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•

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.

�•

'C ommentary
The Daily Sentinel

~·Has
I

•

PomeroY
•

Pllgl 2 The Dally Senti~
Middleport, Ohio ,
Tuescllly, December 22, 199Z

•

.

_ _ _ _ _ _..__...;·-·- -. past - retired Gen. Norman
Martin SchriUII
Schwarzkc;r:.;ook " Live With
________
;...._ _ Regis
and
y Lee" by stonn,
aslcing : "How would you have
pounced. ' ' A fot of jleople arc liked
be !he father mother
or commad , " Pentagon spo1ccsman L t. of onetoof...the young Marines
Cmdr. Joe Gradishcr told The ing ashore, not mowing whether
Wasbinaton Post. In his rage, he someone was m
' back m
' •L..._..... _
revealed the low-tech secret (or ness with a weapon readyu"'
_ ..
to.shoot
defeating our troops ' bigh-tcch at them, and all of a sudden, your
night-vision equipment: "The 8011 or daughJet is ilium~. yon .
White Iightl of the cameras just know, with cameras?"
totally destroy Dijlht vision. Our
But wait! _ despite its spotforces are pracucally blind.... lights and satellites, TV missed a
Thank God there was no opposi- '--y ~of Jhc .mrv·. rsblicity-hunlion."
""'
gry entagon-;;{
chte s delivering
Defense Secretary Richard what mil!ht as well have been
Cheney ' s spokesman , Pete engraved mvitations (You arc corWilliams, complained: "When you dially invited to cover an invasion.
cover a football game, you don't R s v p) T00 b d ABC Nc s'
put yolir crews out there on the
· · · •
a
w
middle !lf the 50-yard line even su~rb Pentalon corrcsJ?I!ndcnt,
though that IRI'ght be the best place Ro ert Zelnic , dido 't vtdco~
Pete Williams, who'd lnvited him
to watch. You stay off the playing to a ""'-invasion chat. 0o CNN's
field."
" Rcif8iile Sources" show, Zelniclc
There was even a blast from the

ca's fiDCSl Navy IIIII Marine troopS
hilling the beach in Somalia under
PII.Nie•;lhc pre-dawn cov.er of darkness,
theP. seemingly surprised by a
meilia brigade armed with the
PAT WllriTm:.w
finest
of TV cameras and lights.
,a, ' 1111t NlldaeriController
The Video Light Brigade charged,
surrounded . the outnumbered
LI!T'll!RS OF OPINIOf( 'ue welco1111&gt;. They obould be lelo IbiD 300
invaders and badled them .in megawordl. All letlel'l ue ~::/:: to edlliD&amp; IDd must be li&amp;ned with noine,
kilowatt brilliance, lhc better to
Pllwu llld lalepbooe n
. No IIDiiped lettera will be publiabed. Lettera
show lhe world' s couch-generals
lbould be in ao&lt;&gt;c1 tula, ICidreaina iuuel, not ponohalitieo.
.
live pictures of commandos who'd
· · been camouflaged and dMic-painted
to avoid detection. · The U.S.
Navy's highly. trained SE.A~s
seemed napped· m a .............. Cll'- .
.....-·"
cu~ worthy ooly of P.T. Barnum's
tnilned seals.
In a flash, the Pentagon
effort 10ward this final resolution.
•.Dear Editor,
.•. Tbe past two years have been Without all of your efforts we
. .extremely diff'JCult 011 the lllelllben would not soe the installation of
GOoD! @.VeRY ~o~LilR
· ttf Local1857 and their families. It scrubbers and would 1101 have the
~ou SPef'lD PeMONST~~TeS
has also been difficult on the oppci1Unity to control our fu~.
. I would especially like to dl'ank
Southeast portion of Ohic;&gt; in wonReNeWeD coNsu~R
.:dering what lhe economic future the Chambers of Commerce and
· coNF'i?e.Nc.e :
the citizens of Meigs, Gallia, Vin'•would hold.
Now il's over. The PUCO rom- ton, Jackson and Albens county for
missioners have approved AEP's your n·ever ending effort. All of
clean air compliance plan which you belped in evety way you possiinCludes the instilllation of scrub- bly could.
We ane all happy that the final
. bers at Gavin Power Plant. Our
"Future now rests with our ability to decisiQII has been made and we feel
produce coal at an acceplable cost. that Soutbeasttm Ohio will. greatly
:·The installation of scrubbers gives benefit from the scrubbet mstalla'us a chance to operaJe. without the tion.
' Scrubbers we would have had nothOnce again my sincere dumks to
oF couRse, wije~ '{ou
CoUI.D f'~utfGe
. :~ I
.
all of you that helped in the effort
mg.
T~e ~iL.l., You 'I.L
U$ Ri~Hr g~,;K
. On behalf of Local 18S7, I to make the scrubber insn!llatiiJII at
··il.oould like to thank all of the peo- Gavin a reality.
WGlNT To CUT WaY
INTO
ple that have supported us' and
SacK
oN
You~ $Pet•ll)i~.
Re.Ce ;;;&gt;· ;;;&gt;1 ...... , ...
')hose that have devoted time and
'
United Mine WOrkers of America

· Letters to the editor

Southeast Ohio moves ahead

iP you ~llY eNOu@M,
We.

C~N

GeT o&lt;lT

oF THi$ ReCeSSiON.

THaT

PresideD~=

Getting old isn't so bad

. . What is old?
:: I go 10 a restaurant occasionally
· for a cup of coffee and the swols
.;~ always filled with a bunch of
·
oldmen.
· : I never sec any old women
:thm~.
- .l
' I'm conccmed. Don't wer. like
: eoffcc or is it they just don l like
old men?.
, I wu in the - y in France and
''fC had taken an area with wine
·~cellars and we were tasting the
· Wine. It llllf.ed liiiSly to me and one
of my buddies said "find an older
betel, it will Wle bcuer."
~·s the lint I blew you c:ould
taSte old.
I don't undersland all the ways

old is used. I drive race horses and
if I bump into some young driver, I
can hear "why don't you stay at
home old man." But if I'm luclcy
enough to win, I never hear, "congratUlations old man."
.
I ate at the senior citizens center
the other night and I'm rclling ynu,
them old l!i!'ls can rcally put on a
feed. You know there's qwtc a few
biUIIpS along the way to gettin' old
but I'm glad I got Ill expcricncc it,
.there's not much d. ill alrcmative.
General McArthur said "old soldiers never die, they just fade
away," but I can't do that. I goua
take care of that old woman of
mine, God love her.
Old Brooks Sayre
S.yracuse

Joseph Spear

Berryls World

E8ch of Ohio's Statewide elected officials serve an important role
Sen.]an M.
in the daily qJeration of stare government. For example, lhc Attorney
• General provides legal counsel and lhe public may be less familiar is
consumer protection services, lhe !hat of the State Auditor. GeneralState Treasurer ensures that the ly, the State Auditor is responsible
state's resources arc wisely invest- for auditing each of the departed, and the SccrcJary of State is the ments and agerJCies of state government as well as political subdivistate's chief elections officeJ.
One sJatewide office wilh which sions such as municipalities, coun-

umg

"An adver1tur.e
'

the legalization of other drugs. heresy. \
Would !hat 1101 inspire an cxhilaratTherefore, in the inlen:st of conJ
ing fandangQ:'t,
· ., •·· ~ sistcncy; I suggest outlaw IObacco~
I personally believe tl)at legal- Let's set up checkpolnts along ~
ization is the best way to win the Kentucky border and bloclr:ade thd
war on drugs; I believe we should Nllflh C8rolina coast. Maybe shooi
decriminalize heroin and treat dQwn a few planes !hat look like
addicts as medical patients. I they might be hauling the leaf.
believe we should legaliZC m!lfijua- Draw some blood, randomly of
na and cocaine, regulate their course, and chcclc for traces of
porcncy, tax them, license sellers, nicotine. Prosecute growers, tiaf.
outlaw advertising and prohibit lickas and usen. String np a few.
sales·to minors. As a result of these
What would happen? • "lf
steps, I believe, drug profi!S would cigatettes were ~btted," said
fall sharply, the blaclc inarlcet psyclliatrist Dr.
tcr Grinspoon
would disappear and drug-related of Harvard Medical School, "there
crime would dissipate.
would be a black market, and peoIf a serious effort to outlaw pie would lcill over tcrrirory for
tObacco got underway, how would selling !hem."
,
·
lhe drug war 'tough guys deal wilh . I imagine it would be much
it? A few weelcs ago, for example, worse than that. Prices for illicit .
arch-conservative Sen. Phil tobacco would p!Obably slcyroctet.
Gramm, R-Texas, touted a new. Street urchins would sell $20 bits
plan for dealing with violent Crimi- of the weed laced wilh fillers like
nals and drug dealers. "What I chicory and com silk. Tobacco carthink we need is to striag people te1s would spring up overnight. The
up,'' he said. if tobacco were out- murder rate would soar.
lllwed, would he string up exccuHow about i!, Bush, Bennett and
lives at RJR Nabisco, malccrs of · colleagues? Are you true bclicvm,
camel, Winston and Salem?
or arc you hypocrites?
Drug czar William Bennett- a
(Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
nicotine addict at last report - '!'fl'iter for Newpaper Enterprise
views legalization of drugs as Association)

Taxpayer watchdog; State Auditor responsibilities

~
~.

,.
•,.,·

'

recalled: ''They not only told ui
where the troopS would be Iandin&amp;
and the precise time.... But we wau .
over wlierc our conespondents and
camera positions were located. '
said, 'Ted Koppel and two creW\1
ane going to be up at the airport,
and Bill Redclccr and a crew is
going to be atop the priJon wall:'
And Pete said, 'No, I thinlc YOIJ
ought to move Rcdckcr, because.
there's llOI going to be any actioh
there lhll I know about.'''
·
On the btAich, CNN's wueapo~i­
dent Breau Sadler and ClmiCI'8WOIIIan Cindy Strand didn' t videota
the helpful Marine&gt; officer wro .
guided diem Ill lhc landing. CNN's
Jim Clancy said on ."leliable
Sources": " They were actnally
sllllding on lhc beach when a U.S.
Marine officer walked 'II' to diem
and said. 'You Wlllltto move down
to the Oilier end of the bay?' And,
lo, when they got there, that's
exact!)' where the vehicles came ·
through!.
.
So the Pentagon's prolCSII were
about as genuine as a pro WIGdel's
cries of feigned ~ain . But that
doesn't excuse TV s btain·li~ usc
of bright ~IS, which banifor!Ded
a mercy miSsion into a media circus nm arnot.
Now we can see the lessons we
noed IQ learn. Schwatztopf should
have Ieamed to target his stormin'
at his old Pentagon pals - in their
PR zealotry, !hey failed to protect
our !lOOpS by clamping a few sensible restrictions on the media (such
as: stay baclc, use infra-red ,1~
only). Also, nctwprk tclcVlllon s
off-camera execs· and on-camera
elites should have learned the
impemtives of ~If-policing - in
!heir out-of-control zealolry, lbcy
once again transformed TV coverage in~o a negative story that
lhrcatcncd to dwarf the story TV
was.covering.
.
And, linally, there is an overriding lesson for the rest of us to
learn: Even in the video age, we
can't aiWI!ys believe our own~·
(Martin Schram Is a syndicated writer for . N~wpaper Eaterprise AJSociationr

Put this in your pipe and smoke it

I have an idea that fits right in
wi!h !he Bush administration's wat
on drugs, would savr,. billions of
dollars and thousands of lives
every year, and would exP,O.se hyp- mated 370,000 people each yearoerites by the score.
more than 50 times as many as·
Let's outlaw tobacco.
those who die from illegal drugs.
PrettY. awesome; huh? There arc Seen from this ~rspective , · the
consultanJS in this capilal city who tobacco compantes are no better
would charge the government mil- than the Colombian drug CZIUII. As
lions for such a brilliant concept, The Nation magazine put it, "WhO
. - - - - - - : - - - - - - - ; . . . . . . - - - - - - - - - , · bull offer it absolutely free.
runs the worse criminal enterprise
Why would it be consonant with - the Medellin cartel or the Dukes
0'
the war on drugs? The logic is prct- of Durham?"
ty Simple. The active ingredient in .
How would such a scheme save
tobacco is nicotine, wliich is an · billions? For one thing, health-care
addictive ljrug. Indeed, th~ U.S. COSIS would probably drop dramatisurgeon gelleral published a rqx&gt;rt cally. For another, government
in 1988 whicb concluded that ruco- price support programs for tobacco
tine is as addictive as cocaine or - $279 million in 1988 according
heroin. It is compulsivel)' con- to ·anti-smoking activists-. would
sumed and alters moods. Users sof- cease. The taxpayers would also
fer withdrawal symptoms when have the satisfaction of lcnowing
I
they try to quit, and they.relapse the tobacco companies are no
about as regularly as heroin longer getting !heir annual $1 bil, abusers.
. ·
lion write·off for advertising
As lcillcrs, heroin and cocaine expenses.
don't even approach the effectiveAnd how would the hypocrites
ness of tobacco. Every year, 4,000 be Oushed out of their lairs? They
people die from the usc of heroin- would have to either renounce the
type drugs; 2,000 overdose on legal trade in the addictive drug
cocaine. But tobacco kills an esti- nicotine or announce suppon for

"'·

.

beyond your
· imSSinat\on''

.

ton for a wanime conference with Prcsident'Franldin D. Roosevelt.
In 1963, an official 30-day mourning period for President Kennedy
'•
ended.
.
In 1984, in a case !hat drew national attention, New York City resident
Bernhard Goetz shot four black youlhs on a Manhattan subway, claiming
they were about to rob him.
·
·
In 1989, Romania's hard-line president, Nicolac Ceausescu, was toppled from power in a popular uprising.
In 1990, 21 sailors returning froin shore leave to the aircraft carrier
·
By Tile Aisoclllted Press
.
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 22, the 357th day of 1992. 1bene arc nine days . U;s.S, Saratoga drowned when the Israeli ferry they were traveling on
capsized.
.
; left in !he year.
Ten
years
ago:
A
severe
storm
lashed Western states, resulting in
' Today's Hilh!ight in History:
powt'Z ouJages in parts of California, Arizona and Nevada, and forcing t)le
; On nee. 22, I944, during the World Wat n Battle of the Bulge, the Gerclosing of San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge for two hours because of
~ mans delil8nded the Slilmlder of erJCircled American troopS at Basto$DC,
' Belgium. Brigadier Gen. Anlhony C. McAuliffe reportedly rcphed: · high winds.
Five years ago: Tlie Reagan administration criticized Israel's handling
: "Nuts!" The Americans held out until additional U.S. forces ended !he
of
!he
Palestinian uprisin~ in the occupied territories, particularly the mili: siege fow days '-'·
Jary's
use of live ammurution against civilians.
•
• On thll date:
One
year
ago:
The
body
of
Lt.
Col.
William
R..
Higgins,
an
Amcricali
: . In 1775, a Continental naval fleet was organizcd .in the rebeUious
hosJage who had been murdered by his captors. was found dumped along
' Americsn colonia under the COIIiiDIIId of Ezek Hoptins.
·, In 1807, Congrea8 paned the Embargo Act, designed to force peace
a highway in Lebanon.
·
today's Birthdays: Lady Bird Johnson is 80. TV personality Gene
:bclwCCD Brillin IIIII France by cutting offall trade with Europe.
Rayburn is 1S. Former House Speaker Jim Wright is 70. Actress Barbara
• In !864, clurinJ the Qvil Wat: Union Gen. William T. Sherman aent a
:messaac to Plaldeol Lincoln tiom ~ saying, ·'I beg to present you • Billingsley is 70. Actor Hectcll' Elizondo is 56. Retired bue~IJ?laycr
Steve Carlton is 48. ABC News correspondent Diane Sawyer 1s 41.
:as a Chrillmu Pft the city of Savannah. '
.
• In 1894, French 11111y officer Allied Dreyfus was conVICted of treason
Retired baaeball player Steve Oarvey is 44. Singer Maurice Gibb is 43.
:in a court-martial that Uiggered worldwide chatges of anti-Semitism.
Singer Robin Gibb is 43. Golfer Jan Stephenson is 41.
Thought for Today: "Anger !Dalccs dull men witty, but it keeps them
· :(Dreyfus was ultimatcly vindicated.)
·
"·' In 1941, British Prime Minist,cr Winston Churchill arrived in WI!Shing- .poor." - Aaributed to Queen Elrza!M:Jh I of England (1533-1603).

)Today in history .

