<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10687" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10687?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T11:59:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="21131">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2d93003c2f2cb6115c41cee1e5825446.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7e72f5c817e7b9d00b21ddde172df0c7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34044">
                  <text>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

IUY 3 PAIRS

LEVI'S J
AID RECEIH A

FREE

UNDERWEAR
.

LEVI'S SWEAT ·
SHIRT '

20% OFF

($20 Value)

COMPLETE
STOCK

'ENTIRE STOCK
FLORSHEIM

SHOES

SWEATERS

20%oFF

20%oFF·

Rttlstw I• HoskiM· •13" R..te (OIJrel
CeltrTY
T-Christ•as
Glft·A·Rama eNittendoGne

No...,-._..,,

-

-

nol bo pruonllo'""

WUNGLER
SNAP FRONT

~~~

CJ

. ...... .....
- ~~~~~.,

DENIM SHIRTS

$2499

GROUP MEN'S

DRESS
SLACKS

$2599

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."

r.::=:==:::-=:::~~~

COMPLETE

JOGGING SUITS

..,.,, Fleece, Nylon

20% OFF

GROUP OF MEN'S

••'s

•

20% OFF

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

'SUITS &amp; CO RDUR0 y KNIT SH.IRTS &amp;
SPORT
COATS SLACKS

0% OFF.
TO 25%

$19''

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
•'

'

~

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

e4.JitaiiVCR

'

"

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 ·

•

.

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.
.
'
'

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.

�•

.

.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Mondly, December 21,1992

I

•

·.commentary

•

hgl 2 The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'

Winter storm weakens as it heads East

OHIO W0Jthcr

By'l'lle~,.._ .

·Monday, Dec:ember21, 1992

It will lie plfllr cloudy IClOU
Ohio Tuesday, w1th bi&amp;bJ ia the
40s.
Clouds were to incJase tonigta.
with lows 25 10 35.
HiJh temperatures on Sunday
were ID the 30s.
The rcc:onl high tanpenture for
this dale at tbe Columbus Mllher
station was 64 in 1967. The record
low was- 11 in 1942.
Sunset today will be at 5:10.
Sunrise Tuesday wiD &amp;eat 7:50.
ACI'OII tile alldoll
The fierce winter storm that
sweot across tbe !!()(them and cen-

MCH.

The Daily Sentinel
. . DfiOTBJ) TO
'

111 Coart ltnet
I'OmeiVJ, Oldo

TID: llnUIIIITII OP TIIB IDIOB-IL\IIOII MBA

0

ROBERT L WJNGE'lT
PubU.ber
PAT WlllTEIIEAD
Aalstam Publllher/Conlnlller

CHAltLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma1u11er

Ll!TI'l!RS OF OPINION. are welcome. They should be len thon 300
words. All )ellen ore oubjoct to editin&amp; and mull be si&amp;ned with name,
oddrell and 11&gt;lepbone number. No UDJipod letll&gt;nl will·be published. Leaen
lbould be in good tute, odcllwin&amp; ll11101, nol pmonalilies.
·

How Clinton avoided trouble
in .19 hours of televised talk
''

•

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
· · WASHINGTON - The handlers said quit but Bill Clin10n said no,
and kept his economic telethon going overtime. No problem. although the
·IOld-you-sos were waiting.for trouble.
There was none in the nearly 19 hours of televised tallc that Clinton
called part of his effort 10 "reconnect the Aniaican people with theit government. •• The president-elect presided start lO finish with questions for
Nobel Prize economists, reassurance for unemployed workers, and zest
'·for mirathon policy discussions he found 100 fascinating to halt for lunch.
· . And he did it without committing his incoming adminis(ration on any
~rnic policies that wcrcn't part of his program all along. .
, · In addition, the Utile Roclt conference underlined the depth of the
·'problems he'll face, with speCial emphasis on health care reform and
·•deficit controL "We can't do anything else on the deficit if we fail to curb
the monster of spiraling hwth care costs." Clinton said, with a succcs- ·
· "sion of experts 10 Illest to it and lO say that the deficit problem is even
'.worse than ~le know.
·
• . The president-dect said the conference had forged the beginnings of a
consensus on economic action. But consensus on problems aad goals is
·far easier lO attain than agreement on the delails. That's next, in lhe pro•&lt;gram Clinton will send to Conpess soon after he is inaugurated m a
·
. month.
Going in, Clinton political aides had been nervous at putting their man
. 'in TV camera range for hours of IDISCripled and unpredictable talks on tbe
·issues central to his campaign and election. The central features of his
· economic program a1ready were set and no conference was I!Oing to
change !haL S.o there was a risk that two days of talking about 11 would
invite criticism and dissent before Clinton taJres office and makes his case
·•to Congress.
· · In addition, the conference idea fust envisioned as a session with a rei. titively small group of economic experts had expanded into an exttava~
' ·~anza of 3~6 economists, business and labor leaders.• and interest group
·representanves.
Clinton noted that thousands more had wanted to come.
The man wbo planned the last conference like it, for President Gerald
• R. Ford in 1974, said he would have told the Clinton people not to have
one, that it was an invitation to IIOUble.
'
· • Afterward, L. William Seidman said Clinton had scored a success by
'·'8voiding televised problems and by displaying his own contniand of the

issues.

~

.

"It turned out to be It pretty good showcase for a president who could
·· 'Sit down and handle ideas inlellectually with anyone m the countty," said
" Seidman, whQ served as the government's chief banlting regulator.
-'

WASHINGTON - In the
spring of 1980, 8 33-year-oJd IQV•
cmor from Arbnsas faced his first
major leldelsblp taL
Fidel Castro had allowed some
125,000 Cuban dissidents. mental
tients and hardened ctirninals to
.fiood Soutb Florida in wltat
became Itnown as the Marie!
Boatlift. Thou$h most or the
ref11gees sta)led u\ South Florida,
thousands were shipped off to a
relocation center in Fon Chaffee,
Ark.
Bill Clinton, Arkansas • young
first-term governor, was forced to
call in tbe Nlllional Guard to qncll
the riots that soon enveloped Fort
Chaffee. Afterwards, his popularjty
began a slide paralleling that of
President Jimmy Carter's,~ as many
Arlcansas voters came lO view Clinton as an iitefl'ective victim of foreign circumstances. That fall, Clin·
ton lost his seat to a Republican
opponent who c.ampaigned using
footage from tbe F'ort C!Wfee riotS.
Today, Clinton may have a case
of deja vu in Haiti. As South Florida braces for a potential repeat of
the Marie! disaster, the presideht-

-~--~--~------~~------~~
0.

Berry•s World

.
·'
'
0

• 0

By Jock Anderson
and ·

Cl4HtfRwr.Wl2.. ~

Line~ item veto · isn~t .the
•

•

•

'

'I

• '

,answer

.

l

'ose•nh
S•near
r
r

J

1

comings. It would wreak havoc, for
example, On the seplration of powers doctrine by which we govern
o11rselves and hand the White
House a fearsome a·dvantage:
Every time a member of Congress
opposes .one of the president's
multibillion dollar prop:ts -an
excursion 10 Mars, say- tbe chief
.executive could swing the line-irem
club and threaten 10 smash the legislator's multimillion dollar pork
barrels.
The scheme would also fail to
live up to its promise. The campaign for a line-item veto is based
upon the assumption that Congrcss
wallows in waste and is tbus
responsible for the deftcits that pile
up year after year. This is manifest
nonsense. On budget matters,
Congress follows where presidents
lead, and it has been 30 years since
any of them oversaw a budget with
a bottom line writlen in blaclt.
The bulk of the budget, moreover, is dedicated to untouchable
entitlements - Social Security
benefits, food stamps, pensions ·
·

.

.,
·'·

'

'

' •

and interest on the. national debt. other things- and came up with a
Only 40 percent of the budget grand total of $280 billion that
would be vulnerable to the line- could be saved over a five-year
item ax, and· nearly two-thirda of period.
.
·
that goes for defense and foreign · That would pay the $200 billion
aid.
'
··
' annual interest on the $3.1 trillion
ln·shon, pork-barrel waste is national debt for. about three
peanuts. When Ronald Reagan dra- months and 12 days.
matically lifted up a 43-pound
I believe the line-irem veto was
omnibus spending bill during his a hokey notion the day it was
1988 State oftbtUnion speech and dreamed up.. It is _just one more
complained about the money being form of the bash-Congress game,
spent on cranberry research.and it's .time ,the lawmaken called
money that he .could not excise the presidents blu_ff. They sh.ould
because he didn't have line-item fmd ~~way to ·g~ve the ~1dent
veto power- he was talking about the bne-11em veto on a trial basis.
$30,000. That was .0000028 per- Let h.im make the tough decisions.
cent of the budget.
Let ~m explain how .the 10 bridges
An organization dedicated to he killed today pa1d two days'
cutting the fat from the federal bud- · worth of i~terest on the national
get Citizens Against Government debt Let h1m chew over the fact
Waste, recenUy added I!P the that 553,000 cit~zens l~ve. in the
money· that goes down the drain average congress1onal diStri,C:I that
because the Internal Revcnll\l Ser- loses a veterans hospit~l and
vice fails to collect delinquent 387,000 of them arc potential vottaxes and because the Defense ers. Let him ponder the fact that he
Department buys too ;many spare would not have Congress lO kick
parts, and because bureaucrats around any~re.
manage their mone;~: imjlerfectly,
My bet IS he would fold h~s
and because the military has too hand and we could fmally get thiS
many obsolete bases, and because . dumb idea off the table.
tbe Forest Service subsidizes logJosepb Spear Is a syndicated
ging roads, and because of a lot of writer for Newspaper Eaterprise
·
·
·
As8od8don.
.

Defense dollars for fiscal mafadles
Santa Claus is on bis way, but
there isn't much in his bag of goOd·
ies for those worried about Amerib
ca's fiscal health. As President·
.J.,_....
.
ortal peril
elect Bill Clinton keeps saying, the re ~~-m
m
.
The public and politicians
have
current cyclical recovery masks
been
conditioned
for
almost
SO
fundamental problems that will tic
years to respond aulOmaticall 10
hard 10 fix. Suangely enough, how· such
advice As a
ever, there is actually a present it hascautionary
taken
several
y'ears for the
awaiting the president right in the
.
.
.
f~cts .of our secunty snuanon 10
middle of the budgetary thicket
It cannot. be easily grasped, · smk m. By now, however, they
however. Once called the peace ~houlcl be czystal clear. The worhl
dividend, it bas all but van is bed IS full of danger, as always, but
from public discussion. Too much · very !ittle of it ~ireclly affect.s
was expected of it too early after Amenca. Tblt which does can be
the end of the Cold War. Then, met ~ force levels far lower than
when it failed to materialize, thanks today s.
to lack of vision in the Wbite
To put tbe case bloody, the curHouse and lack of leadership on rent defCDJe bud&amp;et could be~~ by
Capitol Hill, it was all but discred- 40 percent to SO percen~ w1thout
ited. What hadn't occurred damalinl American SCCIDlty.
overnight was mlddmly believed to
.The Gulf '!'ar all but proved the
pomL
Wubll!&amp;lOO put a SOO~
beimpossil
There w also the inevitable penon force mlO tho field agllliSt
counterat
from the national lraq, stripping tbe Weatern Eurosecurity state'e cbeerleaden. "Serifroiit to do IL With tbe Iron
ous" people took to oxplainina
.urtain down and tbe Wanaw Ptr;t
solemnly that only a 111lative hand- d!sbanded,lbe!'e were no.IOjJiiicusful of dollan could be squeezed SIORS, conclustve evideace lhlll an
from deCenae IPOJilling. To do more ol~ debate ~ad been ,put to reaL
was lild to tbrcatien iwional~ecu­ Wttb no credible tbrealto tbe eiSt,
rity in a new world whose dangers NATO needs no more than token
wore more numerous than expect· American f~ on tbe Continent,
ed. Despite the collapse of the and even ~~ ~ more as. a stateSoviet Union. tbe imperial power ment o~ COilliDwng comiDIID!~I lO
whole ex!stenre had jullified mas- the alliance tbiD or any military
sive defCDJe llletldiDJ for 10 long, necessity.
the United States- supposedly
'But if the Red Army has evapo-

rated as a tlauer aimed at AmCriIn purely military lerms, the current
defense bud~ is inexplicable.
ca's vit~ls, has somelbing else
replaced 11? What enemy currently Given the underlying economic
exists to juslify.lthe mainlmance of realities whose existence was cen---Llishment tral to Bill Clinton's victory last
a permancnt mili
. . ' tary ........,
~ over ~ .mllhon people? Or of November, it is indefensible.
er 1 million,.for that !Halter'?
~orth Korea rema10s a rogue
The budgetary fact of life is that
nat1on, but S';Juth Ko~ea has a lherc ·is at least $125 billion waiting
lOugh, well-eqwpped military force
'of over 600,000. Wby arc we still for the new president if he has the
tbere in divisicitl strcngtli? China. · political courage to seize it. 1bose
that famous bugaboo of 30 years dollars exist in a defeue category
which, despite re,cent"ieductions,
will someda be f&lt; •
remains
close to $300 billion a
power. is
=·=~
year,
a
total
beyond the boundaries
nor arc its energies currently direct:
of
necessity
or
good sense. For reaed outward. Japan, despite our illsons
of
equity
and efficiency, the
conceived attanpt to force it to significantly increase its military president-elect may feel he must
spending, is a military threat to no raise taxes on the very rich and cut
one.
·
certain entidement programs, as he
There rern8in a balrer's dozen or has long promised. But the payoft
more local and re$ional conflicts would be cqnsiderably higher if he
whole outcome is tmporlllllto the ascd his political muscle to divert
';leople involved but not to Ameri- excessive defense dollars lO more
pPOC!uetive use. It wouldn't be easy, ,
~~sltnrnediale security. Unlea we
mlend 10 invent 8 new rationale for s1nce they arc not actually all sitmassive military spending by tin&amp; there in one.ccinvenicnt pack·
becoming the world's Lone a~ reac!Y fur instant fiscal gratifi. Ranger, intervening unilaterally canon:
wherever the forces of good and
evil arc engaged, the exiStence of
HoddiDI Carter III, former :
such wm iii tbetnsclves sbould not Stale Department spokesman :
deter us from collin- back troop IDd award-wbmlng reporter, edl- •
levels drastically. It 11 poslible to tor and publlaller, is president or:
wish for cenain outcomeS without MalnStreet, a :Washington, D.C.-·
feeling duty-Jx&gt;und to attempt to bared television production 4GDi· :
influence them by armed force on pany aad a writer ror the News· ·
each and !IVery occasion.
paper Eaterprlse AssociaUon.

,'..

.

~

1-'

•
••
0'
...

::•
"'• '
••
•
.;

..

f:::

~

••
•• •

••

•·

•, .

•
.•'

.·.
•

0

•
•

•

,,
J

.

:fm'lary

1f n!

n·Rocldes weakened as it rode a
low pra1111e ~ e111.
.
Snow advisories remained in
effect early loday for pull of lbe
Northwest, with SIIOW forecast for
east.cm WIWbington, Oregon,Itlabo
and·MonlaDa.
Snow was also forecast today
fi&gt;r the IIOI1hem Great 1 •Jres while
light rain was forecast for .he Gulf
Coast stares.
Relatively tranquil weather was
expecltd for much of the rest of the
nation. Clear skies were fOrecast
for much of the Southwest an4
parts of the Plains. A high-pressure
sysrem was also expected to bring
sunshine to the easrern seaboard

Governor angry over
cost of contaminated site

c -

rr

&amp;Et46 901Til=D

@JR&amp;c.trAtt~m

IND.

Michael Binstein

rJu11.

00

•

tremors in ID area that's still dig·
· book. the Haiti policy reads:
ging itself out of the devastation r.'fe'verse Bush Administration
left behind by' Huiricane Andrew. policy, aad "I'P,..,Icpabi.aon."
"Right now, then: is no way you
Clinton hu sinc:e blckpedaled
can even find an apenment for rent from these statements, insisting
in Broward County," Cesar Odio, that he won't allow IIIIOiher Marie!
Miami's city manager told our scenario in Florida. He now says
associate Dean Boyd. '"There is no asylum hearings for Haitians would
housing for people like that to be carried out• either at sea, in
come en 1188C."
. Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, in
elect may have sown the seeds of
If
a
refugee
crisis
erupts,
some
Cuba or in a third country,'
What will likely be his ftrst foreignwill
argue
tba.
t
Clinton's
own
"There is a. significant number
policy crisis.
words lighteclthe fuse.
· (of refugees) ~ho will 5Wply leave
Already, more than "40,000
.. While the president-elect was Haiti if there u any place they can
Haitians have set sail for America still
bailing badly in tbe PQlls last be received," says Rep. Robert
since President Jean-Bertrand ArlsD-NJ., chairman of the
tide was depoeed in a military coup spring. he told aildiencea that bis Torricelli,
House Subcommittee on Western
IS months 1180· Today, some esti- administration would grant fair Hemispheric Affairs. Torricelli
11181e that u 11181)Y u 200,000 more hearin•• lO all Haitians 10 deter·
li
Cli
ould be
ok
they were ' leaving on be eves nton w
could take 10 the seas when Clinton mine
account of economic concerns or ing a crisis ~ he allows ~ .
~
is sworn in10 office.
. · al
· Th
h
reach American shores. Clinton IS
I
Coast Guard overflights last po 1bc persccunon. ose w o . · ot 0~· 10 allow that to h&amp;ppCn "
. ..
ueidon' ·
month showed that some 700 bolts were persecuted would be gnmted 0 g
"temporary
asylum
until
we
Torrice
told
us
••
The
qu
.. !S
were undi:r I;QIISIJ'uclion on Haiti's
.
r
estore
the
elected
govemillent
of
w~at
nu!Dbers
will
leave
Haiu
1f
beaches. "They arc read}' 10 go
Haiti,"
Clinton
said.
At
the
time,
they.
belteve
that
they
can
have
a
anywbere they can lO tmd ~- ...
They believe the docks will be ' the Bush administration was tum· hearing aboard .a C~. Glldftl v.esopen,'' said ~lene Dorfeuille, a . ing away all Haitian refugees found ~I or De taken ~.a third loqauon
regardless of theit cllims.
like G~o.
humanitarian relief worker in Pon- at sea.
Clinton
was
even
more
inviting
Some esnmate that at the very
au-Prince, Haiti's capital city.
·
The expected influx of Haitians in his campaign literature. In 1~.•,10 percen~ of~ who leave
s shore ~ die at sea. ~
into South Florida has set off "Putting People First," his cam- Hain
refugees arc wd to be .destroymg
their bo,ats on purpose in hope of
being picked up quicker by the
Coast Guard. Others arc being
taken for exorbitant fees by boat
opera10rs who promise a trip 10
· CJf~
Florida then drop refugees in Cuba
under the cover of night.
. IN MY NECK, .
. The man who could possibly
Aflt~
avert tllis whole scenario may be
Haiti's exiled president himself.
~FOR~LONO.
Recently, however, Aristide has
refused lO comf!rDD~ise in negotia·'
tions with Rain's military government, stalling talks that could ultimately bring an end to the economic embargo. So far, Toqicelli is
among the minoiity of lawmakers .
,.
who question the morality of Artstide's unyielding stance.
Aristide 's reputation is also
growing tarnished as reports surface that he was a (lemocrat more
.in theory than ln practice. Last
week we reported allegations by a
Haitian jailer that Aristide ordered
tbe execution of a prisoner on the
ni~ht his regime Vias toppled by a
military coup. ·
Jatk Anderson and Mlcbael ·
Blnstgein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Hoddina Carter JJJ ,

,.

