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By The"Bend
Commun~ty

a-.,.

t-aaity Caludar itt•s

e.lar.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTI'OM - Faith Full
Gospel Chun:b in Long Bottom
will bave pttaehillg and singing
Friday • 1 p.m. with David Dailey
lllld the Dailey Family. Pastor
s- RciCd . ~ lbC ~lie. Fetlowsbip will fallow.

HENDERSON, W.VA. - Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club, Saturday, 8-11 p.m., Henderson Community Center, Henderson, W.Va. John Waugh wiJI be the
caller.
CHESTER - There will be. a
special meeting of Shade River
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, on
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with work in
the E.A. degree. Refreslunents will
be served.

1UPPERS PLAINS - A round
~ diP:e will be held Fri·
day liDm 8-11:30 p.m. the TuPJ!CfS
Plains VFW Fml No. 9053 Ladies
AuDiiaty. Music will be by 0 and
the Country Gentlemen. Public

aad

Education first

a• -•.

Typical America now has more
hiah-scbool graduates than at any
otlier time in U.S. history: over .78
percent About 23 percent of lbcse
graduates have gone on to earn a
bachelor's degree or highet. Educa·
tiona! attainment directly impacts
income.' The avemge monthly eaql·
·ings without a high school diploma
are $452; with a diploma, $921;
and with a bilehelor's degree,
$1.829.
.
. .·

POMEROY • Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143, will have its
Chrisunas program Sunday at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Victor Roush invites the
public.
CHESHIRE • The annual
Chrisunas program at Silver Run·
Baptist Church, Cheshire, will be
Sunday at 7:30 p.f11. The public is
invited.

Names in
the news

W011der, who vowed in 1986
he'd neoa-perronn in Arizona until
it bad a KiDg Day. bas agreed to
late Jl-'ha. IS in a Xing-inspiled
musical spectacular, the city
MID*' e.t n.sday.

s

I

JACKSONVnl.E, Fla. (AP)Thieves smashed a window and
carted o{f $5,000 worth of toys collected for needy children, but the
Salvation Anny said Thursday it
should be able to salvage its holiday toy giveaway.
As news of the.tor grab spread,
businesses and individuals pitched
in to make up for the loss, said
Fred Musgrave, Salvation Anny
area commander.
Donations were up slightly this
year, but the number o~ families
registered for the toy giveaway
jumped to 2,247, up 110 percent
over last year, said Musgrave's
wife, Miriam, who coordinates
women's services for the Salvation

be..........,

.
stot
en ear1y
Wednesday after someone threw a
~~!~ of c~crete through a win-

NEW YORK (AP) - Kirstie
Alley's new adopted son has !O
com)lflC ror space in the actress'
32-IUOIIIIIIIJ!Sim wilb a menagerie
of some 40 pas. including dogs,
raccooos, geese, chickens, cats,

•-n.e .Uma)s be him.'• Alley

. says in the Jlllloary issue of the
I adies' HaDe JournaL "We have
five dojs. And one or the dogs.
I inie, lies an die bed and prot«ts
him from die oilier dogs.

The Grand
. Old Party
fte

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Inside

••
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Alon1 tbt river ---Bl-1

BUIIDess/Farm-----.D l-8
Classified - -....- ..- ....D:Z..7
Deetb• ·--~.:.------A-3
Ed.itoral ..-~----..--A-4

Features ------..:..-Et-8
Sports, --------Cl-8 .

W-.tber.-..-------A·2

'

lt
l\'
~

A JIIUiicGl &amp; tlnuntJtic pi-e•entotion. of the
bin/a ofour S.nor.
Praented by th(t combined
Children. &amp; Adult ChoU. of the

.

Middleport Church of Christ,
~

Stla &amp; Main St.

REMOVING THE BODY • Jay Cremeens,
lert, ol Cremeens Funeral Cbape~ helps GaLlipolis Pollee OIYicer Charles Reynolds remo•e the

Sunday,
December 20 at 7:00p.m
•.
b"- , - ...1:-rr... .._ ,
--'•L

...._ _ .

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pu

uc:

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a. eo.-~ U&amp;llit4tu.J 1o JOfll
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'
GALLIPOLIS
- A Gallipolis
·man was found dead Satur~ay
mor~ing at his residence of an
apparent gunshot wound to the,
head. A handgun was found near
the body, but police offiCials said it
would be up to Gallia County coroner Edward J. Beikich to determine
if the wound was self-inflicted.
Berkich was out of town Satur-

'

By DAVID A. REED

·ft1iddleport Sunda_y, Dec. 20 ·.
Holiday Shopping Hours
.

·· WrCiot~iers

•..··Jo~•so•'s Variety
ILI!IItls fll'liture
Servis tar
LICker 219 /1\e Sne
. Miclcleport 'Dep•tlllelt
Store
.Mil Street Books
DciryQa•

'

During January 1986, God gave unto· me a vision, at ~he age
of 38, where I saw a massive amount of air crafts, destroyed, in
an isolated, snowy mountainous area.
Let us turn to God's Word, for support of this vision.
Acts 2:17, In the last days, saith God, your young men shall
s"visions.
St. Matthew 24:20 &amp; 21, Jesus speaking, but pray ye that
your,fllght be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath day,
"which is Sunday."
For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the
beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
Habakkuk 2:2 &amp; 3, ~rite the vision and make It plain upon
tables, that he may run that readeth It
··
·
For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it
shall speak, and not lie: Though it tarry, walt for it, because it
will surely come, it will not tarry. .
.
Habakkuk 3:2, Revive thy work in the midst of the years, in
the midst of the years make known; in wrath remember mercy.
Isaiah 55:11, So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my
mouth, it shall not return unto me void, but It shall accomplish
that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I
sent it.
·
1 believe as a result of this vision bejng fulfilled, the followIng scriptures shall be ful~illed.
Romans 14: 11, Fo'r It is written, as I live saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to
God.
Genesis 6:3, And the Lord said, my spirit shall' not always
·
strive with man.
II Corinthians 6:2, (For he saith, I have heard thee· in a time
accepted, and In the day of salvation have I succoured thee:
behold, now. is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of
salvation.
A person can obtain salvation, by praying to God, confess·
ing our sins, asking for forgiveness of those sins, and accept·
ing God's Son, Jesus Christ as personal saviour.
Then we must obey God's word, only by His help, inclUding
being baptized by a minister, by submersion, In the name of
the F.ather, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Romans: 2:13 (For not the hearers of the word are just before
God, but the doers of the Jaw shall be justified.
·
Let us meet In Heaven, Is my earnest desire. AMEN I
""\

body or Gary Lee Carter rrom his .f~ourtll
Avenue residence Saturday morning:'~f· e~·
Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)
.

in Meigs County to the
Ravenswood.- Bridge .has been
included irr'ihe state's "Access
Ohio" plan announced several
weeks ago. The connector road will
offer a long-sought link with I-77
at Ravenswood.
Tbe committee's major focus is
on the development of U.S. routes
23, 33, 35 and 50 and State Route
32 , the Appalachian Highway.
Bush said detailed recommendations on these roads are ready for
submission to the Ohio Department
of Transponation.
In a letter to ODOT, the committee has reaffirmed its push for
the extension of 32 and 50 easiw.ard as a link to 1-77 at Parkersburg, and of 1-74 at Cincinnati to
the west. Additionally, the commit·
tee is urging the state to plan

beyond its boundaries in developing U.S. 35.
·
In other matters, the committee:
• Heard from SEORC Chairma'n
Carl Dahlberg about the ~teed lor
the state to complete a highway jbb
once it's planned and started.
Dahlberg suggested passage of·a
law mandating such action.
·
• Voted 10 send a letter to Stale
Sen. Scott Oelslager supporting
Oelslager's stance on changing·
Ohio's highway construction procedures. .
• Were u~ by Bush on die
committee s highway progress
brochure, which he described ns a
means of gettinl! "our ideas to
Columbus." A h1ghway agenda
brochure developed by the committee is being readied for publication
after New Year's, Bush.~;

5

Ma.n fo~:~nd dead in fesidence

in thU c!lebrcadon. of_ our ~rd~ birlh.

Prepare For Jesus

Middleport

JACKSON - Environmental
opposition 10 the construction of a
four-lane stretch to U.S. 35 south
of Chillicothe was outlined to the
Highway Users Committee of the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council when it met Thursday.
Committee chairman G. Kenner
Bush said the need for environmental impact studies is delaying the
project
Wetlands and the possibiHty of
archaeological sites at several locations in the path of the road-widening are prompting the opposition,
Bush swd. He added that environmental and lUI:haeological protests
to other projects promoted by the
committee are "our biggest hangup
now."
,
Bush told the SEORC members
that a connector road from U.S. 33

~

~

Vol. 27, Nq. 44 ,

Copyrighted 11182

Highway Users Committee
eyes opposition to 35 project:

~

.

•

·.:.

Mlddleport:-:f'omeroy Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, December 20, 19112

•· ,

I

paiiUIS, llllb:ys and possums. .

1bc ''Chcm'' sw and her husband. actor Parter S!evenson ,
""t.,.a. w-.m- True in October.
He -llaru PeL s.

Celebrating Christmas during
World War ll • James A. Sands • A-6

111 tlt::.131..... .
Allu._ . Lno. Hiouuapepor

'k~~--~=t'J!::V'~~~--i!::¥~

Police had no leads.

992·2178

&lt;I;OQ-$;00 PM
•YideoToa
O.'s

Wahama group lauded for outstanding
holiday shows in area • Hoeflich • B-6

fit

~h~':::cy~· were

s

788 N. Second

'

Marshall cops national 1-AA title 31- 28

Consolidation
of schools is
top·story in
Gallia in '92

Thieves steal toys ~~~~~~~~~-~~~:ifn:~
for the needy
~

.

1111SBURGH {AP) -The last
time Bruce Sprillgstecn p~ed in
Pilbtugll,
$10;
to a
suup titcM! in a depessed former
st=IIOMI.
This week, Springsteen was
bact oo another concert tour and save the Rainbow Kitchen
:uuJM:r $10,000.
... 1 was floored:• said Kevin
Amos. opellllioDs roanagu or the
tiu:ben, who met die star during
~ • Wc81esday's show.
.. He' s real nice, a real dOWD·II&gt;canbpenoa..''
Sprihg
abo asked concengoers 10 matt clonalions. Volunu:ers 001sjclc the Civic Arena colla:li:d iDUIICy; food and toys.
Sprihg ca dnnara! SIO,OOO to
dleti~in 1985.AIDO&amp;said.

GrlstiiiSSeaSOI.
9 to SMH.·Sat.
I to 551111ay
Feahrllg PollseH~s II 7
. Mn. P"ollseHia Halill
laskets, Ho'r Tree~ ~ ·
laskets, UYi .d (It TretL
For deparhd loved MS: gme
blo•ki,ts, wreat•s, sprays •d
raseL
HUBBDD'S s
Oh.
·
' ~CIIU,
992•5776 · ·

PROGRAM PRESENTED • A dress rebearsal Was beld Tues·
day ror the Christmas prorram at Pomeroy Elementary. During
. this dme the t~rogram wu pretented to die senior citizens ol Meigs
County.
·

WE SHIP PARCEL POST
DAILY

mqltin&amp;-

II b

ls•w•~ftr•

LONG BOTI'OM - A Chrisunas
program will be presented at the
Long Bottom United. Methodist
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

I

1 i

HtaiARD'S GREENHOUSE

I

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance SaturRACINE- Racine First Baptist day from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Own:h will pn:sa11 iiS live nativity Reynolds building in Hockingpon.
sa:oe Riday and Salwday from 6- · Music will be by "Out of the Blue"
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff.
7:30p.m.eacbcvening.
and Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. Santa Claus will be there. ingiOn, Gallipolis, wiU be the guest
preacher at the Naomi Baptist
SATURDAY
Everyone welcome.
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
Chureb Cbrisamas progr.un, SaturLOTIRIDGE · There will be a 10:45 a.m. The public is invited.
day 8ld Sunday, 1 p.m.• MA Family Chrisunas dinner at the Lottridge
O.ia ws • ~ pesnjration by Community Center on Satilrday at
CHESTER • Ken Amsbary
tbec:bikRL
6 p.m. Bring a covered dish. Every- Chapter, I~aalc Walton League, .
one welcome. The center is located muzzle loader shoots, each Sunday
KANAUGA • Square dancing on Athens County Road 53, five at 1 p.m. through Jan. 3. Prizes are
... dgilg a die DAY Building miles west of Coolville.
the same as fqr the other shoots the
from 8-11 p.m. Music by Liberty
league has had.
Mc••aineas..
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Santa Claus will
RACINE - Racine First Baptist
J'OMEROY • Royal Oak Dance visit the Syracuse Fire Department Church will hold a Christmas canOlris1mas c~ance, sat- on Sunday at 2 p.m. to give treats tata Sunday at 7 p.m.
urday, 8-II p.m., RoyaJ Oak to'the children. The event is ilJXln·
Reson. Masic by Doug Hess Quar- sored by the fire department and
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
tet. A macl:.llulfet will be scrvtd.
ladies auxiliary.
Church children and youth Christmas program, Sunday, 1 p.m. The
HARTFORD, W.VA. - Live
CHESTER - A Chrisunas pro· ·morning service will feature a
Jalivity, Saunlay, 6 p.m., Falher's gram will b.e presented at the Happy Birthday cake for Jesus and
louse Chan:b, Hartford, W.Va. Chesfer United Methodist Church everyone will light a candle.
.. _ . Oyde Fields invites die pubon Sunday at 9 a.m. Frolil 6-8 p.m.
ic.
there will be a live nativity 31 the
MONDAY
~·
church.
RACINE - The Southern Local
MIDDLEPORT • Hope Baptist
Board of Education will meet Mon.
;:bun:b will bave iJs pre-school
TUPPERS PLAINS· A Christ· day at 7 p.m. at ,Southern High
d e p - . OiljsJmas pc!fty Satur- mas program will be presented at School.
_
day a7 p.m. a die chwdt.
the Tuppers Plains United
Methodist Church on Sunday at 6
RACINE - Racine Village
p.m. and in the Alfred United Council will meet Monday at 1
Methodist Church the program will p.m. at Star MiU Park.
beat7p.m.
·
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
MORNING STAR ·The Christ· Church will have Chrisunas carolmas program at the Morning Star ing Monday at 7 p.m. Christmas
United Methodist Churcl\ will be baskets will also ~be deli~ered.
PHOENIX (AP)- Slevie Won"
der, who ' )jed lead a boycott of
AriZIIIIIl wiiC!l die state refused to
COKl a c:ivil fi8lt!s holiday, is coming to help c;elebrate the first
•S1lil&amp;:widc Mlrlin Ludler King Day.
Afta' yellS
SCOOIIJid
die loss of the
Bowl,
Arizooa voters in No•wemt ber
wud apmd
. · stae holiday boninviral.

'

Page 10

Sunday at 10 a.m. Pastor Kenny '
Baker invites the public.
•

REEDS VILLE • Eastern' High
School Music Department, annual
Chrisunas concert, Sunday, 3 p.m.
at the high school gymnasium .
Public invited.

-; :_

Friday, December 18, 1182

calendar

MIDDLEPORT - Hemh United
Methodist Church will hold a sweet
shop Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Middlepon Arts Council building. Cakes and candy will
be available.

kllft • evnt
1111111 1M t1a7 fll *M e-. lkms
k •ilfti•e4 wdl i1t advaDCe
to
,., , . .liratioa ia tbe cal-

. , , t11

·~ Ill It I, I\

ctay and could not be reached for
comment
_.
Gary Lee Caner,41, 422Fourth
Avenue, Oallipolis, was found by
his wife, Ann Carter, Saturday
morning, GallipoliS Police Deport·
· ment Detective Michael Tucker
said.
Mrs. Carter told police she and
her husband had a dispute Friday

night and she left with their three
childrll. . . tpotMhho· night else· where. She ·returned to the residence e.I!I'IY Saturday morning after
·calling and not receiving an

answer. ..

The police were called to the
scene ·at 6:27 a.m. The incident is
stiU under investigation.

Revolutionary procedure allows
high quality cattle production
I

Bb BRIAN J. REED
R~~~8~~::~raham

.is taking al"quantum leap" at his.
1,

Roct Springs beef fann, using an
innovanve iechnique to.increase his
productivity.
The process of embryo transfer
allows the G and H Limousins fann
(co-owned by Graham and C.C.
Heilman) to produce high-qqality
beef cattle using cross-bred cattle
as embryo recipienJs .
The Limousin breed is the
fastest-growing .breed ol cattle in
American ·agricultute, sccoidirig to
Graham. That's because in light of
increasing concern about choles- ·
terol in red mCllt, the Limousin
breed's lean meat product is more
popular. Presently, it is the third
most popular breed of beef cattle,
behind the Angus and Hereford.
The Limousin breed is expected 10
come ahead of the Hereford breed
very soon.
The artificially-inseminated
eggs from Graham's prize
Liniousin cow are "flushed" out
and implanted in less valued cows,
allowing the farm to produce a
higher number of top-quality catde .
using less expensive recipients. In
fact, in only the third "flushing",
Graham's prize Lirnousin has pro- .
duced almost as many calves ns she
could be expected to produce in a
lifetime if she. were bred in the

"traditional" manner.
,
cess is significant, Graham said. He ·
Graham is assisltid in lhi proce- estimated that he spends about
dure by Brad Wiseman, a profes- $300 per calf, cOnsidering the cost
sional embryo technician from Lib- · of semen and implanting, feeding
erty, W.Va., who flushes the fertil- the calf and other expenses. The
two groups Friday arternoonl. Among those
READY FOR DELIVERY • Tbese 350
ized eggs from-the Limoi!Sin cow average price paid for a yearling is
dtlivering nowers were Melvin Cross, Frank
beautiful poinsettias were delivered by Feeney•
and implanJs an embryo into the $1,800 for a bull and $1,500 for a
Epple, Thomas Brewer, Fred Hanel, Lloyd
recipient. At a implanting session heifer. ·
Bennett Post 128 legionnaires and auxiliary
Johnson, Reuben Collins, and Virgil Parsons.
members to arta nursing homes, elderly houson Friday, an embryo was implantSo far, the farm bas enjoyed a
ing, the lnfirma~y, and shutin membtrs or the
ed intd a Holstein cow, although 100 percent successful calving ntte
Graham also uses one of several with the implanting process, almost
crossbred llereford/Holstein cows unheard of in conventional cattle
as recipients.
·
farming.
Wiseman and his wife, Char"The only time 1 really enjoy
lene, who also operate a cattle , this work is tile calving and weanfarm, provide the embryo service to ing," Graham said. "Then, 1 can see
20 fanns in the area, and are among
hat
f£ rJs h ••tped
Chrisunas project of remembering sons was project chairman again
ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
several technicians who do the duce.~Y e 0
ave'"'
to pro·
this year.
others.
Timts-Sentlnel Sta(r
breeding service. The process is
At last year's Ohio Beef Expu in
The project cost was about
This
is
the
lOth
year
for
Feeney·
lVIIDDLEPORT • "It tales hunused mostly with dairy cattle, Ora- Columbus, a buD produced in this drel!s of dollars and lots of hard Bennen Post 128 and its Auxiliary $2,000. The cookies, candies and
ham said, but is gaining popularity manner at G and H Limousins work, but when you see their to remember hospilalized veterans. breads for goody bags were made
among beef catde farmers.
brought the highest price for a red smiles, you lcnow it's all worth it."
residents of the infirmary, disad- by the Auxiliary members. For
The profit realized when selling bull.
That was the comment of one vantaged families, nursing home each child in the 19 needy families
the top cattle produced by the proAmerican Legion Auxiliary mem - residents, and shutin members of and to the residents of the Meigs
Continued on A·2
ber as she talked about the annual their own groups. Geraldine Par·
'&lt;

Legion Post128·and auxiliary remembers
others at Christmas for 1Oth year in row
I

Firefighter, deputy contain blaze

VINTON- An off-duty Viriton
Volunteer Fire DeparunC\IIt firefighter and a Gallia County Deputy
Sheriff demonstrated quick thank·
ing and action in containing what
could have been a major blaze at a
Vinton business Friday evening.
According to fire department
spokesman Mark Werts, a truck
caught fire in a work bay at ·

Ratliff's Filling Station on State
Route 160. 1
·
Firefighter Mark Imboden
noticed the lire around 8:05' p.m.
and ~ported it, Wetts said. Deputy
Joe Browning used a fire extin·
guishef from his vehicle to comain
the fire before arrival of the fire
deparunent.
The fire department then
responded with one truck and 13
fll'Cflghters, WellS added.
Damage to the truck was listed
at $2,000. An electrical problem
\Y&amp;S listed as the probable cause,
erts said.
'
'

Klan to erect cross

I,

POMEROY • Donald i:. Lindeman of Racine is scheduled 10 go to
trial on Monday morning, but the
weekend has brought speculation
that he may instead enter a plea to
charges relating to the May 25 robbery and murder of Howard
Lawrence of.Long Bouom.
Last month, Lindeman waived
his right to a jury triai and opted
instead to have his case heard
before a three-judge panel. That
panel is made up Qf Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fr~

W. Crow III, Dan W. Favreau of
Morgan County Comf!!on Pleas
Court, and Robert G. Tague, a
retired judge ~m Pe~ County.
Lindeman, 28, was mdicted last
summer on a count of aggravated
robbery and a count of aggravated
murder which carries a death
penalty ~iflcation. If convicted
by the panel, Lindeman could face
the electric chair.
Lindeman, throufi his attorney,
Public Defender Mike Westfall of
Athens, rejected a plea bargain

offered last month, and reportS of a
planned plea by Lindeman Qn
Monday have not been confirmed. ,
Lawrence was found shot in the
grocery store he operated on
DeWiu's Run near Long Bottom in
late May. He was taken by Life
Flight to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus, where he died several
days later Auth!)ritles believe that
Lawrence was also robbed prior to
being shot, due to the fact that his
wallet was found missing upon his
arrival at the hospilal.
'

on Cincinnati Square

w

?!~~~~~$·::;~~:~~~~~

Victim of shooting dies early Saturday

Klux Klan
erccung a cross on
a downtoWD blic !!jU&amp;re Sunday.
GALLIPoLIS -A Patriot man
Mayor Dwight Tillery said he active in Gallia County legal cir- ·
deplores ·plans for the Ku f'1ux cles who was shot at his residence
Kl'!ft disPlay, aild flnds the orpni- more than two montlis ago died
zauon otfenstve.
,
early Saturday at Pinecrest Care
But a recent court ruling has Center.
cleared the .way for the U.S.
Samuel 0. Hoffman, 49, 4350
Knights of the .Ku. J9ux klan, a State Route 32S, had been hospital·
facliot't based .in nearby Hamilton, ized since the OcL 13 incident, in
. Ohio, to set up the 10-foot, white ·which he wu repol1edly shot sevwooden cross on Fo1111tain Square.
eral times with a small-caliber,
"We're pulling the cross up for .semi-au10!1181ic; handgun.
Jesus Christ on his binhday," said
Diana Whaley, 26, Columbus,
Ron Lee, who said he is the was arrested by sherlfrs deputies
group's imperialldaliff.
in connection with ~shooiinJt llfld
I

•days until
Cliristmas

Lin.deman trial to begin Monday

.
&lt;

(

has been-charged with attempted
murder. Whaley's case was bound
over to the next tenn of the Gallia
Countr grand jury by Gallipolis
Munictpal Judge Joseph L. Cain on
Oct 21.
The grand jury i~ expected to
meet in January. Whaley has been
held in the Gallia County Jail on
$50,000 bond since her arrest. .
Prosecutin~ Attorney Brent A.
Saunders sa1d Saturday he has
requested Coroner Dr. Edward J.
Berkich conduct an autopsy on

.

'.

Hoffman. Saunders added thai he found Whaley ui be sane. Common
will review the autopsy's findings Pleas Judge Donald Andrew Cox
b.efore considering a switch in has since allowed Whaley to obtain
charges against Whaley.
her~ own psychiatric evaluation, an4
Whaley, represented' at her pte- Saunders said he. will also have an
liminary hearing by Gallipolis evalution done on Whaley .
at~a!:[ Richard C. Roderick Jr.,
Hoffman served as the local
pi
DOl guilty to the attempted common pleas bailiff during Roe!murder cbaJie. She has also plead· erick's term as judge, and !lad been
ed'not guilty by reason of insanity, a parHirne insauctor in the E_mer~
prompting an evaluation of the son E. Evans College of Bus10ess
defendant by the Shawnee Forensic · Management at tbe University of
Center.
Rio Grande. Whaley bad also been
Saunders said the center a Rio G~ student
::
info1111ed .him by telephone that it
•

'

'·

�December 20, 1182
December 20, 1112

OH Point Pleaaant, WV

State officials may use house
arrest for some prisoners
tilt'

Alice Beegle

Blair, Key Club Co-Chairperson Kelli Smltb,
Key CIDb President Jared Ford, GAllS Prlnd·
pal·Jim Pope, Key Club Advisor Julia Roderus,
GARS Vice Principal Rosalie Miller and Key
Club Exeeudve Board Member Eric Hoffman.
(Times-Sentinel pbolo by Kevin Pinson).

.

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GOODY BAGS PREPARED • Fruit, raudy,
...cookies and breads were pacbd In lucy sacks
,;for deUvery to Infirm and elderiJ resldenlll, anci J
• afedy families Friday afterDOOD by the Ameri·
; can Legion Auxiliary of Feeney·Beanetl Post ·

.

A bill sent 10 Voinovich by

The bill would require 125
offenders to be 011 electronic monilOring after the fli'St year the program was in effect The dqlariment
lish guidelinea for operation of a estimates that wlien fully imgtestatewide prDirBDI.
men ted, an average of 1, 00
Sponsolllefby Rep. Robert Hick- offenders per month could be covey. D·Dayton, the measure would era!.
permit use of elccii'OIIic monitoring . There 8!'0 almost, 38,000 people
for prisoners with 110 more than sill m state pnsons designed to house
months left to serve in their sen- about 22,000.
tences
Electronic monitoring could flee
. Oniy first-time felony offe!nders some space, but Tessa Un~i~, ·
would be eligible, and then only if department ~keswoman, SJild 1t
their crimes were neither drug nor would be qu1ckly filled by new
~m related.•
arrivals.
·
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ness.

Iegislahl"l lilt week would 111tborize the 'Obio ~ of RebabilitatiCIII and Conection 10 estab-

Continued from A· I
~ty Infinnary. ~ Legion provlded$2.
.
Friday afternoon the legion~~ auilliary members loade411P their vans and other vehicles
! ' s 350·poinscttias and 51 indiual goody bags containing 33
of fruit, 80 dozen cookies, 75
i~Ctunds of fudge, and 64 loafs of
~pkin bread. to deliver around

granclsoa,eeffre

,,
G a r y L e e· C a t ; : e r

of enquirer

Home. ·

CINCINN AT1
(AP)
La.wrencc K. Beaupre has been
chosen editor and vice president of
The Cincinnati Enquirer, !he paper
has announced.
Beaupre, 48, succeeds George
R. Blake, who was chosen The
· Enquirer's vice president for community affairs earlier this week.
Beaupre's appointment was
announCed in Saturday's editions.
Beaupre had been elteeutive edi·
tor and vice president for the Gannett Suburban Newspapers group in
White Plains, N.Y., since 1984. He
was Gannett's Editor of the Yeat in '
1988.
Enquirer Publisher .a!ld .Presi·
dent »ariy M. Whipple .c alled
Beall{ltf a "key editor in Ganneu"
who IS ~voted to substance and
high quality. }
.
"He's a hirt-sleeve editor
who's out o the flOjlr, working
and leading," Whipple said.
.· Before going to White Plains,
Beaupre spent 16 years at Gailnett's ,Times-Union in Rochester,
N.Y .• J,llllgressing from reporter to
managmg editor. .
He is a ilative of Kankakee, m.,
with bachelor's and 11raduate
degrees from the UnivetSlty of Illinois.
·

.J algn •

"

.....,Bawl

·

aw-r

RU7LIID FURII!URI
RUTLAND

1-800-837-8217

3.8 V6 engine, power steering, power
brakes, auto. trans., air cond., AMIFM,

~ftc county.

· ·· Poinsctw were taken to Area·

dfa. Unicare,·Overbrook, the lnftt~. The Maples, Stonewood,
EAtended Care at Vcterans and the
~ereer

AM/FM stereo cassette. power
windows and power locks, power
driver's seat, tilt and cruise, . rear
defroster.
,

and Darst Personal Care

11 '
.
.......
1111 FORD MDI711117 HlftiiiCI

~nlers where they were given to

it~dividual residents and used to
dkoratc dining areas.
:1For the fifth year Gallia-Meigs
apmmunity Action provided the
nlvnes of 19 needy farililles and to
f$ch one of them went large bags
ol fruit and poinsettias
•;. Besides the Dowers and goody
~s. gifts were delivered to all 24
iltterans in area nursing homes, the ·
._, residents of tbe'Meigs County
lnfttmary, to "adopted grandparents" of the Auxiliary, and 10 a spedal handicawcd child remembered
ala special occasions by the $lOOP·
. With the Christmas proJCCt for
others completed, the Aulliliary
113embers and legionnaires will
have a holiday party at 6 p.m.
Wednesday night at the hall.
.·
" On Christmas Eve, Santa will
rllake his traditional stop at the
l:egion annex on Mill Street. All
af,:a children are invited 10 stop by
sOmetime between 5 and 7 p.m. for
a;tandy treat and an apple.

.
Weatber
'·

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.. '

..

'!l!lla-OOJII!IIo~ .

...

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I•

DUNKIN~S
Diamonds &amp; Gold
"lbe finest quality jewelry at the bat possible !lite".

o90 dlyl, 12 or 18 months SUII IS CASI (an 1ppr0vwcl credit)
oOr UM our FREE layiway up to 12 months!

302 V-8 engine, power steering,
power brakes, auto. trans., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo cassette, cruise
control, rear defroster, GT cloth and
vinyl articulated sport seats, cast •
aluminum wheels, low miles. ·
WAS
13 995
$ ,

.

lOW

'11,999

1811 FORD PROBE IL I DR.
4 cy!. engine, power steering, power
brakes, aulprnatic lrans ., air cond ..
AMIFM stereo cassette, tiH and cruise,
bucket ssats with console, power
windows and power iock!j , rear
defroster. Like new condition.

.•

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•

·-. Soulb-Ceotral Obio
J Sun~y. variable cloudiness, a
cnance of rain early. High 40 to 45.
q.ance of rain 40 percent.
• Extended forecast:
~ Moad11 tbrougll Wednesday:
: Monday, fair. Lows 15 to 20,
Highs mosdy in the 30s. Tuesday, a
c!lance of ram or snow. Lows in· the
ni!d 20s to lower 3()s. Highs in the
4(h. Wednesd!ly, fair and cold.
L'Ows in the 20s. Highs in the mid
20s
.• to lower 30s.

Latt Chance To See Santa!

Wu
$1o,99s

. Monday &amp;·lu,sday
Dec. 21 &amp; 22

IUIP8__,
Oalltpoltt, Ohio, bJ 1.. O.lo Volo]o
hbliolli"l c...,paaJIWolll-. Inc:
s-.1 claM poolop polo! al Oalllpolio,
Ohio .CM31. Entered u _,.claM
IILiiH8c rnaUer II Pv:wro,, Ollto. Palt
• -Oflce.
'

.lOW

Monlbor: n.. Aloocialod - · uci lho
Ohio I'IIWopa_pOr Aooocialiool, N.u-1
Ad•ertiolat .....,....~au... BroahiBI
Newapopa• 8al01, 733 Tllir&lt;l Ami•,
Now'Ywk, New York t0017.

6·9 P.M.

IVNDA1' OJIILT

IUBIC?JP110N IATD

..
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uo,
0.0 v.r....................................- ..148.10
a,.con~ororM_._

BINClLII COPY

,

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PRICE

S~r; ....................................._

' No ""-criptl- bJ onoll panaillod In
arau wiMie IMlar carrier 11rftee ill

1

I •\'llllol!ll·

: ,..•,...... "--t

Upper River Road
GaiUpoRs
446-6369

!

,:n 1121, Emma Willard founded
TJOOy Female Seminary, tbe first U.S.
w6.ften'l coJieae.

'"

..

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will

oOI ...

I

relptptj#' fer .........,.,.......

I

to iafttln.

1

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75 C...to

I

Ho, Ho, Hope To See You!

J a n i c e. L . G o r b y
COLUMBUS- Janice L. Gorby, 75, Columbus, died Friday, December (8, 1992, It Mt Carmel East Hospital in Columbus. She was a former
resident of ~ City and a member of the Ncxthl8nd Church of Christ

G..:u.~IS

......1Uilled •ell SoiadaJ, • • Thlnl Me.,,

IJospital
news
.,
-,
Veterana Memorial
·FRIDAY ADMISSIONS - Nell
(Ji aves, Pomeroy, and William
MOrris, Racine.
~FRIDAY DISCHARGES
Nlme.

' MAIL ltiiiCaii'!ION8
......,Clto~J'

Brlna Ia 70111' hit dMI on a New Car or Truck and we
· will trr to matt or Beat ttie DeaL

OM Yoior......................... :................ f47.N

.....................................a:u.'lt

8lz -

•

FOil A GOOD D.UL.,
SEE .JACK ROUSH or BOB ROll
Our Sentlce Department Ia ()pen.Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
MuHier Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sit. 8-12 .

1

Dllllr . . ........
MAIL aiiiiCaiPI'IONI
...... c

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2 -..........................................40
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First·Baptist Church
·Christmas Cantata
MONDA'( DEC. 21
I P.M.

.....:::nt:.~
Altai~

42Und Alwa., 0 We ah, Oh.

Lottery results

COLONY VIDEO
c.... Olt o., INkly
tpNIIItf
5 rans FOI

FOI

•soo

3 DAYS

(NEW IELUSES EICLUIEI)

01

, 3 NEW IILEASES

'5" ...

DUE IACI 'l ilT DIY

,:•

;!: ·

·-·.....

'

GAlJ.IPOUS • Audrey Mae Hedritlc, 61, Palriot, diecl Friday, Ddf!
18.1992.1tHoberM~LiiCII Ceaw.
·..•
Servica will be hclcll p.m. ~Y It Wauah-HIIIey·Woocl J:. 'i
Home, widllhe Rev. James Lusher officilling. Burial wiD be in Olcl t.f$.:.
c:ervilleCemr«•y.
.: ..
Frienc!s may eal1 at lhe functal homeoa Malday from 6-8 p.m.
·~~
PaU beaus will be Bryan Unroe, B!lly Unroe, Randall S'pencer, Paul
D. Willi•s. Paid D. Williams n. Paul Athey and Billy Unroe U.

Samuel

0. H o f f m a.n

..•••.
,

)

PATRIOT-. Samuel 0. Hoffman, 49, of 4350 Stale ROUIC 32S, ~
1992,11 Pineaest Care Center.
:·:
Cmncens Funeral Chlpei of Oallipolis is handling iln'lllgCRICilts. :;: .

01, died Slturday. Dec. 19,

....
-..
..

.... ....

George

in Columbus.
She was
OciOber 20, 1917 to the late RedmOnd and Willie Moore
Rose.
.
Rrissell C l i n e
· SurvivQrs include two daughters, ·Susan (Michael) Dennen of Circleville and Jane (Douglas) Mullins of Pawkala; three sisters, Roma
POMEROY - Russell M. Cline, 85, a resident of Syracuse, died Salllr- Myers of Crown Ci!Y, Opal Sheppard of Oallipolis and Nellie McCown of
day, December.IIJ,I992, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Florida; four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
A retired bus driver and minisler, Mr. Cline was bonl July 4, 1907, at
She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, James W.
Claysville, Pa., son of the laiC Bradford.and Martha Werling Cline.
Gorby; two brochers, Ray Rose and RoUancl Rose and one sister, GeralHe is survived by his wife, Leona Cline, and two claujlhters, MrS. Alva dine Smith.
·
(Grace) Holsinger, Tuppeis Plaiils and Mrs . ~ (Patricia) Collins, Cir- ·
Services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at the Evans Funeral Home, 4171
cleville; seven sons, John H. Cline, Sw\city, · .; J110es Cline, Beverly; E. LivingsiOII Ave., Columbus. Committal services will be held at noon
Davill Cline, Waterford; Richard Cline, New Lexingron; Charles Cline, Monday at the Crown City Cemetery.
·
St. Joseph, Mo.; Calol Cline, Tuppers Plains and Carl Cline, Mason, W.
Va.;'a stepdaughler, Kathtm Pugli, Middlepolt; a half-brodler, Rev. Harvey Ours, Dunbar, W. Va. and a half-slater, MiB. Dory (Martha) Wolf,
Racine. Several nieces" and llephews IIII:Vive, alonl with ~8 grandchildren, H e l e n
Harrison
30 gteat-grandchilclren and four greal·grcat grandchildren• .
Two wives pteccdcd 111m in death • Seva (Beaver) CJ.ilie and Dorthea
. (Pugh) Cline, alona with ~ clau&amp;hl«. Mary Ellen Batli'Daardner and two
• Helen Mildred Harrison, 87, 2359 State Rote 141,
infant children (twins). Fannie V. and PranciJ E. Cline. 1'wo half-sisters, Gallipolis, . Friday, December 18, 19921t Holzer Medical Cent«. She
Mary Green llld Olive Wolf aiJo pm:~ him in death.
·
was a re · employee of the G = s Developmental Center and a
·51 Olurcli and Gallipolis ChapMr. Clilie was a World War II veteran, llaving served in the U. S. member of , Centenary United
ter 11283 of Eastern Star, of which she was a past matroo.
Marine CoiPs.
She was born May 22, 1911 in Gallia County 10 the late FJedrick E.
Funeral !services will be held Tuesday, December 22, at 2 p.m. at
Northup
and Blla M. O'Dell Northup.
.
Ewin&amp;Funeral Home, Pomeroy, with Rev. Charles Bush.off'JCiating. Burial wllfbe in Letart Falls Cemetay.
.
·
.
Survivors include two 81111S, Stanley Harrison Di Oreal Falls, Vif&amp;inia
Frie!lds may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9·p.m. on Mon- and John E. Harrison of Malvein, Arkansas; one daught«, Jeannie (Jim)
day.'.' .
Trout of Keonewick Washington: one brotber and one sister, Paul
'• '
Northup and Pearl Burneu, both of Gallipolis; 10 grandchildml and 14
great-granclchildren.
·
She was preceded in death by her husband, Stanley M. Harrison, who
Earold Dean
died January IS, 1983; one grandchild, one brother and one sister.
·
Friends
may
call
from
5
to
8
p.m.
Sunday
at
the
Wilugh-Halley-Woocl
.
"Home. Eastern Star Services will be held 8 p.m. Sunday at the
' ALJIANY - Earold Dean, 88, of llOUIC 2, Albany (Pageville), died funeral
funeral
hollle.
· FridaY. morning in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Services will be .held 10:30 a.m. Monday at tbe Centenary United
: Born in Pageville, Nov. 19, 1904, be waslhe 9011 of the late Jack and Methodist
Church witb the Revs. Sue Smith, James Lusher and Jimmy
.: Effie Cheadle Dean.
·
Chipman off'JCiatin£ Burial wiD be in the Mound Hill Cemerery.
' A (inner, he a1Ji&gt; used a~ of hones in his ~g. He was a Scip_io
Pallbearers will ile David F. Harrison; Calvin RUJSilR, Lonnie Halri·
::.Tow~p Ti:ustee for 16 yem and a fCIIIIICI' Republican ctntral 0.X01Dlt~ son, Tim Trout, Paul Trout and Bryan Morrison. Honoiary Jllllbe*ers are
~.!(&gt;C . ember.
, . ~
·.
"
~up. Jeff Northup, Ronnie Burnett, ~ Rpysel:l, Pecer Bauer,
:fiJ '-is. sill'vivecl by six a--hildren: Juoe Bryan, Green Bay, Wise.; 9ary
Edwin
Elliot, Dean Evans, Kenneth Stege~", Carl El1icit and Harold Salis;. Lewi• Monis, Albany; Steve Morris, ~ Paul Morris, Qelphi, ·
bmy.
.
: ~ Ind.; Ken~y ~· W~ llld ~ayne Morris, Springboro.
In lieu of Dowers, donations may be made to the Helen Mildred
% AIJO SUtvlvtnglle 13 great-panclchlldren.
Northup Harrison Fund, Centenary United Methodist Church.
~ ~~ was preceded~ •
by: his wife. of~ years, Esta Welch Dean; a
: dauRhtm", Mina Morris; one brother and SIX SISlers.,
·
•i ~will be helclll a.m. Thursday, Pee- 24, 11 the Bigony-Jordan
:;,Funeral Home in Albany with the Rev. Eddie Boyer officiating. Burial
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
: will be in the Wells Cemclery.
•.
.
were
two tickets sold namin~ aU
Fr.iends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wedncs6iy at the funeral
five
numbers
drawn .in Fnday
i'ho
" me. .
.
.
night's Buckeye S drawing, and
each winning ticket is worth
utility executive
$100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
The winning tickets were sold in
Bedford Heights and West
Portsmouth.
.
Here are Friday night's Ohio
i:A MiniiCSOIB utility executive.who lished in your Cabinet continues, it Lottery selections:
·
f"servel! in the Ford and Carter is probable tbat you will appoint Buckeye 5
11-13-18-26-36
•~administrations is a suong con- fewer women 10 the Cabinet than
(eleven, thirteen, eighteen,
b endetfor energy secre&amp;ary as Pres- Presidents Carter. Rea,an or
twenty-six,
thirty-six)
~·idenJ-elect Clinton J"P8I'I'S a pre- Bush," EleanOr Smeal, president of
Pick
3
Numbers
::chriSimas Owry of Cabinet picks.
the Fund for a Feminist Majority,
7-4-7
•: HaUl O'Leary, executive vice said in a Friday lcuer to Clinton.
(seven,
four, seven)
l· president of Northern Stales Power "To make a real cllange from the
Pick
4
Numbers
i:Co. iqf Minneapolis, was inter- past, I urge IMt there be 110 fewer
7-3·1·1
f•viewcjd by Clinlllll oo Friday. Also than six w;.en Cabinet mem·
(seven, three, one, one)
•imecung with the president-elect bers.''
·
.
i:was lf{ouse ~ Services:ComHarriet
. s of the Nauo~~
:•mitfce Chamnan Les Aspm, D- Women's P ltical Caucus c,JU.
::wis.;' clinton's top choice for cized as "window dressing" a
~defense secretary. •
meeting_ ~·s ~ had ~s
,. O'.Leary is a black attorney week wtth Clinton ~ c~­
lj whosii career also includes stints as man Vernon Jordan to YOH:C their
~ a ~uror in New Jersey and as concerns.
(, head P._f an energy consulung busill ncss. She was interviewed even as
~ women's groups intensified 'their
:•criticism of Ointon for not naming
~ more women to ~is ~inet.

