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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

Wellston
downs
Meigs

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PageS

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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

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

NOW 1BRU rQHJ~'ll\IASJE
~IWV£'9~.~

•
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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 ·.
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RUFFLES
POTATO

AMERICAN
GREETINGS
GIFTS AND
ORNAMENTS

6 oz.
REG. _

•1.39

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25°/ooFF
cmPs

ALL
CHRISTMAS
.SEASONAL GIFTS
1/2 PRICE:

t

AMITY BILLFOLDS
.AND LEATHER GOODS ::

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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

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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)
·

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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

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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.

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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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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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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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�Commentary

P~ge 2 :rhe Dally Sentinel
PomerOy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

111 co.rt ltnet
Paaaeroy, Oldo
DnO'I'&amp;D TO 'I'D JN'l'BIIBIT8 OJ' 'I'IIB IIIBIQS.IIMIOI'f AREA

ROBERT L WINGEIT
Publilller
PATWwTEHEAD

Asslstut Plabllsber/Contrqller

CHARLENE ROEJLICR
Genenl M~~~~~~pr

LETI'I!RS OP OPINION. are welcome. They should. be le11 tb111 300
words. All letter~ are subject to editillg llld must be signed with name.
lddre11111d lelepbone number. No unsigned letleB will be publiabed. Letten .
should be in &amp;Ood wre, addressing illuel, not pemmalities.

.

Letters to the editor
Wants'to set the record strmght
While certain legal avenues are
still open to Jaspn Riggs (on the
Super Shock Probation Denial), we
would like to set the records
straight on one of many rumocs that
are being circulated.
One such ruinor has it that the
reason for Jason~s denial is as follows: Pomeroy was just bll,lzing
recently, on how independent Jason
acted while in the Pomeroy courthouse for .his hearing and how
ineJtcusable it was that Jason did
not even know Mr. Will 's first
name.
The facts are; Jason's attorney,
Herman Carson, Jr., Athens, Ohio,
had petitioned the conn for a hearing and it was scheduled for Nov.
25, 1992 at 12:30 p.m. On Nov. 23,
1992, we were advised that the
hearing date had been canceled and
that a new hearing date was not
rescheduled. Therefore the order to
convey (bringing Jason back to· the
county) never occurred. Jason has
not been in Meigs county since he
was sentenced and sent to prison
over two and a half years ago.

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WASHINGTON (NEA)
Without queslion, the bigest intel'nal fight of the Ointoo tnuiSition
has deve)opcd over who will succeed U.S. Trade Representative
Carla Hills.
'
The early Cavorile. and probably
still tile front-runner, is Paula
Slem, the former Clr!cr ldrninisualion chaimum of the International Trade Commission. She is both
an academic and head of her own
consulting fim!.
Initially it loo~ed like a freetrade advocate would get the job.
However, some of the natfon' s
~ unions came out swinging,
claiminf that Stem has represented
foreign llltl:miS in trade fights with
the United Swes and would advocate allowing U.S. jobs to be
moved o~en ns
Unions are backing former
depilty trade representative Alan
Wolff, 'as are a number of major
American industries under sbarp·
. attack by foreign competitors -

computer chip menuf.Cturers and
the teJtlilein+stty, to name two.
Wolff, while far frOm a po!Celionist, does want to fllld ways to guar-

Robert J~ Wagman
antec sane pmcection for domestic
industries from predatory foreign
trade practices.
.
The stakes are high, and the
fight has become unusually nasty.
To hear the Wolff forces tell it,
Stem is Japan's biaest friend here,
.and sbe will reptaedt any interest
as long as the check clears. Stem
loyalists argue that Wolff is.an
incompetent, a captive of big labor
who will sabotage the North American Free Trade Agreement.
· Into this hostife environment a
new, compromise candidate bas
quietly eQICJIIed. He is Georgetown
international trade law professor
Barry Carter. Carter coordinated ·

trade issues for the Clinton

cam-

~lAlkf61

'FtJVl GoT

~LFA

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Berry's World

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deny.
So. according to insiders, transition plannen have deci~ to take
two different approaches: expand
the definition of "White House
sllff," thus making cuts easier, and
then cut lid; that number without
actually eliminating many jobs.
When you hear •'White House
staff," you tend to think of the
small cadre of people immediately
surrounding the presidenL J:fowe\1er, there is actually something offi.
cially called die "executive office
of the president," which encompasses rens of thousands of wc:dms
at a&amp;cncies like die Office of Management and Budget, .(he Central
lntelli&amp;ence Agency and a dozen ·
others that all report directly to the '
president. For purpo$es of Clinton's promise, say traruJition plan- :
ners, elliS will be made in the over~
all executive office of the presi-'
denL
·
But how to cut without actually cutting? In the best Washington ·
tradition: by simply moving whole
offices and agencies out of the ·
eJtceutive office of the presidt'DL
Two examples. Insiders say that
the Office of National Drug Control Policy may be moved to either
the Department of Justice or to _
Health and Human Services. Such
a move might be opposed on Capitol Hill because it would appear
that the war on drugs was being
llownsraded• But with the promise
of additional funding .and the
appointment of a highly regarded
new drug "czar," Congress might
goakJn&amp;.
Also the controversial Office of
Trade Neaotiat« might be made an
independent egency or, more probably,IIICMCI imo a revamped Commerce Department that will be
renamed the Department of Trade
and Industry and stripped of all
non-bade, non-business respon8ibilities:
With these two moves alone, .
Clinton would be more than half
way to keeping his reduction . ·
pledge -and no one would be out . ·
of wort.
(Robert Wapnaa Is ·a syadi- ·
c:ated writer ror the Newspaper · :
Enterprise Assodatloa)
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER :
' EN"mRPRRSE ASSN.
.

Workers' comp drains business, government

T~x

before a higher appeals court overruled the judge's decision and. cut
off the benefits.
The Signorelli ~is a symbol

alen claims represenWive for his
insurance company saw the piclllre
and reeled in the man's benefits.
Insurance investiptors interviewed by our associate Dale Van
Alta also cite chutzpah in many of
the cases. A Rhode Island employee got inebriated at a Christmas
office pany and fell out of a third-.
story window. The state Supreme
Court ruled that the festivity was a
work-related event because it was
held on company time and properof the ever-expanding parameters ty, and destgned to benefit the
of what is considered a wort-relat- employer by enhancing good labored injury and is deemed compens- management relations. So the
able. It's one example of what is . employee was awarded workers'
·driving the $60 billion-a-year comp benefits.
workmen's comp system- a sysThen there's the case of Barbara
tem bankrupting ,businesses, and Moran,' a topless dancer in Pomstate and local governments. The pano Beach, Fla. During a break
consensus of dozens of eJtperts we from a double shift of drinking and
interviewed suggests that at least dancing in April 1991, she drove
IS percent of the system is plagued into a concrete pillar. Paralyzed·
by waste, which amounted to more . from the chin down, she .won a
than $9 billion in 1991.
$1.6 million setUemcnt from the
For insurance investigators club's ~nsurer. The workers' comp
across the coulury, the examples settlement was proper, in the view
abound - sometimes it takes of Florida officials, beCause drinksleuthing, other times a simple sub- · ing was part of her job.
scription to ~he local newspaper
. Finally, there was the case of
sufftces. A New Jersey fiSherman. Casimer Gacioch. He w¢nt to work
for example, was collecting dissbil- for the Detroit-based Stroh's Brewity for a back injury. He'd been ery Co. in 1947. One union-negotitold by his doctor .not to lift any- ated benefit of the job was free
thing -heavy. But he coyldn't resist beer, as much. as one could drink
hoisting a 34-pound striped bass in on brealcs. The policy followed a
a jubilant pose for a photographer 300-year-old European traditioll at
from the local sports pages. An -~~weries. Over 27 years, he devel-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

..

oped a 12-bottle-a-day habit during

breaks and lunch. Gacioch was
finally)!1M in 1974 for alcoholism. ;
'lbii!e years later, Oacioch filed
a w~lfkers' comp claim, charging ,
that bis alcoholism was Wort-related becan"' of the free..beer policy.
The worms' comp bearing referee ,
denied the claim. Gacioch died in
1977. But in 1982, the Micbi11an·
Appeal board reversed the decision
and awarded. the widow $106 a
week. In 1990, the Micbi
state ·
Court of Appeals ruf:d she
deserved the benefits because ~~leo­
holism, in this case, was an occupational disease. The final word in. :
the saga came last February when ..
Stroh Brewery Co.' a insurer was
ordered to pay $85,000 ~o his
widow to seltle the claim.
Investigators are also ftnding a
new trend in workers' comP.
claims: emotio11al injuries. A jail .
guard in Massachusetts recently
retired with disability checks for
on-the-job sttess. He had to retire.
he argued. bcc•nse fellow employ- :
ees drew a face end a pair of glass-' _
es on an onion and pl!t it wbere he ..
could see it. The officer said the _
harasSment, plus deniil of a promO: .
lion, was too much to tolerate.
.
Copyright, 1992, United Fealllre .
Syndl"cate,lnc.
(Jack Anderson Bild Michael ·
Blnateln are syndlc:aled writers
ror United Feature Syadlc:ate,
Inc.)

,IND.

increase taxes on alcoholic beverages, tobaccO, and soft drinks.
They sai&lt;l the package was balanced and would cause taxpayers
the least pain possible, althouj!h
some members of the both parUes
who voted against it said it wilt
hurt many families and businesses.
The bill Includes a new top
bracket in the income tax for earncrs of $200,000 a year or more.
They will pay 7 .S percent, com·
pared with the 6.9 percent now eollccted on incomes of $100,000 or
m~~inovich 's budget director,
Gr~&amp; Browning, explained tile
rationale for that and llie Other
taxes ill lllllerial he distrliJuted to
memllcn of the Legislature. He
said the 7.S percent tax will t;cJual·
izc the brackets and assnre ' that
~~:= r:;:~. are conHe said vlrtua1l
Ythe same with
regard to other provisions
that
apply the ales tu to sports clubs

--~-- Weather--.;...._20s. Chance of snow 40 ·JIIRZIIL
By Tlae Associated Press
EdeDded
South Ceatral
throaa'
s-lay:
Friday
· Tonight, mosUy cloudy with a
Friday,
fair
ani!
cold.
Lows iD
chance of flurries. Low in the low
the
teens.
Highs
near
30.
~.
20s. Chance of snow 40 percent.
Thursday, mostly cloudy with a a chance of snow. Lows 10-lS.
chance of flurries. High in the mid- Highs 20-25. Sunday, fair. Lows S10. Highs in the IICell$.

--Area deaths-Orlyil R. Cochran Sr.

'gorles
-fr·tapSoflbout
a balf-dozen cate·
tues the lesders said
would have lbe 1ea1t Impact on the

swe'• ..-x- econcmy.

The c;,::or aad legislative
kaden
to clole l(llle loopholes and lllcsed Inequities in the
sales and income taxes and to

1'

Charles L. Spires

Charles L. "Buck" Spires, 51,
Orlyn Robcn Cochran Sr., 56;
.Morgan Center Road, died Tues- Route 2, McArthur, died Tuelday,
day, Dec. 22, 1992, at his resi- Dec. 22. 1992 at his residmoc.
Mr. Spires was hom Feb. 23,
dence.
·
He was born March 12, 1936 in 1941 in Danville to the lale Calvin
Galii a County •. son of the late and Ruth McCalla Spires. He was a
,Dewey and Glenna (George) construcdon worker in soutlaslem
Ohio, a peacetime army veiCI'III, a
Cochran.
Survivors include his wife, Eula member and past commander of
(Grider) Cochran of I,.ouisville, Am Vets Post 683 in Hamden.• a
Ky.; five daughters, Mildred Rus- member of the Wellstoo ~
·"'ll, Tammy Rus.seU, and Darlene Le~on Post 371 and a member of
Cochran, all of Vinton, and Phyllis the Disabled American VetmDS.
He is survived •by his wife, Ruth
.Kemper of Point Pleasant; two
JayJohn
Spires; two dau·ghters.
sons, Orlyn Robert Cochran Jr., of
Mrs.
Ray
(Teresa) Reed.
'Vifginia Beach, Va.. and William
McArthur,
and
Mrs.
Perry {Cheryl)
. ~- Cochran of Vinton; four sisters,
Shiffiet.
Hamden;
one
11011, Ohlrles
Leora Kruskamp and Mary
McClintic, both or Cohrmbus, "Bucky" Spites Jr., It home; dee
Thelma Mullins of Gallipolis, and siStei'S, Mrs. Paul (Delores) Jeffers,
·Margaret MitcheU of Bidwell; and Gallipolis, Mrs. Walter (Marian)
McCarley, Vintoo; and Mrs.~
·16 arandchildren.
(Eloise)
Reeve, Albaiay; a laodlcl
• fie was preceded in death by
and
sistel'-in-law.
Rould ... Jew:four brothers, Carl, Dewey, Merell Spires, New Plymouth; and
~ riel, and Charles; and one sister,
three grandchildren.
·Freda Cochran.
·Besides his parents, Mr. Spila
, Services will he held 1 p.m. Sat:urday at Willis Funeral Home, with was preceded in death by a brother,
,the Rev. Theron Durham and the Jack Spirea. .
Services will be Sunday • 1:30
·Rev. Bob Manley officiating. Buri,al will be in Pine Grove Cemetery, p.m. at the Blower-Gam:ll F-al
Home in McArthur with Rev. A.B.
;Morgan Township.
Friends may call at the funeral Maloy officialing. Burial will be in
.
home on Saturday from 11 a.m. Hamden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
· until services.
home on Saturday from 3-S p.m.
'
and 7-9p.m.

Meigs Emergency Services
units • answered the following
:calls:12:25 p.m., Pomeroy to Kaylor-Road, Alice Board to St. Joseph
, Hospital; 1:07 p.m., Pomeroy unit
:to Bald Knob Road. John Berry to
!Veterans Memorial Hospital; 5:12
~ p.m., Tuppers Plains urut to Joppa
Road, Herman Grossnickle to
Carnden•Ciarlt Memorial Hospital;
8:20 p.m., Middleport squad to
' Overbrook Center, Nellie Bernard
;to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
, WEDNESDAY, 2:05 a.m..
:Pomeroy unit to State Route 7,
•Albert Martin to Veterans; 6:21
:a.m., Pomeroy unit to Cole Street
•in Middleport, Melissa Hart to
: llolzer Medical Center. ·8:56 a.m.,
•Rutland ullits, ftre marshall to Dye
; Road for detonation of dynamite.
.
'

.•

The Daily Sentinel
""ftY

Friflay; 1ll

Ohio by lho Oblo Valley PablioldDC

The bill repeals some exemptiou liven rdaiiiiiCIIdumts under
the sales tax and reduces to o, 7S
pcltCDl from J.S percent a disl:ount
they receive for collectina the tax.
B.....,;,..,
said retail.• ers in Ohio
•vn•-...
have enjoyed exempttonsllld other
benefits greater than m~st states

,.

•

rr

Racine; Helen White, Middlepon;
and Carol Wines, Middlqat.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Milton Hood.
HOLZER. MEDICAL CEN1'ER
·Dlsc:hafle&amp;, Dec:. ZZ • Klrissa
Sullivan, Robert Murphy, Robert
Newsom, Robin Jonas, Orville
Marcum, Charles Spires, Harold
Dunkin, Brandy Purr, Doma Harless, Mrs. Mitchell Coleman_.
son, Eldon Ridgeway, Margarel
Howell and Kariee Jones.
Birth, Dec. 22 • Mr . .and Mrs.
Bret Russell, son, Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.

Winners named
winners in the latest Christmas
drawing, conduciOd by Middlcpon
Community Aasociation: Dairy
Queen, Connie Soulsby; ~
Touch, Maxine Lee; Sean, s.Johnson; Fruth Pharmacy, Cadly
Erwin; Dan's, ~arleen Jcm-;
Prescription Shop, Chad D 'ins;
Mill Street.Books, Nita Coadc;
Valley Lumber, Deanna Davis;
Vaughan's Cardinal. Cathy Pickens; Locker 219/Thc Shoe Plaee,
Bob Freed; Bahr Clothiers, Ron
Carpenter; King ServU.. Hudware, Shaula I alidennilt; Ja&amp;el's
Furniture, Rop:r Hllllt.er; J• • •'s
Variety, J......., Duffy; ..a Middlepon Department Store. ICadleryn HyiiCII.

aftorooan, Mflllflay
Court 81., Pomeroy,

Campony/Molllmodl&amp;

stale."

~ c:o.Yicti.,.; were ower-

llliDI:d .......... ..tile WBiirr.d
from the S.Mhaa Ollio Correctional FacililJ' in Lacu•ille on
May 11, 1990. Be 1IIIS rdeascd
alil:l' the ...... coway

,.01«...

tor dcd~ to retry Johnston
1M&gt; .,. ~ evit • e ••Yncd in
his triaiWB dislllowcd.
If McQ 0 -*s ia U •n1'S
favor, the ()D) eo.n or Claims
will deride llow IUdo Jo!oastnn

Man's arm severed in accident
_,..._ll:ft--..szuucdby

a wood "';.ic
~
Jetlicted
the- ... wdalllloal30 yards
to bis boac. wllcre ltis wife ~
him .fiat aid., M" • ilirs Slid..
But ltobcrt llillta- of Scioto
T-ns!iip ia Ddaaa&amp; c-y said

"•"MS

Wcdn '') ..._
m7d him
lhl:y Mlllld Itt be a7lle 1D ,.._b

lac.,

Pameroy,

Ohio 46768, Ph. 11112-21&amp;8. poolap pold aii'UtiNIO)', Ohio.

Mo- The - l o l l Pt..,

1&gt;1...,.,..

....

...,j lho

-11oft. l&gt;laliAdoa111i... ~alatnoo, Bnmbam
Now-- .._, 'IU 'l'hmt
,Now 'Ibn, N-Torlt tOOtT.
'
'

,Ohio

.....,ft...,

1'011'1'MA8'1'1R: 8ollfl . . . _ lo
Tbo DallY lollllnol, l11 CcJart lit.,
:ft.H,_,; OHio 46'1811.

,

.

IUUC&amp;lPTION &amp;ATU

. • ,.c.m... -

......

,0.. Woot... .........................................1.80
I ·~ MDblh ......................................... t8.116

.a .. Year................................. _.....aea.ao
'

81HGUCOPY
PRICE

CoupleS apply for
marriage licenses

)Jolll&lt; ........................................ - !16 C..lo

a-IIIII dooillllr Ill
·e r-JIWiliilla--dlrocltoTbo
Jt111ho -

--....... ...._

DollY lollllaol '"' a .._, ola or 12

a-ill .... cndll will bo ' " " " No

t

I

,..-...

lpllono

by

mOll

pormlllod Ia
Ia

. , _ wbora homo aurier ~

. w-.......
-.s..
........................................1:1.14

u

18 Woob..........................................
112 Woob..........................................
;
OWioldo-,. Co•IF
taw-. .........................................
IIW-.. .........................................
113W-..........................................

II
78

!5..,

. .
'

tO

.

.•.

..