IToleiloI 40" I

WAATACRlCK

Thanks to ionner President
Ronald Reagan's persistent calls
Clinton cenainly was in no rush to end it At Tuesday's windup ses- for a line-item veto during his two
sion, be said his staff had told him it was lime 10 adjourn and hold a clos- terms in office~ the propo"'l has
become a pet cause for most eoning news conference in order to make network deadlines.
",T blt's what out handlers say we should do," Clinton said, and over- servallvcs. Richard Nixop and Gernlled them. ''If we go a little overtime it's not going to be the end of tbe aid Ford suppon it. George Bush
world. We're going to be on the evening news whether we have a press · wants it.
• so why do such flaming liberals
r 'conference or not, right? ..
as
Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill.; and
Right, despite two extra hours.
·
'
Sen.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass...
The Ford economic summit in 1974 also ran two days, but it came
think
it's a good idea? 1 susalso
·: afler nine preliminary conferences, with more than 800 people crowding a
peel it's because they're 'ood
'WasJrinlton hotel ballroom.
·
· That one actually was ftrst suggested by Senate Democratic leaders; poker players who recogmze a
•before it was over, rival political aims were on display. Ford put the good bluff when they see one.
A brief prologue: Congress
emphasis on dealing with inflation, Democrats talked about jobs and ecoappropriates
money. like ·a Cajun
nomic growth, and neither side foresaw the recession that was just begincooks.
II'S
a
big
medley of things,
. .in that fall.
.
•
and
the
rules
say
the president has
~~ the Clin10n conference. the only congressional 'participants were
10
swallow
it
all
cl'
throw it out. lf
·jbere in new roles, as nominees lO top economic posts in the new adminishe
could
piclt
out
the
stuff be didn't
. tration. There wen: Republican busmess execunves, but no conservative
like; it is argued, he could reduce
:economists 10 challenge basic Clinton program.
wasre and trim costs.
~ 1 As a forum on policy, it is not likely to have a lasting impact But as an
That's wbat a line-item veto
:exemse in conlacts, consensus, and listening patiendy, it may serve Clin· would do: (live the P-resident the
~ tonwe.
.
'·'
II
··: One ironic sign of success: a complaint by Republican leaders to C- power to strillle·indivtdual expendi'SPAN, CNN, .and National Public Radio, at the "staggering amount" of tures from the mega-measures
passed by Congress. There. would
broadcast time the Clinton conference got
.be no more general vetoes and no
: Nobedy fussed at the broadcasts of Ford's troubled economic summit
more lhrcats of government shut·
:· • EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- downs.
Those are !he alleged advan·
'a ist ror Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Wasbingtoa and
tages. There arc also a few short·
·iiatlonll politics ror 1more tban 30 years.
·

f

•

Clinton faces potential .crisis in Haiti

~

The Dally Sentinel ~· 3

_ _._;_Weather---except a chance of flurries north.

By The Associated Press
Exteacled roreeut
Wednesdaylllruugb Friday:
Wednesday, fair. Lows 2S 10 30.
· Highs mostly in the 40s. Thursday,
: turning colder with a good chance
·of snow. Morning bighs in the 30s
-then temperatures falling into tbe
' 20s. Christmas, fair and cold,

Lows 10 to lS. Highs 20 10 25.

South.CHtral
Tonight, increasing cloudiness.
Low 30 to 35. Winds southwest 10
· to 15 mph. Tuesday, partly cloody.
High near SO. Outlook for Christmas Day, fair. Highs 20 to 2S and
lows 1010 15.

·- -Area deaths.-.- Samuel 0. Hoffman

·: Bernard D. Bay

COLUMBUS (AP) -Gov.
George Voinovich criticized the
198S state ~base of a contaminated prope.1y in Cleveland for a
prison site for three times more
than its original p:ice, a ~wspaper
reported.
.
The Columbus Di51l&amp;tch report·
ed Sunday that the Site will cost
taxpayen $30 million to clean up.
The former General Motors
Corp. F'ISher Body site was chosen
for a SOO-bed prison. But plans for
the prison were abandoned afrer the
community protested and the Ohio
Court of Claims ruled against the
project in 1987.
"This entire project is a complete disaster, and I am enraged
that the stale ol Ohio is taking such
a bcatinl! on this' piece of property," Vo1novich wrote in a memorandum to his chief of staff, Paul
Mifsud, in Jqne 1991.
In April 1984, GM sold the
property for $300,000 to the
Nanonal Council for Community
DevcloprnenL Within 24 hours, tbe
New 'i"ork-based development
company had sold it to the Park
Corp. of Oeveland for $500,000.
More than 1 1/2 years later. the

Samuel 0. Hoffman, 49, 4350
State Route 325, Patriot, died Saturday, Dec. 19. 1992, at Pinecrest
Care Center. '
He was born Feb. 8, 1943 in
Cabell County, W.Va., son of the
late Samuel A. and Jessie Overby
HofiiiUU!.
He was active in Gallia County
legal circles having served as the
Common Pleas Court bailiff during
the tem1 of JUclwd C. Rodericlt Jr.
By SONJA BARISIC
tfe also had been a part·time
Associated Press Writer
instructor in tbe Emerson E. Evans
CINCINNATI (AP) ...;, MemCollege of Business Management bers of the Ku Klux Klan peacefulat the University of Rio Grande and ly put up a cross at a downtown
he was also an instructor at the public square near a menorah today
Southeastern Business College.
as police stood by. Police later
He was a 1961 graduate of arrested a man who tried to take it
Miami Norland High School, down.
Miami, Fla. He received his B.A.
Four or five members of tlie
from Emory University and his . Klan put up the white cross about 8
Juris Doctor degree from the Uni- feet tall on Fountain Sq,uare about
versily of Florida in 1968. He ·6:20 a.m. -and left, Slid Officer
received bis la'A! license from the Howard Nichols. He said there
·Supreme Court of the State of · were no protestas nearby.
Florida in December, 1968. He
But about an hour later, a man
studied law in England sponsored tried to remove it Nichols said the
by the Marshall-Wythe School of man, who is white, was charged
Law of the CoDese ,of William and with disorderly conduct. Nichols
Mary in WillilmsbW'g, Va.
did ilot know tbe man's identity.
Mr. Hoffman was a member of
NichOls would not say how
the Academy of Ftorida Trail many'OOiice were on h8nd.
Lawyers and was appointed 10 the
Police put iron barricades
Panel
of
Arbitrators
Of
the
Amai·
around
the cross. Two officers
.Gertrude J. Fork
Arliitrltlon Alsociation, and he stood guard.
Gertrude J. Fork, 68, Beaver can
was
a member ~ tbe International
At the top of the cross is an
; Falls, died Thursday, Dec. 3, 1992 Legal Fraternity of Phi Delta Phi inscription from the Bible: "John
i at The Medical Ccnler lherc.
Kappa Alpha Order. At one 3:16: "For God so loved tbe world
Born April 2, 1924 in Racine, and
time he was 1 paitner in tbe legal that he gave his only begotten Son
'she was the daughter of the late firm of Preddy, Haddad, Kutne~ that whosoever believeth in Him
Herbert H. Ours and Lydia May and Hardy, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
would not perish but have everlastCozart. She was an avid supporter
Survivors include three aunts, ing life."
'of &amp;aver-Casde Girl Scouts where
Mrs.
Evans; Clarksdale,
At the boUom is another inscri~
she had served as service unit Ariz.,Virginia
Mrs. Norma Rutherford of lion, a di8claimer: "This cross IS
'dircCtor for Beaver Falls as a leader Patriot, and Mrs. ~ Arrington of dedicated to our messiah by private
of girl scout troOpS.
Huntington, W.Va.; two uncles, funds and is not sponsored by pubShe is surviVed by her husband, John
W. Overby of Huntington, lie funds." Similar wording 1s at
:Leslie J. Fork; a son, Leslie D. W.Va., and Ted .Hoffman of Kitty- the display of the menorah about
Fork, Broadrun, Va; two dauglltas
NJ.
200 feet away.
·and sons-in-law, Sandra and Daniel hawk,
He was preceded in death by his
About 300 people held an antiHouseholder, Center Township, father in October, 1975 and his Klan vigil Sunday night at the
and Cheryl and Jeffrey S. Maze, motbet in October, 19.92.
square, where the KKK had a city
Brighton Township; a niece, Eileen
Graveside services will be held permit to place a cross near a
Tripp, Darlington; a brother, Carl
Ceme- menorah.
Ours, Fon Lauderdale, Fla.; a sis- I p.m. Tuesday a&amp; Hillcrest
--~•L
Manba:Jfthe crowd members
,
enova,
,
,,
WIUI •L-Re
UKO
V,
Wva
tery
K
.ter, Mrs. Kenneth (Anna) Wolfe, John Jackson officiating.
carried
'ghts 10 shine "li~ts
Shade; four grandchildren; a niece,
Friends
maYJ
call
at
the
Creof
peace
and
into tbe
Eileen Tripp, Darlington, along meens Funeral Chapel on Monday darker sties brotherhood
of intolerance and
with other nieces and nephews.
from 7-9.
hatred," said T)1011C Yarcs, a city
Funeral services were held at the .
councilman wlio organized the
Lutton Beaver Falls Flmeial Home
vigil.
with interment at the Grandview.
The Klan didn 'I arrive, and the
Cemerery•.Big Beaver.
vigil endecll 1/2 hours later.
Earliec Sunday, a different set of
In
tbe
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
it
profeSia'S
chanted and carried signs
The Daily SCDiincl
w~ reported that the Cheshire Gar- on the square for two hours. Litera·
(VBP8 JlloMO)
den Club decorating contest wiD ~ ture handed out by some in the
l'llbliohed ..ery olloeniaon, MOI&gt;doy
held Thursday, Dec. 22.
crowd of 200 included material
lhrvuth Friday, lit c - t Sl., Pw•GJ.
The announcement should have from the International Socialist
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Nlllohl..
Compony/Moltimodla Inc., Pw ....,,
read Tuesday. Dec. 22.

Bernard Dyle Bay. 45,
Reedsville, died Saaurday, Dec. 19,
1992 at his residence.
Born Nov. 23, 1947 in Marietta,
.·he was a son of Marva F. Schrader
.· Bay, Marieua, and the !ale Bernard
· W. Bay. He was a member of the
Forked Run Sportsman Club lind
he coached LiUle League Basket., ball and Baseball' in the Reedsville
area. He was a l966 graduate of
Marietta High School. Mr. Bay was
:: a member of Laborers Union No.
. 639, Marietta, and ·he was
· employed by Catalic Company of
'· Belpre at Shell Chemical.
.
Besides bis mother, Mr. Bay is
!· survived by his wife, Ecma L.
" McGuire Bay; Qne son, Richard
Dyle Bay, Reedsville; one daughler, Bclheny Aira Bay, Reedsville;
and three grandchildren, Rhonda,
Kenneth and Bradley, of Vincent.
Besides his father, Mr. Bay was
preceded in death by one brother,
· Clifford Allen Bay.
: Services will be Tuesday at ·n
a.m. at the While-Blower Funeral
Home in Coolville. Burial will be
~ in Eastlawn Masoleum in Marietta.
Friends may call at the funeral
· home on Monday from 3-5 and 7, 9.

M1~

'MMI A.....&amp;•ted

•
~aM &amp;be

- - , . . ftlplwoala';:{,....

" ' " " - - . 79ll
Now'II&gt;R, Now110r1!: 10017.

JIOSTMASTEII: 8ea4- ...._ lo

Benlillel,
11 ~-~allY
..........y, 0Hlo46768.

ll1 c-t II&amp;.,

H ......................

= ........

.,c..m.r .. -...w.k ...........................................auo
8UB8CIUP'l10N liATll8

One
One !iiOIIIh...................... .... ,,,,,,,,, ..,il&amp;
One Yur............................ ............... $13~
BINGLBCOPY
PIICB
Dai1~ .................. ..........................26 C...lo

suboi:ribon not doolri,.. "' ..., u.. carrinonilln...- ... lo...Tllo
•Dally
moySeniiMI
• lhno,
12

.--..........
-. . ...... ....=

,_IIi-. ~wiD lloli,.. -

_.,.
..~

..-..-

.
·

-.1p11uoo by mall pormllllld In

=

· IS Woob. ........................................ =IM
· 28 Woob.........................................
.
o........... Coulr
IS Woob. .........................................
28 Woob. .......................................
fi2 Woob.........................................

aw........... . .................... .... . ... .16.,.
40

McArlhur man
charged in accident

Stocks

Ohio NeWIPOJII&lt; · .-oliool, Noll-

. Celeste didn't return messages
from The Associated Press left on
an answering machine at his
Columbus home Sunday.
The State Highway .Patrol is
investigating the matter to determine if any criminal activity was
involved, said special counsel
SIeven S. Kaufman in Cleveland.
He declined to comment on the
investigation, .
Robert Princic~ site manager for
the Ohio EnvirOnmental Protection
Agency, said the land contains
asbestos, PCBs, low-level dioxin
compounds, oil and gasoline contamination from underground
tanks, and various sludges and
heavy metals..

Organization.' ·
The Klan had obtained the permit to put up a cross ,' using the
same reli~ous freedom argument
that a Jew1sh group had used to get
permission to display the 18-foot
memph, which was erected Friday. Oty offiCials said they had no
choice but to gnmt tbe Klan's permit. _.~

·
Klan officialS had said the cross

would honor Jesus Christ for the
Christmas holiday. They didn~t-say
when they would erect the cross,
but the earliest time allowed by the
permii was 10 'a.m . Sunday. The
· permit is good for 10 dayS:
Sgt. Alan Mar.ch said police
didn't know when the cross might
be erected. He said police had
urged Klan members not to lry lO
erect the cross without police orotection.
Repeated telephone calls to Ron
Lee, spokesman for the U.S .
Knights of the KKK, based in near·
by Hamilton, were not answered
' Swiday.
.
During the evening vigil, about
20 community leaders spoke
against the Klan and its planned
display.
'Let's know this for what it
really is - a false cross at best,
representing division ... meanness
and madliess," said the Rev. Fred
Shuulesworth, a former Birmingham, Ala., civil rights activist

ern Maine and the upper Great
Lakes; in the 20$ and 30s acrou
m.uc:h of the northern tier; in tit
40s and SOs in a band strelehiJIS
from the mid-Atlantic sta~ welt
10 California; in the 60s across the
southern tier; and in the 80s in
south Florida.
•
Pensa;:ola, Fla, posted a record
high Sunday of 79, breaking the
previous high for the dale of 78 SOt
1978. The high for the nation SWI·
day was 83 at West Palm Beacll,
Fla

Meigs EMS responds to 13 calls •~
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to 13 calls for assiswu
on Saturday, Sunday and early
Monday morning.
On Saturday at 6:53 p.m. the
Tuppers Plains unit was called to
Barr Hollow Road for Betheny Bay
and Erma Bay. They were treated
but not transpOrted.
At 8:34 p.m. the Syracuse unit
went 10 Route 7 for Tony Jones
wh() was talcen to Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital.
The Middleport unit. at 9:45
p.m.. responded'to P!lach Circle for
Thelma Collins who was uan~­
ed to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday at 12:41 a.m. the
Pomrroy unit was called lO Lincoln
Heights for Ladonna Nitz. She was
nan sported 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital.
I
At 1:31 a.m. the Syracuse unit
went to Coon Street for Dennis
Musser who was taken to Veterans.
:roo·Syracuse unit. at 8:32 a.m.,
went to Rose Valley for Gene
Imboden who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 2:16 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Vale Street for Kimberly
Lemley who was transported lO
Vererans.
The Middleport unit went to
Ash Street at 5:12 p.m. for Johnny
Smith who was transported to
Holzer.
·
At S:S3 p.m. the Pomeroy unlt
was callellto Pomrroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Herb
Roush who was uansported to Veterans.
The Middleport unit went to
Broadway at 6:43 p.m. on an aulD
fire. '111e.owner was Mike Mallei.
At 7:16 p.m. the Racine unit
responded to Canter Road for Icie
Tucker who was transported to
Veterans.

Meigs announcements

The Chester Fire Depanmenl
was called to the Vince Gheen rest
dence at 10:34 p.m. on a chimney
ftre. Units were on the scene ret
approximarely one hour.
•
This morning (Monday) ~
12:20 a.m. the Pomeroy unit we'll
to Libeny Lane for Edward Timmons. He was taken 10 Veterans . .•

10 people die :
over weekend
By The Assoc:iated Press

At least 10 people have died in

traffic accidents over the weekend,
the State Highway Patrol said

toda~ patrol counts fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday 10 midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
.
ST MARYS - Rose E. Greenwalt, 78. of St Marys, a driver in a
two-car accident on Ohio 703 in
Auglaizc County.
CHILLICOTHE - Micllad G.
Wails, 29, of Bainbridge, passenger
in a truck-all' crash on U.S. 50 in
Ross County.
.
RAVENNA - James E. Clark,
19, of Windham, passenger in a
one-car crash on Ohio 700 in
Portage County.
GALUPOLIS - Ray V. Belcher, 57, of Gallipolis, pcdestr~n
struck by a truek on Ohio 218 m
Gallia County.
BATAVIA- Scott D. Smith,
16, of Milford, driver in a one-car
crash on Ohio 131 in Clermont
County.
SATURDAY
PARMA HEIGHTS -Edward
J. Stupka, 64, of Parma Heights, in
a one-a~~" accident on a city street.
EAST TRUMBULL -Gregory
A. Osborne. 28, and his wife,
Melissa L. Osborne, 26, both of
Chardon, in a two-car ilccident at
the intersection of Ohio 166 and
Ohio 534 in Ashtabula County.
PIQUA- Donald F. Weaver,
61, hometown unavailable, pedestrian hit by a car on a city slreet.
MARlETT A - Thomas L.
Mitchell, 57, of Canton, driver in a
one-car crash on Interstate n· in
Washington County.