••

•
in Northern Rockies; rain In
Southeast
win

By Tile A-lated Preu
,_, _ _~~ ,
........... aww-~ 'Mill t sec a
~10 Cbriltmal,,hul ~·11 get a

IICH.

frilid-. bo r • • aid:
'Tbe N81iCIIIII Wellhllr Service
sara the ooLiept
I
F~dar.
thts HUOD are e Y on n y,
1111Dpcr81111Giik

It was hardly Normandy, nor
Iwo Jiina.ID'G•wlalralllll But the
U.S. landing at MopdUhu is nilw
forever cm6Iazoned in history as a video-ase Citarse of the Light

ROBEitT L WINGETT .

Dear Editor,

r.Dee. 23
far

the Pentagon seen· the light?

B~
e lhinlc we saw it all: Ameri-

• 0

,

S~ow

1.' j · ;t \ill I

Wetnt

'

.

.

Q t 11 ( I

Pomeroy

r

ties, townships , and school districts. These audits arc conducted
to be certain !hat each of these entities arc properly completing tax
infOI'IIlllbOII and Jhat !hey arc paying !heir fair share of taxes. During
lhc fiSCal year which ended on Jwie
30, 1992, the State AudiiOr's office
released 2,7IS audit reports which
c011taincd 500 findings for recovery
of $4.6 miUion.
The State Auditor has the
~sibility of being the taxpayers watchdog for waste in state
and local government One example of lhc Auditor lighting to save
taxpayers' dollars arc !he efforts of
his office to combat the pioblern of
welfare fraud in our stare.
In 1987, House Bill 242 was
enacted to give the Slate Auditor's
office the authority to usc state
income .IIX data to·assist in catching we! fare ~rs. Prior to the
enactment of this bill, the Ohio
Department of
Services had
no way of de!etmining If a welfare
recipient was accuratelY reporting
his or her income. Now, lite State
Auditor can use· state income tax
information to determine whether
or oot welflrc rccipiCIIIII arc reporting income fran a new )&lt;lb.
·

Human

Another program aQied by !he
State Auditor to prevent welfare
fraud is the Ohio Task Force on
Wclfi!'C Fraud. The soals. of th.c

Taslc Force arc to prevent, inves4gatc, and prosecute fraudUlent welfare claims. The Task Force is
composed of federal, state, and
local wclfarc &amp;gerJCics. Each county can ·choose to invite the Task
Force into the county to assist in
lhe investigation of welfare fraud
cases. Since 1990, the Stale Anditor has completed investigations iit
II counties wjth more than 40j)
cases of welfare fraud uncovered. ·
These cases involved $4.2 mjllioit
and have been referred to th!l
appropriate local authorities for
prosecution.
.
The State Auditor has also been
a watchdog for Jaxpayers by ~
toring the usc of state vehicleS:.
Recently, a decision was made 19
~low .tbe Dm_crors of state agen~
. ctes to usc !heir state-owned vehi•
clcs to attend political activitieS
and fund raisers. This is a reversal
of a long-standing policy which
does not allow state vehicles to bel
used for a political purpose. Th!l
SIBIC Auditor has made a commitJ
ment to light this decision so that
our tax doOars arc 1101 UBed to ~
port political activity. The State'
Auditor serves an important role by:
ensurtna ttiat the public monies are'
safe and being used appopialely. :
As always please feel free to;
call or write me, Statc ~Jan·
Mic~acl Long, if you have-tny;
quesnons or comments about these:
or any other issues my number Is '
(614)-466-8156, and my addrass is ·
the Statehouse, Columbus;' Ohio, ,
43215.
·'·

I

with rcadinsa ~~~ the low teens.
· Snow could amved belatcdly on

IUulllcl!42" I•

The Dally SenUnel Page 3

MddiiPOrt. Ohio

~.

The: tc';f!rature plunge ..
besin on ednclday, wben the
~' s lows arc llkdy to be the
day's hips, fllRICUia1 ald.
~ record-hl&amp;h IIIDpcriiWe for
this c1aeD M !be CcWnbua n 'rtter
station wu 63 desrcea in 1941
while the record loW- 17 below
zao in 1989. Sunaet tonight will be
at 5: 10 p.m. and lllllrisc Wcdnca.

A~early
=l'hilll

~tile ......

cold
down from
Canada
li&amp;lillliOW
on the
wdoern
today. Rain
soaked much or Texas and tbe

Sm* L
The powerful blast of arctic air
was upcctlld 10 awccp through the
nordoern Pllins by late today.

66 e,asesprocessed by Judge O'Brien

!Nil

$23 and costs; Kiitliy"L. liluc,
Dublin, speed, $21 and costs;
casca last we&amp;
Robin A. Walters, Lchi&amp;fi Acres,
F'mcd- Sue SimJlllOD, Mid- Fla., $21 and COilS, speed.
dlcporl, . . belt violatim, $2S and
DaX J. Bllltc, Pomeroy, hlllllinl
costs; Mart E. Llaurc, Stockport, · without permit. $2S and COilS; Jacl:
speed, $26 and costs; Roberta K. A. Bolep, New Martinsville,
Yoho, Columbus, speed, S:W and W.Va., possessing a deer not
cosjl; Danya L. Glioen • .Middle- tagged, $4' and coats; Brenda L.
port. aea1 bel violaliOn, costs only; Vafet~tinc, Parkersburg, w. va.,
Chriatopber L Rathburn, Oallipo- speed, $27 and costs; Tracey L.
lis, speed, $23 11111 aJfll8; Daniel E. aravcs. McAnhur. speed, s24 11111
Norm•. A!bcns, scat belt viola- COSJS; John M. Boyle, New Lcxing· tion, .costa ~~~ Rudolph ton, ~ $21 and costs; Rodney
Malkovic, Seven · , after killing J. Brewer, Mt. Gilead, failure to
a deer, failed to deliver aaid deer to control, $25 and costs; Alban R.
a deer checlcing statiOn for final Curtis, Pomeroy, speed, $2S and
tagging by 1iOOII following the day costs; Teresa R. Tillis, Pomeroy,
of harvest, costs only; Andrew L. speeding, $21 and c:osts; Tina R.
Simmons, Colwnblls, seat belt vio- Newlun-Cowdery, Racine, DO op:r!Ilion, $2S and. costs; Andrew C. ator's license, three days In Jail,
Bulacb, Hamilton, speed, $20 and suspended, $75 fine, suspended to
costs; Jason M. Wailace, Jackson, $50, costs, c:ourt finds dcfcnda!lt
IIJ)Ccd, $24 and costs; Ronald E. has obtained a valid operator's
S'cldomridgc, Vienna, W.Va. , license; Clifford Smith, Jr., Racine,
speed, $24 and COSJS; Erin G. Bor- DO valid operator's license. $75 and
llmd, Powell, speed, $22 and costs; costs, one year probation, three
John Imboden, Pomeroy, speed, days in jail, suspended with valid
$23 and costs· Richird M. Houck operator's license wilhin 60 days,
Crown City,
$20 and
fiiled to display valid registration,
Arnold R. Parsons Pomeroy seat $10 and costs; Karen Hysell,
belt violation, $2S ~costs. '
Racine, DUI, 10 days in jail, susSue A. Sim,PSon, Middleport, pended to three, $350 and costs,
seat belt violation, S2S and costs; operator's license suspe~ for 90
John S. Thomas, Middleport, days, one year proba~ton, upo~
speed, $21 and costs; Timothy enrollment and complenon of ResiSchulcr, Silver Springs, speeding, dential Tr~en~ Pro~, $150
$28 and costs; Kenneth White of fine and Jill blnc will be susMiddleport, failure 111 secure a dan~ pendcd; Jcncua ~am. Middlegerous ordinance, 90 days in jail, pon, scat belt VIOlabC?n• $10 and
suspended $100 and costs one costs; Donald M. Retch, Chcsayear probation; Martha F. Poole, pealcc, speed, $22 and costs, scat
Pomeroy, speed, $22 and costs; beltviolation,$25andcostS.
.
Bryan T. Hoffman Middleport
William E. Taylor, Chesap'alce,
scat belt violation, S2S and costs; scat belt violation, $25 and costs;
Sandy Chappell, Pomeroy, seat belt Rhonda G. McGrath, Long Bottom,
violation; $25 and costs; Floyd scat belt violation, $25 ~ cosJS;
Pullins, Lon~:m, failure to Terry Sharp, Reedsville, scat belt
display valid ·
plale, $10 and violation, $10 and costs; ~tty. D.
costs· Laraine Sloane Newsome Boyd Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
Syra~use, speed, $29 and costs; $10 ~nd costs; Jose\)h A_. Boyd,
Thomas M. Dunt, SL Paris, failure Pomeroy, scat belt ·v!OlaUon, $10
to CDIIIn&gt;l, $15 and costs; Craig R. and c:osts; Edward Milliron. MidHendershot, Parkersburg, W.Va., dleport, dischargins firearm on
speed, $23 and costs; Steven E. highway, five days in jail, suspend·
Kovach,
New Marshfield, speed, cd, costS, one year probation; Marte
.
. - Meigs' County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 66

Weather
' Tonight, variable cloudiDCis
TIIID'IIIaJ tlirOuP SalUda,-:
Thursday, fair and cold. except
~ with a chance of showeri. Low
scattercd'
' Ourries northeast. Mornncar 40. o....q of niin SO paa~~L
Wednesday, considerable cloildi~ ins highs in the 20s with neat
. ness wilh a slight chance of flur- steady or falling temperatures
ries. Breezy. A morning high in the through the day. Friday. fair. Lows
~!JI: 40s, wilh the tcmperatbl'e 10-15. Highs 20-25. Saturday, a
·.
, in the aftea110011. 0umcc of ·chance of snow. Lows in the teens
·snow 30 pcn:enL
·
and highs 30-35.
.

:

----Area deaths-infant is survived three brothers,
James Andrew Jones, Charles
Michael Jones IIIII Roben Franlclin
Washington Jones; several aunts,
UIICles. nieces and
· He wa IJtCCcdcd m death by his
palcmll anillllllt:IFial grandparents.
Graveside services will be
Wedneday at 11 a.m. at Roclc
Springs Cemelely with Rev. Odell
officiating.
EwtnJ Funeral Home is handling the amngemtnts.

·Clarence G. Hammer

...,s..

· Clarence G. (Mike) Hammer.
69. 2087 Rochelle Place. Columbus, died early Monday, Dec. 21,
1992, at Univerai!Y llospilals following a two wed!: illness
. Before retirins, Mr. Hammer
was employed with The Columbus
·.Dispall:h for a numb« of years.. He
was a membtz of ICvcral Malonic
Orders. Over the yean, he wu a
.frequent Pomeroy visitor.
Among his survivors arc his
wife, Betty Hoeflich Hammer; a
cB!ghttr and son-in-law, Kimberly
and ne.ia Stout, Columbus, and
live xrandchilclren, all of &lt;;olumbus; Rc - pm:eded in death by a
cBightcF, Lou Ann Jones;
setvices will be held at 2 p.m.
Wedncsday at the Evans Funeral
fiomc, 41?1- l,.ivi.n1ston Ave.,
Columbus.. Callln« hours are fJOm
6 to 8 Tuesday. Burial will be in
Columbus.
.

Manier

Floyd
.. G. Wessel
Floyd G. Wessel, 102, New
Hartford, Iowa, formerly of the
Nease Scalemcnt in Meigs County,
died Sunday, Dec. 20. 1~ at the.
Home Hea1lh Ceatcr. He was well
lalo""' as a prosperous and progrcsalvc farmer. He- a cousm of
ihc lale Vemon NCISCI
Mr. WGSel is IUI'vived by a son
and daughter-in-law, Dwane imd
Thelma W-1; a daughter, J Lodae. umaa. ru.; several grandchildren and grcat-grandchildrco.
Mr. Wessel was preceded in
death by his wife, Agnes, and a son
and daiJPier.
Bmial for Mr. Wessel will be in
the family plot in New Hartford,
Iowa.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to his church in care
of his son, Dwanc Wessel, New
Hartford, Iowa, 50660.

Jessie
Jones
.

.· Jessie Tyler Jonesj ::::&amp;

infant of James Andrew

·

and Shirley Jones, died Sunday,
Dec. 70, 1992 II Clbell Huntington
Hospilal in Hudington, W.VL
· thc1infant was born Dec. 19,
-1992 in HumiJI&amp;ton, W.VL
·
. Besides his pltCIIlS. wbo reside
in West Columbia, W.Va. , the

(Continued fr011 A·l)

:Donald L. Lindeman...

eventually found, convi~ted and
senrcnccd.
Story read from· a statement of
fact outlining the sequence of
events relating to Lawrence's
dcalh. Acconling to Story, Lindeman, who had recently joined the
"Jokers" motorcycle club, had
negoriMC!cl lhc pun:11ase of a motorim~
cycle fJOm Donald Yost, and had
Lindeman's attorney, Public ancmpted to 9Cil a clog to raise the
Defender Mike Westfill of Athens, money. At around the time
outlined the results of a psycllolog- · Lawrence was found wounded in
ica1 Study d. the defendant. which his store, Lindeman came back to
found dill early familial difllculties Y01t wilh !be money necessary to
and drug and alcohol usc could purchase the motorcycle. A
. have contributed to the offense. weapon found at Lindeman's rcsi·westfall also Dllintains that Linde- dcnce was determined by ballistics
. ' man was 1101 the primary offender, cxpens 10 have been the gun which
·. and concluded his tcmarks by say- killcd Lawrence.
. ing !hat he hopes the murderer is · . , An eyewitness reportedly heard
.
· ·
Lmdeman say !hat he "would just
• rob a sllli'C" to raise !be money necessary for the purchase.
'I'Le Dlily Set•••~
Lawrence's wallet was later
CWI'II~
'
I retrieved from a well at Linde'
P'MS
eft
....... I
c..t ..:
• man's home, but Story said yesterOllie
... Ollie "'!!or • " I!~ • day that officials were unsure of
c
a
1:'1......~ wbo placed !be wallet there.
~~
Linclemin was remanded to the
........
a&amp; p
., CIIID.
cUSIDdy of the Meigs County Sherl l l l . t t - ..1
...............
.iff's Dcpabllielll and will be trans~ t71t;a s &amp; t
r, 1 ported to prison. He was jlivcn
!Jo
I wit, 'Ill
,._,
credit for 179 days scrved m the
-~-'lftl0011.
70 years.
· Story noted that Lawrence's
family, members d. which were
preaent in the courtroom. CODCIXl'Cd
with the agrce!llent, ~lthoug~ a
~for the faQly, !be VICum's brother, Ciarcacc Lawrence
of Plxtland. said he felt the "maximum aeniCDCC allowed" should be

.

:=-:,,..:::tu

r

=dll...--...
I

,'£'

.

si-J.

costs;

.

Ex-wife accused of
murder~ for-hire attempt
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- A
woman accused of offering an
undercover sheriff's detective
money to have her former husband
lrilled has beellltleased on bond.
Penelope Haubach of Austin,
Ind.,.appcarcd at a detention hearin~ Monday before U.S. Magistrate
Mtchael Mcrz and was released
after siC:l for an unsecured
$10,000
.
Merz saicl fcdcral prosccuiors
withdrew !heir 1IICllion to have Ms.
Haubach detained pending trial if
she agreed to a set of conditions,
includinl! staying away from the
alleged VICtim and receiving Jrcatment for an addiction to prescription dru
Ms..
bas been charged
with one count of llavcling in interstate COII11I1CICe with the intent !hat

f:iubach
0

Stocks
Am Elc Power.... :.............. .32 SIB
Ashland 00........................27

AT&amp;:T.................................50 1/4
Bank One...........................50 3/4

Bob Evans ........................ .18 1/2
Olannin&amp; Shop..................l7 S/8

City Hokling. ..•......•....•••..•.~21
Federal Moaul. ................... l6 318
()()oct)'OII' nR ..................6S
Key Cellturiola ................... 21 1/2,
Lalds Elld...........................27 118
Umitecllllc ..,.................... 27 3/4
.28 3/4
Rax . ..................3(32
Relit~
lric................18 7/8
RobbiJisclM
..•••• _ ..." ••17 1/2
Shcltcy's ~ .........
3/4
Slat B8lllt ..............." ..........35 114
Wendy Int'I........................ I3 1/8
W~lncl. •••.•...••••••. 23.
Stock reporta are tile 10:30
LED, q. . . pnmded lliJ Blot,
Ellil ud LoewJ fl (MB!polil,

Ma. . . . . .

H OOUUH0022

COUJIIy jaiL

I'Oift'IIM'rD:
Tllo
:-&amp;..,h¥
I, -~ ..
I......,..-.
.
IUMCaiP'nONUID
.,Oonlor_...._._,
. Qoo - . . ... - ..... - .. - ...................