-

Ohio lllllft sought

in s~ting
death
,

PARKERSBURG. W.Va. (AI'}
- An Ohio man wanred in the
sbooti.DJ dl:adl of a Pad:en!liar&amp;
man has eluded police for two
days. a dii•l saidealy IIIII').
ROOat DwaJIIC M:Oar, 'II. of
Belpre, Ohio, wu sowpt for
an 1 IIJ
of Dull Rowe.
28, off'Dastluq eady .......,,
Wood a-ty *'iff's dispMrllu
JayGV ·a Slid.
Rowe died a lltlO JLWL TIIIPSC:.,. 0.•1
Slid.
MrO= •
· lalaiF caly
todaJ, said a s!lcriff's disJWcller
.,., de&lt;:f 110
Go!clsai~ said afla Rowe's
deat7l that offil ilk 'WOIIId sed: a
newwamaonMcC
10•!
the cbarze apiast !1ia 10 fmtqcc: cleo ia pll&amp;z of• (X·

•••i•
·c

p.e---

w

ed

....
..We jut Plan to JO Jel it
siped.. We'D u-wc
IO'i&amp;h\ or
- ••itbe--:..
...._
IIWiiiOW _ . . . . . .

T

..,... ...-

'IJ.

S71criff S.F. Graillc:r said two

odla' aca were sliot.. He said
J-R. A!liooa. 21,-. . . die
Pelt beau ..t R.it:llad W. JW..
Pey.
ia die ripl..mt.
Bolli llsn rn.. l'lda:s-

25.-..

t.q.

.......

-

A1lista ad ltdll::y - - .
JODd••
R••a. a...,.·s~
pilll ia fMtu4 10 w . I ap:r. ,._,._ 0
- SliiL
I
1"aaiiz IBid Cilia' dlliiiCI f £ I 1 . ?WWe, t. sllcrift"s xu J 1tRa Wadi: said lie
llldll"t J1:ra c . . . . I willl•••ic
Allisaa ar ltdll::y.

said.

dam.

The department did J!.Ot know
wbat caused the hole b~ause the
source of the leak had not been
found; Ms. Hayes said.

Trustee's daughter
victim i11 murder-suicide
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) The victims of an apparent mmdersuicide each suffered a sin~le gunshol wound Ml the head, Jiolice said.
Tina Croucher's former
boyfriend, Joseph Parker, shot her
in her bedroom, then apparently
used the gun to Icillliimself, Lemon
Towaship police Sgt. Vince Lovepy said tuesday.
The victims were found dead
Monday in the Middletown-area
home where Ms. Croucher, 18,
Jived· with t.er parmts. A .357-cal.hllld.
f. d
ibertheMtgnnmLo. . gun_dwas oun
M
IICCIII:,
'VeiOY SBl •
Ms. Crduc:herrs ·rather, Lemon
T~
J
Croucher

T
said Par 'f~ ha-rsbee~ un'lri;

ca.t ordet
~ stala:way

' \"'

-

:;rthas

Ms. A~ew was taken to Grant··
Hospital in Columbus, where she . ·
was in serious condition Tuesday. . ,
Fred McCafferty and several .
other Madison County residents
arrived at the scene the same time
as Teater and Ms. King.
When the car doors couldn't be
opened, McCafferty pulled out the
door windows with his hands , ..
Teater said.
.'
''Flames were coming out pretty
good when we pulled the man
out," Teater said. "We lost him ·
once because his leg was bent ·up
underneath him."
Teater, illso fonner commander '
of the London Unit 73rd Infantry
Brigade of the Ohio National
Guard, said he was aware the car
could explode while they were trying to rescue the three.
,
"Yes, those things always run :
through your mind. But you don't'
think about those things when people need help," be said. ·
Teater said they couldn't get to
the driver because the car was
engulfed in flames and smoke.

Report says list down to two
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio
E~positions Commission is choosing between officials from fairs in
Minnesota and Missouri for the
Ohio State Fair manager's job, a
newspaper reported today.
The Columbus Dispatch reported that two commission members
said the finalists were Richard
Frenette, assistant general manager-finance director of the Minnesota State Fair, and Roger Alewel,
general manager of the Missouri
State Fair. The newspaper did ·not
identify the commission members.
The commission was scheduled
to meet this afternoon.
Frenette, Alewel and two other
candidates to succeed Billy Inmon
as fair manager were interviewed
last week by commission members
and Gov. George Voinovich. The
other two were Cynthia Hoye,
senior mana$er-marketing director
for the Ind1ana State Fair and
Patrick Lloyd, general manager of
the Tulsa (Olda.) State Fair.

Stocks
Am Elc Power....................33
Ashland OiL
.26
......................

ATI:T.................................Sl
Bank. One........................... S2
Bob Evans ........................ .18 3/8
n..-;nn Shop
17 7/8
~lding.......................21

--·-··-'11 ..................

Commission members fired
Inmon as manager in August after
this year's fair. Inmon had no fair
experience before this year.
The Dispatch reported that .
according one of the commission
members, Lloyd was eliminated ·
from contention when he requested
a $90,000 yearly salary, while Ms.
Hoye, 35, was eliminated because
she lacked experience.
Inmon. was paid $5,000 a
month. The commission is discussing paying the new mana&amp;er as :
much as $65,000 a year.

judgments sought
An action for foreclosure has
been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Hocking Valley Bank of Athens Company,
Athens, against William C. Miller,
Albany, and others, in the amount
of$41,365.41.
A suit alleging personal injury
in an auto accident has been flied
by Joyce Farley, a minor, Rutland,
against .Chris Capehart, Middlepan, and others, in the amount of
$250,000.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 45Z4

• . ;, .

~·::::::::::::::::::}2 ~·

Goodyear
Key Ccnntrion ...................22
LaiKis End. .........................27
I..imiled
Inc.......................
27 7/8
u •• t"'--1:.
Inc
28
3/4

Divorce filed

!:.,____
uuow- trapa1111ng.
~_,~-'~-~:·~--·~~~..... C..t
. RaxRcstauranL .................. l/8
~·lfOJU,IA

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

'l'lle·lnteraatloaal Court of Justice

;,.:a-

-:!

. '

.
~

I

Rcsidenis ~ere evacuated from
about sill llomcs near the dam in
Adams Lake State Park, Mary
Hayes, a spokeswoman for ODNR,
said Tuesday. But officials·did not
believe the leak posed a danger,
she said.
ODNR officials believed the
n:sidents would be able to return
home today, Ms. Hayes said.
The residents were evacuated
Monday after a hole about 20 feet
by, five feet was discovered in the

