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                  <text>NFL heads into season's final week C-1

Meigs bears
hit market

Slab Creek, Gallia County's makebelieve community • Sands • A-2

nationally

Inside
Aloal the river ""-""-Bl-8
Busiae./Farm"-"-"".Dl -8

Mason Monster antics in Point
Pleasant recalled· Fred Crow A-4

B-1
•

Claiained .............,.. - ....05-7
Deatbs. .......,_..................A.-3
Ed.ltorai ............................A-4
Sports...:.........................Cl-8
Weather...........................A-2

•

Partly . . .,.
lAw .......... 3GI.

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xmts'

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Vol. 27, No. 45

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point
27, 1992
"
.Pleasant, December
. - .. -- . .

Copyrighted 11192

'

14 Secdona,122Pllgea
A Multlmedl8 Inc. tNwap.per

Bush to face questioning
about his Iran-Contra notes
By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Iran-Contra
proseeutors plan to question President Bush and other administration
officials about why they failed to
tum over relevant notes the thenvice president took six years ago,
offic1als familiar with the investigation say.
Bush, who pardoned former
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and five other Iran-Contra
figures on Christmas Eve, began
keeping the .notes in November
1986 as the Iran-Contra scandal
was erupting, said the officials,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
The White House didn't tell
Iran-Contra independent prosecutor
·Lawrence Walsh about the material.
until two weeks ago.
"There ~e a lot of questions
and a lot of people to talk to," one
official said Friday.
In another development, The
Los Angeles Times reported today
that three top Democrats, including
Les Aspin, President-elect Clinton's choiCCI for defense ~.
asui'ed Bush .weeks ago 6 they
would support the Weinberger pardon. .

•

SANTA IN SOMALIA· Naty Beacbmaster HMl ~~~Blazer
or SID Dleao, caur., sbowed blllllollday spirit by weariD. a SaDta
cap wbDe OD Christmas Day duty ID MOiadlsbu, Somalia, Friday.
(AP photo)

.............-.---Local Briefs

'

,·

BIDWELL -Two Bidwell men were injured in a one-car crash
on Ohio 850 (Rodney Pike) in Springfield Township Friday morning.
.
.
.
According to a report from the Galba-Me1gs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Donald M. Foreman, 26, was northbound on Ohio
850 when his car went off the left side of the road, slruCk a small
creek and rolled once before coming to rest~ its wheels ma field.
A passenger, Gene K. Clark, 27, was transported to Holzer Medical Center where he was treated· for a possible concussion and
spinal injuries, a fractured jaw and lacerations. He was then transported to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., a hospital
spokeswoman said.
· .
Foreman refused treatment, the spokeswoman said.
The patrol.is investigating.

GALLIPOLIS - Icy conditions
and snow-covered roads lead to a
number of accidents in the area,
according to reports from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol, the Gallia County Sheriffs Department and the Gallipolis
Police Department
State highway patrol
Three people received minor
injuries in a two-car accident on
U.S. 33 in Mei~s County's Bedford
Township Frtday around 12:20
p.m. .
According to the report, Stewart
L. Blankenship, 44, Guysville, was
· northbound on ·u .s. 33. A southbound car, driven by Roger P.
Schumburg, 48, Defiance, slid left
of center on the snow-covered
roadway and struck Blankenship's
car.
Schumburg and his passenger,
Dorothy G. Schumburg, 42, Defiance, were transported by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service to V~erans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy where they were

Store reports shoplifting
GALLIPOLIS - An employee of Ames Department Store, Upper
River Road, Gallipolis, was taken into custody by Gallipolis police
Thursday afternoon after store security saw him allegedly take two
stuffed animals from the store without paying for them.
According to the report, Paul E. Baker, 49, Rl 1 West Columbia,
W.Va., allegedly concealed the items, valued at $39.98, in a shopping bag and removed them from the store.
POlice later released Baker on a summons to apJle81' in court.

.

GALLIPOLIS- A Point Pleasant, W.Va., woman returned to her
1984 Chevy S-10 Blazer Thursday afternoon in the municipal parking lot to find a 16- to 17-year-old white male apparently trying to
hot wire the vehicle.
.
Amee K. Foster, Rt. 2 Point Pleasant, W.Va., told Gallipolis
police her boyfriend chased the subject, but he got away. According
to the report, the subject gained entry by breaking out the driver's
side window and had also pried open tlJe vehicle's steering column.

v

Aspin and House Speaker
Thomas Foley expressed their support after an intensive lobbying
campaign on Weinberger's behalf,
the newspaper said, adding that the
cam~ign was led by Weinberger
lawyec Robert S. Bennett and longtime friend· William P. C)jdc; interior secretary in the Reagan administration.