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..........
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fllaa ,.

th

· -. ............. _,,,,,_, .....

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-u:

IINOL&amp;ODPI'

Dran, ......:- ····· - --·--..... _.. Ceall

..........

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•11

:
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-.a.M ........ .., ,. ' .
Ne I ... II

:J:.•J.c..
rz: . .
_ _ _ _ ..;__. l.U
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- , ......,.................................
a-.
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.-...

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IIIWoolto.;..- - - - -

~ftonday

1

n·

9-4-4

Pick 3 Nutilhen
.

(nine, four, fow)
Pick4N-hen

0-9-7-5
(zero, nine, sevcn,live)

,.

The Followi~ Area Financial
IMtitutions ·Will Not Be Open on
S~turday, D~cember 26th, in .·
Order to Enjoy the Holiday

Slate Auto's already

lowpremium5canbe

•

redi iOid even more by
;r..,inQ bolt ycu car
.aiid llome'with the
. Al*)Companies.

Happy Holidays!

s...-

+R:

let us tel you just
how much your savings

can be.

949·2210

..... .,..,., ....
'•

news

Lottery

-One.-NA·:.
-FDIC ...
. .·

tO

~e

· Riggs responds...

Whatever.ftt0ke8.
.·
.
.
'

'*

EMS receives six ·.
calls for

··' - :'

II

"

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dec. :U dlllcharges - Tamara
Bachner, Mrs. Johnny Ohlinger and
daughter, Florence Figgins, Barbara Bowling, R9nald Marcum,
Helena Feustel, Audrey Ball, Donald Boggs, Harold Queen, James
White, Robert Pratt, Allie Holley,
Betty Harmon, Kenneth Cadc, Violet Werry, Rcva Evans, Franklin
Giles, Bmma Edmunds, James
Bhinton, Judy Hutchinson and
Edna Taylor.
Dec. 21 births - Mr. and Mrs. .
Mitchell Coleman , son, Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Farney •
daughJet, Thurman.

Meigs announcementS

rem

·- .
BANKEDIIE.

•• ' "

G

Hospital news

.

rifled

TODAYI
992·2124

0.. -......_ ...., _ _ _ ,, _ _. . .,. ,.

~·r.

her husband, Dale Haubach of
Medway, be kiilcd.
She is accused of offering to pay
an undercover sheriff's detective
$2,000 to have Haubach. lcillcd.
The indictment allcges !hat Ms..
Haubach traveled from Indiana to
Ohio on Nov. 18 and made a partial
payment to the deputy. She met
wilh !he deputy agam on Dec. 3 to
discuss plans and malcc another
partial payment, the indictment
alleges.
·

Suow - forecast today for JIF ·
northern Roclcies, the northcm.
Plains and ea1tera Wu hinatriP
Sllte. FluniG al8o were cxpcctlld lb
northero Maine. Showers wee
expected in the Northwest, Texas
and parts of !be Soottheelt
:
Snow fcll early today in Moll·
lana, including HelenL
.

C........_ Eve lEI vice let :
A Christmas Eve service at
E. Smith, Oailipolii. hunting with- Bradbury Church of a.ist will
out apocial deer permit, $25 and presented by the young adult c:Jas
COlli; Deborah S. Ebcll, Columbus, on Thur~y at 6~m . Featurca
,
' ludc
Hoiy N~
speed, $21 and COlts; RefJDI solos will me
by
Heather
Finlaw;
"It
Came
pon
Eakin~, Pomeroy, . . bell VIOlation, S2S and costa; J::Jc Jo the Midnight Clear" by Pat~i
Thomu, Middleport, di
crly Arnold; "0 Liale Town of BethlOcondrrt. $25 IIIII COlli; J11011 Not- hcm" by Kristi Riffle; and "Silelit
Night" by Tina Hoskins. Ttrp
til~PUD. Lon&amp; Boaom. DO hunting
Christmas
story and scripbnB will
licenle, $25 fine, IUIJICIIded. to~~~;
be
by
John
Arnold, Matt Riffli,
DO special deer permit, $50 line,
Ken
VanMatre
and Joey Snydc:t.
..
tom. COIIlS..
The
public
is
invited.
ladra Call, Gallipolis, n belt
Trulees to meet
violation, $25 and costs.; Ernest
The
Scipio
Township Trustees
Cross, J.angsvillc, domestic viowill
hold
their
last rcgillar meeting .
1.C111ce, $50 and CIOIIS, six montbs in
for
1992
on
MOflday
at 6:30p.m. at
jail, IUSJICIIdcd 10 time leiVcd, two
!he
Pageville
Townhall.
probatiorl, restraining order
tssucd; Buddy Hamptoll, Rutland,
Ratlalld tniiCees lo - •
The Rutland ToWII4hip Trusttlts
reckless operation, costs only, ·left
~center,~ IIIII COlli; Roben ~· will meet in special session·
Rifftc, Racine, -'t. 10 days w Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the Rutjail, ,concurrent widiiCDtence ~ land F'U'C SJation to c:onduct end.ofservmg, cosJS; Pm1st Qualls. h;fid- lhe-year 11'1Sineas
Trustees to meet
dlcport, transported a fircsrm m a
The
Lebanon Township
moror vdlicle, $1Cl0 and costs, 90 .
Trustees
will
meet MIJiday II 7:30
days in jail, suspended. two years
p.m.
at
the
township
building.
probation, fircanit forfeited to the
State of Ohio; James Bryant,·
Langsville, fleeing, $50 and costs,
five days in jail, suspended, six
months in j~il, su~ndcd, six
assistan~
months pmbllion; R
YH.~ley&gt; Pomeroy, ~ess opcrauon,
· Units of the Meigs Coun.iy
$50andcosts,rcsiJ!iDf~SlOO Emergency Medical Services
and COI!ts, 10 days m jail, suspcrid- responded to six caiis for asaislallt:e
r:d to bmc served, one year proba- on Monday and early Tuesdily
bOD.
Forfeiting ~ds wm~: ~aid
at 10:20 a.m.
Behm, Sc~ Hills, after ldllinJ a Pomeroy unil was called 10 Li~
deer, failed to deHver to checlcing Lane for Edward Timmons wHo
station for litta1 tagging by ~ was taken to Veterans Memorial
the foUowhlg d~y. $3Si Damei Hospital.
Behm, Seve11 Htlls, Oh1o, after
At 10:26 a.m. the Racine unit
~ a deer, failed to deliver to went to Yellow B usb Road for
checkinl station for. final tagging . Louise Stewart who .was transportby noon the followmg day, $3,5; ed to Holzer Medical Center.
Christooher Burke. Nevada. Oluo,
The Rutland unit, at 1:15 p.m.,
speed, $65; ~Pamer, Pomeroy, responded to Salem Street for
seat belt violation, $60; Gre~ory Henry Cadc who was also ta1cen ~
~. Johnsfuwn, ,scat belt VIola- Holzer.
·
uon, $40; Davtd Leadbetter,
At 2:20 p.m. the Middleport llli'it
Logan, speed, $85.
went to Ash Street for Robert
McDaniel. He was ta1cen to Holzer.
•·
The Rutland unit went to l'liCe
Strong Road at 10:51 p.m. Gilbe,n
Fi!Zwaa was transported to Holi•
er.
'·
.(Coatlnued from A· I)
This morning (Tuesday) at 6:~~
any chance of survival, Carson a.m. the.Syracuse unit went to
wrote, "il is true that Mr. Will was • Balcer RQIId for Barbara ~tt. Sire
fatally mjurcd when S1ruc1c by the was taken to Vetcnms.
.
truck Jason Riggs was operating.
However, it was the opinion of the
:*nl
Franklin County C01'011Cl'i Office
OSpuu.
!hat he eidler died instantaneously
VETERANS MEMORIAL
or wilhin moments of the ilnpact.
Monday
Admissions - None.
These findings· ~ Franlclin
Monday
Discharges - Larty
County Corooer's
were conSarah
McDowell and
Cummins,
sistent·with an absence of pulse, as
determined when Riggs went to the Gerald Douglas.
back of his truck to aid Mr. Will
within minutes of the collision.n
Riggs was scnt.enccd by Crow to
a term of live to ten years. He is
now imprisoned in the Southeast
Coneclionallnsti!UlC. According to
an affidavit filed by Carson with
the latest motion, his behavior
while in prison has been cxcmP.Iary, noting !hat it was an "incredible accomdlishment" that RiS~~s
has serve over 28 months m
prison without even a minor infraction ci1ation.

· from

IlL,

ill

81

day 117:51 Lm.

••

�•

T•O•

Pocu•ot

4 The Dally sentinel

·n

llddlepOI't. Ohio

Sports

•• diJ, Decemb8r 22, 1H2.

'Salisbury Elementary presents. ~~~!~rold,E~y~~y·plains about c~~~~k_:s.....
·annual Christmas .play
;;..:";;;~_..1:-7 ::-1\la Aim
lra"r::YJ:w:rp;~pl~:
""'•'-! ..-.
L d
SalisburY Elementary presented
its
Olri~ play Monday
at7 p.m.
.
The play .:ted out ChriStmas at
the North Pole· where St. Nick
holds a big Christmas kick-off to
celebrale the beginning of ~ seas
son. The highlight of the his celes
bration is the annual snowflake

.-nuaJ

contest
Special recognition is given to
the snowflakes 11 the Nonh Pole
because evCl)'thing there runs on
snow power. Thus, when SL Nick's
snow machine hu a meltsdown,
Christmas, itself, is jeopardized.
The celebration lllds as qu::,.;
it started as there is really
·
to celebrale any 111CR unless I solus

lion is found. St. Nict, hln!aetf, hal
but it fa1la *-t ~.:con
'J1iea, I certaia IIIOWflake JIIIMd
Platy, wlto is 'flell.bowll for flrz
out Ideal, sugesll oae Jut (and
rather slim) poaibility. No one

I pia

:::'s~~=li!J7.~~

~·arm-.~-=-~
to try her plan. Like I 1nJe Owist·

mas miral;lo, Ftalt)'' a plan worts.
St. N'JCit is off IIIII Chriltmu Is on.
Ftalty Is a hero and ai.O teaches
everyone an importatlt lesson as
well.
.
Finl pade reindeer- played
by JCRIIIy Blmb, Nalban Bricltlel.
Nicolo BUidter. lea CniJias, Wes·
ley Fields, Jamie Higbam, Darin
Horn, Stacy H)ICII, AI!JIIIdl Kinl,
Joaeplt Manltall, Pamela Martin,
Tia l&gt;ntt, Jenny PrOffitt, Joshua
Ramey, Joshua Rllhbum, Jessica
Roller, Justin Starrett, Jo~:::,;
Jordan SIDUS, Jamie SIDYei. .
Stumbo.
Se!:ond pade reindeer- pors
:a:d by Marc Barr, Lindsay
, Dawna Brumfield, Jonathan
Diddle, Richie Dill, Tirzah Dods
son, Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin,
Melody Felts, Albley F'telds, Justin
Gilltey, Jon Halar, Chris Haning,
Bubby Haye, Megban Haynes,
Timmy Hubbard, Joshua King,
Shawna Manley, Jennifer Morgan,
Isaiah Riflle, 'lfeathu Riflle, Jason
~oaler llld Lois SliD.
cbaraden rro. tile pla7. at
1bird ~elves were pla'Jed
. eveaing, are: atoryteUer,
Salisbury Elementary, presented
by
Bobbte Burson, Zack Davis,
Cbrisl)' Pllalb!, elves, Amy Frecker,
Whaley, ud storpener,
Anthony Dottfer1 CJ. Estep, Aahs
Shawn White. Second row: storyteller, Marjorie Halar, snoWII8ke,
Jey Hoschar, JUSiiJI Hoschar, Addie
Ashley Rupe, saorytellen, Alula Story, Marlaa Whaley, Beverly Burs
Hubbard, J~h Martin, Christos
dette and Kim Peavler. T•lrd row, Jingles, Meredith i1elts,
pber
Neece. Mindy O'Dell. Amber
snowflakes, Becky CoUtu, Ta•ra O'Dell, Lacy BankS, Mel_lssa
hoffiu,
Micbellc R.iftlC. Elizabeth
Werry and storyteller, CortDeJ Scarberry. Back row, storyteller,
RusseU,
Clay Russell, Cindy Six,
Tanya DiD, -nHa, Becky Karr, Morpn Matlaews, Trk:la Davis
Marc Smith, Allison Story, JacOb
· aitd St. Nkk, J.T.
e1• Md Jenmlala JeDtley.
Wilson, John Withclell.
Fourth grade elves were
Michael ~rwnlielcl, Amy Frecker.
Sandi Gilkey, Brandy Graham,
Sherry Haye, Abby Hubbard,
·Yancey Huftter, •Grace Kitchen,
Leah Lonca, William Souls by,
Euva Stumbo, Heather Whaley.
Fifth grade snowflakes were
Becky Karr, Morgan ,Mathews,
Ashley Rlipc, Kriaty Six.
. Fifth and sixth grade storytellers
were Beverly Burdette, Leeann
Dill, Marjorie Hatar, Michelle
King, Kim Peavley, Christy Pltalin,
Brooke Singleton, Anna Story,
1 Marissa Whaley, Shawn White,
Melinda Clarlt, Tanya Dill, SheUy
Pavich, Cortney Scatbetry, Abby
Wilson.
. .
.
.
Fifth and siXth grade elveS were
Daniel Hysell, Paul Williams,
BobbyRupe.
Jeremiah Bentley and ·J,T.
H~mphrcys played !he pan of St.
N1clt.
Meredith Felts porttayed Jins
gles.
.
Speaking
sixth
grade
snowflakes were l,.acy Banks,
Beclty Collins, Tricia Davis, Tamra
O'DeU and Meliass Werry.
: Christmas specials abound in pares for the 1992 holiday season.
tile week to come as ldevision pre·
One holiday broadcast is the
Walt Disney World's live broad·
cast on Christmas Day of "Mick• ·
ey 's Vcry Merry Christmas
Parade" scheduled to air on ABC at
Rodney Smith of Pomeroy has
10 a.m. The twOshour special feaT
been
employed at the 7aJeslti Civil?
tures such celebrities as1 Ed McMas
ian
Con~rvation
Camp located in
bon, John Davidson. Joan Lunden,
Vinton
CountY..
Regis Philbin and Betty White. A
The Civilian Conservation
special fwure of this presentation
Corps
offer onzthesjob ll'lining for
will include a performance by
18s24
year old men and women.
Bruce Wolfe, Racine, in the parade
as a riverboat dancer. He wiD be Corps memben"Fllll OIII,JOilUDity
wearing a green, white and gold 10 gain work experieace m
tuxedOstype costume. He also pel's areas while oerfolmina much
formed in the Splash Mountain ed conservltiOD' woik. The corps
Dedication Ceremony Show which mm~bers are ll1licllhe Fedelll minis
will also be aired sometime during mum wage. A Jlei'IOII hired for up
the presentation of the parade. In to 1,2 months can be promoted
twice, receiving a pay raise with
this segment Wolfe will be located
on the side of the "mountain atttac· each promotion. They aro also
.BRUCE WOLFE •
tion .. itself.
aUowed to appl~ for ID extatsion.

a-••

Wolfe performing ~n broadcast

Smith employed
at Zaleski CCC

oace a •lmed
llld pol&gt;mkeal ' ti liN a e,
1111 llllill 10 1111iCaJ1J 6ued by
llrir mae. dill 111e ce ao Jollier
- . , llldle or IDed llenelf. Slle Ia
iacc-•f I 111111 CIIIIOlJecupize 111C
owa ...... l C11e b berOWII)' clay.
wok 11111 ia lllldal
lilnltiana 1 - . lUCia com_.IJ
u, "I c:ait•t remember anything.
I think 1'!11 pttlna Alzhelnoer's."
Thla Ia UMIIy followed by lll&amp;flter
. and 111CR jokca I!Joul ~
-1101:1'0! widl dill cnJel illllea. I
don't Wldeallliid bow people can be
10 m-mve. WllliD my ooqsjn wu
ltricba wilh 11nut c:ancer, people
clidll'tllua1awlalbe'Jielmada1Jciut
iL Mocking cbm't occur whliu a
pen~~ baa helrt llllll:k or ..mn
a llnlb. Why should Alzbelmtts
be difrcrenl?
Alzheimer's is the cruelest of
diseaa. It fon:es families to wild!
helplealyu loved onculowty drift
outoflaCII. Sofar,aotrearmentor
cure is available. The hurt 111d
nain 1s funber ~....._.. by the
!Men.idvil)' of~ make
jokea about dill dreadful diseue
that is tilling my mother.
AnD. p1eue urge everyone who
rtada your column to be morutasitive to lhe impact of Alzlleimer's.
Help them understand thll jokes
about this bosribte illness are not
tunny. They are cruel.
NO
NAMI!,NOCfiY,Pl..EASE,IAM

Milly-..