Reliance Elcetric............... .19 1/4
RobbiJISAMyers ..,............. I71/2
~~~~ill ~an of the Shoney's Inc......................22 7/8
lltdo·
to .::.talea~ 1
Slar Bank ...........................3S 1/2
c.n, .. are tllree --members _ . Wendy lnt'L....................... l3 1/8
7 I 'I lela, San Marino and Swlt- Worthington Ind. ...............22 3/4
--.._ 0t11er llatel may become
Stock reporta are the 10:30
J!Utie1 to tile Court's llahde. The ja- - · qwotel JII'O'Ided lily Blunt,
riakt1an of t11e Court eomprilea
E1P11 ud Loewl or Gallpo!la.
willc:ll tile parties submit to It ............,.a;;;;;;o;;;;;;..,.;;;;;;;;;;!l

=:.~ :.=~ l-:

~-

WEST UNION, Ohio (AP) Workers continued to partially
dJain Adams Lake in southwest
Ohio so they could fmd ll!ld repair
a leak in an earthen dam, the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources

::::·c:onvktions :W~in;

=

' ' ~~

~

LONDON, Ohio (AP) - The
former director of the Ohio ~part­
men! of Natural R,esources. helped
pull two people from a burrung car.
A third person, the driver, Brian
E. Bronson, 24, of Westerville,
could not be rescued and died in
the accidem Monday on U.S. 42 in
Madison County.
Robert Teater, director of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources under former Gov .
James Rhodes and a member of the
Columbus Board of Education, was
driving from Central State University lO Columbus when he saw the
car accident
Teater ran to the car while his
passenger, Denise King, a Dublin
councilwoman, called 911 from the
earphone.
Brett Collins, 23, of Cedarville,
and Rosalyn G. Askew, of Xenia,
were pulled from the car, which
had veered off the road, struck a
concrete culvert and burst into
flames.
I
Collins was taken to Ohio State
University Hospitals, where he was
in fair condition Tuesday.

---7-

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs Coun_1y Probate
Court to On:aor) Alan Murn1J,20•
and Jennifer Ann Hom, 17, batla of
Goshen, Ind.; Charles Thoma
Stewart, Jr., 21, and c.olyn FildiP&amp;Irick, 20, both of Malon, W.Va.;
Heath Ryan Hill, 25, ud D-.e
Ail . . . far diiGCC . . .._
Kay Wolfe, 26, both olRacine; _.
Robcn Leon Sawyen. Jr:, 46, _.
Sue Ellen Eshclmail, 30, both of
Cc*,R1 Ju&amp;
.
Shade.
.
•
'''- •'•

about three miles west of Delaware
In central Ohio.
Shefdon Ross, Tri-Township
· f~re chief, said Rinker was alert
aitllr the accident.
"f didn·' t know my ann was off
WJtil I saw it," Rinker said.
Rinker Said he would consider
having an artificial arm.

Crews draining lake
to find leak in dam

.,

.'

Former state official rescues
two people from burning car .:

Buckeye 5
8-2{}.28-34-35
(eight, twenty , twenty-eight,
thirty-four, thirty-five)
Pick 3 Numbers
3-4-8
(three, fol}f, eight)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-0-7-2
(five, zero, seven, rwo)

DELAWARE. Otio (AI')- A

and Elmer Pickens, is Kathy Meadows. Other
Meigs County Biker representatives pictured, Ia
back, are, 1-r, Sherry Swisher, Jane Slater, Lori
Payne, Brenda Davis, Jo Frye, Amy Molden and
Patsy Price. ·

PLAQUE DONATED· The Meigs County
Bikers doliated a plaque on Monday afternoon
to tile ~ American Legion Post. The Racine
Post Pills offered its post home to the bikers to
wrap toys coUec:ted ror needy children. Presenting the plaque to Post 602 members W.F. Bearhs

Lottery

the-Jo
ilwas...,dalllqed..
••J doil't fi:d 100 ....... Rinlasaid by • • .... rr- OPiio SIIIC
· Unitasily&amp;"ijMel•illCo' "'"
Rioter, 6S. is a •tlirtd blliDiDg
spcrialisr of die flliWII:r llochdl
1n1eu • :·or r
Veterans Memorial H. . . .
He said lie spliuinJ lop
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS - 1i&amp;sday
....... wllaa hisjll:bt
Danny Johnson, Pomeroy; Y ' . . . . . . (alai 7lis - iDiio
Sellers, Pomeroy; Jon Berry, &amp;Ul
the mriic Scioto Towasflip is

The following have befll DUlled

Pobliohed

and in the future, they will be treated the same as they would under
1
DJinois' tax laWS.
I
Building mainteniDCe and eJttel',
mlnating companies must begin
payina lbo aiel tax, undllr the bill. .
Browning said Ohio'I tax laws '
have not bpt pace with the powth '
of the servlcit as an element the
economy. He abo noted that ser, ·
vices sucb as security and lawJI
care are taxed and the bill makes ·
the tu nlore ~table.
Aa for beer, wine and liquor - ·
each wiD inca- bY. a nap from
0.2 cea11 a boUle (beir) to llix centl ~
(vermouth) - Brownina said Ohio .
DOW l!u the -411t lowest taxes in
the nation. The bill lUkes it 38th, •
he said.
Browning said soft drinks lq
Ohio have been "vinually
untapped as a state revenue .
soun:e." The extra penny for each ·
12-ounce lefVin&amp; "willlft'oc:t only
the •eament ol our population.
whicll bu die income II«:
to purchase these products, •• lie 111d. ·

te.r, A-eae Cooper, 18, ud her
fiana: Todd S+ 7 7 I 19.

;Meigs.EMS units
·respond to calls Hospital news

lllrouih

and 'P,.ysical fitness centers that
attract taxpayers with more ''discretionary mcome.''
Riffe and other Democrats
insisted on requiring wealihy
Ohioans to pay more, in return for
accepling Voinovicb •s call for
additional taxes on beer, aloobolic
bevCfiiCS and c:lprcttes.
,
. Brownin&amp; safd theae items arc
not basic neceaities and that the
new taxes generally n comparable
to those or other swes. In the case
of ci~, he said lbo six-centsa-pac increase (to 24 ccnll) may
bclp people lllln smokin~ and lead
to a reductioO-iD "smoking-related
health care COlli borne by the

rest of the" northern Plains; 20s in
the Great Lakes region and northem Rockies; 30s in northern New
England, the central Plains and the
Rockies; 40s in the rest of the
Northeast, the Midwest, the Northwest, most of California and Nevada; 50s in the Appalachians and
much of the Southeast, the southern
Plains and the Pacific coast; 60s in
the Gulf Coast region and midAtlantic coast; 70s in northern
Florida, southern Georgia and the
Southwest; and 80s in southern
Florida.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 83 degrees at
Jacksonville, Fla.

' 'If'

rationale explained

By ROBERT E. MILLER.
Aaloclllted Prlli Writer
CQLUMBUS ~AP)- Gov.
George Voinovich 'I ldministration
defended the particular mix of tax
increases that went into the package approved by the Le~isfature
last week to stabilize Ohio's budget.
The bill raises an estimated $1
billion to, help erase a $250 million
defici! plojectcd for the CU~Jm~t fiScal year endlll&amp; June 30 and pro~ide additional revenues to belp
stabilize the lleJtt two-year=
Voinovicb nogntialed a
with Senate Prcsidetlt tanley
Alonoft', R-Cincinnali, and House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelers-

and Nonh Dakota were forecast
below zero, with snow expected
across that region and the nonhcm
station was 62 degrees in 1933 Rockies.
wbilc the record low - 14 below
Strong wind was expected to
zero in 1989. Suntet tonight will be drive the wind chill factor to SO
at S: 11 p.m. and sunrise Thursday degrees below zero in pans of the
at 7:51a.m.
.
northern Plains.
.
Acna tile nation
On Tuesday evening, snow was
An arctic front dumped snow scattered over Michigan, nonheast
and sent temperatures plummeting Minnesota, the northern Plains and
in much of the northern Plains the nonhern Roclcies. Rain extendearly today. Parts of the East ed from Nonh Carolina and South
teeeived min.
Carolina across Kentucky, TenThe front was eJtpected to cut nessce and Arkansas.
across the Oreat Lalces today, and
Highs today were forecast
blizzards were forecast in Michi- below zero in the extreme nonhern
1;m. Highs in northern Minnesota Plains; single digits and teens in the ·

The·record-ltigh aemperawre for
this due a the Columbus weather

and many of these will be hard to

.

WASHINGTON - Several
years ago, I! Micbipn judge ruled
that it was a work-related=
when a Detroit man died of
•
monoxide poisoning after having
sex with a co-worez in England.
Domenico Signorelli, 37, was a
project engineer for a Michigan
automotive plant when he was
asked to fly to England to visit a
sister plant. One spring evening,
the married man accompanied the
33-year-old secretary from the
British plant to her Birmingham
flat. They made love next to an
apparenUy faulty gas he'ater. Both
were overcome by the fumes. She
recovered; he died a ""eek later,
having never· regained consciousness.
The man's widow and two children collected on a $170,000 life
insurance policy and then applied
for workers' comp benefits. State
Administrative Law Judge .Leo
LaPorte awarded the Widow $167 a
week for 10 years. ruling the fatal
tryst was work-related with these
word~ "The deceased's work
assig!lment in England exposed
him to situations and hazards that
were different in nature and degree
than those found in Michigan. Man
is by nature a social creature. It iS
not reasonable to cJtpect that an
employee who is on assignment to
a· distant land will simply stare at
the walls of his hotel room after
work." Another four years passed

higlls on Thursday, 15-25.

MICH.

pai,n, inclnding the complicated
dcetSion-making that led to Clinton's conditional acceptance of
NAFTA Reportedly, the president·
elect was so impressed with
Carter's work that he personally
asked him to become the transition
cluster leader on trade.
Some insiders say if the compe·
tition between Stern and Wolff
stays as superheated as it is .now,
Clintoo may simply 1Um to~Most of the Clinton transition
hierarchy arc still in Little Rock,
Ark., and most claim to be out- ·
siders, but already they are coming
up with some very traditional
inside-the-Beltway methods of
dealing with problems.
One case in point. During the
campaign, Clintoo promised that. if
elected, he would cut the "White
House staff' by 25 pertent. This is
)lf9Vin' a most elUSive goal for the
transillon team because every011e
wants a job. in the W:hite House, ·

Today in .history

By The Assotiated Press
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 23, the 358th day of 1992. There are eight
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 23, 1788, Maryland voted to cede a 100-square-mile area for
the seat of the national government. About ~o-thirds of the area became
the District of Columbia.
·
.
. On this date:
In 1783, George Washington resigned ss commander-in-chief of the
Army and retired to his home at Mount Vernon, Va.
.
In 1805, Joseph Smith Junior, founder of the. Mormon Church, was
born in Sharon, Vt
In 1823, the poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" by Clement C. Moore
was published anonymously in the ''Troy (New York) Sentinel.''
In 1893, the opera "Haensel und Gretel," with music by Engelben
Humperdinck and libretto by his sister, Adelheid Wette, was ftrst performed publicly, in Weimar, Germany.
In 1928, the National Broadcasting Company set up a permanent,
coasi-to-coast network.
In 1941, during World War II, American forces on Wake Island surrendered to the Japanese.·
·
In 1948, former Japanese Premier Hidelci Tojo and six other Japanese
war leaders were executed in Tokyo.
In 1968, 82 crew members of the U.S . intelligence ship "Pueblo"
were released by Nonh Korea, eleven months after they had been captured by the Communists.
·
In 1980, a state funeral was held in Moscow for former Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin, who had died Dec. 18 at age 76.
In 1986, the experimental airplane "Voyager," piloted by Dick RuUin
and Jeana Yeager, completed the ftrst non-stop, round-the-world flight
without refueling as it landed safely at Edwards Air Force Base in Califurnia.
.
Ten years agb: South Korean opposition figure Kim Dae-jung arrived
in the United States after being released from prison. Federal health offi.
cials advised residents of Times Beach, Mo.. not to return to theif flood.
damaged homes because ef si~ of dioxin contamination. Actor-director
Jack Webb (''Dragnet") died m West Hollywood, Calif., at age 62.
Five years ago: Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, serving a life sentence
for the attempted assassination of President Gerald R. Ford in 1975,
escaped from the Alderson Federal Prison fa- Women in West Virginia.
(She was recaptured two days later.)
.
One year ago: President ~ush spo~· by telepho!K: will! Russia~! ~i­
dent Boris Yeltsin, after which a sen1a- Bush admmtStraUon offic•al SSid
the United StaleS would eJttend diplomatic recognition to the Russian
· republic. •

--·--

Arctic front _blasts across Northern Plains; rain East ·

'lbandaJ, Dee. 24
Accu-W W forecut for

Trade rep post provokes bitter fight

Further, the statement about
Jason not even knowing Mt. Victor
Will's firSt name came aftel' the last
SEPTA evaluation. Jason states he
was never asked if he knew Mt.
Will's first name and because of
Jason's politeness and JeSpeet for
his elder,;, he has always addressed
them as Mt. or Mrs. Evidence is
now available to the court that
clearly proves that Jason did indeed•
know Mt. Will'.s .f~rst name and
does iildced show
mnOiliC.
Regardless ot S::Oors ·being
circularcd, we Jeaiil.e them arc a lot
of caring people in die county and
surroundmg areas that are very
much concerned about Jason's
future and well beine- We greatly
appreclalion this genmne conccm.
Thank you for die cards. leuas,
and phone calls. Anyone wishing to
write to Juon may have his address
upon requesL
May God richly bless each and
every one you of at this special
time of the year.
Gene and Judy Riggs
. 39386 State Route 7
Reedsville, 45772

Dear Editor,

OHIO V'Jc,1tllu

o,ctmbll' 23, 1992
Wedneeday,
- . ·.
-

The .Daily Sentinel

:~VV~Id~n~•~·~~~~~~~~~ce~rn~ber~~23~,~1~912~~~~~~~~~~~-------------2P~oaww~~c~•~':!..!!~~~~~~P~~~ft-~~~o~h~lo~----------------------------------!The~1D~a~l~ly~Se!!n~d~n~e~I:=P~a~gee!:~3 .

·~.

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7

�OhiO

·sports

The Daily Sentinel
Wedneaay, December 23, 1992

-c--

By Tbe Alloc:lated Prell
The balance of power appears to

be shiftin• in the NBA' s Pacific
Division this season.
Phoenht and Seattle, fmishing
third and foul1h ~ spring, are in
first and second place following
victories Tuesday night over Golden SUlte and Ponland, lhe second
and fiiSt-place teams last season.
The Suns, who have the best
record in the NB A at 17-4, won
their lOth consecutive game as
Charles Barkley ha4 3S points, 16
rebounds and the game-winning
tip-in with 18 seconds left in a 106104 victory over the Waniors.
The SuperSonics also were
impressive in their fourth strai$ht
win, 107-96 at Ponland. Demck
McKey scored 26 points for Seattle, which played without leading
scorer and rebounder Shawn Kemp
bec.ausc of a sprained laJcc.
"Everybody had to step up to
another level without Shawn,"
McKey said. "We felt we've been
coming together as a team, and
tonight we showed that. 11'6 a confidence builder to beat a team as
good as Portland in their own
building." .
"We didn't make many mistakes," Soilics coach ·George Karl
said. "I thought Derrick had an allstar type game. Dmick is a funny
player to coach. Even in games
when he is not going well, you
don't want to take him out because
he could pick everything up all at
once.'' ·
Seattle built a 9S-7S lead with
7:33 left by starting the fourth peri-

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Domil. .................. l2 10

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lldilaa .. a.EVI!IAND, 7:30p.m.

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od with a l3-4l'llli; but the Btazers
responded with a 21-4 spurt
Cliff Robinlon led all scorers
with 28 poin1a for the Trail Blazen,
including 12 in .the fourth period.
His three-pointer made it 99-96
with 1:17 remaining.
But the Sonics sCoied the fmal
eight points ·of the game to hand
the Blazera their third home loss in
13 outings. The ouiCOIDe also 1w1te
a tie between the two teams for
second place in the Pacific Di vision.
·
Spun 113, Nuuels 108
John Lucas' NBA. coaching
debut was a success thanks to
David Robinson's 21 points 18
rebounds and eillht blocked s!Jois.
&lt;Lucas was hired Friday nigbt to
replace Jerry Tarkanian, wbo was
fired 20 games into the sea!OII.
Dale Ellis and Sean Elliott
scored 23 points each for the Spurs,
Klap IOl, Bueks 99; OT
Sacramenw snapped a 10-game
road losing streak and handed Mil·
waukee its 11th straight loss.
Lionel Simmons sccred seven of
his 23 points in overtime for the
Kings.
Eric Murdock had a career-high
30 points and a career-high 1S
rebounds for the Bucks.
Clippers 108, Maverieks 94
. Mart Jackson had 21 points, 12
rebounds and 10 assists and Ron
Harper stored 25 points as Los
· Angeles kePI Dallas winless in nine
games on die road this season.
Derek Harper and Terry' Davis
scored 20 points eacb for ihe Mav·
ericks.

NopmanundaJ

en m TVC besttba11 aciiOII Tuesday eveoin&amp;:
,
.

Coach fJm Derrow 1 R~kets
· · hold a 3-~ IIWic ov~ and m the
TVandC. ~ drops to 3-4 overall
3-I in ihc 'IVC:
.
Ice-cold shootmg once agam
was the downfall for the ~ders, who were ~ble to cash m on
only 34% of their silas for the con-

3

Milk 101, Jazz !J8
Shaquillc O'Neal had 28 points,
19 rebounds and five blocked
sbots, and dominated the fourth
quaner fa- Orlando against Ulab.
The 7-foot-1 roone sat on the
bench late in the third quarter and
early in the fourth with four fouls,
but relllmed to bail out the faltering
Magic with six points, six rebounds
and t!ne blocked shots Ia the rmat
10 mmutes.
PIIIOIII !JI, Rockels 84
Joe Dumars scored 23 points
and lsiah Thomas 22 as hot Detroit
cooled off Houston.
Detroit led 42-34 at halftime
before rookie Robert Harry Scored
12 of his 2~ points in the third
quarlet, helpmg the Rockets get as
close as 60-S8.
Dennis Rodman, whcl had 18
rebounds, guarded Horry in the
fourth quarter, and Detroit regained
the momentum.
Cehlcs 106, Nets 104
. Dee Brown's 20-foot jumper
w1th .1.4 seconds lert gave Boston
the YlC'?.'r at New Jezsey, spoiling
the Nets comeback from a 16point deficit in the fourth quarter.
Robe~ Parish led the Celtics With
20 pomts.
Hornets 130, Hawks 114
Larry Johnson score4 29 points,
Dell C!JllY 28 and rookie Alonzo
Mournmg 20 as Charlotte handed
AtlaDUI its fourth consecutive loss