Cbriltmas Eve service
A Christmas Eve candlelight
service will be held at St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
Road, on Thursday at 8 p.m. Can-'
dlelight St'lYices will be held at SL
Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
at 11 p.m. The public is invited to
both services. ·
· AA group tn meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
JTPA building in Pomeroy. Call
Saturday Admissions: Sarah
992-5763 for infmnation.
McDowell,
Racine.
Lelioa to meet
Discharges:
None
The American Legion Drew
Sunday
Admissions
: Larry
Webster Post No. 39 will meet Jan.
Cummings,
Racine;
Waller
Rou5h,
5 at the ~st home in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy;
and
Icie
Tucker,
Racine.
Dinner will be at 7 p.m. and meetDischarges: Robert Baile.y,
ing at 8 p.m.
Robert
Reeb, and Lola Bohlen. .
Olr~ees closed
'
Planned Parenthood of South· HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
east Ohio 'Patient Services offices
Discharges, Dec. 18 • Mildre'd
will be closed Friday through Jan. Cade,
Brittany Patlerson, Debora)l
· 3 in observance of the Christmas Weddington,
Clara· Baker, Mrs .
holiday. Offices will reoperi Jan. 4 Gregory McCany and son, Ml'S.
at 8:30 a.m. Special office hours Richard Parsons and son, Margaret
will be observed on Thursday from French, Marla Folden, Ronald
10 a.m. lO 3 p.m.
Cochran, James Northup, Davhl
Baum. Loren Wolfe, Gerald
Keams, Kenny Siders, Kenny Zinn,
and Erica Taylor.
·.
Births, Dec. 18 · Mr. and Mts.
Keith Hill, a son, Point Pleasant,
W.Va Mr. and Mrs. Gary Keefer, a
William Spratley, Ohio con- daughter, Leon, W.Va . Mr. a~d
sumers' counsel, said he is suspi- Mrs. Robert Northup, a son, Galcious that utilities might try to use lipolis.
..
profits from U.S. operatiOnS to pay
Discharges, Dec. 19 -Willia.m
for foreign inveStments.
· Spears, Hannah Hughes, Kelly
Tobin, Hile Fyffe, Francis Trapp,
"They often use core sub- Cody Johnson, Millard Addis,
sidiaries as cash cows," Spradey Gene Welch, Mertie DeWees, Bolt·
nie Patrick, and Mrs. Gary Keefer
said.
:
PSI has no intention of doing and daughter.
Discharges, Dec. 20 · Brian
that, spokeswoman Angeline ProPayne, Casey Fields, Brenda Ro1!5,
togere said.
"Under no circumstances would Melissa Bush; Mrs. Roben Nonhup
custOmers' raleS ever be increased and son, Melvin Smith, George
to suppon those inveStments," she Borden, Harlan Little, Fred Pasco,
Saundra Watterson, Therill Clagg,
said.
.
''With this mer$et JlrDPOSlll, we Jennifer Ault, Justin Gilmore, and
'
made a determinauon that the suc- Geraldine Gerlach.
Births, Dec. 20 · Mr. and Mrs.
cessful company was gomg to he
the low-cost supplier. So that's a Johnny Ohlinger, a daughte:r,
motivation 10 keep tbe costs as low Letan. W.Va.
as possible," Ms. Protogere said.
'We want people 10 loot hard at
this propoSal. We think they will
come to the same conclusion we
did"

Hospital news

Consumer advocates monitor
propJsed utility merger

CINCINNATI (AP)- Con sumer advocares say they'll monitor a proposed merger of Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric Co. and Indiana's
PSI Resources In.c. to make sure
savings arc passed on lO C!IStomers.
The companies said last week
that they ex~l the merger will
save $750 m1llion during the next
decade by allowing them to combine rcsoun:es and postpOning the
need to build more power plants.
The companies also plan 10 cut 400
jobs from their combined work
force of9,200 people.
''I hope their promises regarding the savings are true," said
Sames Tumcr,lndiana's utility consumer counselor, who represents
the public in utility rate cases.
A McArthur man was charged
Am lilc Power...................32 1/4 with failure to control and 10 mainThe merged ccimpany, CINergy
A+larul CliL.......................2.7
Corp.,
would be based in Cincintain IISMed clear distance follow·
AT.tT.........
49 718 ing an accident at the intersection nati. It would serve 1.3 million
Blat: Cllac.-ooooouooououoo ooooo oo49 , .
of Sycamore and East Main Friday elec1ric customers and 400,000 natural gas cus10mers in a 25,000BCIIt BYIIUI .........................18 314 afternoon.
squarc-mile
area of Indiana, Ohio
~bop. ................. l67/8
Pomeroy police reported that
and
northern
Kentuclty.
21
Jimmie Caudill. 41, McArthur,
CG.tE
and
PSI said the
~ooooooouooooooHool6 Jn
driving a 1980 International b'UCk,
~ ..................653111
approval
process
could take 18
struck the rear of 1 1986 Ford
Key
...................21
months,
which
means
C!Nergy
Escort owned by Christie Brum- ·
Pick 3 Numbers
1.-11 W-...................;:;.,,27 1,«4 field, Middleport. and OPer8ICd by wouldn't Sllit functioning until tbe
S-3·8
I Jmlt dlac.
·
27 SIB Eric T. Smith, 22, Chesbfre.
ftrst or second quarter of 1994.
(five, thllle, eiRbl)
Me•Milpedit IJIIC.................~28 314
The merger pcllpOIAI still hasn't
Heavy rear end damase was
Pick 4 NumberS
au Jertau~
..3(32
been
filed
with
the
Public
Utilities
incUrred lo tho Brumfield car aad it
8-1-2'-4
Rellw:e 1Declric.....:.......... 18 314 wu towed flom the scene. There Commission of Ohio and the Indi·
(eight, one. two, four)
RobblnllMycn .... ,........... 16 ~ was li&amp;ht front ead damage to the ana Utility .Regulatory Commis·
Super Lotto
~··JIIIC.
..20 7/1 IJ'UCk,
sion .
5-8-11-16-41-46
s.- Billlk: ...........................33 112
Shateboldcrs of both COIQpanies
According to tbe report. Smith
(five, eight, eleven, sixteen ,
lll/8 was waitina to make a left band will be asked to vote on the merger
forty-one,
fony-six)
in
March
or
April.
The
federal
"'
lad. ... ;...........22 ~ tum onto Sycamore when his vebi- ·
Kll:ker
Stock nporll an tile
cle wu aruct from behind by the Securities .00 Exchange Commis.
8-1-3-2-3·7
truck. No · · · wae ~.... b
sion and the Federal Energy Regu.... q . - ,.otlded IIJ I
lli,JW1CII
,..,...._ y latory Commission also must
(eight, one, three, two, three,
IIIIMd Loewi fll G•lfall
........ ,driver
or a.cmaaer.
Anthoseven)
approve tbe deal.
ny Smith, in the rumfilild car.
0

duo

deal.

Klan puts up cross downtown

Clarification

Ohio 411'169 Pb. 9112-21118. po~ttce ,ud •t PonwaU), Ohio.

administration of former Gov .
Richard Celeste bought the sire for
$975,000, afler an appraiser's $1.8
million evaluation and consulting
an environmental report.
A former Celeste adminisrration
offiCial not identified by the newspaper ·Said he believes State Offi •
cials in ·the 1980s ·were victims of
circumstance, and that Celeste
believed he was getting a good

from Maryland 10 Cllll:l'll ~A low-~ system !Jrou&amp;ht
Sunday's besYf snow aad strong
winds to poruons of Montana,
Idabo and Wyoming on Sunday,
including 11 inches that fell at
Pierce in nortbern Idaho.
Utah shivered under record cold
temperatqres. The temperature
dipped to 17 below in Richfield,
breaking the previous record low of
zeroforthedaleSdin 1971.
Higl\ temperatures today were
forecast 10 be in the tlleiiS in north-

Lottery

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

..........
w=:;:;. . . . . . . . . . . .

!!=

·"'·-

\\.

0

,,

••

�Sports

Monday, December 21, 1992

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, December 21, 1992
Plga 4

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

BIBB

•

1882-1893 .
In tbeNFL ••.
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
E..._DI.WC.

T-

W L T Pd. PFPA

y-B.trolo ........... II 4 0 .733 3112S6

,.,."="····
· · ·· 10I
ape&gt;&amp;·.......

s7 o0 .601
.l33 3)1261
19l215

N.Y. J«a ....... ... .. 4 II 0 .2GI 22ll2'1l
Ncw&amp;aJaod ..... 213 0 .133 192347
CatraiiMwWoft
a•fillal&gt;oqll ....... 10 l 0 .601 276212
y-H- .......... 9 6 0 .600 32S2Sl
CI.IM!l-'ND ... 7 I 0 .467 2:592:52
CINCINNA11.... llO 0 "33 2:57343

w-.Dt•0 .601 3CM227

7.s .. Di&lt;p ....... 10 l
Kat.~ City .: ••. " 9 6
I 7
L.A. Raider&amp; ...... 6 9
S..Q]c................ 2 13

0 .1500 306262
0 .l33 242217
0 .400 221261
0 .133 126231

Den..................

17. Nobnolr.a ..................~
II. Florida SL .................$-3
19. UNLV ...................... 3-4
20. Mklrlaan SL ............ J.]
21. California .................4-0
22. Connecticut .............l·l

2l9
213
209

2:5. \'andomilt ................ i-1

ll

25

--111.6l,lla,...60

r.u-19. Cfed-• ..
.... J!zio 79, Pltl-lllllflri77

Ohio 1laalokaa 96,8-75

24

..

T011111. .111ts
H-fw-CIIal&lt;

Malmo7t.-6l

WaiMIOI,~ol9

Ja,..Ciualc

Xavier 119, AU.J- l7

MVP~

1!. ea..~iaac~--n. r... 61 &lt;OTJ

C1uah&amp;a.
SE Louiaiaee 17, t .....Paa Am 69

!JocqelowD,

•·MiM-.......

10 5 0 .601 347242 .

Chiar&gt;..............

l 10 0 .333 231334

D&lt;uort................ liO 0 .333 7£73CII

y.,.paBay ........ 411 0 .2GI240362
W..a.tmiNw....,..
k·San.Franc:itc:o . 13 2 0 .167
y·N.,. Orloulo ... II 4 0 .733
Allulll ............... 6 I 0 .429
L.A...... ......... l 10 0 .333

Mualtin . I:Z.Capilal63

W. Cuolina 66, Abal62
W'llmin""" 67, Ulbana 61

W-.r76, NCMiellanto. Ohio 51
lludta)oCiaul&lt;
Ck-,....lp
OhioSL 19, Georaia 72

f'1r West
California 80, S~n&amp;~ Clar~; 73

.u7230

Thlr&lt;f]llaca

New Mexico 96. Tuu Tec:h 75

310202

Xavier,

213335
275356

Ohio~.

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores

San Ju1n ShoOtout
F1nl round

y-&lt;:lioclloll pioyolf -

E. Micbi&amp;an 19, W..CJUcaao II

Saturday's scores

Iowa 101 , American U., P.R. 47
Miuiaaippi S1. 58, Fla . International
51
'
S. Illinois 108, Radford 12

N.Y. Gianla Jl, Jt.nno City ll
San Pn.Dcl&amp;c:o 21, Tamp!l Bay 14

S_unday's scores

Southern posts 67-61
victory over Unioto

Saturday's scores

Bullalo 20, New Orlcuoll6
- 1 7 , CI.IM!l-'ND 14

Eul
Gc011e M110n 10, SL Pelcr'• 61
Gooractowri 103, Moraan SL 85
Manhoaan 83, Amly 51
NiaJU116, W. Michi1aa 68
Pitt~bu.rah 102, Ouquiane 91
R....,.~. Lon1 bland u. 11
SL Bont.venb.lrl74, N. low• 63
SL Jobo'•li,Hohlno 56
Syracuae IS, Waanu 52
Wat V'liJini.a 78, Ohio St. 69

GleeD Bayli,LA. Ramll3
Min : ta 6, Pi.CIIblqb 3 ·
CNCINNA112ll, New l!ntllnd 10

16, Pbomia IJ

a17, wuru.,.. 13 •
~
.CIIica 3
s.. Di.- 36,
14
lleeYU Io, s..q~e 6
Miami 19, N.Y. Jcu17

cr.-

Tonlgbt'seame

By SCOTT WOLFE

Sentinel Correspondellt
In a game that went right to the
wire, Howie. Caldwell's Southern
Tornadoes. emerged victorious in a
tight 67-61 non-league boys' basketball contest in Southern's Hayman gymnasiwn Saturday night ·
Southern moves to 2-1 overall,
while Unioto is 3-2.
Southern senior Michael Evans
led Southern scoring . with 17
poiniS, Mark Allen added 15, and
Ryan Williams had 11.
Charlie Ward, Unioto's 6·foot-7
center, led aU scorers with 18
points, while guard Jason Tuttle
added 17, and 6-5 forward Jason
Cruse added 12.
.
The game was a typically tough
,contest between two traditionally
tough teams. The lead changed

,South
Ala. -BirminJlham 111, Prairie Vtew 61
Alcom SL 85, Campboll61
Clcm~on 76, Citldcl .54

Dal1ui at Adanta, 9 p.m.

Week 17 slate
Saturdly
New OrlGanl alN.Y. Jdl, 12:30 p.m.
LA: R.aidcn at WuhinfJ1on,4 p.m.

Copp!n SL 60, Cell ofCharleftm'li
Davidsm 12, L)T&gt;chbWJ 47
DeJa ware SL 96. Bowie St. 80
Rorida SL 63, N.C. Olldotte 59
~Tech 17~Lou.iJville 8S
James Madison 89, Md.·E. Shore 62
Kcnwcky 108, Morehead St65
Mc:Necse SL 80, Stetaon 74

Sunda71 Det. %7

a..EVELAND at PiltlbW'Jh, I p.m.
Dertv«ll Kanau City, 1 p.m.
~BI)'ItMimtiiCM&amp;, 1 pm.

lndima~ at CINCJ.NNA11, 1 p.m.

Miami 14, Florida AWntic 61
N. Cuollna A&amp;T 102, Arbnsu St.
100(301')

Miami at New Btlaltnd, 1 p.m.

N.Y. OiuM It PtdlaclelPhia, 1 p.m.

Atlanta a1 L.A . Jtama,l p.m.
Chicaao ., DaUn. 4 p.m.
San Dicao 1\ So.tLlc. 4 p.m.
Tatnp8 81y It Phoenil, 4 p.m.

Buffalo 1t HCIUI10n, 8 p.m.

N. Cuolina SL69,0..p SL 68
N.C.·A&amp;heville 17, Montreat·Andeaon
72

,

Monday, Dte.ll
Detmit 1t San Fnncitco. 9 p.m.

12

62

In the NBA ...
Alllnllc JII.VIon
TWL ·P&lt;LGB
New Yarl&lt; .............. 16 7 .696
OduMio.................. ll 9 .l.IO 1l
N&lt;w Jcnoy ............ 13 11
.542
J.l
Bc.100 ................... .10 13 .435
6
7 16 .304
9
Miami ......................6 15 .216
9
Pbiladdpllia .............6 ll .216
9

w..........,.. . . . . . .
C~nlrll

Dhillon
7
.682
lndiana ................... l3 10 .l6l
CLI!VI!IAND ....... I3 II .541
Dmcit .................... ll 10 .524
Clwlolle ................ l2 II .522
AUoz&lt;a ................... ll 12 .478

O!iCIJ0. .. ,.............. 1!li

Milwlukce ..... _..... .IO 13

.43!5

2l
3
3.5
3.5
4.5

5.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwal Di•lsJon
, Tunt
W L
PeL
Ullh ....................... 14 7
.667
HOUIIOO ................. 13 7 .650
San Amorlio ........... IO II
.476
7 14 .333
~ .... ....... .... j
IS
.250
Dallu .......................l 17 . lOS

NW LoWai~na 113, Cat\cnlry 102
Old Dominion 9l, Alabama 91
SW l....ou.iJilna 107, Oeoflia Southe:m
Soulh Alablma 16, Arli:.·Linle Rock

TaDjllo 67, Flmida 62
Temaueern, w. Camlina!li5

om.YO' .....................

w~ 78,Jacbmville6l
William .t Mary 81, Va. Wooley.., 63

DOWNING ClllDS

GIRLS
DEC. 21 - Fort ·Frye - Away
DEC, 27 - Trimble - Away
DEC. 28 - Alexander - Away

111 Stca.. St. P•IJOY
YOUIIIDINIDEIT
AllmiEIVIII
MIIISCOUIR
SINCE 1161

.S

Drucl?$, YCUIBIDWft SL 62

lndiaoa 79, ~64
Kanau 16, E. T...-- SL ll
MaJq-. 90, American u.74
Middpll94, Iowa St. 72
Middpll SL 65, Ill- 60
Mmo-. 92, llelh.....O.C.m.,. SO
MumySLI7,B.....m.71(0T)

w·'echi•n SL 13
•to,ola, m. 73

.636
.565

.471

6..5
11

Saturday's scores
awtau. 126. wuru.,..m
N.,. Ywk91, loliomi 17

Bayb 19, Tuaa..San ~12
Ol&lt;lahomaSL9l,--S4
Slophat F.A..... 71, On! Rotiena 75
t ..uA.tM6&amp;.ToueSoulhom63
Tens· El.Pas:o 19, San HO&amp;liiCin SL 'n
1\dn 74,1llinoia SL 61
Air p...,. 96, Ponland 6l
11oiAe Sl 75, Clootlil St. 64
Cal Sl·fltllalon1!, CS Nonluid&amp;• 68
Coknclo SL 65, IUho SL 62
Dollw&amp;M 71, Rice 65
Flliabcoh City St. 7'J, Idollo12
Gonzop 106;
56
Loyola MuymCIUil66, SKRmenlO St
61
.
Manhall K5, MaUna Sl 77
~on 101, Mo.-St. Loula65
PaQfieU. 70,f-SL49
S. Utah I 00. N. Arizona 74
San Franciaoo 71, Nevada 76
Stanford 71, How..S U. 46
UC Sanla Bubua 7'1, SL Muy'a, Cal
37
UN!.V Ill, !JC !nine 97
Utah 17. T CJ.II 76
WullinAIOIISL 73,SanDi... SLll
W- fL 57,SanDI'I"73
Wyomina79,Col ...... 72 •

Cam&gt;ll.--

Orlando Ill. Allanll 14
a..EVEI..AND Ill, Ullh 104
lndianl l24,New Jmt~yltO

Pbiladolpbia 98, ClUe&amp;

96
f}f
Ddtoi.t 103, MUwaLlkee 90

HOUIICift 112, Oall•

LA Ukm 92, Dm...-16
S..ulc Ill , L.A. Qippcn I 01
Goldal Slate 122, Minneoola 116 (OT)

Sunday's scores
New Jcncy 104, Sacnmento 98
PcWand 130, Golden State 114

_ Tonif;ht's ~ames

Indiana 11 Pbiladelphia, 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND at Wuhiniton, ? :30
P"'·
Miami at Chicaso. 8:30p.m.