•
i~Minnesota
~~~~~~:!~~~for ~~~r!:y~~~~tab-

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"
742·2211

Pea•

M. H e d r i c k
~

LONG BOTIOM · John 1. Ficlt, 76, Route 7, Long Boamt, died Friday. Dec. 18, 1992 at Holzer Medicll Center.
Born Nov. 17, 1916 in Chclter Towntbip, he was a son of the late
Dana and Ballnie Klmea Fick. Mr. Fiek was self-employed as a Cll)ltlller
!lnd ~. He wasa mernberofSL John Lutberan ChulchatPine Grove.
He is survived by his wife, Jane Cooper Fick, Long Bottom; four
daughters and sons-in-law, Judy and Ron Billy, ~burg, W.Va.,
Joyce llld Chuck Bartels, Pomeroy, Janet and Charles Hoffman, T~
Plains, and Joanne and Steve Dill, Chester; a sister and brother-in-law,
X•dr'een and Henry Wells,. Pomeroy: two brotbers and sisters-in-law,
Charles and Mary Lou Flck and Richard and'Mickey Flck, all of Chesler;
a sister·in·law, Doris Fick, &lt;;olwnbus; nine grandchildren: four step· grandchildren; one great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, Mr. Fid: was preceded in death by a sister, Manila
Fick and a brocher, Roy Fick.
Services will be Tuesday at II am. at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev.
William Middleswarth offiCiating. Burial will be in 01ester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funcJal home on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m.

r

'

for • 41" oc...., TV te be glvan
Bunclllyl No purchMe n••••ry.

Audrey

M.

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY UNTIL 7.P.M •.l..
HOURS APPOINTMENT.

·

QAIJ.IP0t.IS -Guy Lee ~.41, of 42l Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
died Saturday.
•
.
-l'he boilennaker was the son of Charles (Chod) and Anna Lou (Wood)
Carter.
Services will be announc¢ later by Waugh-Halley-WIId Funeral

'
;THRU
DEC. 23RD OR_CALl FOR AFTER
Don't forget te - I n
IIIIo IH8k balora

Melr.

She was llllive of Wayne County, W. Va., andiiiO'Ieclro Citnll Co.,
Fla. from Racine. She was allomernabr, a member of !he Belhany Unired
Methodist Church an die Order of~ Star, Chapter 138, both of
Racine.
.
· ·
She was prccecled in death by bet' husblncl, Captlin Harolcl 0 . Beegle,
two sisters, tme brothers, and a
~Cilclolf.
. ·
River, Fla., a daughter,
Survivon iilclude a 1011. Oecqe L. ol
June RoushoiRacine, two t.othen. Oeorse L11 bert of-Arizona lllclJolm
of Splingfiel4 a sil&amp;er, 101ie Prldd of Springfielcl, five panclchllclren, and
three great.pllndchildren.
·
Funeral uiangements were handled by Roberts Funeral Home. Dunellon, Fla.

named editor

llll, Middleport. Amonglbose pardcipallng in
tbe annual project of rememherlllg otben were
from lbe len, Etta ·WIU, Dorotby Lon~, Bonnie
Krautter, Debra Krautter, and Ethel Stitt.

. sl'icut. uor mAr BOVQ

Jobn · Fick

RACINE • Alice Beesle, 78, ol ~River, Fla., a foniler
County resilient, dial at her~
. S. 1992 after Ill exs nMtl · •

Beaupre
RIBBON ClJTI'IliiG • Gaillpolls City Scbooll
Superintendent Patricia Brennemaa cwtl
ribboa Friday aftemeon at lbe Gallla Academy
.ffigb School Key Club's ToyTowa project In the
MISOIIIc Hall, 4lll 1/l Sec:oad Avenue. Also par·
·tidpallng In lbe ceremony were (left to rl..t)
«ey Club Executive
Board Member Adam
'
.

Sund8y nmea S.ntiM.I

---Area·deaths ---.-------"!"""-----------~..... ...

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The crowded state prison system
could place certain non-v1olent
offenders on electronically monitored early release under a bill
awaiting GOv. George Voinovich's
signature.
Similar house arrest programs
are being used by some local
authorities.
Transmillers attached to individuals are monitored by a cenual
. computer that can determine when
they leave the house 10 which they
are supposed to be confmed.

Pomeroy llddle90rt Gljllpollt, OH Point Pleasant, WV

.

R. Noble
.

'

LONDON - George R. Noble, 72, London, died Friday, Dec. IS,
1992 at his residence.
•,
Born Feb. 14, 1!00 in Cheshire, son of the laiC George and ~
(McCarty) Noble, he retired from the U.S. Army, where he served in tl)e
European Theater during World War II, in addition to the Korean War 1111
in Germany, AlbDsas lncl c.tifornia, in 1961. He aiJo .redred flola I¥
London Comlcti&lt;nl Institute in 1980.
;.;
He was a
of American Legion Post&gt; No. lOS, London, Fnlll(.nal Orela of the Eagles Lodge No. 950, London, and the Lonclon JIOill ~
the VetmnS of Foreign Wars, Disabled American VellniiS and Amvets;,:
Surviving are his wife. Marjorie (Beasel) Noble, to whom be
married for 44 yem; a daughler, Nancy Noble of Knoxville, Tenn.; a 1(111:
and claughler-in-law, Nicholas and Christine Noble of Odord; two~
children, Matthew and Suzie; two sisters and brotbers-in·law. Mit•
Rayoond (Doris) Zerkle and Mrs. Edward (Helen) Preston, all ltf;
Cheshire; a sister, Kathleeo Noble of Cheshire; and two close frienc!t:
Mali: Long and John Unc:iig.
:::.
He was also preceded in deatb by three sislers and two brothen.
:•:
Gra..-eiide services will be 10 am. Tuesday at the Deaueck Towa'!P: .
Cemela)', with lhe Rev. Oordon Johnson officiatinJ!. Friends may ~:f.:;
the Rader-Lynch cl ~Funeral Home, 124 E. High SL, Lonc!oa, '• •
7:30-8 p.m. MOiiday.
,.•
In lieu of Dowers. conlributions may be made to the Madison ~
Friends of Hospice.
;~;
- ' ......

member

hal'*"'

'

.Betty J a n e Woodall

...
.~

~;; .
........

BIDWELL • Belly Jane Thom115 Woodall, 6S , or Bidwell, Ohio, f~
mcrly of Point Pleasant, died Saturday, Dec. 19, 1992, in Hol1.er MediQII
Center.
0:•
Born Jan. 12, 1927, in Point Pleasant, she was a daughter of the IIlii
Roy L. Thomas and Ivy Denny Thomas. She was also prcccdcd in clc4ill
by her husband, JJack Lee Woodall, who died in 1990, a son, John, t"'
brothers and a sister.
·
:•:
She was a member of the V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary Pos1 4464 of Galt
lipolis, and attended the Christian Community Chun:h of Point Pleasant, ·
Surviving are two daughLCrs, Mrs. Scott (Lisa) Jeffers of Gallipolis,
Mrs. LaMy (Teresa) Rcajlp of Gallipolis; two sons, William of Rocltport,
Ind., Kevin or Gallipolis; six sisters, Helen Vickers and Rosemary
Thacker, both of Point Pleasant, Phyllis Meadows of Buckhannoo, Robed&amp;
Johnson of West Columbia, Norabell Taylor of Wellsville, Ohio, ViiJil)ia
Smith of Cedar Grove, W.Va.: two brothers. Ralph E. of Gallipolis Fort,,
Richard of Scottstown, Ohio; seven . grandchildren and one g~grandchild.
.
.
The funeral will be Monday, I :30 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
with the Rev. Isiah Crump officiating. Burial will be in the Ohio Vallcj·
Memory Gardens, Gallipolis.
·. ·
Friends can call at the funeral home Sunday. 6 to 9 p.m.
:

�--

.

Commentary and perspective

Sunday Ttmea Sentinel Page ~

Pomeroy-MiddlepQI't Gllllpolla, Oft Point Plenant, WV
'

December 20, 1992
Page-A4

Iran's prodJiction of nuclear bomb looms
WASIIINGlOI- ._.s...

m lilt: M" ,,; poorottPt m se1c nucJeii'JeiCiml.
)ll1ldKe
a
alld
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liaf ap c-pcbng cenaers for
Of alldlele foreigners, the two
10
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- w.-• • • ; - c : i u : b = puductiott 111110111 most potent are • Russian expen

a .:'•tic•.;:;:
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a5 Third Aft., Go!HpoHt, Ohio
(614) 446-:U.U

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111 Court St., Puaco)o OMD ·

•

("4)f9l.~-

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
. .blloher

......
~-

HOBART WILSON JR.
EDcullft Editor

a

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. . . . . . . . . . =...£,

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·
A MEMBER of The Auociated Preaa, and the A.merican
' Newapaper Publiibeno A.alociation.
•

•

Telleru ad chewkre ill Ina.
Their iali•
w• is 1Ja1c ab:a
-iiuat:; illlidi: 6c cr • c.p.
wid~ ...._
al.lk .. ...
pic's M; • Milne_., -z,e
an - s ud oil callar&amp;o be

I..ETI'ERS OP OPINION ""' welcome. They abould be leu than
300 wonla . Alllet!eno ""' oubject 10 editing and mU&amp;t be signed with
l name; adclreu and telephone number. No unsigned letteno will be
publiabod. Lette!l should be ) n good taste; addre01ing iasueo, oot

illljmcd m lla;
&amp;ttirr.llsis yar, lk J'ali*;'s
Mojakdia
em...,
made a clealm ltay ru.
ljn4!
• ab-

' p~Q~~Dalitiel.

••" ..:. m.

.

merSoril:l•

.,...,._lltr:r..,

not yet bcca ddiitlc:d.. ne fa.
~ Md Sale Dqaw said ·
they Uti., proal fllllti: P ee..
:and aalkdila -~lie..,
lrollica!ly, OK al. dte aw-minds of die .,.,._. £!All&gt;
isone m!lie .._,..,. •• ia • ·
RaE j · ·
'' ID

By JAMES HANNAH
ASsociated Press Writer

;: DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - The debate over the bumin~ of hazardous
wl\ste is healing up as l!ll environmental group ts seekmg to block a
develop ..r zaodae asg
cementltiln's plans to incmeratethe m.atenal.
•
: The Greene Environmental Coaltuon says the Southwestern Portland fralliu -decement Co. doesn't have the proper permit to bum the waste. The gmup ·
has asked slate regulators to rule in its favor.
: In addition, the group. has ~ up the heat on Sou~westem 11Y S~a¥·
ink demoostralions outstde the kiln and tl!e company s headquarters m
sUburban Failbom.
, 'd B
,..__
· "We want them to stop burning hazardous waste, sru ruce ..-.....,
a :inember of the Greene Environmental Co3Iition. ''We want them ID 1'/J
bilck to burning coal only."
•
~ Soullnvestern offteials said the company has foUowed aU or ·the slale s

,...,.,..ip

"whs. ....

·~;&amp;~~iog~r Steve Curtis said that under tlte Ohio adminisiDiite
cilde, plan!S t1tat bum hazaidou~ waste.to recover its energy- as lbe lr:iJa ·
dbes - are considered to be mdustnal fu"!aces. (\s a result, they ~
rc;4uired to get a burning permit from the O.h!~ Env119nm~tal PlotH •m
Agency instead of the Hazardous Waste Facdiues Board.
~ " We have followed the rules and regulations as ~y are written;•
CUrtis ssid. "The bOttom line is the code and regulauons spell out '\laY
clearly the route to follow, and we have followed that route."
, Curtis called the coalition's req~est of the EPA a "~ ~
ver" designed to delay the bumtng of waste at the kiln. He said the
group's arguments aren't valid.
·
· Curtis also said the emissions tests conducted by the kiln for the EPA
eX:ceeded the testing required by the hazardous-waste lxwd. He aid lie
hciPes that if the EPA determines the !rill) needs a penni! from the boanl,
new testing won't be required.
·
·
, The dispute luis ignited debate over the issue of how to dispooe ofhazaidous waste.
·
• Curtis ssid it-is better to bum the waste than to dump it into landfills,
where it Could leak into the groundwater.
1
"To me a much beuer solution is a once-and-for-all," Curtis said.
"You bum 'it- it's gone, and you don't have 10 worry about it"
·Curtis said tltat unlike some of tlte environmentalists, he is doin.g
something about the problem of hazardous waste.
"Instead of standing on the outside and yelling, I'm wmting on the
inSide and doing," he said.
.
.
.
.
Cornett said he favors a tlttrd opuon - stop generatiDg hazardous
waste. by using substirute materials.
; "You simply don't create the stuff in the first place," Comett said.
'''J'hat is reaUy the only solution."
· He said kilns that.provide a cheap way of disposing qf hazardous waste
creating incentives to keep generating the waste.

-.
1

I

Alulenora
n•rad
;,L--1 BJ·...·..
,.,..,..,.,,.

u..

b m Pcweuy durin&amp; difficult
He uf&amp; i•at at lhe furaal
vl!E wrifa's Iarc wife, Eleanor
Oow.
a

~B.s.

FredW. Crow

groups jockey for position

: WASHINGTON (NEA) Within his first hundred days in
office, President-elect Clinton
intends to send to Congress a ~­
prehensive health care reform
package. Already,!here is a furious
behind-the-scenes battle being
fought between interest groups try·
ing to influence Clinton's health
care advisers and position themselves for the comin! health care
revolution.
.•
During the campaign Clinton
sketched out a health care reform
plan built around "managed competition." Under this concept most
pQOple wiU obtain their health care
from very large, HMO·Iike, man·
aged-care cooperatives - each
offering an "accountable health
plait" (AHP). The cooperatives
would be set up on a lo~al or
regional basis and would compete
wl!h one another for patients.
Although Clinton's expens are
still working out details, it i~
assumed tltcse cooperatives would
largely be eslabli~hed by commer·
cia! insurance companies that
would recruit doctors, hospi!als and
· other health care professionals.
Businesses would pay for their
employees to join one cooperative
or anotltcr, wbtle the poor or unemployed would have their membership paid for by tlte government.
Each cooperative's AHP would
feature standard minimum benefits
and services, and no jllan could
deny coverage or base tiS rates on
an individual's medical history or
on a pre-existing condition . The

anticipation is that ,competilion
between these cooperatives would
keep health care quality high and
costs down.

Robert}.
I

•

•

lte is relirillg IJid lie and his
wife. Dmie, are p!wrinc to IIIOYCto

Plw

....... ,

- ......

know wltae dlt:J ...., .... ISley
bicJw if pia: Piliiils will be a m
paacriplioa dntp ..ncr a - -

ut.a·a...n111
HI b••-•

J&amp;"kwr SJA@il:
n , -==~~
areIaltp
a.p!ctdy
apiast die p1u
Lo K •liOJid . . . . pa !ka

ldim•• "''

Ow@;ps time is also a time to
rdbt ... lbe past. DuriDg the past
few
writer has seen sev·
cnl or his friends and acquain·
..._.~ Iiol!l this earth as fol·

_,.!be

lows;

BILL SlEWART. of Racine,
atlite ia OVA a-ball
blly dteil'
dam&amp; tbc- 1930s and 1940s.
die • ••t IIIIi LL
He . I Bat &lt;':rimm, Don "Piz.
nc ... • ...... . zlc'"
WOlfe lild cdrn in die busiIIIISS end o(. dlis orpnizalion. He
is
.
.
.
.
p!K:e
as.. Molt IIIF · asa.eia
am we c:mpkJyed 11 Ohio Univeror 111e p1a h
t11cy a!oc:adt siiJ in 1be pw• I asi:~~g depenmenL
have ....Jed-are systeas iJJ BiD 3lso • n1 lbe O.U. athletic
e•istCW'T' u.y seaQcr -e us
dtpa- ill die blllSJ*IUIIiOII d
are 4 · • i1. h•
• ia lllti: ..-. .nfiiUI!s -s athletic ajuipmenl
dlcy llawe pmspacd . , .. niiJ' 1lis -quire I job in 'VIeW of' the
ber of players involved. He
insuriJic
ltaldly
iDa
dleU ruts. Under •
also e·· I die Crow r-ily when
-w awe 10 .-c • •J 5011, Ric:k Crow was elected
toPIICD
..t dis .JadF Bill Stewm 11at1 grca inOucould drift _,of dtaa- of.

011t ot:

IN .

a$

co"*"""

£"! opk: WOllld
4in:aly

no.

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lOa Jcia:w pial. . . Oill . . .
alilailalcw••
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file seaill&amp;, niwna£ ate« S' 10

laMa--,. ......
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eli wa 'I

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odD:'s;;.:r
·
DAFF ANDERSON, of Middlea bicacl

ror alnag

time.
We finl ~ wbile playing in the
Aaericall Legi011 Lillie League
B bel P''IJMD Dalf'also played
I£IIII1S at Miff p llll Hi&amp;la Si:ltOol.
Aliatt a JCI!S 1J11D Dill' llad Clllcu vl die pCIIIIde. Sarpry was.
pori. -

,...
, . . . . . . . . . dlel!llltt
IWO JC1!S lte
10 line m:ov-

acd.. Dariilc die last four yan d
ltis life:. lite caccr Je [II I I tal IIIII
k Ia
illeiD
ltiam' end. ,Daff
was a liow r llld also qune a
...... 11te . . . . plaJed wilb bim
• '
cwa •· •• Dlllf called

*

v

- Aaotlter
* whilefrielld,
IIIB..

died··-·
::&amp;:'

jj!al

HUGH

.a

Pf~ ... .tt
aae
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~e~er-:::ti!:'
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'IIIey Ji:ai' r • •••
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&lt;'AWpMics, ....... ale lkatlstt
api" ~ pea
iathiiiJbc.-

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M

CUS1ER.
~1 Died itt 1919 His
. . • • ... He lOOt id*h•

beae6ts. 11le bigu iBauc:e

·=

C::,.mhis his dforls
'The

caa
Crowf~
. .

a

major lift ill dtc a tt I
we
Ass• i ••• ~A
a' w 290
·()(JPJDIQciaJI tal* ,
c palif - l a s iawe wdS tbt:ullllf*=l,J.S..p! I ' •
Sc:vuallflliiiAA s Prg bels
.. - iacllldiag llelwpt•it•
Life,~ -s OGNA -llawe
quit dtc jj!UII£I, ahowl 'zicc ...
die ia:atJIS of bqe ·
as _,
be very difl'- .._ diose of
smaller iasaus ill die s
· :&amp;
woddoftal*a&amp;idaa
HIAA. itt w!ta- • as a

i

By The Associated Press
·
Today is Sunday, Dec. 20, the 355th day of 1992. There are 11 days
left in the year.
..
.
Today's Highlight in HisiOry:
On Dec. 20, 1803, the Loui.W. Purchase was formally transfeared from
France to the Unired States during caemonies ill New Orleans. 'The United Slates had paid the French about $15 million for the territory, whiCh
effectively doubled the size of the COIDitry.
On this date:
In 1790, the fust succeslful cotton mill in the United States bepn
operating at J'awtuckct, R.I.
In 1820, Missouri imposed a bachelor tax on unmarried 111111 between
tlte ages of21 and 50. The tax: $1 a year.
In
1860, South Carolina
became the' first\ state to secede from the
•
!
Umon.

lll years in GallijJolis,

Aftl:r n

"fee-fcw-suric:e" acdicille is N'Oftll Carolina. He bas been
wm t • I*'* I I &amp;s cu• .._ inoMd ia .-y chun:h lild civic
would - - . a • •• ie " • ill·a.y auivities IIIII it wiD be difficuk to
m• a !J.cM&gt;baiuiSJa:a
acpi;Ke AI. Good luck AI, in your

Under this concept the government would have several roles.
Some governmental entity in eacb
state would assure - through a
price control mechanism, possibly
even direct price negotiat!OD that the cooperatives would JNiy
be competitive and could not them·
selves fix prices. Mcanwhlle, a
Nalionai.Health Board in WashiJic·
ton would standardize ·all IICCOWil·
ipg .and paperwork,. ensure that
state agencies were correctly regulaling, and offer subsidy pa~
to cooperatives with inordtnately
large numbers of sick people.
Although there are still myriad.
details to be worked out, most or
the vast national health care indus·
try believes this is the essence of
the Clinton plan. Thus, furious
jockeying for position is going on.
pitting intereSt group against inter·
est group as each seeks a beuer
position for its members:
Private hospitals like the managed-care idea. Under such a sys. tem they would likely prospel'.
Physicians' organizations are
generally waiting 10 see the fine
details of the Clinton prop.osal,
although tltey are not automaUcaDy
opposed to a national m~~ed·
care systelll so long as trachuonal

Today in history

--

pea\ef statement

II'

........... _

0

1wida

-.
., a. Clllb. 0..,. a • · I) , . _ .tiller I waald
little 1aac1t widl ltim two or three

I

= ....

l!lttla'-

..... wcet.
'•

u.:a -

employed

bJ die u.s. Gowsw in .the Soil

t

\ gest sa\e 0
Th\S \s ou~· B g b" and see
. e·ar - Stop .;r
\eC·
.,_., the Y .
nd best se
·
Buy Now
the b\ggest aTr\·State ~rea. ,
t\on \n the tu\\ - we are '
our \~ts are
\v\ng you
con\l'n\tt'd to .:,e dea\ \n , .
the bt!st pos~• the t\me to . .
the area. NoW as trade and . .·•
SALE
...:.u·'I· Bring your ··h· you. We ..
" .
bOOk Wh. .
•
payment \\ tnese unats ·
LUMINA EURO
must se
1993.
!Jo&lt;kl2lll
before Jan. 1'
letaM...................................$18, 1
I

&amp;dt .

Sciver Pac
Our

GM Rebate... .................:::..!.&amp;
Buy Now

1992
.. LUMINA A.P.V.

1!111',. 102

Ful~

(Regular &amp; Euro'sJ ,

1993 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME

SILVERADO

Rotti .... ~........................... Sl 9,043 ltocl 121ll SPlClll !DillON.
Saver Pat Dh&lt;M! .................-750 Ful~ loaded, no hM1Ies, no
011 laltate..................:......... -2,393
GM Ralxfe............................-500 no ieba1e.

M.S.l.P.

BUY NOW

~..klfM942

lio&lt;kmiMI
V·l,lir, !Mo., der10 w/-h,
door loeb ~ 111011.

92

SALE

s9992

SALE

IT'S AEURO SEDAN/

v~.

$

.

WAS 512,995

WAS S11,99S
SALE

Prlcod Tq SOli Now.•

WAS$5995

10,492

SALES

I

Will BE HERE 10
FIGURE TH~ BEST
RATE AND TERMS
AVAILABLE..

E

.

J •

WAS$3995

4292

SALE

WAS$8995

$

2992

SALE

'

•

'

•nertiHtl prices.

21,000m!llt.

air, auto., kN:alll'ldl.

'

*T•x &amp; Title •re not indutled 1n

CONVERSION VAN

BliCk, one locll owner, new tlrH,

WAS$8995

.!.\IE IIGI

$12,995

STI)(ll!lll
llll, 1-1, a~ OliO., !., atilt.

ALL·CARS MUSJ 1:0 IEFORE JAN. 1, 199 • OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN• .
.
PRICES'IN THIS AD GOOD·THRU DEC. 31, 1992
CALL US TOLL F~EE 1·800·521·0084

,.-·
·
-·
9992

-

12,972

t\"

HOLIDAY

CAVALIERS, CORSICA$;
IEIEniS, GEO PIIZIIS, ·
. OLDSMOBILE ClEW TO.
CHOOSE flOat·WE WIU NOT
IE UNDERSOLD. PICK ON.
lOW - THI PIICIIS IIGHTI

1\t ... · - u llodol. ... as1ol, AM/'ll

5

OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY - SPECIALLY PRICED FOR

CHEVROLET LUMIIIAS

1992 CHEV. CAVALIER
. CONVERnBLE

Loaded.
•
THIS SALE ONLY

Buy Now

·

4•

$

•

o:~D~;;;~~i~~.·~ ~ ~: : : :~:~:.~:.·:~~~sil Ea1.~:.~~.~~. . .

!Joe~ 12631

Air, auto., on. owner.

!Jock 12311

ltocU25SI

Sale ........................... $27
Our DiS&lt;ount ................ - .,~,

WAS$11,995

•'• 1992 OLDS 88
· . ROYALE LS.

GM .... ,,. .......................,...... ::;~1
BUY NOV{ FOR

...

conservation service. Later he was increase in the death rate of your, .
also the Vetenins Administration friends and acquaintances of your
officer for this county for several age.
All the people named herein
Y~RANKLIN RIZER passed touched my life in some degree.
away a few weeks ago. He had can- Their presence made life more
cer (leukemia). I had known him enjoyable for the writer. Soon you
for many years when he served on begin to notice the grim reaper will : .
the Village Council for Pomeroy. be looking at you shortly and yo11 ;:
During most of that lime I was vii- often wonder what and when some- ·
!age solicitor. Franklin should be thing is going to happen to you. :
giv~ excellent marts for his work Rupe, I am rounding third base,' ·
as a villaae councilman. ·
beading for home, (compliments of
Flllllkfin .had cancer since 1969 Joe ~uxhalt.) It won't be long
and no one knew about his condi· because time flies and it is later ·
tion except his family. This was than you tltink.
: ..
one of the best kept secrets of all
A great deal has been reported'
lime. According to Wanda Rizer, on the 25tlt anniversary or the Silhis wife, Franklin did take regular ver Bridge collapsing. I arrived at , ·
treaunents for his leukemia. His the scene about 6:30 p.. m., and .·
condition worsened during the past offered 10 assist i.n any way I could:
two yars. E~ in spite of this m. My offer was turned down. I have .;
ness, Franklin brouglit his crane to never seen as much chaos as
my house in Syra~use and lifted occurred that night. There .were 46
Freddie tlte Frog (6' monument} individuals wtio died in this catas· '
offthegroundsothebasccouldbe trophe. One of them was BUS
re!luill llreddie now stands high in LEE, the former general manager ·
Syracuse due to
of the Gallipolis Galliansl He also·
Franklin's efforts. Franklin was ·chauffeured Mrs. 0.0. Mcintyre in
also a lieutenant colonel in tlte US her limousine. I attended his funerAir Force and participated in two al service and was very sad about
wars as a pilot.
his deatlt. Bus was always a gentle·
Also passing away within the man and a good baseball player.
past , few weeks was CLERO
The story of Loren Miller was
BAKER. Clero was the father of also newsworthy. 'He had crossed
Edison and John Baker, (deceased) the bridge to the Ohio side and had
and Mary Hindy. Clero was 97 stopped on the bridge approach: :,
yan of age when he died. He was Louise Hauldren was !he drivlt of
a former rail roader ·and was tlte car. Then he heard a crash. He :
emt~ by the B &amp; 0 Railroad. ran up the bridge a short distance
In
years he worked at Baker when he saw the concrete deck ·
Furniture in Middleport with his breaking up. He hurried back to the
two sons,Jolm and Edison. He was carlseconds before tlte bridge col·
well respected in his community lapsed. It v.:as a'close call.
and was very popular in Middle·
Rupe, I appreciate the Ohio Valport. .
ley Publishing Company inviting
FLORENCE . SMITH, of me to its Christmas party on
Pomeroy. died October 13, this December ,14. The performance by •
~· She was a sntdent in Pomeroy
the Waha111a students in ·!heir panHIJII Scbool the 11111e time as the tomime rendition of the singing or. •
wneer. t have been well acquainted Chrisunas carols was outstanding.' •
for DilDY years with her and her Also, the awards giv~ to Margaret -.
family. Florenoe worked for seter· Lehew, 35 years and Charlene :
ai years for lbe U.S. Government. HQeflich, 25 years, were a high· , •
and lived in Russia for several light or tlte evening. Special thanks ;
yars. She ~ to Pomeroy (or should be made to Katie Crow for . ,
her retirement. She built a new transporting me to !his.event Alsb
home and bad lived in it a short to .Bob &amp;Dd Charlene Hoeflich for
tit1le pior to her illness and de8th. listenin&amp; 10 my strange utterings.
Flolencc wu a cancer viCtim. She Rupe, if you are not confused by
bad a bout with cancer several now, wait until next week.
years 110, but tater the cancer
Carry on.
1eaJaed. Site -very respected
Editor'• note • Long·tlme
tfi!CIDIIIer 6imC1 lid she tauallt a Attorney Fred W. Crow is the .
liridP class • the Senior citizens.
contributor or a weekly column
R• • as you can sec ~e h,ave . for The Sunday Times·Sentlnel,
named six individuals who have · Readers wlsblnl to applaud, crlt·
p1•d away in the put few monlhl lclu or comment on any subject
whom I knew personally lind (exeepl religion or ~olltlcs) are ,
regarded as frieqds. As one.grows encQuraged to wrate to Mr.
old.e r you begin to notii:e the Crow, In care or this newspaper.

8vyNow

Buy Now

$5992

.,.

Rounding third base and heading home

are.

~nterest

from Kazakhstan and one from
Turkmenistan. Both 'have been
..., ~"«I
hired 11 buge salaries to work in the
~J ,61
!mining and~ department in
the Atomic Enetgy Organization in
Teheran.
.
M
. i
#.;.a
Rafsanjani's personal instruc+
-~'
lions reft...o:nw the whole effort are
detailed in a confi~tial memoran•--·s Revolutionary Guard dum following a high-level Iranian
Cups. die mUiwy outfit that is - meeting in early 1990. It was
·faaatic:allllll political than essential, Rilfsanjlll!i ordered, that
tile regular military, is in the van· security for the "great plan" be
gard m die •~~:lear effort. Their mainlllined by sponsoring "several
~ wfinc 011 nucar pupams for parallel but•independent and self·
6c b• ·• year axlin&amp; lasl ~h sufficient sysaems~ including the
•wed OUl a tDCR lhan S800 mil· necessary lahomtones, workshops,
Iino- at least four times lbe $200 and faCtories, to be built in differaaiDiot lbe GUild spent 011 nuclear ent parts of Iran."
.
tbc ~e•ious year.
'The following six locations are
lbfsanjloi s "great secret plan" i~tifutbly pan of !his plan, which
.. , k bcaYily lln the cuupaation features deliberate decenttalization
olfitac:iga-rJe;rexptJb. Allcast from Teheran:
.
·
SC • I cxpeab from ~ Near Isfahan -:- !hu nuclear
• • - fnll!l lilt: United StaleS complex actually ts ttself a S!llall
- -...e bla Ptind by~ lllllllah's city m the~ foot1tills. A. small
re~. Dozeal of Cbanese and nuclear ~C~~Ctor ts J)t!lsently ~n use
R - c;;qtCib 1re Jqlllarly lr!IV· thCJ:~, but Teheran tS workmg ~o
dial 10 aad from lraa. These obtam a larger one. Part of the
upcns are .e11gagcd .ia nuclear complex's buildings are under
a 1 _ ~ traiiWIC ~ nuclear . ~age covenng, and part luis
spen•hsrs, su~mg lbe con- been built underground.
Sllitlioa: of fariliJies lllld seuing up
Northeast of Gargan - One of
- ·

P"'

n··· ' .._

Debate over burning .of
;
hazardous
waste comes to boil .
.

upiea.

oili:a. .-.,(

the regime's largest nuclear sites is
located near tbe shores of the
Caspian Sea. In the first half of
1992. $80 million was allotted to
this project, which C311s for "use of
atomic energy for peaceful purposes." But ,it will provide Iran witlt
the biggest nuclear reactor, a major
step toward obtaining an Iranian- ·
produced nuclear bomb. 'Fhis pro ' .
)ect is supervised by Mansour Hai' .
Azim, deputy head of Iran's Atomic Energy""""
. " ization.
-:•pa•
Darkho~in - The Revolution- .
ary Guard Corps' nucle11r unit at •
• Darkhovin miliUtry base is busy
building a large nuclear center to '
be equipped with two 300- •
megawatt nuclear · reactors.
Referred · to as the· ''Kharoun-,
Plan," this project is progressing •
'essentially under !he supervision ot
· Chinese experts, of whom at least
four are stationed at Darkhovin.
The complex was the primary •
objective ofRafsanjani's tt:ip to .
China last September.
Karaj - similar to tlte Isfahan
site, !his project is also as big as a
JQwnship or a small city. The facili·
ties are disguised as a complete
medical and hospital complex and
large buildings and warehous~ are
being planned. All the stru~t.ures •
are destgned to withsland a military
assault. Both Chinese and Russian
experts are involved in various
stages of this project
Mo'alem Kelaveh - This is a
Revolutionary Guards Corps com·
plex known as the "Alamout
Plan." The Corpt forcibly relocat·
ed the inhabitants of many villages
in the northern areas of Qaz vin
(I 20 kilometers northwest of
Teheran) in order to build nuclear
facilities in this region.
Yazd- One of tlte most recent· ·
iy built nuclear site~ is located in
the vicinity or Yazd m centrai Ir.m ·
near a ·uranium mine. Little is
known about this complex, which ·
has been built ·aver tlte last tltree
years.
.
Of course, no nuclear weapons .
production program is complete .
without a concurrent program to ·
produce tlte missiles to deliver tlte
warheads. The site Qf Iran's ballis· .
lie missile production facilities is .
. located near Bandar Abbas on tlte .
strait of Hormuz, and is supervised .
l1Y a special Guard Corps unit.
Jack Anderson and Michael ·'
Blns(ein are writers lor United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•

CHRISTMAS TIME!

$

7092

WAS$5995
SALE

$

4292

1985
K·BWER 414

Mull: IM ·1r.1a one.

WAS$3495

l987 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

1992 CHEV. WMINA 4 DR.
Y-1, air, aulo., AMJFM lltr110.
Stook IPM1!3t.

WAS $101995
I

•

SALE

1984

. .
9 292

$

RANGER
PKKUP .

WAS$4995

WAS$ :~LE $3992
5

11

GEO PRIZMS

$7490

1S" CHEVROLET

LUMINAS IN STOCK
STARTlNGAT

!)
• -·. , I

I"'"..

.. -

\

e

GEO

•

V-6, air, auto. .
OYER 20 TO CHOOSE fROM.

SALE

W•-•-. -~-• ••-~

"12" 1992

CHEVROLET

$

1987 OLDSMOBILE CJERA 4
DR:__ 1 ••

WAS $19115

Fu!lyoqulppod. .

Y-1, power wtndowe, two-tone paint.

1992 CHEVROLET
CORSI ,~a L",J,

OLDSMOBILE

$9292

1

1987 CHEY. CAMARO
Loco! to·ldo. Y-1, o!t, outo. Exconont ·

lcQIOWDOf, only 42,000 m!lot,

flciO&lt;ywononly.

lno!de 6 oul.

I

.WAS$8995·
SALE

$.

WAS$9995

WAS$139115

SUPREME
Loclll o.or, lOlly dtiNn. only 23,000
rail.., IJCII'IIhlrp,lntkll A out.

WAS$9295

WAS$69115
SALE

S~LE $12,292.

1991 CHEY. CAPRICE 4 DR•
oldorlor, locolly ownod. Wo odd

V-6, •lr. auto, mileage IIi 'ltfY low.

$
SALE ·7992

WAS .$89115

BROUGHAM

Onil tocal owner, two·tone btlc:Wiilwer,
llnu.

$39115

condhlon.

'$ 99·" WAS$9995 $8592
4 lli
SALE

SUPREME 2
Only 14,000 mNoo, !lilly oqulppod.

$8092

.

749 2

1 Pou., 0110 10011 ownO&lt;, power
wl,_. "oc:lco.
.

SALE

1987 CHEV.IC·BLAZER

stook M'Mt88 Air, olllo.,IJC)Od ml!oo,

SALE

$

9892

.-+------------1992 CHEV. METRO

0n1 c. .ful ow,..,, new Otdl tNdl,
fully oqu!J&gt;Pod.

WAS $9995

$11,9115

CONYERnBLE
11110, tow m!lol. "2"1N STOCK.

IW,IS $8995

�ha• AI Sundly nm11

s.nun~~

Pomeroy Mlddllpan OaHipolla, Ott Point Plstllnt.

December 20, 15

wv

IJ!Ieember 20, 1892

Patrol reports six accidents ~
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia- Friday evenins when it struck' a
Meip Putt of tbe Swe Hlabway deer on S.R. 160 in Springfield
Pllrill illvulipted lbl ICClUnts T01F h'p ill Oallia Coualy.
beh: na Fridaj lftemaae IIIII SatMaOerite E. Robie, 41, 8637
urday JIIC)nliaa. Five of die IICCI- S.R. 11), Bidwell, wil 1011dlbound
dents wwe
wbell .... cuck die deer, tillina il
A Racine man waa ciled for No lnjurlea were reponed. fbe
~ blcldnr followlna a two- vehicle was rowed froril the scene.
v~.,..,kleiltJ:riday evening on
Swe Route 338 in Suuon TownAn Oak Hill woman's vehicle
ship, Meils County..
.
sustained llaht damage Cllly SaturAccoriling to the report, Gary day momiDJ wben illll'UCk a deet
M. Jolmson, 39, 47474 S.R. 338, on U.S. 35 m Springfield Township
Racine, was blcking a lniCtor-trail- in Gallia County.
er Into a private drive on the north
Melissa L. Roush, 26, 1696
side o£ S.R. 338 when a westbound Centerpoint ROid, Oat Hill; was
vehicle, d.riven by Aman.da J. westbound when she struck the
Brewer, 23, 14682 S.Ry SS4, Bid- · deer, which then left the icene. No
weD, struck lhe vehicle's trailer.
Injuries were repoi10d. ·The vehicle
· No injuries were reported. was driven frotri the scene.
Brewer's vehicle sustained heavy,
disabling cla!nage and was towed
A Gallipolis woman's vehicle
from the scene. The ~ lire hold· sustained light damage Friday
er on Johnson's vehicle sustained evening when it struck a deer on
moderate damage.
S.R.. 160 in Springtleld Township
· In Gallia County.
·
A Bidwell woman's vehicle susTeresa L. Combs, 23, 1433
tained heavy, disabling damage Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, was

deer.,.,...,.

__

HOW DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
LOOKED .50 YEARS AGO - This picture from
1!142 shows tllree of Gallipolis' more popular
stores • Kerr Druas, Luckolf's and Haskins-

Tanner. By C..-utmas or 1!142, some 1,200 Gal·
lians ·were servin&amp; their country in tbe armed
services. San!ll eve11 arrived that y~ by a miUtary bi-plane.
'

andshoutwi~joyastheir~y~en-

counter fll'Stglimpse of the brilliantly

lighted
Manyto ~idents
the
city
havetree.
learned
listen for of
sound
of this early morning summons to
Christmas worship jllld feel' a sense
of security and comf~ ~the cenwry old custom pcmsts.
Harry Hum wrote lhc above para- .
graph for 'I1I!l Gallipolis Daily Tribune jUSJ before Cluisunas in ~~2.
ThatJ?ecember.thde were.8 million
American JDe11 m the semce. I .200
of whom came from ~allia COillity.
The war effort was ge11111g betlet and
so~theeconomy.Unemployment
~y was ~-7 pcrceDt, lhe low-

'

dlt

1&gt; Whitehouse man's vehic~· ­
sustained li&amp;ht damage Friday•;
evening when it struclc a cleer 011 •·
U.S, 33 in Bedford Township ln·r
Meigs County.
·
.
Allan A. Kilkka, 42, 59SS WiJd'J ..
wood Lane, Whjiehouse, wss wcsW
bound when he struck the deet;"
which then left the scene. No
injuries wue reported. Tbe vehiCfe"
was driven from the scene.
•"•

•

•

•

•

' • .,J

Gold Coins

Uhivenlty in EastSttoudsburg, Pa.
5atuiday• •· ~'= ·" · f . . .
CommCI.n,c~ment was hel~ at
Koehler F,~llf.I!CJus.e. Hayes 15 a
gralluate of ~~Jiigh Scppol.
·
·

Fire report
MIDDLEPORT _ The Middleport Fire Department answered a
total of 71 calls durin_g November.
The total included eight fire and
rescue calls and 63 emergency
medical calls. Two structure fires
were included, one at 575 .South
Front and lhe other at 550 Broadway, Middleport.

Police report
MlDDUPORT - Six accidents
were investigated and 47 arrests
made
November,
to the during
Middleport
Policeaccording
Depart·
ment report.
Parking meter collections
totaled $494 while merchant police
collections were $71. A total of
192 parking tickets were issued
during the month. The two police
cruisers drove a total of 5,622
·miles using 397.6 gallons of gasor the
lndi
me,
repon
cates.

GALLIPOLIS - James R. Gillenwater ll, 21, 112 Island Ave.,
Kanauga. was arrested by lhe Stale Highway Pattol Friday morning
for driving under the Influence.

Man reports theft
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man reported someone stole the
spare tire cover from his 1985 Ford Bronco Friday night.
R..C. Patterson, 13 112 Pine Street, Gallipolis, told Gallipolis
po~ his vehic!e was parked outside the Old Brick T11vem, 234
Third Ave., Gallipolis, at !he time of the !heft.

Post office reports theft
GALLIPOLIS - An employee of !he Gallipolis Post Office, Second Avenue, Gallipolis, filed a theft c0111plaint with the Gallipolis
PoliCe DepanmenL
According to !he report, three orange parking cones were
removed from the palkin~ lot sometime between Wednesday after.
noon and Thwsday mommg.

Police issue citation
GALLIPOLIS - GallipoliS police cited Joseph P. Drummond, 61,
RL I Gallipolis, Saturday moming for speeding.

Vandalism reported
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
Sawrday that !he department lOOk a complaint from Clrolyn Collins
of Pomefl)y, who stated that the hood of her 1!187 Nilsan 'had been
damaged while parked atlhe Meigs High School parkin&amp; lot on Friday.

co·St of·reg·J•o· nal sys·te·m'
wool'd top $25 m·.~•••·on

stacui~onfrodemgreetheinEasc:ardiact
S'trourehabdsburilig'.

Womeldorff-Thomas
Coin- ·
cidenlally
they werefor49¢.
also selling
hammers for 49¢. The movies 1hlt
Christmas Included at the ColOny
·'For~ and My Gal" starring JUIIY
3arlanll,and'TwilightOnTheTrail"
at lhe Gallipolis Theatre starring Bill
Bqyd and Andy Clyde.
. A Victoryboard,listingtbenames .
of Gallians In the service was unveiled but only 90 people showed up
forthededicstionlluetocold wealher.
. There was some controversy over
abingogamesponsoredbylheBusinessandProfessionaiWomen'sClub~
TherewasarevivalinJII!JSRiUatthe
Baptisl Chuich that December and
the evangelist Dr.Joseph Hakes, fatherofthechun:b'spastorEdHalces,
cOndemned bingo games vigorously.
The money did, '--·ev-. go •or a

Man jailed for D.U.I.

Employment statistics
POMEROY - Meigs County
was one of 13 counties in Ohio
wjth' an October unemployment
rate exceeding 10 pen:ent.
According 'to a repon released
this week, Meigs County's unem·
ployment stood at 11.7, up two·
tenths of one percent over the
September figures, and up four
pmnts over the October, 1991
repon.
The report shows a lsbor fon:e
· of 8,300 with 1,000 unemployed.
Gallia County's jobI~ rate was
8.8 percent in October, up slightly
from the September figure of 8.5
and up 1.6 percent from a year
ago.
.;• .

CINCINNA.n (A,P) ..:.. A lrlftic
management system will cost $25
million in the Cincinnati area to
comply with federal cl&amp;n air stan·
dards for autoniobile emissions.
The computerized Regional
Traffic Management System,
which could be operating by 1996,
is designed to malce interstate high·
way more efficient. It would reduce
'air pollution tiy cutting down the
number of velticles idling In traffic
jams, said Jim Duane, executive
director of the Ohio-KentuckyIndiana Regional Council 6f Gov· ·
ernments.
The federal ·govemment w.ould
pay 90 percent of the project's east .
·and Ohio and Kentucky would pick
up the rest,' said Duane. That would
not include an armual $4.1 million
operating expense, he said.
The sfrstem would monitor 85
miles of reeway onlnterstares· 471,
71, 75 and 1275 in Ohio, Kenlllcky
and Indiana,
Video
caR) eras,
radar,
microwave detectors and ultrasonic
beams placed along the highway
would message electronic highway
signs to wam drivc;rs of congestion
and suggest alternate routes.
The system also would alert
radio staUOOs, cable television sys·
terns and tow truck operators of
wrecks and stalled cars.
But the main goal would be
reducing air polluiion . Fewer
clogged .roads would mean fewer
cars idling in traffic, spewing
hydrocarbor:s. carbon monoxide
and nitrogen oxide, planners reason.
The Cincinnati region must
.meet air quality standards of the
1990 Clean Air Act b)' November
1996 or face punishment, including
·loss of fedelal money.
"If we cail improve the speeds
and lessen congestion, then we can
improve air quality," said Marshall
Slagle, auistant director of the
Northern Kentucky Area Planning
.Commission. "We've got to do
something. We can· put in more
transit and more buses, but we

~~~~~~~~-

.Robins!Jn jailed in North CizroUna
POMEROY - David M. Robinson of Racine is being held in the
Cluu!Jam COIJ!Ity, N.C. Jail on an Ohio Governor's Wamnt as a
fug1uve: He will have an exbadilion heamig on January, 13.
Sheriff James M. Soolsby said !hat Robinson was indicled In
October by lhe Meigs County Onn!Jury on two felony counts of
theft, three counts of foraery and ooe count of receiving stolen

· EMS units answer caUs

PO~OY - Unita or Meip Emerpnc:y Services~ lhe
following caDs: FRIDAY, 10:42 a.m., RaciDe lqDid .to Pary Run
Road, Gerald Moore to Pleuant Valley Hospital; 2:34 p m
Pomeroy unit to Big Wheel, Brittany ChsjJman to Holzer ~
Center; 3:12p.m., Rutland squad to Main Street, Kathleen Tillis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 7:47 p.m., Racine squad to State
Route 338, Amanda Brewer and Tony Smith, ueated not transport-

..

'

BALLED AND BURLAPPED

Christmas Trees
, White Pin•, He111lock, Spruce
Plant Outside JAffer c•rlstnaas

'•
'I,

t

TAWNEY JEWELERS

SMELTZER NURSERY ,;~
,1/'

624 JICISOI PilE

•"

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nj

.

~----------------------------~~~

~·~·-·-::,:~~.,,,.,&amp;.,,lit-. : ~

I... POOR
BOYS CARS and •..
POOR BOYS TIRES
I

.: would like to extend a lleartfelf
thanks to our
valued
custo111ers, aild
the lord
bless you with a very

•••Y
••Y

~··

'

n auf

422 SECOND AYE.

.

15
,.

•••

.

', I

REMINGTON 870 EXPRESS
·12 GA. DEER GUN

$209°0

jiy SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
• . AP Military Writer
.
·~ASHINGTON - The United
StateS on Friday warned Iraq not to
attack Kurds in northern Iraq,
ac~using the lraq.is of increasing
harassment agamst U.N. relief
operations by bombings and other
types of intimidation.
'The ·Iraqi military has been
au'empting to impede relief convdys traveling from Turkey into
Iraqi regions inhabited by' the
Klll'ds. said Assistant Secretary of
. State Edward P. Djerejian.
,"Recently, Iraqi interference
has taken on a particularly disturbing dimensi011," he said.
'"There has been over the last
month a paUern of sabotage against
~ef convoy vehicles. This week,
Ill least 15 trucks were damaged by
lltlmbs, putting the Turkish drivers
a( mortal risk,'' he said.
•: "Eyewitness accounts of these
a(tacks leave no doubt that the
lialnbs were attached by Iraqi security personnel at checkpoints the
lr)lcks must pass,'' Djerejian told
~rters.

OTHER 870 EXPRESSES TO CHOOSE FROM

BlUM LUMBER COMPANY

Ambassador Nizar Hamdoun 'said the end of Operation Desen Storm
!here were maneuvers in !he north in February- 1991 when Saddam
but no activities against the Kurds.
suppressed a Kurdish uprising and
The protection zone for the forced thousands of Kurds to flee
Kurds was ·established following . to the Turkish border.

'

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•16 channels ·Lockout •10 Bands ·Review

. '11995

•

', :·we lalce this matter very seri-

-

ill

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

~ly. We are consulting with our

• ~~'"''
',~,,,~
.,. ::--,,_,_, "'''I
...

.

decisiQn on whether Infinity has for comment Friday. Infinity is
By KIM L MILLS
the Mjuisite characrer to hold com- expected to 8llllesl the fine In court.
. AIIOCilted Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The Federal mission licenses, there are simply · Greater Mcdill Inc. of East
Communications Commission 100 many outStanding questions on Brunswick, N.J., which owns the
announced a record $600,000 fme this core issue for me to approve Los Angeles station KLSX-FM that
Friday against the company that the assignment applications with· .carries Stern's show, reacted angrily. "It's an outrageous amount of
employs radio "shock jock" out conditions, •' Sikes wrote.
money. The FCC has now equaled
He and several of the other con\·
Howard Stem, but decided not to
block !he corporatiori's.purchase of missioners wrote· that !hey did not Ho.ward Stem's ·outrageousness
three more radio stations.
.
wish to injure Cook Inlet, a mlnori· with this fine," said Tom MilewsThe decision· capped weeks of ty-owned company based in Alas· ki, spokesman for Greater Media,
TlJe FCC warned that any future
wavering over how to punish Infin- ka. .
violations
by lnfmity ·"will result
"Cook Inlet had nothing to do
ity Broadcasting Corp. of New
in
further
enforcement action,"
York for Stern's on-air behavior, with today's enforcement action
which
could
include additional ,
which the FCC has deemed legally a~ainsl Infinity," wrcite Commisfmes
or
a
license
revocation hearincleeenL
.
siOner Ervm S. Duggan. "To !he
ing.
.
·The commission voted 5-0 to contrary, Couk Inlet is one of !he
Quello
said
two
other
compositive
stories
In
radioa
mlnorfine liifinity rather than ~ubject !he
•ty-controlled
company
that
-has
plaints
about~'s
~
have
company to a hearing on'whelher it
should lose its license, according to · built a suc~ssful group of stations been filed wi?.!_~ssion and
will be reviewed. '
·
Maureen Peratino, an FCC across !he country."
·
The fines announc.ed Fridly
spokeswoman,
In an interview, Quello said
. Commissioner James H. Quello Infinity had written !he FCC saying covered a series of prov-uns aired
said in a statement that be found that Stem's prograin would not be last year on three Infm1ty stations:
the size of the fine was "amply broadcast on the three Cook Inlet Stern 's home station of WXRK·
FM in New York; WYSP-FM in
warranted in view of an apparent stations if the sale were allowed.
Infinity President Mel Karmazin Philadelphia; and WJFK-FM in the
pattern of indecent broadcasts on
this show which Infinity pro· did not return sev~ral phone cans Washington area.
BRIDGES AND BELLS - ~ Emanuel, left, and Mary Mel
duces."
·.
·
French, co-executive directors of the presidential inaugural, and
Stern
asks
celebrity
guests
about
~arry Tbom8SOII, general co-cllatrman, met with reporters Friday
!heir sex lives, talks about his own
In· ArliDgtoa, Va., tn dlsaus tile "Brldge5 and Bells" tbeme of the
sex fantasies and sometimes invites .
.inaugural. ''Bridges ud Bells" will have President-elect Clinton
women to come to his studio and
walk across the M•orlill Bridge tn the ArHngton National Cemedisrobe,
then describes it over the
tery after attencllq a miiSical celebration. (AP) ·
.
air.
T~e FCC issued a warning to
·'
Stem in 1987 to avoid certain sexu·
just for t!'e next tour years but for . limit should be placed on the size al innuendos and double entendres.
som~ penod beyon~ that
.
of deductions companies can take
FCC defmes Indecent mare. D1scussmg var1ous deficll·cut- for suPlJlying health insurance to rialThe
as "language that describes in ,
Illig p~posals: .
. .
their employees. Some have pro- terms patently offensive as mea'. Chnton. sa1d !hal rrusmg ~e posed capping those tax writeoffs sured by contempOrary community
Soc1al ~ecunty reur~ent age - IS as a way of forcing companies to standards ... sexual or excretory
somethmg that defimtely has to be economize on the coverage plans activities or otgans."
looked at.': He said, "With the. they offer employes. "There has io
The commission voted 4-1 to
fas.rest growmg group or the popu- be some personal responsibility in allow
Infinity to purchase three
lauon over 80, by the turn of the this health-care system we set up," radio stations
$ I 00 million
century, the average person could Clinton said.
· from Cook InletforRadio
Partners,
literally spend 20 years in retire• On the question of estare taxes, Peratino said. The Cook Inlet stamenL"
Clinton said he would consider tions are in Boston, Chi~ago and
The ProgreSSive Policy Institute, raising revenue by ending the tax Atlanta.
a Washmgton think tank that has exemption for capital gains on
FCC Chairman Alfred Sikes
12 GA DEER (20" AS)
#5565
supplied a number of advisers to assets held when a person dies.
said he voted against allowing sale
Clinton's campaign, has suggested
Under current law, the amount
the Cook Inlet stations because
that the new administration save that a deceased person's assets of
he was not convinced that the
$60 billion over the ne.xt two such as property or stocks have license transfers would serve the
decades by raising the reurement g3ined in value since !heir purchase
c %~:t
age of 65 to 66 by the year 2002 is not subject to the capital gains publii'c
1
"A
and to 67 by the year 2008 for tax and a person's heirs have to pay
. those n:ceivingfull benefi!l!: .
· the capital gains tax only on appre• Clinton saJd he was mclmed ciation that occurs after the date of
to agree" with those arguing tbat a death.

Iraqi harassment draws .warning

can't do it fast enough."
The Kentucky Trartsportation
Cabinet has committed $4.3 mil·
lion and is being asked to kick in
$1.9 million more . .The Ohio
Department of Transportation will
be asked for $19.1 milllon in suue
and federal money.
The money would come from
federal and Slate uixes on gasoline
and other motor fuels, which goes
into a trust fund earmarked fot
transportation projects, Duane said.

And A
Safe·fl Bapn New Year
'

-

By MARTIN CRUTSlNGER
AP Economics Writer
, WASHING)'ON - Presid~nt·
elect Clinton is weighing a wide
range of tough deficit-cutting messiJ[eS including pushing back the
Social Security retirement age,
~said Friday.
.
, s:;linton transition spokesman
George Stephanopoulos stressed
thai the proposals were just being
swpied and that Clinton had made
no final decisions. He said !he presic!tont-elect was determined to make
a 5\gnificanl effort.
"The important thing is that we
have a strong lon¥·term deficit
reduction package,' Stephanopoulos said.
·
.
,Clinton indicated in an interview Friday in The Wall Strut
Journal !hat he was also considering taxing capitalJ!ains when ape~­
son dies and limitmg the siZe of tax
writeoffs companies can take for
providing health insurance for their
employees.
·
He balked at the idea of raising
gasoline taxes as much as 15 cents
p~r gallon, calling that "exces·
sive.••
Several participants at l!is
National Economic Conference this
w~ had put forward the idea of
nlisin11 the gasoline tax to lower the
deficit and Clinton seemed to
ef!lbrace the suggestion, linking it
with his proposal to provide middle
class tax breaks.
, During lhe conference, the deteriorating outlook for the budget
~ficit received particular scrutiny.
Jobn P. White, who drew up Ross
Perot's budget plan, said new estirir&amp;tes had Increased the siul of the
likely deficit through 1996 to $300
billion more than the estimates
&lt;:;linton used to devel&lt;ip his budget
plan last summer.
:
:In the newspaper interview.
Clinton said, "Whatever we do in
the short run, we need a multi-year
progmm !hat simultaneously brings
da,wn the deficit credibly and
in'oreases our investment.' '
· Jle said that 'lhe economic
reyival program he presents
Cpngress m January will be accom. pabied by a deficit reduction pro~ that will malce proj~s not

FCC fines shock jock Stern's
employer for 'indecent' shows

•

MERRY CJIBISTMAS ..•. ·=!•

jHoptl'ty.

r

588 in Green Township in Oatlia
''"·
.County.
Willie Srcele, Jr.. 27, 3817 S~: ~
588, Gallipolis, was westboun~
when he struck the deer, wllicllt
then left the scene. No injuri~•
' were reponed. The vehicle wis
driven from the scene.
,.,:;,

often:J-·

• .f:S_..-..,...._
. ,.
..-...----LOcaJ Brle

•

A G•ll.rcis man's vehicle SUI·

lained liltdamage Friday afternoon.when It struck a deer qn S.R.