55

. '•

-.o;com11unlty Calendar items
:"•"'

~ two days

before an event
Uil tile daJ of that evenL Items
f!iatt lie recehotcl weD 1a advance
hJ-re pabllcatlon In the cals
eadar.
,•

TUESDAY
;. BRADBURY • Bradford
CJJwch of Christ, comer of Route
i24 and Bradbury Road, will pres
siOt a live nativity scene on Tuesdty and Wednesday from 7s9 p:m.
riiJhtly.
:.:
WEDNESDAY
; :MIDDLEPORT s Youth proAt!~ at Hope Baptillt Church will
~·WednesdaY at 7 p.m.
·: RACINE s Racine United
fllethodilt Church Choir will pre·
M(lt lhe cantata, '"Bcdtlehem Jo(
o6- Wednesday • 7:30 p.m. Public
1

.

iiMteeL ,
'

;· RACINE • Racine F'lrst Baptist
Cbwch children will be pn:senting
NThe Gifts of Christmas" on
Wednesd•y at 7 _p.m. under the
direction of Debt Bradford. Tho
P,ublic is invited.

.

.

;
T,HURSDAY
• POMEROY · A Christmas Eve
cMdlelight service will be held at
St. John Lutheran Church , Pine

Grove Road, on Thursday at 8 p.m.
Candlelight services will be held at
St. Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy at 11 p.m. The public iS
invited to both services.

BRADBURY s Christmas Eve
services, Bradbury Church of
Christ, Thursday at 6 p.m. Public
invited.
STIVERSVILLE s Stiversville
Word of Faith Church will not have
services Christmas Eve.

Winnen of the Chrislmas lights
ing contest in Rudand have been
llllJIOUIICed:
.
In the overaU religious category
Davis Wiseman won first place;
Joan May, second; and Margaret
Edwards,~

NEW YORK (AP) - Woody
Allen says a oJideotape in whiCh his
adopted daughter supposedly
accuses him of molesttng her is
itself chikl abuse.
Allen said Monday through a
spokeswoman that Mia Fanow, his
former· lover, ·committed the
"worst kind of child abuse" ~Y

·

ITRinin~r
--:..-"!

oamp.

Castllas lost his starting nqse
tacltle job in Atlanta, but now plAys
left tackle in the Cowboys 4s3
defense.
"For me this is really gratifying
... coming btclt and hcariiig all thC
' boos in the stands, you know, peos
ple hate me," he said. "'So I just
like the way the scenario ended.
"I could never wear a shirt lib
this and play
in Atlanta."' be
said, holding 1;1{1 a lnnd new item
proclaiming hts team's division
championship. "'No animosity or
anything, but as long as Jerry
Glanville'1 the coach, it will be the
same old thing."
To most of the Cowboys, it defis
nitcly was a new thing.
They started in 1989 under
coach Jimmy Johnson with a ls15

please

Winning in the secular (nons
religious) category were David
HyseU,f~Judy~ny.~

and Keith Kcruledy' third.

Decorated doorway winners
were Nate Wise, first; Ioanie
Collins, second; arid Marjorie

here

deputies 10 be melted and molded :
for deaf projects.
Names were drawn for the
grange exchange: Harrisonville
will visit Hemloclt; Star to Racine; .
Rock Springs to Harrisonville;
Hemlock. tci Star; Racine to Rock
Springs.
. The literary program was pres
sented on Thanltsgiving by Rosalie
Story, lecturer. "Land of Plenty"
was by Barllara Fry; "F"trst Thanbs
giving" by Opal Dyer. Wrapped
boxes handed around to guess the
contents .was won by Pauline
Alkina and Maxine Dyer. Linda
Montgomery read "Over lhe River
and Through the Woods" and "My
Thanks Come Easy." Naomi Reed
read "Spirit of Thankfulness; Wests
ina Crabtree read "Prayer of
Thanltsgiving." Virginia Carson
read ''Why Worry."
~ine Grange served refresh :
ments at the close of the meeting.
·The next meeting will be Jan. 8
with Roclc Springs as host.

seaaon. They-went tO 7-9 I year ·
later, tben made·the playoffs at Us
S. Now, they are 1~3 and division
champions with a game remainins
Sunday apinst lhe Chicaao ~·
"We.'ve cane along way IIUICC
that season (1989)," said Troy
Ailarum who completed 18 of 21
paasos for 239 yards and three
touchdowns. "Winning the East
was absolutely a gqal of ours and
drawing the bye - it's one less
game we have to play."
Johnson was~ of his team.
"I think most people ia the
country will recOP-ize the NFC
East u the most difficult division
in aU of football, and to be able to
win it with still OJIC game to go, it
ssys something about out footbaU
team," Jobnson said.
· It meant liUie, he said, that his
team gave up 372 yards passing to
the Falcons, although four saclts
chopped 37 yards off the total. The
opportunistic Cowboys also·recovs
ered three of four Atlanta fumbles
and turned them into 17 points.
Two fumbles became Cowboy
touchdowns within 2S seconds
early in the third period, putting the
game out of reach.
"Wethoughtatthehalfwereals
ly had a shot," said Glanville,
whose team trailed 20·10 at the
break. "We turned the ball over
three times and we dido 't get any
turnovers. You've got 10 ta1te some
away."
Johnson wasn't concerned with

nuiitbCii titli ~'tnllult in poiDII.
•
"'What we're trying to do is let
them have all the yardage,'' he
said. "But keep 1be ball out ~ the
end zone. We rdaxcd a liUie bit at
the end and let them have a touehs

down.

"They can have aU the yanlafe
they want. We want to wtn
games."
AikmaJi threw an l•syard touch·
down pass to Kelvin Martin, an 18·
. yarder to Jay Novacek and a 23s
yarder to Alvin Harper,
Lin Elliott bad field goals of 47
and 22 yn.
Emmitt Smith scored on a pair
of 29 yard scoring runs. He carried
24 times for 174 yards. which gave
him 1,582 for the season, five
fewer than Piusburgh's Berry Foss
ter•

· The Cowboys' victory guarans
teed Atlanta (6-9) a losing season. ·
"Toni.&amp;ht everything was out of
sync," Flilcons Safety Scott Case ·
said.
'.
" It doesn't matter what level
you play at or what lnnd of foots
baU you play, if you tum over the
ball more than the other team
you're more liltely going to lose,"
said Atlanta quarterback Wade
Wilson, who completed 30 of 41
· passes for 342 yards' and two
touChdowns.
He hit.Drew Hill earl)' with a
sixsyarder and Andre Rtson late
from 10 yards out.

man.ipulati;'lg the child into malting
"th1s ludtcrous and wiclted cas~eue" and allowing "snickering
friends at social fttherings" and
TV statims to 1111C 1L
"If ever tangible proof was
needed deDIOIISirating the unfitness
of this mother, Mia has provided
it, .. he said. '

Rock Springs Grange held its
Christmas dinner .and meeting
recently at the hall.
Turlley WIS pi~ by Barbara
Fry. The Christmas tree was donlls
ed by William Radford and the
table~ 111111 the treec1econted by Barbara Fry and Jan·
Chwch will hold a Cbristmu Eve iceWm.
C811dleligbt euchmst service Thins
William Radford gave the bles~s
day at 8" p.m. with a musical p:es ing.
Jude at 7:30 p.m. Public invited. ·
A Olristmas faod bubt will be
DJ'CI)8red llld cletivcrecl to I needy
LONG BOTI'OM Free Ouist· laniity. Toys from al,1 granges in
mu dinner,.Thursday, beginning at the county have been J~vea Ill Vet·
noon, at the Long Boaom Commus mns Memorial Hospital. This is a
nil)' Buildlns. Call 667s3799, 843s yearly gnnge JJI(ljecL
S321 or 985-4482 for a ride before
The grange banquet was tentas
Wednesday. •
lively set for April Ui.
Roclt Spings Grange will serve
REEDSVILLE s Reedsville Pomona Grange·in January.
United Methodist·Church, annual
One appeal for aid was
Cbriatmaa Eve servi~» at 7 p.m. answaccL
Rev. Seldon Johnson, pastor,
invitea lite public.

.

A communicalion from the state
mastei was read by William Rad·
ford, master.
Roclt Springs grange participatE
ed in the Christmas parade and
Bunny Kuhl thanked . all who
helped work on the lloat.
Names were submitted ·for
granger of the year award.
·
Pauline Rife and Christine Napi ·
er, delegates to the state grange
session, were guests and gave a
report on the activities. A vote of
thanlts was given to them.
Barbara Fry was than1ted for the
~hristmas dinner, decorations and
the faod baSltet being prepartd.
A white elephant ~ exchange
was held and thC meeung closed by
singing "Silent Night" ~by the

group.

,._
J·Bulfak&gt; ••

?

CODiraiDI5 0 .6fil
Y·llauaoa .......... 9 6 0 .600

•. - . ....... 10

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..

MONDAY THIOUII SI1U.DII
10100 ••••.• 1100 ....
SUDAI hOO PA • 4a00 P.IL

Don't forge~ to -IIIIRCI . . .

M......,ort .Dqartnaent

before....,.
RUft.AIID

the .....

~WI: SERVICE

!tHAT Wf SEI.L" ·
.RIITLAHD•
1-11111-137-1217

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.
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ON THE ''T' IN MIDDLEPORT

.

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NATIONAL CONFERENCE
-DITW L T Pd. PfPA
l·D.UU ............ : Jl 3 0 JOO 311l2!1

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T-

WALES CONFERENCE

,z 0

11

107

.... 7:~p.m.

-···-··1""·

w
.......... au..,o.a:30 p.m.
S.C.

PhoaU.. atlla!Y'II'. 9 p.IIL

- · •• L.A.l..lbn, 10,30 p.m.
Ili11M
IIOoldat S1110,10:30p.m.

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

. s. . . . . . .

NiaJU~ 71' 1Cait70
WDaJttSt.IO,Obio77

4 46 150116
6 41 151142
l 40 125112
6 34 1411Zl
3 Zl IQI.I46
3 9 71167

Toumlllllentl
Kl-illlolldaJ Cluolc

""'""""