'

~

Thlrdpl.ouUiuu Ted! U, Alabama Sc. 73

Thlrdploco ,

NE l.,cumana 97, S. CuoliN SL 68
MVP I!GIUY Clullc
CllaliiP-IP

Eut Can&gt;liaa 72, Tolodo 61 (OT)
SE I

AP Top :zs college
basketball poll

69

-r:.Pan

otiria•~

American

UNOCIIal&lt;
t'lrai-

The Top 2S ~ ill Tho AuocitiC4
,_. co~~eacliaaltetball po11. willl fin•·

D~ 60. Samfoad 51
N&lt;w~76.SWTewSL~

pl1ce vota i n p1renthe1es ~ ret:orcl•

"'""'"'Doc. ..W,..,..

20,
hued on 2l
• poilu&amp; for I ru·st·place WOlC thrauaJt cnc
' poinl for • 151h·p1aec vCIC.C and p~viOUI
rani:U!a: .

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

106 N. 2nd

W-L
I. Dukc(43) ..................4-0
:Z. KanNa (:12) ...............6-0
3; ~y ...................5-0
• . w;.. .......................l-1
S. Nm111Cuoliaa .......... 6-0
6. Mio1isan ...................5-1

I
2
3
' 4
l

7. s-l!aD .................. I-1 1,244

6
7

9. a.w.oma ................. -5-0
10. Ad&lt;JnH&lt; ...................l-0

913

961

9
12

11 . - -.............-5-0

909

II

I . Iowa ........................... ~ 1,149

ucu .......................

11.
t.-1
13. , , . _ .... :..............7-0
14. AIIJona .....................lo-1
ll. ......................5·0
16.0eaqiaTecll.....,......+l

J

1s2
124
716
710
701

DOWNING·(
S·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
·111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY
992·2342

555 Park St.

•

.''

.'

•(•

Pomero , Ohio 45769

JUST DO IT•

STIHC

..

..

,P. 0. Box 683

Yaur Local
1-_!ll~!aB!!"
•rtHL .. ••

Dealer

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

RIDEN~UR
985·3301

SUPPLY .

,

N. 2nd AVE.
Olllo

I,

Bank
3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
5TH STREET
Mason, W. Va. Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. New Haven, W. Va.
1121 304·882-2136

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST

MAIN ST.
POMEROY

II1/J/[Iif! 992-5432

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

Mi••llport, Ohio

...•

Peoples

PHONE
(614) 99~.·6451

VALLEY LUMBER

S

1'
14
ll
16
17

WILL ,.IKE CARE OF ILL
YOUR' INSURANCE ·NEEDS

GUARDRAIL
&amp;
SIGN EREOION

Pia. Wetk
1,603
I ~10
1,472
1.41!
1.372
I ,30(1

Middleport, OH.

~

Lui

T-

992·3345

915·3301

992·2635

Pictures
·~ Whirlpool Appliances
~ Lamps
~ Sylvania TV's
~ Tables
~ Dining Rooms
~ Ottomans

Middleport, Oha

255 Mill St.

BAUM LUMBER

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND RADIO SHACK

plenty of time left to purchase
that.special gift!

Berkline Recliners
~ Desks
~ Gun Cabinets
~ Sofas
~ Glider Rockers
~ Bedrooms
·· ~ Curios

HawaU Pre-Hallda7 TaurniiMIII
Champ-lllP
Hawaii 66, CouW Carolinl61

·HOUIUI!. II Dclroit. 7:30p.m.
Golden SU.I&amp; II Pboenb.,l p.m.
SaCRmenCO.Il Milwaukoc, 8:30p.m.
Denv••t Sao ~Winio. 1;30 p.m.
Dtl1aa It L.A. Oippm,10:30p.m.
Seattle at PorUand;tO:lO p.m.

There~

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Where America Goes 'lb Relax··

CHESTER

NOV. 3G-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. to-AT NEbSONVlLLE-YORK
DEC. t4-AT MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN. t1-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2G-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 26-MILLER
FEB. 1-AT BElPRE
FEB. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 6-TRIMBLE
FEB. 11-AT EASTERN

When The Time Comes ... See Us
For Your 1993 Graduation
Announcements.

®~·

Christmas Specials Throughout the Store

Champ-lllp
N.C.-Wilmin.... 9l,AIIbunl 50

BOIIOI1 at New Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
UWI at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
O.arloae II A.llanta, 7:30p.m.

Put Oae Under Your Tree
Christmas

Thank you for ypur patronage and friendship •.

Tournaments
Eul c_. Bubdlall Cla.lc

Tuesday•seames

GIRLS
DEC. 21 ~ Wellsto• - Home
JAN. 4 - Trimble - Away

~~ llj FROM
ANDERSON'S

ParW..t

DEC. 4-I.T ALEXANDER
DEC. 8-;-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONYILLE-YORK
DEC. 16-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
J~N. 9-ATHENS
JAN. t2-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN. tS-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN.t9-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 26-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. t2-SOUTHERN
FEB. t&amp;-VINTON COUNTY

DEC. 22 - Wellston - Home·
JAN. ·5 - Federal Hocking - ~ome

PHARMACY

l992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

BOYS

We Welcome Your Prescripti6n
Business!

-

4
7
8.5
II

~OHSE

NOV. 3G-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC . 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21 - AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 26-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT EASTERN
JAN. t4-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 2o-MEIGS
JAN. 2t-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAt4,. 26-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT· WATERFORD
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB.15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

MEIGS-MARAUDERS

MEIGS MARAUDERS

Will Be lble To Fill Prescriptions for
Meigs County P,ublic Employees Who
Have The
EXP~ESS SCRIPTS PRESCRIPTION CARD.
You Only Pay the Co·Pay.

M-1
AIXLNU 73, Mi.touri. 68
Bradleyil, 01D&amp;oSL 61
O.Vdand St. 61, Bowlin&amp; Cltoon l9
Drail&lt; 95. Lcwil77

a.-.

2
2
3
4.5

.2'13

Walle Foteat II, Ridllnand 74

Obio 18.
W.Va. 77
92, ladiW St. 6]
St. Loula 94, Ca179
WidUta St. 7$, T.... A.t164
w.... Mil..- 92. w.lllinoil71

GO
-

.BOO

.651
.652

SWISHER &amp;

W, .Kcfttucky 14, Va. Commcnwcahh
71

NW...aern

P1clnc Dlvl~on

Phoc:nU. ............... ... 16 4
"""""' ................. 15 7
Soonle ................... .ll 7
L.A. LU:m ~; .......... l4 8
LA . Clipperi ......... l3 10
dotden Sialc .......... ll 12
Sacnmento ..............6 16

V~ndcrbilt I t6,Allllin Poay 71

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
DEC.12-MILLER
DEC. 16-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC. 19-UNIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 3G-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GAlLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JA.N. 1&amp;-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN ·
JAN. 3G-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
., FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 30-AT TRIMBLE

DEC. 26 - Coal Grove at O.U. • Chillicothe
DEC. 29 - Rio Grande Tournament
DEC. 30 - Rio Grande Tournament

••u••••••
INSUUICE

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

BOYS

hands seven times and the game;
was tied on eight different occasions in the first regularly scheduled meeting between the two
clubs.
(See TORNADOES on Pace 6)

EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY

UCLA 61, Clootlil 63

TORNADOES

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Soudtem Mill. 16, Uf·Chluanooaa

Nobrut193,

•

GIRLS ·
JAN. 4 ~ Warren Local - Home
JAN. 7 - River Valley - Home

83

EASTERN CONFERENCE

;

CHARGE OR ACTING JOB - One can't be sure by just lookIng, but one thln&amp;'S for certain - Southern's Mark ADen (4) is
headed to lbe noor after Vnloto's Charlie Ward (left) Jakes the baD .
in the paint during Saturday night's game at the Charles w. Hay- ·:
man Gymnasium, which the Tornadoes won 67·61.

c. - . . . 61. Mo.·IWtw Oty 56

Rice 60

Tournaments

a-clinched divilion titlo

.

Ohio ~an 73, ThGIIIU Mon 63

(OJ') .

,

DEC. 22 - South Point - Away
JAN. 5 - Southern - Away

Malone SJ, Aldenm·Breedaoa 54

N'E Illinois I~. Aquinlls 66
NDflh Carclinal03, B•li«S6
NotJt. D1me 73, Boaton Colleae 70

6 0 .600 269269

Jr::l:i!!;.Wabh
lS
Uaionll

~61,

Mldwttl
DlinolJ 77, Merctr 51

Central DtYIIIon

BOYS

Baldwin·Wallaoo 66, Marioaa.49

Flmida SL 91, T&lt;mploiO (OJ')

l'bomia..............

EISTERN EAGLES

Saturday's _...

S.Ulh

I'IAirida 70, N.C. O.ad0110 69

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 54JNIOTO- t :00 p.m.
DEC. to-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC.t4-AT BELPRE
DEC. 17-TRIMBLE
JAN. ~WARREN LOCAL
JAN. 7-RlVER VALLEY
JAN. 9-AT MEIGS- 3:00 p.m.
JAN. tt-SOUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-1 :00 p.m.
JAN. 2t - WATERFORO
JAN. 23-M ILLER -t :00 p.m.
JAN. 27- BELPRE
JAN. 26-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. t-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;-MEIGS -1:00 p.m.
FEB. 15-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT .MILLER ·
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. &amp;-RIVER VALLEY
JAN.12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. ·23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

Elhlblllon

Ohio women's
college basketball

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

Mi..;. Ohio II, Alblota Ia Actim 59

S«on Han II, Fairleiah DickiAJon 61
Vermont 73, Harvard 6S

9 6 0 .600 2102:M
N.Y. Giana........ 6 9 0 .-400 296347
4 II 0 .'JGI 24032:5

.THIS WEE 'S
GAMES

ado 91, Or'mm T1
Tilllo 91, 0.0.11
un-a 9i ~Jrin, 61
w. v...,.. 71. OliiO St. 69

19
II

· Sundae scores

Waa~UnJton ........

EAGLES

a-...74.~$2

Major college
basketball

y-Pbilldc4Wa.... 10 l 0 .601 3:Mlll

'"'

....., D.

WU:e Forest 11, MuuchUJCitl "·
Briaham Youna59,1llinoia 37, New
Mellico St. 36, Ullh 35, OWO ST. ll .
Tennes- 26, Mcmohia SL 22, Goo!J&lt;
Wuh inaton 19, XAVIER, OHIO 17,
Temple 14, VirJini• 13,. Mai\uettc 12,
Tex.u-El Puo a. S. lllinoil 7, ouaon 6,
Ala.-Birminah•m 5, Miuouri 4; SW
l..oWai&amp;n1 .. SW Miuouri SL 4, ~
113, ~2, GoorJia 2, Baylor I.

Eutem Dlwlaloa

Ohio..,....,.. ao

20
10
22
23

OIIMr Ntel•lo&amp; -~ Liloi4viUo 80,

TW L T I'd. PFPA
y-Dallu ............. II 3 0 .716 341112

'

405
362
'244

23. Ciftc:i.Miti. .................3-l
:14. Tulane ......................l-2

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

a-. Bay..........

l37

•s1

'•

MIDDLEPORT

BRUCE FISHER- Owner/Operator
992·5141

Prescription
Shop
For All Your Prescription and Slmdry Needs
See Us

253 N. Second

Middleport, Oh

�.·

Paa•

e The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 21, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· :With two toru:lulowns in IIISt three 111illutes,

:H ouston edges Cleveland 17-14 to knock Browns out of playoffs
By CH1JCI: MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Clevelud Browns 1!1(1 seen the
play on film a mil)ion times.
Luenzo Wbite cau:hes die bell in
rhe Oat. PIUJeS wbile his blockm
annihilate a few defenders, then
barrels down rhe field.
It scared the daylights out of
rhem - with good JeaSOO, White's
'65-yard gain on a beautifully executed screen pass set up the winning toucbdo- in the fmal minute
as the Houston Oilers clinched a
~ berth Sunday aild knocktd
.Cleveland out of contelltion 17-14.
· . Wilh t1110 toUChdowns in tbe last
·three minutes, lhe Oilers (9-6)
:helped put themselves into the
.playoffs for rhe sixlh consecutive
.iie&amp;UI, the longest cunent ~ in
'the NFL. The berth officially
became lheiis Sunday night when
:Miami defeated the New York Jets.
: The :Browns (7 -8) were elimi·naled for the third Slrllight year.
• "We've been on the edge all
year long," Houston coach Jack
Pardee said. ''We're not a bad

team, but we sure haven't been
playing good all the time. I hope
this is a IOOd
IOwald geaing a.
little more solld:r
The Browns dominalcd rhe fust·
3 Ill q1111ta1 and seenicd to have
clinched the game early in the
f0111111 quarter when, leading 14-3,
their defense stoPPed rhe Oilers on
four uies from ·the Cleveland !yard line. Houston gained no
RI'OUDII on a run by White, a sneak
by Cody Carlson and two incom·
plete passes.
"It was kind of bleak-looking
there for a while," Carlson said.
"We get down on rhe Hoot line
and can't score -ridiculous; But I
don't think anybody doubted lhat
we~ddoit"
_
Two possessions later, with the
clock becoming a factor, Carlson
drove the Oilers 85 yards in 12
plays capped by Curtis Duncan·s 2·
yard touchdown reception. The
Cleveland lead was 14-10, with
2:58 to play.
.
The Browns were unable to pick
up a flfSt down, and bocause Hous·

*"

ton used two timoouts durina the
series, the Oilen rellined )IOIIel·
sion at dleir own 21) with 1:51 to
go. Facing a second-and-23
because of a penalty and a sack,
they called die pass. hoping
10 use rhe Browns' aggressiveness
against them.
"Toward rhe end, rhe only thing
phey were concentrating on was
getting a rush· and trying to get
anothtt sack," Carlson said. " That
opened it up for us.''
. Cornerback Frank Minnifield
millie a diving stab at White as he
rumbled by, but no &lt;1ne else had a
shot at htm until Terry Taylor
shoved him out of bounds at lhe
Cleveland 12 with 1:03 to go.
It was a· play lhe Browns had
been warned about all week.
"CDach Saban (defensive coordinator Nick Saban) even talked
about it in meetings," safety Eric
Turner said "He said if they execute it, there's a S0.50 chance of it
going 50 yards. They just caught us
in lhe right coverage at the right

••

RATES
Days

~VFairland

Displlyl

• Auto Qlannet Search
• 178 Channel Cap~f
• Chromacoiol Contrast

i:«Q

'

0 .W., .......... COUI)' J'IIK ad ,_. a1111 be propoid

• a-.. dioeo•t for oda paid ia ad••-·

277"

$

..·

~

..
-v-

•
-•'.

.Remote Con1trol
VHSVCR

~

.·

• F. . Ado: Cl-war ud Fowol ado ....Hr 15 word. wUI be
naJda,..at_,. du.rp.
• Prica ol ad for aD ..pitalletton Ia doulo price of ad coot
• 7 ""'"' liooo typo o.Jr .....
• S..IIMI io-.., ...,...u.lo for"""" aftor fontdoy (cbeck
for ....... r...tdayadi'WLI;, popor). C.U befo.. 2:00 P·'"·
· Uy •fler ,_blic•lioa to ..... eorreetioa
• .W. daat
IMI f-:id ia ad.wuce an.:
Card o1 n ..u
Happy Ado
Ia M-riuo
Yard Salol
• A ct..lllod
plooeol ia ... GaWpollo Daily
Trilooo• (••opt C....llloolllloplay, B•ID- Card or Lopl
No-) will a1oo appoar ia tho Poiat Plouant Rep10r aacl

••t

od•-

•,

.

... o.uy Seatiael, ...hiDe

•. L___________

tHQ 0.,. &amp;a.. PtC¥WIWiing
•Uniliod TVNCR Remota
olltsUgt Cenlw Oilpllys

•25" Dillg&lt;llllll •RtcoivllfllonKor
oMTS Sima wldbx Hoist Reduction
•Remote Control SC3350.Qn.Screen lhnu Dlspliy
Auto chlnnel Stareh
•178 Chlnllll ClplbiHty

$

INGELS

Luo.-E A. CONDE, II II.,

Open Sunday 1-4 PM
Evenings til 8 PM

I

Credit Terms
Lay-a-ways
Mastercard
Visa

FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY, INC.
.106 NORI' SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614)992·2635
TOLL FREE iiOOI 426-5511

' .