Some of the top songs of 1942 featured both Christmas music and
'.;;
reflecreqAmericabeingatwar. There patriotic songs. A series of commu"I criticize 'any delay on~§'
was: "PraiseTheLordandPass The nityslngswereheldln 1942andi943
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- OffiHospilal spokeswoman Sue Patsomething
like this is found ou~ •
Ammunition", "Rosie The Riveter", to help boost h0111e morale. ·
cials at the Veterans Affairs Medi- terson said that while il isn't known
said
Sen.
John
Glenn, D-Ohio. ,,
"When The Lights Go On Again", ·.: ..LastlY Harry Hum observed an- cal Center are defending the way whether the patients contracted the
Legionnaire's
Disease is arj;'
.
"We'IIMeetAgain"and "This Is The · olherphenomenon that was timeleSs they handled cases _P.f Legion- disease while at the hospital, bacteacute
pneum011ia
characterlUd
11Y:
Anny Mr. Jones".
·
J'ust like the rlnmng of the early beDs naires' Disease despite criticism by ria that cause the disease were
.,...
union officials and lawmakers.
detected in the water on Dee. 4. flu-like symptoms. Hospilal oftr.~
The Chrislnlas season began ill at Paint Creek Baptise "Sabbalh
The hospital has come under tu:e She said the work force was for- cials say lhe disease is
lateNovemberforGallipolilanSwhen School atlendancC is perking up. It for delaying disclosure that offi- mally notified of that on Dec. IS.
cult to detect, but is easily
.
3,000gatheredattheGallipolislevee always does'at near approach 10 the cials had detected bacteria that
However, Ms, Patterson.said all with antibiotics when it is clerec ;:
to watch Santa Claus arrive In a bi- Christmastideas youngsters envision cause the disease in the water sup- of the people who may have been
plane. The "joUy .old elf" had some U'eats of candies, fruils, nuts, and · · plY, of a nine-story hospital lOwer at risk were 10111 right away, includdifficultY getting frOiil the plane as . possible participation In lhe various hoosing 300 patients.
ing clinical workers involved in
thewarerwastoodeepandthewinds programs inc:identiO the holiday. It
Rf.ll!l!ey Cranford, president of direct patient care.
100 strong to maneuver the plane. A has long been, an axi0111 that Saara
Loc8l 2209 of the American Feder•'Our feeling was the people
For
plank bridge had to be built from the Claus is more kindly disposed to- ation of Government Employees, · who needed to know knew," she
aircrafL Once on land, SL Nick wanl'gogd'liltleboysandgirlslhan saidPridayhefeelsthehospitalput said. "It's not that it was a secret.
Investment
boardedafue!I'Uckandwasrakento lheotherklnd."
its workers at risk of being infect- We bad it under conlrol We were
and
the bandstand in the park where he
Juaa Sands Is a special c:orre- ed. The union represents abou~ taking care of iL''
gave a speech 10 the children. Santa · IIJOIIlkntortheSua~nmes-Sea- . 1, 700 of the hospital's 2,000
Reps. David Hobson, R·Ohio,
Jewelry ·.
asked for a show of hands ofllow tillel. His ad~ Is. 65 WWow emf!~ees.
lind Tony HaD, 0-Qhio, have cril,i· ·
manyyounRSterShadbrothcnorother Drive, Springboro OH 45066
Wednesday, hospilal offi· cized !he hospital's delay In notifY- '
closerelativeslnthearmedservices
cials announced that two recent ins the employees. Jlobson has·
and nearly every hand went up.
patients had died of Legionnaires' asked Anthony Prlncip1, acting secSome of the shopping bargains
.
Disease and that a third had been retary of the U.S. Department of
that year Included: men's shirts at Hayes graduates
d;i&amp;gnosed with the bacterial infec· Veterans ,.Affairs, to look into how
Pavis-Shuler for $1.98 women's ..
uon..
,
the sltuauon was handled.
coatsatKnight'sfor$8,~braceletat
POMEROY ,DamnE Ha
.
Hixson's for $8.50 and a fruit ca1ce at Pomeroy ,&lt;recei~ed his m~tet:~f
.
.
.
·

est!thadbeensmce1929. Thegross
nstionaJproductgrew~27perc:ent
that~· the greatest mcrease ever.
Inflation was ~bout 4.7 pen:enl
Unemplo)'lllel!t m 1929, before the
Great Depres
_ SIOll was 3.2 perce.nL It
reached high 01'25
1933
•ouw ~
"
a
mat.
.
.
~t
m
.
.
gond
cause
•
to
provide
eyeglasses
b did not
e u mto smgle digtts and IODSillectom"'s
...ntchll- "'orlndi'.,....
,, ut.til1941
un
.
dren. Ctu;istmas programs that year
_.._

ed.

northbound when she BilliCk IJP.
deer, killin&amp;l\. No injuries welt!
reponed, Tbe vellicle was drivee
from the lceiiC.
J.:c

VA officials defe~d handling ~~~
cases of Legionnaires' disease

Celebrating Christmas during World War II
By JAMES SANDS
SpeCial Correspo~~dlllt
GALLIPOUS-'"Ibebelfrybell·
In Paint c-t. Bap1ist Chun:h will
again 'rlngouuhegloryofthemom',
on Christmas Day, just as has been
the custom for
more than a cenUKy. Worshipers
gatherase.lyas5
a.m. to sing songs
of praise, utter
prayers of cleep
devotion and distribute gifts of
sweeuneats to lhe children. Persons
pn:sent.nowlonggrowngrayinHis
service, will ngJJ their childhood
years when they were summoned by
tbe -:If-~ bell rl&gt; enjoy the early
mommg Christmas 5eiV1CC, and the
reverence engendered remained
throughouttheday.Despitethehour,
itisamerrythrongtogalheraboutthe
portals of the veneqsble edifice to
exchangegreetingsandgoodwishes,
and !he little ones clap their bands

,

.

Retirement
age boost
under study

wv

OH-Polnt

aWes, Including the Turks, and at
Iii!! U.N. on how to meet this challepge," he said.
,;The Iraqis "understand the serio~ consequences that would result
if lhey were to move against the
Kurds,'' Djerejian said.
·The actions come as military
intelligei:ce re~rts have noted an
upswing in acuvity among Saddam
Hussein's militar/ forces in the
we.'tcrn sectors o northern Iraq,
· sai!l a senior Pentagon official.
!l'he Iraqis have been "shifting
sorfle of their assets around within
various military units," the offic~
saib on condition of anonymity.
fhe official denied there has
be~'! a massing· of forces in the
no~ or that any new forces have
been brought into the region.
He said their number remains
about 2S percent of Saddam 's overall military power. The reasons
beliind the unit moves are unclear,
the'Official said.
~addam could be readying an
att4c;k ,against the Kurds, or could
also be bulking up some units to
prepare for a large-scale military
excR:ise, said the official, who has
access to intelligen&lt;;e reports.
~'It's hard for us to know exact·
ly what he's getting ready to do,
but•we are watching it closely,"
·the.official said.
Th~ are enough military units
in the region to overrun .Kurdish
setdements, a senior military offi •
cer noted. .
·
The allied air umbrella that has
prolecled the Kurds from Saddam 's
army continues, the officer said.
There have been no recent viola-r
tions by the Iraqis of the "no-fly"
~ in either northern or soulhem
Iraq, the officer said.
AI the United Nations, Iraqi

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MIDDLEPORT

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KANAUGA, OHIO
Sale• - Service

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Open Mon.-Fri. 9-8
Sat. 9-6

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December 20, 1192

PICII A8 Sunday nm• SenUnel

CONGRATULATIONS!-

•

-

'

•

•

.~Along

the Rive~

,6allia County 1992: The Year in Review
!

.

.

The waters of Consolidation
River were not always as placid
and free-flowing, as !bey were~
first week of cJ""· however.
·After a nUIDber of levies and
schools, Hanllao
· bond issues were Jejcic;ted by vot·
ers, the financially-strapped Galan end Sept. 14 wben
lla County Local School Board
£reek High School ""1"
• felt it had no Other choice but tD
..fresh coats of black and silver . consolldau: in on!er 10 cut costs.
.glint and le1WDed River vaney
The announcement wu not
tfigh School - officially opened · received well. WbedJer because
,!Jsdoorsforthefirstdayofclas". ofold·schOolloyaltiesorconcem
~ The old 61.2SO square feet for the students' safety and wen., ,fluilding, designed to ,hold 350 being, many residentS the area
~.had.togotluouglialittle . were firmly opposed to consolijt~odeling last summer in prepa- dation.
,
·
.'t)"on of tbe 630-plus expected
One· such concemied parent,
'studentS.
·
F. Ste~nSanders,filedsuit1une
""' The opening day of the school 8 with the Galli a County COI1lt of
•
was delayed by two weeks Common Pleas, asking the court
'While the school awaited the de- for an injunction to stop consoliUvery of two modular classroom dation:
~which Would supply an
The Save Our Schools Assoldditional12 rooms 10 handle the elation, consisting mostly of par.
fnflux of an almost-double stu· ents residing in the southern end
:~population.
of !hi: county,later joined Sand·
After a week of orientation, ers as a party in !be suit.
·
began S!:pt; 14 still awaitS.O.S. members were conjngtheamvalofoneofthemodu· cemed about ,subjecting their
Shuftling students around tD ~ldren tD a daily bils trip of one
-:cover the modular deficit created to two- hours to RVHS,located at
.J few minor headaches, but things the northern end of the county.
'fOgressed pretty smoothly.
ThevillageofCrownCityw~

- Rajanlnath 'Gbarekban, president of the Seeurit Council and ambassador to India, at tbe U.N.
frida , Tbe three discussed tbe situation in
· ·I.uerzegovina. (AP)
8 osn•

of

Fighting dogs U.N. mediator's
mission to end Bosnian strife
Milosevic and delivered a "very
forceful " message on behalf of
European governments demanding
respect for human rights in Bosnia.
Milosevic is widely viewed as a
maj'or backer of the Serb campaigns in Croatia and Bosma that
have killed tens of thousands of
people.
·
He faces an election challenge
today from Milan Panic, a Serbborn U.S. millionaire who has
called for Serb compromises to end
Bosnia's war. The outcome of the
poll may be decisive in deterrninmg whether the war spreads to
other parts of former Yugoslavia
At the United Nations on Friday , the 179-nation General
Assembly approved a resolution
urging the Security _Council ~top
its arm's embargo agamst Bosn18.
The General Assembly - voting 102-0, with 57 abstentions -

also called on the council to consider enforcing a no-fly zone over
Bosnia and setting up a war crimes
uibunal. The resolutio.n is not binding.
In Sarajevo, Bosnian radio said
the Serbs were bringing tankS and
other equipment frorn;Banja Luka
in the west to Gradacac, near an ·
important couidor to the capital.
The last 419 Muslim mmates
vacated the notorious Manjaca
prison cam{J in northwestern
Bosnia on Fnday, leaving behind
the unheated cattle sheds, mines
and barbed-wire fences that provoked an international outcry
against their Serbian jailers.
Children jeered and armed Serbian fighters spat at the eight-bus
convoy .as the prisoners slowly
made their way toward Croatia and
a new existence as refugees.

l.

!t ·

atiSses

:fF·

.

OSCAR W. CLARKE, M.D.
President

UP to install scrubbers at Gavin Plant

' .i

also Uklng lddipooal measures
to teeptheircbildren fJOm ~met·
ing cross-County. Village .epre-_
sentativc Oary · Woodall spoke
before the board at tnany meetIngs. JeqUe8lin8 that the Yi11qe
be lnlllfemd tD the Fairland
School District in Lawrence
County.''
Thtbolrd,concemedovertaX
clollm which would be 1ost by
approving the release, eventually
turned down the Jesoluticn
'IblnU tD apetition circulated
in the villqe, the question of
wbedlcr tD release Crown City •
fniiD the Oallia County Local
School District' will be put tD !be '
voters of the district during the
next general election.
At the end of August, a decision handed down by visiting ·
Melgs County Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill signaled the rapidly·
approaching end tD active opposition of the consolidation issue.
Crow dismissed S.O.S.'s injunction request. stating the coun
does not have power to overrule
decision of a schoOl board unless
thereisprooflhattheboardabused
its power.
"(l)t Is settled beyond dispute
that it is the law in Ohio thal
courts have no authority to interfere in decisions of boards of

education which they are author·
ized to make except where such
decisions are unlawful or constitute an abuse of discretion.'' the

Holzer Medical Center Medical Staff
As

',

The school board has asked
!be state depanment ofediJ!:atiOll
10 conduct a feasibility SIUdy, one
of. the options of,whlcll is the
consolidation of !be county and
city schools.

Transportation

.•

'

To be commended for your "exemplary service to the
Society and to ' Internal Medicine, and fot
contributions to the understanding of the- role of
socioeconomics in the practice of medicine" clearly
describes your dedication to the 'medical profession
_you so admirably serve.

a

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·Artist's
conception of the .Gavin . Plant with flue-gas scrubbers installed. (Courtesy AEP) ·
'"'4" .
••

fter battling environmentalistS and large
industrial interests, American Electric
Po'olver cleaJ'Icd hurdles by the U.S. Anny C01ps
j)f~~~,~~=and the Public Utilities Commis~
and is now in the process ofinstallscrubbers at the Gavin Plant in Cheshiie.
ne cteciiSlon tD install the scrubbers, which

You:r leadership of our Medical Staff and service to
the Holzer Medical Center since 1950, caring for your
patients, giving of your time and talent to the Gallia
County, Ohio State and· American Medical
Associations, and at present serving as Chairman of
the AMA Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs,
clearlr reflects your ' ongoing commitment as a
physician and champi~n of high ethical standards, ·
professionalism and accountability.
.

.

.

New Gallipo.'.!.:lis•- aeaJ~cat1~a

Mines.
.
Even now, an industrial coalition is challenging PUCO' s decision allowing AEP tD install the
Scrubbers, saying higher industrial electric rates
will cost even more Ohio jobs.

'

Again, CONGRATULATIONS, and thank you for
your forty-two years of service to your patients
through the Holzer Clinic and the Holzer Medical
Center. ·
I

.

Holzer Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees
Administrative Staff and Employees
of the Holzer Medical Center
The new Glllllpoll

R~t

Locks were

dedicated In a ceremony Oct. 10 at the locks site

. ''

' c

(I

will enable AEP to use high-sulfur Ohio coal,
saved hundreds of jobs in the nearby Meigs

.S.' 35 Bypass opened )une 3

· LMS SATELLITE

=:....-:::==.:=.......;

Route 850.
In October, officials and dig- .
nitaries dedicated !be new $224 .
million Gallipolis Replacement ·
Locks.
The new locks will replace the .
current, out-dated Gallipolis
locks,longconsideredahlndrance ·
to river traffic.
On the minus side of the equation, the CSX railroad tracks trpin
Ewington to Gallipolis were :
pulled up and removed during the ,
spring and summer months.
•
Tbefullll'emayholdevenmon: ·
chanaes to transpOnation in Gal- ·
lia County. Talk of lengthening ,
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airpon in Gallipolis, extending the _
4-lane U.S. 35 through Ma5on ·
County, W.Va., and replacing the ·
Shadle Bridge in Point Pleasant, .
W.Va., may open up the county ,
for even more industrial develop- . ·
ment.
. Galli a County Sheriff Dennis ,
Salisburywithdrewfromthesher- 1
iff's race after the Ohio Supreme
Court decided even incumbent :
sheriffsmustmeet state-mandated
experience requirements.
Veteran.GallipolisPolice SergeaDt James D. Taylor, who won '
· the race in November, was ap- ·
pointed by county Republicans to
run for sheriff instead of Salis-

Transportation. or the ·lack
thereof, played heavily in Gallia
County news during 1992.
On the plus side, with a snip of
a ribbon, the long-awaited U.S.
35 bypass was opelled for traffic
Jone 3 and the equally longawaitednewOallipolis locks were
officially dedicated Oct. 10.
The 4-lane U.S. 35 bypass re- bucy.
placed art older two-lane high·
way.After!bebypasswasopened,the old highway was renamed
By Jim Freeman and
County Road 35, to Rodney, and
Kevin Pinson
State Route 588 to Rio Grande.
Rodney Pike became Gallia
Times-Sentinel Staff
County's newest state highway
after it was redesignated as Sw.

We wish we could have been present in Honolulu,
Hawaii, when. you were recognized nationally for this
impressive and singular honor by your peers.

. ... ,

decision said.
Attorney James Casey, who
was represeniing !be association,
asked the judge to reconsider, but
to no avail. S.O.S., !be only gr6up
representing those opposed to
consolidation. chose not to appeal the decision.
Back in the present. education
is once again getting the dirty end
of the sticlt with the state's budget
cuts. The county schools are fac-.

ye&amp;IS.

..

.All of us at the Holzer Medical Center are so proud of
you, Dr. Cl~ke!! To be named "Distinguished
Internist of 1992" by the American Society of Internal
Medicine not only . brings great honor to you
· personally, but also to t~e Hospital you serve as
President of our Medical Staff.

.

River V~yi High Sdtool. Here, Charla Evans,
director of Instruction, shows scbool board
members Joblr FeUure and Roger Burke designs
for the r;chool's·new l~o-

ing a financial situation which
· reqUired them ·to take out yet
another loan· the third in as many

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Gallia COUI!ty Local Schools' high school stu- .
dents discarded old traditions al!d formed l!ew
ones after tbe coul!tY districts' four high schools
were consolidated intb one, larger school -

"Distinguished Internist of 1992~'

Israel ignores
Council's ire
UNITED NATIONS (AP) The Secutity Council has con demned Israel's deportation of
more than 400 Palestinians and
demanded their return from the
Lebanese no-man' s-land where
they have been stranded for two
days.
· '
Although Security·Council resolutions are considered legally binding, Israel has routinely ignored
previous condemnations, considermg them interference in its internal
affairs. Israel dismissed Friday's
resolution as biased.
The resolution was passed after
hours of unsuccessful argument by
the United States !hat it should also
condemn the terrorist killings of
Israeli soldiers and police that
~the deportation.
•' The condemnation of the
Security Council is one-sided,"
Israeli Ambassador Gad Yaacobi
said after the meeting . "It has
ignored the violent measures of
Islamic fundamentalist organizations ... It has ignored the kidnapping and murders of innocent
Israelis ... and the efforts to murder
the peace process." ~ .
As a permanent member of the
Security Council, the United Swes
could have vetoed the resolution.
But; although it is lsmel' s closest
ally, it has con~emned p~evious ,
smaller deportations and 1s especially upset that the la.test one has
interfered with the Mideast peace
talb.
The talb, which began last year,
are one of the Bush Administration •s most signifiCant foreign poli·
cy accomplishments. Tbe Palestini- ·
an delegation said Friday it would
boycott further talks until th~
deporteeS are returned.
The resolution "suongl y con·
demns the action !liken by Israel,
the occupying power, to deport
· hundreds of Palestinian civibans,
· and expresses·its flllll opposition to
any such dcpatation by Israel.''
'

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•

eated debates and
lcpl ..lllac:onceminj the conaolldldon
of the four OaW•

By NEIL MacFARQUJIAR
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Henegovina - U.N. mediator Lord .Owen
anived Friday on a mission to persuade Bosnian Serbs to surrender
captured territory and offer Muslims "an ·honomble senlement" to
the civil war.
.
Mortar and small•arms ftre were
beard as Owen's jet touched down
in the Bosnian capital. Samjevo is
under an eight-mondt Serbian siege
and has been without elecuicity,
running water, telephones or heat
for the past 15 days.
Bosnian President Alija Izetbe·
govic said he agreed to meet with
Serb leaders- after refusing to sit
with them since August - to get
them to abandon their goal of a
separate Serb republic in Bosnia.
Whether the. meetings of senior
Serb, Croat and Muslim military
commanders would have any affect
was unknown. Previous tallcs have
failed.
The Serbs want to partition
Bosnian lands into ethnic departments.
Izetbegovic told reporters his
Croat allies, who had leaned
towards !he Serb idea, had accepted
a U.N. plan for a single Bosnia
with increased autonomy for different ethnic communities.
Bosnian leader Radovan
Karadzic on Thursday offered to
stop fighting CIJris~as Day, but
made no offer to withdraw from
Serb-captured lands. His promises
were wearily rejected by Muslim
leaders.
")Ne've experienced that many
times before," said Ejub Ganic, a
member of the Bosnian presidency.
"There is nothing really s11rious
from the other side."
In Belgrade, ·S'(o'edish· Foreign
Minister Margaretha af Ugglas met
with Serbian President Slobodan

Section

\School consolidation top Ga11ia ·County story

·•

.
SEC~ COl!JIICIL .,.... Cyrus Vance, left,
spec:lal Untted Nab011~ envoy to t~e Secretary
General on Yugoslavta, spoke wtth ~erbert
Okun, center, deputy envoy, and Chtnmaya

~im~s- ~entiatel

SOUTHSIDE, WV • (304) 675-4851
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In llopelt, W.Va. The new locks will repl1~e
older loeb 1M Ll d nearby.

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1192

PomerOy-Middleport GaiUpolla. OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Watchdogs question fine
WASHINGTON (AP) - First S1ern himself,'' Fint Amendment
Amendment w~doas are qucs- lawyer Floyd Abrams said Friday.
tionina the propec rep~ .Rile "It only c:ould have come herause
of the Federal Commun1cauons of the watered-down protec:tion
Commission arter it levied a currently afforded radio and televi$600,000 fine oo the comp~my that . sion.••
employs Howard Slern, radio's No.
On Friday, the FCC announced
I badmouth.
a ~ 5600,000 fiDe for indecen•'This order could not have been cy against Infinity Broadcasting
issued against a newspaper or a Corp., the company that employs
.
record manufacturer or Howard SUIU.

i.•

NEW YORK (AP) - Grammys, Tonys .and Oscars were nice,
but composer Marvin Hamlisch

·~ -

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-s v..~ Wamnty ·

:•

Tawney Studio

efree Batterfes
efreeCase
Film .

....•

424 S.C.III Avt.. .G '••
446-1615 .

-Free

..

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· (AP)
GREEN BAy w 15
•
• picket- a
Police offu:crs say they'll
T
perf ormance h y rapper Ice- ,
whose sopg "Cop Killer" angellld
law enforcement agencies nation'wide.
.
"I certainly support the officers
in protesting any performer who
advocates bodily harm 10 a police
officer," Brown County Sheriff.
elect Mike Donart said.
Donart and Green Bay Assi~rant
Police Chief Tom Hinz said officers who march outside the concen
hall Dec. 29 will have ui do so out
of unifOI'IR on their own time and
without w~pons.
••A$ long as it's done profes- .
sionally and doesn't infringe_on the
rixbts of the ~le who attend, it's
ali right with us, ' Hinz said 1llurs·
day.
.
Police, record retailers and Vice
President Dan Quayle ·criticized
lee-T earu!'Z this year for the song,
laced with obscenities, that boasts
lyrics such as: "I'm 'bout to dust
'some cops off." ·
Ice-T agreed in July 10 pull the
song from the "Body Count•'
album and issue it as a single.

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•Auto Focus
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PEITAIIQ ZOOM
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TERRA SCHOONOVER and GREGORY FIELDS

--

· Schoonover - Fields
.

,."''·

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·Wolfe - Hill

"~ -

RACINE. Evelyn Hachmeister,
P Lenora, Kan., announces the
C engagement and approaching mar~ riage of bet daughter, Diane Kay
~ · Wolfe, 10 Heath Ryan Hill, son of
. •; Don Richard and Mary Hill.•
•• Rae'

"'

me.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles A. Schoonovef announce
t!le engagement of their daughter,

,.

NEW MEMBERS - Four new board mem-

bers were wek:omect to tbe Big Brothers/Big Sis·

Terra Dawn, to Gregory Stephen
Fields. .
.
Wedding plans arc mcomplete.

ters Oraani:utlon durina the group's annual

Decorating contest scheduled

Occasion.

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·-·

::. . Jenkins-Bumette

You will hav(l over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose
from. We have a large selection of the latest styles
and complimentary accessories lor this spec~al ·
occasion.

'"'

Q•aUty For•alwear at
Affonla..le Prices

.

. llillll!l . . .
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II you are planning a weddin~, thenyou should
come sae us at Haskins-Tanner.

·'. New arrival

"Ill 'I&amp;:
'111111111 "

business adminislralion. He is selfCHESHIRE - The Cheshire Roush Lane• .
employed.
Home
Decorating contest will be
Categories include door ov~r­
The open church wedding will ·
held
Thursday,
Dec.
22
from
6•7
all;
religious; mo~t original; .and
be an event of Jan. 2, 1993 at 2:30
·
p.m.
Homes
will
be
judged
in
the
•
entry
way.
p.m. at the Racine United
Cheshue,
Watson
The
contest
Village
of
Methodist Church.
Grover Road, Rivezside Drive, and
the Cheshire

,.
The bride-elect is employed
-· with Kenneth Uu, CPA, Pomeroy,
, as a scaflaccounrant Hill is a 1991
:: graduate of the University of Rio
.: Orandc with a bachelor's degree in
••
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to picket rapper s

Christmas Celebrations ·
The joy of lhc yuledde ICUOI1 is captumlla lldonble new
PIU!CIOUS MOMENTS ~IJ;. hu • ClriiiiiiCIIJS.
Elida ~ cdllioa ornament Is bandcnftcd Ia llllrlc:ale
. dctallto lrim your tree 1D style.

GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR MORE

8

•'I should have been happy
when •A Chorus Line' came out,
but a had review of the music was
devastating. I hadn't yet realized
the main journey is 10 fmd happi •
ness, not to find success,'' Ham·
lischHesa:od.und success with Oscars
•'
for "The Way We Were" and
"The Sting," Tony awards for "A
~horus_ Line" and fOIJ! G~ammys
(mcluding best !!Cw ari!SO m 19~4.
He found happmess wuh h1s w1fe

--

Will DON (AP) - Dame Bar·
bara Cartland says the' troubled
marri.age of her step-granddaughter, Princess Diana, could l!e
blamed on nerves. , ·
The 91-ycar-old romance novelist, whose daughter. Raine. is
Diana •s stepmother; said lite disclosure this year. that Dian&amp;..~uf­
fered from bulimia may be a clue
10 her split with Prince Charlea.

FREE MERCHANDISE

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lor next summer 11111112 Low
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......... 1:30'1:01; . . . . . t:•2:ta

SHIP U.P.S. DAIL

meeting: Pldured are, (I tor): Jerry Sparkman,
Lyda Hudsoa, BiD Medley, and Charles Hu~r,
board president. Not pietured: Steve Mace. ,

~~~----~~--~~~

New Year's
Eve ,
Bowling
Party

25% OFF OUR ENTIRE SELECTION·
OF NEW-AND PRE-OWNED JEWELRY.
•
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THURS., DEC. 31
10 p.m.· 1 a.m.
$12/person
$20/couple

WEDDING RINGS
DINNER RINGS
NECKLACES
PENDANTS

' Includes BowJing,
Shoes and Snack .
Table

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

leservllfhtas M~st Be

OPEN:

Now through
Christmas
9:qo a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS ·PAWN SBOP

SKYLINE
LANES

(jOJBpoGs.
Store .

-- IN WEDDING PARTY

of three years.
·
·
They were brought togclber by
their housel!;eepers, and Ramliscb
said he proposed marriage the fltSl
time they met
"I never was this happy,'' the
composer said.

'

; HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Clay
·and Tish Hudson of Huntington,
'' w.va .• announce the birth of their
,!; daughter, Caroline Olivia, on Nov.
';;; 17 at Women and Children's Hos- ·
~• pita!, Charleston, W.Va. ,
.
·;· She weighed 7 f!Ounds, 3
1ounces, l!Dd was 19 inches long.
; CaroiHje i~ the granddaughter of
,, Olive Venz Miller and the late
· Loren F. Miller of Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are Chester
. and June Hudson of Gallipolis.
The new arrivl!l was welcomed
·; ])ome by her brother, Kyle
Matthew Clay Hudson.

Stop by today 10 take a loot at lhae fitn~psr!c . ormmrms
and our selection of Encaco PRBCIOUS MOMENTS gif11
for Cluistmu.
.

"

wasn't hapPy until he ~ot a Terre.
Hamlisch, in th1s Sunday ' s
Parade m'lgll-rinc, said his insccuri·
ties kept hilll from enJ' oying life
T
u nlair~l. h1s 1989 marriage 10 erre

GALLIPOLIS,OH. 4563.1

430 SECOND AVE.
614·446·0840
-~

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Pomeroy Mlddlepori-G8lllpolls, OH Point PI-nt, wv

8undei11mll Senllnll

,

GVFD fire fighters to distribute
.'Child Finder' location markers
.
QALLIPOLIS - Through the
generosity of several local individuals, service clubs and organizations, the Gallipolis Volunteu Fire
Department recently purchased
"Cbild Fmdcr" location markers.
The markers, according to•fue
fighter Glen Davis, are hung in a
child's bedroom window to alert
ftre fighters of the possible location
of a child in tbe event of a fire
emergency in the lton!e.

and ftre fighter Jim Saunders, who
made·it possible for the department
to offer the "Child Finder" to 1he
public flee of ~e.
To receive a ' Child Finder,"
contact any member of the GVFD.
"Residents are asked not to caU
the ftre station," said Davis. ''That
phone is for emergencies Ol)ly."
For more information contact

window or a small child. In lhe event a fire
breaks out in a home the responding fll'e Iicht•
ers can locate tbe trapped child. (Tribune photo
by Kris Cochran)
·

CHILD PINDER • G•Ripolil wldteer rare .
f'lpter Glm DMiiiiMdl- "'iid FiDders" IO
studeats at ~ Elmealllry dlliUg a recent
fire safety clnlaut~tiDa at tile schooL Tile
brf&amp;lrt . . . . . . . . U'e .... ed Ill tbe bedroom

A LESSON IN FIRE SAFETY - To the
amusemeat of studellts at Green Elementary,
Gallipolis Fire Depar~~Rat Battalioa Cbief Jila
Sbato, (left), pats llis buker gear oa dlll'illc a
fire safety les50II at the scllool. Shato and fire

ans' memorial in the city's Eden
Parle. They hope to award the first
scholarship in Apr\11994, the l Otb
anniversary of the !'lemorial's dedication.
Carl SIOUI. national treasurer o(

.

..-.

RIO GRANDE - Christmas
carol sing, 3 p.m . at Tyn Rhos.
Refreshments will be served.

EVERGREEN - Trinil)l United
Methodist Church Christmas progmm,7p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Fust Cburch of

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NORTHUP - Northup Baptist
Church Cbris101as program, 6:30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gary Warner to
preach at Mina Cbapel Church on
Neighborhood Road at7 p.m ..

Legion Auxiliary #161 regular
meeting at the home of Margie
Deckard .at 6:30 p.m. $3 gift
exchange..

.

(lttms jor tilt comm11nlty cartndar ap[H(Il two days prior to an
tvtnt. Tltty miiSt be rtct/vtd by

tht Gallipolis DaUy Trlb11nt In

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Next
time you receive a sales pitch by
telephone from a retordcd voice,
gmb a pencil and paper. It could be
wort!) $500 10 $1,500 in damages.
Recorded telemarketing calls
will be against fed!lml .Jaw starting
Sunday, unl~ss the recipient has
previously given the company permission to caU.
Solicitations from non-profit

TOYS ·Robia Williams stars as Lesll~ Zev!J, ,tbe eccentric son
of a toy manufacturer in the Twentieth Century Fox film ''Toys,"
directed by Barry Levinsoo. (© Twent.ieth Century Fox. All rights
reserved.)

.,

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cations Commission devised to
enforce the law are not as strict as
its prime sponsor Sen. Larry
Pressler, R-S.l;l., wanted.

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STOCKING STUFFERS
1 oz. Pul'll Silver
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OF

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NEW UNIFORM- The· Gallia Academy
High School band is currently raising mooey for

New band uniforms introduced

' ; 1._·.

JOHN ATHAN MARTIN@)'· .

'"c,::
• ' I • • I:

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WISHULE SILK

LOUSES

GALLIPOLIS -The community got a sneak preview of the new
Gallia Academy High School band
uniform commJUee. The presentation was made by Jan Betz, committee chairman, Kitty Griffith,
booster president, and.Rodney Tolliver, band director.
The uniform will be ready for
lhe 199~ marching season.
The Caribbean Cruise tickets

''.,• , ...

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~It Certainly Does Make A Difference
Where You Buy Your Diamonds!
Diamond purche- are dlfflcultl No metter whlll dlamon.d you
find - enother jeweler Mime to have the eame elze for I••·
Diamond• era prlcad baed on not only elze b~ al.o purity cut
end color. We Ill Acquleltlone aek YQ~ to eompal'll our new dl•
monde with enyone'e. You will •• the ' dlllerence - Your
Dlemond Doller will buy you more at Acqu)eltlone. We price
' •ch diamond .with 11 eugg•tad ratall price end our price Compere ue julll once- You will - the Nvlng~~l You ~.nnot
, alford to ehop anywhere elllel

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NEW YORK (AP} - Tatum
O'Nesl will play convicted killer
Lawrencia "Bambi" Bembenek in
a TV miniseries, a newspaper
reponed Saturday.
NBC has signed O'Neal to play
the ex-Playboy Club waittess, expolicewom!ID. ex-fugitive al)d exconvict, the Ne.w .Yorlc Post reponed Saturday.
Filming of tbe four-pan miniseries chronicling Bembenek's sensational case is set to begin next
month, the Post said. Bembenek
was convicted in 1981 of killing
her husband's ex-wife, then

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STOREWIDE
OPEN EVENINGS nL 8 !J.M.
SUNDAYt TOS

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~~~~,~·Jf{"".~""~~""~J$~~~
~:
··~
·. r---~· /...-' ........_' .
42 Court Street
&lt;
.
(614) 446~9372
.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .• •

·,,,

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Bakery &amp; Deli

...

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,
lllrk Dillon, 611et M-ver ' Dee Dillon, R.N.,
Wtbll

lltdiclid &amp; PrtvllttlltUrtncH

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We a.dd no preaervatlvea or additives.
We bake from scratch dally.

;: Open: Monday-Frlday'6:00 a.m.-6:30p.m.
~:
Saturday 6:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

446-2206

..... ,.,........,_,_....,..,-:"_"!'11_
,

Ye~r~"

1480 Jeckeon Pille

.

-,

Also, whUe you're shopping stop In for
lunch or call for carry out.
'
Homemade Soups • Dell Sandwiches
.· Salada

Medical Shoppe

":.

•FREE PARIIIG
~(
•FREE 90 DAY FIIWKING

~

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»I

=

HOURS
M Mon.-Frt.

(Tope's

'

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 241-H75

We specialize in:
Deli Trays • Holiday Cakes • Holiday ··
(Cookies • Dinner Rolls &amp; Breads e Pies.:

I

CORNER SECOND AT GRAPE STREET

~

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~19(;, J'E/WE£~

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Dell Sandwiches • Donuts &amp; Cookies
·,.·
Cakes &amp; Pies • Breads &amp; Rolls
:Place your order with us for the holi4ay. :C ·

"St,_l•t ... Are• fer Ofer tS

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fashionable color comliinations, ~·s a terr~ic value! And it's made in

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25TH a JEPFEitSON AVENUE

LYNDA FRALEY. REALTOR, .......
MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR, 441-1101

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S~owaway

ONlY

(POINT PLEASANf MEDICAL CEI.In'ER)

DIAII CAU.AHAH, AULTOA.EUfiC£ NIE.HM, REALTOR,. ...... tlt7
RUTH I MR. REALTOR, 4M-0721

DEBORAH lcni!S, REALTOR,.......,.

....... -

.,·

Ouo Selld Silver

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

VIAGINIAIIITH,IIROICEA,IINQI

.1'

You will want more than just orie pair.

escaped to ·Canada where she w;IS
recaptured.
Be~Jx:neck, 34, w~o has denied
commuung the murder; was
paroled last week after pleading no
contest to a reduced charge of second-degree.murder.
Last montb, the 29-year-old
actress - who won an Oscar at age
10 fo.r "Paper Moon." separated
from her busband, John McEnroe,
33 , after six years of marriage. The
tennis star reportedly was upset
that O'Neal wanted to revive her
film. car~;er. They have three children.

CHRISTMAS
'COINS

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

GAWPOUS, OH•

..•

Bronze/Gold Smooth; Silver/Denim Fabric; Black Pat/Black Smooth;
Purple/Black; Pewter/Black: Gold/Black.

OPEN SUNDAY
1:00-5:00

American

23 LOCUST ST.
. 446·6806
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFHRENCE

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were also available 10 parents. ·This
will be one of the band boosters
major fund iliisers. ·
Proceeds from the cruise will go
towards payment of the new uniforms and also for financing the
band trip to Orlando, fla., and Disney World in Nov. 1993.
Tickets are available by contacting any booster.officer or from Mr.
Tolliver.

... \. 0' Neal to play convicted. killer

leautlfuf Colorsl Willie .,., Lastl

IISIDENTIAl·INVISTMINTS- COMMIROAl- FARMS

422 SECOND AVE.

new uniforms. Jan Betz, left, Kitty Griffith and
Rodney Tolliver display tbe new uniform.

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At thiS time of great rejoicing. we wish
our mony true friends a Merry Christmas.

5

'SEE OUR COMPLETE
LINE
PENTA!
CUllUS

CHESHIRE - Order of the Eastem S1ar 1450 regular meeting 7:30
p.m.

.@00· .

.[f!]@lJ(Wrr® ~orru@Y .

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SIIOP TODAY 101 BEST SELECTION
Over 400 Chains and
Bracelets In Stock!

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POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

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CHESHIRE - Cheshire Home
Decorating contest from 6-7 p.m.

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$28''.

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NOW

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A Christmas program bas been
scheduled for 7:30 tonigbt at
Prospect :Saptist Church in Bidwell.

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groups or political pollsters will
still be allowed under the law, as
will computerized telephone alert
systems notifying people about
community emergencies.
Alid real peOple can continue to
sell by IJhone, but they must obey if
you telf them not to caU again.
The rules the Federal COmmuni-

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FAMJI.Y PRACTICE

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Phone solicitors liable for damages ·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D..

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PINSON

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advanctjorpllblkadon)

· RE~UliRLY $38

Review
By I&lt;EVIH

Before the anti-climactic climu, adhesive as second-band scotch
Williams' dlmcter ·delivers a Pat- tape.
ton-like speech .full of runs and
Toys' only redeemable value is
wordplays 10 a platoon 0 wind·up · its visual appeal, The set designen
toys 6efore sending tbem off to bat· put a lot effort into malcin1 the
tie. the general's war toys. The rou- Zevo Toy Factory a saep iniO Toytine seems a little limp and weak land. The factory is a regular funcompared to William's usual pat- house of interior design witb IIOlid,
ter
comic book colors and well·A climactic battle between the · defined lines. It's like watchilll a
Zevos • toys and the IJCDeral's war cartoon with live-action aetors.
toys is disappointingly one-sided,
Toys should not be on your
with the war toys simply blowing Christmas lisL
away a bunch of old wind-ups !hat
do. no.thing but step into the line of
ftre.
·
With a liUie creativity, the battle
could have been spectacular.
Instead. Leslie and company just
use the ~s as targets to attmct tbe
war toy~; ammunition. Oh what
fun, watching old wind-up toys
being blown apart for ten minutes.
Levinson had a real good idea
cooking, but somewhere along the
line he for~ot to tal&gt;e it off the
stove and 11 boiled over. What
cou.ld've been a good family
Chris1111as movie witb good versus
· bad ideals falls as flat as a souffle
in an earthquake. All we're left
with is a jumble of stmnge ,scenes
loosely held together wi!b a plot as

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CENTENARY - Centenary
Uniled Christian Church Christmas
dinner, 6 p.m. at the Gallia County,.
Senior Citizens Center, State Route
160. Special singing. Bring a covered dish. Everyone welcome.

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Mllllday,Dec.21

EWINGTON

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fighter Gleil Davis, (right) presented a fll'e safety .
video, "Child Finder" markers, ru.l ers, and
emergency phone numbers, and took students
on a tDUr of one or tbe department fire trucks.
(Tribune photo by Kris Cochran)

GALLIPOUS - American CanCHESHIRE - Chris101as pro- cer Society Suppon Group meetgmm at Silvcr RIDI Baptist Onm:h, ing, 2 p.m. at New Life Lutheran
Church, Rllllle 160. For more infor7:30p.m.
mation caU 446-3538, 446-4895, or
446-8657.
GALLIPOLIS - Traditional
Cllristmas Cllnlata, under the direcGALLIPOLlS • Narcotics . ' ·
tion of Ralph Young, at Christ
United Methodist Cburcb at 10:30 Anonymous Just For Today Group
a.m. Following the Cantata, the meeting, 7 p.m. at Grace United
church youtb group will sponsor a Methodist Church. Use Cedar
caroling party 10 nursing bomes Sllllet entrance.
and shut-ins. Pasaor Micbael Smith
Tuesday, Dec. 22
welcomes e·.eryonc.
KANAUGA - Kanauga Fair
GALLIPOLIS - Gary Warner Haven United Methodist Church
will be preaching at Mina Chapel Christmas Bazaar bate sale at
Church, 7 p.m.
Hills, beginning at 9:30a.m.
CROWN CITY - Christmas
musical and drama. ''The Answtr is
ChristmaS." will be presented at the
Crown CiiY Methodist Cburcb at 7.
p.m. The pro~ram is under the
direction of Ttmothy Brumfield,
featuring Sanford Brumfield. director of music and Sharon Petrie, ·
pianisL

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Gallia County calendar of event&amp;
OLD KYGER - Old Kyger
Church will have its annual Ouistmas program Sunday. Services
begin at 7 p.m.

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him. without any enemies to fight,
Toys starring Robin Williams jumps iniO the toy business with
bad all the makings of a good both feet and ruins the child-like
Christmas mo~. Too bad directol' . atmospbere' of tbe factory by trying
Barry Levinson put all his effort ·to instill military practices into the
into making th!l.. ftlm nuevo-weird plant's open!lions.
- i t\le Ze.3"tDansiOn-folds out of a
He even squl$hes the-pbilosobOx liU a page in a pop-up. book) phies of his dead brother under the
and forgot to keep the plot from heel of a com bat boot when be
becolllinllircsome: . · ·
begins production of military war
Kenneth Zevo (Donald O'Con- toys, which is the ftnal stmw that
nor), tbe president of the happiest leads to a showdown between the
toy fac10ry in the land, dies and Zevo children and the general.
leaves his brother, U.S. Army GenThe film is over two bours long
eral Leland Zevo (Michael Gam- and fuU of scenes that should.have
bon), in charge. . been left on the cuaing room floor.
Kenneth Zevo's children, Leslie For. example, there's the general's
(Robin Williallls) and Als8tia (Joan - experimental sea swine - some
Cusack) aren't quite ~ to take kind of mechanical amphibious
over tbe business themselves. assault creature/toy that insists on
Leslie is content to test-pll!y with being a part of a film in which it
the company's practical joke prod· has no business being. Maybe it got
ucts and Alsatia to test-wear.life- lost on its W.y to the set of Alien 4.
size versions of paper doll flishions. .
Robin Williams, usually the
The general, bored With the hyperactive king of improvised
army because the Cold War bas left one-liners, seems restrained.

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God, 109 Garfield, will present a
Cantata "Wbat is Christmas" at 7
p.m.

/lmt)

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Sunday, Dei:. 20
CHESHIRE - River Valley
Christmas concert. 3 p.m. Public
invited.

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Toys
.
Rated PG·l3
*1/2 (o_ul ornve)
Twentieth Century Fox
(Now playln1 al the Sprl"g Valley
&lt;;IIWIID 7. ,Cfrtclc local llsllllgs for

.•

the Vietnam Veterans of America,
said some VVA chapters arQUnd
the country have scl1olarsbip funds,
but he bad not heard of one similar
to the Cincinnati project, which
would benefit future generations. .

Sunday nmes Sentinel Page 85

'Toys' needs strOnger batteries
.

·Vietnam vets establish scholarship program
, CINCINNATI (AP)- Viemam .
veterans · are trying to raise
$300,000 for a scholarship fund to
benefit descendants of those who
served in the war. ·
Earl Corell, one of the Vietnam·'
veterans leading the drive, said Friday the money will go to "whoever
needs it the most - I think need is
importanL"
Corell said the program will
serve veterans' families within SO
miles .of Cincinnad, including
neighboring plirts of Kentucky and
Indiana. There are about 45 ,000
Vietnam veterans in the Cincinnati
area.
The Greater Cincinnati Foundation will administer the grants. The ·
foundation is a public charity,
which includes more than 600
charitable fullds.
The grants could be used for
college and technical school
tuitions. Recipients will be selected
by an advisory committee of Vietpam veterans.
"I think anytime that we can
help young people with their edu:
cation ... that is probably the most
important thing that any of us can
do," said Karen Hoeb, foundation
executive director. "It becomes a
lasting tribute to what~ Vietnamem veterans did for our country."
Corell and Thomas Brush, a former Cincinnati mayor, said they
have talked about the project since
they coUabomted in 1984 to help
raise money fo~ a Yietnam veter-

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Polnl Pl....nt, wv

December 20, 1892

20,1112

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December 20, 1892

December

OH ·Point Pleaunt, WV

Tim• Sentinel

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-----Meigs
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE • Sanl!l Claus will
visit the Syracuse F'ue Department
on Sunday at 2 p.m. to give treats
to the children. The event is sponsored by the fire department and
ladies auxiliary.

.

BECOMING ACQUAJNTED • Juniors at Obio VanetChristian
acquaillted wltb tbe ei~bt new IBM computers recently
: .1DStaUed m tbe computer lab. All Juniors are requh:ed to llike com·• puten and learn DOS JDanagement, WordPerfect Processing and
::;. ·Lotus Spreadsheet applieations. Tbe lab was put together by Joe
::: Peters, computer teacher.

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available ·

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- papers, "Those Who Gave All •
ty Historical Society has three new World War II Soldters of Me1gs
publications available for the County," a book of those killed
Christmas season.
during the war. (Only those solNew publications include "Log diers wh~se p~otographs were pubCabin Reminiscenses," memories hshed will be mcluded m these two
of early pioneers, copied from books.)
newspaper'articles of 1898-1902;
~e boo~ are photo copied and
"World 'War II Soldiers of Meigs ~vadabl~ m soft cover. Further
County," containing over 1,000 mformatton may be obtamecl by
photo's and written material, contactmg the Metgs County
of 1944 Museum at 992-3810.
news-

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· FEA'I]URED ENTERTAINMENT. The
Meigs H~ School Choir, ulider the direction o1
Teresa Davis, wiU be among 17 area high scbool
choirs taking part In WOWK-TV's annual
*: . Christmas presentation,·"1be Sounds or Christ·
~: : mas.~' That presentation will begin at 7 a.m.
, Christmas morning and continue until 12:30
; : : -p.m. The Meigs Choir wiU appear at 11:34 a.m.
; . : Members or the-choir, in no particular order,

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CHOIR &amp; ORCHESTRA

6:00P.M.

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First .Baptist Chur~h .
THIRD &amp; LOCUST"" GALLIPOLIS

what
they do and have made a number of
appearances in the area over the
holiday season. Costuming is
always appropriate and attractive.
Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Bragg who
train the group are to be commended for their work-certainly an
addition to the Big Bend area.

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Give a gift this Ch ristrnas
which wilt be around for
years of enjo.yment.

~· Elegant Clock availaltle
~:' in oak or cherry. Caltle

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.•·.·. driven, tr.iple chime.

Holiday Hours' M-Sat 9am-9:30pm
' Sun. llam-(;pm

··; REG. $1750

•

aVIn
REG~ 60% OFF .

5

799

OFF .

30%

·1. . .·-G~i'_'_w_r_a_ppi_n....~g
20%
It
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40%
(

• ;~~go.

SAVE

30%
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DUNKJN•S
Diamonds &amp; Gold
"The finest qullity jewelry at die best possible Jlice",

SECOND &amp; GRAPE
· IN GALLIPOLIS
' 446..0332
ofREE PARKING
ofREE DELIVER'(

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

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• 90 (lays, 12 or 181111111111 S . AS CASH ron 11JP1M11 cndO
• OruseNFREEia~yupiO 12monhl

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·If You Want

A BEAUTifUL GIFT
From

THE QUALITY SHOP
OF GALLIPOLIS
Don't Forget
- To Tell Santa
314 2nd Ave.; Open ~venlnga ti18; Sundays 1 til 5

Family Planning ·
· It Makes Sense...
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

~

Slldl" '" sale. No 0111 refusetl services ltecause allnabllty ta pay.

•

446-0166
992-5912
8·30 to 5·00 Mo-1-·Frida · 8:30 to S:OO Mo~friday
•
•
-r
Y . 8:30 to 12 Sataday
Closecllli~rsday
Closed Tlt•nclay
ALSO: Jacboll, Clltsapeakt, Alhttts. Qlllcotflt. L0Fn &amp; McAmw

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

flee Seledion J
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
Aigner Shoes
6 MIDDLEPORT
GALLIPOLIS
414 Secllllllln., 211d Floor
and Handbags! ·~ 509 S. 3nlln.
Bea•tlhl Colon For Gristlllasl

'f1if£ SHO'E Cf1Lf''E

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FORA

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,icway Shoes

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Big B•ar

ALCOVE BOOKS

Open
Evenings
Late

'JCPenney

Pizza Chef

Catalog Store

Rental King

For Your Shopping
'
Convenience

11

NEW SHIPMENT OF
BARCA L~ . .

OFF

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• . "It's so hard to lose a friend,"
said. "I'm a real pee lover. My
•'gOsh, I've had everything from tur;: des to goats.
·~ McNeely, 43, moved into
~ entrepreneurship after her cat,
~p.sey. died accidentally in 19~7 as
~ exterminators worked at her home.
: 1bis was to lie no shoe-box funeral.
~· "I wanted something more than
· ",the old, flat photograph to remem; jler Casey by,'' McNeely said.
~ · · So under a potted plant and next
·to the TV setin McNeely's living
:toom rests a small likeness of the
; deCeased calico caL
,
: - Unfortunalely, the statue doesn't
• contain an~ of Casey's ashes. It
: wasn't unit! 1991 that McNeely
' Perfected her .proCess and received
•*patent.
:• The statue work is done in
; Grand Rapids, Mich., where
. ~Neely'$ sister and the compa: ny's co-owner, Patricia McNeely
~ SOechtig, lives and whcle McNeely
•hal had bener luck findina ll'lists.
• · Whilo MeNeely's success hasn't
;been enough to make her quit her
•j,ob as a partS inspector for l'lirolartor Products, she's optimistically
'.bJucbing OUL

:She

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ALL GIFTWARE
.25% OFF
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS

~~~... ~~.,..~~~~~.......~~Q~~-.PQ"t~M••
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Some• :where in a living room in Michi•:l!an, Max the German shepherd'
' -stands eternal guard.
: ~ Not the flesh-and-bone Max, but
• ·.his ashes, mixed with clay anjl
, •molded into a lifelike Slalue.
• • Sound,morbid? Maybe to some,
::,but it sounded like a goOd idea to
~ .Susan McNeely, who founded
~ .Everlasting Memories 1 1/2 years

SAVE
TO
Off Regular Prices On ·
•Curio Cabinets •Cedar Chests eCQncles
: •Williamsburg Brass •Cotton Throws
·
•Decorative Santas

F
BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS

Hackworth, audio visual technician; Sheila Yester, technician,
physical thCrapy; EllabeUe MeDon,
aid~ chairperson of the Gray
Ladies; and'Rev. Lund.
.
The Volunteer Service League
and Red Cross Gray Ladies decorated the French 500 Room and the
hospitlil chapel for the Christmas
season.

patients will be Elsa Cox, R.N.,
evening nurse administrator.
Families or friends of patients
who will be 1~iting with them on
Christmas Eve are urgei1 to attend
the chapel service with the patient .
T~oSe unable to go to the chapel
will be able to ·watch the worship
service over closed circuit television on Chapel Channel16.
•
Other special television productions taking place this year include
a Tuesday, Dec. 22 performance
from 1:30-2:30 p.m., by the Gallia
County Senior Citizens "Old Tyme
Chorus".
.
On Chnsurias Day, Rev. Lund
will present Christmas devotional
on the hospital's clos!ld circuit television system at 10:45 a.m. '
Involved in this .Year's seasonal
activities were Rev. Roland Wildman, chairperson, Paitar ef Trinity
Congregational Church, ~acine;
Rev. Greg Swann, associate pastor
at Grace United Methodist ChW'Ch,
Gallia County; Rev. Roger Channell, Pastor· of the Parish of the
Templed Hills Presbyterian
Churches in Oak Hill; and hospital
S!3ff members: Ginger Tayntor,
director of Volunteer Services; Thn

.,. DEXTER, Mo. (AP) -

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40%

. GALLIPOLIS ··The following
arc activities and menus for
21·25 at the Gallia County Senior
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, Dec. 21
10 a.m.· Walking club
11:30 p.m. • Blood pessure
1 p.m.- Chorus
Tueaday, Dec. 22
10 a.m.· Walking
.to a.~~J. to 3 p:m.• Quilting
10:30 a.m. - S'I'OP/Exercise
II a.m. - Advent service
!2:30 a.(It -·Video matinee
Wednesday, Dec. 23
10 a.m. to 3 p.m . Adult Day
Care availa,ble
··
·
10:30 am.- Walking club
10:30 a.m. • Herbs class
Tbunday, Dec.l4
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.· Quilting
10:45 a.m.· Bible study
11:30 a.m. - Blood pressure
Friday, Dec. 2S
Closed for Chrisonas
Menus consist of:
Monday: Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes/gravy, apple rings, broc- ·
coli, rolls, cheesecake with topping,
Tuesday - Meatloaf, sweet pota·
toes. peas, tossed salad, bread,
peaches.
Wednesday- Ham and beans
with onions, boiled egg, spinach,
cornbread, pears.