· ~ ll,llarlbom II

WoJ4o 94, s;,. Jleialuo 63

Major college
basketball scores
Eut
Am!y69,Rid.64

~~~~1Z~~~~
~~o~,c...a

s.,.,..DI....

21 10 4 46 137107
20 10 4 44 155123
v.................. 19 10 3 41 147100
Edmoaton .......... 12 II 5 :Ill 91131
Winoipoa ........... 12 17 3 27 109121
s... J..........s.... 5 21 I II 10017S
MODday•a KOrea
-5.-2
Wublnpn 4, O..Wa 3
JOiaolooqb 7. Qooboo 4

N.Y.IIoiia!a3.11owi-O
...... M•I-4
c.taoi1 ! , - • :z. or
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T...,.a.ya&amp;s-.,7&gt;10p:...
T-IIDtlloll, 7&gt;101'm.
k ·l.t:a*at MbrWOII,I:IO p.m.
V-otl,oaAnploo.IOl40 p.m.
'

WedD ....IJ 01111lDt1
r ........, •• Hatlonl,"7l40 p.ao.

W~.... IIB!Iftolo, 7&gt;40p.m. '
Ctloolo11Cla&gt;wa.7l40,...
N.Y.,...,..
7&gt;40 p.m.
Newl_,oaN.Y........ ?'40p.m.

II,.,.......

Fat~! 7:~tDp.m.

n. ro-n-73

lolaiMU,IIull'alo70
- 9 : 1 , Panl1um 67
N'11~ 1l.K•u10
,.,.. St. 73, Dreul64

26 I

~ 10, Camall72

SouIll

lollbuml6,c-y61

·-73.0..leot.t 60

66

~ H.llnlitca 77 .
B.T-11.112.c-.N.......,.

NW 1 •w=•91 TIUIAAIIO
SW 1 ·dri-liil',r ' ' 111

--ii5, ~~o~ao-?m

STOREWIDE SALE
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY

• Natunlizer
•Connie
•Auditions
•Cherokee
•Nike
•Reebok
•Boks

•Chippewa

•Dexter
•SoftS.,Ots

•Nurse Mates
• Daniel Grema .
•Dear Foams
•Handbags

CHAPMAN SH.OES
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

He'll use his fiJ'St year of retire· ·
ment 10 rest and spend time with
his 1()-year-old son and ninesyearold daughter.
·
"My kids are at an age that
thef:'! very enjoyable," he said.
r, he !DRY go into coaching
or broadcasting.
Munoz came bac1t quicldy fro.m
the knee injury because he wanted
to play at least one more game
before he retirecL He returned Suns
day and was a dominant force in a
2()..10 victory over New England.
His size, quicltness and agility
macle him effective It both runs and
pussblocking. The BCII;gals de~l·
OPed inlll the best IWI1lllll team m
die NFL when they went to the
Super Bowl in .1988, running pri·
marily behind Munoz.

llouok II, Bowllna o-. 79

26 111135

AT CHAPMAN'S

al. ''

MJdsOhlo Confenace
thbana 94. Obio Ilonti!Ucon 91
Non-conference
""- 6:Z. N.Illiooi157 (Of)

CalprJ ..............
LooAqoloo .......

.

6.5

Ullh II Mioml. 7:30p.m.
IJoo,ok II Ch•+ue. 7:30p.m.
ladioDot. CUM!LAND, 7,30 p.m.

r ..................... 13 15 4 30

"

3

4,5

Wedaelday•saames

~~ounm.t

19 15 2 40 14.'l!Z7
N.Y.It&amp;npl ..... 11 i2 4 40 141127
Nnd-........ 1615 I 33 10!1C77
N.Y. blondon .... 14 16 4 :12 136133

n ·

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2

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0

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5
6

Bcoot.oatl'lnoJeaay, 7'30p:m.
llLih at Odlndo. 7:3b p.m.
OtaloaollAtloota. 7:30p.m.
llauaoaatllerl&lt;!lt. 7:30p.m.
Ootdee Stlte 1\ Jlhcad,a,l p.m.
Sacnmmto .. Milwaooba, .,30 p.m.
Sr.AilloaiQ. 1:30 p.m.
Dollu ott.A. Cliooooi,I0:30p.m.
S..ule •P!ooland;I0:30p.m.

TWLTPio.
Chi. . ............... 19 ll 4 41
DIOn!IL............... II 16 2 31
Mia •••• ••.:...... 1"1 12 4 31
r ...poa.1 ........ 1420 2 30

......
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OoldlftSiaiO,s""'"ll 1l .471
s........................6 16 .273
M011day's ICOrel
l'ltiladololtio 113, !AdWoo 101

hlrtctDIWLTI'II.GPGA
:14 9, 3 Sl U61:19

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

CINCINNATI (AP) ·- The
Cincinnati Bengals found it dirfi·
cult to say goodbye to llstime Pro
Bowler Anthony Murioz, recogs
nized as the NFL's best offensive
tackle.
Munoz, 34, announced at a team
meeting Monday that he'D retire
:;:,~:¥idly's game ~nst lndis
"It was c fust time l'e ever
seen SO ·
men all ~f·"
wide receiver im McGee wd. 'It
was vr:n s ·ng ... But it brought
out the human natwe in everybody,
because Anthony epitomizes what
a true human being IS all about.''
The teaJ)l pn:sented MUDOZ with
a watch, a large framed display of
photos and one of his No. 78 jerseys.
"He'D never be replaced," Benz
gals coach Dave Shula said. "That
would be an impossibility.''
Munoz said health was the No.
I factor in his da:ision.
In his 13th ICIISOII, he has mains ,
rained the level of play that got him
elected to the Pro Bowl so many
times. But he's been hampered by
injuries the past three years. He
was on the disabled list twice this
year, once for chronic problems
with both shoulders, and once for a
knee ligament tom Nov. 15 against
the New YorltJets.
"It's been a tough da:isipn that
I've had to come to," Munoz said
during a news conference. "In my
heart, I know it's the right thing
tbilt I have to make as an individus .

4

Podlan4 ................. 1S

M•ciiJ, OK. 21
o.ai&amp; ll Sill P... ··co, 9 p.m.

•

3

3.5

Po-DI.tlloa

at s.tde.4p.m.

SL LoW ............ II 11 4

.Munoz to retire
after 13 years

9.5
9.5

WLPCI.Ga
'7 ,667 '
JJauaoa •.,.,sososos•13 7 .650
.5
S•~IOaio..s.s.... IO II
.476
4
O....,.,,..,soso"""•'7 14 ,333
7
Mlnn-u.,
.,,.$ 15 .250
8.5
llallu.,,. ,.,.,s,.,,.,. ,.,,,2 17 .105
II

·- 11I·"~"~ I.,p.m.4p.m.
Jlulralo

Jlhi'e' Jrtta ....... 111"! 4

6
1.5

1Julo.,. ,,.,_ ,s •E•so~ ~4

O..Baya&amp;t'hr•ou.l f!"·
!r*M 1 J clilatCJNaNNATI.I p.m.
Wiamf atNew~lp.m.
N.Y. Oiaall
' .I p.m.
-'-II L.A....... p.m.
ll IllliM, 4 p.m.

In theNHL ...

3.5
3.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

~ll-Cily,lp.m.

Qaowa ... s••••""" 3 30

.773

s ...... .

ClliVI!LANilllPiaot.orah-1 p.m.

- E •E•"'•s ll II
Quaczosoo•""'" 11 ll
B -.7............. 19 II
Blllfalo............... 14 1•
llalfmd,,..,.,,sooo 'IQ 2IJ

.192

soO
Oo•0""".16 7 ,696
CU!VELAND .......I4 II .560
!Adlu!a .........
IJ II ,Sil
Doiroit .................... ll 10 -'24
Cltadatto,..,soo,...,,.12 II .!122
Atlaou,.,.,.,s,,.,.,.,.,ll .12 .47J
Mil-ukee ............. IO 13 A35

Suoclay, Doc. Z7

\

.318

GB

C!olo:a.....

L.A. RoWton" W........... 4 p.m.

J11uo1our11!

Pet.

7 ,696
9 -'50

CLBVI!t.AND 111, Wuhillp011

M011day's 1e0re
Ili11M41, A11utlll7
Week 17 slate
_,Doc. :If
NowOrlooao aN.Y. Je~~,ll '30 p.m.

T-

L

New)_, z,z..,.... 13 II .sl2
B..........s ....s .... .. . 10 13 · .435

7

CflllniDI-

ATLANTA (AP)- Rhythm :
and blues star Bobby Brown :
already ltnows how he will hattdle ·
the teen·age years of the daughter ·
he and wife Whimey Houston are
expecting this spring,
"'Ah man! It (boys) call, I might
let my 1,irls talk to them on the
phone, ' he said in Monday's
Atlanta Consiitution. ''But ltnows
ing me and the way I was, I probas
bly won't let them m the door."
'

A....lkDMoloa

Cooli'al Dl*loo

B 7 0 .533 242217
L.A. Raidon ...... 6 9 0 .600 221261
Solttlo....._,_,,..•. 2 13 0 .133 126211

PM

EASTERN CONFERENCE
T-

WRAP-UP
CHRISTMAS

(left) geta away frolit At11nta
defeDIIlve baek Bruce Pickens
after tile q~tclt to acore a touc:b·
down in tile first half ol MOD•
day Dilht's NFC boat .onder
the Georgia Domf. In Adanta,
where the Cmrboys w011 41·17.

In theNBA •••

w........,.
... . . . .. 7 17
)oliami ......................6 16

WllternDiddoa
k~.'!~"""'
10 s 0 .6fil 304277
City ..... .. 9 6 0 .600 3067Q

Deaver .......

las wide rec:elver Kelvin Martltt

Pbibda1phh .......,... ,17 15

ClliVI!LANil... 7 ,1 0 .4(;1
CINCINNATI.... 5 10 0 .333

.

A card was aent to Sarah Cald·
well who was having eye surgery.

:.·.· · Holiday Shopping · .:·.
Hours

MIDDLEPORT 1fWe Baptist
Q!urch, lllllitiona1 Cbiistmu live
service, Thursday, featuring the
l.old's Supper, 11 p.m.
.

.... .;,

W L T Pd. PPPA
II 4 0 .733 311:1S6
IQ 5 0 .6fil 3:14W

Cf""L.,s.......
-'"•poli• ....... I 7 0 .533 195215
N.Y.)... ............ 4 II 0 .'JEil20:195
New....,....?... .2 13 0 .133 192347

Farrow's lawyer, Eleanor Alter, :
said the tape ''is the,most convincE:
ing thing I've ever seen. I watched·
it at home iilone and I ended up in :

.

P*-·Jrf${ ~H ,..,,"'*"'·"'p·~

MARTIN SCORES - Dais

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Davis, third.
Betty Dean, Chester, served as·
the judge for the contest whi~ was;
sponsored by the Rutland Fnendly ·
Gardeners, Banlt One, Rutland Fue'
Depatbnent and Rutland Ellle!JCns;
cy Squad. A total of $100 was.
gtven away in the contest.
·

tears.''

-01-

In the NFL •.•

in the news---------

Dinner held at Rock Springs Grange

OPEN MONDAY·SATUADAY UN11L 7 P.M.
THRU DEC.. 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER
HOURS APPOINTMENT.

'.

wrl_...

~---Names

SPECIAL BOJ mAY BODU

'

n;o;;

Rutland lighting contest winners posted

POMEROY s Grace Episcopal
·- . . . .

742·2211

DBAit PRIBND: You've wdaeo
a 1eaer dill will hit many ft:lda1
bet.woeo 1be eyea. Tblat you for 111
importa1CCG11lribalion.
DEAR RAY: COnsid« ycuaelf
wbO wlllt II know 111CR • "reccJIIIized." I CIIIIIOl que wiill a
about this deviutatiDI illness sinaJe word 'Jill bave
You
should send a aelfsaddressed, IOUIICIIite a 01111 for the '90s to me.
111mpec1 envelopo to: Alzlleimeta 'nllab for the pndc clobber.
Allociation, P.O. Box 567SsAL,
DEAR READI!IlS: I recendy
Q!icqo, m. 6Q6110s5675, or call said, "When more than 7,000
lsS()()s 272· 3900 (TD D for the n:adetl -* IIIC to 1dl 'Soatilll Wet
btaring impaile¢ 1 ~312s33S-81182). in Minneapolis' that they found
De.- oa 1m lrn: I didn't cue 10111C11hins in lhe &amp;upbe lbar llqll
for your ~ 111 lbe Iiiier ~ lhe · hYJJCrhydrolis (excessive swating),
01111 whole ec1uc 11 d wife bad ao. I'tcel obliga'ed to pal it on. It's
domeatic akilla. You told her Ill Dryaol.•
.
"M. y .O.B.; wllich r .conaidered
The above il comet. ~~~~ ti!U is
uncalled for. 1 lhillk sistcn who a prescriplio11 drMg. IU not111
Wlllllto help their siblinp are to be • Ovefsth&amp;-COunter drug. So
admiral.
.
see your doctor and ask for a
I happen to be I college-edoq~ prescription.
mate with a gaod job. I am ID
Forget to save some of JOIU
exedlent coot llld a J100C1 houses favorite A1111 La111krs coliUIIIIS?
tceeper. 1 don't need a Wllllllll to "Nuggtll aild Doozies" is the
perform these cbpres. In C.Ct, I QIIIWer. Sellll a self..adllnssed, lottg,
enjoy kcepiDJ bouse. Coqting is l11uilltsNiu mveloptlllld a check
my bobby and I'm goocht iL
or money order for $5 (this lllclwks
I'm amazed 11 the number of postage lllld llatrdiJ11g) to: Nuggets,
women'who pt
I higb degree
c/o AIIIII.AIIdm. P.O. BoJt 11562,
of intellect but cinnot boil Ill esg Chicago, Ill. 606Jls0562. (/11 ·
CQIIQI/Q. sellll $6.)

'

s

POMEROY s The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the JT~ building in
Pomeroy. Call 992-5763 for infors
mation.

EVERYWHI!RB

Goeglem, Sylvia Midltiff. ,
conf~ncewash~dnamtlyRock
CW A wtnnen: quilt, Kathryn
Springs Grange Hall. Arthur Crab· Miller, also selected to go to
tree was master. Deputies of state national; Rosalie Story, second;
grange Patty and Opal Dyer, also sbirls, Patty Dyer; crocbet.ed doily,
presided.
.
Maxine Dyer; pillowcase, Sarah
The singing of God Bless Amers Cullums; needlepoint. Opal Dyer;
ica cpened the meeting.
wall hanging and decorated shirt,
Patty and Opal Dyer reported on Kathryn Miller; youth blouse, Patty
the' deputies confemtce. State mass Dyer; wooden toy, George White;
ter Bernie Shoemaker encouraged stuffed toy, Rose BIIJrtlws; flower
granges to set membership goal for arrangements, Patty Dy~?f, eighth in
the year, .consider the grange the state.
Community service: Star, Hems
~. pride in or~tion and a
·posttive attitude. The state master lock and Rock Springs. Nora Lee
. will be visiting granges over the of Harrisonville Grange received
the lecbftr' s award.
state.
TravelinJ Grangers Award:
Certificates and ribbons were
went to Christine Napier, Pauline
pesented as follows:
Deaf activities: Pomona, Star, Rife. Waid Nic~olson, Maxine,
Star Junior, Hemloclt, Racine, Harz Opal and~ Dyer.
CW A chairmen receiving blue
risonville and Roclt Springs. Neva
Nicbobon rtceived the deaf merits ribbons were Harrisonville and
Star, Hemlock and Rock Springs;
certificate.
Distinguished secretaries: white ribbon, Racine.
c'Members are requested to save
Dorothy Smith, Pauline Atkins,
Qpal Dyer, Jean Alkire. Frances candle stubs and tum them in to

Community calendar·

,.

By BILL SCHULZ
ATI..A,NTA (AP) - To Tony
CasiUu, winning the NFC East
title by beatin&amp; the Allanta Filcons
was particularly patif'Jing.
" No animostty or 111~ng, "
said Casillu a former. l'
who
drew an ~Y caustic round of
boos when he too1t the field belen
the Dallas Cowboys' 4lsl7 victory
Monday night. "'I was just Jlad to
be able to ~ it here...
the second pla&gt;.'er selected in
the 1986 draft, Casillas played five
seasons in Atlanta - oite time
quilling, often injured. He was ·
, traded 10 Dallas during the 1991

Ub IIIC wbo IR betlcr II bdili01lal
fCIIIIIIe .lcJbl tbln lbe women ~
mmy. Since 'Jill I'd eo JeCOplize
us. Ann, I 'iledderl eo bring it to ywr
lllallioD.' -ItAYIN PA.

Pomona Grange and officers

s

••
,.

._Leo....,

,._.,. • • _.
~ lp • 1 •

1112

Pomona Grange presents pertificates .

::l

.~

ers

8D

~ber 22,

Dallas hammers·Atlanta 41~17

IJIDMm, 'l1lla Ia IIOdlina to brla
about. 110 llllller bow IIUCII-.:a.
lion lboy ha¥e. BeiDa illcomuelelll
II ID flmny aor ia it a badae of,
hoaor.
11lere I n I peat many mea

ANN wmaa

The
Daily
Sentinel
.
n.8day,

~W#fljil.,~Jt..~N ·_..,._,..,W:",Itl~

:; fMi{{Street $ook§ ;:·
.·

-U.IZ.xm.,ll071
w. ~rt,B.-7 61
14. N.c..o. • , 70

w-.,

.

. 't0.

~

Holiday Shopping ·
Hours
I .

MONDAY •THROUGH SATURDAY
9:00 A.M. • 8:00 P.M.·
.
.
. .~::· . SUNDAY 1:00 ·P.M. • 4:00 PJL : ~
111~•* :v·.-· ¥·~~: ·;;

..,.*. ** *•·••a::r:a
••

Ingels FurnRII'e &amp; JewelrY.
108 N. Second Ava .

Midfllport, OH.

_., __

Open Sunctay 1s4 PM, Evenlnga till 8 PM

\V

•,

.. . . .0.1,

�&amp; The Dally Sentinel

Page

..

!Y••U,. December 22, 1912

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy fe!!ddleport, Ohio

Meigs girls notch 63-23 win over Wellston in final game of 1992
ByDAVEHARJUS
SentiDel Cor• HPI!IIilat ·
Meigs jwnped nullO a l!i~ lead
at the end o( the firlt period and
crui •ed to a 63-23 victory over
Wellston n girls' Tri·Valley Coo·
ference basltetball~etion Monday
eveniag at Lany R. Mmison Gym·

IUISlwn.

The win gives Ron Logan's

prtsa 4-1 mart 011 !be IIC880il both

•n the TVC and o-.11', Wellston
drops to 1~ overall and 1·!1 in lhc
TVC.

In college hoops,

Katrina Turner, who bad a
ex&amp;dl"" nipllllllftld lix filii-peri·
od points, and the Marauder~'
defense shut the Rocteu down.
Meigs inmued ill Iliad 10 32~ at
the half. Missy Sisson led the
Merluder~' scoring parade with
seven poinll in !be leCOIId period.
The Marludm continued the
rout in ·the SCCOiid half, outscoring
Wellston 31-17 in the second bali
,. to roll up the ~point adVIIIIBge.
The Marauders, who played an
excelie'!t team game, placed all

HenderiOn's two and Amber
BlactwcD'a oae. .fhldaon, V ComjJIIIOii and 1'umllr drilled lbreepoinllln.
Meigs bit 22 of SS from the
I1Gor b ~ lild cubed In 011 16,
of 22 fniin '!be liDe for 73~. Meigs
pulled in 4 I rebounds, witb Kelly
pUinJ eipt Iiiii Vtna Complllln
and 1'umllr JlllbbingLott lecf Wellston with nine
poin~, iocludbur I dJree..pointer.
Wellston c~erelll:d Meigs in the

nine girla on the IOIIUir in the $COl'·
in&amp; cn~...,n 'fllnD' led Mdp wilb

IS poWa. wlliCII oquala I career
bi&amp;II.ICCnd • 11ame • • wen.

. . . . . . . .1111

•.

, • wneto Cllrlay Taylor c.e
off .... bench 1 0 - 12. inchidl"'

eipt ~ nine fnllll .... IIIIo. Milly
Silloo, who coadnnNIIIII' fiDe play
with 11 points, fOI belp from
Verna Compaton a Hvcn, Lori
Kelly's five, Joy O'Brien'• four,
lhreo-point elforll by Hw""' l{ud·