P sped ota
C.. IlL 27,110
Dill t11.,..347
' II01ICII II\' JIUIIliC.ATIOII
• To: DIM• c...cl., Lloat
'lolllolo n• Ballltooore, .._,.
, , .. ,., Curr•nt • II
• Utolta 1wn: lh• Unknown
.'lloiN, Nod of Kin, a.vlAdoollnl, alrlll«•, E•. .utora •nd
a.~aM of Dl..• Cooodo,
. • II
n ~; Cll•·
, .:IM Condo, .Aclclr- Un·
~: loltcaoo; h UooltnCIWII Helra,
• !Mat ol Kin, D•vl••••·
II!\ ~..... 'dlrllJA.akwl,
, lbnw..ll ..,. Aoo1111111 ol
• · Q TIM Condo, • ' I •••
• UM
11; Pobwt Conclo,
~ .Adclr"•. Unknown; 1ho
o. • l•ltlo "Holn, Nat of Kln,
: .,...__, .Aclonlnletralllrl,
_ l b • - ..,. .AUignl of
• Rlhlt C.do, " I
.,. Un1111Mw11; 0111• Concle,
~ AllllrMo llilllnown; tho
• ••• : HWo, Nat of Kln,

=

ofree Delivery
-Full Time Service Dept.

•-. lAp-.

l...t.,l

(. t

Capttue The 1t1o111cnts

=•

=-·

"
••••,,

KODAK
GOLD PLUS
COLOR FILM
351.1M. 400 SPEED
36EXP

'-'

.~

Devla•.., Lept-, AOMinl81nlore, EDoulora lind
Aoo81.,o of 0111• Conclt,
.Adcfr•- Unlul-n; Ed·
worcl Concl•, .AclclrUnknown; Ill• Unknown
Holro, Ntoxt of Kin, Dev·
lAa•tMo, .Aclonln~
olratoro, l!xtcutora and
.A11lgn• of Edworcl Conde,
.Add...- Unknown; Slldlo
Oarrloon Conclo, .Ac1ci'.u
Unknown; tho Unknown
Holro, N•xt of ·ICioi, -O.vl·
eeao, Llogato.. , · .Adrnlnlatratoro, Executor• and
.Aaalgno of Sadie G•rloon
Conde; tho Unknown Holra,
Next of Kin, Dovl11o1,
Lagot..a, .Admlnlatrolllrl,
Executoro .,d .Aaalgnt ol
Kall• Gulh, O.O=ocl, and
tho Unknown Holra, Ntoxt ol
Kin, O.vl•-· Llogatooe,
.Admlnletratora, Exooutore
ond .Aeolan• of Auguet
Conde, DICIUed.
You ar• haroby nollftad
thai you have b - named
Dalondanb In oleui8CIIon
onllllocl Poul Ill. R..d,
·.Admlnlatrator WW.A ol the
Elt.a• · of Katie Quth,
DecoaMCI, ve. Loulao R.
Conde, .a 111. ThlncUon h.la
bHn •••lgned Ca•• No.
27,220 and Ia penclng In lit•

THE BEST

"'''
&lt;,

SET OF
PRINTS

...

ggc
.

" ALICA-$ELTZER
PLUSCOLD .

DENTALAWSE

MEDICIN~59
TABLETS

36'S

.,.

''

VICK'S
FORIIULA44
COUGH SYRUP

•

240Z.

'

2 79

D.M.E OR PEDIA TRlC
1 COUGH SYAUP

•oz.

MAALOX
LIQUIIJ ANTACID

REG. OR
CHERRY
12DZ.

ADVIL
·' CAPtETS
TABlETS OR
IOO'S

349

.

IT! ACREAT DEAL

Sale Price
Lit$$ Mail

12DZ.

lnReboiO

699

POWER STICK

DEODDRIINTOR149
DEODORANT

7SC

BIC TWIN SELECT
~HAVER 159

299

. .......
I

I/INEilARI
WATEROI'I
SCENTED
TWIN PACK

129

VIBRANCE
SHAMPOO

...

'

~r/ONER
15DZ.

773-Moooa

247-Letan FaDo
949-Rielae
742-Rutlaad'

882-New

Hove~~

895-Lotan
937-Bulfolo

667-Coot.lllo

•

.

1)69

~

Sood 4 Ferlilber

1:1\1\l.'

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

Au,.. for S.lo
Trucka foi- Sale
Vuo&amp;4 WD'o
Mt.,rcjcleo
Boalo &amp; Moton for Sale

41- Ho-. for Beat
42- Mob,ile Boma for Rent
43- Fu. . ·for Real.

-

Apart-tlor Real
4S- Furaiohed Roo...

11o-- A\010

p,... ll: A.cce-rieol

46- Space for Rent
47- Waatecl to Beat

3-- AIIIIOUDCelllODII

ll-HolpW•ntod 12- SitualioM Wanted
13-- In~un.DCe
14- BUiiDMI TrainiJJ8
IS- S.looob &amp; lnolrUctioa
16- Rod», TV 8: CB Repair

4-Civeaw•y
S-HappyAda
6- Lootaacl Fo..,d
7- Loot aad Fouad
8- Publle Sole 4

17- Miocollanoo111
18- Wanted To Do

A~tion

9-WaatodtoBII)'

BULLETIN BOARD
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
- PUBliCATION

CLEARANCE SALE!
20%-40% OFF
THE BERRY BASKET

48-

lor !l..t

~I

'

.•

1\\ 1&lt;.1

,. ....

~

&amp; Hoatia1

52- Spo..W., Cooclo
~Aatiq...
54- Mile. Mere .....dioe
SS- Buildi"' Suppli.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUS
SUNDAYS

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; CRAnS

12:00 Noon

~~

. 31904 L.,adiog
c.-kRoad
Middleport, Ohio

Fnsh Cut Tnes
or Cut Your o...

STARTS'

2301 Sixth Street
Syracuse, Oh.
Hours: Dec. 19·23, 11 am·S pm

BRADFORD'S

"'•m"'ng
tr; ... r

Factory choke 12
gauge only

614·992·7144

Public Nollce

... PubliC Notice

CHRISTMAS·
· TREES .

EVERY THURSDAY

5' • 7' TALL

IN POMEROY

HillEY HAIIIIG
RESIDE ICE
35975 FlatWOOIIs
,_.,.,, Ohio
((otlnty loa• 26)
IWOIIIU

EAGLES CLUB
6:45 ,.. .

Commqn Pie.. Court of
PUBUC NOnCE
Molga CoU!IIY, Ohio,
Biela will bo rocei'IOd until
Probala Dlvlalon, Court 4 P.M. on January 25, 1993
Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohio lor the following
45761.
roal ..tate which
1112&amp;11 mo.
Tho object of lite Pallllon declared excoaa property I'-----....;~;;.;.;;;;;.:;;;;t~
Ia to cletermlno tho holra, by lite Village of Middleport
na•t of kin •nd peroono with the onacbne~t of Ord.
R&amp;C EICAVATI.
82
12
entitled to the ••tat• or
•
'
BULLDOZING
Katlo Guth, DtcHaocl. In
A 12-foot otrip of Logan
PONDS
order lltot • dlltrlbulion ol Street rlghl·of·way, bor·
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
clered on tho aoulh by Lot
oald Hlata can be mode.
You are hereby required 12 ol Hartlngar Subdivision,
LAND CLEARING -.
to anew.; tho Palitlon with- on the eaot by Lol 10 of
WATER &amp; SEWER j·
In tWenty-eight (28) doyo all· Hartinger Subdivlalon, on
UNES
-~
ar tho l•t publication ol 1M woat by Booworllt StrMt
BASEMENTS &amp; ~
lhlo noUc• which wl.ll be right-of-way and on lha
HOME SITES
'
HAULING: Llinestone, :
publlahed once a wHit lor north by 'he remainder ol
alx (6) oucc•alva waeka. tho Logan SL right-of-way.
Dlst, Gravel and Coal Th• ]at pubiCIIIon Will be
All bldl mull be aubmil·
'LICENSED oroi BONDED
m•d• on tho 7th day of led to tho Mayor'• office,
PH. 614•992·5591
JMuary, 1193, and the 237 Race St., !'ollddleport,12-S·tfn
tw.,.ty-llght (28} daya for Ohio 45760.
"=======~
onoworlng will commenc•
Tho village reeervea the ·r
on thltt dattt.ln caM ol your right to accept or reject any
failure lo •newer or olltar· or all blda and to walv• any
wlao rHponcl aa required lnlormalltllt! In ~lddlng. ·
by tho Ohio Ruleo of Civil
Fred Hoffman, Moyor
Procedure, Judgment by
Village of Mldclop.ort
l·d•••••tlt will bo rondeoed (12)14, 2.1, 21; J•. 4, 11, 18
232 2nd St.,
agalnat you for tho relief &amp;lc
clem.,dod In thlo Petition. 1
Potneroy
Dated thla o85th day ol
Novembw, 1992.
992·2036
Robert E. Buck,
Check
with us for
Probete Judge
Lona K. Neaaelroad. Clerk
Hot Water Tank
(11)30; (12)7, 14, 21,28:
Rental Program.
(1) 4, 6tc

BINGO

Special Early llrtl .

$1oo;::roH

This ad
for 1
FIE card.
Uc. lo. 0050.:12
111241'92/lfn

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

992-7259

lasha• Rd., Racine

NEW UBTING- Eagle Ridge- olx room houl8 with 3-4
bedrooma, 112 bllaement, carpe~vlnyl ftooring . TPC
watar, 2 car garage, 1+ acn1 on paved road. 111,500

.ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR 6MONTHS

'

SYR"CUSE- LEE CIRCLE· Very cute ranch style home
with 3 bactooml, carport, appliances, good location.
lmmedlaltl pouestlonl $34,900

WE WISH YOU a YOUR F.AIIILY
.A VERY MERRY CHRISTII.ASI
PROM OUR F.AIIILY HERE AT CL!LAND REALTY I
HANK, KATHY, TRACY, .lEAN a IHEARI

...................~ ... 41621
-- 1*1411-t712
-t61411146-1044

HENRY E. CLELAND.....................- ...............102-1111

TRACY BFiiNAGEA........................:.................t41-243t

JEAN TRUSSELL ......-..............-.....................11411-21110
C)FFIC£.•_. .......................................................112·225i
'

742·3305

AFTER
7:00P.M.
12-17-;92·1 mo .

IWOIAill IATU ·

992·7553 .
POMIIOY,O...

5'- 8' Tall

OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence

•Gao Grill Tllllka
•Vontleao Heatttra

II. 124, RaciH
614-949·2072

11·11-112-1 mo pd.

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985·4107
CHESTER AUTO
REPAIR
Moin St . • Che~le1, Oh.
b 14 -9 85-4412
--:.AT ,,;

939·2826
11·2:1-'82-lmo.

,J''

.'
1 ;

BrnkC\, Oil &amp; Lub e,
Tunc·Ups, Engine

~JAYMAR · J&amp;L INSULATION

Quality

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992•
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

1f2Jtfn

36970 Ball Ru1 Road

Po-oy, Olsio

HOliDAV SPECIAl!
~.50 ATon

SIZED LIMESTONE

-\II'''"' ''''" II• I' ••r

992·3470

...... '·h"
·•.' l '''"

!

·d

KEVIN'S LAWN
. MAINtENANCE
949·2398or
l-800-837·1460
Lawn Mciwtng,

Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
- Shrub and Tree
· Trimming &amp; Removal
RMICienllli a Commercial
Fr•EIItlmatM

RREWOOD FOR SALE

~OF CASH

I

GRAVE

BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

$20.00

liSBEHER'

(614) 949-2058

THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

HAULING

$8.00

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

up or

or

Information

539 Bryan Place

Middleport, Ohio
12/1/92/tfa

lrlftl It I• Or W. ·
PkkUe-

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992·5335 or
985·3561

• BISSELL &amp; BURKE
·CONSIRUCTIOR
•Mew Homes
•Gar•aes

o(~lote

. Reittodaliog
Stop &amp; Compare.

FIIEE EITIMES _

- 667·6179 ...

111:17

LIMESTONE,

senior cntzena $6.00
Myow need tr••h pick-

992·2772 or

. 985·4473 •.

SANITATION

December Special

JAMES KEESEE

12·9-92-1 mo

6-2&amp;-'92~111

1992

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
ofneulatlon

- MICROWAVE OVEN
WICK'S
. and VCR REPIIR
-~ · ALL MAliS
HAULING SERVICE

Rcpnir, Wnshing
1 .' It

Everyone, and Gre~l
Gift lde8il.

•100 lb. CyUndera
•R.V.'a

. 742·3051
·sR 124
Ready Nov. 26

ii,·

Handmade Gift• For

-·New haler
J and I Gas Service

Rutland, Oh.

r.l(J~J.fil:

Mon.-Sat. 1G-8 p.m.
Sun. 1-5 p.m .

-~
fe.rrellgas

Fresh Cut Daily

FOREVER ·
BRONZE

FLATWOODS ROAD- Nk:e Brick Ranch style home 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, u~ 6ving /family room.
$48,800
-

lftllf-c:-SHIIII--TU(TOil' .

and LIMESTONE
DEUYIIY SIIVICI
S•alllol• Wclrk.
$25.00"' • .., '

TROLLH
GARRY'S
STATION CUFTS
GENEpL
614-992-2549
MAINTENANCE HOLIDAY
HOURS

1211411 mo. pd.

NEW UIIA RD. Ranch style home willt 3 bedrooms, 1
1/2 balh1, heat pump, CIA, garage. out buildings, approx
8 acreo, $39,500 MAKE AN OFFERI

:;; Rite Aid Pharmacy
for all your drugstore needs.

681 011 Graul Road
1Yo Mile to Growe.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

CHRISTMAS
TREES

12·1-2 mo.

· REDUCED! Momlng Slar- 1 112 1tory log homo wilh 4
bedrooml, alec. heat pump, loft room, _.., front porch,
paved all'88t 2 car genage, on 5 - " of land. Roduood
...71.500
'

r;; Rite Aid Pharmacy

East of Darwin on Rt.

SIUI.L DOZER .
WORK.
DRIVEWAY WOU

11·13·'92·1 mo.

.

manufacturer s coupons.

. CHERRY RIDGE

CHARLIE'S'

992·5082

THE
·ClAlllflfD ABC

Save on over 1,200
Rite Aid Brand Products.

300 E. Main • Pomeroy, Ohio • 992·2586

k

It

U..oock

Maay more specials.

lt!ptiii'III• .. IDIII'

.

576-Apple Grove

I'

PAIC!SON WEEKLY SP!CIALS!FfiECTIVE OI!C!MIEA21 THAOUQH OECEMIJEA 27, 1M2• SOME ITEMS MAY NOT BE ,'.VAILABlE IN ALL ST~ES

''

985-Ct-ler
843-Por!load

.

Boy4G..U.

$32.00

accepts most major
prescription plans.

SUMMER'S EVE
"DOUCHE

458-Looa

,\ I I\ I ' I I

.

11'aatodtoB•y

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
24 SESSIONS &amp;· FREE
BOnLE OF LOTION

~ Rite Aid acceets all

i30'S

~

8

2.5DZ.

• RITE AID
CENTRAL·'o!ITE
VITAMINS

Pomeroy

...,..-

-2.00

.

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

5

67S-P\. Pleuonl

•••
,·

.

ForSoloerTrado
I I I; II 'I I' I 'I II '

Real Estate General

V.Jfups Evf·r~· D.1V .Jt Riff" A1cf

ALCON
OPTI-FREE
~fiNQ
99

379-Wol...o

9f2-Mldclleporol

.
·~

' PLAX Afffl.P!AQUE

REG.ORMINT349

~

Muieallutruaeato

r..u.. a:v....-t.

2-laM.....ry
446-Gollipolio
367-a-hlre
3118-VIatoa
24S-1Uo Gnade
256-CII)'aa Dlot.
643-Aralala Dlot.

56- p.,. for Sale

$ .20
$.30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.

..••
E-r O.y For Only...

15
15
15
15
15

Over 15 Words

Callla County Me181 County Muon Co., Wv
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

1•-·

t

SECOND

Cloaai,/Wd pages ctnJer the
following telephone e:~echanges ...

1
3
6
10
Monthly

Rate

Public Notice

WANT AD

tH,
\

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
1:00p.m. Saturdoy
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunctay
1:00 p.m. Friday

Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fridoy Paper
Sunday Paper

18,000 ho...

ISA

549

COPY DBADLINE
Monday Paper
TueaciAy Paper

Words

_,,_------------+-~~====~========--+--------,-,~-----~~~----------~-------~

' ---------------1111E

9'5
.............

$499°0

0-

Public NotiCe

•1Y•,IEnntT..nsllnt Floc:&lt;adlng
•111 a.nn.t Tilling
oOuidl Slllll.oMIIng

··''.

Southern plays Coal Grove Sat·
urday at the O.U. Chillicothe
branch in Chillicothe.

t

•Auto ClllrNI Sllrdl

Spectacular.Values And Selection

SIX.