/Jpg gone:
fpets live ·on

Dec. 24th
0

CRYSTAL BYRD .COLLECTION
40% OFF

' 50%

t

•Lay·Away ....
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OFF

1

999

1·t . -----.
•Free Delivery

FREE GIFT WRAPPING WITH. PURCHASE •..

14K GOLD -

$

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SALE
·.•• · 15 In Stock Starting At
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viewers a day compared witll 2.1
ll!illion for "Sesame Streel," Ms.
Quauronc said, citing Niel.ten 181•
ings
·
Many adults find the happylucky musings of Barney;lifs ~ ·
Baby Bop and their sing-along
friCnds a liUle goofy or appy. But
preschoolers say Barney's appeal is
simple.
,
"He's my friend. He's fun," 4year-old Kimbell Burkhart said 'at
her Dallas preschool.
"He won't grow up," said
Wyatt Lewis, 3.
Barney's popularity has created
.a bonanza for J.C. Penney Co. Ine.,
Thursday • Ham, scalloped pOta· which decided before his April
toes; com and green beans, fruit debut on PBS to develop a holiday
"Barney Spat" promotion. The
salad, tolls, pecan pie.
COID!'il"Y
expects to seU I million
Ftiday • Closed for ChrisbnaS.
Barney
dolls
this year, mosdy durMake reservations by calling
ing
the
holiday
season.
446,7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish to aaatd.

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HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Is now ope• for tile
·· O.risl-s Seasa

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Over 15 different beautiful
grandfather clocks on
sale! All feature German
movements· with chimes.
Price includes delivery
and setup within 50 miles.

99 I

. And while you ar~ sidetracked
by your holi~ay season activities,
your stlite legtslators and YOJII' govemor are putting together some rax
mcreases to put a couple of hundred million more into the ,slate ·
treasury. Now you know as well as !
~do, govemtnents ~n't cut spendmg to meet the n\come-why
should they when there's always
more where that comes from? Of
course, it's not that way in yoQ1'
own life, but that's different-yoU ,
were taught to spend in accordance
with your income. Try !lOt to think
about it-and do kee srnilin .·

so~ c
·1,4 Kt. G~ld Chains And Bracelets

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area

Winners·of the Beary Chrisonas
program at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ,were selected via the lottery route Thursday. Those named
were selected to win costumed
teddy bears and tlley may pick up
their prizes br, stopping by the
Women's Auxtliary station in the
lobby or the hospital. The winners
are Mrs. Seldon Baker, Pomeroy;
Jerry Aleshire, Syracuse; J ohnette
. J. Chapman, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy; Bonnie Conde, Middleport; Shirley Tucker, Mason, W.
Va.: Mrs. Marcia Arnold, Forest
Run Road, Racine; Ml!fie Hauck,
Pomeroy; Doris M. Bailey,. 6th St.,
Syracuse; Minnie Johnson, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy: Danielle. Peckham, Wells Road, Middleport;
Ramona
43800 Cook Road,
p omeroy,Hawk,
and Eula Jeffers, Willow
Creek Road, Pof!leroy.

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~.n;;;;;ksjyy~es~.~abbJ;·g~thanksh;k;';to;;';aljl~tr:;;a;;;in~edr=an~die;.;nthusiastic in

Hope you have caught the
Christmas show of the Wahama
High School pantomime group at
one location or another this holiday
season. The young people malcing
up the group are talented, well-

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: . GALLIPOLIS - Plans fm the
:· :·1m ChrisbnaS Eve and Christmas
:: : , Day celebration are underway at
.;·· the Holzer Medical Center for
) : patients, their families, friends and
.; · the staff.
•:; · Tlie Rev. Arthur C. Lund, direc i; .ror " of Chaplaincy Services,
j; .J!DOOunced that events will begin
:~ ,on Christmas Eve afternoon when
·: :·Santa and his helpers make an early
:- visit to deliver handmade gifts,
homellll\de
tmas eards, candy,
: 1ll1d the Chri
Scriprures to all
~)latients. . 1
. The gifts .for the patients aJe
• •being handmade and donated by
1·· .:groups and individuals throughout
~ ;the
They include: Kids Under
: Consttuction Class of Grace United
~ :Methodist Church in Gallipolis;
• 'Trinity c:;ongregational Church
~ Ladies Group in Pomeroy; Haer
· ;Bears 4-H Club of Point Pleasant,
~ -w. Va.; Parish of the Templed Hills
; ;Presbyterian Churcll Youth Group
: of Oak Hill; and members of the
.- . ·Rock Springs United Methodist
C.·Church in Meigs County.
•: In addition, handmade Christ; )!las cards have been created and ·
; !lonated by children at Vinton
,County Elementary Schools in Vin: :ton County, for all the patients.
·
~ ~· The chaplains' Christmas card
: :Was designed by Bri¥1 Hutchisop ,
, $&gt;f Grace United Methodist ChW'Ch
j n Gallipolis. · .
:. . At 6:45 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. ·
,24, a string prelude of traditional
:.Christmas carols, performed by
~ €ynthia Langona, Barbara Thomas,
•..Corrine Lund and 'Dr. Edward 1.
~ l)heridan, will be~n the Christmas
; Eve worsllip' semce in the hospital
•~hapef. This 45-minute service will
: be for patients and hospital staff, as
: well as families, visitors or guests,
"and will consist of the singing of
: favorite Christmas carols, reading
; of Christmas Scriptures, prayer and
']ioly Communion for those who
: 'Wish to receive it•
• • Rev. Lund will lead the
• ~vening' s service and Corrine Lund
; will be the orsanist, with Brant
' Pauley as solo1st. Caring for the
'

by Bob Hoeflich

9 to 5 MoL·Sat.
1 to SSvaday
Featuring PoillsettfaS ill 7
colon, Paillsettla H.....
Baskets, Holly Trees, F~Jalt •
Baskets, Ute .d C1t Trees.
For departed laved oaes: grave
•lankets, wreat•s, sprays .d
vases.
'.
HUBBARD'S, Sf!:ICWH, Oh.
. 992·5776 .

-

are: Gretchen B.lalne, Carletta Carr, Cynthia
CotterW, SUIIID Cotterill, Kiln CremeaDS, TriVIs
Drenner, Plillllp Green, KeUey Grueser, Mary
Grueser, Tracey Grueser, April HaUey, Dorena
Horn, Matthew Morris, Kenny Napper, Kelly
Phelps, Melissa Pierce, Trlcla Roush, Angela
Searles, Becky Snowden, Jessica Stobart, Jean·
nette Tlaompson, Melissa Vance, Steven Vance,
Paul VanCooney, Erin Warner and Julie Young.

H
HMC
to
hold
Christmas
celebration
.
.'

LAFAYEnE MALL GALLIPOLIS

l~s BD;d ~ . skills than Big
· Bir!l; llld his~:
..
f Barney u an tncr~dibly lovable, warm and wek:ommg cluuacter," said Kathy Quattrone, vice
pres\denl of ~mi'!g f~~ the
~blic B~-f"l Semce. . The
inf~ that 5 pn:sen!M m the
~ Includes very Sl~ple but
pDign&amp;l!l I~ ... brushing your
~th, pi~g up, how to get al~ng
wu~.chlldren who are not ltke
you.
. .
The show draws 1. 7 mtllton .

.Seniors' schedule announced

'• I •

(Monday, December 21st Ariel Theater)

Beat of the Bend...

of you who have gone to that extra
effort during the holiday season in
decorating the exteriors of your
llomes to make the season mprc
pleasant for all of us.
There are so many attractive
decorations about the county this
year. Seems that you can't go in
any direction without encountering
the Chrisonas feeling.
I've traveled-about quite a bit
taking in as many sights,as ·possible
but I haven't yet gotten to Route
681. Several people have mentioned that the Walton Manley
home is outstanding with over
.20,000 lights. I understand that
Manley who starts about Thanksgiving time w get all of the lights ·
in place put up the display this year
with the disadvantlige of a broken
fooL Hopefully, I will get to take
in the Manley home soon. They tell
" m'e it's well worth the trip. From
::: Pomeroy traveling Route 7 towards
: · Belpre you make a right at the Kee-:. baugh Restaurant in Tuppers Plains
-~ and go about a mile fu:im there on
.,. 681. Hope you get it located with·
·~ out too much 4ifficulty.
.,,
·~ · Many readers became familiar
\ with the outstanding work of Ann
~· Barnitz during her stay at the Uni-~ versity ofRjo Grande.
:"
Assistant coach Ann has entered
.;· her ftrst season at Marshall Univer:; sity after graduating from the University of Rio Grande last spring.
While playing for the Redwomen, ·
. Barnitz was named Mid-Ohio Con.• ference Player-of-the-Year as well
. as NAJA All American. Bamitz,
Rio Grande's all time leading ·scor• er, was also named Kodak All· American honorable mention as a
senior.
She graduated with a 3.6 grade
point average at Rio Grande in
marketing and was twice named·
· the university's Outstanding Mar" keting Student. She is currently
•,. studying business administration at
· Marshall's graduate school.
~
Ann is the daughter of Ann
· Alloway and Gary Barnitz of Belpre and is the granddaughter of
Alice Brown , Minersville , and
' Dean and Hayman Barnitz of
• Pomeroy.

'

Te~ (AP~ - Barney
the Dmouur 1s no gtant ~urple
peopJe..eater1 but he's gobblin$ up
dolllrs for his creators and relailers
this Cbrittmaueason.
•
. The singing ,host o~ ~oddler .
vtdeos and publtc televtslon saar
has become a top-sc~ toy.
"~ .t. Friends', TV .sbo.ws
. and videoS are filled w1th skits like
those on "Sesame Street." But
• Barney is aimed at younger chi!dren, down to 1_8 months, and relies
more on mus1c to teach simple

nee.

:CHRISTMAS .
'
c ·A NTATA

POMEROY • Calvary Pilgrim
MIDDLEPORT· Hope Baptist
Chapel, Route 143, will have its · Church children ond youth ChristChristmas .program Sunday at 7:30 mas program, Sunday, 7 p.m. The
p.m. Rev. Victor Roush invites the morning service will feature a
public.
Happy Birthday cake for Jesus and
everyone will light a candle.
CHESHIRE • The annual
Christmas progl-am at Silver Run
MIDDLEPORT • The MiddleBaptist Church, Cheshire, will be port First Baptist A.B. Y. will preSunday at 7:30 p.m. The public is sent their version of ".A Christmas
invited.

Sunday nmee-SentJnel Page 17

Barney
the
Dinosaur
a
_
b
ig
hit
AI+EM·

'

'
MIDDLEPORT
- Hope Baptist
ChW'Ch will have Christmas caroling Monday at 7 p.m. Christmas
baskets will also be dtlivCJed.
·TUESDAY ·
BRADBURY • Bradford
Church of Christ, co~ of Route .
124 and Bradbury Road, will presen\ a live nativity !ICCne oil Tues·
day and Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.
nightly.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Youth program at.Hope Baptist Church will
be Wednesday at 7 p.m.

Carol" by Ct.Jea Dlcltens o'n Sunday at 7 p.m. Tbe chun:h is on the
comer of Sixth and Palmer in Middleport. The public is invited.

TONIGHT
Sunday, Dec•mlle~ .

~cbool g~t

..;

LONG BOTI'OM - A Chrisonas
progmm will ~presented at the
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

.

calel).dar-----

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE • Eastern High
RACINE • The Southern Local
School Music Department, annual Board of Education.will meet MooCHESTER - A Christmas 'pro- Christmas concert, Sunday, 3 p.m. · day at 7 p.m. at Southern High
gram will be presented at the at the high school gymnasium. School.
Chester United Methodist Church Public invited.
RACINE - Racine Village
on Sunday at 9 a.m. From 6-8 p.m.
POMEROY· Rev. Eddie Buff. Council will meet Monday at 7
there will be a live nativity at the .
ington, Gallipolis, will.be the guest p.m. at Saar Mill Park.
church.
preacher at the Naomi Baptist
TUPPERS PLAINS-- A Christ- Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
mas program will be presented at 10:45 a.m. Tile public is m:vited. ·
the Tuppers Plains United
.
Methodist Church on Sunday at 6
CHESTER • Ken Amsbary
p.m. and at the Alfred United ' Chapter, lzaak Walton League,
Methodist Church the program will · ·muz1ie loader shoots, each Sunday
be at 7 p.m.
at I p.m. through Jon. 3. Prizes are
.
the same as for the other shoots the
MORNING STAR • The Christ· les,gue has had.
mas program at the Morning Star
RACINE • Racine First Baptist
United Methodist Church wiU ~e
Sunday at 10 a.m. Pastor Kenny Church will hold a Chtisonas "cantata Sunday at 7 p.m.
Baker invites the public. . _ .

.

~ New publications

'-'~-. . ~ty

Pomeroy Middleport Galllpolla, OH

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ROUTE 7

,. •

•

.,

.,

'

'

�limn Sanllnel

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Ott Point

•

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21 oz.

Monday thru Sunday
'

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
WE
liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES .GOOD SUN., DEC. 20 TIRU DEC •.26, .1992

.

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ump Roast_____.:..._LB. · 1
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o.v.·all. ............................................

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MIKE BARTRUM, Marsbllll
Scares pme's rlrst TD

PINEAPPLE

~ Houston

not buying Cleveland's
·claim of injury-depleted secondary _

20 OZ. CAN

2 $1
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•

B7 CHUCK MELVIN
"Obviously lhc big COIICCIII is
CLEVELAND (AP) - · So the the health of our defensive~
Cleveland BroWD$ claim they bare- being able 10 get them out11hae ill
· ly 'have enough defensiv~backs 10 the game and also being alile to
: field a team today, eh? Houston . practice' them enough so 11hat
. coachJackPardc:eim'tbuyingil.
they'rc.~ble .to. exec:.utc w.ell on
· "I don't know what their lfUe Sunday, Belicbicksaid.
: situation is there '· l&gt;ardee said.
Even if swting comcr.bacb
: " They have a talented secondary. FrantMinllif'~eld(puUeclgroin) Mit
· They' ve professed a tot of injuries Ttzr&gt;: Taylor (sore I!*Je).llld:slfcin the past, and we keep !eeing the ty Eric: Turner (~ iatlcl .e
: same guys on the field. We don·~ able to play, Belichict ~ be miJ
. •-Le
have to deviSe ardefealllve ·51 t ......_
,_ much stock in that."
: If it's me.ely a ploy !lcsignediO quite different rom the oac ~
: tun the Oilers (8-6) into a false Browns used ~beat .the Oilers 24sense of security, the Browns (7-7) 14 ~t mondt m ~·
have gone to·great tenglhs 10 pull it·
We could ~htz more.;or w.e
off.
.
could use_men lird+las insad
They placed two defensive of defens•ve backs and ,play backs, Steven Moore and Alan zone,'' ~lichict, said. "'!bose are
Haller, on injured reserve early in the ~tu~ns .we ve got to 'Work
lhe week. They added two c:omer- arou . Its e~tber that, or·elsc lllikc
backs to the regular rosrer, signed . a .! W mexpcrienced play«:"and aik
two other defensive backs to the h1m to do the same th1ng.s lthat
practice squad, and listed three you've asked a more ~
starters in the secondary as ques- player to do. .We're gomg w
tionable on !heir midweek injury to have a couple Plf!DS av"t~.
report.
because we could be m trOUble 1111 a
The injuries lefl coach Bill h~."
Belichick wondering how he would
Oilers q~ck .Cod~ CDgo about ·covering the four wide S\}n, ";ho .will be making his fiff:h
receivers in Houston's run-and- start smc:e W811Q1 Moon bn:ike lhis
shoot offense.
arm, was as skeptical as Pardee

'

Mar.
26
42-185
270
70
18-3 1

--- •
Ifill: ·;
illllleC r7 pwe 7 J. -

By TOM CANAVAN
ed the Chiefs (9-6) from clinching
EliST RUTHERFORD, N .1. a playoff berth. It also cost them
(AP)l - If lhe New York: Giants' lhe Chiefs a share of fll'st place in
liitall llom~Ee
g e of lhe 1992 sea- lhe AFC West.
.
smlial.an
g 10 do wilh it, Ray
San Dtego (9-5) can wm the
U tey · t come back 10 coach division by winning its final two
dicllei!D' nr:u
.
games, against the Los Angeles
JU.·i t is, Handley's prospects of - Raiders and Seattle. Kansas City,
'r n.ming as next year are dim . .But which beat lhe Chargers twice durlicc all always can remember Dec. ing the regular season, can clinch a
t91.1992.
playoff berth by beating Denver
'File: Giants (6-9) may have next weekend.
~ their best game under Hand·
aowever; lhe Chiefs' loss was
tew Sawrday as Rodney Hampton stunning.
1301 foe three touchdowns and Jeff
The Giants came iljto the game
Hesretlcr threw for two scores on with nothing to gain and in the
iive consecutive possessions, lead- midst of turmoiL There were
ing New York 10 a 35-21 victory reports Ibis week that Handley was
0Vedhe·Kansas City Chiefs.
going to be fired at lhe end of the
-mit victor)' snapped the Giants' season. There was inremal bicker·
five, game losing streak - their ing between players and coaches,
lbngest since 1980- and prevent- and concern over whelher Hosreller
should even be playing afrer miss-

ing the past three weeks Wlth.a
severe concussion.
lnstead of packing it in, t,he
Giants played like a Super Bowl

ream.

· New York, which scored 13
points in iis previous lhree games
with rookies Kent Graham and
Dave Brown at quarterback, got
·touchdowns on iheir final three
first·halfpossessions to take a 21-7
lead, then added ~wo more TDs at
the start of the lhird quarter, making it 35-7. The 35 po~ts were tl!e
most lhe Giants scored m a game 1n
Handley's two seasons.
In fact, lhe Giants were so good,
what was supposed to be a hostile
crowd only once decided to start
chanting, "Ray Must Go. " An~
lhat didn't seem 10 have much sup.
port wilh. New York ahead 35·7 a(
the time.
·

its

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P P'

Klingler hungry for win in today,s
New England-Cincin.nati contest
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Count
David Klingl~ among the haBdful
of people cJ.cililld about Ibis Ciilcinnati-New Erigland game today.
This malehup of woeful teams
- lhey 've combined for silt wins
- doe;sn' t rant very higb on the
eJ.citement scale. Two bad offens.
· es, two teams just playina 0111 the

season.

and the Indianapolis Colts, who are
in playoff contention al 1-71. lit
doesn't like mucb f~&amp;wii!J 10 see
which one represents Klinglel''s
beSt chance~ a win.
The Col have won lthtce
straiaht
haven't allowed ..
D
touchdown · nine q-un. "ac
PalriOIS have lOll duee ....... .
been shut 0111 in two of dle1 ea
For once. die~-· '""" c. play on even-.
· -·•t ' They've bad IOIDC ta.p
times,'' coach Dave Shsla aid.
"'filings• hive
110t aaae .dleir LillY·
_.....
But were
- -1 no JUiiC1 •
We have 10 fipt llld iCIIIdl for

an

But KlinsJer looks aldie ICbcd·
ule and sees time run!\ing ouL The
rookie quarterback hasn't even
come close to leldin&amp; the Cinc:in. nati Bengals (4-10) 10 a win in
·three 1118rU, alid it's bothering him.
· "r.m very hungry for 1 win,'' e~wecanaet-"
~-·
: ..
e _ . , -w eerily ....
he said.
He '11 get "only two more iheir ~lUCie:
chances: against the Pat#i&gt;ls (2-12}
- C~ncimwti's offcasc rpb .

OAA-· ·-

I.1
I .

Rushing- Youngstown State: Smidt 20-82,
Wood 3· 1S; Wilkins 1-13, Clark 4-3, Cocluan 6-3.
Marshall: Hatchett 15-112, Pedro 15-53, 1'l!yton 12·
20.
. Passing- YoiUigstown Stare: Cochran 18-31-1256. Marshall: Payton 25-39-2-270, Colquitt 0-t.Q.
0.
·Receiving - Youngstown State: Williams 5·
105. Zwisler 546, Smith 1-42, Boylcin 3-36, Quintana 1-14, Wood 2-8, Clalk 1-5. Marshall: T. Brown
10-115, W.BroWII 5-62, Hatcheu 4-41 , Carter .2 -28,
Dartrum 2-16, Pedro 2-8.

N.Y. Giants beat Kansas City 35-21

Scoring·s ummary

I

7-40
32:03

Individual leaders

RIBbing aa.-yds .................................34-116
l'lrlsing yan!S ..........................................256
Return yanls .................. ............................35
2540
2
lllratcpiilns thrown ................................... 1
Punlillg,........,................................... :..641.6 5-39.8
1·1
FIIDbles-k»ss: ............................................0-0

·3 DIAMOND

320Z.

Penalties-yds......................................... l.l-20
Possession time ....................................27:57

Dep+i laotat
. YSU
Fll!ll dOwns. ............................................... 17

6.5%

.2 sl

..

$ 79

·

YS'U-$mith 4 run (Wilkins Ieick)
YS'U·Smilh I run (WilkiiiS Ieick)
YS'U-Smilh to run (Wilkins Ieick)
Mar.,FG W. Memck 22.
A- 31,304

Statistics

·STARKIST
TUNA

'

'

•jiast

OIL OR WATER

Franks.;
. . ~. . . . . .~. . . . . .~. . .LB.
.

NCAA Division 1-AA championship game in
Huatingto11, W.Va., which lhe Thundering Herd
won 31·28. Paytoo kept the ball for a short g!lin
oa lhis ptar. (AP)

Eli.tiSIVE MOVE .,.... Marshall quarterback
Micud. Payton (right) makes an elusive move
Yougstown Stale's Dellllll'io Ridgeway
wlLile looll:isg downrield during Saturday 's

.

( . ECKRICH

·

'

B7MA1THARVEY
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Senior Willy
Menick' s first col!eti•re fidd goal, a 22-yarder wilh
10 seconds left, gave Marshall a 31-28 win over
YoiUigstown Stale in the NCAA 1-AA charqpionship
on Saturday.
·
Marshall (12-3) avenged e loss to Youngstown
State (11-3-1) in last season's tide game in a scenario that was strikingly similar, save for lhe out. come.
· Youngstown State lrailed by 11 pliiniS in 1991
and came back 10 win; the Penguins lr8iled br.28 before comins bact 10 tie the Had 28-28 on Tamron
. Smith's 10-yanl touchdown nm wilh 2:28 to pljly on
Saturday.
.
·
Bul then quancrback ~ Payton, the 1-AA
player of lhe year, man:hed the Herd &amp;om its own 19
to the Youngsiown State five by completing 7-of-9
passes for 60 yards.
The Herd called on Menick after Orlando Hatchett's eight-yanl run took: the ball to the five.
Merrick hadn't even auemptt:d a field goal before.
That duty previously had gone to his sophomore
brolher, David, who was suspended for the game because he missed practice Thursday.
Merrick's Ieick spoiled the Penguins' furious
comeback, which staned after Payton liit Halchett
for a 22-yanl touchdown pass 10 make it 28-0 with
5:46 left. Marshall's defense Jwi held Youngstown

MAC. &amp; CHEESE

$ 49
Steak.................Li. · ·.
BONELESS
$ ]19

December 20, 191:2

·Marshall .beats YSU
31-28 for 1-AA title

GOLDEN WHEAT

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOnOM

Section C

With Willy Merrick'sfirstfieldg~

99(

8 AM-lO PM

1timm- ~entiatcl

Sports

THANK YOU CHERRY
STORE HOURS

'

••

*

2tidl- tlf
2a ~ •
s,
'llliiFcJNC.F ' 7is2Mc
dh _..,

-'De...!-

aills2M,IIIe P

- ... -

I

sl "Di;;
lillie -

p ;..

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lw Ill •£ .......

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6e
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,.._ue

liNDEil PUSSVU - K• 1 City's TOdd
Md' • (.-, .._ die 11111 Sillier
fro2l
. -., , _ Ywk Ginll' C-., MIDer durlu11he
line ~r at S11urda7'1 NFL 1•me II East

,_._II's

+

Rutherford, Nj., which the Gilull WOil

'

make t11e Chiefs work a little harder ror a
Ia the AFC playoll' picture. (AP)

'

'

.

,

�•

4J•

C2 SUnct.y nm.. Santlnel

Pomaroy Middleport Gllllpollt, Ott Point Pleuant, WV

~iver· Valley

collects
fifth straight victory ·

•

Marge Scbon of making racial · tors are.inept.
slurs on a conference call with
"I told (inves.tigators) they
owners says baseball's investiga- acted as if they were learning from
Perry Mason reruns," Sharon
Jones told The Cincinnari
Enquirer. "This isn't lltorough . ...
They're not talldng to the people in
Lanes Christian.
Cross Lanes was paced· by R.E. other front offices who could llave
.
Parker's !lame-high 18 points, heard something."
She
said
til
at
Major
Lel!gue
Jason Carner's 17 and Josh Hanks'
Baseball
has
expanded
its
invesli·
14. The Defenders (1 -3), who
galion
beyond
Schott
and
her
scored as many first-half points as alleged racist comments to look
che west Kanawhans had in the second quarter alone, were led by into a possible cover-up by olher
junior Noah Smith,· whose · II owners involved in die conference
points made him the sole OVCS call.
Jones, a former Oakland A's
double-figwe scorer.
OVCS will play Tuesday at
Heritage Christian Academy in
GADS freshmen top
Ravenswood, W.Va.

Cross Lanes pounds OVCS 69-36

i

I·

.

; Cage standings ·
~

•

SEO, opp011ents
(All games)
J.C!M
, WL
POP
~aa ...............4 o 285 252
c:Jesapea~ce ........ .4 o 32S 254
)1\ver Valley
S 1 477 401
P1easant::::::2 I 193 179
~ty ....4 2 288 307
bs.............3 2 382 290
.................3 2 262 251
.,.....2 2 267 264
..... .2 2 277 248
.......2 2 199 211
....... 1 I 157 147
o 2 • 122 154
lh ..........0 2 114 130
..............0 3 174 226
Local ......o 6 330 456
(SEOAL VARSITY)

'

It~

1

E

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
E
'\9.arren

~ ~ 14~ ~~.

ua .............
.................2 0 114 93
J;wkson ................l I 14S 138
Qlil)ipolil............ .l 1 142 118
.....~ ...........0 2 100 146
Local ...... 2 9S t29
ALS
~ 6 736 736
jt. (SEOAL RESERVES) "
~
WL
POl'
Mlrieua. ............. 2 0 110 68
Aibens................ 2 0 92 82
W'irrea Local..... I 1 110 84
~liJ ............ I I
94 68
. .............. 02 67123
............... 0 2 61 109
LS
6 6 534 534
~..
Friday's games:
:!t
j;EO Varsity
a.IJipolis 82 Logan S6
.dJenl !52 Warren Loca133
t.lerieaa 76 Jaclcson 68 ·
••• ·
. SEO resevea

o

Local SO
=~~62Wmlin
LogUI35
Jactsoo36 •

!

CROSS LANES
(23·15·16-15=69)
Parker 8-0-2.. 18, Carrier 8-01=17, Hanks 5-0-4=14, Ellison 3·
0-0=6, Corbin 1-1-G=S, Stevens 11-0=5, Bush 2-().Q;=4. TOTALS28·2·7=69
'Free throws -7-14 (50%)
·
Fouls-20
OHIO VALLEY
(6·!M3·8=39)
Smith 5-0-1=11, Bad 4-0-1=9,
Beaver 2-0-2=6, Hill 2-0-1 .. 5,
Burke 1-0-1=3, Swain 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS -15-0-6=36
Field gOBis- 15-57 (26.3'1&gt;)
Three-pointers- 0-3
Free throws- 6-9
Rebounds- 25 (Smith 8) · .
~IsiS- 8 (Burlre 4)

Steals -13 (Hill5)
Turnovers- 23
Fouls ...... 19

Junjor high game -

Scoring leaders- OVCS: Josh
· 15. CL: Cupps • 8

Se~

Logan, Wellston in
week of cage action

GALLIPOLIS - Todd Miller's
Gallia Academy freshman basket·
ball team, shaking off a se.asonopenlng loss 10 Warren ,Local, tical
Atbens 37-31 last Thursday and
Wellscon S6-S5 in ovenime Monday befc.e tnoclcing off Lopn 4736 Thursday night. according to a
re~n submitted after press time
Fnday.
.
Against Loglm, Moose Clarlc led
the Alue Devils (3·1) with 15
points. Teammates Jamie Graham,
Howard Foster and Jason· Graham
added nine, seven and seven poincs,
respectively. The Chieftains were
..- led by Moore's 11.
The Wellston game saw Wes
Saunders nail tbree free throws
witb no lime left oo the clock. Omham, wbo led GAHS with 14
points, was followed by 12-poinl
·efforts by Saunders and Howard
Foster and a I O·point effort by
Jason Dailey. Brian Pa110n's gamehigh 23 Points led WellsiOn. ·

MASON, W. VI.

GRAND OPENING,·

,,....... C#
~

I

DUAL EXHAUST..........- ............S89.95 w/GIMa Packs
SPECIAL PURCHASE ON 4 WHEEL ALIGNMENTS
Reg. S39.9s ...............- ... NOW $29.95 One Week Only
We Sp8ciallze In nrH, Alignments, Exhauat.
·
See Neal for the Deal
Call 773 5533, Ask for Chris

1011•.ui111e-~ at Vinton County

ORerlf'ICid It Chesapeake
(

SEE NEilL FOR THE DEilL!
(304) 773-55:i3

ASK FIJR CHRIS

..

Miller 11 Mile Eric Hoff.

35 reboundl, eight by Smitb, and

~ ~ • . ~·
lime 11

~·

duriill: die half.
.

~ Gallilns llllinlallled a 17 10

2~ pocnt. spread thro!i&amp;hout the
third. penod. Uld earned a 63-36
'advan!'le in.to lhe final qullttt. At
. one tame, the Blue Devils were
ahead b 31 . n
Y. PDD!ts, -46. Olbome
~~ed h•s StarUIIJ about.half the
.,.. ..v.

•

The VICtory left Gallipolis wilh
1 3•2 overall record. Inside tbe
SEOAL, Gallipolis improved its

Gallipolil COIIIIeicted cin 31 of 60 .
fceld lllfeiiiPU for St ·pereent. The
Gallilns -e 14 of 22 at dee line
had 21 personals, losin1 Chri~
Sommerville and Jeff Pope via
fouls; 34 ~.Ieven a... Qualls
Uld •oar by Miller. sax· .•~.!......"
. -·ouygo,
23 UJilts, five each by Hoffman
Uld B- h IIIII fourh by Miller, II
stea1s, tree eac Barnes and
. Hager. GAitS had four bloelced
sholl chree by Qualls.
'

•

TIIROWING AN ELBOW _:, River Valley forward Kevbl Hunt
(34) tbrowa a elbow iD tbe direction or lrollton's Jeremy WDIIams
near the buebe durinl the third quarter or Friday lllaht's game at
River Valle:r High School, wllere the Raiders won "lS- 71. Hunt
scored 11 in the encounter. (flmeseSentioel photo b:J G. Spencer
~rae).

IRONTON .
.
. (13·23-i4-:Z1=71)
Leith 8-0-10=26, Guthrie 5·4·
2=24, Green 3-0-0=6, Pringle 2-01=5, King 2.().0=4, Allen 1-0-0=2,
RIVER VALLEY
Delong
1-0-0=2, Williams 0-0-2=2. :
(l:Z·13-17·23=75)
.
TOTALS
- :ZZ-4--15=71
- Poling 6·0-0=12, Hunt 5-0Field
goals26-52 (SO%)
1=11, McCarley 1-2·3=11, Canady
Three·poiDters4·8
5..()..0=10, Peele 5-0-0=10, Mandev·
Free
throws
-15-17
(88.2'1&gt;)
ille 4-0-0=8, Crace 2.().0=4, Covey
Rebounds31
(Leith
10)
0-0-3=3, Cox 1.().1=3, McCarty 1AsSists
12
Gulhrie
6)
0-1=3. TOTALS - 30·2.·9=75 ·
Steals-N/A
Field goals- 32-ffJ (48.S-..)
Turnovers- 20
Three-pointers- 2-10 (20%)·
Fouls-20
Freethrows-9-14 (64.3%)
Rebounds-43 (Canady 12)
Reser. ve game ...,. Ironton 64,
Assists - 18 (McCarty 6)
.
River
Valley 56 ·
Steals - 18 (Canady 7)
.
Scoring
leade~s ..!.. Ironton:
· Tumovers~7
Marq Davis -. 16. .River Valley:
Fouls...-.16
Doug
Lloyd -19
. .
Foulecl out- Hunt

idle until their Jan. 8 game against
E1$tem at Tuppers Plains. Ironton
will play at Coal Grove Tuesday.

The Blue Devils will host Warren Local Tuelday in a conference
Jam e. The Peehminary contest
IJeiinl at 6.
. played II Nel·
sonYillee York ~night Uld
will bOit1actDI
Y·
Coach Lwnn Sheets' Blue Imps
,._.
bv
made.it 1 cl• sweep Friday Y
do wmn1 the LogUI re~es. 62 •
35·
•
.
Gallipolil led 16-!2, 33- 19 ind
46-27 albe quarlmllarlal.

&lt;s-~~-:=56)

h S'EO'" r

In ot er .

·

1-1-4; 0vi1 ~ 0: Ta\Y
QIW!s 7.().2-16. TOTALS :.._ ~
6.14=8:Z
· ~·

•

••

~ action,

Marietta still unbeaten·
Athens de~eats Warren

Tim Mauck 1,0..3=5; Ed Downs
.
2-0-Q.4; Chad Zimmerman 1-00.2; Dustin O.vis 2•1..o-7: Rudy
II
Brandt 1.().3cS; C1ris Sramer 4.().
GALLIPoLIS - Following
0..8: Tom Neasley 0.().2=2: RyUI two weets of competition in the
Carpenecr 6-0-1=13: Tom Smith 3- sauthestern· Ohio Athletic ~-......
0·1•7: Brooks Burris 1-0·1=3 . th Alben Bulldog Uld M;i~
TOTALS -ll·M1=56
Ti~eiS are~ ooly U:.beiucn tumW:.
They will clash at Marietta
GALUPOLIS
·
ih h
Tuesday ncght, w t I e winner
(31-14-18-19=82)
entering lhe Chrisunas brealc alone
Lan:y Howell 0; Jason Williains 8top the Slalldings
OChris·O-Ial; Chad Barnes 6-0·i• 13;
Friday night'~ action saw the
· Roelllcer0-0-2a2; MiteDon- BuUdogsburyWarrenLocal52e33,
nally 1..0.0.2; Nathan Miller 1-3- Gallia Academy down Logan 82·
0=11 : Brad Murphy 0-1·0=3; 56 and Marieaa fight off Jackson
for a 76-68 victory. ·
Marietta 76, J~ 68
At Marietta, lite visiting Ironmen set a new SEOAL record for
three-point goals, as they swished
19 of 39 (48.7 -..).but feU victim to
che Tigers' 37·16 rebound advUI·
· tage Uld hitting 30 of S6 f~eld goals
for 53.6'1&gt;.
Sparked by a 46·22 scoring
adva,nlage in the middle twO quartets, Marietta rallied .to open up a,n
18-poinl cushion IIIII held a 61-43
lead after chreC quarters of action.
The Tigera extended their lead
to 63-43 early in die fourth quarter
before Jactson llllied co reduce it
to 67-ffJ oo a three-pointer by Dave
Kight witb 2: IS remaining. The
lronmen were still within one point
(69-68) on a basket by Matt Wal- .
burn witb 58 seconds remaining,
but could get no closer. Marietta
!hen scored the fcnal seven points
dowli die stretch, including five of
six free throws.

Ben Kroft ied four Tigers in
double figure scoring with 21
points. TeamJIIate Ryan Robinson
had 15, and Mike Smitb and Cam
Mcintyre scored 14 each:
For Jackson, Robbie Travis. hit
six three-pointers for 18 points.
. Walburn recorded five treys to go
with 19 points, and Dave Kight
swished three in scoring II points.
Otber three-point goals included
two by Tommy Hill and Brad
Howe and ooe by Dave Seymour.
The Ironmen made only three of
IS two point auempts for 20-..
from Short range.

.

s'::n':

ATI;IENS ·
' .
" (13-9-ll-11=51)
•. ..
Nick Totb I..Q.0=.2; SliMy Kahl
8-0-2= 18; Jus tin Scholl O-l-tia9; ;
Pat McHugh 4·0.1=9; Kyle Lona;s';
0-2-0-6; Paul Bresnahan 0-0-la;l~
DUI Kiger 2-0-0=4. TOTALS ~ '
15-3-13::5:Z
."WARREN
•,
(11·9-4-9=33)
~.
Jason Burroughs 2-0-0=4;
Harris 4·1-3cl4; Chip Rob.inson I·
0-0=2; Jason Pyatt 5-0•1=11; Mau
Dickens 0-0-2=2. TOTALS- 12:. .
1-'=33
•
Reserve score ..,.. Atbens 59,-.
Warren SO
·- .-

pOWNS GRABS REBOUND • LopD'a Ed Downs (21) picks
t oiiCIIjl! fll J...oa-'1 35 rell a •a ilc SEOAL sa- at G•Dipalls Frl~t...,.~ ~~ Mike DGiluly (22) II show• alon11 wltb'Login'S '
~Ji·
(3,3). GAHS , _ Uo-56.
·
•

The circular lor our sale which begins
on sunday, December 20111 Incorrectly
states the sale Is In enectthrough
Saturday, Dec. 26111. This sale actually
will end on Thursday, Dec. 24th.
We apologize lor any Inconvenience
this may have caused.

MURPHY SCORES • GaDia's Brad Murphy (30) popped In a
three·poillter in the floal period against Logan Friday as tbe Blue
Devils w011 their first conference basketball 11ame S:Z-56. Lo11an
defender Is Tim Nessley (34).

JACKSON
(21-7-15·25=68)
Dave Kight 0-3-2= II : Matt
Walburn 2-5-0=19: Robbie Travis
~18; Dave Seymour 0-1..()=3;
Brad Howe 0-2'2=8; Tommy Hill
0-2-1=7; Dennis Crabtree 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS - 3-19·5=61 •
MARIIITfA
(15-25·21·15=76)
Mike Smith 2·3 · 1=;14; Josh
Offenberger 0-2-0=6; Cam Mcintyre 7-0-0=14; Ryan Robinson 3•:2.
3=1S: Darrell Shuss I-Q.0.2; Ben
Kroft 10.0.1=21: Gre2 Schicleit 0·
0-4=4. TOTALS-li-8-9=76

Soow IUAYS,. ,,

Pw-member price: $150 doub~ occupancy, $130 triple, $125 quad and $175 single. Non-members please
add $25. A $50 deposit is due by January 15. 1993 to confinn your reservation. Final payment is due by
FebrUary 1. 1993. For. information or reaec ntlOiis, please cal Mary Fowler at (304) 675-1121. .
.

Your COS! includes all of the following:

a
a
0

Jason ·
L

The nexc day, we'll brunch at Museum Center in Cincinnati
(formerly Union Tenninal), prior.to enjoying a perfonnance of a
classic 4Q's radio show live from "Studio B'. Following the show,
we'll tour the Center's impressive World War II exhibit (the
largesc in the nation) and visit the unique OmniMax Theater
before departing for home.

0
0

,;

R
Marie ,\1 '
eserve
JCOre
aa v:
36
Jackson
·
Alb 52, W
Local33 ·.. ·
At ~nt.
Ka1u scort,!1
18 points in leading the ~·itt&amp;
B lid
h . .
d
..,.
u ogs .to I ear secon eagu..viciOry, despite hitting 00 .only rii!O'
of 16 three-point field Bli! l.
aaempts. ·
,
Athens .brokeon topl3·11 ~
one qlllrltz but lhe host Wlllrion ~.
scored the fcrst nine points or the
second period 10 lake a 20-! 3 lejlll
with 3:29 remaining in tbe hall.
However Alhens then ran off ni\je'
unanswered points during whicll.
tbey stalled the final one minufe
befc.e Kalu's lay-in with chree sec:;
onds showing lifted diem into a~~
20 halftime lead.
.;
The Bulldogs, who opened thcl:
second half by scoring the firS\
eight points of tbe third stanzi,'
were never in lrollble, as they kqlt.
the Warriors winless in siX outinp,-·
In running lheir owrall marie :lei'
3-2 the Bulldogs shot just 29 ~'"·
cent (13 of 4:5), cooverted sill of l1'·.
at die line, and outrebounded theWarriors 32-25. Kalu snared nine
and Kyle Lonas sill co lead lbe wiJI:;
ners in thai depllbnent.
:
F~ Warren, JIISOII Harris ~ :
almost half of his team's tolal Willi;
14 points and claimed 10 rebounclt :
Warren hit 18 of S1 field goal,; .
made 13 of 19 free throws and .
committed 16 turnoverS.
·

'

0

·~

'

Enroute to our accommodations at ihe Sharonville ·Holiday Inn
near Cincinnati, we'll Slop at the College Football Hall of Fame.
(The ladies may choose to visit the outlet mall across the street!)
That evening, we'll attend a dinner show at the Forest vGanlens, an authentic Bavarian restaurant that combines
intemational cuisine wilh musical theater.

a
'

=

,

Adam Blair~· Eric Ho1J111111
3·1·0.9; David lf8ger 2-0·' • 9;
Jdf Pope l.().:z-.4; Juan Caster 0-

Celebrate Valentine's Day weekend in Cincy wilh a noscalgic and
romantic look back to lhe big-band excicement of the 1940's.

a
a

Ill nrt Prices •••_,_. for lr.U !J!•I•I

~ Jm ~·a quinld, in

Heath HuiCbinson led OAHS
wilh 14 points. Dylan Evans had 11
Uld Eric: Roderick 10. Eric Cox led
Logan wilh 10
·

1\ \\/EH&lt;IN) €HAWAY lro ~11
flmJARY 13 b 1'lt~ · 1W3

773·5533

'

mlOI'd to 1-1. ~ «011PeC1 10 0.
Ryan Carpenter's .13 points
3 oveall IIIII 0-2 illlide die COBfer. PICed Lopn'a lliiCt. Coltb G~ey
enc:e.
• ~wiadulrt played ~yin lhe
ne Blue Devill placed lhree loa.
mea in doable ttpna 111 ICOI'inl
Lopn conn"led on 22 of 59

belting~ Chieftlins for only lbe man lllld David Hqer cbipped in 19 penonals, losing Carpenter in
seconclluneinfiveyen,bullt..,a wilh Dille ~Piece. Adam Blair fin. the final period. Logan had 19
comlllllllinJ 31-8 r1111 period lead, ilhed willei&amp;k
lllmOYen.
.
4 23

·~

ACIOSS FIOM POn OFFI(.

AIIK'«baut Pallll lltlbetl

Locaht
II Marietta

executive assistant, has told baseball officials thlit represenliltives of
all 26 teams were on dee line dur·
ing a 1987 call in which she alleges
that Schott vowed .she would
"never hire another nigger."
·Jones told The Enquirer that
baseball investigators who interviewed her for 90 min.utes ThW'S·
day said they were conducting a
separate investigation into the
phone call and would discuss at
next month's owners meeting
whether officials ignored Schott's
alleged remarks.
Schon, who has denied Jones'
allegations, couh1 nof be reached
for comment
"I can't discuss the evidence,
but we're confident we can show
(Jones') inconsistencies in this
story down through the years,''
said Bob Bennett, Schon's anorney.