at home.
Mourning score4 eight points in
a 14-0 run lhat gave the Hornets a
90-71 lead in the third period. The
Hawks got no closer than 10 points
again.

teaL

.

l'AK1NG AIM at tbe basket II' Meip forward Ja1 Cremeaiu
(33), wbo goes up al:!f: tbe basellae ai&amp;IDit 'Wellstoa's Seot(
Cbeatbam durin&amp; Tu ay al,bt'l TVC 1ame at Roek Sfrillp1
wbere the Goldea Rnckets woa 549. (Pboto by Dave lbrrll

FrldaJ'S pmes

•

San Alltonio at L.A. Cl.ippt.rl. 3:30

•

New Yam .. auca,.. 9 p.m.

• p.m.

The Affordable Dream!

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CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
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POMIIOY

Tuaaday thru Saturday -1 p.m.· 5 p.m.
Other Houra By Ajlpolntment ·

TlleldaJ'IKOrtS

s-s,T...,.Boy3

EYES ON THE PRIZE- Kentucky frontman Jamal Mashburn
. . (len) keeps bis eyes on tbe boop durin&amp; Tuesday aigbt's game
•, against the Miami Redsldlls at Lexinaton's Rupp Arena, where the
Wildc:ats wOD65-49; (AP)

T&lt;~n&amp;o ... Jllltrail4, tie

SL :Lcaail 2. t r

n 2. tie

v-6.LaoAaJd•2

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(]Uc:qo ., aa.... 7:40p.m.

T:t,BayatW 7:40p.~~~.

declines to join Reds
to take care f!ffamily _m.atters

·~ Jenkins

WAID CROSS'
SONS

N.Y. ~at-.7&gt;40p.m.
Newi-•N.Y. ~ 7:40p.m.

PilahuJh .. Phi'rhlphi•, '7:40p.m.
Calpty"' W'........ 1&gt;40p.m.
San lote at E' ,.., 9:-40p.m.

Nopmea
nundayor Friday

. TOROI'IT() (AP) - Ferguson
· Jenkins, wbo lost his girlfriend and
daughter in a murder-suicide last
week, said.be probably won't join
· the Cincinnali Reds organization as
:a pitching coach so he can tate
:care of his SfqiSOII.
• ···1 don't think I can do it now "
':Jenkins told the Toronto Globe and
'
:Mail on Tue8day from his ranch in
' Oatlahoma. ''I want to get back
'.into baseball more than anrthing in
•the world. but I'm afraid I m going
:10 have to tell them I can't do iL
"It hurts, but I don't think I
:have any choice. I have obliga-

PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO

Ohio college
basketball scores
Mea

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Dcniooa 74, -

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FROM THE DW

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Marauder co~eback attempt to
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to summit of Pacific Division

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,

EASTERN CONFERENCE

It D~VE ll4 111S
See • COIIIIIP

m the eecond ptriod lild beTd off a

Phoenix, Seattle win
to ascend
..

In theNBA •.•

' .

.

In NBA action,

S t· ( , a·t·l &gt;(, ~ tt· &lt;I

''

.·Wellston posts 55-49 victory over Meigs

w.IYWI&amp;al
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We Reserve 1be Ript To l,imit Quantities

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t

Those obligations are to take
'care of his stepson, 12-year-old
•Raymond, who was left without his
.natural mother two years aao when
Jenkins's wife, Maryanne, was
. killed in a car c!lsh in Oklahoma.
Last Tuesday, Raymond lost the
,woman who ac!'Yed as his second
mother. C~ TaJcieddii!C, Jenkins's commoa-law wife, killed herself and Jenkins's 3-year-olcl
daughter, Samantha, by carbonmonoxide poisoning.
: Police said Takieddine ran a
vacuum-cleaner hose from the
exhaust pipe into the car and
locbd the doors.
· , "The boy needs me now," said
Jenkins, a native of Chat.ham,
Ontario, and the only ean.dian to
be inductecl into bllseball's Hall of
Fame. "Geez, he's only 12. It
would be too touah on him to hire
someone to look after him. My
!Pind tells me that I bave to get
lllck into baseball and keep busy
doing what Ilene to do."
Jenkins was birecl recently to
~rve as the Reds firching coach
for Chauanooga o the Class AA
Southern Leap.
"I wanted that iob a .great
deal," Jenkins said. •TI was WOit-

ing as lhe :rexas Rangers Triple-A
pitching coach in Oklahoma City in
1989 and 1990, but I couldn't continue in 1991 because Maryanne
passed away and I had to get things
in order again for my family. I
thought I had.
·
"I thought everything was
going fine again and I thought I
could take the job from the Reds."
Jenkins said Takieddine was
annoyed when she discovered in
less-than-desirable fashion that he
was laking the job.
"A young reporter called short·
ly lll'tcr I agreed verbally to work
for thC Reds and Cindy answered
the phone," Jenkins said. "Well,
Cindy knew that I was talking to
the front-oflke people, but I really
hadn 'I explained to her in full
detail that I wanted to take the job.
"When she found out from the
reporter, she became very unhappy
because she felt lhat she was being
left out of the decision process.
"It wasn't so much that she
didn't want me to take the job. It
was more that she was worried
about who would handle the ranch.
. She was saying lhat I was biting off
too much. We talked about it, and I
guess that must have been pan of
what distresled ber so much. .
"But I'll never know for sure
because I won't be bearing any
ans,.ers now. I still wish I knew
why. Why? That's all that goes
through my mind: 'Why? Why?
Wby? Why did she have to take
Samantha with her?'"
Jeakina iniCnda to biro a pmfe•
sional Counselor to wort with him
and Raymond.
"I noCd some personal care, no
question.'' he said. "II wun't until
last Monday llight that I 1illally got
some sleep, but I still woke up at
(See JENKINS ODI'IIt 6)

Both teanl$ struggled_out of the
bl~: these~ was Ue:d at four
w1~ 2.SS left~~ the Jletlod. Two

f:P~t"~~~-~12 of
Y
...,..,......., gave
the. octets • 10-8 lead lll'ter one
penod.
'
Cheatham ~ the Rockets .
10 ~ 17-8 ~vanUige m ~ ~d
Jl5;1od. ICOI'Ing seven of his team. s
po~nts. Steve Rade~ a.dded su
pomts to the ~ockets cause. The
Roclcef:S weJ!t into lhe I~ room
at the '!aJf With a 27-181.~
.
Me!g• started to ~h1p away m
the thud period. Me1gs Qutscorect
Wellston 20-13 and pulled to w1th-

in four poiDis (40-36) with lilt lMIC·
onds left on a Jack Stanley free .
tluow. When the Ro.;kets needed a
bucket to end a Marauder run, it
w~ Ch~ who Clllle throuJib
With the,bi&amp; !Jucket. ~ 6-~ jiDior
sc:on:d eiglll m ~third period, and
~ma~ Ja~ne Lam!Jert five of
his m_pomts m the period.
Me1gs bat~ed back to tie the
game ~ different tim~s in the
founh penod, the last ume on a
bucket by Ef!c Wagner with 4:40
left to make It a 44-44 game. But
~Rockets scored 12 of the last 14
potnts to take a S6-46 lead with 24
seconds left. A JQim Bentley threepointer widllO seconds to g0 was
too litlle, too late for Meigs.
Cheatham scored 24, just over
his average of23.S point to take the
game's scoring lionors. Teammates
Steve Racier and Brad Spencer
added 12 points each.
The wmners hit 2S of 49 from
the floor including one of five from
three point range for S1%. Tbe
Rockets bit nine 9f 13 from three
point ran11e for 69%. The Rockets
pulled m 30 rebounds with
~getting 12, six below his
avemge of ~8 per game. WellstQn
had 13 asststs led by Brett Fink
witli five, amHambert luid four of

In cou:~r hoops,

1

Ewing added nine, Jertd Hill five,
Scott Peterson three, and Adam
Krawsczyn and Jason Hart two
points each. Matt Fox led Wellston
with 14.
;
The M!lfauders will take II$
Christmas holiday off .before
returning to the hardwood on January S, when they host Feder(}
Hocking. Wellston will play in the
University of Rio Grande tournamenton December 29 and 30.
·
·
WELLSTON
(10-17-13-111=58)
Steve Rader 5-0-2=12, Chail
Stevison 1-0-2=4, Jamie Lambetl
1-1-1=6, Scott Cheatham 11·0·
2=24, Brad Spencer 5-0-2=12.
TOTALS- 23·1·9=58
MEIGS
(8-8-10-13=49)
Jack Stan ley 3-0-1 = 7, Er1c
Wagner 3'-0-2=8. Jay Cremeans 20-2=6, Trevor Harrison 3-0-5=11,
John BenUey 4-1-2= 13. Aaron
Drummer 1-0-0=2, Bobby Jolmson
1-0-0=2. TOTALS-17-1·12=49

.

. Du~e,

North Carolina,
.Kentucky latest victors
By Tbe Alloc:lated Press
first-half deficit.
' Talk about the rich getting richNo; 5 North Carolina 84
er. Duke has a bench, too.
Ollio St. 64
There's been ra1lc that the Blue
Eric Montross was 8 for 8 from
Devils' depth isn't what it's been the field and scored 20 points, and
over the last couple of seasons, and the Tar Heels (7-0) hit 10 of their
· .that the bench could be an first 11 shots in the second half to
Achilles' heel if coach Mike pull away.
, Krzyzewsk:i has to turn to it
No. 8 Iowa 90, S. IDinols 70
· It didn'tlook lhat way Tuesday
Val·Barnes had a season-high
night, when the Blue Devils (6-0) 23 points and Otris Street added 20
cruised'into the championship fortheHawkeyes.
game of the Maui Invitational with
No. 9 OkJabowa 105
a 96-67 victory over previously
Cbaminade 18
unbeaten Louisiana State. Duke · The Sooners used a 23-3 secwill play Brigham Young, which ond-lullf surge to beat Division n
beat Memphis Stale 73-67 in over- Chaminade. Bryan Saltier had 20
time in the other semifmal game, in points and 13 lebounds to lead the
tonight's tide galile. .
Sooner.;.
"I didn't know how our bench
No.ll UCLA 80
would be coming into this year,"
Cal St.•Nortliridge 73
Krzyzewski said. "We have three
Ed O'Bannon's 'dunk with 3:3S
players who have played so mucb remaining snapped a tie and put the
college basketball, but we .had six Bruins ahead. The visiting Mata·
wejustdidn'tknow about"
dors tied the game 67-67 on a ·
Duke's reserves provided a big three-point shot by James Morris
· lift when it was really needed. With with 3:44. to go. O'Bannon's dunk
temperatures outside the Lahaina nine seoonds later triggered a 13-6
Civic Center in the 80s and a stand· game-ending sport. ·
ing room-only crowd of better than
No. l3 Syracuse 101
3,000 heating things up inside, a
,
LeMoyH 71
doseofreliefwasbelpful.
Lawrence Molen had 16 points
Duke, seeking its 19th straight and 12 rebounds in 20 minutes for
win, led 24·13 just over 8:00 into the Onmgemen.
the game and Bobby Hurley, the
The Dolphins stayed close for
point guard who has played in three five minutes before Syracuse put
straight NCAA tide games, needed together runs of 19-3 and 17-2 en
a rest. Enter freshman Chris route to a Sl-27 halftime !!'ali.
Collins, who had four points in the
Provldenc:e 8
next 2:4 7.
No. 14 ArizOaa 66
Swingman Grant Hill had eight
Trent Forbes scored 27 points,
points in thC opening 7:00. When including seven three-pointers, and
be had to sit. Marty Clark came on the Friars held off a second-half
to force a quick wmover and score rally to beat the visiting Wildi:ats.
on a drive with 8:0S left to make it.
No. IS Punl• 48
30-17.
S'W Missouri St. 45
In otber top-2S games, it was
Cuonzo Martin scored 20 points
No. 3 Kentucky 6S, Miami of Ohio as the BoiJennalccr outlasted South49; No. S Na-th Carolina 84, Ohio west Missouri. Purdue didn't take
State 64; No. 8. Iowa 90, Southern the lead for good until Martin hit a
Illinois 70; .No. 9 Oklahoma lOS, tunwOUD4jumperfora32-31 edge
Chaminade 88; No. 12 UCLA 80, with 10 minuleS remaining.
Cai ·SUite-Northridge 73; No. 13
No. 16 Geoflla Tccb 81
Syracuse 102, LeMoyne 71; ProviUT-CbattaDollla 74
dence 81, No. 14 Arizona 66; No.
James Forrest had 21 points and
IS Pwdue 48, SW Missouri State 17 rebounds as thC Yellow Jackets
4S; No. 16 Georgia.Tech 81, Ten- rallied• .
nessee-ChatUinooga 74; No. 18
Forrest hit 8 of IS shots and
Florida SUite 9S, Arkansas-Little went S of S from the free throw
Rock 64; No. 21 California 81, line.
No. 18 Florida St: 95
Wake Forest 6!! and No. 22 ConArk.·LIUie Rock 64
necticut 90, Fairfield 66.
Doug
Edwards had 16 points for
Duke shot 62 ptlCCilt in the fust
the
Seminoles.
Florida State
half (18 for 29) and Jed Sl-33, as
allowed
the
Trojans
to get no closer
the three stars - Hurley, Grant
than
15'points
in
the
second half.
Hill and Thomas Hill - went a
No.
21
California
81
combined 12-for-16.
Woe
Forest
65
Thomas Hill finished with 25
Lamond Murray scored 22
points; while Hurley had IS, Grant
P.Oints
and the Bears, sparked by
HiU 14, Clark 13 and Collins 10 as
Duke ended LSU's 12-game win- ihe defensive~ ot freshman
guard Jason Kidd. beat Walce For·
ning strealc in Hawaii.
· esL Cal wasn't beaded al\er Kidd's
No.3 Kentucky 65
three-pointer atlh!: buzzer gave the
Miami (Olllo) 49
Jamal Mashburn scored 11 of Bean a 33-30 halftime lead.
No. 22 Coancctkut 90
. his 26 points during a 29-13 run as
Fairfield 66 ·
Kentucky ovClC8llle a seven-point

Fer thel11t minute item• , ~
en yeur thepplng 'i1t••• F
OPEN
CHRISTMAS EVE

OFF

'TIL 3:00 P.M.
CLOSED DEC. 26

HEADED UPCOURT - Ollio State's Greg SaJilSOil (rlgbt) gets
past a North Carolina player during the first bait or Tuesday
night's game at St. Jobn Areaa in Columbus, where tbe Tar Heels :
won 84-'4. (AP)
·

I·
Join f/1 AI
. We Celebrate Tile lirtll Of
Our Sartlor
.
. Christmas Eve Candlelight Communion
Dec. 24 - 6:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
Flftk at Mait
Wise nun still seek Him."

The Following Area Financial
Institutions Will Not Be Open on
Saturday, December 26th, in
Order to Enjoy the Holiday
Season.

Happy Holidays!
from

· ,. - •. Gruo

YourBankJn~-·ri::l Farmers Bank
~ • """"'c_..,
• • t

I

t •

--

Po~ne~oy

6 Tuppt~ra Pi•n•

BANKEONE.
Whatever it takeS.

~

.SHOE PLACE
Middleport, Oh.

l

,I

the R.oclrels 12 steals. Wellslllll had
22 111r110ven and was called for 12
personal fouls.
Jobn Bendey Jed Meigs with 13,
and teammate Trevor Harrison
added 11.
.
Meigs was 18 of SS from the
floor including one of five from
tnree pomt range for 34%. Meigs
hit 12 of 13 from thelinc for 92%.
Meigs pulled in 22 rebounds with
Stanley getting six and Harrison
five . Meigs committed 11
10rnovers, had nine steals led by
Bemley and Harrison with three
each. Meigs bad seven assists with
Harrison getting three. Meigs was
called for 19 fouls.
Meigs was outscore4 12-0 in lhe
third period of the reserve contest;
but tbe Little Marauders came
stormin&amp;.back to post a 39-33 victo!}' over the Little Rockets. Wellston held a 28-26lead heading into
the fmal period, but the Marauders
regrouped and came back to post
the win. Travis Gmte continued his
excellent play for Coach Rick
Edwards with 18 points, Benny

Bonk One.Aillens. NA
M""brrflliC

. .·-:······· · ........

�•
Page 6 The

.W~nelday, December

Sentinel

Dear Au Lucien: For 40 yeaq,
~IUilly. you ~'t WOikiog, yqu
our 'daqhtlr, "Iris." told ua how
are siillply showing up -lUI: at lh!l
lucky llle was to haYC us is JlllteiiiS.
·
- 8lld leav_ing aft« 10 min~ IQ
My bulllland and I have always
get IOIIICihi"' to eat. rm doin8 aJI
IR*ed our•IOII·in-Iaw, "Randy • like
the thioguround here lhal you don't
11011 and feehery close to~.
ANNLANJ)EJIS
wan1 to do and ~ore claim yc)U
. ~y. when Randy turned
•'Uti, Loo ADpl&lt;o
"can't.~ If~ got pa1d for the w011t
40, lie bad ali affair and put our
you did, youd get .abo\11 one-thlt!1
dlulbt« tluough bell. It went on c - SJDOII~
of your check.
for ~
F'Jnl!lly. he agreed to
Why do you CJtpect me Ill pick up
· Ill lilt jOint counseling, and now they dau ht«' therap' created the li
your slack? Ita yoiiT • · It •Y their !lllrriage iS back on lllll:k.
g family,
s
lSIwe· are saddened
sp t yow dloice and yow: "'·"'
.nft
in ow:
and
_..., To .t-r
We've been ,IOid, however, that by the lop. _ PA.RENTS ALONE it off, you think you should get cveil
Randy feell we have beeJtmiiCh too
more of a tax 1nalt for cbild ~involved in Iris' life and d!al she has IN iowA
How about people who choollc not
got to cool it with us so she can get
.DEAR lOWA: When people wrire to ~ 11101e than one child becMJie
closet to him. Now the only limo to me, 1 am aware tllat rm getting they can't afford it?
we see Iris and Randy. is when they only their side of the story. I
I resent the fact that )'011 think
drop their kids.off fir us to baby-siL then try to figure out what the llther everyone should caler to )'011 beciDse
AU Randy seems interested in person (or people) might say about you are hilving a baby. Big deaL
· .. . what Iris will inheriL We hilve the sitn•Jiotl;
People hilve babies all the time. · :.
spoken to .several of our friends
1 suspect Iris' therapist told her
Pregnant women who want 10
about this,
it Seems they have. she was too involved with her keep working should expect no,
similar jll!lblems with their kids. A pareniS and that ·if her marriage special privileges. I am sick of whil ·
few of them hilve changed theill '' was to survive she would have to goes on around here. ·· NO NAME,:
·
Tammy Blllell, Holly Broderldt, Whlbley Karr . wills. Their D!ltates will be divided edt the apron strings and forge a NO CITY. lENN.
CHESTER ELEMENTARY • These studeats
IIJ1long
nieces,
nephews
and
worlhy
ctoserrelationshipwilhhet"husband.
DEAR
N.N.N.C.,
1ENN.:
Feel
11nd Jessica ~artela, Back, 1-r, Garrett Karr, .,
at Chester Eleaenlary helped ~ .over $3,%00
C&amp;JISC$.
•
·
I
hope
time
will
.
h
eal
the
rift
and
better7
I
hope
so.
Thal
wiiS
quite
l
Josh Marc~~;m, R.J, Gibbi, )\lllcbael Taylor;
for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. They
When
you
recommen!f
"profesthat
when
Iris
feels
hilt
marriage
iS
blast.
You
sound
like
a
very
~outhan DuffY and Ryu Hawtbo111e.
,
are, 1-r, front; Janet Ridenour, Sara Mansfield,
sional help," perhaps you should more secwe, she and Randy will angry person. Why so much veno.ng
· suggest . that therapists not be so move closer to you both. 'Thal would Envious, maybe?
·
. ·,
quick to lay 'the blame on parents l)e ideal for all concerned. I1l keep
Do you lunt questions aboui ;a,
for everything that goes wrong in my fmgers crossed.
but no one .to tolk to? AM Ltutd#rs'
a
child's
life,
We
suspect
our
Dear
Ann
Laaden:
I'd
love
to
booklet, "Stx twl tile Tetfi-Ager."
' · Two st11dentsfrom the Eastern J.,ocalraised $3,232.62 during a Iars but was greatly surprised when
see
this
letter
in
print,
even
though
is
frllllk tllld to tile poiltt. Send 11
Local School . Disuict will be hop·a-thon to make ~t tile most they raised tile most of any one
the porson I have in mind will not stlf·llddrtsstd, lo11g, busintss-siz~
appearing on the' Muscular Dystro- · ra1sed across the enure state of across the stiUe.
recognize
herself. Here it is:
envelo~ tllld a check or money
The
idea
of
the
hop-a-thon
cam·