SOUI'HERN
(I!I·IJ.1!1-16=67)
.~ark Allen' 6-0·3=15, Ryan
Williams 2-2-1=11, Jeremy Dill 4.
0-2-10, Michael Evans 4-2-3•17,
Mason Fisher 2-0-2-6, Ruuell Sinieton 4..()..().8. TOTALS -ll-41=67

POLICIES

The Season's Best

nearly proved fatal to tile hosts.
Southern's defense intensified,
however. Singleton hit a follow up
jumper and Dill hit Evans on a
bang-bang lay-up to give Southern
its first lead since lhe silt minute
mark.
.
Allen nailed anolher in the final
minute as. Unioto's shot selection
proved to be in desperation.
·
Southern held on to win 67-61.
Southern hit 22 of 49 from the
floor and 4-141hree pointers, while
hitting 11-19 at the line. Unioro hit
19-45, 5·13 and 6-10.
Southern grabbed 31 rebounds
10 Unioto's 25. Evans had nine and
Singleton eight. Ward has seven
and Tultle five for UHS.
Southern had three steals, nine
turnovers, seven assists and 12
fouls. UHS had four steals, 15
turnovers and 18 fools.
Southern lost the reserve game
after leading 47-46 with just three
secon«~s left Brad Miller nailed an
NBA desperation three-pointer at
the buzzer to give Unioto the win
Mike Fout had 17 for rhe winners:
was followed by Chad Ward •s 11
and Don Bonering' s nine. Southern
was paced by Jeremy Hill's 17
Mike McKelvey's 10, Cass Cle:
l~nd' s seven and Kevin Turley's

UNIOTO
. (20-14-16-11-61)
Mall Hoops 0-0-2=2, Shayne
Combs 0-1-0=3, Jason Cruse 6..()..
0.12, Jason Tuttle 4-3.0.17, Jason
Hutchinson 2-1.0.7, Charlie Ward
6-0·6•18, Jon Bunch 1-0-0"2.
TOTALS -19-5-6=61
1

o()n.Scrtln llllnu Ditpllys

oQwomiCOiot e-st Plcllft 11M

Remote Control Color TV

see

MoN. tbru Fill. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.R-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

•It" OilgDnll

•51!11 Finish

tops Eastern 55-43

Mart:: ADen gave Southern a 2.{)
lead, but Cruse lied the score on an
inside drive moments later. Evans
and Allen gave SHS a 6-2 advantage before Cruse and Allen
exchanged three pointers for a 9-5
score.
UnioiO lhen took advantage of
~ its height ·and pounded the ball
; ·inside with lhe flash cut, and on
: . sevaal back tklor plays opened up
· · a suing of I I unanswered points.
-;_ ,Southern called time, but Unioto
• · hit another after lhe break for an
: 18-9 advantage.
~
With Singleton in early foul
: trouble, Jeremy Dill filled the void,
where he and Evans prompted a
: t0-2 drive at the buzzer to pull
~ Southern 10 within one at 19-20.
:
Unioto quickly went up 24-19,
~ but sloppy play by both clubs
• didn't allow the next score until the
' 4:44 mart. when Dill cut it to 24• 21. Soulhern switched 10 ione and
' ;~trmied the Tanks' inside game,
~ 1ymg the score at 27-27.
... ~ Jon Bunch hit a tO-footer to
: ::tive Unioto a 29-27 lead; then
: "£vans drilled a three pointer to give
• Soulhern a 30-29 lead. After an
: exchanse at the free throw line,
: Unioto grabbed a 34-32 lead at the
i half.
•
The second half was nip-and. tuck. Unioto held a slight advan' tage early, but Southern slowly
; grappled to a 47-43 lead on a Dill
• driver, lhen Allen hit a baseline
: jumper for a 49-43 advantage. UHS
; ~eel back to 49-48, but SHS led
, afll:r three fiarnes Sl-50.
-' Southern went beck man 10 pick
1up lhe tempo in the finale. The
~ Tanks quickly eyed .the baseline
• and post, wbere they had so much
: success in the first half, Bolh clubs
· exchanged buckets regularly until
· the midway mark, when Cruse,
Ward and Tuttle ran off a 5-0 suing
'; to give the viSitors a :&gt;Y-:&gt; 1 1eaa at
' rhe 5:01 mart.
, Soulhem ran a more deliberate
:offense. bul inlelue ddef~Sive p;s·
. . sure by Uniotoforced duU scrai&amp;ht
c. •Tomaclo 11D110vers in a streak dlat

I

Picture Tube
• Video Ser!1ry

; ·-Tornadoes win ... (Cf,lntinuedfromPage4)
'

Call 992-2156

I"* I fh'•

By SCO'IT WOLFE
No shooting from the field was
. available for Fairland, but the
Selltillel Csw•eliJHIHcnt
• " Easrr:m put up a good fight, but Dragons hit 10-15 at the line. The
! ,.81 rhe final bitz= fell to defeat at Dragons had 36 rebounds, led by
the hands of rhe Fairland Dragons Archer's II, had nine stealS, seven
55-43 Saturday night in boys' SIOD· assists, seven turnovers and 19
league bastelbaJIICiion.
foUls.
Eastern drops to 1-4 overalL
Fairland won the reserve l:!ame
Fairland was led by Chad Stew- 36-35 led by Combs and Wilgus
art with 22 poiniS. Teammate Erron with eight each. Eric Hill led East·
' Archer bad 15, and Bren~ Snyder em with 10.
badl2.
Eastern goes to South Point
: - Charlie Bissell had nine for Tuesday.
; Eastern, while teammate- Robert
~-Reed had eight, Chad Savoy seven
FAIRLAND
• and Pat Newland scored seven
(17·11-!1·18=55)
: each.
Mark McCoy 0-2-0=6, Brent
t Fairland went ahead 17-13 in Snyder 3-1-3.;12, Erron Archer 3·
die fust frame, lhen led 28-22 at 2-3= 15, Chad Stewart 0-6-4=22.,
TOTALS-6-11-10::55
: rhe half.
•
Both clubs played even at 9-9 in
• rhe third round as the frame ended
EASTERN
: · 37-31, but Fairland secured its win
(1J.9·9·1l=43)
' wilh an 18-12 drive to claim lhe
Brian Bowen 0-1-0=3, Jeremy
[ 55-43 win.
Cline 0-1-0=3, Chad Savoy 2-1,
Eastein hit13·29 for 44 percent 0=7, Pat Newland 3-0-1=7, Jeremy
: and was 8-12 at the line. Eastern Buckley 2-0-0=4, Wes Arbaugh 0• had 28 rebounds led by Bissell's 0-2=2, Robert Reed 1-2-0=8, OJar.
• nine, and had four steals, nine lie ·Bissell 2-0-5=9. TOTALS ',.._,
• turnOvers, five assists and 16 fouls. 10-5-8=43
I

To place an ad

•13'0iagonal
• On-Screen Menu

time.''

the shooting in the (irst half for just eight points before intermiseither team," Catlett said aflCI' the sion:
Ohio State game. "We both settled
"This was a good environment
do\vo a little in the second half, but
still you didn't see the kind of con· for us," said Ohio State coach
sistent play that you want from lhe Randy Ayers. "We knew they'dbe
standpoint of ball handling or shot aggressive. We knew lhey needed a
win, especially at home. This tells
selection."
You also didn't
much COD· our young guys wh8t they have to
sistent offense at all from Ohio work on.''
State (4·1).
.
"We knew it was their first road
game," Catlea said. "We were try·
ing ~ disrupt rhem. It did hurt rhem
some . They couldn't get any
rhythm in lheir offense the first
half."
.
- .
Ohio State shoi just 21 percent
in the fiJ:st 20 minutes. Leading
scorer Lawrence Funderburke, who
finished with l4 poiniS, made just
two sh61S from the floor and scored

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

.•

West Virginia defeftS OSU 78-69
By MA'IT HARVEY
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
-It didn't hurt any that West Virginia's nine-point win over Ohio
'State came on national television,
. guard Tracy Shelton says.
"" "It was a good win, and every·
!:_one saw it nationwide," Shelton
·-~ "That helps us and gives us a
·- bit more recognition and a little
more reputation. People will look
. out for us now, so we've just gotiO
get ready for LaSalle."
The Mountaineers (3·2) play
LaSalle in lhe fust round of the
• · Fiesta Bowl Tournament on Dec.
28inArizona.
Before then, coach Gale Catlett
believes his team needs to do some
fine-tuning, 78-69 win over Ohio
State on Saturday notwithstandinj!.
"I wasn't very impressed wtth

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Reasonable ntes
JOE N. SAYlE
SAYRE TRUCKING

614·742·2138

2+92·11· .

WEBER'S

CHRISTMAS TREES
RUTLAND, OH.
HomegrownCarefully Sheered

Scotch I Whit• Pine ·
4' I Up wltll a great
o.tecllon of lal'(lllr

Iran.
Call 742-2143 or

742·2979
11127

�Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 21, 111Z

Poineroy Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by llnlce Beatm

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by L8rry Wri&amp;ht

Glwill••t

21

-------

a

(

Monday, December 21' 1992

Ut••aat

OOP
BRIDOJ:

!;""V.r:..,
~,.d,l l\IM

.........
Oppol1unlly

The Daiiy Senti~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1om 14,1C11 Per l.ooll
"-k--~c..t.t­

-llll·l-

......... - - La.!louie
lrloh
............
0 • I. X .,.
1M,.,.._
-

R~ill

PHILLIP
ALDER

.. .-·----

NORTH

+ K 10 9 4

.2

Estate

+AQI083

~

W..

··~··

.

" 'I;

71

WEST
+872
• K 10 6 3

AldOifor ....

-liM~.:

W ~'""T

~-CIIdohd..,_

=._ IJ:-

·-~ BARNEY

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

Olk

~1,1tt1tl ........
~·::5

lull

TATER'S

.,.._- ....

~
...........

,

SOUND

no.

ASLIIP.

IUS . . . . ~
....

I'LL QUICK GIT MY
WASH ON TH' LINE--

West

Norlb

Pass
Pass

Pass
3t
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Dummy wasn't
disappointed
By Phillip ·Alder

'1m.

·-1

The first evening of Hanukkah was
always a happy time for the Shapiro
family . Rabbi Sam enjoyed relating
the story of the Maccabees, and they
all looked forward to their traditional
bridge game. This year was no exception . On returning from the synagogue, the rabbi's wife, Lucyle, was
quick to set up the card table.
"Sam , I'm feeling especially lucky
tOday ," she said.
"Well, then we'll partner each other
against our daughters, " suggested
Sam.
When he responded three diamonds
as North in the first deal , Lucyle alerted . Judy, the younger daughter, who
was sitting East. asked its meaning.
"I believe it's called a fit-showing
jump. It shows a maximum pass with,
usually, four spades to at least one
honor, and a good five-card diamond
suit. "
Against four spades, Elyse led the
heart three. After winning with the
ace, Judy switched to the club nine.
When Lucyle put up her kjng, Elyse
accurately played the eight. Declarer
drew trumps and finessed the diamond
jack. !lut East produced the king and
returned a second club, allowing West
to win two tricks in the suit and defeat
the contract.
"Well defended!" said Lucyle. "So
much for. feeling Jucky _ But why did
you lead the club nine, Judy, rather
than the two, your fourth-highest?"
"Because someone" - with a point·
ed glance at North - "once told me
that leading a low card in an unbid suit
promises an honor in that suit. WithOut
an honor, lead a high card."
North smiled contentedly.

,.,. Hallmark. .• ',lldi'OOI'II,

I·--

ce-l'upplto,

ii&amp;ua:.Caoo. -

•• 1144 Afllr 7:00 ......
oltoill

Dlaii'••'A:mCa11011: CFA , _

~.~.::
Ill 3010.

New .Homes • VInyl Siding

.
1fN8W Garages • Replacement wrndows
Room Additions • Roofing

:. "::
=':'i =. _...._
ou

Tile'( SAV THE SECRET OF
SUCCESS IS TO 6ET UP
EARL'( IN TI-lE MO~lNINIEi ..

... ,

I OW,~

Ch111

_,...
-:
Pold
L~2.i~~!f::!!!!:::~OH~...,!815~4~31~1o:r~~~EII - a...- W.goo.
r----------------~---------------,,~11~4~··~·~~~il~~LJ~~
"-••'•* U ~ To "'BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. =~d.-.;.:

NO 111 - IDIL

1.. Colonlol 14170, ' a ...,.., · lumlolood, 2

~-~
'm
NOEiah..,.._
_ . ,I. _1
1107
l'or """ ln.......lan ..
lodlyo
......
0111 ,..,.,
•••
1171-tor .......
....

......go.

Cll

~

~Inti ~

E_........ a-

H111

Till

IM-tU-

... .. Atoll&gt; Ttfeltl T~EY PuT Oltl Ttfel,
UGL.IES'T CLOTHING Altlr&gt;
\

-~~o~-. -l•clllo,.
- .~~oy,
. . ITlllllr
NIL

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or915·3139

.. LAY Ttiel, EGGS ,,..,

TtieSf

lllo s...., CaDI)

~

2112192/tfn

,j) (l]

'.
•

•1 HDUIIS far Rant
2
........ . . . - . - . ;
llrnlly, Uvlng, llundry -

·'· Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. ·Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Oklo 45760
(614)
.

Ani- •rly Dlcombor.
lmoU Mo.- Complololy fur.
. . . . . One •• , ..... In ....
=-Alii wow l

Ruga, PIIK:emata,
Quilts, 5 TYpes
Pillows, Animals,
of s11111ll articles.
50¢ and up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985-4356
11-30-1 mo.

12·1·'92·1

Building
SUppllll

-- ........ -

=-.No

1

- w.,. -••a tor
• - .............. lind -~

112 I J uc,.,.._,
I ltefll•• .._..... No

-Y.

mGIIVI10111 to loin uo. N
, _ ........ lvt1111illlnc1od

"'-'-011.

.....

.,_,,

t,"'.,~.... ....._

--

-

tloytr,

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

GOLF
&amp;AWUDS
CHIInlllS SAU
10%-20" Off

PutWJ, Bealnlllf s.t1.

Youth Cu.tom Drlvera.

....aona lnclucMd wllh
purchau.
l.aolt.d an Seoul Cltnp
Rd., Clilttar, OH.
11127

..

I

SHRUB I
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAUUNG
·•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992·2269

•

~

......
.

•

r::.::r•o u.
...... ;..::::

IL'J" 4WD

1ltt

:•

'

~

"CIA- ...

*'- -

IIIU,

a,400

---~-·

. . . . 1111.

HAVE 'rOU TRIED
SUPER&lt;SL.UE~

-Ill:=...........,._......_ ....
........... Alii: 2 Ill, . .
'1111 4111, Qlllpllto.
114 441-7IUIL

, . . . . Mrlllllf. .....,
-I
l n - . 1 ..........

Tlia:._lt ........
171t.IOK.

NOBODYCAR~;;e ,

=·

~~

Q. My favorite painting is the
"Mona Lisa." Or should that be writ·
ten without the quotation markS?
A. You were right the first time. AI·
though stylebooks differ, most suggest
that works of art should have tbelr titles either in quotation marks or in
italics, often shown by underlining.

v

--4-....
Aulo...,... '

78

;

Bualnasa
Training

t Mouth partt
5 Pacific leland
9 Collection of
facto
12 Arrow polaon
13 American
ottrlch
14 Rutllan
pltne
15 Laid Ort
17 Kin of Ave.
18 Pttr aynt't
mother
19 Apportion
21 Tonneo11e
-Ford
23 Powor to gat

rttulll
27 Bllwttn NB
tlldND
28 Alttntto
211 Shtdelrtt
31 Southern
bltckblrd
34 Cooled ltvt
35 Cha"tr
37 10114, Romtn
39 II (Sp.)

40 Gentile materltl (tbbr.)
42 Gypey 1111n ·
44- Runyon
46Compau
point
46 Mountain
bill
50 DoweN
53 Bttlllvt
54 SouiiFr.)
55 NC't
neighbor
57 Foole
61 lltkt Into
lttthtr
62 Actor Aida
64 Unit of lrtn~

en currencr

85 Fut alrcrtH
(tbbr.)
6611ooT. . 67 Full of thldt
trttl

DOWN
1 Ont-hortt
Clnlllt
2 Actrttl

lltrlltl
3ActorGllllon
4 Apptlrlng
5 Ptrsonl non

8 HttltiUon
IYIIIblt
7. Rorntn

...-..~--­

bronze

a Spoun

9 Aclrtll
Bltko
IOUnlttl
II Awry
16 DeHclOUI

•

.,

'

.

• .,._.,..

1'

apr

•

beVIflll

~

btrto-

..

22 lndlln monev.
(tbbr.)
·
23 lllld
tlpltllvt
~+-4--1 24 Foolbtll
pllytrTtrlltnlon .
25
of tclt.
26 SwNI POlliO'

Holt

3D Ttlltd

:

32 Aglt
·
33 Dottn't ullt
36 Punch (II.) ·
38 Ortcull!, t .g .
41 Rill
43 lncorrtet
.
(Drtl.)

45 llorth of Ark:
47 COlltgt dtg.:
411 lltklng do .

With

50 Coneumte :
51 Dtc. holldtr ·
52 Future attye.~

...... .

56 ActorGulager
56 Lullrlctlt
511 Scotll1h cop:
60 Crtfty
·
6'3 ArUclt
·

·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ClltbrltY CIPP* CIYJ)IOQI'Itl'lll ... CtWI . . from quot•Uons bJ t.moul p.ople, put and
Eactllttt• In tt. ~ Nnc11 for another. Todly'• '*'t.· J ~ L.

HPXYO

'ONPUDTI

HPXYO
E R L Z

NV

DERD
DN

wz

FNZDTS
OJYUD

s· N

YX
p

~1 .

•

ANN I

BNU"O

FTNVZXXNT

R

PUBZTXDRUB . '

"

WJROG.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I had to change because I was frightened. I
didn't want 10 die angry and bitter and sad." - Elton John .

fHE.Y'IIt. fOR lilE. OFfiCE
~RTY fO,tiORROW.
•.

..
'
..

and you 'll find 11 . The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker instanlly reveals which

._

~gns are romantically perfect for you .

9·-----1

Mall $2 plus a long, sell-addressed ,
slamped envelope to Matchmaker. c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428 ..Cieveland, OH 44101 -3428.
AQUARIUS (J1n. 20-Feb. 19) You

10. _ _ __

11 . _ _ _ _ _ ,
12. _______1
13•._ _ __

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

should do well in new ventures at this
time. However, don't discard traditional

14• _ _ __

methods and procedures just because
tho enlerprlse Is fresh. Old ways still

15..__ __

work .

r.e .

·

'four
. 'Birthday

~

Dtc. 22, 1112

-l

•.

•t

!'nterprlses or ventures that you beCOme InvOlved in In lhe year ahead
eould be larger In scope than your past
endeavors. Your participation could be
'. oubolanlial. even if you play a minor
r_ple.
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-.ltn. 1t) You
!lillY encounter a surpriii11Q .,_;s1 today
~trdl~g 'I lltuatlon wher~ you bagln
11 the gl- and end up being the re·

.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your pas,, slbllilies for success are stror;.ger than
usual today, bjiCause the aspects lndl·
cale you mlghl have people working on
your behall who are as capable as you .
ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprtl 11) Getln touch
today with people who are Indispensable 10 your material weltare, especially
those who are separated by distance.
Hearing from you will stimulate their
support.
TAURUS (April 20-Mty 20) Since you
have the ability today to enhance what
olhera start, you might take a so-so sll·
uauon and turn It Into something rather
promising.
CIMINI (Mer 21-.IUnt 20) A restricted
Imagination brings mt!agar rewards loday, so don't limit your thinking to pony
1erms. Grandiose ideas might not lm ·

preas otners, but the end
could.
CANCIR (Jun• 21-.lulr 22) You 're lhe
type of Individual who tries to be helpful
to others and tOday probably will nol be
an exception . However, the rewards tor

your good deeds might be unusual.
LEO (JulJ 23-Aug. 22) Others will want
to cooperate with you loday, because
you will know how to make what you're
dojng seem tun and Important. These
are the elements that magnify your
attractiveness.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22) Use quality
materials. merchandise or furnishings if
you are refurbishing your surroundings
at thls time. The splendor will be more
enduring if the goods art lop of lhe line.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Unaltached
Librans who are looking tor a new relationship are wise II they htke.advantage
ot any social invitations they get loday.
Your Ideal might be In atlendance.
SCORPIO (Oct.
22) A shopping
excursion could turn oul to be a fruitful
experience tOday. You might be able to
acquire Items you desire at the prices
you can IIIIard .
SAOmARIUB (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) Compliments from you will have considerable Impact on your friends today. If a
pal does something worthy of acknowledgment, be lavish in your praise.