POOR BOYS TIRES

Area IC:OH!I

County S4 Wellston 51
77 Huntington SJ 60
71 Fairland 70·
Miami rrrace 29
SYIIIIIIIe&amp; VaUey 71
61 Pleasant 53
VaUey 75 Ironton 71
Lilt nipt'• pmes:
AleUnder
-

OVCS

44, Cross Lanes 27

~-

~·g~-=:=.r.; ~by.t~~~~k.: ~~~~~~~~

c~o

Schott
made racialslurs on conference call-Jones
•
..-~ALLIPOUS - The vibes of
ctory from Gallia Academy's 82'f'in over visiting Logan Friday
01glu didn't C8IIY one .SQuare block
Valley Christian's Aclivilding, where die Defendtts
·
a 69-36 decision 10 Cross

Fast start gives Gallipolis five 82-56 SEOAL win over Logan
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Acade~t Hilh ~·a Blue Devlll hit
uh"'lllnlllX-. fnlllllbe 6eld,
I en went oa to defeat vialtln1
LoJan 82-S6 Ia a Southeaatera

couldn't make it. But Lefty
I
n....se.tiMI Staff
did
.
CHESHIRE- River Valley's
Lefty, also known as junior
boys'' blstelball team claimod its guard RyUI Guthrie, scrapped on
fi,flb consecutive victory Friday his guns and riddl~ the nine-point
111'111t by defeating winless Ironton le&amp;4 die ~~~ toOk m~ die second
7S-71 in the final game of the quarter wcth a 16-pocnt effortRaiders' four·JIIIIe home stand.
this included a pair of bonus foul
, "Though lhey were mc.e physi- shots ~ollowing layups in the f~t .
~~ lhUI MarieUa, they're the best .two mmutes ~ well as one _o f has
tilm we've played so far". said four three-po1nt shots - m the
ltp'ider mentor Mike Jenkin~ of the frame to help the Tigers lead .j)y11Je'r s, who lost tbeir second five o~ two occasions in. the last
sdiight pme by a ~ of fewer fo~ mm~:~tes before halflllne. But
t!l_an five points. "The kids put sencor poml guard Aaron McCar!y
fli:th a great effort," he said of his and Canady scored two baskets en
p(Jyas.
·
'
the last 90 sec:Onds to cut Ironton's
u '"We're trying to find a lineup lead to one at halfttme.
tllli dee chemistry's not dlere yet.~ The visi~ returned co expand
~ Ironton head coach Phil Rice thecr lead to SIX when die 6-foot-4
~~ose troops fell to 0-4. "W~ !-eith- his game-high 26 points
hijven'l been together long mcluded a 10-for-11 effQn atlhe
e'ilbiut:h," he idctcd in reference to foul line - got a ·l!!&gt;nus foul shot
~erat or his players not having necessitated by Mc&lt;;'~~r~y's first fo~l
gdaen the stretch version of foot· following !!-layup wcth 5:47 left
~~~~l season (translation:. state
However,~ ~ge~· 43-371ead
q~s) coinpletely out of cheer sys· suffered
ehmcnauon when
~s.
.
C8Dlldy's layup (5:25), senior post. 'Case in point: junior Jerman man Kevin Hunt's layup following
SCORES ON
- River VaUey guard Charles Pec:k (10)
Jir&amp;son last year's point guard, sat a Chris Mandeville missed shot
jets
past
Ironton
Tony
Browu Die his way to tlce hoOp for a
th~beni:h JCCOvering from a baclc (5:03), Hunt's free throw on the
layup iD tbe rcrst quarter of Fridsy night's game at Cheshire, which
iii
SUJiained in the Division m second l!ttempt (3:56) made possi·
the Ralllers woo 15-71 to win their Mil stral11ht game. Peck scored
t~ne-same loss to Mentor Lake ble by 6-foot-6 . senior Walt
10 in tbe contest. (fimeseSeotinel photo by G. Speneer Osborne)
CIIJIOiiC.
'
· Delong's third foul, senior guard
" '1be Raiders (5-1) wasted liltle Charles Peck's layup following a
Wrie shalting off the shallow deficit Canady steal and pass (3:49) and
When Raider guard/forward that kept the Raiders out of the .
cfeated by senior forward Joe Hunt's layup afler taking a Canady
Ryan
McCarley got the roll to go · reach of Guthrie's three-point
~ith's first IJVO foul shots seven
pass (2:42) were registered to put
his
way
on a layup he sbot wilh 4 7 shooting (4-for-7) down lhc stretch.
s~onds into the game. Back.to· River Valley ahead 46-4S.
seconds
left, he was fo.uled by
Led by senior center Dave Pol·
b'aclc baskets by senior forward , Leith's lone miss at the charity Tiger fcirward
ing's
12 poincs, a cotal that was the
Damon
Pringle.
The
RQb Canady. with the first a driv· stripe came wich 2:26 left after che
bonus
shot
was
good,
and
·the
Gallowest
for a scoring leader this sed·
ii)Jt layup following his steal from .6-foot-4 Hunt committed his fourth
son,
River
Valley put five' men in
liitns,
who
led
51-48
as
a
result,
U1th, put River Valley on cop 4-2.
foul against him. Aller missing che
double
figures
for the first time
never
trailed
again.
After Tiger' frontman Conland rcrst sfiot. the former tight end sank
Ironton
kept
River
Valley
wilhin
since
slartins
the
winning streak on
·oreen 's layup lied the game at 4-4 the second to tie lite game at 46.
a
five-point
reach
for
5
:4~
of
the
Dec.
S
against
Portsmouth
Notre
with S:26 left in the fcrst quarter,
Mandeville, a 6-foot-2 senior ·
game's
final
8:47.
However,
the
Dame,
the Raiders reeled off 10 unan· who came in for Hunt at that point,
The Raiders, who played their
s\\iered points in lite next 2:05 to toOk a pass from McCarty and sank Raiders' _pressure-cooker defense
forced
numerous
turnovers,
which
second
road 'game of the season
le$114-4. For the rest of die quar- a long jumper from the right wing
had
more
10
do
with
off-target
against
Jackson
-the lronmen fell
t6t; the Raiders found themselves "to put River Valley ahead 48-46
passes
going
out
of
bounds
tban
76-68
Friday
night
to unbeaten
scaying ahead With a lead that var- wilh I:SS l~fL But 10 seconds later
even
traveling,
which
rated
second
Marietta
Saturday
night,
will be
ioobetween seven co II points.
che pl!le was tied at 48 when Leich
on
the
list
of
Tiger
turnovers.
All
of
Unfonunately for Ironton, Pan- got mside for the layup.

· !CINCINNATI (AP) -· The for·
mer Oakland A's employee who
aetused Cincinnati Reds owner

ca.

December 20, 1182

By Mftlllillg Ironton '!5-71,

,, G. SPENCER OSBORNE

SlntiMI P8QI

December 20, 1182

HOLZER CLINIC

/

Pie-tour reception at Peoples Bank
Deluxe motorcoach transportation
Overnight accommodations at the Sharonville Holiday Inn
Dinner aOd show ac the Forest View Gardens
Deluxe Sunday bNnch
.
Admission to radio show, Omnimax Theater and all exhibits
ai Museum Center
Visit co College Football Hall ol Fame or nearby outlet mall
Traveller's insurance, lips and baggage handling
Esconed by Mary Fowler, Peoples Choice COOidinator

Mu- CiMIIr A! Union Tl!mlinal

•
Ptoploo 0wi1ce. O!olcetrawl opporlllnlllet and choice~ btnefllo for pt!IOIW 50 and - · Members ll!U!I maimain a
$t 0,000 minimum balance In Peoples Bri deposit accounB (e&gt;ccluding checking act0i1115). Peoples O&gt;oice is a division of the
Peoples Bonk of Point Pfe.uarc. Member FDIC.

..

'•

, I

i,

'I

�P-s~s

C4 Sundey Tlmee Sentinel

December 20, 1992 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant. wv

~mber 20,

Southern downs Symmes Valley ·sJ-71.for· season's fir~t vicforr . By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
WILLOW WOOD - Scoring
30 points in the fourth quarter the
Southern Tornadoes posted an
important83-71 boys' basketball
victory over the ·Symmes Valley
Vikings Friday night at Symmes
Valley High School. .
Southern is now 1-1 overall.
Coach Howie Cl!ldwell's troops
were led. by senior Michael Evans,
who ripped the cords for 27 points.
Evans had two thre~:poiiners and
was perfect at the ltne at 7:for_-7.
Russell SmgleiOn was next ~n. hne

with 13 points and had eight ·
blocked shots. Mark Allen ~dded
12, Ryan Williams ll and six each
by Jeremy Dill , Tren·ton Cleland
and Mason Fisher. .
Jerome Fuller, who led Symmes
with a game-high 30 points, was
followed by John Paul Paucrso~·s
14, Todd Robinson's 13 and Rrck
Dillon's nine.
.
The first half was very fa~t
paced as a result of Southern s
upbeat tempo. Symmes, however,
took the opening curtain call and
led2:J-17.

Belpre beats Meigs
62-58 in overtime
By DAVE ~ARRIS
· Times-Sentinel Correspondent
· ROCK SPRINGS - Belpre
outscored Meigs 6-2 in overtime to
post an exciting 62-58 over the
Marautlers Friday evening at
Meigs.
.
The win gives the Golden
Eagles a 3-1 mark both in the TVC
and overall. Meigs with the loss
falls to 3-3 overall and 3-2 in the
TVC.
Belpre jumped out to an early 72 lead with 5:56 left in the first
period on a three point play by
. Chad King. Meigs slarled to chip
away at the Eagles lead and took a
14-13 lead with 1:25 left in the
period on a twisting lay-up by Brad
Anderson. Erin Hall's short jumper
with 1:0() left gave Belpre a 15-14
lead heading into the secontl period.
Meigs took a 16-I51ead 22 seconds into the second period on a
. Trevor Harrison buctret, but Belpre
ciune storming back and took a 2920 lead on a Mark Ohl bucket with
3:20 left in the half. John Bentley
drilled a three pointer with 3:09 left
(29-23) to get the Marauders back
on the comeback trail. Aaron
Drummer's short jumper in the
paint with just three seconds left on
the .clock sent the teams into the
locker room tied at 31. ·
The Marauders took a three
point lead (38-35)at the 5:54 mark
of the third period when Bentley
canned three free throws after he
was fouled on a three point
attempt. Bentley's bucket off of a
Trevor Harrison's feed gave Meigs
a 47-44 with 13 seconds left in the
period .
. Belpre came clawing back and
took a 56-51 lead on a bucket by
Chuck Garvey with l:31left in the
game. Chad King had a: chance to
put Meigs away with I :07 left in
the contest but missed two free
throws. Aaron Drummer brought
the Marauder fans to their feet
when he drilled a three pointer
from deep in the right comer with
59 seconds left to ·cut the Belpre
lead to 56-54. Jack Stanley came
up with a big defensive play when
he stole the ball in the front court
and hit the lay-up- with 37 seconds
left to tie the game at 56. Belpre
missed two shots in the final seconds and t.he teams headed into
overtime.
Russ Jacob's three pointer, 13
seconds into overtime gave Belpre
the lead for good at 59-56. Harrison cut the lead 10 one (59-58) on a
baseline jumper from 10 foot out.
Garvey's lay-up with 33 seconds
left gave Belpre a 61-58 lead, after
a missed Meigs shot Garvey iced
the game with a free throw with
eight seconds left.
Garvey led the Golden Eagles
with 19 points, and Hall added 18.
Belpre hit 24 of 57 including four
of 13 from three point range for
42%. Belpre canned 10 of 19 from
the line for 53%. The Golden
Eagles pulled in 24 nibounds with
Hall grabbing nine, Belpre tunred
the ball over 14 times.
Harrison led the Marauders with
18 points, while Bendey added 17.

Aaron Drummer scored seven off
the bench for Meigs and Stanley
added six. Btad Anderson and
Bobby Johnson both had good
games for the Marauders with four
points each, Enc Wagn~r added
two. Meigs hit 24 of 55 mcludmg
three of 15 from three pomt range
for 44%. The Marauders were a
perfect seven of seven from the
line. Meigs had 20 rebountls with
Bentley and Anderson getting five
each. Meigs turned the ball over 14
limes.
, Belpre rolled over the Marauders in the reserve game by a score
of 50-29. Andy Spencer and Jon
Gerkin led Belpre with 15 each,
Travis Grate led Mei!ls wi!h 10.
In other TVC actton actiOn Friday evening, Miller upset Alexander 54-51, Federal Hocking upset
'I'rimble 61-58 and Vinton County
slipped past Wellston 54-51. . ·
Meigs will travel to Wellston to
battle the Rockets on Tuesday
evening, while Belpre will host
Trimble.

Symmes carried a hot shooting
hand in the frame and throughout
the first half, hitting 50 percent
from the floor.
In the second J.ICrind, the tempo
increased, but this time Southern
won the transition game and carried a 43-37 lead into the half.
. Southern ~witchC\lto zone in the
thtrd penod m an attempt 10 slow
the Vik_ings and hot-han~~ Fuller.
The swnch slowed the Vtkings, but
also slowed the Tornado attack as

Joo

By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentbtel Correspondent
EAST MEIGS -The high-flying Eastern Eagles made th·e
Waterford Wildcats their prey en
route to a 70-67 non-league boys' .
basketball triumph Friday night at
Eastern.
. The win was Eastern's first in
four tries. Wlllerford fell to 3-2.
. Eastern had a balanced scoring
auack, placing four men in double
figures. Junior point guard Pat
Newland led the Eagles with 18
points, while Charlie Bissell scored
a double-double with 15 points and
12 rebounds. Robert Reed did tl)~
same witl! H points and 12
rebounds, and Chad Savoy tossed
in 12. Jeremy Cline added seven
and Wes Arbaugh seven.
· Eric McCutcheon led Waterford
with 28, Tyson Powers had 12, and
Tony Schweodeman had 11.
Eastern hit 25 of 61 for 41 percent from the floor and hit 17-29 at

·ua l 0

7

2

tZ

••

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sunday Tlmes.--Sentlnet.,....Page C5 .

·E astern .tops Waterford. 70-67 to register first win of season

well. Southern outscored Symmes first half to compound the ~ble · day, the~ $OCS to the OhiO Umvcr- .
I 0-9 in the frame for a 53-46 W~.must play belter :::ren.(d
'th sltf·Chtlhcothc branch Holliday ,
advantage.
v;te have. '!nly t ~s th: ;:ar T~~nt Sat~yC ~ 26 for
In the founh round, the Toma- Wlrst~ l)xpcn:jjt!· a '*ter club
~ ~arne wit ·
rJov~ · ..
docs switched back 10 a man· to- goes ong, we .
. in ~
ou rn s·reserves wt pay ac. - . ,·
man defense and really PI.ckod up butthe!e ~oung lci'!-Sk'fo,~
son on, .Dec. 29 at noon at Rto
the tempo. SHS scored 30 rn the h~ve to. ~ u~ qwc
~
G~ s Lyne &lt;:enter as part of the
frame en route t? th~ Lriiiii!Ph. .
cSpei.I~"'::i ~~ ~df~ 11f~m the Rto Grande Holliday Tou~ament.
Ca_ldweU satCI, Our mtensnyj . floo~and 4 _1'6 from three point
SOUTHERN
espcc13lly m the first half and fina
while conneclin on 17 .27
.. ,
1
3
quarter was, really good. ~ur ~~~~·line. Symmes hit ~9-66, 1 of
Mark(~jf:.; 2:~~! l , Ryan
defense wasn t that good, but
three
pointers
and
was
10-23
at
Williams
.J.O=II, Jeremy Dill _
2the line
4
shot 50 percent from the, floor
·
_ = , Mike
Evans _ _ = 1 ,'
0 4 6
7 2 Robert'
7 27 _
Southern OOtrebounded Symmes Trenton Cleland 3·0·0=6,
34-23. Singleton had eight for. Reiber t-0-0=2, Mason Fisher3-0-.
Southern and Fuller eight for 0=6, Russell Singleton 4-0-5=13.
Symmes. SHS had six steals, 13 TOTALS- 27-4-17=83
. turnovers, 10 blocks and 19 fouls.
Symmes had ·four steals, ' II
SYMI\{ESVALLEY
. (20-17-9-25=71)
..
turnovers and 25 fouls.
Southern won the reserve game
Shawn Charles 2-0-0=4, John ..
43-42 led by Jeremy Hill with 17 Paul Patterson 6-0-2=14, Todd.
and Kevin .Turley with 11. Brad Robinson 5-1-0=13, Rickie Dillon,
S11unders and Jason Kowicz had 11 · 3-0-3=9, J~rome Fuller 13-04=30,
'
Scou Smith 0-0-1=1. TOTALS-,
eathforSymmes.

S

1992

. 29·1·111=71

the line. Waterford hit 26-75 over·
all, including ameager 10-34 from
three pomt range. The 'Cats hit 612 from the line. .
The first 'luarter was played
evenly with neither team being able
to take a .clear advantage. T~at
frame was tied three times and saw
four lead changes. The period
ended with Waterford leading 19'
18.
Eastern dropped behind in the
second perio.d, falling behind by as
much as six, but each time the
Eagles pulled back to cut into the
WHS lead. Eastern trailed 22-19 in
the waning seconds of the frame,
but Eastern utilized the foul liqp to
tie the score 32-32 ill the half.
Waterford put itself in deep foul
trouble in the frame and went to the

bench.
Because of the dilemma, Waterford began a stall with 3:28 left in
the half. AI that,point the 'Cats led
28-24. The strategy backfired as

the E.HS pressure and 'Cats anxiety
led to several key turnovers.
Waterford ran a spread offense ·
throughout the night. Eastern ran a
pressure zone that pressured the
perimeter and collapsed well inside
on the much taUer Wildcats.
Waterford took an early advantage in the third frame, then a Newland driver pwt Eastern up 42-40.
Waterford got a follow-up from
Tony Schwendeman, then
McCutcheon hii a three-pointer to
give WH,S a 45-42 advantage. Eastern took a 46-45 lead on a short
jumper by Reed, then Cline hit a •
three-pdinter to give Eastern a 494Sieadatt!leendoftheframe.
Wateford's Tony Schwendeman, a 6-4 post man, was lost due
to an injury early in the-fourth
round.
In the fourth frame, Reed had·
just given Eastern a 56-54 lead,
when Jyson Powers nailed a three '
pointer to put. Waterford ahead 57- ·

.

.

L
I
2
2
3
2
2
3
3
5

PF
274
341
352
376
256
228
285
223
320

PA
216
369
410
369
244
117
278
205
396

Inside the TVC ...
Vinton County .....4 I 298
Belpre ................... 3 I 274
Meigs ................... 3 2 332
Miller ................... 3. 2 283
~Aicxaodcr.. .......... ,2 2 256
Wellston ............... 2 2 224
Trimble ............. :.. 1 3 214
Nelsonville-York .I 3 240
Federal Hocking... I 4 160

288
216
307
301
241
237
218
249
'229

(19-13-15-20=67) .
Tyson Powers 2-2-2=d 2, Greg :
Doak 1·0-1=3, Jeff Huck 1-1-0=5, .Eric McCut~heon 4·6-2=28, Tony :.
Schwendeman 2.-2-1= II, Chari •
Ponchak 1·0·0=2, Steve Miller 3-00=6. TOTALS- 14-11·6=67
EASTERN
(18-14-17-21=70)
•.
Chad Savoy 2-1-5=12, Charlie ,
Bissell 7-0-1=15, Pat Newland 6·0-.
6=18, Robert Reed 5-0-1=li,Jere- •
my Cline 0-2-1=7, Wes Arbaugh 2- .,
0-3=7. TOTALS- 22-3-17=70

BGSU comes
back to top
Nevada 35-34

....L:

WAITS FOR PASS- This unidentified Meip player (with the 1
visible) takes a pass from a teammate while Belpre's Travis Wells
(34) moves in behind him during Friday night's TVC pme at Rock
Springs, which the Golden Eagles won 62-58 in overtime. ~oto by
Cathy Edwards)

Meip 11111rd Eric Waper (1i) rmds Belpre's
Chuck ·Garvey (22)
while trying to scorf in tbe paint
game at Meigs Htab School, where the
during Friday night's
Golden Eaales escaped with a 62-58 win in overtime. (Photo by :
Cathy tdw!lrds)

I

RACE FOR THE BALL - Eastern's Pat
Newlaqd ·leads the race for the loose ball during
a scramble in Friday nigh~'s game against

Waterford at Eastern High School, where the
EaJiles won 70-67 to claim their first win of the
5e{ISOn,

PASS ON THE RUN- Eastern guard Pat Newland (22) gets orr
a pass· to a teamQtate during one or the Eagles' rast breaks during
Friday night's game against visiting Waterrord, which the Eagles
· won 70-67. Newland, a junior, racked up 18 points to pace the
Eagles.

..

By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Bowling -;
Green's players were a confident ., .
group in the locker room with a 25- '
point halftime lead in the inaugural
Las Vegas Bowl.
"
" Coach Gaty Blackney wasn't, .
and with good reason.
·
The Falcons, blowing the lead ·'
on a series of .botched punts, were ·' ··
forced to mount a comeback of '
their own Friday night to take a ·
wild 35-34 win over Nevada in the "•
opening game of the major college ..
bowl season.
'
"I reminded our players at half- ·
time that Nevada is a second half '•·'
team," Blackney said. "I told them ·'' •
about Nevada's comeback against · ·
Utah State when they scored three · '
touchdowns in 7:36 to win.''
'·
The Wolf Pack took even less '·.·
time to mount a series of three third • •
quarter scores against Bowling '·:
Green, striking for three touch- - · ·
downs within a period of 4:27.
-: :
If not for a muffed punt on the ,. ·
part of Nevada that allowed Bowl- · :
ng Green to score with 22 seconds "
left, this one may have easily •··
slipped away.
·· '
"We were toO comfortable with
· the lead we had,'' said Dave Hankins, who caught the winning 3-yard · :.~
touchdown pass from quarterback ' ·
Eriic White on a fourth down play. ·-•
The touchdown pass capped a ·· •
wild game that saw Bowling Green ' :
take a 28-3 halftime lead only to ·• 1
watch Nevada score four straight '
second half touchdowns to go '.:
ahead in the game that matched the · •
Mid-American and Big West conference champions.
Backup quarterback Chri&amp; Vargas tooic advantage of the bad punt 1•
plays 10 throw for two touchdowns • ·
and give Nevada a 34-28 lead. But ,
the Wolf Pack couldn't convert a
third and two with 1:4&amp; left and
punter Steve Lester let the ball go
through his hands and hit him in
the helmet anti the Falcons recovered on the 15.-yaril line.
"Kicking should be outlawed
by the NCAA," said Nevada coach
Chris Ault, whose team ended the
seasoo 7-5.
· ••
The Wolf Pack hadn't even been
in the ga~ in the first half, when
Bowling Green drove for touchdowns the first four times it had the
ball, then stop)l\)d Nevada on a goal
line
stand as the half ended.
'·
1
But Vargas, who replaced starter
Fred Gatlin in the second q~ancr,
took advantage of consecutive 5- .•
yard and 8-yard punts by Rob Don- "
ahue to lead Nevada to qutck
scores. Donahue then tried to run a
high snap out of the end zone and .,
Ne¥ada took over and scored a ..
third time.
. h
;
"We were· embarrassed ID t e .,
first half because our d,e,fcnse ·':·
•·
Played non -aggressively, Ault
d
said. "At ha!ftimede we mhade :· .
changes. We swttch to ~.no- u - ...
dle offense and it worked.
.
Bowling'Green, which :-von tts ·• 1
ninth straight, was out of Lim!J?uts
and running out of time when gtvcn
a last chance on .the fumbled pun~
auempL
·
. ..
Bowling Green recovered the , ·
ball on the 15-yard lif!e and on .'.
fourth and two White ·hit H.anJt!ns "
in the end zone .for the wtnQtng ..
touchdown.
· , ,
"We f!oodc~ one side with four ·•
rtiCCivers and that's tough to slop," ' '.
Hankins said. "The play hasn't . ,
been. stopped all year. I was pretty
confident it would work."
\1 I

THE PAST at:J~: Tf.IB .PRESENT

Sports briefs
ATLANTA (AP) - ·Manager
Bobby Cox ~ill lead the National
League champion ·Adanta BrJ!VCS
through the 199S season. •
Team officillls extended Cox's
contract by two yean. Thp Atlanta
Journal-Constitution reported that
Cox, 52. who managed the Braves
to National League championships
in 1991 and 1992, would make
over $350.000 a vr.llr.

...

'

WAi'ERFQRJ)

TVC varsity boys'
.basketball standings
Team
w
Belpre ...................3
Vinton County .... .4
Miller .................. .4
Meigs ...................3
Alexander ...... ....... 2 ·
Wellston ..... ,.. ....... 2
Trimble ................ 2
Nelsonville-York .2
Federal Hocking... I

.•

56. t'owers hit another to give his passed orr for the "asy buckets."
Ullman concluded, "We played
club a (j0-56 advantage at the 5:3 7
Eastern did exactly whill Ullman
excellent defense throughout the ·
mark. Bissell made it60·58 .
had warned against just second s game. We pressured lh¥ exterior ':
Eastern called time to regroup. earlier. The Eagles fouled, sending and played a very good interior •,
Coach Greg Ullman's advice was Greg Doalc to the line where he hit defense. We broke their press for ·'
well·received as his club then ran one of two free throws. Powers some easy buckets a couple of · ·
of[ a·string of 10 ll'lan!iCI'ed points.
liriJlcd t\",0 three-pu!.Jtcrs and times and our scoring was well balEHS scored firs~ on a bang-bang Waterford was within one a 68-67 anced. We hustled really well."
·
Savoy-to-Ree~ shovel pass whi ch with 2:08 left.
Eastern grabbed 48 rebounds lod
knotted the score. Chad Savoy
Between missed three -point by Bissell and Reed with twelve,
drilled a three pointer and Cline did aucmpts, Savoy and Reed each hit and Cline had ten. EHS had one ·,;
the same on the next possession. one free throw to giveEHS a 70-67 steal, 15 turnovers, three blocks, • ··
Reed hit an eight-footer and East" lead with 58 seconds left. Eastern six ·assists (Newland four) and 14
em took a 6~-60 advantage forcing missed a couple foul shots and then fouls.
WHS to call time.
had a charge that sen\ reserve
Waterford had 31 rebounds, .J3 .- '
Ullman commented on the Shawn Heiss to the line with 28 steals, 10 turnovers, 18 assists, four
strcu:h, "We finally hit a couple·of seconds left. Heiss missed · and blocks and 20 fouls.McCutcheon :
good shots in this stretch . We WHS had two missed aiiempts at led with eight rebounds and •
played good defense three straight the goal before Bissell grabbed the Schwendeman had seven steals. . •
times~ toOk care of the ball and put
rebound.
Waterfmd won the reserve game ,
10 pomts on the board. Rebounding
Bissell missed a bonus attempt 42-31. Heiss led with 13, Powers •.
was definitely a key factor in this with six seconds left and had seven and Brent Reeder had '
drive."
McCutcheon tossed up a three- · 11. Eric Hill led Eastern with ll.
"Charlie Bissell and Robert pointer that went in and out at the Michael Barnell had seven and
Reed rebounded well, and Pat buzzer to preserve a 70-67 EHS Jeff Stethem had six . I
Newland handled the ball well and win.
Eastern went to Fairland Saturday and travel s to South Point .
Tuesday.

BELPRE
(1S-16-13-l2-6=62J
Russ Jacob 1-2-0=8, Chuck
Garvey 6-2-1=19, Mark Ohl 2-01=5 Travis Wells 2-0-0=4, Erin
Han' 7-0-4=18, Chad King 2-0-4=8,
TOTALS- 20-4-10-62
MEIGS
(14-17-16-9-2=58)
Jack Stanley 3-0-0=6, Eric
Wagner 1-0-0=2, Trevor Harrison
8-0-2=18, John Bentley 3-2-5=17,
Aaron Drummer 2-1-0=7, Brad
Anderson 2'0-0=4, Bobby Johnson
2-0-0=4. TOTALS.-21-3-7=58 .

.

••••. .

by Carl 'Jop~

Member FOJ'C':
.,

. . '

a

GaiiiPOits . Ohto
,·

•

�PIQI C8 Sundlly nm• Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Gelllpolll, OH Point PI-nt, WV

December 20, 1'!

----

lrt NHL action,

Washington tops Hartford 4-3; · Detroit h~nds Boston 6-4 loss
and VIIICOUver 8, S. Jose 1.

lly KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer

The Washington Capitab' dclensemen are gelling
m111t of the goals and the -'lory IIIia season.
Friday night, they ~ made their contribution.
But it was the penalty-lcilling unit that really stole the
show this time.
Killing a1119 of ~ord's power plays, the Capitals rode the cnsp spcci.al tealnS perfonnance to a 4-3
win over the Whalers.
"lt was a lot of hard work," said Washington's
Mike Ridley, one of the members on the Capitals'
third-best penalty-killing unit in the NHL. "They
moved the puck weD, but we seemed to be just a step
ahead of them. And (goaltender) Ponnie Beaupre
played a great game, too."
Beaupre siODDed 26 shots to earn his sixth win-iii
seven games. His one loss was Wednesday night,
when HartfoJd broke the Capitals' seven-game winning streak with a 6-3 victory.
.
Elsewhere Friday, it was Detroit 6, BOSton 1; New
Jersey 2, Tampa Bay 0; Los Angeles 5, Edmonton 5,

added an empty-net goal with 27 seconds to play .
when Tampa Bay pulled goaltender J .C. Bergeron for
an extra '"'CJrer.
Klllp ~· OUen 5--:- Caey Millen's ..,-u~ a
scramble m front with 47 seconds left 1R the third
period gave the Kina a lie with the Oilen.
It capped a big rilly for the Kings, who ll8i1ed 4-2
at the eiia of the leCOIId period. Dave Manson's pclint
shot at 6:57 of the tllird had the Oilcn cJinsing ~ a
S-4 lead bef&lt;n Millen lied iL
The Oilers got a big lift from goaltendllr BW Ranford, who made 46 saves, and 111 efficient power-p)jly
unit that convened 4-of-10 man-advantaaes. Cllig
Simpson scorod twice for Edm~.

Red WIDp f, Brulu 1 - Keith Primeau had ·his
flllt two-&amp;1111 aamc and Tim Cheveldae made 34
saves as the Red WUJ&amp;I beat the Bruins.

The Red Wings, who also aot two goals from
Steve YzermaD, hadn't beaten Boston at Joe Louis
Arena sincc·Nov. 18, 1988, a span of four games. It
was also just the seronc' win in I0 games for the Red
Wings over the Bruins.
. The victory was costly for the Red Wings when
star forward SCrgei Fedorov lett the game durin~ the
second period with an injured shoufder. He m1ssed
seven games earlier this month with a similar injury.
. Devils l, LIJbtDIDg 0 - Claig Billington stopped
29 shoiS to regiStU his second shutout of the season,
leading the Devils past the Lighbling.
The loss SIOI1Ded a threO.game winning streak for
the expansion i,.lghbling, who were .shut out for .the·
rust ume. New Jersey stopped a two-game losmg
streak.
Pefenseman Scott Stevens scored New Jersey's
fmt goal at 14:44 of the fust period. Claude Lemieux

Caaucks I, SUrks 1 -The C•tdt:•
times in the first period • they IOUied dte
The lou
lha I~ llraipt for dte
have won only ft~~e of 32 ,.._ in their
season. The last San Jose win was Nov.

w•

ill Cal-

~ Momesso acored twice for the c.nucb.

*::1

Cariuck pltender Kirk McLean loll Ids
in the last period when rookie Rob Oludlau •
shortlunleil, his ninth goal ill eigltt pmea
Sharks.
,Vancouver equalled a team record by ex11iildi~
i~ unbeaten streak at the Pacific Coliseu111 ·10
games (1~2).

'

bulman,IIUIJomaNe ~ ••"eldr.

Alllndr DIYWOIII
Tum
W L
Pd.
NowYolk-.............. 1!5 1 .611
Nowl....,. ............ ll 10 .SIS
Odudo. ................. IO 9 .526

bod-

-

................... 10 13
W.......................7 IS

~dodtr. Joo Xllalt, JttfPuniu and
MU:Iwll R..,to, pdchon, 10&lt;1 Eric F...

s.s

.JIB
.300

K
8

.250

P!Diociotpt,;a ............ 5 IS

Oft.. )lllt OOftUIOl. n.iliftt4 ~ ler!.dlf
1993 OCII!.U'ICIU \0 lCMn Campbd, Kilk

3

3.S

.435

14

MianO .......................

GB

Named Waher J, Hau chairmao. SudJ AJdenan ~ end aen·

culfielder.

9

Eat

3.5

a...p.Souibanfii,~Sl.

~bcrtf ?6- Ccmmnt 59

,._,.
W L
Uoalo .......................l4 6

....
.700

.................12 7 .632
San.Arllanio........... IO 11
.476
o.m......................7 13 .3SQ
Mmrrt• ._,,, ..........S 14 ' .263
Dallu. ......................2 16 .111

-

7

1.5
11

No 1111jcw tcatn

Pactnc: Dl¥lllon
Pho.ii"'" " " '''"'''.J6

4

.800

- d ................. l4 7
Seoalo ................... l4 7
LA.Lok ......... :..... l3 8
LA. C!iooon .........l3 9
GoWon Siooo ......... .to 11
s - 1 0 ... ...........6 IS

.619
.S91
.476 .

.286

4

~s
IO.S

LA. ct;ppas 103, ....._,
PhJeniJ. 116. LA. I..aken 100

Tournaments
t:ut Cout Bukelball Claalc ·

Flntrond
Aubom 65, Louioi.., Toob 45

Eul COMt ...Utball Cta.lc
llnlroud
N.C.·W'olmin-111l.Alabomo S• 93
llawaU rr.HolldaJ Tau,....•t
Flnt n&gt;lllld
.
Coo1111 Cuolino 77, NE lAuiolono 61
MVP
Claoolc
F1nt rCNIIMI
Eul Corolino 72, SE Louioiono 65
Tolodo77, T.....PanAnltlican61

95

u-,

Tiley pklyed Saturday

MiamiatNowY~ 7:30_p.m.

Owloae •~ WuhinJU11. 7:30p.m.

DaUu at H(l.lSlOn, 8:30p.m.
· D.izuU at Milw-.., 9_p.m.
LA. Lak• at Denver, 9 p.m.
LA. ct;ppas 11 S..ulc, 10 p.m.

Oillliooohe &gt;44,11illiud l6

!lowlaoey ........

f

N.Y. lalondcn ....
PhiJWJpNa ....... 10 16 4

Adams Dt•llion
Mormol ... .... ..... 2010 4

............... 17 11
80ilon ............... 18 II
BWfolo............... 13 13
llon(o•L .......... ·920
~

.

6
2

6
2
Oaowo ...... ......... 328 l

49 156121
3B 131120
37 134123
33 105104
30 129125

Lokewoocl67, P&amp;nno !j01111111dy 20 1
LynclhumBNoh 36, Meolor36
Mansfield Temple Chr. 41, Temple

Ou.20

Medina FimBapt. 4~. Atwater 0\r. 29
MoUnt Vernon S3, Whitehill 46
Clrana• Clu. 4S, Willo-llill30
Pickerinpn 104. Fnoldin Hoa. ll
Southwcstcm Chr. 21, Meni«Chr. 26
VcrmiliCII 64, Cle. Adama 36
Watkins Memor:ifl S4, MpyMDe l3
WeoiCn'ille N. 64, ~ Adln&amp;IOn 34
Willoughby S. 83,
1o Ht.. 40

&gt;44 1&gt;44109

40 149)32
38 121109

32 141115
20 951&lt;10
9 74158

Wooeter S3. OrrvW.e

28

1

•

worlhingu&gt;n Kilbowne 38, Orovc Oly
•

Baseball

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norril Olvllion

T"'"
W L T Pts. CFCA
CIUCOJO .............. 18 II 4 40 113 92
DeuoiL.............. 18 16 1 37 146129

MinniCIOta .......... 17 ll 3 37 110 99
TompoBay ........ 13 20 2 2B 121132
Tamn10 .............. 12 14 4 28 93102
SL Louio ............ II 17 4 26 115132

Smytho Dt.lololl
LooAngcloo ....... 20 9 4 44 IS2118
c;.Jaloy J.... ......... 19 10 4 42 129102
Vance~~.vu

... :..... 18 10 3

39 141 97

.... .......... 1217 5 29 96135
,WUmipea,.......... 10 17 3 23 10317.4
Sonlooe ............. 526 I

11

93164

tn

AmerfeanLaa.ae
BALTIMORE ORIOlES - Doclinod
tender 1993 contrw;;tJ to Bob Milacki

and Ma!k Will ia•oa pitchm and Sam '

Hom, Mad McLcmoic and b.iy Milli·
a•n, inriclden. Aarecd to tetml with
Mlrk Parcrtt, eatchor, on a ono-)'CIU contnct and Steve Sepcy, Mike Coca. Da~ 1
Walten, Wayne Edward• and Don
Sch11lze, pitc:hm, oa minot·lei&amp;IUI c:aatracta. Auisned Cau Oevarez, ca~ehar,
outright to Rol:h. . . d. lhe lntemaU~ "

.......BOSTON RED SOX ~

Doclined '"'

tender 1993 con1r1C:ts to Tony POilU and
Jof!Gny, pitchen.
CAUFORN!A ANGELS - Apood 10
t.c.nn1 with Rene
dlird butmano
on I one-year COIUtiCI.
CHICAOO WHITE SOX -llodinod
to lal.dcr 1 1993 cc:ntrlc:l,to Carlton FW.,

Cionul•.

Friday's scores
Dcooit6.&amp;o.o.nl
New Jmey2,-&lt;TampaBay 0
WuhlnP&gt;I 4, llullord 3

Loo Ani&lt;Ja

0&gt;-

I

1993

Cltc:hcr.

s.

Ec!m01110115, tic
VIIICOUvcr a, San Jc.c I

\

CIJlVEl.AND INDIANS - Declinad
10 la'ldc:r I 1993 QJIUICt \o Jlod Nidlok,
pilcher.
•

They played SaturdliJ'

C&lt;llllrlet

10

.

De·

o..a

. . _ua. ' .

Transact ions

-

PII!LADELPHIA PHILL!BS -

DAI.LAI MA

Dame32

1A 114130

• ~ pildo·

Pl1ced

1\oGU, - ... 011 !h•lllilUOd liol.
Activatlll Radian Cumc, cenwr, from

Ellllolte 64, Moyfiold 37
Gufield Ho. 42, Clo. S..uh 23

Pltrldl: DIYIIIan
W L T rt.. GFGA

2
3
1
4

.

Pllll ~ IIIII 11M •

w.-. lllllketblll
..,_
...._tton
VliiiiCKS -

Garfield Hll. Trinity 17, Tot. Notro

1814
17 12
1614
13 IS

...

a-.
~'!~&lt;be!
''
SAN FRANctsm GIANI'S -

a.. Oloovillc 66, Ce. Erimow 37
Ce. W. Toch 74. WlftiiiiYilla&gt;l6
Dublin 57, w.......w. s. 39

WALES CONFERENCE

..........

Bill,_.,, illfi.U.: Mlcbi S1uer,
Clldtr. Den~. aut" -1~ ud

Glrls'IIOO.,_

\IlL

, WuiUnp .. .....
N.Y: IIoopn .....

1 9 9 3 - 10 Koria l!lolo!.

· lloc!lord 49, E""Ud 3B

Tonl(lht's eames

Tua

-.r.r~~ool993....a..'
NEW YOU. METS -~ Aarood to
. . . with ,_ OnUlU. OUIIWaa, (1ft •
011.6-fUr OOiltraot.. o.ct.inM lO &amp;e.nder

~--...

S.c:amcnto a New Jeney, 7 p.m.
Golden S&amp;.dc at ~d, J0 p.m.

l'illlbwJh .......... 23 8 l '

-

SACRAIIIBNTO JaNOS - Ploced
Mazty Cclalaa. fa:awd tmw, ca the in·
jllrod Iiiio Activllod Ruody B....., ......
hunlllo-liol.
SAN ANI'ONIO SPliRS -l'imll~&lt;·
ry r....u..., eoteh. Named JoM Lucu

.......

.

Foolllall
N-IFootllatiU,O.

CIUCAOO BEARS - Soaned Bob

• a.ioiioa, ........ boilo, IIIII Bury W1F·
pnoo~oo oqllld.
Jll8oedG..Kzz' a*i,.W.~,on
ill_u..t--. W~Multllodooi!&gt;IUO• ·

•·---. aom ..

Food-.---·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
••
"·~ Ul I

CIID!FS-

P!oced

-s..-Mldooollmllh.wldii .......

SAN FRANCISCO 49W- Adiwat•
ed Joe MOftlana, qunetblet, from in·

!;:l.;::t"" W~...t

lbolclon Conloy,

Hockey

Nalloulllodoiy~ .
NEW YOU: ISIANili!RS- Sipod
T.......,., rial!•,.; Auipod

a.-..

T-.dtoC.pii!Oisuiet""llboAme:·
.... -.,. l.oip

CoUeae

aAISON -N..od Bobby Jolllllon

-·
-----·
1

'

'we CocldiniiOr.

FURMAN- Prooi«od s.... Willon,

..-...n fOQlb.ll cotcb, tct cW-in c:oNAVY - Aanoancod that KaYin

llo_, !Cavin Kaat ond Bn.a COchtut

..... -~' lhe M*.ablll kllm.

Pi'ITSBUJOH - NIIIIOd

s.... 111111'

- · (lllldlalloooch In ....... "'kldt·

..

' BATIJ.Ji: FOR CONTROL - Detroit goilie
Tim Cbeveldae (cenler) ROeS to the Ice In a battle
for control ol the puck with BGitoa Adam Oates

pitcbet. Claimod Chria Donnelt, ~ird
b.lern&amp;n, oa waivcra (rom the: floricb

LOS ANOELES DODOERS - Doc:tinod 10 ....... I !993 ·- - tD Todd
Btuinpz:, illfieldm ocxfieL!•. Retained
loa Amollluoo, Mal~ loo Foooo·
aon, Bon Hinet, aad ROn Pernaoiti,

.

•

HOUSTON A$11\0S - Doclinod 10
IOftdtr a 1993 .contnct to Jimmr lOMI,

cUoed

MiMolota at Golden Stltc, 10:30 p.m.

.

.

..-....
- ...... .-.Do·
OlMd 10 Sllldlr 1 1993 OCIIIIriCt t.o' Wally

l!M:c 9,4,1opoo All·Siu 56

Nc:w lase)' II Indiana, 1:30 p.m.
Philadclphia at OUc.a~ 8:30p.m.

·

luomo Wahon and Doua

Apoecl to lenni wilh Lony Aoulcn011,

Exblbltlon

Od1ndo ll Allan \I, 7:30p.m.
Utah It a.EVEI..AND, 7:30p.m.

to

.........

Xa..;cr, C»Uo 74, Ddawara66

New YOlk 113, BOlton 87
Utah ll2, Pttillddphia 98
Cl..EVELAND 119, Sacramento 108
. Allonh 108, Miomi 100

yeor ....,... ond o,.;po Sonilh, OUifioW·
ar, and Tonwny Shioldt. infieUer, on onepar cc.atr~Cts. Da:lined to tender 1993
conii'IC\a

La!&amp;11eocb sc. 112.Poiii\X..... 71
Son Dio&amp;o SL 90, NOitll F1arid.o 79

Frklats scores

O.O.W I:U.lndiono I06
SuoMoaio 122. Do1lu 101
Sao... l:l6, - d 109

CIUCAOOCUBS-A..-doo....,
wi&amp;h WWie Willoa, CIUifid.l., Gn a two-

D11ceazo, out!lelden: Ken Pallenon,
~cr. and Doua Stmn&amp;e. Widder.
FLORIDA MARI.lNS - Doc!iaod 10
1en0ar a 1993 eodda to Robct Penon,

hrW. .
Bw.. SL 99, Eliubcoh Cloy St. 70
Bri&amp;hom Y-.19; lhoh St. 65
ldoho 70, GoaoP SC. 64

2S
25
3.5

.667
.667

lhrou.. .

the 1995 ... em.

-:a- reportod

.

ATI.ANTA BRAVES- Iatendod Ute
....... of Bobby c.., .........

Dol'&gt;ul 90, NB IWDoio 13
Iowa SL B1, Meicer46 .
IWou SL 66, Mo.·ltaoo Cily 64
N. 1WooU 86,B......... 31

LS
4.5

fired, Lucas named ·
Antonio's new ·head coaclt

J';al. .l la&amp;lll

Vllldodiill87, N. C:U.0.. A.tT 51

CB

,.

.1

103 1:

·"

(ll) and the Red Wlnp' l'lul Yaebaert d•rill&amp;· ''
Friday aipt's ~ .a a- 111 Detroit, ak!l t~~t: •-·:
Red Winp wun 6-4. (AP)
"'"
" ~]'

Steelers need win aga,nst Vikings
to earn first-round bye in playoffs

'

\

...,;,.

. . ~f,~

•••

&lt;J
By ALAN ROBINSON
sion Sunday if they win or 1he offen5e were as productive as his
PI'ITSBuRGH (AP) - They're Green Bay Picken lose to the Los defense, which scored a elult111
overachieving clubs coached by Angeles Rams. The Packers still record . eighth touchdown on
prime contenders for the NFL could win the division by winning Audray McMillian's 51-yard in~CFo
Coacli of the Year award - and their last two, if the Vikings lose to c:ep0oo mmn against San Fnnci£-.
both coaches are rookies. Both Pittsburgh, and that would leave . co.
tealnS have physical, point-producthe Vildngs out of lite postseason,
"We're looking for the rigltl··~
ing defenses blessed with a remarkperiod.
guy
who can take the ream·, who,:•
able ability to disrupt an oppoThat's
one
reason
why
Green
can
lead
ihe team," Green said.
nent's game.plan.
will switch quarterbacks - again "We've had 1cind of a rocky roaif1.:
·Both would prefer to focus on ~ with Sean Salisb~ey (70 of 125. the last three or rour weeks, which&gt;"
the playoffs, yet are in th~ uncom- 780 yards, 3 TDs, 2 interceptions) can ........,." in ihe NFL. We're not"'·
fol'll\ble role of tt'ying to son out startin ahead of Rich Gannon (159 in a jja:;iC~tuatioo."
. ·:
offensive troubles that threaten to of 27~. 1,905 yards, 12 touchNeitherisCowher-yeL
"•'"
limit their postseason to one week- downs. 13 interceptions). It will
However, he is admittedly COf!.i"'
end. Both are going with different mark the sixth straight week ihe cerned with an offense that fot'-:
quarterbacli:s than were starting Steelers' opponent has switched weeks has seemed unable·to geiiCf:.~ ··
only two weeks ago.
quarterbacks before playing Pitts- ate points on its own, 8t least withSiill, for all their similarities, bur&amp;h.
out the help of a defense that haS"'
there is ~n_e .marked difference
Green appll{ently believes he forced '21 interceptions and 16'"'
between ucnnia Green's Minnesota can no longer be patient with an fumbles.
. 11.
Vildngs and Bill Cowher's Pitts- offense tha has passed for jua two
Unlike Green, however, swiech"2• ·
bursh Steelera entering Sunday's touchdowns in eigllt games, just ing quarterbacks isn't a viable
important »me between Central like Cowher's not happy with an option for Cowher. With Ne~
Division ,l'eaders from opposing offense that hasn't passed for 200 • O'Donnellllkely out until the ptaY,IP"
conf'ere!lces.
.
yards since October.
·.
offs with a cracked right ft&amp;uJaH'g
The Steele~ (10-4) are in the
Green only wishes the Vikings' · , (See STEELERS 011 C·7)
'
playoffs. The Vikings (9-S) aren't.
The Vikings seemed a lock only
a few weeks ago to easily secure
their first NFC Central Pivision
· ·title since 1989, but the seasonlong struggles of their offense were
never moo: apparent in consecutive
losses to Philadelphia (28-17) and
San Francisco (20-17) ihe last two
weeks.
1419 State Route ,
"The Steelers are in the playoffs
and we're not yet," Green said.
GaiUpoU., Ohio 4S6Sl
"That's the key right now. You
614-41416 07&amp;6
want to try 10 {'laY the best football
N..,. Kaaaup Drh'•Ja
in December if you can, because
that will put you in the playoffs.
We're still trying to get that little
extra push you need to get over the

NTIDNIIO (AP) - The . 1989 afier he was the first overall
Antonio
didn't waste pick in the 1976 draft by Houston:
fired Jerry He was in and out of rehabilitation
Tarlcanian ~~h~~::c;;te~ newcomer for cocaine addiction during his
to pro coaching, former NBA play- playing career, and ~ devoted his
er John Lucas.
life recently to fighung drug abuse.
Five hours after hastily gatherLucas becomes the fllSt black
ing reporters to announce Tarlcani- coach of the San Antonio Spurs.
an had been "terminated," Spurs
Tarkanian, 62, coached UNLV
·owner Red McCombs summoned to the 1990 NCAA championship
them again Friday night to and compiled a record of 625-122
announce Lucas had been hired.
~83.7 percent) in .24 seasons, five at
"John is a great player. John is Long Beach State-~d 19 atUNLV.
a great penon. I've always felt he The Spurs, expected to contend in
would be a great leader on the the NBA Western Conference this
floor," McConibs said. "I am sCascin, are 10-11 following Friday
extremely excited ab9ut John· night's •122-101 victory over the
agreeing to some over here and PaUas Mavericks.
·
coach the S urs." ·
·
Tarkanian, 62, was in the fast
Lucas, ~. will begin coaching year of a three-year conttact with
the telllll immediately.
the Spurs that pays him $500,000 a
·('Lucas played for seven teams, .season. He said he won't coach
including San Antonio, from 1976- again.

. lers ...
SJee

The Vikings Will win the!f divi-

~· -ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMASI
FREE VIDEO TRANSFER .

video.,..

. (Continued from C-6)

-~====~=-::...::.:..__....:..__

outfielder, and Dan Gabler and Steve
Cun&gt;nUn"'J&gt;i~.

MINNI!SOTA TWlNS - Declinad 10
oonderl'9lC111uacu io Gaoc Lodoin, r1111

wou

SIIOWDDI
342s-.IIYL '

"Let Us VIdeo That Special Event"
Capture It On Fllm Fon~ver

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.....
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tender 1993 c:ontflcu to Muk Camon,

May your
holidays be
filled with Joy...
and may
the coming year bring
you health &amp; happiness

WE PROCESS
Bmm -SUPER 8- SUDES &amp; PICTURES

7 PC. KITCHEN
CUTURYSET

•

A

'!lily any ly(lll at linin Film ttnelwe wiU irlll allr up lo. 50 fMt of Film
on VH8 Tl(lll- OFFER EXPIRES DEC. 31, Ulft
We htove biwlk
IIVIIIklbie for purci!Me, or bring In your
own, uiiUMd euper high gr8de 11pe.

said, "They're better than ibeir
record indicates."
Remember, the Steelezs are 10-4
and tied with Buffalo for the AFC's
best record.
"(Chicago) was_our worst football game," Cowher said. "I
would hate to .characterize our
whole team as playing poorly,
when you had won four games in a
row (untiiii!Sf week). But there's
no question that you can't perfonn
that way going down the stretch,
especially getting ready for the
playoffs.''
Green agrees. .
age.
)
"We've got to play a solid
-Pittsburgh s offensive ineptitude
against Chicago was so obvious game to get us in the playoffs," he
that Vikings defensive end Chris said.
Doleman, asked about the Steelers,

SPECIAL!

.

.

fQI'IIIer starter Bubby Brister again
is.the mail.
lfhe self-confidence and leadership qualities that Brister ~xudes
hayen 't paid off in either prOduction or points. In two starts, .Brister
is 32 of 69 for 336 yards, one
touchdown and five intercq!tion,,
pulling even more of a burden on ·
an .already overworked Barry Fos~
ter.
FCBter, the NFL's rushing leader
with I ,469 yards, was limited to a
season-low 25 yarlls by the Bears,
or nearly 90 yards below his aver-

Auto-Rentals

lOp."

.

'

Clarence Weathenpoon scored
rebounds and 2.4 poitits by ~c ·defense held the Celtics to 4I percent
shooting.
The
Knicks,
who
17
points and Charles Shackleford
Ceballos.
shot
55
percent,
held
their
oppohad
I4 points and 17 rebounds for ,
Barkley scored 20.points in the
second half and Ceballos had 18 nent under 100 points for the 12ih the Sixers.
•·
Cavalien 119, Kings 108
points in the first quarter on 9-for- lime in 14 games, 11 of them victories.
Larry Nance and Mark Price
10 shooting.
Reggie Lewis led the Celtics scored 22 points each and both
Tony Smith and Sedale Threatt
made 9 of 13 shots for Cleveland
finished with 16 points each for the with 24 points.
Spurs 122, Mavericks 101
against Sacramento.
Lakers. who fell into fourth place
Sean Elliott scored a career-high
The victory was the fourth
in the PacifiC Division.
Clippers 103, Tlmberwolves 95
41 points and San Antonio won its straight for the Cavaliers, a season
· Danny Manning scored 27 fmt game after the ftring llf coach high, while the Kings lost their seventh consecutive game. Sacramenpoints on ll·for-I4 shooting and Jerry Tarkanian.
Eiliott was I6 of 22 from the to, which won at home against the
Los Angeles· held Minnesota without a fielll goal for more than six field in surpassing his pre~ious Cavs last month, has not won at
·
IO Richfield Coliseum since 1984.
minutes of the fourth quaner.
h1.gh 0 f 32 pomts,
set
Mitch Richmond and Lionel
Ken Nomian had 23 points for careerdays earlier against Utah.
· Pallas, 0-7 on the road and 2-16 Simmons each scored I6 points for
lite Clippen. who have won their
last seven meetings with Minneso- overall, was led by Derek Harper the Kings.
with 23 points. Dale Ellis scored 24
Hawks 108, Heat 100
ta. .
Rookie Christian Laettner led points and David Robinson 18 for
Moolde Blaylock scored 20
poinls and Jon Koncak made the
the visiting Timberwolves with 24 San Antonio.
points and 10 rebounds. But his .
Jazz 112, 76ers 98
key plays for Atlanta at Miami.
teammates could not fill the void
Karl Malone scored 23 points
The Hawks led 95-93 before a .
left by team scoring leader Chucli: and John Stockton had 17 points three-point play by Koncak, who '
Person, who strained his right and a season-high 22 assists a~ . scored I3 points. and Kevin WiUis':
Achilles' tendon just 2:35 after the Utah used a 36-12 second-half run basket extended !heir advantage to :
to win at Philadelphia.
100-93 with 3:57lefL
;
opening lip.
The Heat's two leading scorers, •
It was lite fourth straight win for
Knk:ks 113, Celtics 87
New York broke a 23-game reg- the Jazz, while the 76ers lost for Glen Rice and Rony Seikaly, were .
ular-season loSing streak at Boston the lith time in 13 games and held to nine points apiece. Bimbo
Garden behind Patrick Ewing's 30 dropped their home record to 2-10. Coles led Miami with 22.
points and 14 rebounds.
The Knicks' last previous regular-season win wa.S Feb. 29, 1984,
although they won a playoff game
in Boston in 1990.
New York's NBA-Ieading

I' '

Rodgers E-Z IUd~

DETROIT TIGERS - Declined lo

OUc.ao u Philitdelpbia, 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. lalanden at Pitt~bw-ah, 1:40p.m.
WubinJ\(XI It Bc.ton. 7:10p.m.
N.Y. Ranprs ttHartfMI, 7:40p.m.
Buft'llo It Montrt.~~l, 8:10 p~.

By The Assocla~ Pri!SS
The Portland Trail Blazers,
West~m Conference champions
last season, are one of the teams
NBA opponents measure themselves a~
If Friday night's 126-109 victory is any indication, the Seattle
SuperSonics are progressing just
line.
"We need to win some of ihese
games and prove we're just as good
· as t.hey are," Seattle's ~hawn
. Kemp said. "This is a big eonfi"
dence booster for us."
Kemp scored II of his 25 points
as the Soriics stayed in control in
the fourth quarter. Ricky Pien:e had
13 of his 19 points on 6-for-7
shooting in the final period.
"It's not very often you control
a game against a great team like
that," Sanies coach George Karl
said.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
New York 113, Boston 87; Utah
112, Philadelphia 98; Cleveland
119, Sacramento 108; Atlanta 108,
Miami 100; Petroit 122, Indiana
106; Sari Antonio 122, Pallas 101;
the Los Angeles Clippers 103,
Minnesota 95; and Phoenix 116,
the Los Angeles Lakers 100. .
MINE! ~Tile Cleveland Cavallers' Danay Ferry (left) grabs tlte
Suns 1161 Lakers 100
nay tr.n Sacramento l'rGntmu Kurt Rambls durinJI Friday
Phoenix won its ninth consecu~in Richfield, Ohio, wltlclt the CavaUen won ll!J-108.
tive game and sixth straight on the
road, routing Los Angeles behind
,
.
Charles Barkley's 25 points and 23

'*mil

sw l.a~Ja!on• 74, Comoboll59

lllldwwtDI-

In NB~ 'action,

TEXAS RANGERS - Aa,.ed lo
whh Rob DYcey, outfielder, 0!' 1
JniDCr..lolpe OOIUI'ICL
•

59

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Pege-C7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleaaant, WV

~-- .. kanian

oac-ycar cantra~:t. Declined to tender
1993 c:antrac:tl to Bri"n Fisher, pitctier,
and Dave Coc:t-.ae. ·~

~St.ll;JacbonSt. 71
N.C.·o-uboo&gt; 71, CenL Flmdo 66

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Andy Dolidl uocutiw

terT'M

SGoltll
Austin Peay 64. Aitaasu St. Sl

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S 1TLE MA1UNI!IIS - Apoocl "'
wida Derulil Powoll. pi&amp;chor, on a

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45
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Central Olwilion
Cbicoao ................ H 6 .114
Iadi~M ................... I2 10
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C.I!VEIAND.......Il II .S22
Allma .,............... ll II ·.soo
a..n-................ 11 II .SOO
Doonoii ................... IO 10 .SOO
Milw1ukoo ............. IO 12 .45S

20, 1112.

Sonics shock Blazers· 126-109; Cavs win

Apeod "' 10m11 rib Guy W1,..., piJd&gt;.
•· ~ a CIDI-yelt ocnii'ICt. ·
OAitLAND ATHLETICS - An•
nouncM lhtt ~atald. Bainel, Outfielder,
oiluy utoiaolioa. Apoocloo
ICIInl wlih Shan HW.,, pilclllr, on a

EASTERN CO.NFERENCE

..Oecember

sa.. ran~ 11om 3/!6" to

With coo,.llltntotora~ rack.
(17·1191'G)
.
~-

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IILLS~LIIDKT'

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sa•

HandWGiii. . .
Chemically actl-.attd llancl

warmers. 2 per pack. Gntat lor

your loll ODd Winter outdoor
actlvtttea. (ll4MAZ)

•

�•

In NFL's 16th week,

•••

.· Losses by 'Skins, Packers will cQmplete NFC.playoff puzzle
By DICK BRINSTER
Only seven teams vie for six advantage 1Ju0u8bout the playoffs.
AP Spora Writer
playoff slols in the NFC and eight
Bill at Saints
Redul:e4 to its lowest common clubs for six benhs in the AFC.
Buffalo's no-huddle ofrense
demoninalor, the NFC playoff race
In other games today with play- may have problems at the noisy.
has come 10 this: Losses today by off ramifications, it wiU be Buffalo Superdome.
Washington and Green Bay will at New Orleans, Houston at Cleve·
" We're calling on our 12th
draslically curtail "Whar if'l" calls land, Minnesota at Pittsburgh, man," New Orleans linebackel' Pat
to the NFL olfu:e nut week.
·Phoenix at Indianapolis, Washing- SwiUing said. "We want our fans
The playqff puzzle would be ton at Philadelphia, San Diego at.. tomakenoiseoneveryplay."
complete lin the conference. It .the Los Anaeles Raiders, and the
Bills coach Marv Levy said no
would be San Franci.sco, Dallas, New York Jets at Miami.
special steps have been taken.
New Orleans, Minnesota, Philadel·
·''Our team bas done very we11
In other games, it's New Eng.
phia and Washington.
against
noise," he said.
·
land at Cincinnati and Chicago at
In the AFC, things are not as Detroit
Both teams have clinched playsimple. There, it would ~e losses
Dallas (11-3) visits Atlanta (6-8) off berths. Buffalo's aim is the
by Indianapolis (Or a ~i victo- on Monday night
AFC's ultimate homefield ad vanry), Cleveland ·and Denver. Under
tage.
Kansas City (9-5) had a good
that secenario, the· playoff teams change to reduce iiS magic number
Redslduat EaRles ,
would be Buffalo, Pittsburgh, to one when its played the dispirit- · ·Althotlgh both teams are 9-S, a
Kansas City, Miami, San Diego ed New York Guuus (5-9) today at loss would hun Philadelphia more
and Houston.
than Washington because of playEast Rutherford, NJ.
Barring those exact developSill\ Francisco (12-2) needed a off tiebreakers. But Redsltins coach
meniS, it will be considerably busi- win over visiting Tampa Bay (4- Joe Gibbs wasn't thinking about
er n'ext week at the NFL 's Park 10) Saturday to win not on! y the the ~layoffs; just the Eagles.
Avenue headquaners.
' I guess the thing that I rememNFC West, but the homefield

llCI' is carrying hllf our ream to the Oreen Bay' would play Minnesota
locker room up thece on stretch- IICllt Sunday for the NFC Central
ers," be said when asked about tide.
·
games in PhilotJelpbia.
Vlklap 11 Steelen
Jetut Dolplllu
Minnesota (9-5) can win the
ReYCJ18e is the issue for Miami, Central, but cannot qualify as a
and it bas lllllhinl to do with a 26- wild&lt;*'CI team. Pittsburgh (10-4)
14 loss earlier tliis seuon to the needs to finish a game abead of
Jets(4-10).
Buffalo, but wins tiebreakers for
"They knocked us out of the homefield advantage against any
playoffs last year.'' Miami safety other AFC contender.
Louis Oliver said of the season·

Corporate Bonds
U.S. Treasuey Securities
Mutual Funds
lnsurtd Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
• , lnsurtd Money Market
AccouniS
• IRA's

· By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Chicago
Cubs outfielder Jerome Walton,
Baltimore pilehcr Bob Milacki and
36 other players joined the largest
free agent class ever when teams
failed to offer them 1993 contracts
by Friday's deadline.
ChicaBo White Sox catcher
Carlton Fisk, Boston Red Sox outfielder Ellis Buries and Los Angeles
Dodgers ftrst ba$eman Todd Benzinger also were in the group. They
are now rree to deal with any team.
By letting the playerS go, learns
avoid having to go to salary arbitration with them. Some weren't
offered contracts to avoid the rule
limiting pay cuts to 20 percent
The White Sox hope to re-sign
Fisk, while the Oakland Athletics
are thought to already have worked
out a deal with pitcher Kirk
Dressendotfer. The Minnesota
Twins is believed to have agreed
with ftrst ba$eman Gene Laddn.
Among lbe group who fded for
free &amp;Jency in November, five
more stgned on·Friday, while Minnesota ~y announced its $5.2
million, tw year deal with 41year-old outli lder Dave Winfield.
"I'm at he point where it
wasn't just the dollars," Winfield
said. "I wanled to be happy. I've
come from good places, I went to a
better place last year and I think
this may be the best"
Outfielder Willie Wilson left
Oakland and agreed to a $1.4 million, two-rear contract with the
Cubs, and mfielder Rene Gonzales
returned to the California Angels
for one year and an option at
$750,00 guaranteed.
Outfielder Joe Orsulak and the
New York Mets agreed to a
$650,000, one-year deal, and outfieldel' Harold Baines accepted the ·
Athletics•: offer of salary arbitration, which makes him a signed
player.
.
Pitcher Larry Andersen and the
Philadelphia Phillies signe4 a
minor-league contract and a letter
agreement for a $700,000 major
league contract with the chance to ·
earn $450,000 more in performance bonuses. The Phillies auaranteed $350,000 of his salary.
Thirteen rree agent offered arbitlllion approached Saturday's midni,ht EST deadline to accept or
reJeCt the offers, a aroup that
included Mart McGwire, Ruben
Sierra and Robin Yount MeG wire
and Sima have said they will reject
the offers. Yount wu attempting to
finalize his tentative deal with tbe
Milwaukee Brewers, said to be
worth $3.5 million. Players who
reject the offers may conlinue to
nesotilte with their formerflubl
~1an.8.
·
• Five ptayen eligible for arbitration ~. 10· one-year contracts:
Cub• outfielder Dwight Smith
($630,000), Twlns&amp;:f!::J Oary
Wayrrc ($325,()00),
pitch·
er Shawn Hillegas ($210,000),
(

Boeing announces
new aircraft deals
worth $5 billion

diffetenee.

.

..,.,,....,..,,.. YEAR AWARDS • Bob Evans
aflllll, lnt:. 15 year aervke a-reb ·were. pre·
by C111ty McKenzie, left, retired board
~1iae111aber, to Alan Kubn, Bidwell plaJ!t 1 Bess

GJ'IICie 111C1 Gale Lalit. r - Jlirisioa ud Mike
Wilcox, Bldwdl plot d~ ltae fll'lll'S 11111ual
Cbrist.M party ..-dy.

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP UP

•·
•
•
•

Fisk, Burks among baseball players
in largest group offree agents ever

SeaUwb at BI'IIIKOI
Denver (7-7) acts 1o1m Elway
back, but its playoff hopes are
minuscule after four straiahtlosses
in his absence.
Cardinals at ColiS ·
IndianaPOlis (7-7) -· like Denver and Cleveland - is barely '
alive. So, a victory over Phoenix
(4-10) probably won't make any

Cllarpn at Ralden
"The guys are focused because
they see what's ou~ in front of
them," San Die ..o quarterback
Sian Humphries saTd.
The Chargers (9-5), iller winnina nine of their last 10 games, an:
on the verge of bec:ominR the fust
team in NFL history to qualify for
the playoffs after an 0-4 start. A
victory over Los' Angeles (6-8)
would do it
,
Rams It Packers
Green Bay (8·6) willl1e doin,8
some scoreboanl watching in addition to pla}'ing Los Ange~es. If tbe
Packers wm lllid the Vilrings lose,

• Stocks

Minnesota Twins o'Wiler Carl Poblad c!urin' a
news eo1,1ference Friday announcing his signmg
or a two-year contract with the Twills. (AP)

~blr20,1992

•

endinl23-20 O'o'ertime loss.

OFFERING:.

SIQliiS WITH TWINS - Former Toronto
Blue Jays outfielder Dave Winfield touches his
cap while beinc ftanked by his wife Tonya l!nd

Section D

,:F arm/llusiness

.,We Denver and Spread Umestone"

-Mason Sand
•Top Soli .
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Pit Run
•Shredded.
Top Soli ·
•Drainage Gravel
•Pea Gravel
•Straw
•Drainage Tile
· •Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5"} .
•Block and Mortar Mix

Contact:
Stan Evans
Vice President
441 Second Avenue
GalllpoUs, OH 45631

TWENTY YEAR AWARDS • Casey
l•,t~~~':~':; left, preaented 20 year. Bob Evans
Ine. -service awards recently to Charles

r

(Ted) Gl

ball a1111 Victur (Wldtey) George, of

tbe BkhRUpluL

·part~

(614) 446-2125
. 1-800·776-4691

. RIO GRANDE - Bob Evans
l~.~~~!itlnc.
employees of the
. plant, farm division,
transportation division
their annual Christmas
JNI1'1Y at the University of Rio
Grande, Rhodes Center, recentEntertainment was provided
Steve Dixon, Marietta.
: ' ; Presentation of service
' · ~B!'ds highlighted the evening
·S¢SS1on.

J

•

Seattle Mariners pitcher Dennis There were at least three notabie
Powell ($175,000) and Baltimore moves among the players team let
Orioles catcher Mark Parent go Friday. Fcir one, the Florida
($215,000 in majors, $70.000 in Marlins got rid of pitcher Robert
minors).
. Person, whom they took from the
About 140 players are eligible White Sox in the expansion !Uaft.
.
.
to file for free agency in January.

' •'•
••

•
FREE
PAIOONG
· Avallable In Our'

: ·:.·
BySTANEVANS
• .'. GALLIPOLIS-Aflerarisetoa
: !SO-year high, the yield curve is be; ginning to decline from its peaks as
: sbOn term rates rise relative to long
l !erm rates.
1 -:· The loss ofmo• mentum is a func: tlOn of tona 1erm
• titesfimingwhile
: sl\Orttermratesare
! Hegirtoing to imi prove, it is not
lilcelythattheFederal Reserve will cut the discount rate
1any further. The disoount rate has
• lttlded to parallel Jhon term rates
I (90-day Treasury Bill) over the past

Puklna lot Aaoss
.,,
The Street From Our Stolt• '
''
~

I' I

:J
·' ~

,.

I '

't '

l

.t :

r •'

TWENTY-FIVE YEAR AWARD • CaRJ McKeazle,left, pre.sented a 25 year Bob EYJIIIS Farms, be. service award to Maxie
Camden of the BidweD plant durlq the firm's 1111111al Cbrlstmas
party at the Unlvenity oi'Rio Gnacle.

·1r.v,oWhile
years.
shon term rates have the
P.;&gt;tential to move higher in 1993, we
cuirently are not of the opinion that .
tliey wiU move materially higher,
~ llllless President-elect Clinton pro1poses a signifiCIIItstimulus package.
1'[lie current low rate of inflation
: ~utd be a critical variable to that

!

... GALLO

·wHITE
ZINFAJIDEL

Jflt\~

ULS&amp;tl

REG.
$1Ut

REG. $7.50

$1169

750L

FIRST BUCK - Rod Newsome of Pomeroy liilled Ibis sevenpoint buck in Wayne Coonty, W.Va. on NoY. 28 with a .308 WIDth·
ester. It wu bill fll'&amp;l buck.

. ...

. ",
' • l

~ outlOOk.

'
• i •t

J'"'!{,

Holidal' Sale

• :"i Ontheothcrhand,longterminw-- ·
: C5t rates performed well following
: dfedectionasrateson the long Treas: Ill] bond declined from a=nt peak
•of'7.75 percent to 7.4S percent AI·
TIDRTY YEAR A.WARD .c-y McKeuie,left, prtaeale!l a
: t!J!,ugh lhe credit markets have aen- 30 ,tear •ob Evau Farms, Inc. service award to Earl (LeRoy)
!Onilly viewed s1ro11ger business ac- Woan, kill 11oor foreman of the Bidwdl plot, diii'ID&amp; the rmn•s
't.lvity negatively, the polential exists annual Christm•s party at ltae 'university or Rio Grude.
:for a less agressive fiSCal stimulus
the new administration. The
:oxed income markets are more eom' fllfl8ble with improving business ac:tivity becauseit,meansrising govern. ment receipts. A weaker economy
may imply higher budget deficits.
• ~ [Mr. Evana Is u lnvesment
~broker for The Oblo Compaay In
:OS.G:aJUP&lt;Ilill ofllce.) .
The As'Ociarion records ances·
GALLIPOLIS ~ Sbawvers
IIIII keeps records
Windy Aaea, Gallipolis, is 1 new ua1 infcnwion
.
. I
of pi&amp; 1" hM OD ~m~~Y....u .,,ma S
N111mt!d top producers . member of the American
Association, reports Dick S
, for itS memben. 'Ibclc permanent
. bAU.IPOUS - Phyllis Miller, executi vc vice pre1ident of the rccon1s help memben select and
·
Dewitt and Cindy Dron- national orfni7Jiti911 with head- Dille the best lllilllls in their heRls
qf CENTURY 21 Bia Bend quartm in L lOiepb, Mo.
to produl:e hiP q.-lity, efficient
Inc. were rec:endy recoaTile American Anps AIIOCi• breedin&amp; cattle which are then
Donatas 1. Stranahan, lion, with over 24.000 llCUft adult ltWided widllbe American AniUS
21 Oreal Lakes, Inc. and jwliar lllelllben, is tile llqell Aaociatioa. Moll ollhele regisDheclot, on beinR among beef cattle re&amp;baJ u'OCiwjno ia teled Anga -Iliad by the u.s.
sales aaoc'-tes the world. lis CCIIIpllll:iiUJ •occadl f-en ud ruc:ben who raise
21 AtheniiMari- include detailed Information on tii&amp;h guallty beef for U.S. cooCouncll durina the nearly II million registmd Anps.
sumpbQIL
'

:frOm

'

$·

Gallia County farm new
member of association

l£6.$7.l $~99
smu

1/10 C.fWt-....... ,.,S'H

1/4 c.r.t

--S245

SIS.IIIY ECASE

=s

1/2 C.rwt----tsH

~--..J 11~!!!!==:!14t5

••

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oliO dlya, 12 or 11111101111• .... AI C.
oOr liM our FREE
to 12 mott41 ..1

Boeing also got orders from
Japan's Air Nippon worth $660
million and an $800 million deal
with China Southern Airlines.
Foreign buyers represented
about three-quarters of Boeing's
business last year.
Trans World Airlines' new owners, saddled with the oldest fleet
among the.major airlines, are, looking excitedly at the availability of
new jets. Representatives of
TWA's unions and creditors, who
are buying the airline in a
bankruptcy reorganization, say the
first order of business will be
updating the fleet.
Not only do passengers like to
fly on newer airplanes, new jets are
cheaper to mamtain and operate
than older planes.
COMING UP:
On Monday the U.S . Treasury
issues its monthly budget statement
for November.... The Commerce
Department on Tuesday announces
gross, domestic product and corporate profits for the third quarter and
plant and equipment spending
plans . ... November's ·durable
.goods orders and personal income
are announced
· Wednesday by the Commerce
Department.

GALUPOLIS - Results of the Howard to terms as first and secDecember 16 Local Administlative ond alternates to the county comArea(LAA)ConventionandCoun- mittee. Terms begin January I,
ty Convention for 1992 were 1993.
.
announced by Elizabeth A. Collins,
The county convention was concounty executive director of the vened at 10:30 a.m., with 26 deleGallia County ASCS Office.
gates from all areas of the county
James Burleson, a well known present. Prior to electing officers
Gallia County producer, was for the county ASC committee,
named to the Gallia County Agri- John Hendrix, district director for
cultural Stabilization and Conser- 12 counties in southern Ohio, pre-.
vation committee by delegates sented a certificate of service to
from Cheshire-Morgan, Hunting- current county commiuee chairman
ton, Raccoon, and Springfield Walter R. (Dick) Neal. Mr. Neal
towilships at the county ASCS con- will leave_the county committee in
vention, held Tuesday, December January afler serving the maximum
16 at 9:30 a. m., at the newly of three three-year terms. His dediopened C. H. McKenzie Agricul- cated service has been greatly
tura1 Center.
•·
appreciated. Also speaking m the .
The delegates also elected conven~on was David W. McKenLawrence H. Burdell and James. zie wlio retired from ASCS on

December I, 1992.
. James Burleson was elected
chairperson on the Gallia County
ASC Committee. David W. Pope
and Tom Woodward, also wellknown Gallia County producers,
were chosen to serve as vice-chairman and member for the coming
year.
The county ASC committee is
responsible for local administlation
of government' farm programs such
as the tobacco, th.e wool and
mohair, the dairy refund, conservation cost-share, and the feed grain
and wheat programs.
The county committee operates
under the guidance of the State
ASC committee and applicable fed'
era! laws and regulations.
.

American pu blic not always totally
infor~ed what is best for our forests

;Interest
rates
•

..

~NDAY·~ATU~
8-4;M .·~ r.~·

International Lease Finance Co.,
which leases its planes to airliaround the world. ILF agreed to
buy 53 jets worth about $3.6 billion
from Boeing.
Whether by accident or design,
ILF found itself in a strong position
to take !!dvantage of the weak airplane market to replace its older
airCraft
The cpmpany, a subsidiary of
insurer American International
Group, kept its purchases of new
airplanes down during the late
1980s when airlines and other jet
lessors were flooding Boeing and
Other aircraft makers with new
orders. ILF also raised equity for
the new purchases in a stock offering through its parent company in
1990, just before the Persian Gulf
heated up.
.
Airbus also got part of the lLF
order, but the 28 planes valued at
$1.S biUion wouldn't be enough to
offset the cancellation .earlier this
month by Northwest Airlines of 74
airplane orders worth $3.5 billion.
Airbus is also at risk of having to
absorb deferrals by anotlter jet
lessor, GPA Group PLC of Ireland.
GPA has had trouble raising
money to ride out the airline slump
after a brisk expansion,

-

1

~Money Ideas

••

t!D.UDAY Ho~~

.

ASCS results announced
'

.has annual

Stop By And IANtk
Over Our lage
Selertloil Of Gift Sets!
We Also llaYe Gift Certificates!

· ByDANBL~E
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - In the
toughest ~n 9f the worst year
for U.S. airlines, two of the biggest
carriers are cutting their budgets
for new airplanes a second time.
But for all the Boeing jets that
Delta and United want to put off
buying, the world's leading commercial aircraft maker was able to
find_foreign airlines and a jet leasing company willing to pick up
some of the slack.
In the past week, Boeing
8IUIOIIIICed new aircraft deals worth
almost $5 billion. With the biggest
domestic airlines cutting expenses
and delaying jet deliveries, it has
. become a buyer's market for airplanes.
After years of rushing to
upgrade their fleets in the late
1980s, U.S. airlines are cutting
back their orders in the face of
some of their worst losses ever,
Boeing has had to lower production
ofits 757 and 767 jetliners and
eliminate about 14,000 jobs.
For those that have the money to
buy, the timing couldn't be much
betler.
.
Of the three deals announced in
the past week, the largest was with

.

ll '

,_..,~..._,

By CINDY JENKINS
GAIJ.IPOLIS - Forest management here in the orland central
hardwood forests o southeastern
Ohio were at one time limited
almost exclusively to an oak-hickory association of hardwoods. The
hardwoods which make up this
association have been cut·extensively and although much regeneration of these species has occurred,
on certain slopes there is still a lack
of oak, the wood industry's most
valuable commercial species in the
eastern United States.
Even though researchers have
been aware of the slowly declining
regeneration of oak and have been
studying how to reestablish it, no
practical solution has coine about
as of this time. In most instances,
the only way one can regenerate
oak is to clear cut an area so as to
establish an even-aged stand of oak
via .already present reproduction .
However, many environmentalists
who will not comprehend the truth
in this matter have put a stop to
clear cutting on some of our :
National and State forests where
this practice bas been a successful,
legiumate silvicultural practice for
several decades. The powerful lob·
bying of the environmenlal factor
has a tremendous influence on the
American public, who is not
always,10tally informed on what is
best for our forests.
.
Today, forestry is becoming a
very technical profession. Specifics
run the gamut from hydrolo~y
(wale£ quality in our forests) to silvicultural to forest entomology
(particularly the Gypsy moth).
Becoming infor!Red as ho": to
better manage your woodlands 1s a
must if they arc to produce commercially valuable products. It isn't
as·simple as never cutting another
tree . If it were, no more trees
would be cut and that would be
that Of course we would all have
to do without the thousands of
wood products we use daily. The
United States will never outgrow
its need for Wood. Better management practices by todays landowners are a musL S7'1&gt; of the woodlands in the U.S. are privately
owned. It is up to those private
owners 10 educate themselves on
tbe best way to produce their tilnber, the best way to harvest their
timber so u to su1tain minimal

damage to the environment and the
If you are confused about the
best way to market their timber that conditions of your woodlands and
will boost economic conditions for need some tcchnical assistance on
themselves and their area.
how to man310 them, call the GalThere are government agencies ' lia Soil and Water Conservation
that realize these problems exisll' District Foresler for information on
regarding the nation's timber SUJI"'' how to·betler manage your woods.
ply. These agencies have individu- On February 18, 1992 a meeting
als that are schooled and trained in . will be held at the new Gallia
the area of forest management The County Agricultural Center about
Ohio Department of Natural woodland m'anagement and timber
Resources Division of Forestry and harvesting. A panel of three profeslocal agencies such as the Gallia sional foresters will have in-depll•
County Soil and Water Conserva- information they will be sharmg
tion District are just a few of the with the public. Call the Gallia
agencies that are willing to offer SWCD at446-8687 for more infortechnical assistance and sometimes mation. Refreshments. will be
served.
cost-sharing when
Cindy J~nkins is the district
conditions meet the criteria.
These services are at no charge to · rorester for Gallia County's Soil
and Water Conservation District.
the landowner.

Blowers named partner
in accounting firm
GAIJ.IPOLIS - Steve Blowers
was admitted as a partner in. the
International ,Professional Services
fum of Ernst &amp; Young.
Blowers joined the firm's
Columbus, Ohio office in 1979,
transferred to the Cleveland office
in 1987, and joined the Washington, D.C. office in 1992. He is.a
member of the National Account·
ing Department with a specialization in S¢~:urities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) related matlerS.
Prior to j_oining the National
Accounting Department, Blowen
completed a two-year ProfessiOIIII
Accounting Fellowship in the
SEC's Office of the Chief Acco~
tant in Wuhington, D.C. At till
SEC, .Blowers was responsible f&lt;Jo
the resolulion of registrant accounting issues and formulating positions on a lmad range of account·
ing and disclosure issues.
Prior to movinl to Washington,
D.C., B~ was selected to participate in Enlst &amp; Youna's Inlernational E3change Program and
worked for a year in the firm's
Birmingham, EnalllOII office. A
native of Oallipolis, Blowera
earned 1 Blchelor of Science from
The Ohio State UniVersity in 1975.
He is a member of the American
Institute of Certified. Public
II

•

Accountants and the Ohio Society
of Certified Public Accountants.
Also, Blowers is a registered professional engineer in the State of
Ohio.
Blowers and his wife, Tami,
and their daugh 1ers. Meredith and
Michelle, reside in Gaithersburg,
Md. He is the son of Ray and Virginia Blowers of 545 Hilda Drive,
Gallipolis.

·

STEPHEN BLOwERS
l

�•

hal D2 Su~ Tlmee 8entlnel

Pomeroy-Mddleport-Galllpolle, Ott Point Pleasant, WV

C"' '.:

December 20, 1182

:

, ~'(_ =~~~~=~===~==~;::::;:===:=~~=;;=:====:=;;;~====~===~~~~;;
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December20, 1992

Pomeroy--Middleport--Galllpolts, OH Point Pleasant, wv

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·550,000 acres of cropland added
·to ·water-quality programs in year
. ~ASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Depli!JD&amp;il says ~ers put water-quality prldiCell ..to
~ffec,t on S~.OOO acteS ~f ~~
m fiScall991 under proJects 111iU81-

,,

ed ~the dcplu;t~~•ent
. .
. '"Theae P'I?JCCIS ~ .soil eroStOn and sedimentation, tmprove
. the handling of ~ill!al waste and
.reduce the apph~auon of nutri- .

Lower corn, ,soybe(ln prices·
.pull down value ·of export,s

,,I.

.

.,..
Office oa the corne.r or Horton Street. Pictured
are, .from left, Lon Neal, owner, Mason Mayor
George Nichols and Cbris Neal, operator and
·
owner.

NEW BUSINESS • Poor Boys Tire recenlly
· ' opened in MaSon and has set its grand opening
. for SaQu'day, Jan. l, with special$ on eihaus~
' · llllpments, .and tires. Tbe family operated busi·
·" ness is located across from the Mason Post

USDA targets dozens of farm·
··age_ncy offices for possible closure

75; Tennessee, 67; Virginia, 55; made sense "in the days .of mules West Virginia and North Carolina, and wagons," wht;n a farmer l)ced51 each: and Mississippi, 50.
ed to get to the county seat and
· Twenty-two .field -offices in back before dark.
Ohio were to close. Their exact
Asked why Georgia, with 159
locations was mit immel\iately . counties, continues to have so
released.
many offices, Harrison said: "PeaPresident-elect Clinton's home · pie are possessive. There are egos
state of Arkansas has 46 on the list. involved; they !lon't want to lose ACROSS
Agen~ies with loffices at -stake an office. And I'm n~ going to say
are the Soil Conservation :;ervice, they're going to lose an office. I
.; 1 Aliow
7 "SISter -"
the Farmers Home Administration just had to come up with a plan.''
and the AgricUltural Stabilization ·.
One ASCS office serves 'four ' 10 Cry
'
13 Tell
and Conservation Service.
Adanta-area counties. Yet at last
19 lurches; sways
Virtually every county in .the count it was helping just 17 farm20
Also .
country has at least one USDA ers, he Said.
21
Attempl
field office, and some counties
Sens. Palrick Leahy, .D-Yt., and
22
Raise
have three or four if the Coopera- Richard L_ugar, R-Ind., have ques24 Foreign
tive Extension Service is counted. tioned USDA's far-flung network
25 Article
Combined, the four agencies may of field offices; particulatly in .
27 Word of approval
have as many as 11,000 field counties that serve few growers.
28
Hebrew month
offices nationwide.
The congressional Geperal
29 Mualc's Yo-'lfoJimmy Harrison, state director Accounting Office has said that
39 Procrastination
· of the ASCS in Georgia, said the consolid)lting the most inefficient
31 Torment
farm agency coul.d "use some offices alone could save $90 mil32 Algonquian
•
strearnliliing, but it will take ·some lion annually ,from the departIndian
careful thought not to butcher it ment's $62 billion budget. .
'
34 Hearing organ
But eliminating field offices is
up."
. ·
36 Narrat&amp;d
The need for so many field sure to !rigger political controvj!r38 Italy's capital'
offices, he Said Friday, may have sy.
39. Airtlne Info
,.' m~
40 Alternative w.o rd
.
&lt;
,.
~ These are the recommends;
41 Defamed
PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
•
44 Negative prefix
tions for closure, unless a state
Mineral Wells, WY
·
46 Nothing
director can make a compelling
December 11, 1992
•• case (foe lreeping one open)," said
47 Tellurlum symbol
STOCK STEERS:
&lt;
48 Simian
the aide, speaking on condition of
65.00· 132.50
300-undcr
'49 Hindu cymbals
300-500 .
55.00-90.00
( anonymity.
50 Native metal
The decision to target an office ·
;
57.00-80.00
5()0-700
'51
Conttnd
' was based on several factors,
• 47.00-71.00
800-ovcr
53
Neon symbol
including overhead costs, the num54
Spielberg
10
STOCK
HEIFERS:
ber of farmers and the size of the.
55 Cincinnati 65.00..85.00
300-undcr
region served. Each office was
57 Born
58.00-80.00
300-500
•' scored; those ranked above a cer'59 Sn Is Hs symboi
'I tain level are considered vulnera51.00-77.50
500-700
60 Grant use of
51.00'65.00
~r ble. 1n ~e cases, USDA suggests 800-over
61
~atln conjunction
STOCK BULLS:
that
some
but
not
all
of
the
high62
Gainsays
\'
3QO.undcr
68.00-102.00
risk offices be closed, leaving the
54 Dismiss
30().500
51.00-90.00
decision to the stare.
66.IndiVidual
63.00-76.00
500-700
StateS with the most offices rec68 Pedal digit
46.00-54.00
Slaughter Bulls
ommended for cloSure are Georgia,
70 Public aiorehouse
~25 .00-810 .00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
with 95; followed by Texas with
72 Vast age
40.00-51 .00
Bred Cows By #
•
73 Winged
300.00-640.00
Bred Cows BH
74 Baseball Info
Slaughter Cows:
77 Succor · ·
46. ()().51.00
High Dressing
78 Set tree; release
~ . production
39.00-46.00
Utility
80 Commended ·
25.00-38.50
Canner &amp; Cutter
•
82- rurnmy
105.00-132.00
83 Fluent ·
Veal · choice
',.
~ ' 85JJOI08.00
85 Proper; seemly
Medium
86 Recommit
70.00-85.00
Good
87 Real estate map
22.00-28.00
SheepEwes
WASHINGTON (AP)- World
68 Vehicle
20.()0-26.00
Rams
cotton production has doubled in
90 Lair
44.00-62.50
Feeders
about 30 .years, going from 45. r
91 P:art of TGIF
35.QP-130.00
Baby ·Calves BH
, million bales in 1960 to 95.2 mil92 Cepuchln milnkey
43.00-60.00
t lion bales in the 1991-92 marketing HORSEScwt
93
Portions
45.00· I 70.00
Ponies B.H.
} year, asrieui1UJ'81 CCOnOf!!iSts say. .
HOGS:
Most of the producuon growth
,_
32.00-45.00
200-250
..,.. has been achieved through better
27 .do: 35.00
300-500
~ yields, with acreage increasing
Male
Hogs
22.00-30.00
, only slightly.
.
8.00-22.00
Pigs
•
Average yields on a global basis
26.00-54.00
.Goats
: increased &amp;om 277 pounds pet acre
HORSE &amp; TACK SALE. Fri.' Dec. 18th, 6 .m.
: in 1960 to an estimated 535 pouilds
• fQI' 1991 : During the same period,
: harvested acres increased only
· from 79.3 minion to 86 million.
· Emerging as competitors for
r U.S. cotton exports in the 1980s
" were China. India, Pakistan, Aus: tralia, Paraguay and the nine ·
~ Freach·IJICakinB nations of West
: Africa, according to a repon in a .
• ftiCCIIt ~lion of USDA's Farmline
'
.

·By JENNIFER DIXON
AP.Farm Writer
WASHINGTON- The Agri·
culture Department is seriously
·considering closing or merging
, . 1,200 .field offices in a Depression'·
era network that reaches nearly
:
every county in the nation, including s0n1e with few faqners.
·USDA spokesman Roger Run•
,.'
ningen said the list, obtained by
The Associated Press, .is a draft.
The wgeted sites range from a Soil
Conservation Service field office in
the Di.slrict of Columbia io 95 scatacross Georgia.
. teredUSDA
officials in each state
have been asted 10 teview USDA's
•&lt; list and compl~ their recommen&lt; dations on which farm offices
I
'sbould be closed by the en!l of the
month.
·•
"There could be some changes,
'( or there · equid be ·wholesale
c~ges,'' Ruiatingen said.
A congtessional aide said the
list represented the field offices
• that USDA and the WJ!ite House
• Office of Management and Budget
' believed should be shuttered or

.: !;;
•. ,
.~;.
,.~.

.
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s

105 Depoan
107 "-Hard" ·
108 Beast of I!Urden
109 Hawaiian
rootstOCk

112 AbOund
' 114 Domain
1 16 Instrument
117 Neciallve ~d
118 Futftll

ruler

10 Look

.'
•

131 'i:&gt;ispneeeas

12 "Stand - Me"
13 Actual
14 Spanish article
15 Conducted
' 16 Deciare
17 Claw '
., 18 Light cotton

·

fabriC

19 Proofreader'S .

136 MY!IBII

martci'

137 Sink In lnkldle
139 Press lor

23 Loophole
28 ·Birch home

PIYI!*It

140

29 Faihlon

Skill

32 Attributed to

33v.,.·

.141 Sudsy brill!(

142 SwitCh ~iOn .
143 High card
145 Kuroeawa film
147 Nawapaper

35 Pllld notice

\l6 Gull-like bird

37 Turned aside
40 Unlocked .

42 Toward sheller

exticullves .
·151 Crony: co~oq;
152 In mulie. high

43 Irritate

45 W88hed lightly
48 MetriC measure
52 Old name lor

153 Precious atones
155 Chinese pagoda
·157 _Single Hems
158
159
160
161
163
185

187

Tokyo

Distant'
"West ~ Story"
Ravlaad: abbr.

56 Cloaed securely

58 Put forth strength
59 Choir voice

"Magnum, -"

60 Becomes.a-re

Trap
One who employS

of '
62 " -. to the One ·
I Love"

another.
Lanebury ID

83 Condiments
~In Italy

168 Cauaad by: suffix
, 69 Autcimobile etyle

65

66Fakla
67 Culpably careless
68 t.abll
69 Cutor-

171 Ire
. 172 Upper regions

sPace

of
173 Burrowing

71 Lavelad
73 Lata In

anlmai. ·

.

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.

75 .1nlet
76 Plimlre
79- garde
81 Concerning
84 Ta-n
89 RemBtnder .
92 Gci by wal!ll"
93 De8&lt;! or Red
94 ~ly. okl _...
95 Sciw

9i -

CC!'KIIIkil•

98 w..s unsteadily
99
100

oMcte In two

Docirlne
101 Space
102 Guido's high note
103 The firmament
106 Axed P8f\Od ·
of time
109 - . , Prince
113 Servant

·' ~i.lniled Srares did, bowev- ~

~ er, •liahdY inaease its shale ~ the
~·world cquon .market, averaging

. 116 Diplomacy
'
119 Harvest goddeae
121 "- .Vetvet"
123 Evwgra.i t,_
124 Rubber, t 125 Llk81 11181

Food CO:flvoyheadsfor Baidoa;.
Marines . eye next objective

126 WH!Kirawa
128 System of courts
130 Luis
132 University team

'

134 Infantryman
135 Burlel.

138 ,Ship channial
141 Swlaa river
144 Printer's _ , .
148 Pertlllnlng to

the noo8
148 LJiaesa
149 Agave plant •
150 Adclltlonal
•
151 Young 111mon _
152 Three-toed sloth
154 Bridge ..
156 Me. Meara
158 Leg extremHiel
159 Nwrow opening
162 Wrffing lluki
164 Mollarnrnede!l

lllad!ll"
166 Greek letter .

187 Friend, In Parts
110 Roman gods
174- Mans

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ONE DAY SEIYICEI

Tawney Studio
424 SECOND AYE.

GALUPOLls 446-1815

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MOGADiSHU, Somalia (AP) Oakley visited the city and talked
- U.S. Marines said Satutday they with authorities.i He visited Baid?a
would,escort the fust food convoy on Tuesday, a day before that City
to Baidoa in more than a month on
was secuted by foreign troops.
Sunday, 1\D(l they,Jippeared poised·
Peck told reporters Saturday that
to extend their protective arm to the
the forces would be moving south,
starving in southern Somalia as but be would.not say where.
·
Wholesale looting and fighting
ll
we.
Speculation was that. the between clan factions has alibut
Marines would try Sunday to halte&lt;:l relief efforts in Kismayu
secure the port city of Kismayu, a recently. One American officer,
violence-tom pon city 240 miles · who spoke on condition of
southwest o~ Mogadishu and an anonymity, estimated the number
important p way to the south.
of armed clansmen in the city at
Mogadish , the capital, was rei- 1,600.
.
'
.
In other partS of Somalia
atively peaceful. Aid workers
backed by foreign military might secured by the Marines, gunmen
resumed unloading relief food in generally have. avoided the troops
the port Saturday after the same old while continuing to wreak havoc
. gangs trying to work their rackets beyond their view. , .
inrerrupced the work Friday.
Still, gangs that had been 3ctive
The World Food Program -at Mogadishu's pmt in the past
· planned to move 300 IOns of food
.
on 20 trucks to Baidoa, in Soma- returned there Friday. Said Patnce
lia's hard-hit interior, spokesman Franceschi, the head of French
Paul Mitchell Said
Humanitarian Action. .
Mar~ne spo,kesma{i Col. Fre~
•'They were going aboard the
~ Slid the~ _wol)ld be accompa· . boats and causing problems yestcr;
m~ by IS !"il•tary veh1cles and a day and the day before yesterday,'
remf~ rifle platoon of about 60 ·Franceschi said.
troops.
.
He said gang members would
~fter tile, 1/2-hour tnp to ·claim the vaccination !Japers of the
Bmdoa, 160 mt!es br road n~rth- . crew were not in order, or that the
west of Mogadishu, the Mannes ship's kitchen wasn't clean enough,
will escort the food to 20 nearby and demand $20 000 or $30,000.
villages. Mitchell said the food
"Yesterday .;,e tJuew them out
would be enough to feed 750,1J90 and they provoked a strike (of
people for one day._ ·
longshoremen)," Franceschi Said.
A force of ~nes and French ·
He said he went direcdy to Oak·
Foreign Legionnaires secured
Baidoa unc!lallenged on Wednes·
day. .
The last convoy to the city of ·
SO;OOO people was on Nov. 11,
when 32 trucks organized by the
relief agency CARE were intercepted py bandits. Five of the
trucks sold off the food and all but
t\vo were looted. Only four of the
27 ever tewrned to Mogadishu.
• An ·ongoing airlift to Baidoa
from ~enya has been hugely
ekpeDSive.
"lf we have a great day, we can
niove only half • much (by air) as
we'll move IQmorrow," Peck Said
sabii-day. . ·
.
•
. The next objective appeared to
be taking control of Kismayu,
where American forces have been
~ng the airport lllid gathering
intelll8ence. , ·
·
On S!lturday, U.S. envoy Robert

133 "-Fly Away"

OHer E.,W.s12/J1/92

• 27.5 pel'A:Cnt for the decade, as
: cxpcxu by ~ other compeliton
: decreuecl," wd economist Car" olyn Whlllon ~USDA's E4:0110m~ R I cb Service.
,
No otbcr country exports as
much COIIOII a the United States,
silo llld.
.
~
ln the l!HiOI and '70s. aboul40
; JICII"IIl ol U.S. cotton prodliclion
: wM exponecl. In the 1980s, that
: propordOil roae to more than SO
.,.,.., &amp;COUJilina for 6 percalt of
U.S. ~ apans IIICI eam. ' . iqdlll Ulliled SIIICI about $2 bil. ~JiDII per ,..
. : .

transfer of power without violence
since the founding of the GOuntry in
1948. The last civilian adminislra·
tion was overtluown by Gen. Park
Chung Hee in 1961. .
Student-radicals who brought
the cities. to a standstill in years
past rallied quietly on campuses or
~ampaigned for opposition candi·
dates.
Roh by law could not succeed
himself. Roh, a retired general, was
elected in 1987 after mass demon·
strations that forced -an end to
authoritarian rule. The two Kirns
split. tbe opposition vote iii that
elecuon.
· The abacus, an ancient counting
device that uses be!Kis for numbers,
was used to tabulate the ballots Sat·
urday to avoid a re currence of
c[jarges in the 1987 presidential
race that the computer count was
eleclronically manipulated.
To ensure a fair election, Roh
resigned from the governing party
and ordered civil servaniS and the
nation's spy agency to remain neutraL But the opposition still .
charged government officials with
widespread vote-buying.
The Central Election Manage·
ment Committee said 24 million
people voted, roughly 82 percent of
the eleciDmte.
·

115 Diphthong '

Bring Your
\ . c•ristlllal Prints
To Tawney's and
Get ASecond Set
of Prints FREE!

.

t

fixedly

i 1 The eye: poetic

124 Guido's low note

133 -. J, K, -; M
134 Yes, to carlOs

. doubled in 30 years

7 Ne8r
8 Dove cry
9 Vlalble algn

120 ColOrless '
122 Bulgarian
currency
.
123 Cultivated land

'

87 ShalloW .....

1 Roof of mouth: pl.
2 Lueel TV role
3 Fume
4 Males ·
5 "...,. Living Coil)r"
6 Former Russian

'"'

125 ExiSts
127 Lead symbOl
129 "Psycho" atar

l World cottonhoas

DOWN

animal

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175 Submer~·
176 smallest 111110Un1
177 Hindu peasants
t78 Roman road

96 Scorch
99 Strikes
101 Roams •
104 Dine

110 Antlered
111 Mature

on Page C-6

day morning in Seoul. Kim Is the first civilian
.elected to the post in 32 years. At left is his wife
Song Myoung-suk. (AP)

'..:: SEQUL, South Korea (AP) _
majority in pariiament. no one else
_',;, Former opposition leader Kim could get things done. The party
~·.. , Young-sam was ~,'leered Friday as controls 1~ seats of the 299-seat
South Korea's first civilian .presi- ' National Assembly•
.
.
dent in 32 years.
The main campaign issues were
The viciory capped four decades sagging exports, liigh interest rates
·r· . in politics for the 65-year-old Kim, and an economic growth rare that
who began as a dissident opposed has dipped to 3.1 percent, the lowto · SoUth Korean military regimes est in 11 years.
but merged bis opposition moveKim was born into a wealthy ·
ment in 1990 :ovith the . ruling family in the southern island of
•
DemocmticLiberal Party.
.
Kojc and, as a teen-ager erected a
When he takes office in Febru- banner in his schoolroom reading:
ary, Kim'sgoals will be 'to revital- "Future Preside.nt Kim Youngize South Korea's stagnant econo- sam."
\
my and work toward unification
At 26, he became the youngest
with Communist North Korea.
legislator ever, for the opposition.
"We have created a truly civil- He was hailed as a hero of Korean
ian government," he sa1d in a democracy during his relentless
statement early Saturday. "I will fight against a succession of militry to reunify the divided nation tary-backed diC\Btors in the 1970s
and open a new era for our peo· and 1980s.
pie."
I
~ ·
He switched sides two years ago
With half of Friday's 24 million and joined forces with President
ballots counted, Kim had 43 per· Rob Tae-woo. Former opposition
cent of the vote to 35 percent for colleagues called him an ambitious
longtime rival. Kim Dae-jung. Bil· traitor.
l_ionaire Chung )u-yunl!;, the
A vote-rigging sca_ndal three
founder of the giant Hyundai con- days before the election had little
glomerate, was third with 16 per· impact on the vote. Four officials
cent, "
in Pusan, the nation's second• The rest went to four minor can· largest city and Kim's hometown,
didates.
.
were fired amid charges they plotKim campaigned on the theme red.to rig the election.
lf the post-elec.tion period
of stability, ielling voters that since
the Democratic Liberals held a . remains peaceful, it will be the fust

SUNDAY PUZZLER
Puzzl~

BREAKING THE NEWS • South Korean
President-elect Kim Young-sam breaks the news
or his victory in a phone call to his father Sa(llr-