Icy road conditions cause
numer~us· holiday .accidents

Two injured in crash

Vehicle theft thwarted

CASPAR WEINBERGER

The Times, quoting two people
identified only as familiar with the
lobbying campaign, said the effort
succeeded in gaini!lg bipartisan
congressional support for the pardon without stressing that five
other former government officials
3lso should be given clemency.
The Times did not reach either
Aspin or Foley for comment.
A third Democrat, Sen. Dennis
DeConcini of Arizona, told the
newspaper Friday that he called
Bush w1thout any prompting from
Weinberger supporters because he
thought the Iran-Contra affair "had
gone on long enough."
Bush will release his Iran-Colltra notes to the public if Walsh
returns a copy of the president's
earlier interview with investigators,
presidential spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater said Friday.
"We plan to releas.e them (the
notes) with the testimony given to
the independent counsel and Weinberger's notes. We've called for
Weinberger to release his notes. I
think he's agreed to do that,"
Fitzwater said in an interview.
"We have nothing to .hide .
We ' II make all this material ~ub­
lic,'' lte said, adding that he had
"no idea" what was in the notes.

'

Ve.nding machines robbed
GALLIPOLIS - Bill Foster of Vine Street Video, 66 Vine Street,
told Gallipolis police someone broke the locks off three pop
machines in front of the establishment and took approximately $55 $60 in change.

Deer reportedly causes accident
A Bidwell man's vehicle was not damaged Wednesday afternoon when he reponedly swerved to miss a deer and went off the
road and over an embankment.
According to a report from the Gallia County Sheriffs Depart.
(CoDtinued to A· 7)

Fire destroys Racine home
ed by the Syracuse unit to Veterans
Powell trailer fire
RACINE - A tire early Saturday Memorial Hospital. Charles Powell
morning destroyed the trailer home was transported by Grant Lifeflight
of Charles Powell, Hayman Road, · II at 2:51 a.m. to Grant Medical
Center in Columbus. According to
Racine.
The Racine and Bashan Fire Holman, Powell suffered burns and
Departments and the Syracuse unit smoke inhalation. •
Holman reported there were
were called at 1:32 a.m. to the
structure fire, which according to about 15 men from the Racine StaRacine Fire Chief John Holman, tion on the scene and about eight
started from a woodburner located from the Bashan Station. Units
in the living room. Holman stated were on the scene from approximately three and a half hours.
the trailer was a total loss.
Esthctline Powell was transport:}

treaw! for minor injuries, the patrOl
repol1eli,
v
•
Blankenship also sustatned
minor injuries but was not trans- .
ported, the patrol reported.
Damage to Schumburg's 1992 ,
Buick Regal and Blankenship's
19S2 Buick Regal was listed as
moderate and disabling.
Schumburg was cited by the
patrol for left of center.
. ·. .
·
No tn)unes were reported .after a
~wo-veh1cle wreck !ln B.ashan Road
m Chester Township Fnday around
2
P~ichael L. Hoffman, 19 ,
Pomeroy, was northbound on
Bash an Road and struck a van
owned by Betty L. Bergman ,
Mogadore, Ohio, the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.' Bergman's van was
struck in snow at the time of the
accident, the report said.
No injuries were reponed.
·Damage to Hoffman's 1982
Volkswagen Jetta and Bergman's
1987 Chevrolet Astro was listed as

modera~e. .
.
No c1ta~?ns were 1ssued.
Sb~r1~s dep~rtme~t

A Gall1pohs man s veh1cle sustained moderate damage Frid~y
afternoon on .Bladen .Ro~d 1n
Guyan Townsh1p when. 11 sl~d off
the road ~d overturned m a d1':Ch.
· Accordmg to the report, Tlm!Jthy E. Lauder, 23, Rt. 3 Gallipolis,
was northbound on State Route 218
when he made a left-hand tum onto
Bladen ~oad and slid into the
ditch.
.
No injuries were reported and
the vehicle was towed from the
scene.
A Bidwell woman's vehicle sustained light damage Friday afternoon when it slid off the fight side
of of an icy curve on Kemper Hoilow Road in Springfield Township.
. According to the report, Delilah
Waters, 39, 224 Merry Road, Bidwell, was eastbound when her vehicle slid off the road and into a
ditch. No injuries were reported.
(Continued to A-7)