24--.

'

'

20 Author Um- •

Scrv ccs

romance

72111.

·· •

.

CaU OIU' olfleefor paid ill .......,...,. ratao/

M

ACROSS

'
;

.,

~ _..:..-·~·. -

AcCIIICrtM

Thm your clutter 'i nto caah,
s.dl. .it the em woy...by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Plqce xour clquifled qd todfu!
15 word. or le.,, 3 dgn,
3 pQ£Je1J.I6 100

- r:.

Nd!oD'Y CA.Re.e...

=.,"=.a 11 ...._.."=
oowr, ....._ '=-."'N •

r..
;......
::~ ··~· ~

I

1111 K

'•

The W~rld Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

..,.

CORDATE
("KOR·
Something
date' ) is shaped like a heart, as in •a
cordate leaf.• Tie up the proper spelling of the adjective CORDATE, which
begins witb CORD.

..

Injure - Unfit • Crank - Flimsy - FUNNY
·
Sale.swoman: "How did you get those wrinkles around
your eyes at such a young age?" Young customer: "I
laugh a lot.• Saleswoman :"Honey,nothing is that FUNNY!"

•

·-~-r:.~

.,

I&gt;_,,

.."n· _. .~. .

:1117. .....

....,,
wnn _At;._R. ....._

l&amp;t

UCIIIE GUll

TUFOU'~

~~~·--·

CA~H?H

*r.UIII -., .,.._

~~~·

IIIII

IWI mo. pel.

-. .

- -••tt:....
a~~~
~ ·-

PIN down EXTRA

doom- llortit. 2

(

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

--.-.

ant to:

'

GUll SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

.......

you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

By Jeffrey McQuain

Apartment
for Rent

CLUB

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

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

OUR LANGUAGE

f fnhl1d, 2 • ~lor­
In Coun!rv- fllriL -

992-3838

-s'Tcq
:_·.~,_ --~· """'~

2 l i d - Wow ....... No

:a •

FR.EE ES11MATES

·.................

""'r.

--..m,arn-mau.

Dp

mo.

4

onlnal,
Act1W
-·
CoMfi:. 111
IJLR.L
lndl- •
14.

=

to~- • poolll.. lll"ucte.

- - . -P101od , _ _
to: Dr. Larry
141
- · -lnglf Pkwy., llld-

.'II_... .......

~: i::o.,-.,:"~

llldaa.
.~
~•
-.,_
l1llna
Tlvwt

a

111

Moblleltalnea
for Rent

oppart..,Hy 111 - k In

LIOI tl

,~
~· .... _·.---

....

.r;;

LOSER

=•~required,
11101111\ 111
Nllii'llnen
a
ttl ZIOL

=
..=.,=.-...-_-yoo_r_rlg"!-:--wll"'"hc-lho-:-'1.2

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.
949-2734

55

• .._~.llhl
Pt. I'll. I lllal IMiu-

Life • Medicisre • Cancer • Fire • Health •
• : Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

GRANNY'S
CRAfTS.
Naad a Gift?

,.,rra..e ~ous.

~l()ppii(H,

1\ l_t·:~·sl:Jck

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
INSUUNCE COMPANY

I

7
l......l

L.-l......I.._..L_.L._

'

,.,.WIIIburrou•--od Lol.