~~~:Kim Young-s{lm wins South Korean election

';•

See Answer to

.

Yeltsin cuts short .China visit
to ·'restore order' in government

entS," Said William Richlrds, chief
of USDA's Soil C~ Service
· .The department estimated that
lO,OOO Jr011u!:ers partie~ in 74
selected qncultural watersheds
and 1-6 demonstration projects
across the country. They included
the following:
.
-3,300 producers reduced soil
erosion aild sedimentation on
414,000actea.
' .
-325 producers improved ani•
·
.
mal waste stocage and application
WASHlNGTON (AP) - U.S. there's a ·good (Kitential for U.S. practices on68,000 acres.
·
agricul1U1'81 l!ltports are forecast to wheat :exports m the Caribbean.
-2 300 producers ~ed out
drop $800 miflion in fiScal. 1993, . '&amp;rea.;
·
·
.
· .·
, prac~ that reduced the applicamainly due to IO"fer prices.for com ' . "A unique market.oppo_nunity tion of nitrogen by 2.6 million
and ,soybeans and teduced cotton 1 for U.S. wheat. ex1sts m the pounds:'!fhosphorous .by 1.1·
exportS.
Caribbean market because of million
"Little cha~ge is expected in , Ja~aic!I'S rilembe~sllip in the · -'600 producers deCi:casccl the ·
expon volume 1n fiscal 1993, but Canbbean Commumty and Com- application of pesticides by aboull ·
increased world production of mon Market (CARICOM) and the poUnd of active ingredieni per acte ·
grains and oilseeds is expected to ~amaican milling industry interest · Watcr-qualitj practic:CS· inc~
· res.ult in lower prices,'.' says a situ- · ill developing products for sale in nulrient manageinent, animal"waste
ati~n and outlook summary o_n the smaller CARICPM marke~," systems, ~bipcropping, f~eld limier
agncultural exports relel!sed th1s says a recen_t report by the serv~ce sbips irrigation management and .
month by J..!SVA ' s Economic .. on export markets for pain.
inte~ pest managemenl
Research sen.ice.
·
.. .
.
Demonstration proJects are ·
The .total export value for grams
WASHlNGTON (AP)...- U.S . designed to use new and moovative
a~d ~n products, oilseeds and ~tter produ~tion total¢ 100 mil- practices and to transfer iDformaOilseed products, and cotton is bon pouiKis 111. October, 2 percent lion to other regions that ha~ simiexpected to f811 by $1.3 billion, the bel_ow the previOUS Ociober but 1.2 1ar problems.
..
sum!!W)' said.
. .
percent above Septembe~· of th1s
The Soil Consetva.tion Servic;e,
- Horucultural and,an•mal prod- · year.
.
. ·
· along with USDA's Extension Ser'
uct exports are expected to set
A recent Agn~ulture Depart- ·vice and the Agricultural Stabilizarecords, ~ut to grow at a slower m~t report on dairy prodQCts also lion and Conservation Servil:e, pro-~
rare than 1l' ftscal 1992.
s~d . to~ cheese out.put was 56_2 vide leadership for the projects. ·
m•lhon pounds, 8 ~rcent above which iilclude educational. techniWASHINGTON (AP) -· _The Ociober 1991 and 8 percent above cal and rmaneial assistance'
.
Foreign Agricult~al Service says September'
·
·· ·

-:

Sunday Tlmea Sentinel-Page D3

·I

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'

ley, who promised 10 take action.
"This morning they started
working again,'' Franceschi said.
He Said there are four ships two French, one Red Cross and one
of the World Food Program -· in
the pon, with 19,_000 tons of food.
Somalia ·has been rent by civil
war since January 1991, when
President Mohammed Siad Barre
was ousted. The country disintegrated into chaos, terrorized by
armed looters and clan fig!iting.
A U.N. official, speaking on
condition· of anonymity, said an
agreement reported late Friday
between rival warlords Ali Mahdi
Mohamed and Gen. Mohamed Farrah Aidid to remove their forces
from Mogadishu doesn't amount to
much.
The agreement. reported by Ali
Mahdi's radio station, Said the militias would start leaving Mogadishu
on Saturday for -c:anlps ouiSide the
city.
Bul the U.N. official said most
of their armed vehicles already had
left town and that the gesture was
largely symbolic.