phy Association tele!llon of Jerry Ohio,
·
'
Dear
Pregnant
Co-Worker:
I'm
order
for $3.65 (this .include.. ·
paign
was
for
each
participant
to
Lewis to represent the three elePam Douthitt, phy$ical educasick
of
you
sitting
around
patting
postage
tllld hllndling) to: Teen&amp;,
·solicit
sponsors
who
wo)lld
pay
mentary schools in the district.
lion teacher, says she hild no idea
According to ·Michelle Mackey, the kids would raise that much according to how many times m a
your storilacb. tagging ab®t how c/o Ann Limders, P.O. Box 11562.,
a representativ~ of ·the MDA, the money. Sh~ thought realisticallY t:ovo-minute period each person
youaregoingtoworkupwtheday · Chicago .. II/. 60611 -0562 . (In
elemel~talry schools
Easuirn they may nuse severalltundrod dol- hopped.
· . your baby is due.
•
CliNJda , send $4:45.)
:fake Householder, a student at · ·
Tuppers Pblins Elementary hopped ·
the most ti!DeS - 368 hops in two
minutes. Steven Dillon, a student 111
Riverview Elementary, brought in
· the most pledge money. They will
appear on Lewis' telethon accord''There iS wide5p!'e&amp;d agreement·
CIDCAGO (AP) - A synthetic
ing to Mackey.
·
on
the positive .role that a nutritionform of the ingredient in marijuana
al
regimen
·plays in the health of
that produces the high has won
AIDS
patients,
and it is our belief
· Food and Drug Administration
approval for use l!gainst the wast- that Maririol, as an appetite stimu•.
ing effect associated with AIDS. · !ant, CaJI be of great value," said
Doctors said the drug, called Scott Broder, Unimed. senior vice
dronllhinol, helps overcome severe president of sates and marketing. ·
The FDA reviewed dronabinol's
nausea and stimulate the appetite of
,JAKE HOUSEHOLDER
· AIDS patients, who often suffer effectiveness against waSting after .
people with AIDS reported thal
'
EXPERT HOPPERS • Jake seville weight loss. ·
The FDA gave its approval matijuana improVed their' appetite,
Householder, top, bopped a total
of 368 limes in two mfn11tes dur- Tuesday to dronabinol, which is · FDA spOkeswoman Monica Reving a receot Hop-a-Tbon lo help marketed by Unimed Inc: of Buffa. elle said.
Dr. Harry Hollander, who treats
, raise money for the J\lluscular Io Grove and Roxane Laboratories
Dystrophy Association. He is a Inc. of Coliunbus, Ohio, under the AIDS patients Ill the University of
California at San Francisco Hospi"
student. al Tuppers Plains Ele- trade name Marino!. ·
Dronabinol is a synthetic fonn tal, warned that the drug, which can
meJltary. Sleven Dlllon, left, a
student at Riverview Elemenlary, of THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, cause hallucinations in lar11e
· raised the most pledge money the main active ingredient .in mari- dosages, may have side effects I~
during a recent Hop-a-Tbon for juana and hashish. Previously, AIDS patients whose nervous sysMuscular Dyslrophy. All three dronabinol's use had been limited tems are damaged, and lie said it.
schoolS Ill the dlllrk:t partlclpal· by lhe FDA to fighting the nausea should not be given to all patients.
"This isn't the first drug that
ed to .raise a tof81 of $3,%32.62 • experienced by some cancer
MONEY PRESENTED • Students lo the eleaentary sdlools of' the
tbe most for any group across lhe patients undergoing chemotherapy. works on the wasting effect of
Eastero Local School District raised $3,Z3!UZ dulog the Muscular
Marijuana cannot be legally dis· AIDS, but' it definitely can give
state or Ohio. ·
Dystrophy Association Hop-a-Thon recently. Presenting the m011ey to
pen sed for medicinal use in ·the some people relief,'' he said.
MD A representative Michelle Meckey is Chesler Elem~tary student
STEVEN DILLON
United States.
·
·
Garrett Karr.

Ann
L
.. anders

goaltCnder Kelly Hrudcy facecl36 sliols.
·
.
In other NHL action, it was BOIIIIII 5, Tampa Bay
3; Delroit 4, Toronto 4, and MinnciOia 2, St. Louis 2.
Bruins 5, LIJIIIIIIIB&amp; 3 - Brent Ashton and Ted
Donato scored second..period goals, leading Boston ·
over Tampa Bay.
· . Brian Bradley ha!' tw~ goals, his 27th and 28th of
· the season, for the Lightning. . .
Ashton broke a 2-2 tie with his second goal of the
season at S:39 of the second period as he picked II}!
Gord Murphy's diltllp-in pass and beat Tamj! goal·
tender Wendell Young fmin a sharP qle. Donato
milde it4-2 atll:l3 when hecoqvertod Adam Oata'
pass with a 55-foot~ on a power plily. ·
Red Wiap 4, Maple Leal's 4- Goalrender Tun
Cheveldae held off Toronto's power play over the
firial 2:37 of overtime as ,the Red Wings and ~le
Lellfs played to a tie..
.
·
.
.
· Beb Probert recetved a maJOr and !lame m1scon·
duct in the extra period ·for high-~cking Bob Pear·
son. Toronto, getting the olily two shots oti goal in
overtime, outshot the Red Wings 3&amp;-33.
Sergei fedorov scored twice for ~uoit.
Bllles Z, North S111n 2 ...... Curus Jo·seph, who
stoPPed several point-blank shots, was beaten by
Russ Courtnall'sJS-foot slapper with 6:41 left in
regulation as the North StarS rallied to tie St. Louis.
CourtnaU gained control of a loose puclt near
~·s blue )iDe, Skated through the cenlel faceoff circle and let loose a shonhat eluded Joseph's
glove. The goal ruined an otherwise srellar game for
Joseph, who made 38 saves, including 16 in the third
.period. He redeemed him~ in the final minutt: of
regulation, stoppmg M1ke Modano and M1ke
MCPhee from the slot.

n-s,...._.,.

rears·

ana

·"'~Students

NFL tiebreaker system creating
incentives for teams to Jose games
sharP. You only need him sharp for Vikings, who have cliilch\l(l the
NFC Central and know that lhey'll
AP FootbaU Writer
next week.
hilve to play the fust week Ill home,
The NFL's playoff tiebreaker
Now the Eagles.
system is g!'C&amp;t for trivia buffs who
If things stay the way they are, then go on the road if they win ... .
can p0re over the endless possibili- · Philadelphia will go to New thus no Incentive. In fact, they
ties and call their favorite talk- Orleans to try to fmally·win a play- might have diSincentive, too - if
show to disperse their findings 10 off game. If they lqse, the Eagles lhey lose, they get the Packers; if
they win, they get Washington,
the general. public.
would probably go to Minnesota.
· Except for one built-in flaw The Eagles belli.the Vikings and which won IS-13 atthe Humphreytb.e system has built-in disincen. Saints in die regular~. both at dome at a time' it was without most
tives.
home. But they had a lot more IIOU· of its offensive line.
·'
NHL game at Joe Louis Areu in Detroit, wllicb
BAM! - .Toronto's BIIJ Berg (10). aod
This kind of craziness ·hilppens
That is, even in a year like thiS ble with New Orleans and the;r
resulted In a 4-4 de. (AP)
Detroit's Mllrk.Howe crasll tbe boards·In a tan·
one, with only two of 12 playoff were playing a lot better then -u most seasons, and it sometimes has
gle during the nnt period or Tuesday ·night's
berths at stake the fmal week, there was the opening game of the sta- · its bizarre aspects. .
are teams that hilve reason to lose, son. So ... if they I~ .down against
· In 1984,for example, four of the
.
.
.
like Houston and Philadelphia.
the Giants, would .anyone blame . live NFC East teams (Yes, even the Commentary
Cards) went into the final week
And teams that ·have reason to them?
·
be confused, like Wasllington, ·
Which brings us to the Red- with a chance to inakc the plilyoffs.
One of the four was the Giants,
which can lose and make the play- skins.
offsandwinand 'missthem;
Washington, which has been who played then-d.ismal New
• ''I'm not sure what's happen- bauling Philadei,P.!t!a all year for a Orleans at home the final week
ing," coach Joe Gibbs says of his playoff berth, will hilve to root for . knowing their playoff fate didn't
w" .Bt JIM' LITKE
there was 70 ye~ of'·llaseball 10' · 'lidve, bUt alliiost'bo one would dis-'
Redskins. "l just know someone · the Eagles this week against· the depend on whether they won ot
losl
·
,
has t&lt;i help us." ·
·
·
Giants, who hilye long since been
. AP Sports Writer
• take into account and.ev~ year, pute that the'tide of events in base·
Pete Rose. shouldn't need any there might have been SO 10 75 baD these past few years have'made
So they lost ... and made the
· Sta"t with the Oilers, who eliminated.
playoffs anyway when the Red- more help to get into Cooperstown, future HaD of Famers p8rked there. Rose's virtues seem faiier and hiS
alreaily have clinched their wildWhy?
·
card berth and can't help themSo the Eagles can stay ahead of skins beat the Cards and the Dol· but ~·s getting it anyway, 'J'!te lal· It took a long time before all the vices less foul.
·
est Uiist came .from the· Jll•llman, . generals were cleareif'6If the.shelf . :c ~e .llw,per8 are.perverse in !heir
selves if !hey beat Buffalo on Sun- them. Because if the Skins finish in phins beal the Cowboys.
· Which brings up the Giants· who' dropped off a letter last week and we began reaching the next desire to conlrol the game froot top
day nigh1 in the Astrodome. But a three-,way tie with the Eagles and
labeled "1993 Hall of Fame Bat- level .. ,
' ·
·
to bottom, the players rush from
they do have disincentive- if they Packers, they miss the playoffs. · Eagles game this week.
·
''Now, you no longc\r hilve a sit- town to 19wn to ftll their:pockets,
The Giants. who revived last lot.''
win, they most likely will have, to
lt worts tl!is way.
Here are some of the ruunes of uation .'\\'here guys who are clearly and there is a nagging sense that
go TO Bulfaio the following week, ·
If the Redskin's and Packers last week to beat the Chiefs 35-21,
not a particularly ·pleasant place to {both 9-6) lose, the Redskips are in. may have the ultimate disineentive. the fust-year eligibles on it: Rick deservinl! -Juan Marichal, say, 6r the franchises themselves are root·
· If they beat. the Eagles, that's a BurlesoJI, Bill Campbell, Cecil Eddie Matthews. has to ~t 10 less. Yilntees 'bciss·George Stein-·
be on Jan. 3, panicularly for a runIf the Redskins and Packers win,
and-shoot team.
the Packers get in if the Giants beat pretty good [Jnish.
Cooper, Doug DeCinces, Davey or 15 years for his turn."
. . brenner comes bact next seasonIt may also save Ray Handley's Lopes; Garry Matthews, Darrell
Because of the ever-improYing fron,l a lifetime ban, no less- and
So what .better test for Warren the Eagles; the Redskins get in if
•~dre Thornton..
· · Yankees reliever Steve Howe
job.
Moon, whO niay get a little work to the Eagles beat lhe Giants. .
ca1....
1""r of compe''''
....on, th e~e are
Porter, ,...,
Which is not what most of the
And here are sonic of the names going to be fewer and fewer play- comes back every season - cir so
get sharp after recovering from hiS
The Packers are playing the
Giants want. ·
broken arm? So what if he's not
of the holdovers: Vida Blue, Curt ers dominati.ng their ·respective it seems- from another episode of
Flood, Minnie Munoso, Thurman eras, Without recounting .Rose's substance abuse. \ .
After fire years of NFL labor disputes, ..
·
.
Munson, Luis Tiant.
statistics, it is enough to say that he
· Combined, tha.t's a strong Rotis- is baseball's .all-time leading hitter
Alfred R Nobel, inventor of dynasCrie League entry, definitely. An and he collected th!:nl all in what mite, bequeathed S9 mllliOD for the
impressive roster for a card show, we will look back on is one of Nobel Prize award, given to those
piobably. Decent guys all, maybe. baseball's golden ages.
who ·had most benefited mankind in
·And the Hall?
Rpse. hosts a two-hour radio ·. physics, chemistu. mediclne-psy· ,
Not. ·
show mghtly from West Palm chology, literature and peace:
·
There ate enough other tHings ·Beach, Fla., but he haSn't climbed ·
·
By DAVE GOLDBERG
that the lea,ue negotiators must
Last week, the owners. met in
NEW YORK (AP)- After five still du a selling job through Christ· Dallas to consider the plan put happebing in spons at the moment on a soapbox yet, nor made much
years, the NFL has apparently mas and over the fmal weekend of forth in the agreement between to nudge justice for Pete Rose new~ recently concerning his
reached the brink of tabor peace, a the regular season.
commissioner Paul Tagliabue and toward · the bottom of the list eagerness to enter the Hall. He has
not applied for reinstatement to
peace that will include the league's
"We're trying to get from here Jim Quinn, lawyer for the players · marked "Things to Do Today."
But the game he played with baseball, and even if he were so
rust unrestricted free agency.
· to .next Monday," one participant in the Minnesota suit and chief
After 12 hours of meetings said, speaking on the condition of negotiator for them in the contract such dogged determination needs inclined, there is not a full-time
some good news very badly ri'ht commissioner to consider it.
Monday and Tuesday, the players anonymity.
talks.
.
He also refused to return several
and owners announced they had
"It's got to be a fair deal or
But Tagliabue could get only now. Who tnows, doing soroethmg
reached agreement in principle on we'll have to take our chances in three members of the seven-mem- because it Is the right thing, while phone calls Tuesday to.talk about
the fust.agreement since the 24-day court,'' said Cleveland owner Art ber negotia!ing committee to agree still a novel idea among baseball's the topic. Yet, when you think
,.
j
strike in 1987 lhat threw almost all Modell, one of the owners who on the settlement 'and after a long current ilwners and £layers, might about 11, he really shouldn't have
·
fabor mjltters into. the courts or prefers negotiated settlement 'to · session involving all28 tea~~~s went just become habit· orming. And to.
before federal agencies.
·
court action. He said .there were back to w.ork with Quinn. ·
besides, Rose's omission from the
Everyone has . to decide for
.One source familiar with the' ballot can only become more, not themselves whether morality is rei• Neither side would give delails, stilf some points unresolved.
liut it is believed the agreement is . TIM: agreement follows .a period framework agreed upon two weeks less, glaring with each passing
very close to the "framework" m wh1ch the league's labor rela- ago said that ·he had SJ?Oken Mon- year.
.
.agreod upon two weeks ago, which lions were shifted from collective day night with negotiators, who . This year there were a few wor:1\'ould bring free agency for the bargaining to coun.
,
· told him the tentativ~ agreement thy distractions- fll'St·timtn_RegSP.ICJAt HOLIDAY B0t1JIS
gie. Jackson and Phil Niekro;
· fli'St time, impose a salary cap and
Last September, a jury in Min- didn't differ much. ·
OPEN MONDAY-sATURDAY UNTIL 7 P.M.
cui the draft from 12 rounds to neapolis handed down a verdict
That would mean free agency holdovers Orlandq Cepeda and
. seven.
throwing out Plan B, the league's for players wilh five years' expen- Tony Perez. And each of the next
THRU DEC. 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER
"We'v.e had two full dar,s of limited free agency plan. Judge ence and a salary cap kicking in two years offers names that could
HOURS APPOINTMENt
discussion totaling 12 hours, ' the David Doty,.who presided at that when player costs reach 67 ~t be 'bronzed without apology: Steve
Don't
loru-t
to
come
In wid •ill!! up for • 4$" 110,... TV \0 b. given aw.,
statement said. "We made progress trial, subsequently let nine of gross revenue. It would mclude Carlton and Don Sutton in 1994;
lhe,
week
before
8up'V BowiS..-,1 No
n• nary.
Mike
Schmidt,
Jim
Rice
.and
on the remaining issues and have unsigned veterans become free a seven-rolmd dnlft with $2 million
reached a tentative settlement agents this season, including All- per team allocated for draft choices Tommy Jolin 'in 199S. But 19~
agreement in ptinciple. We will Pro tight end Keith Jackson, who - less than some high firsl· will feaiQI'e almost-bookends B1U
Buckner and Keith Hemandez, and
altempt to finalize on it Monday." left Philadelphia and signed with roundera. get now . .
"~SERVICE '((HAT WE SEU"
'Details from the mi:elil)gs of the Miami.
It also would allow teams to it figures to do downhill from
RUTLAND
·1-800-837-8217
742-2211
last two days were sparse, indicatDoty, who must approve this designate a "franchise player" there.
Bill Deane, the senior researcher
ing two things:
settlement, also had a behind-the· who would be protected through
· - That there was indeed scenes role in the talks, urging the the life of his contract. Teams for lhe National Baseball Library at
two sides to reach agreement on would also be able to protect two Cooperstown, has looked at the
progress close to a settlement when things are close, the rhetoric their own. He told both sides that players this year, one next year and balloting dowo lhrou~h the yean
and he concluded; • There have
stops.
neither might like any settlement none thereafter.
·
_ Pllrticipe.nts indicated that the he imposed.
Iti general,' that would allow been some peaks, but overall,.the
quality has gone down from the
agreement was still a bit shaky and
most teams to keep slats.
By DAVE GOLDBERG

Rose's omission from Baseball Hall
ofFame ballot to loom larg~r ·with tim~

to. appear on tel~thon \

·Synthetic marijuana OK' d
for AIDS-related effects

·AIDS leaving
youngsters
motherless

NEW YORK (AP) - Ada Setal
doesn't need surveys or studies to
tell her how devastating AIDS can.
be to ·a family. Her daughter-in-law
and two granddaughters died of the
disease.• her son iS dying of it and
·she's the olily one to care for her 7year-old grandson.
·
"The only way I face it is to
take a day away from everything,
read my Bible, cry and ask God for
strength," she said Tuesday. " You
have to learn to deal with it."
More and more families and
social service agencies are going to
have to learn to deal with it.
. A study in today's Journal of the
American Medical Association
estimates that the number of
healthy American youngsters left
motherless by AIDS will more than
double by 1996 and reach more
than 80,000 by the turn of the cen-

Unlf'estricted free agency, shorter
draft, ·salary cap included in pact .

DOWII. CIILDS

·•IISUUICE