I I I I 1 0

6

Opening lead: • 3

~7 ... ...kldlng lol
. . _ 101 up In llllrll. 1-100 Ill
~~~ !!1 Up On

I

f-:., . . . . ., . ; ; . . . . : ; - . ; : ; . . , . ; : . . . . . ; ; , . . . : : .. . . . . .

r~lerclla nd 1 se

lldroa•

For a major infraction of
company policy, I had a
worker suspended lor three
!! days without pay ."Can you
- -U-B_T_O_E.......::...,Imake it live days?" he asked ,
5
-1·1 need a ---· ···I"

,.,.-

SOUTH .
+AQJ63
.Q84
+J9
+KQS
Vu(nerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Allie n
Ooi PI I ..,_

.,••• " ' '

+s

.AJ975
'+KH
+9432

• 762

111,

- II Doi!P
~
I •

BY E F E

l---rl:.....;lr=..T.I5,.....;I-l;;:.
I. . . . . .

EAST

+AJ 8

:::......,.._

tllll.
"' !'1

Employment Serv1ces

t i It ll

1~

· 1!-11-tt

+•o 16

48 Splice for R.,.

11 • Help wanted

I
I l I' I I I~
CADFEE

........................
.,...
lllleiOnln,_
_-_
CMopor
Lal ...
·•

..

I&amp; PI

Fum..hed
Rooml

,. ...... -.

WOit

�•

•

Monday, December 21, 1982

Pomeroy llddllpoft, Ohio

Teacher claims there are five sexes
--.._lite
fkaed -

0.. .U.I-1 L Ml'

r-1.

adler e11y widi a
Olle ~ his

IIIII)' dill

hip ICIIool 'P t I iltwbiailbe
• , 2 dill din - ll'VID it
the I r ,._ - lillie, fema?e,

. . . . . . eelbj...............

Ann
Landers
ANNLANDDS
-uft.IMA a'r

her home.

Please don't sugest that Agnea
Jdck bini OUL He il ller JI'DdiOIJ,
. IIIII she doeln't _ . him out llllthl
.aeec. We a dillutbed by whll if .
goiDJ on. Willi can we do Ill hell1,

n..s1 ttt_.
c-r111• rtrl'

AM? - DBSPBRA11! FRlENDS IN

IWNOIS
my -·• frillllda
DBAR llLlNOIS fRIBNDS: You
t:llu IIIII IIIey
can iqJCJi1 this m~Mnb!e aitnetioii
cmfinnetP ~he hid iqJCIIW. ·I
,told my - that die te1cller is your 1111'1 clllll and go lOgetber to 10 the Adult Proteclive Scrvicea;
wrong, that there are only two . the principal's offiCe and register a Look in your phone boot or call
-.lillie IOd fanele, ..tlbeO!Ja complaint
your operatOr. If the ~
c s •iea 1111exual pniCUces.
Dear ADD Laaden: We live in 8 refuses 10 press ch!rges, boweveti
"-,l'lll ~bed by this misin- smaU ~n~ment community and nothing can be done Ill help htt.
How about the other memberS
formaliciL No te•lu bas die right eW~yooe here is eitlt« reiiied or 8
top I! d piliiOIIII uritdons r facts. cloae friilnd. We are coocaned ibout of ibe family giving Apes lOme
1 want to ao 10 lbe IChoo1 11111 apeak our 83-yar-old neighbor, •A8DCS-•
relicfl Agnes, if you are readint
with dtlt
!w or the principii,
nis woman has become a pis- litis, I hope Ill heaven tbal you will
but my 1111
beged me 1101 10. oner in htt own horne since her 27- assert yourself. You don't have 19
He's ll'nlid it would get him' iniD year-old grandson mov.ed in. "Jeb"
live like this. Good luck.
trouble.
is violent and has been in and out of
Gem of the Day: When everythinJ
Whit do the expedS say about rehabilitation centers and mental in your life IICemS 10 be abeolutely
.
this? Do they claim there are five hospitals for a long time. His perfect. something is going wrong
Minter FrJar ud Mlcbael F'rJII.:rer; ud back,
BUCKEY£ USHERS • Boy Scout Troop 249
sexes nowildays? Things are chang- pare1111 dumped him at Agnes' IS that you don't know about yet
.
......,~ IICIItllaaster, Robert Arms, JOIIII With·
ushered tbe Ohio State University. Game this
ing 10 r.t dtlt it's hard Ill keep ujl. soon as his behavior problems
Is thtU.AM lAiulers collllftll yo•
ereU, M011ty Hunter, 81111 IICOul 111851er Robert
year. Pictured, 1-r, are: front, Adam Willie,
Whit lbould I do llbout litis ICIIChel'l became public.
clipped years aro yellow witIt age?
Klein.
- A CONCERNED FAmER IN
Jeb demlllds money from Agnes For a copy of Mr most frtqwnlly
UKIA8, CALIF.
.
to buy alcohol. He sits around l'tqii4Sttd poems IJfld essays, stllll a
DEAR C0NCERNEI&gt; PARENT: the house all day watching adult self-addresstd, l011g, lnlsiMss-sire
LONG BOTTOM • Danny
There a Only two sexes -- tDI1e videos. Agnes is ifraid Ill leave htt ertvtlope IJfld a cMclc or IPIOM"f
Lawrence of Long Bottom will be
By
ED
PETERSON
and
female. Recent undies indicate home because she knows her grand- order for $4.85 (this irtciMdtf
the
future.
To
do
litis,
just
call
or
presented with the Eagle Scout
Social
Security
visit
our
office
and
ask
for
a
that
homosexuality, bisexuality lOll robbed his parents' home, and postage atul lrandlirtg) to: Gems,
award on December 27 at the
Manacer
in
Athens
"Request
For
Earninp,
And
Benefit
IIIII
asexualiay
Ire. 1101 the result of she's afraid he will rob her, also.
c/o AM l..m~Mrs. 1'.0 . Bo11 11562,
Reedsville United Methodist
Estimate Statement, (Form 7004). somethinJ that has 1one wrong Althou&amp;h we've known this hoy Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (Ill
Church.
. If you're thinking about retiring About 3 weeks after you send in
Lawrence is the son of Joanne and signing .up for Social Security the form (it asks a few simple with lbe sex ~ but rather a all his life, we are afraid 10 visit in Cd/IOda, send $5.87.) ·
Lawrence of Long Bouom and the anytime soon, some of the best "identifying" questions), you will biochemical-poetic alteration tha1
late Howar_d Lawren.ce. ~e is advice I can give you is cootained receive a statement ihat lists your no one bas been able 10 explain.
anending Ohto State Uruversny.
· th Id B s
..
Exactly wby some people are
As his Eagle Seoul project, m e 0 • oy co~t motto: Be earnings as shown in our files and llllr8Cted to members of their owa
Lawrence refinished the front doors • Prepared. I. ~ealtze that the that provides 10 estimate of your · sex ilia myaay, but these individuat the Reedsville United Methodist prospc:ct of r;ettnng and then deal- retirement benefits. (Disability and lls are lli1I either male or female,
Church, where he attends.
mg With _a btg go~t agency · survivors eslimalcs are also providThe ceremony will begin at 2 hke S~tal Secunty can be over- ed.) Check the earninp statement whicbever way they were born,
and the public is invited. A whelmmg, but you should know and if you note any discrepancies reganl1ea of wllat IUins them oo.
p.m.,lion will foUow
that those of us who work at the with your own records,·let us know . Tbll - - Wbo believes there
recep
.. ·
Athens Social Security office and we'll help you correct your are five sexil&amp; needJ 10 he aet
understand your apprehension and fi1cs.
llraigbl (no pun intended). I suge11
are here Ill help.
3. Gather the documents you'll that ycu apeak 10 ocher (llleiiiS in
If there is comfort in numbers, need to file for benefiu. You'll
you might like Ill know that about need to have a certified copy of
4.5 million people sign up for your birth certificate and W-2
Social Security bcncriiS every year. forms ·for last year (or your tax
Joe and Mary Jelrers, Pomeroy,
And for almost eY!'I'YDIIC, the pro- return if you're self-employed). If announce die biM&gt;of their daughcess is rclati vely simple and you were in the military, bring your ter, Jordan Kate, on Oct. 30 at
straightforward. Here are some tips discluqe papers. If your wife and Holzer Medical Center.
that will help make sure the same is childrell also are filing for benefits, ·
The infant weighed seven
tnJe for you.
bring their birth certificates and pounds and 15 ounces and was 20
L Learn as much as you can Social Security numbers. If ·you tnehes long.
about Social Security ahead of want direct deposit, bri!lg your
There are two odter children at
time. CaU or ·Visit our office and checldng or savmgs account infor- home, Ryan, age 11. and Chrislllask or free CO{'ies of one or both of mation.
pher, age 10.
If you follow this advice, in
these public:alions: ''UndersUIIding
Maternal grandparents are Jane
othec
words,
if
you
will
"be
preSocial Security," (Publication No.
and Brady Huffman and George
Millel, Middleport. Malemal great05-10024)~ whicb pnvides a gener- pared," signing up for Social Secual overview of all Social Security rity should be a simple and easy grandmotbcrs are Hild4 Harris and
programs; or "Retirement, (Publi- process.
Juanita~.
Paternal grandparents are
cation No. OS-10035), which teUs
You can get die bookleu and die
Howard
and Frances Jeffers,
you everything you need 10 know benefit estimate JlliiUCSt form menDANNY LAWRENCE
about Social Security retire!Dent tioiled above by calling O!lf ofrtpe Pomeroy.
at S92-4448 or by caliing Socml
benefiu.
Named Who's Who
LONDON BOUND- Tamara Haymaa, daughter of Dan and;
2. Find out how much you'll get Security's toll-free number: l-800Faith
Hayman ot Syracuse, was selected as a U.C.A. AU-Star cheerRACINE - Keri Whitaker, a from Social Sec~ty ahead of time n2-1213, business days ber,veen 7
leader
at chee~leadina- camp this past summer. Hayman bas been a •
senior at Southern High School, ,so you can make better plans for am. and 7 p.m.
member
of the Sottthem cbeerleading squad for tbe past rour years ,
has recently been nominated to
and
Is
now
a senior member of tbe squad. Sbe was a member or "
appear in the 26th anniversary edisquads that competed in the national ftnals ··
Southern's
cbeerleading
tion of Who's Who Among Amerithe
past
two
seasons.
Slle
will be traveling to Londoo, England on ~
can High School Students.
December
26
thru
January
2, 1993 as part or ber cheer~ad1nc honOnly five percent of dte nation's
Karlita Srump inStalled offiCCIS opening prayer was by Mildred
ors.
There
she
will
be
performing
in The Lord Mayor or West Min- •
high school students are named 10 at the recent meeting of the Meigs Zei~ler. Devotions were a poem,
ister's
New
Year's
Day
Parade.
Who's Who.
.
County Womens Fellowship held Cbnstmas Story, and a reading
Whitaker is active in several at the Hemlock Grove Christian from Psalms by Neva Nicholson.
organizations at Southern High Chwch with 2S present
Karlita Stlllllp announced a live
School; She is in the choir, on the
New officers are Kathryn John- nativity SI:CIIC will bel at the Bradyearbook slaff, the staff of South- son, president; Debbie Miles, fiJSt ford Church of Christ on Tuesday
em 's newsPa!Jer, EMIT, vice pres- vice-president; Linda Bates, vice- and Wednes\lay from 7-9 p.m.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •AllERGY
ident of the Government Club, and president; Charldine Alkire, secreThe next meeting will be Jan. 24
is a reporter for the Service Club, tary; Angie Brickles, treasurer; at the Middleport Church of Olrist
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
an organization which provides ser- Tina Lamben, news reporter, and with Mary Jane Wise, speaker.
vice 10 the school and community.
Ruth Underwood, card secretary.
1 The closing song was "Silent
She is also a member of TEARS
Kathryn Johnson conducted the Night" Cl6sing pmyer was given
(Teens Educating about Road Safe- meeting which opened witli the by Peggy Bole. Refreshments were
ly) the satellite youth board which song "Joy To The World." The served.·
Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignment Acce!pted
JORDAN JEFFERS
educates about the hazards of
drinking and driving and overall
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
road safely.
After graduation, Whitaker
Brandon CaJpenter recently celplans to attend college and major in
military
personnel
serving
on
A
Christmas
!'arty
with
roast
ebrated
his sixth birthday at the
early childhood development
beef dinner highlighted the recent active duty in Somalia. All veteranS home of his parents, Randy and
meeting of the American Legion are uraed. 10 support these troops Peg Carpenter.
Drew Webster Post No. 39 with 49 regardless of personal feelings
Attending were his grandmothmembers aiiCIIding.
lllward the military mission.
er, Dorothy Chaney, Steve, Jason
The group's membership quota
Vecerans wae urged Ill contact and Trenton Chaney, Charlene,
of 284 members was achieved for their elected •epesc:ntatives about Amanda Swartz, Ryan Terrazopothe legion year of ·1993. Several the mOll recent pnliX'!!'I'' regarding lis.
past members have not paid their other uses for veterans hospitals
Sending gifts were )ohn and Ed
dues as of yet and they are remind- not pertaining Ill w~ or care Chaney, grandmother, Thelma
J
ed \hat the free insurance is only for needy veterans.
Poulson. Abon; Ann Eldred. West
EDU SPECIAL: The first 12 watdles soltl Tuestlttr will
active unlif Dec. 31, 1992. If 1993
The next meeling will be Jan. 5, Palm Beach, Fla.; Don and Lois
dues are not paid the insurance is 1993.
be If 50" off.
2 Per
BeD and Larry and Bess Taylor.
canceled.
All veterans are urged Ill belong
COMPUTE nOCK
10 an active veterans organizatioo
President for a day?
to maintain their rigbu and tbe
opportunity 10 have dleir ideas oo
veterans affail! heard. Drew WebWASHINGTON (AP) - David
ster Post welcomes new members.
Rice Atchison (1807-1886) was
Silent prayer was offered fr. lbe president for one clay. Or was be?
KERI WIDTAKER
2'

mnwt

wbo 1111 in die -

7

J

7

Gets Eagle award

•

'*

Your Social Security .

•
•
Vol. 43,

••

No· 111

Co..,...IMI1112

.

.

Lindeman murder case ends with guilty plea
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
The murder case against Donald
L. Lindeman of Racine came Ill a
close on Monday, as the defendant
entered intD a plea bargain agreement. and was sentenced to life in
prison.
Lindeman was scheduled 10 go
10 trial before a three-judge panel
yesterday Ill answer charges that he
killed
Long
Bottom
Storekeeper/Postmaster Howard
Lawrence in May. After several
hours of discussion between the
prosecution, defense counsel and
the three judges (Presiding Judge

JOHN WAbE, M.D., INC. ·

Legion holds Christmas party

Celebrates birthday

TIMEX WATCHES 40%oFF

JEWELRY

2 PRICE

E&amp; PERFUME

WOMEN'S

Community calendar
Community Calenctar Items
appe1r two days before an evnt
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be recelve!f weD Ia advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

BRADBURY - Bradford
Church of Christ, corner of Route
124 and Bradbury Road, will present a live nativity scene on Tues·
day and Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.
nightly.
·

MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local
MIDDLEPORT- Youth proBoard of Education will meet Mon- gram at Ho_pe Baptist Cbwch will
day at 7 p.m. at Sout~ern High be Wednesday at 7 p.m.
School.
·
RACINE. - Racine United
RACINE - Racine Village Methodist Chwch Choir will preCouncil will meet Monday at 7 sent the cantata, "Bethlehem Joy"
p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
?n :.Vednestlay at 7:30 p.m. Public
tnvtted• .

MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
Churclt will have Christmas carol- " RACINE - Racine Ftnt Beptilt
ing Monday at 7 p.m. Christmas Church children will be Jftaelltio&amp;
baskets will also be delivered.
"The Gifts of Christmas" on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. under the
TUESDAY
direction of Debi Bradford. The
public is invited.

'

\

YOUR CHOICE

President James K. Polk' s term
rmished Mln:h 3. 1849, and Milch
4 was to be inauguration day for
the 12th U.S. president. Z.Chary
Taylor. Since that day wa a Sunday, the inauguration was postponed ...til Mlrdl s.

''

25% OFF

COLD POP

CAN

NUTS - Fr••• Front Our Mac•i••

• Atchison. as Senate president,
was I!Cllt in line fr. the office.and
some say be was president on

Malch4.

BRANDON CARPENTER

u.cJA£ ••mAr BOUU

IIICHOR HOCKI ..G 12 PC.

COOLER SET

16-0•ce Coolers

$

49

OPEN MONDAY.sATURDAY UNTIL 7 P.M.
THRU DEC. 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER
HOURS
APPOINTMENT.
'
.
'

Don'tlolgiiiD-Itl...allglltlllfDra41"- TV IDIIe ....... .,.,

111!1 ..-~~~~ora .... a-t a.

1

vt No punt

amtnrv.

Rl I 1·'0 PUIII I Ill

742-2211

"WE' SERVICE WHAT WI: SELL •
Rlii'LAND
UOO 137-1217

CANDY BARS, •••. soc OIILY

35 c

PRICES GOOD THHOUGH THUI1SDAY. DEC./ 1111

'

.
••

Fred W. Crow III of Meigs County
Common Pleas Coun, Judge Dan
W. Favreau of Morgan County
Common Pleas Coun, and Robert
G. Tague, a retired Common Pleas
Court Judge from Perry County),
an agreement was approved in
which Lindeman pled guilty to a
Char$e Of aggravated murder with a
spectfication that the offense was
committed in con)unclion with
another aime, in thiS case, thefL A
theft charge against Lindeman,
however, will not be tried.
In explaining why the state
agreed Ill the agreement, Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story said
that some of the evidence to be pre-

sented to the panel was circumstantiaL
"This case has many strengths
which would prevail," Story said,
"but it also has some weaknesses.
There's been no confession, and
some of the proof is circumstantial.
There are also conflicts as Ill times
and locations of the defendant in
relationship to l,be crime."
Lindeman withdrew his earlier
plea of not guilty, and entered a
plea of guilty to the charge o(
aggruvated murder with the specifi~
cation. He was sentenced Ill life in
prison, and will be ineligible for
any form of probation or narole for
(Continued to A'3}

'

Pomeroy council opens bids for
village insurance; action tabled

Birth announced

Women's Fellowshfp meets

1 Section, 10 Pagu 25 centa
A Multimedia lnt;. Newap11~

a; • "!I p Drt..Ohio, Tuesday, December 22, 1992

Bids for viUage insurance were
opened when Pomeroy Village
Council met in regular session on
Monday evening.
.
The Wiseman Agency of Gallipolis submitted a bid for the
health insurance portion of the
speciftcations, while Davis-Quiclccl
Insurance Company and DowningChilds-Mullen-Musser Insurance,
both of Pomeroy. submitted bids
for both the health insurance and
liability insW'811Ce portions. Representatives from Burnham and
Flower Agency of Ohio, Inc .. a
self-insurance company-for public
entities, submitted a pt'o~sal for
self-insurance on the liability portion of the specifications.
Jim Zuccaro and Bill Kerwin of
B.umham and Flower gave a brief

ENTERS PLEA • Dollald 1Lindemaa, ww wA
IIi
·~­
, ft
S c •a
813!' SteYelr L
from right, entered a plea of ~ oa M ' 1 ·-.- ' .......
a.y, Dl n
J
I W.esd'all; Lin:
in Meigs County Commo• Pie•s C o:urt u
charces relatin&amp; to tile deatll or Hew..,..
_. ••
'7 WJ lleiJIIad.. (Senliillll .....l!r..._~Lawrence of Long Bottom. Lwdewn
tenced to lite in prisoli.,Allo picbirecl, m. lllll!.

,g

WB--

7

Riggs responds to Crow's
Cle~ial of shoCk probation
I

•

·By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Slalf
The attDmey ~ling Jason
Rig~s of Reedsvtlle has filed a
mobon in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, refuting statements
made earlier this month by 1udge
Fred W. Crow III in denying
Riggs' motion for shock probation.
.Herman A. Carson of Athens
filed a motion for relief from
. Crow's entry·on Friday, askin&amp;lhat
Riggs' motion for shock probation
be reconsidered and granted.
In 1990, Riggs entered a plea of
no cooleSt 10 cliirges relating Ill the
June, 1990 death of Viclllr Will of
Canal Winchester, who was sauck
by a pickup occupied by Riggs and
a co-defendant, tlouglas Harris of
Pomeroy. Will's body was
removed from the scene and recovered a day later by authorities on
West Shade Road.
"'Counsel was proceeding under

the ifiiPlesiUI Iilllt ill: ll!llml-.11il ~~y..-1llill"sdtadt.
•As lite I ftomexhibit, sbows,
hold .a lb. . . . &lt;1!11 6e n ti• (DiiDr
sbock prnbati~ • -Iiiia ill 11ii11:Jp iii; - o f Mr. Will's first
(Harri.s ',)case.~
aa.:y . . bslieetll since shortly
said, "in &lt;l'lllb' b
I . . 6c lillllllt:lr tile aa&amp;s wfli:blled 10 his

'·.

'I

water service Ill residents on Pleasant Ridge. Those residents have
submitted a petition in support· of
the service at the last council meeting.
Council President Larry
Wllltrung discussed a problem of .
ice on West Main Street near tlie
GTE Building. Anderson indicated
that the problem was caused by a
faulty catch basin.
Councilman Thomas Werry
noted that a filter was needed on
the village gas pumps in light of a
problem witl! water tQ gasoline discovered last week.
Present, in addition to Anderson, Wehrung, and Werry, were
Councilmen Scott Dillon and John
Blaettnar; Mayor Bruce Reed; and
Clerk Kathy Hysell.

,..,_.s

~fe=~~ 'iJ~ ~=
reJ'IlOFSI! .and !his

"1 Mit4MM•- ing incarceaaial; • w' ' • ~
curacies &lt;in lthe SI3PDL ~
lion; and~ IPJil1i&amp; 6eCIImlll1 w.iill
other dn'f.omnri- Ormmu:D alllil
.Riggs were • y•".... fill a-m lftiHl
the court +ril!n4 lite
6 •l'lliifilout a .bCIIIiit!JI: aml•ii61uut m•iite
that there -wldl - 1111: a 1 •
The Drdlnlw 9ICIIDJ' ~ iill w.lbitk
1

"'*

or in put, bHc4 ...._ uwiiP••!e cJf

.facl(s) as liD p uiii • iilsuls" ilL
ered b_y •iLe &lt;court iiJI llbe III!w mh u
9 entry.~
Responilitw ~a li
dtllllll
the SEPifA liqJilll illlll~ fAit
not know W.ill':slilii~O...
refer.red t o :a !lc'ttar d ~ a •.,
wriaen talibe Wliiia"sfaiilylllaii-

llc.court fla ~ved

I!IM MWI I

a laiD.., A• "'ell' s-.Sloan
..tliirllll51:1 bill Izlaia Rigs' cour•1• aC'n:fi:nfug ID older
D''",...;, ty "KKt.• em ' Jo{u. •. As a
....... u o6 u u rt:st. it is (ltiggs ,)
lluiDil D m&amp;or tDJ ~ persons by
-a.· • "llfils." and not by their
fiitm
-:lllic
l'icdl lieuer and affi. dlll9.iil 311111 tile p:sri'Jt!mty of I ason
Zifp _. tat• •• y.)l Mlllk Sheets

-u..., .. Jason, Rigs does
aun •·

liis ICiion on&gt;liis co,1\i IIi'*" • J ! - Riggs fully
amq15 z iNlit¥ fO£ his own
wliieaailtcliillcofidiole events."

iia=*s_, L::s~
=
robbed.Will of

ada die a1• • 7
((" S

FOR nTiiii&gt;i&gt;C
County · ~:'~;~,hh.ave donated over $3,000 to
ous organizations in tbe area. Tbe group donated $500 to Operation Litt-off, a group that does
special requests tor children with lire threaten·
ing illnesses; to tbe Meigs County Deadstart
Program the group bas donated $500 worth or
merchandise; $300 bas been donated to tbe
Locomotion Teen Center; to Serenity House,
$500 wortb of merchandise bas been donated;
$500 or Nintendo video tapes have been donated
to tbe Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Ward;
and to the IO'WII of HarrlsonviUe tbe group bas
donated $1,000. Pictured, 1-r, as tbey receh·e

t • A-3)

Foreign policy team next up?
By RON FOURNIER
Aslaclated Press Writer
LITI'LE ROCK, Ark. - President-elect CliniDD, trying to nu his
Cabinet by Christmas, is linin¥ up
a team that will inherit the military
deployment in Somalia and the
growing international effat 10 SlOp
the slaughter in Bosnia. .
Six cabinet posts remained
empty Monday after ClintDn named
former South Carolina Gov. Dick
Riley to head the Education
Department' and Minnesota utility
exeeutive Hazel O'Leary as secretary of tl)e Energy Department
Clinton still hoped Ill complete
his Cabinet before Christmas,
although a news conference to
make announcements was not
scheduled for today.
Two key foretgn policy posilions - the secretaries of state and
defense - are still to be filled.
Transition direclllr Warren Christopher is the frorit-runner for state;
Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis. , is the ·
leading defense prospect
·
A senior Cltnton adviser said
Monday the president-elect would
· designate the ambassador to the
United Nations-as a Cabinet-level
position. The U.S. trade representative, who was g!ven Cabinet-level
status by President Bush, also
might have it under ClintoR, the
aide said.
Madeleine Albright, a National
Security Council aide in the Caller
White House, was mentioned by
Clinton advisetS IS a contender far
the U.N. post. Site was in 'Little
Rock on Monday for a meeting

presentation about the self-insurance system, which allows public
and governmental agencies Ill selfinsure, using a reserve fund built
through premiums.
Bill Quickel of the DavisQuickel agency also was present to
outline his bid.
Action on the bids was tabled
'pending review by members of
council.
Village Administrator John
Anderson briefly discussed plans to
file applications for Round seven
of Issue Two monies. The village
will .seck funding for a roof at the
water reservoir on Lincoln Heights,
as well lis a water main extension
of Main Street in Pomeroy.
Anderson also said that he was
developing a proposal to provide

with Clinton !Ill i(nrilinrdlmJmmenL
Also ,in ILiilflc JaDdl; .......,.
Woolsey-. .;a ffa; i• 4 •• ,, .. ~
tary
&amp;llle'l-"qiCIIIIdidare 110Bielll6e~
--~
gence ."&lt;geDcy. Aunib •r ltD
IndiHh
p,a "c a• a m

of-..,

7

ean Who ~- n'ziMQ.

ambassador. -~ 1!5'

CliniDII &gt;00 'SJ1Dib!y. J'IY rr;, oiae i5 at
prospccl.forUbeS.CDj saeni(S

No.2!i&lt;iJl.

·

Naming A!llri_gtn 110 :a 1'!6i• I
,Je·vel ;positiot w.mMIIIC!Ip CJiam!
dcllect heat ifmlll•
r.; w iiJII"
who want .am.e fr:mallrs ill I;VJ
White House. I!IIXI5. OJinPm Jhriitdlnll
.- -

.

""''"u

........ ._
. . _..........,
.... .-aaa•""s

when aSkeil ;a

Monday.
~

'

,:~e~.,.,.
5

-

Ci

-

~

_....,.s

d!!jjl ...- - - - - - - - - - - ,

-

and math
siil.lk
also said a1bCII 2 11111\nomilllltiml d
alail11tc
Envia()!.., 4 T
" ~
y
and his eo-Dil
Advi sers. Ball c. lie " Q W
postl, but - . . . . . . . OlD-

. .

iiai:ILIIIcaiiDSiiilltliere' was a " disliiml; a;ru:zr lie would name a
....
'K
R'..
.
. _ l'li• •aegoedi that more
G
...., BWDtiCrs was. the
iiJtlll
1e 'IIOIIICIIl andl minorities
....... lllacilladaiiiistralion.
..... tflii* .... t i is alt said
- . . . . . willl ,._ lia:n allle Ill
poe,_ a - .dbeue Cabinet
• • - i l i wdninistr.llioo
tk
c:«a seen, but also
IIIIIIC iia 111tiirlll cl'iffi:renl tinds of
II'NIIIk· llaolc: liiDle real! influence
-a •··· • mfilll piii'IIICI3liip and
I ;, -; - I 1m tkddibcraliOns of
llliis
- " t:ntlfOII! than. ever
trfw: '"'" I'Esaid.

-*
_.Fe-··'

3

net.

" Tbey-.ilt....., ..........
ing those po .
Ji a - 7 5

adminia••H• •6111tt.r..
who are til+ ""• dla.. if I llld

.~nted ..titr:_•..._,.._

lions,'' CliiDne Sliil Wlilla __,.
glare.

O
'Lctuy--..

and ihiril ltild::
net

5

T

IMP

.. - Qlii-

ClintonP-•-·'

%

attor.ney !JeneAi.• wr a ..
idvisers, an4 'Uiitlle llliillllltaoc
more tban ,dme
iltlealt- 11----------~

their donatlo•s are: IJilda Th·ad·o. Sooret•itv
House; Barbara Wilson, Locomotion; Maxine
Little, Holzer; Jon Jacobs, Meigs County Healtb
Department; Cnol Young, Mefgs County Headstart; Jerry Davis and Becky Dailey, Operation
Lift-off; and Randy Butcher, Harrisonville. Presenting tbe donations on bebatr of the bllters is
Brenda Davis. Otber bllter representatives are,
1-r, Kath;r Meadows, Lori Payne, Amy Molden,
Patsy Price, Jo Frye, Sherry Swisher and Jane .
Slater. Tile bikers also donated over $2,200 i.D
money and Items to the Meigs Methodist Coop- . eratlve Parish.
.

Suspect allegedly threatens other prisoners
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - A man
described by the FBI as a suspect
in the de8ths of four outdoorsmen
has been put under "homicide protection" at the Stark County Jail
after talldng about strangling other
~ers, authori!ies said.
County sherifr s deputies began
keeping other prisoners away from
Thomas Lee Dillon, 42, of Magnolia after two strips of wool, one
made intD a noose, were found in
DiUon's ceU, Chief Deputy Bruce
Umpleby said.
Dillon told a jail mental health
· counselor .. he would strangle
in~s ... if he had the chance, and
he wouldn't shed a tear," according Ill a Dec. 11 department report.
The swement·was repoited during
a counselins session in the jail'·s
mental health unit, the repon Slid.
Later that day, jailers found
under Dillon's clothes two S-foot
wool pieces 10m from his blanket
Dillon Slid he used the strips to
cover his eyes while he sleeps, the
report said.
"One strip was tied into a noose
at one end, which could have easily

1

been used to strangle someone,"
the report said.
DiUon is being kept in a cell by
himself in a maximum-security
wing, Umpleby said.
"All of his activities are constantly monitored . When he is
moved, he is shackled hands and
feet. There are a minimum of two,
usually four, corrections personnel," Umpleby said.
•
Dillon has been held withput
bond sincehis arrest Nov. 27 under
federal indictment for rtrearms violations. Records nted in U.S. District COun in Akron describe Dillon as a "significant suspect" in
the slayings of the outdoorsmen.
He has not been charged in the

deaths, which occurred between
Aprill, 1989, andApril5, 1992.
The victims believed slain by a
serial killer are Gary Bradley, 44,
of Williamstown, W. Va,., in Noble
County; Claude Hawkins, 49, of
Manfield, in Coshocton County; .
Jamie PaxtDn, 21, of Bannock, in :
Belmont County; and Donald ·
Welling, 35, of Strasburg in Tus- .
carawas County. The death of .
Kevin Loring, 30, of Duxbury, ..
Mass., in Muskingum County is .
suspected to be ~h_e work o~ th.e . ,
same kiUer, authonues have SBI(I. ••
The five were shot with highpowered guns while hunting, flshmg or walking alone in rural eastem Ohio.

Kanawalsky bond set
Bond for 44-year-old Joseph
Kanawalsky, Reedsville, who is
charged with Saturday's aggravated murder of his 45-year-old neighbor, Bernard Dyle Bay, has been
set at $500,000 by Meigs County
Court Judse Patrick O'Brien.
In acltlitioo, a $200,000 bond for

attempted murder has been set.for
!Canawalsky for firing at law
enforcement officers. Kanawalsky
remains in the Meigs County Jail :
A preliminary hearing has been
set for Tuesday; Dec. 29 at 10 a.m.
by Judge O'Brien.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="330">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9624">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34046">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34045">
              <text>December 21, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6552">
      <name>bay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="355">
      <name>cozart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6553">
      <name>fork</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