MOSCOW (AI?) ·- Russian
PreSident Boris Yeltsin cut short
his fir~t visit to China and flew
home Saturday to rilake sure key
reformers are kept in the country''
new Cabinet.
..
After landing at Moscow's
Ynukovo-2 YIP airport, a weary
Yells in said he wanted to be
involved in fonning ihe new goyernment under Prime Minister Yiktor Chernomyrdin, a Soviet-era
technocrat appointe_d to the post
· Monday. ·
Yeltsin sai&lt;;l in Beijing that con' servatives and Chemomyrdin were
trying 10 rep~ C
. abiilet members
.
who served under Chemomyrdin's
ptedecessQr, Yegor Gaidar, a close
Y eltsin ally and the main architect
of Russia's econQIIIic reforms.
"They ha\le begun ioo early to
fightforportfolios,topullapartthe
Cabinet, and so the boss must
return and restore order there,"
Yeltsin said as he abruptly ended
his lrip.
.
Yeltsin was forcel! by'f.ard·liners iii Russia's parliament to
replace Gaidar with Chernomyrdin,
a former oil and gas industry boss.
The change demonstrated
Yeltsin~s political vulnerability and
threw into doubt the fate of his IIm.onth-old drive to clisma'ntle
decades of Soviet central planriing.

· · Chernomyrd.in has said he
Chernomyrd'n was returning
would continue refonns but wants Saturday from a visit to Kliza· to soften them to ease.hardship on khstan. Some key members of the
the people. He also supports subsi- Gaidar team wac to join the meet- ·
dizing Russia's ailing state-run ing Sunday, said Shokhiil, who also
induslties to prevent bankruJI!Cies was at the Wrport.
1
and mass unemployment
Shokhln said they wiD "decide
Presldential spokesman Yyach· on either the .resignation of the
·eslav Koslikov said that "some Cabinet or the continuation. of
political parties and their leaders reforms. I'm confident tliat Cherhad been imduly active in ljUCStions non\yrdin wants to coniinue
of government formatiOn" in reforms and will continue them.''
Yeltsin ' s absence, the Interfax
Following two days of tali&gt;s
· news agency.reported. . ·
with Chinese leaders, Yeltsin had
Yeltsin planned to meet with planned to fly from Beijin11 ro the
Chemomyrdin on Sunday. He told southern city of Shenzhen, where
reporters that the guidin11 principle china has conducted experirileniS
in fonning the i:lew Cabmet would in market reforms.
be "to preserve.the main nucleus
But he abruptly canceled that
of the Gaidar government"
visit to return 10 Moscow. Lower:···The core of Gaidar's refonners level Russian officials went on to
must not under any c.ircumstances Shenzhen.
During his trip, he expressed
be pulled apart.~' he said before
departin~ Beijing.
interest in China's method of grnd· YeltSin said he would agree to ual reforms, a co~llrast to the
replace ooly three to five people in "shock therapy" tried in Russia
the 30-member Cabinet.
and other fonher East bloc counOfficials close to the president lries.
·
have said the Cabinet members in
"It was a very good visit,"
danger of losing their jobs include Yeltsin said. " We reached the le:vel
two deputy p'rime · ministers, of friendly relations that we had 35
Alexander Shokhin and Anatoly years ago."
Chubais; Foreign Minister Andrei
China's official Xinhua News
Kozyrev; and Foreign Trade Minis- Agency said the visit " has been
ter Pyotr Aven.
very smooth and successfuL"

Palestinians settle in makeshift.
camp for what could be a long wait
Rantisi said the tents would ment from Friday night, when the
MARJ AL-ZOHOUR, Lebanon
accommodate
an average of seven deportees had 66 mattresses and 25
(AP) - Palestinian deportees Satmen
each,
a
considerable
improve- tents.
urday settled into a makeshift
refugee camp on a snow-covered
hill with no sign of an end to their
new lives in limbo between
Lebanon and IS111!:1.
Although Israel11rgued the
deportations would help curtail
COLUMBUS·, Ohio (AP) - The Oliio Expositions Commission
Muslim extremism and violence,
and Gov. George Yoinovich interviewed four finalists for the post
Israeli soldiers shot and killed at
of Ohio State Fair manager.
least six Palestinians in clashes Sat·
Richard Frenette, assistant general managerfinance director for
urday in the occupied Gaza Strip,
•
the Minnesota State Fair; Roger Alewel, general manager of the
Arab and U.N. reports said.
Missouri Stare !lair; Palrick Lloyd, general manager of the Tulsa
The International Red Cross and
fair; and Cynthia Hoye, senior managermarketing director of the
the 0 nired Nations sent more rents
Indiana State·Fair were interviewed Friday.
,
and mattresses to the 415 deporThe commisSion seeks a replacement for Billy Inmon, who was
tees, who were stranded in freezing
fired in August after the 1992 state fair. There were criticisms about
temperatures in a no-man's land
management practices, amusement ride policies and finances during
between the Israeli and Lebanese
the event.
.
.
armies.
Mark List, acting fair manager, Said he hopes a new manager
Sixty-three tents have sprung up
will be chosen by early next year. Fair officials are waiting for
on the hill since relief convoys
·results of background checks on the finalisiS.
began reaching the deportees Friday evening, a day after they were
COLUMBUS, O~io (AP) - Columbus police are warning resiexpelled from lhe self-declared
dents about robbers who have entered three homes by claiming to
"security zone" Israel ciccupies in
be law enforcement officers.
south Lebanon.
Two people were injured in three robberies last week.
' "We still need plenty of extra
All three homes wac ransacked, and victims were handcuffed in
stoves, medicines and heaters;"
two of the robberies, said Deputy Policy Chief Gary Thatcher..
said Dr. Abdui-Aiiz Rantisi, 46, a
The robbers, who carried shotguns or handguns, claimed to be
Gaza physician. "But we are grate·
agents of the Dru~ Enforcement Administration and SWAT ~fl­
ful for the assistance we got yestereers, authorities S81d.
day and today. It will help us surPolice said the three cases appear to be the work of the same
vive in this place, where we will
men.
stay for as long as it takes to pressure Israel into allowing us back."
MARION, Ohio (AP) - A Marion County grand jury next
The unprecedented mass depor·
month is to review testimony about an alleged stabbing during a
tation has left the U.S.-sponsored
dispute between an estranged couple in a courtroom.
Middle East peace process in jeopKaren Hammock, 29, of Marion, wa$ questioned about her
ardy after the Palestinians said they
alleged assault Friday on her husband, Barry Hammock, Said Tim
wQuld not participate until the
Bailey, chief deputy 81 the Marion County Sheriff's Department. No
deportees are allowed back.
charges wac filed.
Ismel said it acted to avenge the
Hammock, 29, formerly of Marion, was cut in the side with an
killing of an Israeli policeman, Sgt.
unidentif'led object. Bailey said. Hammock re&lt;:ei'ved six stitches for
Maj. Nissim Toledano, by the funthewound.
·
damentalist Hamas movement lasl
The couple began arguing during a recess in Hammock's senweek. He was the si,.;th Israeli
tcQcing bearing in a common pleas courtroom, Bailey said. lfam·
trooper killed by Islamic fundamocl:: was being senreneed on a drug charge.
Hammock allegedly shoved his wife and she allegedly stabbed
mentalists in a 10-day period.
Israel claims the deportees were
him.
suspected of membership in Hamas
"It's a ease where each said the other started it.u Bailey said.
and in Islamic Jihad, which have
The judge, attorneys and bailiff were out of the courtroom at the
been blamed for the ·attacks.
time.
On Saturday, Israeli soldiers
.COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A former television medical
shot dead at least six Palestinians
reporter plea:ded guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge involving
and wounded more than 25 in
pte5criptions he wrote for a co-worker.
clashes in the Gaza ·strip town of
Dr. Nelson Klaus, 48, of suburban Worthington, declined comKhan Yunis, Arab reports and U.N.
.ment Friday after entering the plea to one count or aiding and abetrelief workers said. The violence
ting in"the unlawful possession of a controlled substance. He
erupted right after troops temporarappeared befote U.S. District Judge John Holschuh.
ily lifted a 10-day curfew in the
Klaus faces up to one year in prison and a $100,000 fine.
town, they said.
There was no end in sight to lhe
The charge involves 16 prescriptions for the narcotic painkiller
Dilaudid that Kraus wrote for Jym Ganahl, a weather reporter for
deportees situation.
Israel rejected a U.N. Security
WCMH-TV. Kraus was medical reporter for the station at the time.
Council resolution Friday that
strongly condemned the deportation and ordered the Jewish state to
allow the depOrtees to go back to
the Israeli-occupied West Bank and
Gaza Strip. The United States,
Israel's strongest ally, endorsed the
resolution.

--Ohio briefs--.:.......

. BOW

.Medical Shoppe
.

"Sen~ing

.

the pf:ltient cmd phy1ieian /or
011er 30 yefJn."

J

Physical Therapy Services lvaila•l• For:
•ConaultBtlon

•Bec~eckln)unea

•Physical Capacity
oCybex Testing ·

•ArthrlllaiBui'IHis
•Athletic ln)unu
•St.O!i. Rehabilitation

•P,.....mployment testing
. •Adult Fltnus
•PUI Control (TEN$)

•Work Recovery .

HERMANL.
DILLON .

BOC

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HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY ~

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HOMt OXYGEN SERVICE

~ardllc Rehlbllltltlon

"Cemplete lleepttal l•rP"" Fer H••• Ute"

oJolnt Repllcellllnt
Rehabilitation

MICHAELL
HEMPHILL

AT

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JOI'INSON

PT ·

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24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVIa-7 DAYS AWEEK
FREE DEUVERY &amp;SO UP
I ·IOG-451·6144
446·7213

ST.
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~ynm•

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

O.lllpolla, Ott

Consumer advocates are
watching proposed -merger
CINCINNATI (AP) - Consumer adYocates want to make sure
that savin$$ from a JrOII(lSed merger of Cincmnati G.S &amp; "Electric Co.
and lndia!l8's PSI Resources Inc.
are passed on 'to customers.
the chief executives of both
c ompanies said Monday they
expect the merger will save $750
million dUring the next I 0 years by
allowing the utilities to combine
resources and postpone .the need to
build some new pow«7 plants. They
also plan to cut 400 jobs from their
combined worlt force of 9,200 peo-

ple.

"I hope their promises regarding the savings are true," said
J·ames Turner, Indiana's utility con-

sumer counselor, who represents
the public in utility rate cases.
The merged company would be
known as CINergy Corp. and
would be based in Cincinnati. It
would serve 1.3 million elecUic
customm and 400,000 natural gas
customers in a 25,000-square,mile
area of Indiana, Ohio and northern

Kenrucky.

It would be the 13th largest
investor-owned utility in the
nation, with generating capacity of
nearly 11,000 megawatts.
CG&amp;E and PSI said the
approval process could take 18
months, meaning th~t !;INergY.
would not start furrcbomng unttl
the farst or second quarter of 1994.

Shareholders of both companies
wiU be asked in March or Apilto
vote on the merger. The merger
proposal still has not been filed
with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and the Indiana Utility
Regulatory Commission.
The federal Securities and
Exchange Commission and the
Federal Energy Regulatory Com•
mission also must approve the deal.
Jackson Randolph, president
and chief executive officer of
CG&amp;E, and James Rogers Jr.,
chaiiman and chief executive officer of PSI, friends for 17 years,
were having lunch this summer
when they ~gan serioUs talk of the
merger, Randolph said.

Holiday enjoyment overshadowed. by 'demands

PI'ITSBURGH (AP) - Hark!
It's "boo-hoo-hoo " . instead of
" ho-ho-ho," aceording to a survey
that shows people spend more time
bickering and trudging through
malls than relaxing with friends
and relatives this time of year.
" We spend a lot more time with
the frustrations of the holidays than

the aue enjoyment of giving~" said
Michael Fortino, a lifestyle management consultant who led the
study.
Some 5,000 Americans were.,
telephoned and 4,000 others were
mailed surveys over the past three
years. About I ,000 people in six
cities responded.

OHIO Weather
Sunday,Dec.20
Accu- Weather• forecast
MCH.

.

The survey found the average
person spends less than 17 minutes
planning holiday purchas&lt;:s and six
hours shopping for them -· with an
average of three Uips \o the same
store . Wrapping lhe gifts takes
about 28 minutes.
Nearly 7 l/2 hours are spent
baking lind preparing hohday
meals, while less than a: half-day is
devOl~ to relaxation arid enjoy·
ment; the srudy found.
Christmas morning, the average
parent spends just nine minutes
playing with the children.
·
"We help them assemble and
put some things together, play for a
few minutes and then that's it,"
said .Fortino, president of the Cen·
ter for Lifestyle Management, a
consulting f1tm in San Francisco.
A veter)ln time-management
expert; Fol'tino determined in 1988
that people spend five years of their
lives waiting in lines and six
months sitting at traffic lights. He
was in Pittsburgh last week fot a

seminar.
In his latest srudy, he found the
average person spent up to an hour
and 10 minutes a day the last week
of December bickering over holi·
day-related plans, such as what par·
ties to atiend, what to wear and
whether to leave early.

W.VA.

Point Pl....nt,

wv
UNITED ITATII DIITIIICT COUIIT 1'011 THE

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JOSEPHINE HAYNES, et at., Pfalntifb.
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. SHONEY'S, INC.. e1 at .. Oofendants.

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wrtrten ReQuest for Cl ..m Form; a samPle is printed at the bottom of this notice. THE~EOUEST FOA ClAIM
FORM MUST BE SENT TO THE COURT CLERK'S OFFICE AT THE AObRESS SHOWN BELOW AND MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER
THAN January 11 , 1993. If the proposed Decree il given final approval by tl'le Court, you wil be sent a specffic Claim Form onlY if you have
thllsettlement, you mutt 1ubmft 1

prtvioutty Hrtt a Aequtat for ClaJn1 FOfm ttating thlt you may want to file a Claim. EaCh Claimant must complete and retum tM Claim Form in

••

.J,' :

accordanco -11\8 lnslruc:tiona on the Ctalm Form. PLEASE NOTE THAT SENDING A REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM OR RETURNING THE

ACTUAL CLAIM FORM DOES NOT GUARANlCE YOUR PARTICIPATION IN THE SETT~EMENT FUND .
S. ca.m.· PmcadUI"e tor Cui'MIIt or FOIIMr EmpiOJMI. tf you are a member of the Currem Of Former Employee Class, ~ mtw file a
Requeat tor Qaim Form to assure that ~e 1 ~ a record of your currenl address. Snoney's, 1~ . will be mailing c!aim forms to all c urrent or

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ASTRO-GRAPH

today In matters that'aHect your material neads. You could now be lucky where
you were once unfortunate.

.

SCORPIO COcL 24-Nov. 22) Try to locus your efforts 1oday on issues or

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

things of personal importance. This Is
one of those Iimas when you can help
yourself and others Dy looking out tor
No.1 .
Dec. 21, 11192

'·

'\bur

'Birthday

Dec. 20, 19112
Vou could be a bit luckier than usual in

•

I''

....

,

•

is your turn to repay favors , be sure to

balance accounts. Sagittarius, treat
yourself to a birthday gift. Send lor Sag-

nancial prospects look encouraging to·

CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jen. 11) Your fi-

day, but you might have to take a calcuyear ahead by matung $1 .25 plus along, lated risk to acquire what you desire. Be
self-addressed. stamped envelope to bold, but not foolhardy.
Astro-Graph , c/o this newspaper, P.O. AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. 11) Do not
Box 91428, Cleveland , ·OH 44101 -3428. abdicate your leadership role today to a
person who lacks your qualifications.
Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN CDec. 22-JM. 19) A part- Under your guidance, and not his or
nership arrangement with a reliable ally hers, lavorable results are probable.
should work out well today for the par- PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Merch 20) An en·
ties Involved. Leave plenty of space for deaver tt~at has so far seemed unproduc11ve could experience a resurgence '
your cohort to use his or her initiative.
AQUARIUS CJtln. 20-f'eb. 11) Do not be when new lite is breathed into It today.
o 'on't throw in the towel yet.

'

11oCor 11oore F-.1
Home, 1ho ..........
lllgln, lleclty .....
Herb
Moore,
II•Mn
Billie and planlet Jean
lllilcn, the VInton Blptlat
Churoh. Aloo lor your

pnrae, ldnd worc1w,
..... IIIOIMJ, food lnd

bel"" there It 1ho
U. of 1ho toea of our

.................

Wlla Phillie, Jell, Kim
Soon andGrMdchlldNn

'

kindness sh1W1 In
dlneu and death of
..lond father altill

Aspecial tltaaks .. tiM
hnlllr• staff II Plnlaest
!Nursing H•••· · th

lntenslrt (al'l Ulllt IIIII

fourth Flaor llarslaa
Staff
of Holzer IIMlcal
. I
t
with special
Icon~sldt~·atlons to DIYicl
,I
Dehhll ....It,
-• : r ''
Natalie Gardner.
,
011lovt
Pf'IYIIS ..
The l-tv
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Opening lead: • K

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11 · Help Wanted

11

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and talephona calla we
received during the
foss of our beloved
mother and grandmother.
A special thank• to
the Rov•randa Joa
Hefner •nd Reverend
Jack Berry, ICU nurolng
otalf,
Nancy
Brunner, Dr. David
Evana of Holzer
Medical Center, our ·
pallbearera, Freda
Eliason ond to the
McCoy Moore Funeral
Home for their help
and word• of 'comfort
In our time of eorrow.
Tha Ruth Scott Family

81111 tho -

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_ . . .• . , 10 In a

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r..umo

Navy Is
18-30 year · high
· school grads. U.S.
citizens, willing to

to: Dr. Lany Koi........,, 441
0.....1 llllltngor Pkwr., llld-

"'-'•Oh.

The
llotlllntt _
Authorflr
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relocate.

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1-8()()..282·1384.

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oppo~ntod br I·
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Happy Ads

.... P: lion. 11* lndlvldull

the 111oyor of Pl. PIMoant:

f'-1
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••1•on.cbl1Ky
monafiOIMnl
lor and
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unb of _,.......,.
IOUbllo hcMinglind ns -"""

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otan IIICI - i i i J , Wort&lt;
F Flllve!J wtlh II flvlla of

go..........,.
too

lnclvld,.t lhould

e ..UIIId Pullllo Housing
llt1Mgor rw too owpoblo . cit
lllhleY!nl--lkon whh . .
,..... lilllpiOJ-- Appllelnlol
fttUII ..... I lUDDIImtnl . .

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Lolt &amp; Found

ROBE:;no~ISON
31111150-121121110

AUGUSTA JACKSON

314122-12120'83
o.ys or aadMe• •u1 cotM
o'er.,.
Taart or lllitnOI oft•n flow
For mtmory IIHpo you

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The Patriot Auction Barn will be
Closed Saturday; December 26, 1992.
The Patriot Auction Barn will Reopen
Saturday, January 2, 1993 at 7:QO P.M.
Consignments accepted at noo_
n•
Thanh You to everyone who made
this a greal year!
We wish everyone a very
Happy and Safe Holiday!

35.
Consignment takln from 10:00 to 6:00
dayorule.

NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE
Tenns: C8sh or check with prop ID
DoorPtlas
AuctionHr David Boggs Lie. No. 4596
Gallipolis, Ohio, 614 t46 7750
Licen84id imd bonded In Stlllt of Ohio.

Marlin &amp; Joyce Wedemeyer
&amp; Family

Not Reaponlllle for Accidents or

Lon of Ploper1y
no Mle Friduv, Dac. 25, 1992

There will be

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Real Estate General

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ATTENTlON BUSINESS'EN AND INYESTORSI

Who could mk
for anythilig nwre
When I have you,
Mickey, al 34. .
Happy Birchday!

~

--·-.

.

We have 1 70 x 255' mllll building whh fully
equipped kliC:hen for concnaion, Indoor baths,
ollctt, completely insulated, pr1M11tly being used.
L.ocettid on 8.886 ICTIS, alllnctid. Lata ol parking.
Call for mor• Information on thi1 eatablishld
bullnels.

•,.

lANNY BLACKBURN. Bne 446-11001
RUTH

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often ne1r u•

hNrto
Along

wfth

booutlful

m.moril1.

MIIIHd ond .......,bored by
June, husband, ct.ught.,. •

romHy.

Reai Estate General

Real Estale Glnetal

Real Estate General

Cy~ (]!. g,utt~/~loa

-

PROflSSICIHAl SERVIU MA!ES fHE DlfriRIHCt'
tiiAOINtA SMITH, BIIOKEA.................. :tfi·IUS
EUNICE -NI£1111, IIEAL10R.... .......... ...44t-fft1
RUIH BARR. REAI.T00...................... 441-G1U
~ SCIIES. REAL TOIL ........ 411-4101
LYNDA FRAlEY, REALTOO................. 441-1101
•cttAEL .._LER, REAUOR ............ 44t-l.,.
PATRICIA ROSS, "EAL10n ...... ..... ...,45-1575
~J£VEN -~wonos..... .
...... ,45-51411

23 LOCUST ·sT.
446·6806

·

QESIGNEO FOR HAPPY LIVING - Tills - spaclo\ls homo wlh a vlaw ot lilt llOIJJtrt llo
foyer, catllodrol celllnga will blloony, 3 BA, 211 -.s,

.

•

"'"'*""·

-.....g
equip. - .
breafdast room has • lg. wtndow. II8NO spa:ll8rs
throughOut, biUII 1911 ,..,.... &amp; much ...... 2 ear

· living mom wllh

allaclotd gon1go, aftlc sloriQI. I A. m/1. This hou•ls
maintenance-. o l - qullly. MUo your lflPOIII·

-0

...... &amp;... ;i'youdioni·- ·

]

1752. IF YDU WANT SPACE, THIS IS THE
PROPERTY FOR YOII-3 BR, modulor with 2 balho,
aquiflped ldlellan, - · haal AJC, lg.LR. DR, klcllon
with dnlng area. VfiiY lg. FR. 18'x36' swtnrnlng pool
o1 enclosed patk&gt;. Woodbumer nears enure. 1 acre
alio.
il23. I'REm AS 'A PICTURE you wal&lt; ..o

. lhls 3 BR, t balh, llrgo FR, lR and nl·ln ldlchon,
wnh ga-ogo oncr - n t end s acres nvt. $40's.
Take a look. Con be pUIChaood wlh 10 tcm m/lolso.

hOml-

1130. SCOTT SCHOOL ROAD Is lhe location on
12'x65' (Do4rotlell mobllt
LR, Ml·ln
klchen, btlh, gao tumece, 2 BR. AI tu.-.... goos
wlh .-homo o'""'f'' TV and,....

this

LANO CONTRACT - Lookln!l tor I ac. m/1,
do-.
SR 160, pOIIer. CillO&lt; eppolrlmlnl. $40.000.

looge

•:t.-lP
Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

0

.

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-

Though you left u. ynn:
ago.
You will 1lw1ya be In our

r r 1 r 1• r r·r rr
a

t,,!! .

==~--~IIJI(, I

-:

7:00

~·- "'"
r - 6 Se1h Sluo•wn,, I
"-""' •
•
Sc,otlie, Sluuuton,
}.R., Chrutie.

In Memory

2

~~':'"~~-=~:-~

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Mft-ft"' J'-1

DOmpanr.1ao •.-a.

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Public sare
&amp; Aucllon

8

Happy Binnuay

'AVON• ALL AREAS!- ,...;.·
ttmowlh-Yau'l_t..

My neighbor had delusions
of being an opera star ~nd
I 1 I. I I
L-..1-..L-.L_.l.-..&amp;.=-'
sang constantly. After see1ng
...- - - - - - - - , a psychiatrist he stopped srng·
. P A P ARE
ing. "Are you cured'?" I asked.
....._~1•.:.1;....:.-~1..;.;lr.::..,lr::-9-1 "Not really," he sighed, "he
1'--L-'--L-"•L..,J.~ just gave me a ··----· ----.''

C..pllanoe,l---------~-~-~"~"!~~·~~~~'!'~•~n~-~~;

DlnDiiltlon Mollet
HUICrlll8urglcal Clinic
1
f .1
30 .....,
no., u 0 une • 1••'!1
221-1211, Fu: 111•~~ Statutatory
Agent,
1HZ. Tile Altemate
llllloolm W. Lentz, 2071
netacl AlprM~ ._1M St. Rt. 325N, lid Will,
toragalngllff-- eourc• Ohio ~- 14
ond alloclld unite, who"'"
1ct when the D•lgneted ~mblr13,20 1 1H2

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7

T E G N. E l

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Amerla•n
Aold RainEleotrlo Power
S.rvloe Corpor811on, 1
Alv.,.lcle Pl118, Cohabue,
ohio .az1s, Phone 111•1

I,

- ''
• •t'

ptloollon
Ilia ~--... -thin
Jon...
lilA To P o - Olfloe, Point
Houotna A~horfty,­

Edited by CLAY I. POLLAN

TROMSY

wv.

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446-G963

,.... ...............
"".......
a

R Al 0 l C

.,....... , _ Loto. kllh
-lltiM, • • .... ...._

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.

Rentals

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Estate

,......_.,..w..,.... ....

a-

1125. CLOSE IN - Ftwa am&gt;s ot n&gt;llngltnd.

ICMI-.

.

..

.

- . ~ llotl- • 2
...._
SI500.
~ tu 113 b:s:s after 4:00
Pll.

.....-

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orlonlod
-~~ olftc:e.....
Wo .,.tooillng
for
a cledlottocl, .......... and ... ..
moll..aotl to loin ... tl

-·MA Y R Wl

ol11110, Publa Uw 101-141,
10• Stat. 2111 that,
purauwnt to an ag,...,..nt
binding on Ohio Power
Company, owner and
opentor of G.rin,
litohell, M•ldnaum River
..... Tlcld Pow. ....... end
the llllwtacl llllb M - " of
lheae gonerllllng atatlona,
the DHign8tecl Aepraoenldv• for the !ONgOing
olleoted eouroee al\d
oiiMiad units wll lie John
11. llleManue, Dlreotor of

...

-

Painting by the
or by the hour. CaD

-

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1------------

........ peril,

..-.n.l14
. . . wile
_a...
_ _Rt*'ctdt Din

1111111, Ill. -

Announcements

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
wards below lo moke 6·
simple ·words. Pr lnl letters of
each iii its line of squares.

•I

' ' ' !"'
:..~-

Helpwanttd

lhlahl - - Na Wll 'lOIN. Ckmw ,.,. c.ll
all.
.
.

That Intriguing_Word Game with a Chuckle

Tbe Senior Life Master bustled into
the room, a few minutes late for bis
Saturday morning clus.
"Which characteristics are ~
f · t
br'.t- 1
'" he
sary 0 ~ • op
•.....- · P ayer ·
asked.
The replies came slowly at flnt,

lin.

........ ...... .... ...,..
=

S©~~}A-~tt/'S®

By Pltllllp Alder

--

"You should've seen it: hand-to-hand
Christmas shopping!"

1-..

-- ~~···
'llill tour ""' • -

t2l7 ...

1\ESIDENTIAL· INVF.STMENrS- COMMERCIAL - FIIRMS

Persistence pays
periodically

.n-..

era, food, money, carda

~·

I

In IFill

card of Thanks

The family of Ruth
Smith would like to
IICknowfedge •nd ehow
our apprecladon to our
frlendo, nelghboro tllld
relative&amp; for the flow·

"

not aChieved on your first try. Your ARII'S (March 21-Aprll 1g1 Something then more quickly: mathematlcalabllchart indicates success provided you rortuitous could develop tor you today lty, experience, card sease, concentraunder the auspices or an old and loyal tion, a good memory.
.
do not throw In the towel prematurely.
11
wili
be
an
arrangement
that
will
"Tbese
are
part
of
the
answer,
but
friend.
PISCES CFeb. 20-MMeh 20) A friend ol
there Is one other important aptitude:
yours who ,was successful recently ir;~ produce mutual benelits.
handling a problem similar to one that TAURUS (April :ZO.May 201 Ambitious mental toughness, a never-say-die atyou now face could have some dyna.:. objectives have an excellent chance of titude. Even when defeat MeiDl onmite id~as for you today. listen careful- being fulfilled today, but not necessarily avoidable, a top player will search for
in the manner you want . Be flexible and the one distribution of the cards that
ly to the suggestions.
·
will allow bim to IIICeeed.
ARIES (March 21-April 11) Something adaptable to change.
"Look at this deal," be added, putis stirling at this time that might prove GEMINI CMay 21-June 20) A friend who
h N th •-.. th n1a f •-•- •
beneficial Where your earnings are con- was quite kind to you recently might
1
o wuay I
cerned. Be alert for possible ways to need your assistance today. 11 you let t ng t e or """' ca
this
opportunity
to
help
Slip
past
you,
diagram_
up
on
the
board.
develop new revenue.
you'll collect guilt later.
Acaillllt your four-spade contract, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
TAURUS CAprll 211-Mar 20) Your willCANCER
CJune
21-Ju!y
22)
Yo~r
best
(the
SLM continued), West cultel two,.
ingness to make adjustments tor others
possibilities
for
personal
.gain
today
lop
hearts
and then awltcbel to the
, PUaUC NOTICE
is your greatest asset today. Every time
A publlo hMrlng will ba
you bend a bit, those with whom you're could come from situations already es- club ·queen. You win With dummy'a
tablished by others. Your function will ace and Play a trump, gettlnc a rude held on Jt11111111Y •· 1113, at
involved may bend even more.
be
to provide something of value they shock wben Eut clilcarda a low beart. 1:00 P.M., In the tr-urer'e
GEMINI (MaJ 21-Ju,. 20) Ambitious
It HenlS you are aure to 1 - two olfloe at Eaetern High
objeCtives concerning your ca,_ or fi- tack . •
nanceS can be achieved today II you LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Avoiding difficult trump tricb to 10 with tile two bearta School. Purpoea of tha
dlanee t hHrlng lo to rovlew the
make them primary in importance. The decisions Is not apt to be numbered
1 d 1 t Is th
among your character flaws today . a rea Y 01 ·
ere uy
a 't":a-" budget for the
secret to your success ia focua.
Evell
mora
importantly,
you
will
be
Inall?
·
echool clelrloL The budgot
CANCER (J..,. 21-Jutr 22) Today you clined to tal&lt;e positive measures to act
After paualn&amp; loa&amp; _ . . , to take wiU be II'MIIable ._ ....,.__
have a way or making everything you do
off his overeoat, lwillt 1D the closet flon, All lnt.rulad partie•
seem exciting. This wm automatically as your judgment dictates.
YIRGO
CAug.
23-hpt.
22) Rewards fD( and adjust ltll tit, the SLM pn eeedtcl. -lnvllld 1o -.d.
attract omers to you, because your enwork Well done . could be large&lt; than
Tbere I I - falltt WfM» You mlllt l!loiN Bollin, rr-unr
thuSiasm is contagious.
usual
at
thiS
lime.
Your
returns
miQht
flad
Weat With euctly tile rllltt dlltrl- e I 11.....,.. w-1
L£0 CJIIIJ 23-Aua- 22) You could be
not
come
immedletety,
but
they
are
atllutlan:
~$.1-2 with two elultl. Aft« Dlllllot
rather fortunate today In ways you '~
wiDlllal trick four with the apade - · 11100 lA 7
least expect , especially in a critical mat- ready in the neighborhood.
ter that you've been trying to tie Clown LIIAACIIpi.23-0c1.23) Someoneyoy f.taY&amp;41anM!!MIIodumm)"a-,naffa Au~_ ,,.., OhleU772
know socially might cometoyouwlth en ow elab 111 band aad c:ub your otller (111111 tie
and finalize.
1:--~~---~--VIRGO CAuoJ 23-Sept. 22) trterestlng Jnteresttng commercial proposal todll\'. three red-lilt
Hear
thiS
person
out,
becauae
thtldoa
You
have
Jt-Q-1·1
at
apadet
left;
.Public 1\!otlce
· developments are likely today In situa• Welt hu :110-7-1 Ellt witll the lllltt
·
tiona where you are· more concerned · could be profitable. '
PUBUC NOTICE
about others ' Interests than your own. SCORPIO (Gel. 24-NOV. 22) Focus your ' or -~·• w.t fiDdl IUt Tda
energy today on endeavors that can
•
Of AEPAEIENTATION
UnselfishneSS Is rewarded.
contribute to the welfare or your tamMy. two ·
trump trlcb haft Publla notloe 11 hereby
LIBRA (lepl. 23-()ct. 23) Trends
You are capable of doing things that ·~.:-· - • ·
giYM undw Till,. IV of tho
should begin to change for the better can
be quf\e helpful.
•••
ta 11
Clef' Air Aat ~llldmente
1

I

would like _to lharlk 1ho
lolowlng epeollt people,
Frlenda,
,....._
Mlgllbora,
wp m''lly
Plllor IIIII'VIn Sallee,

' I

I

:...-~=
=MWIJ•
...... =.=.-.,-:.::

• ....

. ...

Halp Wanted ·

The family of Norm
Swindler would like to
thank everyone al
HMC Emergency
Service, . EMS
workers, ·our family
and all our friends who
called and helped In
so many ways at the
time of Norms
accident. All your
prayers &amp; thoughts
were so gratefully
appreciated. Norm
wants to especially
thank
Lyndon
Montgomery, Mark
Chapman, Vernon
Jones, Scot 'Rankin &amp;
a special thanks to our
son Nathan Swindler
who were on the
scene of the accident.
We thank you all so
very much.
.
Norm &amp; Vicki
Swindler

'I • I
·•

~

est regarding your work or career. Con·

your "Zodiac sign.

• j

' '

· Vulne~able: Both
Dealer: South

••

·. ,. 7

' .,.

t 'KQS

t+

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' 1

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.... '....'
. ' •. r
. . .- ,.
.
.· •. ,

tJI52
+KtOU

West
Pua
Pau

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SOUTH
+AKQU3

Sao~

.

•
•

.108852

+2

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••

EAST

unused.

.. .
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business world. Don't let this gilt go

ittarius' Astro-Graph predictions tor the

'

i

..

•QH

SAGmARtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This
is a good day to socialize with people
with whom you share a common inter~

Jl-11·11

tAll

+JIO·Hi
.AK7
tJ074
+Q5

establish a larger array of relationships
with individuals who can help yt&gt;U in the

the year ahead regarding situations that structive bonds can be established.
affect your home and family. Your per- Major changes are ahead for Saglllarisonal finances are also looking better, us in the coming year. Send for Sagittarius· Aslro-Graph prediCtions today.
but beware of being wasteful.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-Dec. 21) To- Mail $1 .25 plus a long. self-addressed.
day could be memorable, not because stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
of what you do lor yourself, but because this newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveof what others might do lor you. When it land, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to stale

dismayed If an important objective Is

NORTH

WEST," •

In the year ahead you should be able to

APPL.ICMf: 0

_.,.
•u

1

11~
·
lhanb .. tile
mony friends, ~~~~~bon
and ·tamny for thllon

CIIIIIIENT ~ D
•OOIII!R ·~ D

----lpalle.

11

ppreclatlll

TO RECEIVE A Q.AIII FORM(S) , ,atECk THliOX(I!I) WHtCH u.LY:

j

"

Employme11t Serv1ces

In Appl'ldlllol
The famiiJ II fi'IK
TaborwOuW • ..
tur sllctfl

IOCW.IKUMTY,._

- ·---;b:.

W.ntotl•....... ·~

1St

ColuUlbUI,

lovld
one.
. Your
ldn...... wll a~.., ....

,_

dolld 211,..

Larry Uvotr.t1UII.UOI•

19112 .... In Unlv.alty

•

.

'1 1

j

33 Fanns tor Sail

11 '' ••

lor

'

'

' "

F h ...

.._
121.000. 1111

Top , _ Paid: · All Old U.l.
CoiM, Oold llfnGI. 8 - Colne,
Gold Cot,._ II.T.S. Coin lllop,

JAMES LEONARD IWIH ·
who ...... _ , Dao. I,

HOepllll

·~

-=-.. .....1-...

Wanted to Buy

W.ntotl To 1ur: ~unit Allloa
With Or WltiMMA llol- Colt

of

.

-- •

later decision woukl be In favor of cJass members, and If It were, that tt would be as favorable to tne class members as lhis settlement.
Dalod this 24th day o1 November, 1992. .
Clertc of COurt, United States District COurt, Northem District ot Florida, Pensacola DMeJon

- ALDER

.

,, . ,
,
.

YOU MAY OBTAIN A COPY OF THE DECREE AT YOUR EXPENSE. TO OBTAIN A COPY. YOU MUST CONTACT THE OFFICE OF THE U.S.
DISTRICT OOUFIT CLERK AT THE ADDRESS SET FORTH ABOVE.
.
.
t1. Adlftu 011 DefenM eo.....t for~ Of servtna copieS ol any obtections, the address tor service on counsel for the Defendants Is:
Jomoo G. Ramooy, Fonia, Worf\tld &amp; KaMdoy, SUite 1!!01f. Third National Financial Center, Naahvllle, TN 37219
·
II the settsement 11 not approvec;t by the COUrt, no money will be paid and the case will proceed to trial: However. there Is no aas...ance that eny

..

TM FirriiiJ

;

...:..._

..... --~...,..
_,·r- ,......_
... 110G til 7171 .... ....

- , w UOtiii:OO Pll.

Thank you all
who came, Thank
you all who cared,
Thank you Friends
&amp; moat of all, For
the memories that
we shared.
Written by:
Mary Jeen Ball,
Donald "Duck"
McPherson Family

-'
... ' "'i

Former Employett for whom Shoney's, Inc. has a valid; current address. ShOney·s,·lnc.'s records, however, may not contain a.correct atldresa.
It is your responsibility to usure that Claas Counsel has your col"recf adtlresa.
I. ott.. Atlrrnallve ·A.uet. The propoletl Decree also estabU1h81 goals for hiring Black persons in Certain positions with Snoney's, Inc ..
impllmentation of an Internal comP'&amp;int procedure. training and educatiOnal programs, as well as otl'ler obligations.
7. llndlng Elfect. The proposed Decree, if finally approved by rna coun, will be binding on all class members and will bar any person whO •&amp;
a ·Mtmber of the clUHI from seeking relief other than that provided tor In the DecrM from Shoney's, Inc. or Danner for daim5 or em~oyment
discrimination and I Of retaliation bacaute of race. C18u1Mmbet1 wll not be allowed to
themaetvea from the tenns at the o.cr...
t. Oblacdotil ID • ConHIIt Decrw. If ycu ~lleve that the ""opoaed Dv;.roo should net be finally .appr9ved for any raason. ~ou~~
present your~ at 1 heartng on January 25.1993, at 1:00 p.m. at the United States Oil!rict Court, Ur;tited State' CoUrthOuse, 100
PalatoK Street, PensaCOla, Florida. A"Jo.member.of the utttement ClaiMS wno wants to obieet to the proposed Decree mu1t file an obtfct1on
and appur at the hearing. 'The ObfeC~• must be fited in writing wlttl the United States District Court Clerk's Oftlce, wtth serviCe of copies
upon Clan CounHI and for the ~ntl, on or belort January 1.1, 1983. Any anomey who wlll repraHnt an individual Objecting to me
Deer• mult tw. • notice of .,.,_ranee with the Court and HMt counHt for ell pMtes on or Detore the same date.
I. Cllrtt:'l • dd a-. The Cterk'l addrftl Is: Ofrlce .of 1he Clertt, United Slates DistriCt Court. Northem DistriCt Of Florida, United Statel
Counhoule, 100 Nonh Palafox Street, PenSIC()Ia, Aondl32501 . AI ReQUelt for C..wn Formt or other COI'I'elll a MNttee mutt ..... the 1WM
a n d - of ... cue, Hoy- •· S/ootloy'l Inc., No. PCA · - I I V;
10. Cleol Coo 1001,_ hd•w•tioo• II you change your-- otter sending in the Request for Claim Form, hIs your obligation 10
Inform Olu Counsel In writing. Failure to report • chllnge of ..xtren may result In a quaHflad claimant being barred from receiving the benefits
of tha r.etltlh'Mm. If you have any questiOns about the Oecree, you may can or wrtte the onices of Class CoUnsel at the following addresses or
call fhe.tDII frM number listed belOw:
·
·
· Barry L Goldstein
·
Thomas 1-. Warrfil
501 Ealt ToMO.... SlreetiSuha D
Saperstein, Mayeda, Larkin &amp; Gotdstein
P.O. D r - 1857
1300 Clay Street(11th FlOOr
TallailoiiiM, FlOrida 32302
Oakland, Califomia 94812 '

lt:woll

.

Card of Thanks

1

.....

1111,1- -~

,. .

G..._

. . .'..

••21111

1'1111 . , _
- ..........
-.
......
In ow.
..

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So--

PHILLIP

~. . . . II

thldtV- ... IdfoiOMI.
Sunder • 1:00 ,...
F~-·2:GO

'·

=to

REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM

,...,..,. ....,,..,..
......._...,_..
.....,_,,

lLLYMI---IePoldln
Ad-. IIEAIIUNI: 2:GO PJL

·,
•,

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32 Mobile Hom•
for Slit

.

Gaalpolla
&amp; VIcinity

'rem 11111 or • any rntaurant owned and oper1ttd by Shonly'1, Inc: but failed to appty bec8uH of
llletr ll\8t Sllonoy'o, Inc. Ollglgld In .-ly billld hlflng pracllcll against poroooo ICon&amp;lri(Ctive Appllc:lnll) .
2. Ttnne of PrCJI CII d II II 1M11t.
COurt appro¥11, the plllntiffl lncl defendants I'IIYI -ureed to the entry Of I Decree ~ 1ht COurt
that ntablilhll cert1tn twtng ~·· 1 ~••t fund 1nd certain lnjunCtt¥8 relief aorNd to In order to satisfy dalmt Of the plalntl"l and class
members and to pey ldlOmeya t. . co.ta, a othlr ,....,., of Utigltion_and setflemlnt. Tl'l!s relief -wtll be in final settlement of aH daims by
the plailttffa and Cllll ,...,.,.,, .Qainet Shonly'&amp;. Inc. and Raymond l . O.nner for claint of employment discrlminetlon and/or retaliation
beCiull of rae~ thlt wer. raiMd or could hll'll been raiMCI it thla cue.
.
3. Tile laiMaireaM fund. -n. popolld DecrM ~ snoney·a, Inc. to utabtlah a Settlement Fund in the amount of $105,000,000.00 tor
paytn0n11 10 quaMM Clllmontl and tor pe_-.t ot """"' oxpon1111 that will be Incurred In lha ""'"""""' and claims ptOCeQ, not l"&lt;::udlng
attorneys' fen, Purtuant to the OecrM. Shoney't, Inc. aJio hit agrMd to pay Clau Couneel'a attorneys fHI, costa and •xpenses. Thl
Fulld will bt uHCt io poy IIICIIIOIIry owords 10 quolillld clo11 - · who comply with tht cloimo proceduro required by the Court.
Tho e•ICI .,_,. ot lunda 10 bt pold tram the Santomont Fund for wlllch 1 dalmonl m~ght bt eligible wUI bt dolormlnocl by 11\8 ctolma
proct&lt;kn, Olllflbllty roquirernOntland Other llmitlllons oet lortf11n the DocrH- PoymentoiO qualified ctaimlnts will bt made pver a apec:ifie&lt;l
period ol time 11 required by the DtcrH. Conotruclivo Appllcantt will-lilY riiCOiv• the benefits of the equltlble hlrlntf goals aotlbli- by
til&lt;! llocrH but will not bt eligible 10 r-lvt 1 ....-ry awtrd tram ltle Sttlloment Fund.
_
4. ~ Pt ~ c11:1 n far Appllolnbt. If you ar• a member of ~ Applk:lnt cla11 mentioned above and want to be tltaib'e for pel'ticlpation in·

Hll'l""' •· Shonoy'a, Inc. - PCA-811-30093-RV (N.D. Ail.)

0

.._., , 'co.'...:£

-

-·lid

r- or cllargo.

1t5'

7 ,.._ . . . .
-am..•w-"'"""'

-on om5!

~ in Nurwt~e:

oomeono from their o"lco wilt !Ilk 10 you

WlntedtoDo

Qal . .

I

He!,.•"* 3. 1112 (c...r.nt or F""'* lEI~) ; and
•
All btiCk Plt'IOnl who would hive~ f a r • t t at any time~ Februlry 4, 1985 and November 3. 1992 at Shor4y's. lnc.'&amp;

They or

11

• ,1

set1llmll ;t;
,
All bllck per'IOIW who un.uccHsfulfy IOPied tor ~tat any time tielwMn Ftbrulry •· 1985 and No¥ember 3. 1992 11 Shone',l's,
lnc.'oCofporlll HeodquooWo In NuhYiilo, T - o r 11 eny - n t - end-lied by Shoney'o, Inc. (Appllc:lnto l
·
All blliCk pirDMI wno.,. current or formlr ernp~oyMt 11 snoney·a, Inc.'s corporate ~uarters in Nliahvilte, Tennetsee or at any
retta&amp;nnt owned and ~alwd tJr Shonly's, tnc. ·anc~ whO..,... employed tn one or mora of ttose restaurants between febr'Uiry 4 , 1$15

corpora•

.....er

SNAFU® by 81'11ft Beattie

I' I

..i

INC.
Sllonoy'o, Inc. and Aeymond L. ~
IQfMd 10
~-:!"""""" 01111 ..,_ llwlull , _ - . , tht ~
Dlolricl c:-t In
i 1, ThO -..ct thet
.; , Inc. end Ra"""""' L OoMOr dlocrln11111ltod' 1011no1 llltck
IJI~I~Intl for
bile* ••!plcl•• .t Shanev'l, lnc.'1 Corpore..
V
In Nalhwlle, TenneaiM and at Shonliiw-'s, ~n
D'o, LM'o F , Flftll. O...W. or Porgo'l - - . . , . _ CMMd ond
bY Shoooy'o, Inc.
THE PURPOIE OF THIS NOTICE IS TO ADVISE:
• OF THE STATUS OF THE LAWSUIT, INCLUDING A STAlCMENT OF YOUR RIGHTS WITH RESPECT TO A PROPOSED SETT~EMENT OF
THE CASE
• IF YOU HAVE A POTENTIAL CLAIM AS AN APPliCANT, THE REQUIREMENT THAT YOU MUST MAIL A REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM
• IF YOU ARE A CUIIFIENT OR FORMER EMPLOYEE, YOU MAY MAIL A REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM IN ORDER TO ASSURE THAT
THERE IS A RECORD OF YOUR CORRECT CURRENT ADDRESS
• OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO FILE WITH THE COURT AN OBJECTION TO THE SETTLEMENT
1 . '1111 A - Cleo- The following pt(IIOOI may !JionlitlodiO lllllllfl1a, lndlldlng·o monetlry IWird, Olllbllshod In 11\8 ~

ond

Public SIIe

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No. PCA 89-30093-RV

)

IIOIICI Of' CI.AII ACTION IITTU!-NT AND CONIENT DECIIH
TOo 8LACK PERSONS
j1l UN8UCCESBFUU.Y AI'I'UEO FOR EMPLOYMENT, (2) WOUIJl HAVE AI'I'UED FOR EMPLOYMENT
BUT FOR TltilA IE
OF R'Ct~Y 111ASE0 HIIIIHO PRACTICiiS AGAINST BlACK PE'IISONS, OR (31 ARE OORRENTLY OR
HAVE BEEN EloiPI.OY£11 AT SHONEY'S, INC.'S COAI'ORAlC HEADOUARlCRS IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 011 ~y SHONEY'S,
CAPTAIN D'S, LEE'S FAMOUS REQPE, FIFTH QUARTER, OR PARGO'S RESTAURANTS OWNED AND OPEAAlCD BY IIHONEY'S,

"*

Sa ....

•

Pomeroy-Middleport--Galllpolla, Ott Point Plea•nt, WV

LOit&amp; FOund

6

NOIITHIRN DIITRICT OF I'LOIIIDA

••~•• • ••a -•~--~~-•-•• • •-••••• ••• -- • -• •--·--· ---•- - -•••-••---••-••- •• •-••• •••- ·- ·- - - - - • • • - • - •• ---·· - - • • -- •••••-•-••---- - -·- ·- -- •---- -·· - -••••••~ •

BRIDGE

1992

December 20, 1982 '

,J

1

110- bulldng? LOCOI!ed on old

1845. UNUSUAL BRICK RANCH In

..,_.op

condlion
wih 3 BR, 2 baths, tul - ' " · t:R, DR , Ill-In

ldlchen, bath. Alsa t ~ c:ar urllitt..::htd glfiQit. AI this
on 9.42 ~ . m1.

1146. NEW LISTING. ~OOKING FOR A PLACE
TO HAVE YOUR OWN BUSINESS II YOUR
• HOllE, than IIIII II 11M pnlpelly. 2-3 - · 2
baths, !.fl. Fr. olll4n - · - . B8 · DW, uti.

--·

rrn. and ll:orap on ~ .c. mil. Can be 3 8R lklgle

17H. FOR FIENT - !1325 110. - Plfml toc:allon.
Eutam Ave. Opportunity to .homo anct
.bu'*-· btlio Rlv• trontago. VfiJ ,_ 3 Mml wlh ~.lull'
,.II. TNa II a money
rnlklng ~- Cal tor ...........,.

1712. FOliA BEDROOM HOllE. - 2 Ollhs, roomy
rMC:ft holM kK:ilitd In the country. Extenstve work
co~ • tolbws: new Thermo Alslde windows,
securtty - . . . stHl siding,
oool , kkchen,
coromic . . entry _ldeei ..O..chan. 16x53 deck,
cement walks and pad. See 1his hOme and slop
loir*hgatl8ubae.

hoovy

1130.
EXCEL~ENT APARTIIENT SLOG.
INVESTIIENT - Good money maker IN TOWN.
LMgo filii - biCIQ. wlb 3 two bed"""" opts.; 2 one

P-'Y
_plulaediAigt
_ _ ___
priceTlis
_
btmn.lljlll.,
-two"'.,..,...._

1111. SWEET &amp; LOW - Comfortable small 3
bedtoom home. Lot 66X1 60', ru1111 water, b. gas heat

on,..-··$15.000.