•u•-••
,..........,
111 Sace• St., ,_..,
AIIITIIIIVIII.
-COUITY
1161

....c,

Most· will be poor and black or
Hispanic, living in communities
least equipped to care for them, and
they will face serious psychologi·
cal, financial and legal problems,
said the authors , led by David
Michaels, !lSsociate professor at the
City UniversitY. of New York medi·
cal school.
.
"Unless increased auention and ·
resources are devoted to this vulnerable population, a social catastrophe is unavoidable,' ' they wrote.
Another study, issued by the
United Hospital Fund, estimates
that as many as 30,000 of those
children, and an additional 25,000
young adults, ages 18 to 25, will
live in New·York.
Setal's grandchildren were
lucky in some ways. Their mother,
Armed&amp;, and father, Eddie, asked
Setal to ~like custody of the children before the mother died . .
Setal was able to care for them
, in her home, but for a woman ·in
her 50s, it was a handful, having
three AIDS-infected children, plus
the ailing parents.
.
,"It was·an hourly sorrow," she
said.
.

· BftLIID PUIIIftBI

CLEVELAND
(AP)
Linebacker Clay MatthewS' says his
newly established team sack record
doesn't mean much, because the
Cleveland Brow.nl will again sit
out ot the NFL playoff1.
.
A fm-1'0111111 cbft pk:t in 1978
- Clevolllld plekod former tight
end Ozzie Newsome later in the
same IOUI)CI - MlllbeM. 36, currently is tho .,.._ defenl!ve player
in the NFL llldlle 'anelrina 8noth·
. er Clevel~d record. lJI Sunday's

season finaie at Pittsburgh, he

will

play in his.216th game as a Brown,
tying Lou Oroza's team mark.
"Winning as a team is whilt it's
all about," he said. "Whenever a
team nioves the ball on you, you
second-guess everything·- · the
rush, the coverage, your plays.
When I go home; I second-guess
myself as an Individual. You even
do that when you win. It's very disappoinlirig. t t
!
.
The HOuston Oilers used a 65-

yard screen 1pass to set up the
deciding IO~chdown .in a 17-14
Cleveland lola Sunday. The defelll
eliminated the Browns frOm pl!lyoff contention.
·
"One thins )'00 learn if you're
f~ enoup to play for a long
ume - team 1\Jcceas," Mallbewa
said. "I rnigll get an hour cl pood
feelinl!'om a record, but I the
team
well, that lasts for a life.
.:.....e. "
.

beginning.
.· .
.
.
"When the HaD began in 1936, .

'Jenkins •••
(Conlinued from Paae S),

5:30. in the momlng, talking to
mytelf. I'm tilrribly lloubled, lari· .
bly confused. ..
Jeoldns Nid he ... IOiliC peace
of mind wbenllo'• illldna b11eba11
with hll old ltllllltDIIA
"Ernie Buklllu called.'' be
llicl. "So llu BWy Willllll!• and a
bunch of other guys who played
with 1110 for tho Chicago Cubs... .

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
.
HOLIPAY HOURS..
THURSDAY, DEC. 24
10:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M.
FRIDAY, DEC~ 25- CLOSED ·
. SATURDAY, DEC. 26
10:00 A~M. • 6:00 P.M.

Mi[[ Street tBoo~
HOLIDAY HOURS
Thursday, Dec. 2.4 - 9 am-5 pm
FRIDAY, DEC. 25 and

26

SATURDAY, DEC.

CLOSED
-..

tury•

ponh••

Matthews cares little about Browns' new sack mark

The D!llly Sentlnei-Pag._7

Counseling 'backfire~ ·on couple ·

.Vancouver, Boston, two ties
comprise latest NUL action
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
The Vancouver Canucks played the perfect road
game: The LQs Angeles Kings were perfectly awful.
Scoring just 16 seconds afrer the opening faceoff
at the LOs Angeles FOrum, the Canucks went on to a
6-2 victor}' over the Kings in irn)XXUIIIt big Smytlle
Division game Tuesday rught. ·
" No one could have anticipated that we would
score on our fust shift.' ' Vancouver coach Pat Quinn
said. "I think: it's ol)vious ~we aren't usually ·the
type of team that gets off to a fast start We la!ow
that's what the Kings usually do." .
. By the time the fust pe'riod was over, the Canucks
had rolled up a 4-1 lead and taken the crowd - and
the Kings - out of the game. The victory gave the
surging Canucks a 7-1-1 record in their last nine
games and left them only !l point .behind the Kings
and three behind frontrunning Calgary in the Smythe
race.
Oefensemiln Dana Muriyn's 35-foot slapshot just
16 seconds after the opening faceoff gave the
Canucks the ~ly lead, and lhe Kings never recovered. Geoff Courtnall follqwed with a goal 111 6:51 to
make it 2-0.
The Kings, 1-4-2 in their last seven games, pulled
within a goal when Luc Robitaille scored on the
power play with 3:51 to go in the fii'St. .
.. ·
But the Kings could not take !idvantage of a slashing penalty to Vancouver's Sergio Momesso lare in
the period. Instead the Canucks came up with short·
handed goals by Pavel Bwe and Tom Fergus in a 21second span. .
.
Vancouver goalie Kirk Mclean gave up a secondperiod score to Paul Coffey, but stopped 27 shots to
remain unbeaten in his last six starts. Los Angeles

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

23,1992

.

Pickens, Tina Delacruz, TllhlnJ Kidder, BOlle
Jo Wel.cll and Janel Calaway. Back, Kim
Mardllko, Jao Sanders, Jeremy Connolly, Chris
Lyou, J•ke Houaebol4er, Bradley Braooon,
Jimmie Putmao aod Stacie WIIIIOn.
'

TUPPERS PLAINS BLEMENTARY ·Help• Ina eontrlllute to tile $3,Z3Z.6Z raised for lbe
MIIIC\llar DJ*op~ ~tlon were th- stu·
deJtl al Tuppers 1 Elementary. Tile .oney
will railed dUrlaa a Hop·•·Tlloa lleld IIJ tbe llu·
dentl. Tb~y are, l·r, froot, Albley Hapr, Nancy
•

•

~

••

.

. , ~- ·t~

.
\f '

Christmas
Hours
Thurs., Dec. 24
Fri., Dec. 25
·Sat., Dec. 26

All offices close at2:00 P.M.
All offices closed •
Drive-thru banking 8:30,..M.- 12 P.M.

Use Of!Y of these caids to bank 24 hours aday at our
·
Automatic Teller Machines.

...

Member FDIC

'·
.

••

..

~

�"Page 8 Thl Dally Sentinel

Weclnelday, DecemiNW 23, 1112

Pomeroy MiddlePort. Ohio

v.(ldneeday, December 23, 1992

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dilly Sentlnei-Pege-e : ·

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

War marks Bosnian Christmas

THANK YOU CHERRY

PIE FILLING

STORE HOURS
Mo~tday

: SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Shrapnel, bullets and
winler's chill had forced the Slolw
family to mostly keep to their
klll;hen . The spirit of Christmas
inspired !hem to ven111re back into
the living room.
.
The fust mwnent they hung on
their frail aee Tuesday was a small
red apple, the gift of a teacher
friend killed in Bosnia's war.
· ' . ' 'Family life is the easy part,"
said Mary Ansda Slokar, 44, who
~jght years ago moved her family
ftom Houston to her husband's
native Bosnia. "You have to not let
other thinis b?!he~.you , like no
warer, no electnc1ty. .
• Carii8S, the Catholic relief organization, employs both Slilkars.
The couple and their four children- Antony, 14; Mary Angela,
12; Chedomil Jr., 10; and Teresa, 9
:,:.. and Slokar's mother Mary have
escaped injury.
· ·~ But all the windows in their

210L ·

thru Sunday

99(

8 AM-10 PM

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

GOLDEN WHEAT

MAC. &amp; CHEESE

1v. oz~ . · ·

4 $1
$2 49

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOnOM

Round

'

Tavern

.

H a m s o o.... 0 • • •

·s179
$189

'

..

·

C

Chicken_"~. .-". . . . . . . . .l •. S9

La.

R

Monday Paper
Tuellday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Frl\lay Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.ii.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12
CLOSED

SUNDAY

• Ad• outlide tha cou.aty your ad r11111 .... , be prepaid
• Reeei.ve dU~c;ouot for ad. paid in ad~e.

Cla,.(lied page•

• Free Ado: Cl-ny oad Fouad .... uader t5 -..u will be

cor~er

the

Monthly

15
15
15
15

Rate

Over 15 Words

.
..

•

••

·•

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

$ .20
$ 30

$1~ . 00

$1.30/day

Petli for Sale
M1111ical ln1trwnoa11
FruUo A V.,...a.loo
For s.1o or Traclo

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

I \li\1 &gt;I 1'1'111"

'•

•

'•

367-Cbeol.lre
388-Yialoa
245-Rio.Croode
256-Guyaa Dlot.

or n ...

MS-Arai.la Dlot.
379-Wol-o

992-Mltldleporo/
. Pomeroy
985-Ciwoier
843-Porlload
247-Letort Fallo
949-Roclao
742-Rulland
667-Cooi.We

675-1'1. Pleuool
4SII-Uoo
576-Applo c.....
773-Moooa
882-New u••en
895-Lelan
937-Bolfolo

Li-tock
HayACroia
Sood A Fertlliur

M- B,..;- Buildlnfo
35-Lo~aAA......,

,.-----1

36- Rool Eo~a~a Waaled

1\1 \'1 \I"

GET RESUI.TS • FASrf

5-HappyAda
6- Lo.t and FoUDd
· 7- Loouad Fouad
8- Public Saloi A
Auedoe
II- Wuled 10 Buy

·-·.

WonlediO Buy

3l- Far•• for salt

Rates are for conserutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

2-laMe•ory
3- AuouaceJaen&amp;l
4- Giweaw&amp;y

•
•

qup

32- MoLlie Ho.... for Sale

•

Trueka for Sale

4.1- HoUiel for Reat
42- Mobile Hom.ee (or Real '
43- Fanu for }teat
44-- Apartment for Rent
4S- FumUhed Rooau
46- Spaee for ReDl
47- w...led ..

GaDia County Melp Coanly Maoon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-G.WpoUo

.•

,\I I\ I" I (I( k

followin&amp; telephone eschangea ...

run 3 dap at DO ebal'fl.
• Price of ad for allcopi&amp;olleuoro ;, doulo price of ad - •
• 7 point liae 1ype o..Jy ued
• S.ntm.l ill not n~poa.iltle for enon after r.nt cl.y (check
for error• ron. day od ..... ill popor). c.u before 2:00p.m,
day after publieatioa to •ake eot'I'Mtion
• Acll du.t mut be paid ia advuee an:
Card
~~o
Happy Ado
Ia M-oria• .
Yard Sahi
• A clauirtod od•er.UO..al plo.od ill ... C.lllpolil Daily
Tribune (acopl Cluoillod Dioplay, B,.ill_ Card or Lopl
Noliceo) will alto appear illlhe Polol Pleuu1 Ropier oad
the Daily Seatiael, reaehinc over 18,000 hoMe~

6.5·~

DAY BEFORE.PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thur.oday
1:00p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

STARKIST
TUNA

$ 129

BUTT STEAKS OR .
Pork

r a n k s ....................................

6
10

· To place an ad

OIL OR WATER

F

IS

1
3

C h e e s e o••••••••••••••• oo •• o••• 0 ••••• La.

WHOLE FRYING

Words

Days

POLICIES

ECKRICH

....
'

RATES

2 .s1

•••

COLBY LONGHORN

ARMOUR
'5.0Z.

~ LB. .

'

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

S t e a k o•••••• ooo····o··(a.

HAMILTON BONELESS

'

home have been shattered, slnpncl their living room, Their contents
caved in one part of the roof and . were more lh8n the scraggly tw~
the OUISidc is peppered with bullet foot pine could hold , but with
wood scar~e in this city without
holes.
The family IllS spen1 most of the heat, lhe "small L' CC was the best
'
worst J.l8lt of the war in the kitchen, they could do.
and it1s around that room's woodThe apple-shaped ornament was
burning stove that much of Otrist- a gift from lhe children's favorite
homeroom teacher, a Serb who was
mas is bein$ celebrarect
The family could have CV!ICUBt· killed in. shelling of the city last
ed when the war staned in April, May.
•
Mrs. Slokar and her husbaitd but chose to stay.
''It's a challenge. It was danger- wearing winter parkas - wat~;hed
ous, and SCI1r)' for' the children .... as the children danced around the
aee,
But this is m:t. city, I belong here,"
They sang " Amazing Grace,"
said Chedolnil Slokar, 50, formerly
"Santa Claus Is Coming to
a globe-trotting oil worker.
The Slokars have remained Town," along with local Chrisunas
through a war that has claimed the tunes.
The Slolcar children were the
lives of at least 17,000 people.
star
singers of Sarajevo Christmas
Sarajevo, under siege by Serb gunpageants
in years pasL There will
ners, has now been without water,
elecuicity or telephones for nearly be no pageant this year.
To make presents this year,
t~Weweeks .
On Tuesday, the family spread everyone raided mom's sewinl:l
out two huge boxes of ornameniS in basket.

Rabin·declares

•• '
•'

Vaao A 4 'WD'o
MotoRyele.
AMoloroforSale
Pan. &amp; Acce-neol

a..,

48-~Jpo!OOI

ll- Holp Wooled
12- Sil•lio• Waaood
Ia-J~~alltaaefi

po

14-- B~o~~iDMa TrainiDfl
15- S.looolo A laolrucdoa
16- Rodio, TV A CD Repair

Pl...biDfl A Heali.as
Exuvaaa.,

52- Sportlaf Coodt
53-Anliq-

17- Ma.c:ellaDeOUI
18- Waaled To Do

•
•

Rclri«o:ralio~

Mioc. Mercbaadioc
sS.:.. Bulld;Dfl Suppli,.

o a s t s ••••••• oo •• o •••• oLBo .

BUCKET CUBED

.

..

Beef Steak. . . . . . . . .LB.
CHOICE

BONE~ESS

$ 79

BEEF

ump RoasL____...JB.

I,

2
$ . 99
1

Pl,lbUc; Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTJIIENT OF
•
FIDUCIARY
On Decombor 4, 11192, In
tht Melgo ·c.,unty Probote
Court, · c;ooe No. 27704,
'J""n T. WoHo, P. 0. Box II,
'Racine, Ohio 45771 •••
""!"'lntod Executor ol tho
ooute of Coltor Hoymon,
docooood, late ol Cherry
,Sttoot, Racine, Ohio, Ohio
:45771.
Robert Buck,
Probata Judge
'L- K. Nasolrood, Clark
l

!

3 DIAMOND
.

PINEAPPLE
I

•• I

e:

20 OZ. CAN

2 $1

'(I~ 11, 16, 23, 3tc

' · Public Notice
• · PUBUC NOliCE
'
NOliCE OF PUBUC
·
HEARING t2
; ' Tho. VlMago oiMkklloport
; lnllndo lo opply lo tho Ohio
ol O..olopmont
lor lundlng under tho
Community O.volopmant
: lll!&gt;ok Grant (CDIG) Small
•Cltioo Program, • foclorally
: lundocl program odmlnla·
' toiocl by the atato. Tho VII·
: ~ ia eligible lor $400,000
' ol Flocol Year 13 COBG
: lundlng, providing tho vii·
•lago mooll appllcllblo pror"'IUiromonll. On Doc.
150 111112, the ' Vlllega con·
; ductod ill firel public h--

RED EMPEROR .

GRAPES......~.......................LB.
BROUGHTON

·

2°At
Milk~···~·················GAL
PARKAY
MARGARINE. . . . . . ..'. .La.
BIRDSEYE

Cat Food. . . -.. . . ~. . . . 6 oz.
:ARMOUR. TREET

REAMES FROZEN . . DUMPLINGS OR

:Lunch

oz.

Meatso.ooooool2

BATHROOM TISSUE

(
89

4ROU

Good Only At Pow.ll'e Super V•lue
Offer Good Dec. 20 thru Dec. 28, 11182
Limit 1 Per Cu.tomer

Good= At Pow.U'a Super V81ue
Offer
Dec. 20 thru Dec. 21, 1112
Umlt 1 Per Cullomer

•

Noodles. . . . . . . . . . . .l2 oz.
DOERGENT

-----c:turv~r-----,•
- - - rr...-::--- ~
BEm CROCKER
11

TIDE ULTRA

CAKE MIXES ·

42 Oz. R'l•
47.0z. Bleach

PKG.

$189

39(
, - c
aoz. 8·9
99(

Cool Wh~p.o

•• o•• ooo.......

79'(

$299

Good~~~ At PoW.II'a Super V.lue
Offer
Dec. 20 thru Del:. 28, 1112
Umlt 2 Per Cu.tomer

Good~~~ At Po II'• Super Value
Offer
Dec.20 thru 0.0. 21, 11182

LIJIIII 1 Per Cuetomer

I;
II
'I
II
II

··HEINZ
KETCHUP

:a,_

320Z.

99(

t

Publ~ .Notice

vflloga oubmlla
Ita FrodHollm.,,Mayor
Application to tho Ohio Vlllogo of Mlddllport
o.p.!rMnl ol O.v....,.._t. (12) 23, 11c
CltizMs ond olllntaroolocl
parlin aro •courogocl to 5
Happy Ads
attend thla mooting on Jon.
5,, 11193 to e1pro11 their
vlewa and commonll onlho
v118go'o propoaocl COBG
Applicollon.
Wrl- commenta will bo
accepted until 7:00 P.M.,
Jan. 5, 11113 and may bo
Flocol Y•r 13:
·
Upgrade lnd · Roatoro mellad to Mayor Frod
buolne11 bulldlngo In lho Hollmen, 237 Roc• Stro•t.
downtoWn area; Upgrade Middleport. Ohio 45760.
and/or roplaoo oldowalkl
of Tltanks
and elrHta, lighting, elg· 1
nago, atroot clr.;nago, park
locllltlft, parldnt and other
or- In nood, to moot the
Our Bos1, EJP,
The family of
Notion.; Objoclive ol Aid In
will reach the ripe
lho Prevention ol Slum and
Donald. B. Allen
Blight
old age of 50 on
would like to
A ooc:ond public haring
Dec. 25. The
will be held In conjlinclion
thank friends
with
the Middleport
Employees of
Community Aleociallon'a
and neighbors
Peoples Bank,
monthly meollng on Jan. 5,
and all those
11193, ot 7:00 P.M. at tho
Middleport,
hope
Pooploe Bonk at tho comer
who
helped
durol R- and Socond st-~
you will stop in .
Middleport, Ohio lo give olli- , ing the death of
and wi&amp;h her a
zona on odoqullo opportunlour loved one.
ty to comment on tho vii·
Happy
logo'• propo11d CDBG
oppllcallon, Including the
propoaad · octlvllioo oum·
Real Estate General
morlzed above, boiQra tho
ing to Inform clilnna llbout
lho CDBG progr.,., hoW It
miiV bo ueod, wh8111Ctlvllleo
are oliglbla, and other
Important program ,..
qulremonll.
Baeod on both citizen
Input and local o!flclala'
ouooem011t ol lho villllgo'e
, tho vlllllgolo pro..-·
lng to unclortalle lho lol-·
lng COBG oolivltloo lor

:.=..::.:.:..:..______

Real Estatt General

,';.::;:===::::===:::::==::::=::::;
.••

GROUND
.BEEF

'

11/26/1 mo.

Middleport, OH

10 LB. PACKAGE

POMEROY ..; EbonNor Slroot- Fools like home wilh 3
bodroomo, one balh, beautiful kitchen cabinota, newer
, roof, and forced air natural goo fumaco. ONLY $11,500

$1390

WELCHTOWN ROAD - A2 story home with 4314 ..,,.,,
Has a now Hardy "'""""'· a new roof, equipped kitchen
("'ngo end ..l~r) , waoher ..d dryer.
with •
family 100111, dinmg room, and 3 bedrooms.
130,000.

992·2259
NEW US11N0- Eagle Ridge- lix raom house with 3-4
borlraomc, 112 bailment, carpel/Vinyl ftooring, TPC
- · 2 ._ ger.ge, 1+.,. on .,...cl rom. '",100

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rice Run Rood - lnslanUy
appealing ie lhia 3 bedroom modular wilh 2 baths. Y011'll
love to c:cmo home to cook supper in lhls beautiful kitch·
. on and lhen ,.;ax in front of the fiAiplace. Thie is tilling
on approx. 1i\ acres. Was $45,500. ..... HOW $43,500

10 LB. PACUGE

'

I •

$11 ~
90

t40,aoo

IYRACI.I! LEE CIRCLE- VfiY oute ranch 1ty1e home
wl.. 3 baclnlomo, 011p011, appliancn, good location.
1 - ' u ..,....o1on1 $34,aoo

RUTLAND - Y011 nood to - thio 2 11p11rlrMnt house.
.Tho downet.ire hOI 2 bedrooms and a balh. While tho
~pellire aperlrnont h01 3 bodrooml end a bath. Y011
could live. in one and Nnt lho oller. H01 • hugo backyard
. "jlnd gordon spot. yet in town.
Ul,lloo.
'
.

.

.i:XJTTE TUAHEJ\ ......~.-.......- .........-.112

. WE WIIH YOU I YOUit fAMILY

=
=

A VERY MI!RRY CHRI81IIAIII
~OUR MilLY HERI AT CL!LU!D RI!!ALTYI

HANK, KATHY, TRACY, JUH IIHERII

BMJI)A .EFFEAI...............- -..................... 111 .
1DARLIIE 111WAAT--·-.!................___. ......
'1AIItiY ~A...:--o....................... - ....-117t
•JERRY II'RAOIJNCi..-.....- - ................(JCM} •a
I

.OFFICE....- ................: ···········!············......-

HENRY IRINAOEI!-----..;_..!
E. Cl.ELAND-·-··-·--·-·-•---·-·~111
TRACY
____.._mt

.lEAN TRUIIELL ..------·---~-- .. Mt-2110

CliFFICE.. ---·----·-------..111-2211

......111-

'

Fres•·Cut Trees
or Cut Your Own.

~~==;:;~;:== ·

D.K.'s
FARM TOYS

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE .

HOLIDAY HOURS
Mon•.Slit. 1o-e p.m.
Sun. 1·5 .p.m,

12·17·'92-1 mo .
~~~~~