100 and Vanessa Compston, Lee

·

NBC doubts Wal-Mart's buy-American policy

reserve contest· 33,21. Arlabright
led the Wiilncn with 13. Stevison

ME1GS
Meigs taU. a IRak for the holi·
(15-17-U-Il=C)
days until its January 4 sam.e at
Vema Compaon 2..()..3-7, Lee
Trimble.
.
H~ 1..().(la~. Lori KcDy 2- •
0-I•S, Katrina T~ 6-1-0.1!1, :
WELLSTON
Misay Si11on 4·0·3•11, Joy '
(0-6-8-9::23)
O'Brien 2~. Chri$1)' Taylor 2Stevison 1-0-1=3, Clark 0·0· 0-8-12, Amllll' Blackwell ()..().h=1.
1•1, Anhur 1-0-0-2, Maxwell 1-0- Hcatbcr Hndaon 0-1~3, VlileiSI
0.2, Jenkins 1-0-1•3, Snyder 1-0- Comps1011 0-1-0=3. Totals -19- .
1=3, Lott 2-1-2-9. Totals - 6·1· 3-16-63

,

f

String of losses by ninth·-ranked ·teams continues with Sooners'· loss
.

.,

r.,e:::

By RICK GLADSTONE
AP BuiDel&amp; Wrlttr
NEW YORK - Wal-Mart
Storea Inc. vcbemendy denied aile·
gations in an NBC report tb,at ill
commitment to sell American prod·
ucts is phmy.
·
The "Dateline NBC" report
says that despite Wal-Mart's fer·
venUy patriotic image, the nalion's
No. 1 retailer. impons increasingly
vast quantities of merchandise,
exploits swCillhop child labor in
Bangladesb, has done business with
a suspected garment smuggling
operation in China and displays
foreign-made clothes on racks !bat
proclaim "Made in the USA."

added12.

.

.

30 seconds left. ~righim Y011ilg ;
Central Michigan (2-4).
will play Memplus ~·a 64•58 :
No.llowal03
winner over Cbaminade, m today's ·
Eastern Mldilpn"
AI San Juan, Puerto Rico, the semirmats. Oklahoma dropped 10 ·
·
Hawkcycs go~ 21 points from S-1.
No. 10 Arkl•as 123
junior forward Chris Street and 18
1
JackiOD State "
.
I
from senior Jay Webb, two players
AI Pine Bluff, Ark., the Razor•.
who haven 'I produced much in ·!be
shadow of 1991 Big 10 MVP Aci~ backs (~} forced 29aumovers and
won easily against JackiO'I SlatC,
Earl.
2
"To see Chris and Jay have a
gami! like this shows that we're &lt; -~irren Hawkins had 20 poin11, ~
getting better," Iowa coach Tom Clint McDaniel added 19 and Scot. ty Thunnan 18 for Adtansas..
\
Davis said.
·
No.l9
Nebi'ISIII116
BrliJiam YDWII76
Texas-Ar~"
.,
No.9 Oldlboma 75 ·
At Lincoln, Neb., freshmen ~.
In a morning game at Lahaina,
the Cou~ (6-1) came back from Erick Stricklarid and Tcmnce Bacl-1' ·
a 1!1-pomt deficit with 12:40 to gett scored 17 poinll apiece, and "
.,
play and a four-point deficit with Nebraska forced 33 llli'iiOVen.

Bw CHRIS SHERIDAN
just 11 minutes.
.
national championships second balf - four ~.Y M&amp;n
"That fina! 'sbot wasn't a throw, shooting and sreaa passing
·' AP s~ Writer
Bakalli - ·but coUld t'W.! no
r
A few words of caution 10 teams he gathered himself, set himself" sreat p~ 01lnt Hill led Duke than 10 points. Adonis Jordan bad
guniling for the Top 10: Avoi4 No. and made it," BYU coacb Roger witb 22 poinll, Q~S~awing inside. seven stella, seven aasisll and 16
9.
.
, Reid said. "W~. were 1~, ,someBqbby Hurley had 19 poinll ~ poiiil$ for Kana•
Since the ·repilar season began, limes the ball bounces 11ihL'
,12 from three-point range- .in
·
No.6
94
no ninth-ranted team has won a
In other Top 2!1 acbon, No. 1 addition 10 a nwnbcr of liiiCCIICular
Ciutnl Mk!i'l•J. 69
game. The quirk continued Mon- Duke beat DePaul 89· 7~. No. 2 ~- ~ Hill bad 10 poinu,
Michigan posted a victory for
day night as No. 9 Oklahoma lo$1 Kansas beat N~ft!l Carolina State , his last two on an lmJRISive dunk the 1111111 who made "Fab Five" ·a
10 Brighatn young in the opening 84;-64,. No. 6 Micbipn beat Ccnttal in the lane with 6:2$ to play that · part Of today's basketball lexicon
round of the Maui Invitational lOur· .Mil:h1gan !14~9. No. 8 Iowa beat gave the Blue Devils tbcil b1gest - coach Steve Fisher's father.
nament in Hawaii.
Easlem Michigan 103·66, No. 10 lbadofthegame, 77-57. ·
George Howard Fisher, 81, died
· Arizona was ranked nintb dur· Arkansas beat Jackson State 123· . No.2 Kauill4, N.C. State 64
S81Urday night in Htnin, DL, short·
ing !be week of Dec. 6-12, and lost 76 and ~o. 19 Nebraska beat "
At Lawrence, KID., the Jay- ly ~ wa~g his son's team
tO tbcn-unrankcd Arkansas. Texas-Arlington 116-95.
hawks (7~) avoided a repeat of the defeat Iowa State on television.
Lpuisville was No. 9 the next
No.I Dulle 89, DePaul73
second-half doldrums that bavc
Fisher attended his father's
week and lost to Vanderbilt and
AI Labalna, Hawaii, abc Blue plagued them all.season.
·
funeral Monday and was not on the
I(en~cky. Oklahoma was ranked ~viis re~ their 18tb straight
sidelines in Ann Arbor as the
ninth last week, but did not play. ·
VIctorY With the same formula ~
North Carolina State (2-4) bit . Wolverines {6·1) got 18 points
: Florida ·State fits in as an aSter· bas earned them consccuuve five straight tbree-pointen .in the from Chris. Weliber and rolled over
isk. the Seminoles were ranked
ninth in the preseason poll, but won .
twice .in the Preseason NIT touma·
ment
The Sooners (S-1) were done in
, Monday wbell BYU's Kevin Nixon
rebounded a missed tbrec-poiniCr,
and bit a Callaway from the foul
line with less than a second 10 play
for a 76-7!1 victory.
"I remember arching it real bigh
because I wanted to give it a
chance to go in, and the more I
backpedaled the better it looked,"
Nillon said. "It hit the front of !be
rim, hit the bact of the rim and just
kind of slitbcred in there." '
Nixon riDisbcd with 14 points in

Mklalaa::

-- ..

Former serviceman returns gift
VINCENNES, Ind. (AP) - A
Christmas gift sent nesdy SO years
a~ has been returned - b11t with a·
mce tbant-you note.
Robert A. Azbill of Visalia,
Calif., never goa around to
the wartime gift of a pack
cigarettes .and .lho11ght
.

I&gt;

. Danaerous.

residents of Vincennes, who sent
them, would like them back for old
lime's silke.
•'I lhoucrht it may have been a
little silly,'.,.Azbill said. "I wasn't
sure how much value they would
be to anyone there.':

· ·

Days

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad. oullide tloe couaty you od n1111 • . , , 1&gt;e prepaid
• llocei.w dilcouat for .U paid ia adYaDCO.
• Froo Ado: Ci-way ud Folllld ods uDder 15 ....nts willl&gt;e
. ~3.,.at-~.
1'- 1
'
~,· ,.,, .. -.
• Price ol ad f .. aU copitalletton i.o doul&gt;le prioe of sd coot
• 1 polatliDO type oaly .....!
• S...tiaelio bOt
for erTOn after r.... day (cl&gt;eck
for error• r~rst day ad.....,. Ia paper). CaD l&gt;efore Z:OO P·'"·
4,y after pub_licaaioa ID ade eorreetkta
• Adllhat~nuat be paid iD .dwaac:e are:
Card of '!'hub
Hsppy Ado
Ia M-riul
Yard Saleo
• A cluairood Odwerti.oe-t plocod u. t1oe GaUipolio Daily
Tribune ("'"'ept Clusiflod Dlspl~y, o.,;,., Card or Lopl
NotM:ea) will alao appear Ia the Poiot Pleuut Reptor ud
the Daily SeatiDol, -•llinc oYer 18,000 ho•ea

SVGA
Color
Monitor I

....,.....u...

"
AiiJINI• .,.. It jult ei'C.

.,, . , . , l't:

, . ra a11r...,.
• New CD technology 18¥01ulloniZes oomputing
1 25MHz 80486SX Multimedia PC 1 Mouse
1 107MB HD 1 4MB RAM 1 31/z" 1.44MB drive
· 1 MS·DOS 5.0, Windows; lull Hbrary of software

DAYBEFOREPUBUCATION
I :00 p.m. Saiurday ·
I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
tOO p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEAJ)UNE

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M. • SAT.8-12

lndudH

l't: ..,.

Jordan, held 10 tbrec free throws
for tbrec periods, scored 1!1 points
on 6-for-9 shooting in the foorlh
• quarter as tbe Bulls outscqred
Miaini 30-11 in the final.12 min·
utcs and beat the Heat 86-82 on
Monday nighL
"I have to say that I will take
the blame for the rtrSttbrec "quar·
ters, tbe way I was shoo!inB·" said
Jordan, whose 18 pomts was far
below his NBA·leading 31.7 a:ver·
age. "But.it was a good team effort
and I have to thank my learn for
~ support. We're in a BtruS&amp;Iing
period rigllt now. We m~ht not be
playing to expectalions right at the
momenL"
·
f Miami led 71-56 entering the
~urtb ' quarter tb..W 10 Jordan's
miseiab[e sbooling.
·
: In Monday night's only other
~ Cleveland edged Washing·
19.n. 11_1-107 in overtime and
~phia defeated Indiana 1131.
Before the fourth quarter, Miami
ach Kevin Loughery ex)!4'Ct~
liis team 10 win for the fust biiiC m
:CS tries~ the Bulls.
• ''A lS:.point aJsbion going into
the fourth quanec should be enough
~win in the NBA." he said. "We
·!fad more airba11s than field goals

MOllday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Frldfly Paper
• Stinaly Paper

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t)i

3
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15
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2

DUOFONE

14 seConds to go and Pippen
c9111pleted the scoring seven sc:coilds later.
.
i Cavalieri Ul, Bullets 107

llog. 111.00 IIB-1211

.

Tl1o prtco

24$-Rio Gnade
256-Gto,oa lllsl.

247-Lotut Fols

643-Arololo DloL

94~Raclae

882-New u...
895-Lotan

37~1Val-

742-Rutlaad

937-B.trdo

367-Cioeol.ire
388-VIII,_

c.....,.

' 667-C....twlile

3$- lpto " AA: ......
36- a..t Es.... w..~oo~

a..•

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Relat
45- FWIIilllcol 1...
46- Space fH Rut

G81lla CoWlty . Me~A- CoWlty Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614. Area Code 614 Are• Code 304
992-Mkldleport/ 67$-I'L .........
Pomeroy
,
458 Leoa
985-0oooter
576-AptiO
1143-Portwul
773-MMoa

32- Mobile ao.. for Sale
33-- Faras for s.Jo.
34- o..u- Buildiap

quip
'IVanl&lt;!cl to B"l'

Li.........

Hay A CniD
Soool A Forlllioor

'

1u-- ""'- for S.lo
112-· Tn..b l'or S.lo

41- 1Vul&lt;!cl to l•t
forO...t

4--Gi...way
$- Happy Ado

Boo" A llloton f• Solo
Auto Part. A Acoo-ri-J
Auto Ropolr
Ecpi~

48-

11- Hslp 'II'oal&lt;!cl

.•
'·

v.-

41- Mo.lle u - for O...t ""--·
A 41VD's
4S- r.... for
Mo....,.....

'

~slbpoU. .

Pet. f.. Salo
Muicall.,,._.,
Fnill A v.......loo
For s.Jo or Tndo

"'''"·'

·'•

..

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12- Sltuot!one """""'
1$-).,......,..

6- Loot oad Folllld
1- Loot oad Folllld
8- PuhiM: Salo .t:
A.uetioa
9- 'IV outed to Buy

1~

Basi- TraiaiDtJ

1$- Set.ool. A lnalnlctiool

16- Radio, TV A CD Repair
17- Mlaeollo-111
18- Yaal&lt;!cl To Do

52- Spol1iq Cooda
U--Aatlq-

34- Mba. Morcheadioe
55- Bulldl"' SuppB•

C..enl Baulinc

lllfi.- M•blle a.... Repair
Upholstery

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
NHdaGift?
Rugs, Plllcamata,

• 8x zoom with macro
• I lux lor low light
• Wllh remote
llog.llt.D011f·IM

,.,.,...
IArE'fiJIJ

fllttM·tln

Homegrown·
Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up with a graat
•election of larger

01

l1u....., - 1 0 ....1100 ...

.

-may,.,.._..,
'*'"

· -to buy -v

ol pun:!.quolfytng- .
homo on a~..,.. In

·

-.

742·21179

COI814-882·7104 for

Stop&amp;ColllliGrl

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

. 915·4473

$20.00

GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

....... .••..
.~

7

FIIIIITIIIAIIS

AHANDFUl

OFCASII .
IS BEllER
THANA
GARAGE·FUl
OF STUFF

a:

2

In allrn()ry

667•6179 •
CIIIIITIAI

24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
lOmE OF LOnON
• '32.00
M•y more specials.
NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CEJ;InFIICA1rESI

FOREVER
' BRONZE

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

SIZm LIMESTONE.
FOR SALE .
Call 614·992~

LAKE

RACINE, OH.
949·2734

. ' 6637
St. Rt. 7
Chesltire,

12·1·'12-1

IOLF
&amp; IWIIDS
CHIIstiUS SILl
I 0"•20" Off

AU, 8E8810N8 GOOD ·

In die bulb

FOR IMONTHI

-

Our II......
bfllldlllhe

•....itl'llllliila-

..........

....,we~~~,

._CD. . . .I

Wllh Dller eeoo locations

nationwide, Radio Shack
Is 11 In ellclron~

-,..,....firloW"""'·--------·---,.........

S.Oinner Sale.
Youth
Drlwra.
t.aaon•lneluded wtth

_ , . . . , . . fiiNJit

F.REI

ICIMiiao, 111411.116). Qllo1 VOilo CA. S. -~~-

f

I

I

.

992•3838

\

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'

992-6215

, Panurey, Ollie

"

· ii1141YCR

... . .,

- A&amp;L . . .U
~

•.

Chlttlr, OH.

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

,_.,,.

36970WR•R...

Ill'S llw.cE

HOUDA1 SPJCIALI

992·5335 or
915·3561

'9.50ATOI

SIIYICI

SIU' LIMESTONE

D._.16Tel'll a

992·3470

12-1-12·1

SHRUB
TRIM and

.REMOYIL
•L,IGHT HAUUNG

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992•2269 '

u!Cat!r:=C...
,
,
,
Rd..
USED RAILROAD nES

1
aM~~--~--~~I, IL------~~~
m~

and

I 614·742·2138

(614) 949-2058

Quallt.Y ',
Stone Co.

939·2126

25..=.

I

LIMESTONE,

11127

...... ltl.,ladH

adarter as Phil~ belllndi•

11127

HAULING

-o.......
-c....... .

31 poinll and backcourt partner
CraiB Eblo nine of his 16 m overdJnc as Cleveland had 21 points 011
7for·7 lleld·aoal shooting in over·
tiDiO apnst WubiDJIOn, cxlelidillg ill wiDnin&amp; llrelt 10 lix.
·
After eacll team scored 22
j)!lnll In the fourth qlllller, tbe vis- .
nfllg Cavalim oulle:Cnd the Bul·
lep 21-17 in the fiVe-minute cxlni
~ - The combined total of 38
wis one short of the NBA record
set by lndi... IIIII Ool~ State In
Malth 1991,
Rex Cblpman ICOied 37 points,
i.klading H In overtime, but it
: wlm't
pcwu.t the B!JI·
..... from
.
""!" .,... 1 Plan 101 ' ..
~ Ral AndenaD ICCied 17 o{ bii

OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
885-4356
11-3C).1 mo. pd.

GRAVE
BLANKETS

BISSELL &amp; .IURKE
. CONSTRUCTION
•lewHo...s

llog.llt.D0111'8M

up

.

I

• 18x digital zoom
• Hl·fi mono • 11ux
• With remote

~and

Cal1742·2143 or

or

Raclnt. 4 BR, 3 bOihio, 2 garoooo, ,.,.eel 1 :
BR 11'1· P,_ty _,dol 4,800 1!'1· a. form
bldg.

Qullb, 5 Types
Pillows. Anlmala,
lots of small artie lea.

tree•.

........ ol up 10 -

-

· LEWIS. J. SMITH
Who puaecl away
14yuraago
DaCiimbar22, 1878
'

• Powerlu112x zoom
• 0. 7 lux for lOw light
il Wllh remote

(OT)
! Mark Price scored seven of his

•

•

He entertained troops during·
wars in Korea, Vietnam and the
PerSian Gulf.
•

41- Ho- r.. R..t

In Memory
In Memory Of

,..,,.
,.;_
,. .,
, ···-

~lh

l

the airlift.

,\ I 1\ I ' I I II k

Clau4fied page• c:011er the
folluuJing lelephqne e%clunagea ...

PRICE REDU

IArE'flll IAJE'flll

'

led Miami with

. . Detlcf Schremp( had 23 poinll
8Jid 17 rebo11nd• for the Pacers.
•Pbiladelpbia toot • 79· 71 lead
into the fourth period ·bef~re
A6denoo sccred six ~ JIOOIII
to1 ntake it 8!1·71. ·

Hope began cntertaininJI U.S.
troops in 1941 with a USO show at
california's March Air Force Base.
His traditional Christmas tours·'
began· in 1948, when he went to ..
Berlin to cnlerlain Ols involved in

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

• Clair aouncl

witb 22 points, 1.-oke the lie
free throws with 42 scc-

~~ third victory In 13 bome .

·.

I \1:\1,, 1'1'111'

1------=:-:-=====-----1

.. . . .

LoW,-. 1•1W.,.;,.,.

two

dson·lliltl

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

Rates all! for conseortive runs, brolcen up days will be
' charged for each day as separate ads.

=·~~ ~
~~.·~:~TV.~-·

,,,..
... ,.

zl poinll, made two free throws

'

.

Going undercover, an NBC .
aew a110 Viailed whit it said was a ·
Bangladesh ~ where chil- ~.
drcn were mating Wal·Mart ·
clothes. ln fodage shot inside IIOI1IC
Wal·Mart IIIOreS, tbe teleca!t shows
racks full of clothes from Korea,
China and other Asian countries ·
under American flags and "Madel
in lhc USA" si~.
Chief Executive David·Glass,
Walton's successor, said in the
telecas~ that the company has con· .
verted more than $6 billion worth ·:
of Wal-Mart merchandise to
domestic manufacturing over the
past seven years.
· '·

RUTLAND, OH.

~:fourth
!luarler·"who led the
Scottie Pippen,
left.