~ANO - Land lAys
story briCk P'lolna wlih 4 bedrooms and

1717. PJa11E OlVEI.OPIIENT
wei. Okllr 2

nome In IIHII o1 nopllr. 121 ac. m/1. 011 SA clOse to

p - Nursing Home.

1134. BJ.U:'IEL HOllE - 3 bodnns., eal·ln kit . lg
lR, 2~ bla'd, 1 .::. m.1. lmmedlarle pos585Skm.

SELL flOW
BARGAIN NEAR Rto
CliWIDE- Sp.a IIO&lt;AiilllfliiQ your lwnlly needs. 4
.. 2 lui and ..., llrgo llvtng ""· 8011
11m ~ ....., nn. · utllly
mo .. 2 - · - - p.Hng, pool. 7....,. mil some

"""'*'

-AI~toraveoyl0wprlco.f45,000.

- · aiiiEII OF YOUR OWN with C0&lt;1Siant
· Uoll8od
L.cMif - trw 10
- _ ......
_ furniture
.... living
qulotn.
_ AI
and
~ ... 2
Fatrmonl
......... 1111--3 oc. IN!.

-om

1.--4-3. ..

- . F-.'f -

E·Ml
1111.,

o-u-T-

- Will -

ooom 10 S.P· A·

IIIII_ Ill., DR.

and
"*"·

LA. lam.

1840. NEW LISTING - 4 bedroom, 2 bath ranch
home wttn llnlshed basement . Home Is located on

0.840 ac mlllol. l'rlced In the 1140's.
1711. GREAT INVESTMENT - 3 1-bo droom
apanments. Full bathS, living room, ldtchen, total sq.
h. app. 1440. E~oy lhe lreetl om of owning your own
home alang wnh a rent al income . Call l or more
honnalion.
1103. QUALITY- LOCATION · SPACE - Quality is in
lhe brtdl: Cape COd home that has a friendly home
almosphere. tt fe81ures 4 bedroo~. 2 baths, ·11111ng
room wllh flmplace, e~c. heat pump and cent . air,
epp. t800 gq. ft. location is overtooking the Ohio River
and a large IMa lype body of water adjoin ptopert~
bounclaries. Space Is a 36K48 metal building. Penea
lor 10meone 1hat has a business aoo needs a large
storage area. Plus, a 14K24 buitding lhat could be
used lor a showroom or a :.mall apartment. Cali tor
more detals.
IIOol. ENJOYABLE TO LOOK AT,Iun to ~ve in, has
space jOf tamii'J entertainment in a su~en recreallon
room with lArge lire place, 3·4 bedroom, spacious
saeened ;n paUo oH kitchen. This home awaits you
and your ramfy. n anlldpates your needs . Situated on
1 ac:. rrv'l. Pnc. reduced. Call l or an appointment to
9811 this spadous hOme.
·
1141. NEW LISTING - White brick ranch , lull
basement , 3 bedrms., 2Yr bathS, 2 fireplaces, heat.

••

_,_ __

. .. _ '· .J

..... i

.~ ·

'

'·•'.

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aao. ~ HOlE- L-jull JJfl SR 35
= ¢ 3 nndt wl" new lli4NCNM.rD. Lovely

-

rellrMs.

rm . ar~Mtt ... ~

-'

...,..._., ..... --.""" 3 - old. 2
bodmM..LR..... mo.,ld.,•-tftlftpon:h.-

•••·

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. ·'

4,000 sq. n. comm&lt;.,tlal buMdlng ,
used lor welding shOp. 4 acms more or le9S.

1836 . .NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom ranCh home

located on Adrian Street. This home has new skiing
new rool. and new windows. 10x12 storage building'

1car caopon . HMO sq. n. olllving space. Prk:e&lt;t 1n

$oi()'S .

,n,;

1760. 2 0&lt; 3 BEOROOMS, 1 bath. living mom, tomly

room, satellla diSh"'" equipment. $40. ·

.

...

17113. BRICK RANCH - S"uale&lt;l on I ac mll .uppar
AI. 7 . - to llhOpj&gt;ng center. This home lelluros 3
· 2 tuN baths, l&lt;llchen and dining
2
Hdrooms, uUHty room , famity room, kitchen 1n

•oo.

-.onl; 3 c a r - and a 6
cal lOr rnor. lnlonnauon.

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car deiiCIIod fJWOgo,

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tll41. - - 1WP. -110 ... ""'· rights.
. -. ...... e n d - end- homo. Localed on

1777. NEW LISTING, HANNAN T1UICE ROAD Cozy 3 BR roncll wtlh Oll·ln IIICI\Otl, LR, DR, both.
ruat oil hall!, ,.,. """· Just rlgt'll tor ,...,_ or

..

putrll. 2 car go~ago ,

EncloMd """' and

-poo:ll.lul blll
llldlod Ql!lllg&amp;. 1 ac. mil.
.REDUCED $42JOO.
1114.LARGI C~JIIIEPO/U. BUI.OINO - onSIIII
RoUo. 2 - filii- on 111 - · l'oal&gt;le 3 more

: ... · '

1111. SPECIAL NOTICE - PRICE REDUCED - 1
ACRES MIL · Tastefully decoo-. 111otol rmo 4.5
bedroonw, 3 baths, LR, DR, kl .• ut•y nn., tuN ciYidocJ
basement will\ family

100m. 2 car garogo, pool

patio.

'

anc1

..,,~

~

�1182

KIT 'N' CAIU,YLE® by Larry Wrlpt

13

5I

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point

December

Pomeroy-III!Sdleport-Galllpolls, OH Point ·Pleasant, wv

54 MlscellaMOUI

Dual---.......--.-....
MerchlndiM · ·

IOHIM111.

_..., ..... ,.._

Color T.V.'a Ill -

a•

old, 3DWJ5.

........
......
-.."·--

W""""* 1121. ICOh -

,., ..... " ill - ~--

D.P. Wolalll -11, . _ """

.. _ .......

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Middleport, OH

~u

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.-

Cons

eo.-.•-205 North Second Ava.

.

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od

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=;~Co!olt.c:aat;:

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_____ ...., ....

--.............._
64

lllllcal
lnatnnnems

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Looking for a place to build
thai draarn hom. or a place to park that mobile homa.
Wall hare' s IIPP""'· 2 acres alntadr aat up and waiting lor
you.
$12,000

Real Estate General

Hay &amp; Grain

Serv 1ce s

1/ll. lon, .... - . .-

Plumbing &amp;
. 'H iedng

HIJ' .......... - - .
~-·-­

.Real Estate Ge::n:.:e.:..:ra::,;,l_,___ _.__
i

.,......_
"""" 1ot -

a.oo ..., .;..., ·

Tra11sportaflon

SLppi1PS
\ L1·:rstock

'!'In

71

44

Autos for Sale

,.
''

MIOOLEPORT - A r/ica brick professional building that
has 12 rooms and 2 baths downstairs. Has offioaa plus
an apartment in tho ~pstairs. Thera is _aloo a 38XSO park·
ing lot. Sot up for you to start your busonass today.
$185,000

Apartment
tor Rent

Eleclrtcll &amp;

64

LANGSVILLE - You'll love to coma home lo 181ax in the
oountry, in this 2 bedroom ranch with aquil)pad kitdlan an
silting on 13 acr8S. If you enjoy hunting llis is tl1a place
.
$C2,500

.,.
•

RUTLAND - A comer business - Opened 3 years ago,
but is doihg a thriving business. Everything you need to
oparata a video rental, soft serve ice c18a111, hot dogs,
etc. The business comas with tha buiklng, approK. 2,300
currant videos, VCRs, Nintendo games, 2 ice cream
machines, and much more. Lock. olock and banal.
ONLY$115,o00
FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION - Craw Road - A large 11,
acre lot with a Barrington Doblawicle, silting on a full
basement Home has 3s4 bedrooms, dining room, fam~y
room, and in-ground pool, back deck, and much mora
'
WAS$57 ,000 NOW$51,000
I

. .

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD - An .oldar home that has c:cim·
pletely drywalled downstairs. Has a large living room with
2 bay windows, a baautifllt kitchen with an island, a din·
ing room, 3 bedrooms. with latge walk..fn closets, a nice
stone fi"!place, a wrap-around porch, and many outbuild·
ings sitting on 1Yr acres .
$55,000

COMMERCIAL ,pROPERTY· U A. i'llll, 248
frontage .tiona SR 7, just aciaoo ham Ohio
River PlaZa.
(264)

10Dx150 LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE • OWner
wants a quick sale. Cell l&gt;day and olwt building
right away. ·

JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD • ADDISON TWP. •
386 aae larm, 3 pondl, IObiiQco bae, 55x1 00
h. bam, wilh conct1141111ocn. May oonoklllr aplit.
. (578) '

LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUSINESS?s SR 1SO near Bulavilla Pike.
Approx 200 • 200'1ot No utilities available.
'
(866)

78 ACRES MIL, Sugar CNek Roell • Watar
tap and bam on~- $32,000.
(511)

17.5 ACRES MIL, RACCOON twP. • Fronts
on SR. 325 N. near Rio Grande. Nice home
sites .

wooDs IIILL ROAD

3 bedrooms, blllh, LR, kitchen with range and
18frigei'IIIDI', bam with hone . . .. 27 .....

PORTER ROAD
4 Bedrooms, balh, LA, kitchen, dlndte, hll
basement bam on property, 2 water taps, 4.49
acres MIL.
(976)

CHURCH ST. (BIDWELL)

3 Baci'oamo, ba\h, living mm., kitchen, cellar,
unattached ~hop. 3IQII MCh 66 x166.

PIKE STREET
Fomerly Treasure House Ceramics, 2,060 oq.
ft., bath, kilehen, 10ll52 mobile home used as
rental.

(114)

RACCOON ROAD

'

3 BRs, balh, kiu:t.l, ll11lng rrn., 2 1/2, car
unattached garage; bea~IIU wooded 4.5 8Cf91.
(864)

PLEASANT VALLEY RD. (RIO)
3 BRs, 1112 balhl, LR, kitchen, family room, hal
oil heat alum. llding.
(209)

711SECOND AVENUE
3 BA, 2 baths, LA, DR, kitchen, large family
rm ., gas heat, cent air, garage. (224)
ROONEY VILLAGE ·11 3 BRa, 2 baths, LR, DR,
FR. 2 lire~. heat pump, above ·ground
pool.
.
(1046)

Real Estate General
~-· 011
···~·~ ;-::.:=i=;_
,,,
_ _ _ __

.. .....

I

......

. .....

I..

45 , Furnished
t:
" _
Rooms
,, =· _...,..
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1

.

:.:·~r::z::-o--.
lo

ROOIMtOr_ s_GriJ!OIIIh.

.

I I - ,_,. wMh oootling.
AMo' trollor .;.... All -nUpo.
2:00 p.m., 3Q4..773WY.'- ·
t

CENTENARY AREA

3 BRs, 1 112 baths, LR, DR, FA, attached
garage, full ba~ernent 2 fireplaces . Mid $70's.
.

446·1066

~

~ 01
~,

I

"

124.423 ACRES 11/L, 'GREEN •nd "
SPRINGAELD TWPS. s Just off St Rt. 35, all ·
vacant land. Ideal lor davolopmont.
:

'

PATRIOT AREA ·.
';:
3 BRs, living room, kitchen. beth, c:arpe~.
attached glllllg8, otDmm ,windowS and ~i
ssict(2 foot lot
(7~)

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

'

SKINNY DIPPIN' PRIVACY - 24.8
Farin
in Groan Township. Knoll top setting provides
outstanding view. Large cedar ranch with 3 big
bedrooms and 2 full baths . Perfect
arrangement for your family. Raise a beef or
other 4sH project. Great place for a pond .
lnground pool and more. Neighbors close, but
not too oloaa. Broker'• no•: This. type of
property doesn't coma on tho mari&lt;et vary
often, so don't put off calling tor . an
appointment
1202

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSEDI Owner has moved and naada to sell this 3
bedroom. 2 bath, living room, dining room
family room and large eatsin kitchen . Outdoor
area features 3 acres, mn, access to large
fishing pond, 2 car garage. Call today. Now
your dreams and pocketbOok fit together. tS03
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY - Over
$1,200 per month inoome ·Ia ·produced from this
live unrt apartrnent building. Good l.ooation in •
town. Good rental history. Vary nice lot with
acc~ss to bact&lt; alley. $59,900.
11206'

HOUSE AND 5 ACRES' II OR L - Located on Slate
Aotua 588. House h·as 5 rooms. 2 bedrooms 1 beth
PRICED AT $25,000.
'
.

AFFORDABLE UVING - You're not going to
believe hOw much houu you can buy lor only
$43,500. This horne oWers 4 bedrooms, 1 beth,
living room, family room, large kitchen with
dining araa situated on an oversized lot.
Comfortable family living at an aflordallla price.
Hurry bafOJW it's too lata.
HOO

;,

"

••'•

NEW USnNOI LOCATION! LOCATIOIII
LOCATIONI 242 Lariat Drives Wei..,..IUCIId
brick ranch style h - conollting ol 3
badniOml. 2 baths, lYing room, ldtr:han, dining
area, family """" mare. 1 car allached
ClfPOil Cal today lor Ill appolntmlnl. 1505

a

•••

Real Estate General

.

- Looking for'

THE CONDITION CAN'T aE SUI~PASSE1D
in this ramarkable 3 bedroom, 2 beth
viny~ ranch. Its spoUess condition is evidan1ce : I
of loving care by a particular owner. P,.UV .
soon it will have a new owner, and it could ba
your. Piicad at $64,500.
~
INCOME .PRODUCING PROPERTY ON 10
ACRES! - Buy for investment and building lot
potential. Close to town.' Small pond. Duple•
lypa unit provides good income. $29,900. 1222

It VINTON YILLAGEI H- you wlllnd this 3
badroam 1 1121N1th one •IDlY home with lvinll
room kllchen, laundr)l and den. A clellll:hed
one.;. garage, blown-in lnoula1lon and mote.
On a 121'x 115 comer lot Alklng only $30,000.
Caii!Odly lor your lj)pOintrrtanl.
$4111

Building

446~4 '

game abound, Inducing wid turllly. There are
bulkinG 11tH with na rntricotionl. Timber ' not 11aen ..,....lid lor,..... On oounty raad
will llectric available. fv;t now and you will

hirme
leel of lona ago
oomlort and convfnlence ol lllday. I rooms, 3s4
handtnflad chaMtn..... 2 ....... loc:alld
In Tuppen Plains on Main Rl has I + AC and nice
fenced back ywd. ASKING $48,800

120 ACRES - This would be an oxcellont
placo to hunt, fish or just ralax. You have a
large stocked pond, pasture, tinibar and 3
bedroom living lodge. Older barr\, fruit t-•
and mora. Located on Law Jonos Rood. Call
. tor prioa.
1700

BRING ON 1ME PRESEN'J!I.! FRIENDS • TREEI
THERE'S LOTS OF ROOII H~EIIJx:tdad on Morning
8t.r Fld. In Reolne thia 1 112 IIDry log honW has 4
badiooms, hMt pulllpJ
buemant. lnd 2
gar1g41 piUaillve front pordlal on
Room lot
EVERYONEI Baal ol IIIII's bean REDUCED 10 S78.500

badloom•.

loft""""· ...

home_.,-

I

HAP"" HOWDAY1110 YDUI
PROM THE ITAFI' AND MANAOEIIEN1' OF CLELAND
REALTY,IIC.I

'

I EURt E.

.

CLEI.Afii)_--·-----

....,.
111111

TRACY IIINAOER.-.--..- - - .llt,IIID
.IIAN TRUIIP 1 - - - - - 11111111

OFFICE.--------·

t ..
,

a-·

rLL BE YOUR HOllE FOR CHRISTIIAS, YOUR PAJIII
THE WHOLE YEAR 1MROUOHI Tlio
a 1ant1y and • en lnceniM It oiiM 4 ""'*-· "CD
- · 206.61+ Acrn,- lanced, moat 11mbar, and
FREE GAS with 6 olllgaa Willis, nice big bern ' oOme
lhedal A .,... paohga dlall $125,000
·

DAVJD WISEMAN, BROKER· 446·9555
Loretta McDa~e- 446·7729
Carolyn Wasch.B. J. Hairston - .448-4240
Sonny Games - 446·2707
•.

~

aplace tD hunt lnd cal 'fO'JI - ..

IUY

ON

..

~

'

..

,..

LAND CONTRACT! • 3 badroom.
lYing room, kilchan. .950 acre far
$35,iloo. Owners 18~ make Ill ollor. \'AI. also
181 on land oon..ct with $5,000 cbwn. 14111

ball

THIS SHOULD RING YOUR IaLII A VERY CU'FE
RANCH STYLE HOME on NichOlas Ad. hao 3
badioomo, 2 balha, elee. heat pump, oanhl air, dlclilng,
2 Qltlllulldingl, modem kllellan, above gniUIId pool and
1.053 ac;NI. $42,000

'

living room, kitchen, bath, alum. siding . ,
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
M87
MAIN IT. YlfTON Ia 11111 2 badloOm 1 bath
brick home, with IIIICIIan, living room, laundr)l
room and a larga walk-ln lllic. that oould ba
oonv.lld 10 a tltlrd bedroom, nice ooY8fed
front potch and Iaiii"
one .... gantge
lind more. Caii!Odly!!

r*&gt;· •

HUNTERS PARADISEI Approximately 81

87 ACRES, MIL - Vacant land located in
Green &amp; Springfield Townships, just off U. S.
Rt. 35. Fronts on township road and old U. S.
35. Water and gas available. l.alld lays mosUy
rolling with &amp;Kcallent building locations. Has
hig~ hill area with nice view. City ochool
system. Best location in Gallia Coun~ to build
and live"Priced at $67,500.
,
11236

t=:t .

out or reilng thlo hornell lor youl2 ....._..,

REDUCED AOAINI NOW 155.DIJO. WAS
ASKING ....OOD.·OWNER WANTS OUTI
Good Investment property li..-cl at 3111. A._
4 badraomo, 2 baths, -_ , gao f)lmace.
Mobile · hOme also lricludecl. Goad rantal
lnoome
. ' 1482

' NEW LISTING - VA ASSUMABLE bedroom doublawide situated on 1.59 acra lot
locatad 3 miles from town . Large detached
racreation room. Priced ai $55,000.
1701

REAL.FSif\IE K

cozy ' CUTEII1t,IOO.DD • Whether otertilg

11101

- · Cen ba yours. Peer. and other small

I)

LOCATEO IN GALUPOUS - Vine SIJWt - 4 ....tar
un~s. good 1ncome propally. Cal lor mora information.

1si00-IN1D&amp;&amp;

.,'

510 SECOND AVENUt GAWPOUS

3 BAs, 1 112 baths, kitchon w/range and
re erator, walksin basement,
880 1'

MERRY
AVE LOTS FOR SALE- Located on Rt. 35
CHR ISTMAS
and old Rt. 354, this property is. prival8 and
convenient. Prices start at $6,900. Call forma
·
1223
AN DA P1'\'0SPEROUS 1nforrnMon.
NEVI YEAR!

OWN YOU~ OWN BUSIESS -toea~ on Rt. 7 (Euras
kit), 30'x36 block building with slonlglt'jn basement 70
ft. frontage on Rt. 7. Lot runs. to Ohio Rive' Was uaad 81
conven1ant mart. DRASTICALLY REDUCED NOW
ONLY $32,000.
.,
.

FOR YOUR COHVENENCE 1RY
OUR lOLL FlEE II'FEl

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Real Estate General

QUIET COUNTRY LIVING ~ Move into tho
country and enjoy tl)lo t&gt;aautilullinta set
large 2 acra lot with plenty of good nat ~Jnd ·~
for animals, 3 bedroom ramodaled
building with 3 high overhead
tractor and implements. All for only •ou,,uuu.
1201

REMODELED ONE AND ONEsHALF STORY HOlE Locatod_on State Route 7 at Eureka. 3 bedrooms. livi1g
room , d1mng room, kitchen and bath located on 32.9
acre mn. CALL TO SEEII

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodnoiy Vrlage II. Call lor
mora Information.
•

or
1·800·585·71 01

start a small busine-~s cr move your orasan,t •
o~e? Gat good visibility with ; this !Oclltion '
without paying the nol!llal high in·town pricesl
1224 sq. ft. building with ·2 finiohad rooms and .
bath . Largo workshop 'and supply room .
$39,900. Ownar will consic;ler selling ~·
business also. Call Davel
11203

WANT A HOllE AT AN AFFORDABLE
PRICE? -Then you naad to tab a look at this
baauty. Large living/dining room combination,
nice kitchen with la~ndry area, 3 bedroom• af'd
2 baths. Newly painted ceilings and exterior.
Combine this low price with low intarast rates
and you can fulfill your homeowner's dream.
$29,900.
.
1613

NICE LO~ATION FOR A HOME ' - 12 acra M or L.
Appro•. 1n m1le Iran new River Valoy High School, on
blacktop&lt;t~ad. Rural water ava~able . Pri&lt;*l at $1 s.ooo..

~

ol

PI.AN1l SUBDIVISION

GREAT IN TOWN

Household

I

or 446·9539

446~7101

a utility buiding in a handy location? Want to '

Merchand1se

100 ACRES M or L on Frierdy Ridge in Clay Twp
Water and electric available, Pricetl at $32,500.
·

PH. 446·7699

CHERRY DRIVE
'
'
,2 BAs. 1 bath, LR, kitdlan, gu ~1, dly~;-;
used as rantal property .... $29.000
_ I ;,

'

Mqse Canterbury, R1111ltor-446s3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor-256s1745
Tim Wetaon, Assoc. - 446-2027

BUILDING FOR. SALE IN j:,CKSON ,- Put business
downstairs and rt has a 3 ,bedroom apartment upllli,.,
Start your own business and live upstairs CAll ABOUT
THISONEi.
.

LEIDII6HAM REAL ESTATE

"
MYRTLE AVENUE
4 Plex. Rental property, each unit has 2
bedrooms, bath , LR. kitchen, laundry. Gao
. hast
(8011 ~

•

(CALL US ANYTIME)

LAKE FRONTAGE
Nice 6 rooms, 3 bedroom c:oCiage locelld with frontage
on BLUE LAKE in Clay Twp. Galla County. "A• acra,
Boat Alii and enjoy tl1a lake. You ~UST - thia beaus
tifuf oottaoe and location. .
1700
BUIIIESS OFFICES' SALE~ODII FOR LEASE
DOWN'IOWN, 2ND AYE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

414.1HIRD AVENUE
'·
4/5 BRa, 2 batha, kitchen, DR, LR•.alum. aiding,
gas heel cenl. air, new carpet
. (m) ~

Allen C. Wood, Rllllllor1Broker-44&amp;s4523
Ken Morgan, Rllllltor1Broker-446s0971

Goods

•

108 ACRES IIIL. 7 Guyan T~lh~Owner ~
financing ID qualified buyer with
clc&gt;wn •
payment
(512) :

- .ii.~ ·

THE KIDS • YOUR POCKElliOOK .,;11
thank you when you baoome the proud owners
of this afto- beauty. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
large tivirig room and kitchen, 1 car garaga,
huge deck and largo lanced yard . Tha price is
right at 549;sod. Graan Elem./G.A.H.S. 1607

""""

WEWISHYouA
MERRY CHRIST-MAS.!

•,.

.

'

Wootf ~a{ty, Inc.
32 Locust Streat, Gallipolis

(1006)

CARMEL ROAD • 4 mi. N. ol Rio Grandtt, ~.
Approx. 24 .... o1111rvaved vaoant land. lciNI : •
lomew home: $19;000.
•

CHESHIRE VILLAGE II this wei estel)lilhed
UNCI buolne11 Oil f!t 7 wilh twO bay
garage and olfice. A mobile home lhat has 2
1 bath, living nn.. dining nn. and
loltchen. Alkilg $V9,500. Without mobile horne.

bedroom•.

su,a.

,.n

~I!RCIAL-

4711 JACKSON PIKEs 1 . . .
lot, approK. 31'1156' buNdlng with IWO bay
a-age, uphalt pnlng lot
....

.

CLOSE INI• E~ e view ol the river ham fie
great~ .... kMiy 6 y.- old, 3 bedtOOih, 3
bath home with family room and llnllhed
b a - . nine. clo10ta, 2 wdtslno. Tu
frM lor nine years. Too many amanltieo ID
mention henl. Call lor more lnlannadon. Alldng
~

seers.

.

OWNER. BAYS MAKE OffERj .IIEIIIAT,E
POSSESSION • Juat waiting lor you I, 3
bedroom IIIICh llyltl home, living room, lantlly
room, 1 car anat with ..,.,, door opener lnd
men. Exc alent loc:atlonl
,...
a1 WOODED ACRES In ~lim SchOol

..... Ntrwttt has ..., 11p. ax mi!H to Rio
Orinda. Call naw.

· .

tM2I

V~ LAND 011 LIICOUI PIKE· 86 - ·

' ..... pond • 1*1• 18a24 .,_'-·Asking
$21,!00.
•
' ..78

CHEAPIEI 111,000. M IIILL CREEKI LMng
- · kllchln lnd clnlng room Clllllllo,
.,._,
bath and OOWNd ctrpOrt. Calllodarl
Immediate poueulonl
-

RUSSELL WOOD, Broker
PHYLLIS MILLER
.
MARTHA SMITH
PATRiqK COCHRAN

'
PICTURE
YOUII NOU8I HERII s~
land. O.J. White Aold. Uil2 - · lata ol
..... Goodbt ...........
11,800. 1412
;

441-1514

446 4818

. 256-1138
379-2851

379-2184

I

446 4255

245-9697

446 8855

e ._• ._.., .. ...,...... , •• - "'11CifUyi1AIII&amp;-.CGpa*''~
-.~Qf!lll~

•

tiiDiiJE~Y OWNED NIDOPEIIAll'D

J
I :· .

�Tlmll

wv

OH Point

Sentlnll

1112

New requirements issued for advances on burley tobacco
GALLIPOLIS • The Agricultural SUibilization and Conservation
Service recently amended IObacco
regulations to correct abuses in
advance g::nts nWie to producers for to
deliveted to tobacco
warehouse operators, dealers or
Oilier persons.
To be eligible for price suppxt,
ASCS offiCial Elizabelh A. Collins
said producers must reJain beneficial mterest in any tobacco for
which lhey receive an advance payment or other fmancial. consider&amp;·
lion. The new regulatiOns also list
criteria for delelmining if a )llllducer loses beneficial interest in the
tobacco aDd penalties for not complying with Jhese requirements. .
Ms. Collins said in some cases,
warehouse operators and dealers
make advance payments or other
consideration to producers for their
prior to the tobacco being
offered for sale in the producers'
names at auction. Often these
advances are, in effect, ~ purchase
of the tobacco from the producer, If
the warehouse o~rator or dealer
uses lhe producer s marketing card
to matlret the tobacco after it has
been pUrchased from the producer,
then the warehouse operator or
dealer receives the benefit of price

support. .
auppon if Jhtte il no wnaen •sree·
Under the new requirements, the . ment executed on tbe advance· a
producer and the person m.UOg written llftlCment is executed aDcr
the advailcc must execute a written parties fail to comply with the
agreement, setting forth the condi- a~t; « th_e average advance
tions of the advance.
pnce per pound 11 eqllal to or more
Producen will be considered to than the averqe ne.t Slles price per
have lost benefiCial interest and the pound for the farm for the entire
tobacco will be ineligible for price marteling yell'.
Producers and ~rsons making
advances will be JOintly liable for
refund of all price SUPPOrt received,

.-

I

'

I

I

~

.

~uper 8 Motels ,~ill again offer
accommodatio~;~s on Christmas
.;
-, GALLIPOLIS • Super 8 Motels
am.
fn:e accommodations
•O.il1ma&gt;Eve

the Thilraldson ' s idea on a trial
basis in 1990. "Our plan was to
begin wilh a fairly small· scale program ri$ht away."
·
J~wctt stressed tllat the program
owes its success to .motel employccs as w~ll as the franchisees and
executives. "Obviously, we wollld
all prefer to be at home with our
loved ones on Christmas," he said.

Clft'crs

:· Tile Gallipoli,s

.

p

Super 8 Motel,

If a 321 Upper River Rd, has

41111litiSpanicipating in
$1pcr1Miltds'l992Roomsat lbe
Jnl ....-. 'J'be mocel will offer
. _ • 11
'*"'Mion• oo Christmas
lliC 10 •yone 'llisitjng a friend or
n' ite ill a nursing honle, veterinS' Ileac, hospital, or treatment

Farm Flashes

free
Eve

"But our maids and managers have
gone out of !heir way to make Ibis
program work."
.
Super 8 Motels, In\:. is one of
the nation's largest economy lodging chains with more than 57,000·
rooms. As of November 30, 1992,
it bad 932 properties in 49 states
and Canada and an additional 44
properties under consuuction.

· .

quota peNJtles

::r

asses

Jlllllbdng
IJ!I tobacco

Southern
downs
Unioto

•

on w.hich beneficial interest has
been lost.
The tobacco warehouses are .
aware of the changes in the pro-.
gram and are executing adv1111ce
agreements with producen. Burley
tobacco prodill:en may contact the .
county ASCS office for more infor- •
mation on the new requirements for
advance payments. .

Super Lotto:
S·S.ll-16-41-46
Kicker:

li-1-3-2..3-7
. Pick 3:

S-3-8

Page4

record number of entries. Probably
the qllality of animals is also a new
record. ~ial thanks to alllhose
that bel
make the weigh-in go
smoolh y. The fairboard takes the
leadership and contributes many
hours of volunteer time to make
sure the youth of Gallia County get
off to a good stan on their project
Big increases in livestock proJCCts
for the Gallia County Junior Fair is
the result of tremendous community support. 'J;ake time to thank fairboard, 4-H and F.F.A. Advisors.
and .local busine~~ses for their suppon. Many counties are expericnc··
ang number decreases particularly
in the steer poject area.
. A "DeSign Your Steer" comput·
er program print-out will be mailed
to members in the next few days.
This pro,rilm computes weight,
ageandhipheightandprojectslinish weight for each steer. The daily
gain necessary to achieve finish at
fair time is estimated. These calculations are extremely accurate on
th\'average. In 1991 the total
werght for the top ten steers was
just 25 _poUilds heavier (2.5 pounds
per calf) than projected in the prior
December. Last year (1992) the
total weight for the top ten steers
was just 100 pounds (10 pounds
per call) heavi~r than projected last
December. The average fair ~ig~t
for the top 10 steers last year was
1205 pounds with the weight range
records.
of lhe top five steers being 1230No Extension educational agri- 1270 pounds.
cultural programs are planned for
The Tobacco Market News in
the next couple of weeks. More Lexington estimated that 70 pertime will be available for individu· cent of the 1992 Burley tobacco
al contacts such as farm visits. The. crop has been sold at the end of
Ohio State University Extension market on December 17. The averOffice in Gallia County is now at age price for the final pre-Christthe new location in the C.H. · mas sale on December 17 was
McKenzie Agricultoral Center at $181.22 per hundred bringing the
111 ~ackson Pike; Most everyJhing season average price fpr the burley
is in its new place and ready to belt to $182.46. The percentage
!crve the public. Several education- going to die pool on December 17
al classes are scheduled for Jan- \. was 15.2, pulling the season peruary.
cent up to 10.9. Burley tobacco
Weigh-in of steer proje~ts for sales will resume staning on the
the 1993 Gallia County Junior Fair week of January 4.
was held Saturday, December 12.
Ed Vollborn is Gallla County
Some 125 4-H and F.F.A. members Extension Agent, Agriculture.
weighed in 166 steers. This is a

C .

:r

••=•

E!

•-g,

-!d

~~
~lp .,s turn ~at
~ f~ms. auto somethmg

JP

we,._. !'Ills. II~ ~!S ~ ·

iind-lllff•lkbolidaypnL
£ SIIJIU I n•agement a4opted

· - - - briefs
•

·
W~N (AP) -:- Prof·
• • lkcliiiiDD s sa"'llgs msutu-

dli"::c"on~s:cram~ alre~dy
ICl a
~ •.
YCf'l ut \

E

~: the mdus. .
$1.27 brlhon
. quarter at
"'"~;ate~tor
........,.. or . l1'SI
~·., ol th_e _year. ~;be Offrce
~ SuperviSIOn sard Thursdie

\

Holida~

Neighhor held in connection

Sale

Reedsville man shot, killed

K£NNETH W. STAPLEToN

A Reedsville man is dead and the squads requesled· that an officer
his neighbor· is being held in the go to the shooting scene first.
Mei'gs County jail on charges of Meigs County .Sheriff James M.
aggr:avated murd~r and attempted Soulsby said that when officers
murder for firing at law enforce- arrived on the scene, some eight
ment officers.
shots were fired at them after
Dead is Bernard Dyle Bay, 45.
which some 35 officrn responded
Being held in the county jail on to the area.
the alleged charges is 44-year-old
Soulsby stated officers esUib·
Joseph Kanawalslcy.
lished a perimeter around the
According to the Meigs County wooded area and a helicopter from
Sheriffs Department, at 6:54 p.m. the Wood County West Virginia
S~turday evening lhe Meigs CounSheriffs Department arrived on the
ty Emergency Medical Services .scene.
received a caU1hat a man had been
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
upon seeing a light in the Kanawal·
sho~ . at Barr, Hollow Road in
sky residence, a tel~one call was·
ReedsVille.
According io sUindard procedure made and Kanawafsky agreed to

S~pleton promo~ed

ple~~~~e~ ~~~:~e':i·f:o~
~~ty:~~?v~~~:':ri~
Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant

Crane Operator to Yard Supervisor

according to Norman H. Tarr, plant
manager.
.
Slllpleton joined OVEC in 1979
as a Laborer in the Labor De(lllt·
ment, and in 1981 he uansfcrred to
the Yard Department as a Coal
Handler. In 1983 he advanCed to
Barge Attendant and the following
year was promoted to Tripper
Operator. In 1988 he was promoted
to Tractor-Diesel Operator and in
1990,to Crane Operator.

I)UNKtN•
Diamonds &amp;" G .......L.a

By WILLIA)'.t C. MANN
ing in the capital. He said two
Associated Press Writer
Marines fired single shots from
KISMAYU, Somalia-In what their M-16 automatic rifles ilnd the
has become a famili!U' pattern, as firing from the building stopped.
troops of Operation Restore Hope
· Within seconds, a vehicle armed
secured a new city without opposi• with a .SO-caliber machine gun
tion shots were fued at soldiers in came around a comer, he said.
cities lhey had taken earlier.
· The vehicle's driver spotted the
U.S. Marines and Belgian para- Marines and turned around, but a
troopers C8Jlle ashore and quickly young Somali manning lhe .50-caltook: control of this southerp city's iber machine gun swung the
pon and airport on Sunday.
wea{K&gt;n around and ·aimed at the
"Everything went well; not a Marmes, who opened fire, Peck:
shot was fired," said Col. Fred said
Peck, a Marine spokesman in
The seizure of Kismayu
Moaadishu.
reopened an important gateway· for
!Jut ttoops in Mogadishu and . 'the shipment of food to the sUirVing
Baidoa, 120 miles inland, came in Jhis ravaged East African nation.
under frre.
Clan fighting and looting had kept
Mark: Thomas~ a spokesman for the port closed for months, reducthe United Nations Children's Fund ing the flow of aid to ·a trickle
in Mogadishu, said French troops . delivered by planes from neighborcame under fire near BaidQa on ing Kenya.
Sunday and also found mines had
Wilh Marines riding shotgun on
been planted around one of their Sunday, the frrst truck convoy of
vehicles.
Cood in more than a month reached
He told reporters today that lhe Baidoa,. in the heart of the famine
French soidirn were fired on, lhen bell, without ineidenL
returned fJre and disarmed three or
Cobra helicopter gunships and
four Somali gunmen just south of FA-18 Hornet fighter-bombers and
Baidoa. Other reports said three A-6 Intruder attack planes filled the
Somalis were wounded.
sky above Kismayu as the 180
In the ~ond incident, Thomas Marines SPlashed onto the beach in
said, French soldiers discovered a amphibious vehicles on Sunday
planled mine, searched the 11fC!1 and morning.
·I
.
found others in a warehouse in
They were followed by 90 paraBaidoa. When they returned to troopers of Belgium's 1st Airborne
their vehicle, they drscovered sev- Bat~ion in U.S. N~vy hovercraft,
era! mines had been planted around and transport helicopters that
it, he said.
dropped some of the soldiers on the
Peck said a Marine foot patr0l pon's broad, con~te dock.
was shot at Sunday by automatic
As the Be!g1ans secu~ed the
weapons from the parliament build- port, the Mannes moved mto the

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By JULIJANA MOJSif;oVJC
Associated Press Wrater
BELGRADE, Yu$oslavia Hard-line Serbian prcstdent Slobodan Milosevic appeared to be running even Monday with California
millionaire Milan Panic in an election many sec as a choice between
peace and continued war.
There were persistent reports
that Milosevic 's political machine
was enginOc;ring fraud during Sunday's balloting, and the incum bent's opponents said they might
not accept the R15ults.
•Panic accused Milosevic back·
ers of ttyi_ng bllitantly to rig the .
elections. ·
·
"l always knew they wouldn't
be fair," Panic told reJl9rlers at a
post-ballot party. "But what I
didn't expect was that they would
be so cheap."

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city in their armored vehicles and
raced for the airport, about 3 1/2
miles to the south.
Somalis on the streets and on
rooftops cheered and waved as the
Marines sped by. Forewarned of
the landing,· many residents had
painted sigps sayi9g "Welcome
American Soldiers."
Two hours and twenty minutes
after the landing the airport was
declared &amp;ecure. A U.S. government plane touched down less than
an hour later; followed by two
relief flights of the International
Red Cross:
LJ . N~ · and private aid agenbes
had pleaded with the U.S.-led military coalition to restore order in
Kismayu, about 250 miles southwest of Mogadishu on the Indian
Ocean coast.
Similar -conditions · and
entreaties from aid workers led
American miliUiry commanders to
send a combined force of Marines
and.Frencb Foreign Legionnaires to
Baidoa on Wednesday . Armed
Somalis .fled before the troops
arrived.
· Clan gunmen and bandit gangs
also disappeared from the streets of
Mogadishu after the Marines
arrived on Dec. 9.
But armed men have been filtering back: into the city.
And Thomas, the UNICEF
spokesman, said relief workers
were increasingly concerned about.
the number of gunmen and heavily
armed vehicles on the streets of
north Mogadishu, which the foreign troops have not entered.

M'ilosevic is seen as the instigator of the ~rb war of aggression in
the' former Yugoslav republic of
Bosnia-Herzegovina and last year's
war in Croatia.
·
Many .Yugoslavs and Western ,
diplomats believe Milosevic, 51,
would not accept electoral defeat
and could spark new conflicts in
other Yugoslav regions to rally
Serbs to his nationalist cause.
. The Serbia-born Panic ; who
later founded a pharmaceuticals
company in California, became.
Yugoslavia's premier Ibis year with
Mil~vic 's suppon.
But Panic has since broken with
him and entered lhe race for president of Serbia, long the dominant
Yugoslav republic, on lhe prot!liSt
of ending the war in Bosma. Serb
fighters have seized 70 percent of
Bosnia since fighting began in

March and Serbia has· been pun·
ished by the U.N. with economic
sanctions.
An exit poll conducted for Panic
indicated a dead beat with each
candidate receiving 47 percent of
tbe vote and the rest split among
five minor candidates.
That would mean a nmoff election in two weeks since a candidate
would need a majority to be elect· •
ed.
But the Partner Agency 's poll
did not cover Kosovo province,
where the Serb minority is fiercely
nationalistic. Milosevic was
~xpected to win easily in Kosove

Pickup hits, kills Gallipolis inan

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A 57 -year-old Gallipoli~ man 218 in Gallipolis Township when
was killed after lae walked into Jhe Belcher walked out in front of his_,
path of a pickup truck Sund!!Y . 1987 Nissan Hardbody. Layne was
. ·
morning around 7:15, the Galha· not injured.
Belcher, who had a history of
'-.Ia Meigs Post of the State Highway
mental illness, was transponed to
Patrol reported.
Ray V. "Speedy" Belcher, 57, of Willis Funeral H9me in Gallipolis.
The Gallia County Emergency
39 Paxton Road was dead at the
scene
multiple head wounds, Medical Service responded to the
a fractured left leg and a fractured scene.
The accident was the sixth fatal
left shoulder, Coroner Edward J.
Berkicb said . Troopers said his accident investigated by die patrol
in Gallia County Ibis yell' and lhe
destb-was not a suicide.
According to tht! patrol, 'Mark second involving the death of a
M. Laroe. 25, 268 Dillon Rd., Gal~ pedestrian.
lipolis, was southbound on Ohio

rrom

·81FT
CERTIFICATES
•'

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~

Christmas Is ...

surrender. ~a helicopter with
search light vercd over the scene,
the suspect
e out and surrendered at 10:45 p.m. He was armed
with a loaded 9mm handgun. Bay's
wife, Errna, was allegedly a witness to the shooting.
Gallia County Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury, Athens County Sheriff
John Hiclcs; Meigs County Coroner
Dr. Douglas Hunter and BCI Agent
John Perry were all on the stene.
Perry processed lhe crime scene.
~ay's body was removed to the
While-Blower Funeral Home in
Coolville and was taken to the
Franldin County Morgue for an
autopsy.

Tight race for Serbian presidency;
-Milosel'ic backers accused.offraud

~====~COMPLETE STOCK ~~~~~======~
MEN«S

..

•

Kismayu takeover goes well;
shots fired 120 miles inland

otO dlyl, 12 or 18 monlhl .... AI WI (ouppooiMCicndlt)

o()r uu ourFREE lllyawlty up to 12 monthal

ENTIRE SIOCI
JOCKEY &amp;
HAlE'S

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"

1 Secllon, 10 Pogee 25 cenlt '
A llulllmedlt Inc. Newapoper :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .Monday, December 21, 1992

By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN

GALLIPOLIS . The end of
_ Approx~mat~ly 6~0 Supe~ 8· another year and the start of a new
.,..., ...-wide will be takang growing season often is a time
ilirt ill tile third aJinual R~ms at when farme{s evaluate the past
i!c lnlp&lt;CJWD. Jewett estunaled year and mate plans for lhe future.
ialt • _,as 5,700. rooms--or This time period is a good time to
:10 peaCfll!l of die enur~ Super 8 accomplish some of the basics such
. ~can -cmkl be pven ~way · as talnng soil samples; balancing
P.-. Jlle ..opau- 1"W
ee ~peel a livestock rations and generating
lll!id !*"' over 99 1, Je"!'ett year-end inventories.
. iiid. :Ik 'IIOllkJr ·mouth lluilds
The extension service can help
Jtilk CMIJ Jl=-· 0oce JICOI!lc stay rou,with these tasks. We specialize
;Ji* • w~te!er .the ciicum-, an helping farmers take soil samdie) re ~I,!Dcd td come pies, prepare and submit Iberia to
.... -~ . . .
the laboratory in Wooster, and
~wuced regu~uon rs no1 assist in interpreting the results.
Jtq t,, 11111; ~~ can be . The corn)llllcr Beef Ratioo FormuWldt rail. . 5~; Super lation ~gram generates least cost·
;w, •- 6e JaaYIIJDD line, at 1· t~ feeding plans for beef cattle. It
~· Bot . ~ fran. will calculate batch mill and miner·
. . _ El)' -s to Jimitithe JI!IDI·
al nee4s. A telephone conv~tion
?rtk~~ons (446-7007~ ~s11ally .generates
wemdc:d. J:!rrectones of enough basic mformauon to proMoiiCI!oQtions are also. vide a "general " recommendation.
Jlluup Superline or from Feed samples analysis results make
~ai'JIIedllill's popeaies.
the recommendation more accurate.
r ~ ~ l l ~- ~~~~~program The Ohio Dairy Ration computer
ialiias.,iad by a simi!.- program program was just revised last
J.-.tuve.,an ago by Super 8 · spring. This program is a .little
a k Gary lind Linda Thar· more complicated but is easy to
~of F~o. No_nb Dako~a. learn if used on a regular schedule.
liwe IIIII scvaa1 family. tragedies Several dairy farms own their own
alll':"!•~•,!*!d Christmas and sortware and do their own ration
I' .
~ ~ldson work. A good supply of farm
aa' : d', •'!" ~- IIOIJIIays ·were account books are available at il
1 • d' witlla ~· of t-1 memo- minimal cost for those who want to
~for as. We decidad a program start 1993 with accurate farm

neu. Low 30 to 35.
w.a 10 to 15 mpb.

.•

.
,, n

1.

TOIIIglll,lncreulng cloudlWlods lOUth·

Pick 4:
8-1·2·4

WASHINGTON (AP) - The million pounds for the 1991 92
Uniled Slales is now lbe dominant season, according to a recent rcpon
almond supp1i« to the \Y9fld. with br the Foreign Agricultural Serexpons expanding more thiul five- vrce.
,
fold in two decade•. Agricultore . The U.S. 1118111et share of globe!
De
t tlade specialists sa .
alR)ond exports doubled from 33
~almond exports grew t,m percent in 1911 to 69 percent in
68 inilllon pounds for the 1970-11 1991, said the report In Agriculturgro~ng season to more thiul 3n al Trade Highlights. .

.-,s.i-AT=f/~=; N.ow is the time for farmers
an::::;s:i::g~~~·
dfi • Jllegoal of the jlrogram is t
..... liw-d: Mwe want to elirn•
0 start planning• for ext year ..--------~----------------~----•
-.e lodgiiic costs as a barrier to

ptilin&amp; a loved one over ChristIJ!IS.•

•

U.S. is almond supplier to world

tobacco

DONADON MAD~ • IIDk One, Altleas, N.A. bas donated
......
;ala n,s to ltle Melp Athletk Boosters, and Pepsi Cola
Rftnl ktmdml megapboaes. Tbe. cups will be sold
Jtl1lla - ......, llld the megapbOIIes filled with popcorn, while
'
1a1t, duillg tke upcoming basketbaU season. All proceeds
~ p lo the boosterS. Pictured with a me,aphone some of the
~ .re ,JaiHS M. Soulsby, left, booster president, and Steven
':» n e, rnznger ol BIDk One's Pomeroy !)ranch.

aod few paynient of

Ohio Lottery

..

days·until
Christmas

HELLO AND GOODBYE • Scott 'Lucas,
Administrator or Veterans Memorial Hospital,
right, welcomed two new hospital board members and said goodbye to two other tong-term
board members this week. From tbe left with
Lucas are Jeff Warner, Ball Run, Po'l'eroy, and
Harold Rice, Rutland, who will begin three year

terms on the Board or T,ustees in January, and ,
David Fox and Wayne Roush, both or tbe
Racine area, who eacb have completed nine
years service on the hospital board . By-laws
limit the service or Fox and Roush to nine consecutive years. At least a year must now lapse
before they ag~in can serve on the board. ·

SHARING WITH OTHERS • Employees
and volunteers at :Veterans Memorial Hospital
carried out a rood program this year to help
underprivileged families during the holidl!Y season. Approximately 900 rood items were con·
tributed by the employees, volunteers and sever·
al residents who joined to help in the program
including Jack Abels, Margaret Kennedy,
Sieglinde F. Miller, Paul and Marcia
Houdasbelt, Elmer Burns and Mae Weber. The

Women's AUlliliary or the hospital added COD•
siderably to the success or this year'$ program
by contributing rood items in lieu of their annual
gift exchange. Pictured wltb the rood donations
as they were loaded for transportalion or the
Meigs United Methodist Parish Coop are I to r,
Scott Lucas, hospital administrator, and the
Rev. Roger Grace and the Rev. Keith Rader,
local Methodist pastors.

Bill OK's private college pQlice
COLUMBUS - Private colleges and universities would be
able to upgrade their security
forces to -campus police dcpartmeniS with full arrest powers under
a bill the Legislawre approved.
The measure cleared the House
and Senate last week. It now goes
to Gov. Geqrge Voinovich.
Sponsored by Rep. Thomas
Johnson, R-New Concord, the bill
would aulborize trustees of private
colleJ!es to establish police depan·
men'!s whose officers would have
the same authority as municipal
police officers:
However, campus police powers
would be limiled to school propeny
unless an agreement was reached
with city, county or vil-lage offi •
cials .
There are about 50 non-profit,
private colleges and universities in
the sUite.
"I don't know bow many insti·
tutions might take advanJage of this
bill, but it is permissive legislation," said Johnson. "Marietta
(College) is one that's definitely
considering using this piece of legislation...
Pu~lic

\.

universities llresdy have
autborlty to create campus police
departments.
Larn: Christman, president of

the Association of Independent
Colleges and -Universities of Ohio,
said the bill poses no expense to.
the state because the institutions
involved would pay the c,ost of
training.

Campu~ police would have to
complete a training program
approved by the Ohio Peace Offi- ·
cer Training Council.
Christman said most colleges .
have some kind of security system.

Local briefs
Racine man cited in crash ·

•

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A 27-year-old Racine man was cited for driving under the influence · :
and failure to control after wrecking his pickup truck on Tanner's Run · ·
Road near Racine Sruurday at approximately 10:45 p.m.
·•
Christopher S. Ransom of Tanner's Run Road was eastbound on Ohio ·
124 made a right turn onto Tanner's Run Road and went off the left side
of the road. He then struck a sign and a ditch, the G&amp;!lia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported. ,
.
•. •
No injuries were reported. Daniage wRansom's 1973 Ford F-100 was
listed as light and disabling.
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Patrol probes two-car wreck .

An improperly siODilcd car was listed as the cause .of a two-car wreck
on Ohio 143 in ScipiO Township Sunday around 3:30p.m.
According to a report fronl the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the Stale Highway
Patrol, Reymundo R. Pena, (.4, of McArthur was eastJ?ound on Ohio 143,
went over a hillcrest and struck an eastbound car driven by Michael E.
Pierce 18, Albany, that was stopped in the roadway.
Pe~a' s 1986 Pontiac Fiero then went off the left side of Jhe road and
struck a tree, the patrol reported.
No injuries were reported.

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