Handinade Gil\t For
Everyone, and Great
Gilk ldeu •

992·3470

12-5-lfn

12·f.112·1 mo

Quality Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

6637

$20.00

St. Rt. 7
c•eshire, OH.

(614) 949-~058
11127

•

•
•
•
•
•

-.
·,

,..._ _ _ _...., ir--------.·:

HAULING

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
Carefully Sh1111red
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up with a great
aelection ollarger
trees.
Call742-2143 or
742·2979

lt/27

DIYIDSOI'S
PLUMIING
~

·

·
;
a
31904'Lil~

-

LIMES~' .
GRAVEL &amp; COAL •

~~~~~~~~·

l; •.
l.

PH. 614·912-5591

Dellvwed 16 To. Mhlilum

For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

.

LIQiNSED and BONDED

•

SIZED LIMESTONE

GRAVE
BLANKETS

PONDS
sl:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING ·~· ·
· WATER &amp; SEWER

Dlr!L.Gt'IIVel •nd Co•l ~

50 ATo•

•

R&amp;C EICAYAn•
BULLDOZING . ·.

HAUUNG: UmeetQne;\

Sft
., •

11127

EVERY THURSDAY

HOME SITES

HOLIDAY SPECIAl! :

A;~~..

BINGO

BASEMENTS &amp;

DIIWDJ, , _

1 _. pm Woolullyt
1 .,...,2 pmSilunfoya untl

GARRY'S
GENERAL
MAINTENANCE
742·3305
AFTER
7:00P.M.

LINES

369701111 ... Read
p
......

112-3314 ca,., 7424ozo Evo.

East of Darwl• on Rt.
611 011 Gravel Road
I Y. Milt to Grove.
WATCH fOI SIGNS

111241'82/lln

614·992·2549

SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915-3561

QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
2551111 St., llidcl~opoot, 011.

. CHERRY RIDGE

•

KEN'S APPLIANCE

'Aidorlln Stack'
Spoclol Edition· Show Plocoo
SotAt

adl o':loH

TROLlEY
STAOON CUFTS

kk~

ShoWII. .Ia·Collocliblls

6:45 P.••
S~lol EariJ llrd .
SI 000
Thl1
lor I
FIE card. ·
uc. 11o. ooso-u

FI.AlWOODI ROAJ). Nice llric* Rench ltvle' home 3
bodlao.na. 2 balhl. flrepleca. uniqullvlna 1 famay room.

PoMEROY -Mulberry Ava. - AHordablo but nice.
l'i•"''s • 1i\ story, 2 bedroom houu with • now roof ond
porch. It has boon lrelhfy peintod in lido and out
_,.
Juet SII,OOO.

BUDFORD'S

IN POMEROY

NEW UIIA RD. Alnch otyle homo wilh 3 bodroomo, I
112 balhl, heat pump, CIA, gwaga, Ollt bulking&amp;, -wrox
8 ..,.., $38,500 MAKE AN OFFERI

'

,CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; CRAFTS

EAGLES CLUB

REDUCEOIIIornlng Shiro 1 112 srory loQ home with 4,
bodroome, ..... hHt pump, toft""""· largo front pon:h,
pevocl otroot2 car ger.ge, on 5 ..,.. ollond. Roclu..,.
ID171,100

eo....

BR'EAST

CHARLIE'S

lrl, II Ia Or We ·

mo. pd.

11-30-t

11/24/'92/1-

HAILEY BIMINI
RESIDENCE
S$975 Flatwood• ld.
Po•eror, Ohio
(CHilly Road 26)
IEASONIILE
205 North Second Ava.

~ CH

11·17-12·1 mo pel.

CHRISTMAS·

ALL IWtll

Qullts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals,
lots of small •rtlcles.
SOC and up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985-4356

OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.
742-3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
· STARTS

oadYCR

Rugs, Placemats,

s•.• a• Tall

5' • 7' TILL

..

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
Need a Gift?

CHRISTMAS
TRE.ES
Fresh Cut Daily

TREES

OFFICE 992·2886

•'
(

Public Notice

card

'

•Owl•-

TWIN PET

, ..~.. Public Notice

Reasonable rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

•
•
•

•

614·742·2138 •.

.------.·••
KEVIN~S

I

lAWN .:
MAINTENANCE
949·2391er

1·100·137·1460 •.

••

Creelllo••
Ml••ltfOrt,o•le

614·992·7144

LAwn Mowing,

•

Fertilizing, Weeding,
· •nd Seeding.

•
•

ShrubandT-

Tri!Dmlna &amp; Remov•l
Alekllnllll I COniiNnlllll
FrotEotl-..

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
r .

�. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

__ fir_., . . .,-. 42
.,,...

·---·.......
,.,..
..
,...,.,_.._._
2

!ii:ll.t'

1

. . . . . . .

au......

21

OpponuniiY

__ ,..._
=::.-....::rt~

1

INOIICII

=...-: ....., ......
!!~~-

R

.......

w•t;CA,*,_

,

OliO IMLUY -UII.IG CO.
R

.....

aC&amp;za ......._ ..... ....

. _ , . . .

. .

2

. . . . .

...

Rl•JI

Estdte

-

ACROU

·~~
··.•

"'*-'

S7

11 Ov•NIId
pNIII
13 A?lot
11 ....... Ill.
"and CT
18 Diner
18 - 1111

ALDER

j

'!

lnltiUIMittl

NORTH

+ta

":::i.'

JS.U.Il

11 RoWing

•Qu

lmplem•nt

t 32

21
22

+K875Sf
((

AKQ 10

F,.rm Suppl•· ·
&amp; L1•,e,tock

3t Hom11 tor IIIII

BILL CLIIJ"DJ

lOS?!
Q76
Q2

~DHIS

Apartment

~E.'

torRent

tSU 2

288Umammal

.K J3
tJt 5 4
+to 3

31 VIII ao-s

21 Llrft

...................
=r.'"=."\:i:i=

_.......,.............,,,a ••,. . . .,
•

...

-

_ _ _ .,..... l"lo"'

Jr ........... eoUSE , Clll 1
!DWllll

-·--.........
...,...
'I

~

....
,..._
eLOWOIWHit
DIIMH CUE.,_A · u A - Olloolldullln

Rent;1ls

MAllY BITHU

__

M ttay•Graln :
::!joy,::-:..
=-=·-::..:::...:::~:::.:::.6-:::!i~r=-.

..............
""' ""-. .,, •

---.,plo?l . . ....,

WHAT ARE YOU
INHININ'
• ABOUT

....

··-

Building
Supp11.81

?-. No

err-. OH Col 114-

I
011 Hoid ._... IIIah

1

Pi

''"·

Goad - - lf4.

__ ...,.,.CioirdO_
llrllll,_...__
...
111 ldL

·SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUI SHOOTS
SUI DAYS:
1:00 P.M. ''

.UGHT HAUUNG ·
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
•

992·3131

USED RAILROAD

24 SESSIONS &amp; FlEE
BOTTU Of LOnON
'32.00
Maay .,. specials.

. OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

NDMDif6

JEST BECAUSE

I BlAT HIM
SHOOTtN'
MARVELS!!

If

I.
~

I

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

7t

AutOI for Sale ;

..

...... PEANUTS
I-lOW ABOUT
T!.l15 ~ROZ.EN
BROCCOLI?

Exterior

, ..nina

~~ EI'IWA1EI)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Pa•ll'lf, Olllo

LAKE
RACINE, OH.
949-2734

,.......,

, . . Pl)maiA

~ Turbo,

cam
... " 4
PS IPI, Air, 117,

Check with us for
Hot Water Tenk

==::a..~=

D I 11n, Eto..

~
t
t

....... ....... 111111 :1441

z;::

,.., ca.-.
;;~· •olr,
""""""
!1!11!
......
il,a&amp;l
... ?II . '!!'II

::· FRANK AND ERNEST

,.., ................... 11'00,
117-2711.

l

FOREVER
ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOA I MONTHS

JAMES IEESEE
992·2772 or

12-1-'82-1

539

•r• Place

Milldleport, Ollio

BISSELL &amp;.BURKE
· CONSTRUCTION
•hw H...s

.........
.C:o....te
lt•..tliag
SIOJ &amp; C.•1110re
FlEE ESIIIIIfES

12/1/92/th

-

J,..

Ferrel.__

ovMew hiller
J •• T ha S.nic•

:=.::=·
•100 lb. CyHnclen
-R.V:o

985·4473
667·6179
II. 124, ltKIM
~.-----2-·7-·H_·~~· ~-·~4~J~;tB2

Houalhold
Ooodl

. .:

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homn • VInyl Sldng
New Gereg11 • Replacement WTndows
·
Room Adcltlons • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·,160
or915·3139
llol•••rC.Ds)

2/12192Jltn

1111 IC&amp;w

VI'U FUIIIIITIIRI NIO NJ.
PUAHCU
111 ttl t•ORI1t 1•1111

--.... -=-.-t.....--.
--l!;e.
.....w- - . IMt or
tuaw•~::;::t.,...•..,._

-~.......
CiiiiiN Or . •••
~--...

--

a

II~

COUNTJrf

I'UIIIIITUIII NIO

CIW"'I
W.lllfeCNIIIAM-a.
Dille. Aloo Wll c.-. ~
v-·IHrla.W.IIuJAndlil

••tta

December Specllll
$1.00
Slnlor Cftlzlnl $1.00
• you need trllh pick·

...

.....

cell

n.-.......

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

tiJ.4J52

lox 119

Mltlllleport, o•io 45760
(614) ·· ~13·5:

Putter., Beglnnef Sate,
Youth cu.aom Drlwre.
LMeon• Included with

. pure.,.._
Localed an 8ccU Cimp
l
Ad!, CMIIII, OH.

11127

•

•

_
bjl

78

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER lOW
FOR IHE
HOUDIYS
915·4107
1211411 • • pd.

CELLULAR
....., .,.....

lOTALLY AUTOIIOTM I'EIIFONIAIICIE

•• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••

The prid ChlistJoos Gift "" tlwt lmJ to INr ""JlffSIIII M )1llf tsl.

-·-•..... ,.

·~,­

. . .1

......

_.,~.~~,..

-.o..o,..r

,...,,._

WAITED

liME ONLY
5 95

69

THE:Y'RE lHE eAME

KETt:HtJP OR Q.Tet.JP.

THING:, AREN'T

'!OL.l I

F~

60\'.E:THING-

NE:W EVeRY OAY.

THeY~

Auto Parts&amp;
Acce110rle1

CempeJ'I&amp;

=-.

MotorHomea
11 Wlldl~

Exstl nt

171'ml.

'

J

ft.
...
.•
l

Setv1ces

Thrn your clutter ·into cfUh,
Sdl it the equ U~ay...l!x phone,

'NHID-1 DO 'IOU ~FER,

'

81

•

Home

lmprovamenta

no need to leatJe your home.
Plpce xour clauifled tul toooy!
15 UJord. or leu, 3 dpys,
3 pcwen.l6,00

...·-'.. ------------------ASTRO-GRAPH

Call our of!ie• for paid Ia ...,....:• rm••l

Life • Medicare • CaoceN,.Firei,Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA'iM6ngage

up or mo,. lnlormetlon

IIAFORD'S GOLF ·
&amp;AWARDS
CHIISIIIAS SALE
10"·20% OH

114-atf.t111.

Pilla.

011 All V111J! I C...
...............
ca........,

.......

C8A.zl0,

-.--.~,
- ....... 1,- -

79

~:e--~~

-~,_._Uo M :aat ltoull M1, 114-

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

- CA~H?U

H

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

11._ _ _ _ _1

~=-==~..,

·----

' 13.
14•._ __ _ _
15....__ _ __

GaUipoiii'Dally 'D"Ibune
4484342

Po•eroy Dally Sentinel
982-2156
Pt. Pleal'n' lhllster
675·1333

You c:oulcl have.....,.-- oppor.. tunllles to Improve your lln-..clll or meterlal position In the year ahelld. How· you must pay auentiOn ?o delelll
1n order 1o be Cllrtaln you .,. nellher
wasteful nor too
Co\PIIICORN (Dec. 2N8n. 11} Down·
play your 11111-1n1-t loday IIMI acqul·
IIC8 ?o the will olthe malorl?y, 8'1"' II
• )'OU ?hlnk .)'OUI ways are bel1er or more

""""""'*"·

h

'

.

lun. Trying ?o patch up a bro?cen romance? The 1\slro-Graph Ma1Chmaker
can help you ?o unders?and wha? to do
to make ?he relationship wor?c. Mall $2
plus a lOng. setl-llddres141d. stamped
envelope to Metchmaker, P.O. 11ox
91421. ~. OH 44101-3428.
"'au""""s (.1M. 211-feb. 111 S?rlve ?o
bl methodical In all of )'OUr endeovors
today. blcaull ,...,. .11 a chance you
mlgh? l\lllkl an ovwolght. 11 ?his is so.
ractlly lt lmmedlalely or a problem

PIICEI
(Flit. 20 " .
could
resul?.

ell 20} Instead of

19?1klne .a -'l!iiJa ~ r~oL­

ored gl11111 ?oclay. II might bl Will ?o
let les80na )'OU've learned guide your
ballavlor pal$.,.,..
, . , . . (lllarcb 21•Aprll 11} If an arlangemw ot II not all )'OU wet11 told II
would bl, do no? bi.....C.anl to negol~
ate. You c:ould pulliOOM?hlng toge?her
th.i? Is bl?ter lor II coo-ullld. ·
TAUIIUI (April . .. . , 20} Thla Ia one
ol days ....... you mlghl jump
ln?o thiogo lmpulaively, wllhoutlhlnklng
through the c:orooeq._. Problerloo
can be avoided II )'OU .,. methodical.
GIMNI (.., 21..,._11} You Will only
whal Is r•
vy ?oday.
?hrough hard wor?c. Olloppolntmant lo
pooalble II you depend 100 much on others 19 ball you out

""""""*"'

I

.-

'

CANCER (~une 21-.luiJ 22} Do no? ?urn
a deal ear today to advice or sugges?ions made by people who like you .
Their concern about your -are could
be quite helplul.
LEO (~uiJ 2S-Aug. 22) You are not likely
10 be mMially comfortable today II )'OU
negleC? Cllrtaln dulles lha? )'OU are responllible lor. lns?ead of collecting guilt
lor wha1 )'OU did not do, take care of
things .
VIRGO (Aug. 2S-Sepl. 22} Your well-Intentioned budget could end up as a
mere scrape of paper ?oday II )'OU lg·
nort It 811d cater to )'OUr more extravagant ·whims. But what the heck. It's
Chrle?mas.
UIRA (s.pt. 2S-Oct. 23} Today )'OU
may bonk a bi7 ?oo IIMvlly on wha? you
think Is your ace In lhe hole. II you ge?
too caretas wha? you .,. holding might
betrump«&lt; .
ICOIII'IO (Oct. 24
22} Consider
. the oource ?oday n do no? be?- tN·
erythlng you-· ~ Wl?h ufterlor moll- might try to m~nlpula?e )'OU
and )'OUr opiniOns.
SAQITTAIIIUI (Nov. ZI-Oec. 21} Try to

llav.

keop your lmpulll- wtlhln - -·
able - s today. Cvalully 1-1ga?e IWIY propoula thM ,.quire an In_,_,, on your behaH. Do not do
any!hlng silly.

Collecllol! ol

lacll
27 llenoorlu1lon
28 l.uonD oleartll
211 Stroln for

I!Orth Allantic bird

350M-lime
:

38 LogendiiJ
llren

•

*"ors:....

tonll

44 Chem leal d"
46 Trite

.

-

lllf
.

47 -

age in the club suit. It would run
if the queen was a singleton: an a
ri probability of just over 12 peneent
Slavenburg wondered if he
prove his odds, making the ....ntr•••tl
against a 2-2 club split: a 40 per&lt;:eotl
chance.
When West continued wit:hh ~the~~t~~:
queen at Irick two, Sl
dropped the jack. No longer having
worry that South held jack-fourth
spades. West greedily cashed his
two spade tricks. Slavenburg i·IJmm!di-l
ately discarded a club. When the
did divide 2-2. Stavenburg had
contract.
A nice play, but when South
lowed to the third spade, West sb~uld I
have scented a stratagem. H
wanted spades continued, it bad
better for the defense to lead another!
suit. H West had switched to a rea liW?I
at trick four, the contract would
been defeated.

heart In lin
FranciiCO

411nlllllt52 Drudgerf

53 Take apirt
54 North ol.f'L
55 UnlOck : ~.

t:lt.;

-

that contain the same sound, such as
BOO!{ and LIKE? It isn't a rhyme, but
wbat is It?
A. The word you want is CONsoNANCE. When two or more words be-.
gin with the same sound, you have alliteration: 'Petet prefers pickles."
Sometimes, though, the repeated con·
sonant sound doesn't start the words.
'Kim likes books; for instance. repeats the K sound of KIM in the words
LIKES and BOOKS. This repeated
consonant sound is CONSONANCE, .
pronounced ' KON-suh-nuns."

+--1

57
eo~ "
62

.,mbol
ThrealciH
llolh

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ce6ebrtty Clph« ayplogriiM .,. cree1ld frOm QUDt•llons by r.mout p«&lt;f::6e, ~ ...c1 ~
Each IMtW' inti'MteipMr ltMCiator~. TtJUr'• daM.· TlfqUM Y.

' G

YVL

UVZX

Gl

VKK

JH .

SODX

IPI

DYVJUUX~M.

CVKZV

KXUI

G

YIJCXC,

IPS

VOL
IYX

EVAX
LIEC,

ZVGLC ,

zvccx~cx . ·

YVTXW.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' Tva never really pursued stardom . But I h111111
actively pursued the craft ol acting." - Judy Davis.

TIIAT DAILY
PUZILU

WDID
lAM I

O Rearrange
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low

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form four simple words.

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PIN doutn EXTRA

25

·41 . . .

A welt or swelling on the skin is a
WHEAL. Round out your use of this
noon by pronouncing WHEAL like
WHEEL.

939·2126

"

38 l.nclant:aine

By Jeffrey McQuaiD

lashln IW.,Iadne

Rentlil Progrem.
12·1·2 mo. pd.

a

4 Scarlel? 5 llounl
(2 wdo.}

..-1-++-1

OUR LANGUAGE

•VInyl Siding
•Replacerrilnt
Window
•Roofing
-ln•ulatlon

yas

17 FemlniiM :
SufiiX
20 - andrm
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· broath

I

GIFT CEFinFIICAl'ESI

J&amp;liNSULAnON

P~ncoio-

3

14 Oppolit• ol

6 Range ol
hoorlng
7 Indian monoy
• (abbr.)
Greek poak
g S.n - Calli.
1Q Fulure bird
12 This: Fr.

1 Hlgh•ol
tprel.}
2 Pelvic boneo

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mediately noticed·the potential

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p.,.

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45

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40 Brlttoh ochool
42 Emplo,~d

1

ANYIODY C-AN PVT ON A B~A/ll&gt;
ANP . GO "1-fO·tiO:tW.... .........._
L.~T'S t-I~A/l YOU NAM~
AL.L Y0Uf2 ,~INP~f, .

232 2•11 St.,

65 Work•ra'

31 I. conunon?

Nonnally, when you are the declarer, you try to keep your cards ' bidden"
from the defenders. You don't
them to be able to ' read" your
.
But there are times when you want a
defender to be aware that you hold
particular card. .
·
On today's deal. South was Bolobv I
Slavenburg, a Dutchman who won
World Open Pairs title in 1966. He
a very imaginative player.
It isn't · clear why Sla11enlourg
opened one club rather than
mOIId. Over West's take-ouutt !~~~~~
North made a· pre-emptive til
raise. South's bid of three no-t.run,n.l
though debatable, was pre~licta1ble.
West led the spade

BRONZE
OHIO YllUY
PlUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG., IIC.

63 Boredom
54 1111. otflcor

By Pbilllp Alder

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
AS~ ABOUT OUR

1:11t11 mo. pd.

se~::U...n

511 Each
61 Scared

Making known
the unknown

Transportation

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A colleague was complaining about the expense of keeping two kids in college. "All 1
can aHord to put aside for a
~t~~~~:?esighed, "is a pair

1 I I I 18 10

7
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-

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Comp lete the chucld e quoted
by f dl1ng in the missing word s
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
l ETTER S IN SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·~-u
Victim - Dowdy • Focal - Hearse • MICROWAVE
"I remember when the term 'melting pot' used to mean
The United States." the old gent sighed. "Now it means
you put the wrong container in the MICROWAVE. "

,.

�Peg• 12...:..The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy lldclepart, Ohio

u·•dnllday,Deoember23,1182

Delegates attend meeting
De!eptes from the Meigs Coun·
1y Farm B - joined nearly 300
official ddepes 81 tbe Ohio Fann
aureau Federation's 74th Annual
Meeting, held in early December.
Membm of the Meigs County del·
eplion included Donald and Maida
Mora, Pomeroy, and George
Holler, Racine.

The meeting theme was "Farm
Bureau Families • The Driving
Force". Dele11ates attended the
annual meeting 10 determine state
and national policies that will guide
the federation during the cutrenl
proplllll year. OFBF is the largest
farm organization in the state with
more than 137,000 members.
Delegates from Meigs County
Farm Bureau heard OFBF Presi·

Doormen have
bands out

dent C. Ray N~ OFBF Exccu·
tive Vice President C. William
Swii!Jc; Earl F"~kle, president of
Central Weather Services, Inc .;
John Hosemann, chief economist
and director of economic reaearch,
American Farm. BIDCBU Federation;
Dr. Richard Eberling, professor,
economics. Hilhdale CoUege; and
Orion Samuelson, producer/host,
U.S. Farm Report.
Finclde addressed weather pat·
terns in the midwest. Hosemann
discussed economics and the environment; Ebeling talked about the
changes and prospects for licedom
in the new Russia; and Samuelson
presented a motivational speech
tirled, "Is There Still a Field of

By DANA KENNEDY
Jrn.Writer
NEW YORK- n - begin·
.W. 111 ltd a lot lib Cllrillmls 81
c.. New y lilt bi&amp;IHiJe; 'l1le door
IUD'S vest pocket wu bulging
with white cavclclpcs fuD of tu·
he cadi.
There are a lot ollllld cases in
tk h!iJcti,._ "but I've m•arJ rq
break the ICCI with all of them,"
said Midlael, wbo spoke only oa
condition hiJ Jut name wu not
"•

I.

uaed.

'1ls the

1111 when J]l)ms

Dreams?"

•
•

•
•

CheYillier and Mary NaRy. Second row, 1-r, ..-e
Letitia Holsi111er, Kim Mlcllael, Carrie Mllnissey, Lisa Hoffman, Sherr! Smith, aad Bobbie
White, Back row, 1-r, are Andrew Wolf, CUd
Grilritb, Jeremy Buckley, aad 11- Rose. .

'

Carol compilation includes sublime, cynical
LONDON (Al') - In choosing
the best of the world's Christmas
carols, the editors of "The New
Oxford Book of Carols'' weeded
through bad tunes, bad texts, even
bad
motives. Some they left in
lace
P ·
"There are a few carols of no
obvious distinction which are held
in such universal affection that it
would bave been churlish ID omit
them." Hugh Keytc and Andrew

fam)tt write in the introduction to
the weighty book.
They refrain from naming
stinkers, although declarin11 that
"We Wish You a·Merry Christ.
mas" is "sliD in all roo common
use."
Parrott, who directs the Tavern·
ATTEND MEETING • These Meip Councy Farm Bu~au mem·
er Consort musical group, began
bers receatly atleaded the Ohio farm Bure8D Federatioa 's 74th
the book with Keytc in 1985, plan·
Annul Meetlac, Tiley ..-e Donald and M4ida Mora, Pomeroy, and
ning
10 spend a couple of months
GeorJ:e Holter, Racine.
assembling about 50 carols. The
carols grew to 200, plus nearly 300
tunes, and seven years' work.
''There are some wonderful
texts with bad tunes, and some
NEW YORK (AP) - Jay Leno . ter, Vera Davis, called Miss Gabor couple of days, and ·more focused wonderful tunes with bad texts,''
said in an interview.
is upset with NBC for not reassur· last week and told her the center since The New York Times ediiDri· Panou
"Th N Oxfi
al," he said.
On!Bookofcar.
. e . ew
ing him he won't be fired from needed· 100 turkeys for the PQOr.
"She said, 'Oh Vera, dahling, I
ols,"
publi~
by
Oxford Univer·
"The Tonight Show" and replaced
He said Minnelli remains
just
talkin•
about
you
last
sity
Press,
includes
three versions
was
opposed ID the law. The measure,
with David Lettaman.
"I don't think il will happen," night,"' Davis srud. "I asked her if approved by the voters last month, of "The Joys of Mary"- En~h
Leno said in today's The New she could help, and she said, 'You · probibils civil rights protcction for and Irish versions of seven JOys,
York Times. But he added, "I'm got it."•
hom~xuals. Its passage reScinded · and an American version with 10.
Miss Gabor called Merv Griffm gay-rights measures in Aspen,
not sure. and that's the IINIOying
Two underline Parrott's point
part."
and Barron Hilton, her e&gt;&lt;-hus· Boulder and Denver.
about bad texts. The Irish version
He said NBC President Robert band's son, and they eacb pitched
Minnelli was supposed ID be the begins: "The first iejoice Our r...cty
C. Wright bas given him no assur· in SSOO for the spree Tuesday.
headliner at the -show Sunday. got, it wu the rejoice of one; i,t was
The former actress worked at Before she backed out, singers the rejoil:e of her dear son, wbc::n he
ances.
Leno rook o&gt;'er "The Tonight die shelter as part of her sentence John Denver and John Oates and was born young.''
The American version, coUeciCd
Show" .in May from Johnny car. for slapping a policeman during a acror Anthony Zerbe hild agreed 10
1989
ttaffic:
stop.
'
perform.
·
in
Carthage;
N.C, ends: "The very
son, belling out Letterman, whose
next
blessing
that Mary had, it was
"LaiC Night" follows "Tonight"
theblessing
of
ten; 10 think that ber
MIAMI (AP) - Hollywood
cinNBC.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -· The
Letterman bas given NBC until producers are falling over each Mabarislli Mahesh Yogi, 11uru to son Jesus, could write without a
Jan. 15 10 match a $16 million offer other for rights to the story of the Beatles, bas offered to bombard pen."
. A canclidale for most sublime is
from CBS 1D star in a show ~ Orestes Lorenzo, the Cuban defec· 60 American cities with good vibes