~~~

............. bll.tl 125-1150/4047

x

"'•dOlen
s Rice, who

JIO'•""• :

of goods from Hona Kong and •
Cbina last )'elF, 8,000 limes greuer
than ill import volwne before the :
B11y Amencan program began in- ·

Over 15 Words
$ .20

$9.~

v

· th

AJ an example, it cites Wal· ''.·
M.:t impolll of 288 million

RATES

TANDY.
..

•• •
,,..,,
. ..,.
...

IICiftWp;ogi . .

customers.

•The Area's Number ·!
Marketplace

an ad
Call 992-2156·
With ...
aitln&amp;ecl

ibe Aaian textile indultty's ~

Bob Hope recognized

-••ltallc. . .r '

To place

IWMI

STRAFFORD, N.ij. (AP)Lillian Sotolowsky didn't lhiilt
twice about donating qmned goods
10 a Boy Scoutfood drive. Now she
can't Slqllbinking abo11t iL
The cans included a fake one
r.ned with her jewelry.
'
"I can't believe I did something
so stupid," she sai4last week.
She said the can contained her
engagement ring, two wedding
bands, a strand of pearls, necklaces,
brooches'and a pendant her busband, William, gave her when they
were married in 1944.
Sokolowsky, flY, .had bought tbe

VISITING WITH SANTA • Cousins Adam Humphreys ud Carey
Vaughan talk to Santa duriDJI bls Sunday visit at Locker 219 ill Mld·
dleport.
·

Bulls, Cavs,
Sixers NBA's
latest victors
CIDCAGO (AP) .,.... Qnc word
describes MiChael JCX'dan whca be
misses alllO of his shots in the fust
three quarters and the Chicago ·
Bulls trail by 1!1 points.

Wai-Mart IIOCk drooDcd $1.75 a attack a progr~m designed to do
share to $63.87 1/2 Monday on notbinJ more than create jobs in
publicity about the repon, which thisCOUDiry.''
airs tlni&amp;bt.
Wal· Mart ~ one of the biggest
Wai-Mart spctecman Don Shin· success Stories of American busilde said that ImportS account for ness. Its foupclel, the late Sam Wal·
only !1.8 percent of the chain 'siOtal ton, parlayed a dimcstore into the
marketed goods. He also j)Ointed world's b•ggesa discount chain. It
out thai some of the NBC report has more than 1,700 ouUcts in 42
WSS attributed to organized labor,
states. ·
which has fou4ht Wal·Mart before · , Walton and his· subordinates :
ovtt ill DOII·!JIIIOO policiel.
made the "Made in America"
"Wal·Mart atands behind ill lhcmc a comerstonc ofWai·Mart's
Buy America prognrn," Shinkle SUCCCIS, witb promises of produell
said from the company's Ben- made by Americans, for Ameri·
tonvillc, Art., beadquartcrs. "We cans.
rtnd it incredible that NBC and a
Wal·Mart touts American mer·
coalition of labor unions would chaodisc in commen:ials that speak
of "Bringing It Home to tbe
USA." Walton's own best-selling
autobiolfiPby is tiUed "Made in
America, My SIOI}."
.
The "Dateline NBC" account
says a two-month investigation
fake can of toinato SC!"P 10 bide her revealed that Wal-Mart is one of
valuables. It looked JUSt 1ilce the
real thing, but bad a top that
screwed off.
. Sotolowsty said she was in a
hurry when she filled a shopping
· bag for the food drive a few days . RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) before Thanksgiving. The cans Bob Hope was recognized Monday
went to the Salvation Army, which for his bravery in entering combat
zones around tbe world to entertain
distributed tbem to 17 charities.
She now~ whoever ends up u.s. troops.
The 89-ycar-old comedian was
with .the can will be nice CIIC1USh to
named winner of the "Life On The
return iL
.
"My husband said, 'Hey, it's Line Award" by the Gen. and Mrs.
only money, it's not worth getting Curtis E. LeMay Foundation. The
nonprofit organization assists widsick over,"' she said. "It's rrue."
ows of Air Force offic=.

Woman mistakenly gives away
soup can containing jewelry

r-----r===.;;::;::::::::J
.
,
..,,

,.

·The Dally S!mtlnei--P!pe-;7 f

RACINE OUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
12NI mo. pd.

�Ohio

1992
Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUle
'

I

,,.

ALLEYOOP
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WJ'I&amp;ht

WMietl to lily

BRIDGE

. . . . . . lOr ....

ACROU
1 Halp
7 '11rH
12 U.U'a kin
13 Footbll

PHILLIP

Cabbr.)
1t Alrcralt Plrt

.J

+92
.AQI06$4

+to 75 4

All Yonl .... llluol • ,..., In

-.a. DEADUNE: I:GO p.a

• 98

... 1111 lo '" .....

.S!MMIIY ....... • 1:00 filolow. lllondaJ ....... • I:GO

8

SOUTH
tAQJI0$4

.K3

"I saw him smile once. He fired
someone on Christmas Eve. •

.14

+AKQ

PubliC Sail

..-wlo

Mlll,..l'lrCW I

BARNEY

1-

(Onlr I~
- • AICI-liM In
.,.,. 110. •
"-11 ... 7
Don. IIIIi ,._ .. on I -r.
..,n-.._.PJLI14 ttl~ Or 1114-

MORNIN', PAW!!
CAN I FIX YOU SOME
HAM AN'

!•••........,.
........
..... -.Golllpoll&amp;

ELlUlAR
-... .....
.................................
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PEIIfORIIAHCE

·perfect Chtistroos Gift for rhot lod to buy for pem~ oo ~list.
ftoun!y ~ocot

UMmD

TIME ONLY
5 95

69

OH.

154311

J&amp;L INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window

E66S?

54='•
deg.
55 .Prlntar'a

me11ure

56 Yerr mueh

50 ProHCutor
(abbr.)
61 Idea
3&amp;1&amp;1..1.
63 In good work·
ing order
65 !iOUII
3 Eur.
diVillonl
longUIQt
66 Meloncholy
4 Author
Flemint
DOWN
5 Command to
cat
1 Swlla river
6 Be olltnt
2 Throw•
(music)

•Roofing

54 IIICelllnlow
IIII'Chal'ldllll

o.,,. .,. . ._ ---

pd.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

JAMES KEESEE

992·2772 or

614-949·2101. 949·2160

•r•n Place

CAWFEE

Rodcy R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119
'Middleport, Olllo 45760
- . (6141 14J•526j'·~

....... Cllrll X d oro CloM,

I-IERE, KEEP 11-US

'*

WON'T ~AVE TO
SEND IT TO YOLI ...

FRANK AND ERNEST

AUTOS

EVERY TIUUDIY

EAIUS CLUB

........

. II PO•ROY
Early llrtl

SI0008oH
1'1111
1141
for 1
FIE cri

Uc. llo. OOSIH2

~

;jj'

- 31904 ........
CI'Mkltttl
llltltlltllfl'l, , ...

614-992·7144

11124/'lrl/lln

MAINTENANCE
742·3305

Frtt• Cut Trees
or Cut Your o...

7:00P.M.
mo.

TROWY
STAnOII CRAFIS

,.....,

232 2•11 St.,
992·2036

Check with us for

Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.

614·992·2549

.rl'

.........,
Fenwllgas

J ••• T las S.rlica
•100 lb. Cyllndln

oR.v:.

oGao Grill TMkl

•v.ntlna ....,.,.

c:...p.r
Loll ,
. .....
.
....
. .Trlllor
. . ,...,
.....
.,..

•••••

HOL.IDAY HOURS
Mon.-sat. 10-8 p.m.
Sun. 1-5 p.m.

~

Handmade Gift• For
Eve,ryone, and Great
Gift ldeaA.

IIUYIIY IIIWICI
......... w.rk

l21.00hr ....

IWOIIIKI IUD

992·7553/
POMIIOY,OL

11-13-'82-1 mo.

....

.
\W.O!tT YOU ~TIIU ~
•.liN61.£ ~·~

r IIOW Hnrr IF W£ !liNe.
'()€(.1( 1116 ~. N

IllES

IWUY-

5' • 7' IILL

,, ....
,,.....
....,.....

UIIIIICI
JSt7JRatsu••

111 'MIIU
t1lltlt-

12:00 Noon

Factory choke 12

gauge only
STARTS

•

'

TJIEM" •

rll\E:IZE I'V5r llE 5C»'£TTIING VW'D"'4
UIC£ ~fl(ll£CWS~'t
1lWI

C1t10 YALLIY PUILatNO CO.

--~-llull­

""" ,-

!IOftoaoilol--~""':=,:"'••tlw

..........

............ -

Llcrcll, 11CIISC

1111 · - - - - - - - -

Q . My secretary and I di:;agree

lin

Houllhold

nt to:
PIN doWn EXTRA

rt t

..... I

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I

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t;11tt•n•

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.......... ..--.-

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-~- :a\..'c:

1 _ , 4 ' I -=.1 Vllllollw,
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llr, In' !!hill; Collll Mil ... With
!1o1M •
Ill· r r.~~~o With •
1."0131'11; lolaol-

~~
u...

M; .........
Or 4 . . . 0.. Ml Ori
Plllll.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

00,~:''

OF

Rutltnd, Oh.
742-30111
SR124
ReldvNov.a

11·1'1-el-1 mo pd.

~PER

CLIPS .

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~/

-

.

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-- -.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.........................
-.....- ..
.......
EfiCh 1etNr In U.dpher ltMda lor MOther . TOIMY't Clu&amp;" E . . . . C.

-,...

...~ ·
.

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YNPKNUC

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BUXUP

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CBXVK.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Country music Is good music that you don't have •
to be a professor of poetry lo understand/. - Clint Black.
"':. ;
·~

'~:~:~:~v S©tl~~- ~ £~Se
lditod by CLAY I. POLLAN

. .•

WOlD

IAMI

.

.Rearrange letters of the
four scrambled words below to for m four simple words.

•

.. ~.
t. . •

MIVCIT

I1I
i

2

I I P

'
''

. I

"I remember when the term
'melting pol' used to mean The
United States." the old gent
sighed. "Now it means you put
the ~rong container in lhe ····-

5-H-.R-E_A_E_'"'I
d I 19 • . Complete . the

r--

I

.
'I'

.

ch~ckle quoted

.
.
.
.
.
by fill ing in the missing words
..__,___.._-'-_,___..__, you develop from step No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTE RS
A UNSCRAMBl E
11:1 ANSWER

I' 1 1,_I' I' I' I' I' I' I

FORI

'

2

111111111

SCRAM-LETS AliiSWERS
' 1 " 11
Deface - Whisk - Beefy - Obtuse - WEEK OFF
For a major infraction of company policy, I had a

~torker suspended for thrse days without pay."Can

make it live days?" he asked, "I need a

'

•'

_,•

you

WEEK OFF!"

:

.'

'

. . .

7Urn your clutter ·i nto cash,
-sml it the eau way... bx ;phone,

l

!'

I

CaU OIU' o/Jia for pGIIl "' • rio • ...,.I'G.Ieol

AITRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lu•-----1

11._ _ _ _ _1

'Birthday

•._..............

.
l

81

no need to let.Jtle your home.
PWce xour dqujfied ad toda_x!
15 worda o~ le.., 3 dqn,
3 pgpep,l6. 00

GaUipolla Dally 'lrlbune
448-2342
Po•eroy Dally Sendnel
182-2118 .
Pt. Ple••••t Regl.ter
875·1333

••
l'

..,
'".'!

..;,

Servrccs

--- - ---

~

I

I
1 I

•il
'

TUESDA

-

.

12-5-tfn

Reeldence

POL.ITICAL..
APPOINTeE.

' CHAIN50UT

PH. 614-M2·5591

Frath Cut Dally
- l'·rTIII
OPEN •7 '
lob SnoWden's

ANOTHER

I MAKE
AND~T

LICEH81Dendi!ONDED

CHRISTMAS
TREES

about BIWEEKLY. How often does
that mean'
A. Strictly speaking, I have to explain that BIWEEKLY means "every
other week" or "twice a month."
When you mean that something appears twice a week, then you need the
word SEMIWEEKLY. If you're having problems with these words,
ever, you can expect others to conlusoe I
them as well. My advice is to spell
what you mean; use "twice a week"
"every other week," and you'll have
no trouble with "week" words.

CA~H?ll
· -

32 Mobile Homes
lOr Stile

•: .,.,.

l'lolll&amp; 'I•

INCJIICE?

n

By Jeffrey McQuain

'Your
GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS

""'-~T PEPENI&gt;$ ON i;::
wt4o rttt
~

~,_Col

73 Valli l ~ WD'a
111117a..., 414 Vll Ton
CMw .......... NO IIWIIIOIL 11711
lluno

. .:- ~··

·
PONDS
..
SI:PTJC SYSTEMS · .
LANDCLEARING '' .
· WATER &amp; SEWER~
UNES
'l!
BASEMEtfn l !~
HOME SITES
;, ,
HAUUNG: U..-to-;
Dirt, Graft! Dnd COlli ~

I

Today'syour
deal
is a good
Against
contract
of four~~r~~~~
West leads the heart jack. How
you plan the play?
East opened with a classic
two-bid in hearts. South's &amp;eq11enc:e,
take-out double followed
spades, showed a hand too
overcall with two or three sp::~~
Even so, he was cautious in not -i
ing to four spades.
West led the heart jack: twQ.
three. Knowing his partner ~ad led
singleton, East returned tNe
four, his lowest card being a sult··prel-1
erence signal for clubs. West ruffed
South's heart king, cashed the club ace
and led a second club to his oartner's I
king: one down.
Now suppose South drops the
king under East's ace at
What conclusion ·will East
Probably that it is South, not
who has the singleton. Looking at
club queen in the
East is
likely to lead that suit.
certain to switch to the
That is all the help South
wins with the diamond-ace, draws
rounds of trumps, unblocks the K-Q
diamonds, crosses to dummy with
spade and discards a loser on the ·
mond jack.
Always play the card you are k~~~~~
to bold. It keeps the unknown "'
unknown.

OUR LANGUAGE

-.
~F;tMMielli ~11al::
i!n!r I ""'LI - . 1 - ,

21 . BuiiMII
Opportunity

WITCI FOI IIIII

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4m, Or .,.._1111Aftr!WL
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CHARLIE'S

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CHRISTIUS IREIS

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GENEUL

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PLUMBING &amp;
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Thomas Pickering once said: "In archaeology you uncover the unknown.
In diplomacy you cover the known."
He might have gone on to add that,
a declarer in bridge, you cover the
known. It is important not to make
easy for the defenders to read
hand.

. ONE .. TI-IEN I

CARDS? I FORGOT TO
8UV SOME •.

12/1/92/lfll

Life • Medicare,• Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Obi.
s+

Keeping matters
under cover

~Eof: MARCIE .. '('60T

illo SIIMiay CaDs)

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDEIIi INSUUIICE COMPANY

Easl

SOME BLACK

Attf EXTRA C~RISTMAS

or 915·3139

Middleport, o•io

North

JEST POUR ME

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COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

W.sl

By PIIU!ip Alder

ORDER NOW
FOR IHE
HOL,DAYS
12114/1 -

Soutk

Opening lead: • J

THAN«'! II

New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New ~ra~ • Replacement wrodows
Room Additions • Roofing · .
·

olnaulootlon

12~17-'92-1

ND

HOMEMADE
PIES

Fumlollllll
Ill, A
UtiiMioe Pold, 4
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7PJI.
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bewer...
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Vulnerable: Both
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18 =bollor
tl
10 - PIUs ultra
21 LArer of
tluue
22 Do
hoiJHwork
24 Citrus lrult
26 BoU.t dane·
•r'• lklrt
28 lblde20 ReligiOus
poem
31 F.or leir lhal
33 Therefore
34 CIOII
36 Withered
38 Fatroe
Island•

EAST

WEST

+BS

..... ._,.

blaekblrd
47 llrllllllochool
41 Coupla

15 Ocean Stet•

Mobile t1om1e
IOrRIIII

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42Tid~:·
45 So

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ALDER
~2

lllhlriwtnd
40 Dec. hoNctar

Dec. Zl, 11132
In the year ahead you might be endowild wtt11 mon1 drtw end tenecity
than you prrotoully experleo IC:ed. In situations where you went once content to
be a l o l - you witl now atrtva to be a

leader.

,.

.