site Leno's. and news reports have tor who flew a small plane back 10 10 make murderers meek and lum "In Dulci Jubilo," ascribed to the
14th· century German rnystic,
said that NBC is considering giving his homeland over the weekend sinners iniD saints.
Heinrich Suso, who told of a vision
Leno' s show ID Letterman.
"The police bave not succeeded
and whislced his family to freedom.
During Tuesday's show, Leno
"Forty or SO film proposals, in eliminating crime,'' be said by
joked about the siluation, pretend· actual offers, ate arrivin.~t bv fax, · telephone from the Netherlands.
ing to answer a phone call from by Federal Express,'.' said ·Brandon "Our teams are to bring the light,
CBS intended for Letterman. "Can Scheid of the Valladares Founda· and the darkness of crime will Ral·
you caU back in ·an hour'!" Leno lion, an e~e group in Ale&gt;&lt;andria, urally disappear."
asked the "caller."
Va.
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) _
"Bu1 boy, that was a ,good
The foundation provided the Fourth neo-Nazi
The latest discovery from outer
offer," Leno !Did the audience.
plane used 'by the former Cuban
space:
Inlelligent life exists 011 the
Air Force pilot on Saturday ID pick group banned
third
planet
from the sun.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jesse up his wife and two boys off a
(We're talking about Earth.)
J~ bas been hospitalized with
beach.
BONN,
Germany
(AP)The
Had aliens been running
bronchilis.
"It's a greati0ve srory, a heroic
The 51-year-old civil rights piece," said Paula Connelly of government banned a nco-Nazi NASA's Galileo spacecraft when it
leader was admitted to Howard New York J!f~X~ucers Danroni Pro· poup Tuesday allegedly involvCd · recently zoomed past Earth they
Universily Hospilal on Sunday. He,.r duclions. • It also shows how far m auacts on foreigners, the fourth would have concluded intclhgent
life inhabits the planet, scientists •
developed a feve~ and congestion any human being will go for his such group outlawed this month.
In
Frankfurt,
meanwhile,
nearly
said
Tuesday.
after giving a sermon.
family, so it's got that family value
· 100,000 Germans. lined the streets
During this month's flight over
Jackson was reported in good thing behind it 100.'.
in an hour-lOng candlelight protest the moon's north pole.and past die
condition.
against
radical ri$hlists, organizers Earth, the Jupiler·bound craft also
He will remain in the hospilal
ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Liza
found evidence that the moon once
until tests delermine the serious· Minnelli has backed out of a show of the demonSiliWOII reported.
More than 500,000 poople rook was more volcanically active than
ness of the infection, said Lois organized to raise money to repeal
part in anti-rightist candlelight thought and detected ice clouds
Dyer, a hospital spokeswoman.
Colorndp's law against gay rights.
The singer was persuaded by parades in cities throughout Ger• that help create a hole in the pro·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Zsa friends to join a growing boycott of many over the weekend.
teclive ozone layer above AnlarCti·
Right-wing raclicals bave carried ca.
Zsa Gabor loaded up a shopping the state, her spokesman, Allen
cart - not with Rodeo Drive dia·
The spaceship, whose jammed
Eichorn, said Tuesday.
. out more than 2,100 acts of vio·
lence this year, most of them antenna threaiCDs nearly a third of
monds and pearls, but with turkeys
"It's gotten much bigger and against
leaving 17 peo- its planned Jupiler studies, also
for the homeless.
much more political. The boycott ple deadforeigncn,
and hundreds injured.
The direcror of a women's shel·
found evidence conlladiciing a the·
has gotlen a lot bigger in the last

-----Mames l·n the ne·WS

of an angel.
"He drew (me) by the band iniD
the dance, and the youth benD a
joyous song about thl: inlint Jesus,
wbicb runs thus: 'In Dulci Jubilo,'
etc
"Suso WIOIC '
. •
A 20th-century Enlllish carol,
"Bethlehem Down" by Bruce
Blunt and Peter Warloct (the pen
name of composer Philip Hesel·
tine), bas a more canby bislory.
"In December 1927 we were
both ex~ly hard up, and in the ·
hopes of being able ID get suitsbly
drunk at Christmas conceived the
idea of collaborating on another
carol which could be publisbccl in a
dai~'ly,"Blunt said in a letter
re
,_.. ,ft the ,.._..._.. L-.L .
v.uUiu......_
He worked out the words on a
moonlit walk between The Piowtb
pub in Bishop:s Sutton and Tlie
Anchor pub tn Ropley, near
Winchester. Warlock added music,
and the Daily Telegnph hootgbt iL ,
"We hlul an imnlonal carouse
on the proceeds lnd decided 10 call
ourselves 'Carols Consolidated,"'
Blunt wrote.
However cynically couceived, .
the carol has become an English · ·
standard.
Warlock's haunting melody sets
off .Blunt's affectin11 verse, which
ends: "Here 'he has peace, and a
short while for dreamin,, c:!osehuddled O&gt;&lt;en to keep hiDl from
cold, Mary for love and for lullaby
music, songs of a shepherd by
Betblehem fold. •'

........u.

NASA '·discovers; signs of
intel.ligent life on. earth

..

WEDNESDAY
BRADBURY • . Bradford
Church of Christ, comer of Route
124 and Bradbury Road. will pre·
sent a live nativity scene Wednes·
day from 7-9 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT· Youth proBaptist Church will
be Wednesday at 1 p.m.

gram at Hope

RACINE • Racine United
Methodist Church Choir will present the cantata. "Bethlehem Joy"
on Wem-lay at 7:30 p.m. Public
invited.
·
RACINE • Racine First Baptist
Church children will be presenting
"The Gifts of Christmas" on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. under the
direction of Debi Bradford. The
· public is invited.

RU'Il.AND • Rulland Township services Christmas Eve.
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Sla·
POME~OY • Grace Episcopal
lion to conduct end-of-the-year Church will hold a Christmas Eve .
business.
.
candlelight eucharist ~ Thurs·
.
.
day 81 If p.m. with a musical pre·
THURSDAY
. Jude at 7:30p.m. Public: invited.
POMEROY • A Christmas Eve .
candlelisht service will be held at
LONG B01TOM • Free Christ·
St. John Lutheran Church, Pine mas dinner, Thursday, beginning at
Grove Road, on Thursday at 8 p.m. noon, at the Long Bottom Commu·
Candlelight services wiD be held at niry Building, Call 667-3799 843·
St. Paul Lutheran Church in S321 or 985-4482 for a ride before
Pomeroy at 11 p.m. The public is Wednesday.
invited to both scvices.
REEDSVILLE • Reedsville
POMEROY • The Pomeroy United Methodist Church, annual
Group of AA will meet Thursday at Christmas Eve service 11 7 p.m.
7 p.m. at the JTPA building in Rev. Seldon Johnson, pastor,
Pomeroy. Call 992-S763 (ilr infor·
invites the public..
mation.
·
MIDDLEP9RT • Ht?PC Baptist
BRADBURY· Christmas Eve
services, Bradbury Church of ' Chm:th, trll!illonal ChriSIJI!BS eve
Christ, Thursday at 6 p.m. Public serv•,ce, Thursday, featurmg the
invited.
Lord s Supper, II p.m.
STIVERSVILLE • Stiversville
Word of Faith Chtlrch will n01 have

. MIDDLEPORT· Middleport
First Baptist Church will hold a
special Christmas Eve service

'
Thursday at 7 p.m. The Adult Tone
Chime Choir will be playing
Christmas carols followed by the
Adult Choir. An instrumenlal quin·
let will play and Sam Cowan will
sing "0 Holy Night" with choir
backup. Putcr Janles Seddon will
present a sermoneue followed by
the lighling of candles and the
singinll of Silent Night. Public
invited.

FIUDAY
SATURDAY
NITRO, W:VA. • . Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Satur·
day at the Cin-San Tbeatre in
Nitro, W.Va.

Commissioners discuss public defender status
By BRIAN J. REED '
Sentinel News Staff
The status of the Meigs Cooiuy
Public Defender's Office was die
topic of discussion when Meigs
. County Commissioners met in reg·
· ular session Wednesday morning.
• The public defender's office is
operated at an annual cost of
$40,000 to the county, and has
saved the county considerable
money since it was ereated ·in 1990.
Prior to the establishment of the
office, the county used an ¥J&gt;Oint·
ed counsel system, which, like lhe
public defender's office, provided
for partial cost reimbbrsetnent from
the slale.
The resignation of Charles H. .
Knight earlier this month left a
vacancy in the office for !he

~s~!r~ns:..:..,theouturr,o

"lut _,.,

remainder of the contract ·year, Knight's resignation to the com·
which ends June 30, 1993. Knight missioners (although Knight himbas been appointed Assis18Dt Pros· self did notify the board). Nor did
ec:uting Attorney by Prosecutor· Weslfall or anyone in the regional
elect John R. Lentes, and his resig· offiCe ask tbe .board for recommendations as to a replacement
nation was effective Dec.l4.
The contract with the Ohio PubWilliam Safranek of Athens was
appointed to fill the remainder of lic Defender Commission stipplatcs
the term by the Ohio Public that the Ohio Public Defender
Defender's regional office in Commission is solely responsible
Athens. The board yesterday for appointing any replacement, bul
expressed disappointment that a Jones said that the regional office
local attorney was not appointed 10 should have felt a "moral obliga·
the office, and indicatr.d that the tion" to include the county com·
contract could be canceled as a missioners in the selection process.
result of Safranek's appointment
"''m wen aware of the terms of
Commissioner Richard E. Jones the contracl with the Columbus
also expressed concern thai Athens office,'' Jones said. "But that does
County Public Defender Mike not eliminate the moral obligation
Westfall, who supervises the of the office to not only inform this
regional office; dtd not report board of its decision, but to seek a

.

HENDERSON, W.Va.· Square
dancing and clciuing at . the com·
munity building 6iim 8-11 p.m.
SUNDAY
CHESTER • Ken Amsbary
Chapttr,lzaak Walton 1.eague, will
bave a muzzle lOICier lhoot Sunday
81 I p.m. Prizes are the same as for
the other shoots.

recommendation from the board for
a replacement. We're putting
$40,000 into this office, and lhe
county should be given an opportunity to appoint a local altorney to
the position."
Jones said that he was aware
that at least three local attorneys
had expressed interest in the position.
"I believe that Meigs County
~le should be repr.esented by a
Me1gs County attorney, especially
since Meigs County attorneys are
inlerested and qualified, and the laX
dollars of Meigs County people are
used to fund the office."
Another term of !he contract
allows either pany to cancel the

contract at anytime, and although
he will be off the board after next
week, Jones urged the new board to
use this .provision of the conlrliCt if
necessary.
"I urge this board to use any
persuasion to see that Meigs County has a local public defender. You
can't tell me that there aren't local
attorneys who are qualified to serve
in this capacily. If you have to, you
should exercise your ri,g!it 10 cancel
the conb'aet and eslablish your own
public defender's program."
According to Jones, the counry
could set up its own public defend·
er program without involvement in
the regional office. Slate reim·
bursement would still be available.

In other action, the board:

• Approved several interdepart·
menlaffunds transfers;
• Approved vacation carryover
for an employee in the Meigs
Counly Treasurer's office, upon the
request of Treasurer Howard E.
Frwnk;
.
• Reviewed a Ieuer from the Pri·
vate Industry Council regarding the
resignation from the board of Evelyn Scarberry, iiUIIIllger at the Ohio
Bureau of Employee Services
office in Gallipolis.
Present, in addilion to Jones,
were county commissioners David
Koblenlz and Manning Roush;
Commissioners.elect Janet Howard
and Robert Hartenbach; and Clerk
Mary Hobstetter.

a

Portland restructuring appro-ved by.
district board; other·action taken
' I

'·

Approval was granted to change
:Portland Elementary .in the South·
em Loc8l School District from a I·
6 school 10 a 4-6 school and Letart
Falls Elemenwy from a 1-6 school
to a I·3 school for the purpose of
eliminating double pdes at Mon· ·
.day's regular 'meeting of the dis·
irict's board of education. This
·.move was recommended by the .
Superintendent Bob Ord.
.._'Jtle restructuring will take
. _ the second semester. CliffOrd
TQIII R~q:y was thl; only· JI!CIII·
ber ID vote against the motion.
•
Dorothy Bentz ancl Toni Hudson
were approved as substitute teach·
e~s for the 1992-93 school year.
Diane Rice was employed as a
teacher f~ the 1992-93 school
)(ear. Miss Rice will replace Jetta
Kramer w o will be leaving the
start of the second semester. Den· -

nie Hill was reemployed as treasur·
er for the district with a four year
contracL ·
Graduation was set by the board
for Sunday, May 23, 1993.
J.W. Didion and Associales was
approved for the life insurance for
the 1993 year. The Vision Service
:Plan for vision insurance was
approved as was the liability insur,r
ance for the district with .Nation·
wide Insurance.
The l!oard approve!f the addi •
tiona! money from Chapter. I pro·
gram for the 1992-93 school year. ·
The program will be $202,797 • an
increase of $10,117. Carry-over
money froni the 1991-91 school
year, in the amount of $26,522.56,
was also approved for the Chjlpter
I program.
The Drug Free Program for the
1992-93 school year was approved

in the amount o($10,411 .
The breakdown for die 1992-93
school year for the DPPF program
was approved. The total of the
breakdown is $36,853.55.
The Chapter II program for the
1992i93 school year, in the amount
of.$7,796, was approved.
The Dwight D. Eisenhower
Math Science Program for the
1992-93 school year, in the amount
of $4,151.03 was approved as was
the annual bud~t for the year commencin(l1uly I, 1993 for the con·
sideratton of the county budget
commission.
The board will have an organi·
zational meeting Jan. 6 at 7 p.m.
Attending, in addition to Ord
and Roseberry. were Scott Wolfe,
president, and Sue Grueser, Joseph
Thoren, Denny Evans, member,
and Dennie Hill, treasurer.

M••Jay7rull ·
sanicawUI

c...... ..
ftiUSIIayMd
Friday r•la

onftanday
daatalha

Holiday travel seen heaviest
since before the recession

Ballday.

40% OFF
KNOMES
50% oFF
ALL COLOGNE 10%oFF
. 141 GO~D ......,., 60% OFF

15% OFF

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
253 I. SECOND

.DIUPOII

992-6669

ing,
Saltsman, Eloise Adams, Carrie
McDaniel and Norma Boggess, volunteers who
helped with the distribution.

BASKETS DISTRIBUTED • The Salvation
Army of Pomeroy began distribution or food
baskets and toys to needy residents on Wednes·
day. Pictured are, l·r, Chris Debolt, Dora Win·

Baltimore's Penn s1alion for a train
By DAN BLAKE
10
take him, his wite and son to his
AP Business Writer
mother's
house in Albany, N.Y.
NEW YORK - Travelers can
"We
were
hoping in the middle of
expect bu~er ailports, train stations
the
day,
two
days before Christ·
and highways over Christmas and
mas,
we
would
avoid it, bul I'm
New Year's for the same reason
afrnid
not."
holiday shoppers' are seeing longer
Many would-be travelers spent
lines at checkout counters.
the
past two Christmases at borne,
With the economy improving
skimping
first because of the brew·
and confidence on !he rise, many
ing
recession
and the Gulf War and
expect this to be the busiest holiday
then
because
of economic weak:·
travel season since· before the
ness
last
year
that
had many people
recession began.
worried
about
their
jobs.
"They say it's standing room
In
recent
months
the travel busi·
only,'' said Frank Heck of Balli·
ness
has
been
improving,
helped by
more as he wailed Wednesday in

SEASONAL SAVINIS AT THE
PRESCRIPTION SHOP ·

NOW ADDIDOIAL

2 Sectlona, 28 Pogeo 25 cento
, A Multlmodlo In~ ."-Piper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 24, 1992

ALL CHRISTMAS DECOUTIONS

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days bdore an event
and the day of tbat event. Items
must be received weU in advaace
.to assure publication in tbe caleadar.

ory that icy comets constantly
bombard Earth and Q!iCC filled the
oceans with water, reee.cbers 10ld
reporlelS at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory.
.J
Galileo was released from space
shuttle Atlantis i~ 1989 and
launched on a loopmg path that
requir~ it ID fly JliSI Ven'!S ~d
Earth m 1_990 and Earth ~ this
mon~. USIDg the 1.'~' gravity 10
help 11 reaqh Jupttcr m .199S. 'l1le
spacecraft flew 189._mtles above
!he southern :~tlanuc Oc-:an on
Dec ..s. pracucm.11.for Juptter _by
studymg Earth as if 11 were an alien
planet.

at

·.

else on the ~ They pay clelriy
at Cbrislmu. Hairdressers, aewS.:
paper carriers, dry cieaaers, the
lllllid, the 1*:'8011111 train~:~".
.
You milbt get away without ···
Pinll nae of tlleill. Bnt ignore ~
staff wllcK you live a your peril. ·
"I tip everybody," said EDen
Wojcik, 37, a flight a!lendant who

so far Ibis year.
"Wben I rirst moved here
(seven years _ago), I thought it Wa.'l
SOOICsortcfjm:ithatweweresuppo:set1 to tip evayone in the build·
in . Even the mailman,'' she said.
....:.o if
don't,
pw;;;c - · you
.,.
waJcb out, maybe stuff won't get
lakmcarecf. So now I dO."
Jut approaching Manhattan's
Oi""inp:s aliout OuistJnas lipping
is lite mlking to 'JOIDeOIIe from the
CIA. When the question is posed,
e~ clan nervously llbout ·
Mostly, they say they just start•
eel last 'MICk IDI don't know anyth;M, If you're lucky, they'D pun
...._
you aside lite Deep Throat and
give what one doorman csUed ''the
realsldmy."
·Use their fuD names? When J&gt;igs
fiy. These guys pocket up 10 $5,000
every Christmas and they don't
need tbe IRS oa their lail.
Michael like moa doormen and
c:anc:ic!Jes lnlelviewal, teq,s a Jist
every 7ear of what each tenant
gives bim.

e

Vol. .U, No. 171
Copyright.! 1992

~=n::.=:=:

MEMBERS INDUCTED • These Eastern
High Schonlstudents we~ Inducted 011 Tuesday
into the school's National Honor Society. They
are, front, 1-r, Jaime Wilson, Charlene Dalley,
Michelle Murphy, Jessica Radford, Jessica

•

are

extended all over Man&amp;auan and they don't nece'Wily belong
1D the poor,
Tippina 11 Cbrislmls is cornmoa
aD ewer the countJy. But if you for·
get 10 tip in New York City. ell.. iaDy tk COl• jo gu, doormen
and su~ Ill .... - t buildings
- you re liRly Ill pay for it, )Ill.
Tenants uy they !!ave beard
horror siDries of UPS packages
mySICriously "disappearing" or
repairs not bein11 made on time,
811101111 other incidents.

~

CHRISTMAS GUT • Blood donors In Melp
·County gave tile ultimate Christmas gill on
' Wednesday afternoon by do!llltinll: blood at the
American Red Cross bloodmobile, held at the

Meigs County Senior Citizens. The Red Cross
expects a shortage of blood during the holiday
season;

Clinton names four
to cabinet posts

.
By RON FOURNIER
Alllociated Press Writer
LITI'U! ROCK, .Art. - Presi·
dent-elect Clinton is rounding out
his Cabinet bY, selecting Zoe BaW
.of Connecticutro be the nation's
first female attorney general and
idding another black and Hispanic
to key posts.
The appointment of Baird, a
friend of Clinton and his wife,
Hillary, was expected to be the
highlight of ·a Christm1ts-eve news
·&lt;;)Inference at which Clinton
announces four Cabinet appoint·
men11 and the U.S. tnide represen·

wive.
Transition and Democratic
sources, spealring en the condition
of anonymity, said Clinton also
would appoint:
~Former Arizona Gov. Bruce
Babbitt for interior. Babbitt, 54, is
.a colodul ouldoorsman who ~ht
the 1988 Democratic presidenual
nomination . .Environmentalists
pushed for Babbitt's appointmenL
-Rep. Mike Espy of Mississippi for a(lriculture secretsry. A
major Clinton campaign supporter
and feUow member or tbe centrist
(Continued on A·3)

·U.S. :M;arines and Legionnaires
push toward Bardera, Hoddur
few days after their Dec. \1 arriviu.
A reinforced batlalion of about
1,000 Marines lefl Baidoa shortly
after dawn for Bardera, about 120
miles to the south, while two com·
panies of Legionnaires and a com·
pany of ~&amp;fines pulled out for
Hoddur, ~miles north.
The Untied States suffered its
first casualty of Operation Restore
Hope just outside of Bardera on
Wednesday when a civilian Army
employee was killed by .an an~­
tank mine during a scouung m•s·
sion.
.
Three· SIBte Departmen~ secunty
officers were hurt in the blast.
As they did in Baidoa and
The Daily SentiMI will not pub· Mogadishu, the Marines and
lish a paper on Friday, Dec. 25, Legionnaires were to secure
allowing employees 10 ohsc;rve llie Bardera and Hoddur to protcct aid
Christmas holiday.
convoys from the bandits and clan

By G.G. LaBELLE
Associated Press Writer
BAIDOA, SQmalia - .More
than 1,500 U.S. Marines and
French Foreig11 Legionnaires
streamed out of this central Somali
town in two convoys today, carry·
ing a Chrisunas present of hope to
more famished c:ommunilies.
In the capital, Marines set up
roadblocks and began ~hecking
Somali vehicles for guns, reintroducing a $el·tough approach .liD
weapons diat they a!Jand~ed just a

,

dhaY. .
C r1stmas

a release of pent-up demand from
tourists, travel agents and induslr)'
executives say.
"Things got a lillie more positive after the election," said lvar
Siqveland of Mainline Travel in SL
Paul. Minn . "We're getling close·
to pre-recession levels."
.
The American Automobile
Association estimates 33.7 million·
people will navel at least 100 miles
from home this Chrisunas and New
Year's, up 5 pen;ent from 1991 an&lt;L
near the 34.4 million who took a
trip during the 1989 holidays.
-

No paper

militiamen who have ruled lhe
guns for weeks.
Famine across Somalia has
claimed 350,000 lives and is threat·
ening 2 million more.
The Bardera-bound convoy, pre·
ceded by mine-sweepers, included
20 heavily armed amphibious fight·
ing machines and dozens of
humvees mounted with light and
heavy machine guns ..
10wns with

Weather

1

Tonight, increasing c'louds
with a chance of flurries north·
west. Partly cloudy elsewhere.
Lows 15·2Q. Friday, snow likely
northeast, moslly cloudy with a ·
chance of snow elsewhere.
Windy. Highs in the 30s.
•
I

r

•.

•
•
•
•

•

•

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