CAJIIIICOIXI (Dec. 2NM. 11) Venturea or endeavors you undertake now
ld ,... promising, lOng range 81ecto. Plan tomorrow with great eve.
at you envision Is reachable. Capri-

e
,,,

•
•I'

~

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corn,
a birthday gift.
Send lor C8prlcorn's Aatro-Graph predlcllonS lor the year ahead by mailing
. $1.25 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to' Aatro-Graph, c/o
thlane.wapaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 4&lt;1101..:M28. Be sure to state
your Zodiac lllgn.
AQUAIIIUO ( ...... »Feb. 11) New life
can· now Inspire an enterprise that
looked like a toot cause. Vou believed in
It preytoully and soon yoo may believe
In " llgllin.
PIICII (Felt. 20 Morch 20) Contacts
you mike now can do a great deal to
advance your personal lnJerests. 11
looks Uke you'?lbecomeinvolved with ~
, _ crowd who ·are d-s rather than
dulards.
, . . , (llen:h 2t·Aprtl11) You"ve entered into a promlalng cycle t~at will last
lor the next few - • ; you can advanoa yow Slatus In life n you apply
youroetl. Set realistic ob)ectl- and

-them.
TAUIIUI (April 1N1ar 20) Beginning
today, expe&lt; lei- you gain could help
broaden your outlook and peropecllve.
A hllppler and wi- yoo· may r...U"
from your new slant on life.
0111111 (-21-.lune20) You might be
Invited to join an encleaO'Of al thil time
with aomeoote you.know and IOJSt. The
loundatlon already hu been eatab-

1

- •..

you can

.

contributions.

CANCER (JUM 21·JIIIJ 22) Partnerships which you enter in this cycle could
be benellcial lor both you and your allies_There Is strength, as well as oppo~;
tunity, in these unions.

I

•
. "
. "" I

·

LEO (July 23-A"'- 22) There are indicalions you might be given a larger range
of responsibility where your work or career Is concerned. Perform to the best
of your: ability. because rewards will be
proportionate.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22) Happy
changes could now be available lo you
regarding your social life and popularity. Present relationships may aloo be- .
come more meaningful.
~ (llepl. ~L Zl) lnfluencel
1hal allect your horne and family Ute
could undergo construcliva changes in
this tiiTI!I frame. Harmony will replace
diKOI'd.
ICON'IO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) Lilian
carelully to Ideal or propoaalo brought
to you by others, because they might
provide you with conltructlva _ , , ,
that you oan Incorporate Into your Immediate plena.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. Zlllec. 31) Your
chllr1 lnclloaNa a marked lmpr~t
in yow financial trends. Be alert, bepr0111able ,_channels o r lionS mlgh1 open up lor you o - the
coming-s.

..•••
••'
•
'•
•

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

Wellston
downs
Meigs

.•'
.

PageS

••

..••
•••

Ohio Lottery
BuckeyeS:
8-20-28-34-35

Pick 3:
3-4-8
Pick 4:
5-0-7-2.

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PBA.BMA£Y
IWELLSTON, OH

POINT PLEASANT, WV

MILTON, WV
MIDDLEPORT, OH

HUNTINGTON, WV GALUPOUS, OH

NITRO, WV
PROCTORVILLE. OH
ATHENS, OH

~

..•
••
•,

'

HURRICANE, WV
WINFIELO, WV
CHARLESTON, WV
BELPRE.OH

NOW 1BRU rQHJ~'ll\IASJE
~IWV£'9~.~

•
•

OUR
COMPLETE SELECTION OF

OUR COMPLETE SELECTION

Vat 43, No. 170 ·
Copyrlghled 1112

·~

OF~

JEWELRY

TOYS
25°/o.OFF
AND

LADIES' .

WATCHES

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. Gcage Voinovich signed into
law a series pf tax increases that
affect purcbases or alcohol, tobacco, and soft drinks, as well as oth·ers imposing new levies on certain
services.
Voinovich said Tuesday that the
increases will help emse a current
budget deficit and give some stability to Ohio's fiscal resources in the
two-year budget period j)eginning
July 1.
·
Most of the tax increases take
effect Jan. 1.
The bill, wltich passed the Legislat\lfe last week, is designed to
raise $195 million in the first six
months of 1993.
Voihovic~ promised to order ·
spending cuts to e~e the balance
or a $250 million deficit in the f!S·
cal year ending June 30. He said -he

OUR COMPLETE
SELECTION OF

CHRISTMASJEWELRY ·
•

1/2 PRICE
DOES NOT INCLUDE

1/2
PRICE

TIMEX '

ALL AMERICAN GREETINGS

AI.~

CHRISTMAS
PARTY GOODS

ALL

DECOREL
PHOTO
FRAMES

1

OUR COMPLETE STOCK ·.
'

I

RUFFLES
POTATO

AMERICAN
GREETINGS
GIFTS AND
ORNAMENTS

6 oz.
REG. _

•1.39

•
•

•

'

•.

25°/ooFF
cmPs

ALL
CHRISTMAS
.SEASONAL GIFTS
1/2 PRICE:

t

AMITY BILLFOLDS
.AND LEATHER GOODS ::

·

88(:

ALL

deputy of the Gal118 County ~heriff's Department, Cochran hved alone in the trailer which had no
electricity.
Cochran used candl~ for li~ht·
ing and_a gas stove for cookmg,
Yates S8ld.
According to a sherifrs depart·
ment report,,a relative said Cochran
was intoxicated Tuesday evening.
Coroner Edward J. Berlcich pronounced Cochran dead of incinera·
tion at the scene. The body was
released to Willis Funeral Home in
Gallipolis.
. :t'he S!Bte rire Marshal's office
IS mvesUgaung the blaze, Yates
said.

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associated Press .Writer
_
PITTSBURGH - Contract
negotiations with two sharply dif·
fering groups of coal operallln will
set the course for the future of the
U.S. coal indusuy, according to
United Mine Workers President
Ricluu'd Trwnka.
,
. "The best measure of this
industry's strength isn't the amou.nt
of coal that is mined and.sold
today," Tuunka sai(l Tuesday. "It
is .the commitment of operators to
invest in workers sO we have a
competitive and productive coal
industry tomorrow.''
Trumka's speech followed his
swearing in as president of the
200.000-member union for a third
five-year rerm.
Inaugurated with him was Vice
Presidimt Cecil Roberts, who also
is besinning his third five-year

term, and Secretary-Treasurer Jerry
)ones. This',is the ftrst time Jones
has been elected to the job after he
was appointed last year to fill an
unexpired term .
·
Trumka said giving w01ters "a
real share of the power" is the way
to make tlie U.S. coal industry
more competitive. "Workers can
and should have a gteater voice in
decision making," he said.
The union currently is negotiating a new national contract to
replace one which expires Feb. I.
Since the 19S0s, the contract
negotiated between the UMW and
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association has set the pattern for
most of the .rest of the indusuy.
J'his year, hDwever, the union is
negotlllting with another group of
operators in addition to the BCOA.
The new indusuy association,
called the Independent Bituminous

HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES· i

20°/ooFF

.'' '

I

.••

C~:m~~~; :,Tuesday. House Minority
Leader Conrin
right, helped the gover·
nor line up suppOrt !'rom Republicans. Most or
the tax increases will take effect Jan. 1. (AP ..__
photo)
·

0

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•PROCTOR-SILEX •AND MANY MORE :. ;

•

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say recession Is over
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
·WASHING10N (AP)- Seven
weeks after the election that toppled President Bush from power,
an obscure panel of acade~lc
economists made a long-awa11ed
announcement: The recession is
over.
.
In fact, the recession ended m
March 1991, eight months afrer tt
began in July 1990 and nearly 20
months before vorers went to the
polls to choose between Bush,
President-elect Clinton and Texas
billionaire Ross Perot.
Moreover, it ended long before
Bush was being derided by
Democrats as insensitive for saying
it had ended.
.
So said the Business Cycle Oat·
ing Committee of the National
Bureau of Economic Research, a
panel of seven university
economists regarded by the government and academia alike as the
official arbiter of the beginnings
and endings of recessions.

To a non-economist, it may
seem strange that the commiltee
waited until Tuesday to decide the
downturn was over,' especially
since the government had been
reporting growth in the nation's
economic output since the .second
quarter of 1991.
But the committee, in a news
release, had a simple explanation.
The crucial !actor was not simply
that the economy IUl1led upward in
March 1991. It was that the economy continued growing long enough
to surpass its pre-recession high
point.
That development was confinned by the Commerce Depart·
ment on Tuesday with its final
report on third quarter gross
domestic product
·
"The committee had waited to
make the determination of the
trough date until it was confident
that any future downturn in the
economy would be considered a
new recession and not a continuation of the recession
that began in
I

last year
July 1990," the panel said.
.
' 'Only by December did the
overall pattern of economic activity
appear to be strong enough to warrant the derennination of the !Iough date," it said.
Stanford University professor
Robert Hall, chairman of the committee, said in an interview that the
panel considered declaring the
recession over as early as SepiCm·
her, two months before the election, but that political considerations were not a factor in the delay.
"I fell very strongly ... it wa§ ,.;
imponant that we do exactly what
we normally do irrespective of
election timing. ... We did not want
to speed it up or slow it down .
based on any political factors," he ·
said '
The committee had waited until:
April 2S, 1991 to declare the recession had begun the previous July.
And, as it rumed ou~ that declaration· came after the recession had
ended.

Coal Bargaining Alliance, compris·
es four mid·sized Appalachian pro·
ducers w.ho have expressed an
interest in negotiating a radically
different coal wage agreement for
their operations.
"For the ftrst time ever, some
operators'have expressed a willingness to join with us to negotiate
that future," Tnunlca said. He said
he hopes that contract will set the
path for "a future where coal mining men and women are valued for
who we are from the neck up, not
just what we are from the neck
down.' '
"Our message to the other oper•
ators who are hidin$ in the shad· .
ows watching all th1s, is that you
can choose to be like your counterparts wllo embrace change and
negotiale for the future, or you can
bury your head in the sand and
hope thai this new, global economy
we're jn will simply go awat .

by Racine Grange and
The
gills were wrapped by Mary
riaht, president of the Salon, 1nd•Loretta Tiemeyer, veter- ans affairs chairman. Several members or the
group have 111so provided Christmas_parties for
the veterans at Athens and at the V'.A. Hospital
in Chillicothe.

Suspect in shootings indicted on·gun charges

.• .•

•BLACK AND DECKER
•MR. COFFEE •RIVAL

GOVERNOR SIGNS TAX INCREASEOhio Gov. George Voinovich,left, signs into law
a biD raising taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and soft
drinks during a news conference at the State-

DOING FOR OTHERS • Meigs Conaty
Salon No. 710, Elabt. and Forty, A_merlcan
Le&amp;lon, is providiDI Christmas for Metp Coun·
ty veterans In Overbrook Cent~r, Pomeroy
Nursing and Reb1bllltatlon Center, Veterans
Memorial belldjd Care Unit and the Athens
Mental Health Cellter. The gifts were donated

' .
•

OUR COMPLETE-STOCK

leave to Sheila Bevan _for. approxtmately five weeks begJDntng on or
about Jan. 25, 1993, and Joe
Anthony was granted a dock day
for Dec. 16.
.
Nancy_Basye was n;m_oved from
the subsuture teachers list and the
following were employed by the
board ~ substirute teachers for the
1992-93 school year: Dorothy
Bentz, 7-12 art; Brenda Carr and
Vickie Fink, cosmetology; Bethany
Mayer, elementary; and Kimmy
Pierce, agriculture production.
The board also approved a field
trip for a ~udent !0 a~nd Leader·
sh1p Tmimng Insnrute m Washing·
ton, D.C. from Jan. 24-30, 1992.

~.

1/2 PRICE

I

superintendent, he will remain. in
that capacity through June durmg
which time he will have the opportunity to, ~uaint Buckley with his
new pos1uon.
.
_
ln other matters, the reSJgnabon
of Don Richmond as custodian,

UMWofficersbegin new five-year
terms; union p~esident re-elected

25°/ooFF l/2PRICE

ALL FLAVORS

hire Buckley who was given two
contracts. 1be firSt is a two-month
contract to commence June I, 1992
and the second is a two-year conlnlet to commence Aug. 1, 1992.
According to James Carpenter,

died -

in a rue that destroyed hls Morgan
Township mobile home Tuesday
night.
Orlyn Robert Cochran of 2450
Morgan Center Road was found
near the dQOI'IOf the trailer, Vinton
Volunteei Fire Department
spokesman Mark Werts said
Wednesday morning,
The Vinton VFD was called to
the scene around 9 o'clock, Werts
said. He said the trailer was fully
engulfed upon fuefighters' arrival.
The Vmton VFD responded
with 17 fuefighters and two trucks.
The Wilk~sville VFD from neighborillg Vmton County prov1ded
mutual aid with seven men and two

uucks.

OFF

House Speaker Vern Riffe, o:
Wheelersburg, and Senate Presi·
dent Stanley Aronoff, R·Cincin·
nati, for helping in "a bipartisan
team effort.'
The ·bill raises taxes on
cigaretres {rom 18 cents to 24 cents
a package and boosts the cost of
beer about I cent per six pack. It
includes similar increases in liquor
and wine taxes and a I -cent per 12ounce serVing of soft drinks.
In addition, it extends the 5 percent sales tax to building mainle·
nance, exterminator and certain
other personnel services, as well as
membership dues in recreation and
physical fitness clubs. It also
repeals exemptions and discounts
that retail merchants receive for
collecting the sales tax.
The legislation also authorizes
$1 billion in bond issue-financed
building projects to help creare jobs
in the consttuction industry.

Bidwell
man
dies,
_
in
blaze
~~~;~~.Doo· 14 • wasaccepted -~y
A 56-year-old Bidwell man
Accora:irg'!t~hn·'Yares', chief' - · ~ TnC'boai_il ~giarifed ma:ternit_y

'

"CABOODLES, TRAY CHIC,
OR JAM PACKERS'
JEWELRY oR
COSMETIC CASES

would announce the cuts today.
The bill, will yield $900 million
to help stabilize the budget during
the next biennium, the governor
said.
At a news conference,
Voinovich reviewed problems over
the past year that led to higher
taxes. Generally, they involved
deClines in tax revenues sremming
the slump in the economy. .
He also pointed out that he .has
cut spending by more than·$620
_million since the current budget
period began July I, 1991, includ·
mg reductions in school money.
"This is not an easy time to be
governor. It's not an e&amp;l!Y time to
be a member of the Legislature,"·
said Voinovich, seated next to
House Minority Leader Corwin
Nixon, R·Lebanon. Nixon helped
the governor line up support last
week from HOuse Republicans.
Voinovich pra1sed Nixon .

William Buckley was hired as
superintendent or the M~!e Local
School District a1 the reg
Jl!eet· .
ing of the IJo8rd of educa~on last
night. ·
.I .
The boatd vOied unanimously to
·

ALL
CHRISTMAS
ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS

ALL

1 Section, 12 Pagn 25 cents.
A Muldmedltl Inc. Newap11per

Ohio; Wednesday, December 23, 1992

Buckley new MLSD superintendent Panel of academic economists

AMERICAN GREETINGS .

CHRISTMAS
GIFT
1/2 PRICE

1/2 PRICE

Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

New taxes take effect Jan. 1;
bill to help stabilize budget

25o/ooFF
ALL MEN'S

25°/o

•

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••

1-

•

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••

INAUGURAL • United Mlaeworken of America Pre1ldent
Rldlard Trumpu 1peab 1fter beiDa 11JOI'Il In for hit third term
u UMWA president Tuetdly Ia Plttibarah. (AP photo)
.

' •
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.

••
•

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CLEVELAND (AP) _ A north·
east Ohio man identified by the
FBI as a prime suspect in tbe
apparent serial tillings of four outdoorsmen has been indicted on
more unrelaled federal weapons
charges.
.
A grand
on Tuesday indict·
ed Thomas
DU. Ion, 41, • of Mag·

{!l

nolia, on two counts of unlawfully and ~c~eral law enforcement
possessing firearms ~ twO counts a~~ties believe a serial kill~
of unlawfully rec~t-:fin~ftr~ms can be linked to four dea1hs A rtftlt
while under fe1ony m c ~bed .
IriDin has been described is
.
Dillon has been descr\ . ~ bly tfnked to the other kill::"
court documents as a suspec 10
b
Two other t.m:A- in Slalt ~"~·;;.;;
slayings. but he h.as. not ~en
.~... .
'"""'"1
charged with the k1lhngs bemg areblcalsolinksbeing mvestwtigaredshootin~ ~·:
· otloaJed by a task force of loCal Sl , ,
, U are , 0
gs lD
mve-..
- . Mich1gan and one mIDdlana.
·

'

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