Businesses destroyed, eight
.families left homeless by fire
MATEWAN, W.Va. (AP) - A
fire and ·explosion severely damaged about a quarter of the business
district and left ei~ht families
homeless Friday in thts coal mining
town that was the site of a historic
labor battle.
Seven people were slightly
injured, said John Warden, director
of-the Mingo County Ambulance

SerVice.
·
blast of flaming debris that ignited
Four businesses were leveled neighboring businesses, a church, a
and four.others sustained severe union office and an ambulance stadarnage from ftre, water or flying tion, he said.
debris, said Mayor John Fullen.
' 'We had several explosions that
The fire began about 3 a.m. in a blew glass and bricks into the
downtown auto parts store that was street," Warden said.
filled with paint, paint thinner and
One man, hit in the head by a
other combustible chemicals, War- brick, was taken to a hospital for
den said. T.he blaze.erupted in a · treatment and released.

filters, valves and other supplies for
Operation Restore Hope, which is
providing food and medical aid to
Somalia.
"Since we're filling 300 to 400
additional orders per day for Somalia, · all the requests are handled
same day," spolcesman Jack Allen
said. "That is why we can't take
days off in this type of emergency
situation."
Brisk temperatures statewide
were punctuated by winds in the
north from 20 mph to 40 mph with occasional gusts to 60 mph.

MLSD names::
Buckley new ·
superintendent
POMEROY - William L. Buckley of Pomeroy has been natried
superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District
··
Buckley is an 1980 gradua.e of
Ohio University, where he obtained
a master's degree in. CJUTiculum
Supervision. He has a variety of
experience in education, having
served as a sci~nce teacher, coach
and athletic director at Wahama
High School for 11 years. He was
principal at Eastern High School in
Reedsville for three years in the
mid-1980's, and since 1986, has
been a secondary supervisor and
TAG coordinator for the Meigs
County School Board.
He was a member of the Eastern
Local School Board from 1980 to
1983.
:
He is·currently a member of the
Tri-County Career Development
Curriculum Network, and the
. Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Development. He
serves as a member of the Meigs
County Fair Board and the Meigs
County Fair Show and Sale Committee, is an advisor to the 4x4 's 4H Club. He is a member of the
Chester United Methodist Church.
He and his wife, Twila Karr
Buckley, reside on Lover's Lane ih
Pomeroy. They have four sons:
Ryan, a senior at Eastern High
School; Ryan, a sophomore; Brandon, a seventh grader; and Brent,
who attends second grade at
Chester Elementary School.
Buckley was unanimously
named to the position on Tuesday
night to replace James Carpenter,
who is retiring from the position,
effectiv e in June. Buckley was .
given two contracts. One will commence on June I, the other being a
two·year contract to commence on
August 1.

Police arrest
man in B&amp;Es

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-SeDtiDel Staff
•
GALLIPOLIS • A witness'.
report of a breaki11a 11.!111 entering·ar
a local beauty salon lead to the.
arrest of a Gallipolis man Thursdaf
evening. Further investigation·
brought forth an additional charg~~
for a similar breaking and enterin,.
which occured Wednesday at a~·
ber shop next door.
: ·:
Stephen M. Cooper, 28, Gallla:
Hotel, 237 Second Ave., Gallipolis,
was taken into custody in an alley
on the 300 block of Second Averiue
by Gallipolis police following a
Some flurries around the state pro- chase from the Gallia Hotel. ·
According to police repats, the
duced up to an inch of accumulaarrestin~ officers found $468.58 in
tion.
,
A pair l&gt;f great-grandmothers the sub,JCCt ~s jacket, which authoribraved the'cold to eat at Timko's ties belie~iamost of the money
Soup 'N Such in Toledo after taken fro Montgomery's Barber
nd Ave.
spending the morning with grand- Shop, 244
Cooper was charged with
children. .
·
."We're just tired of cooking," obstructing justice, resisting arrest
and two counts ,o f breaking and
said Mary Taylor.
" When we cook, we just keep entering.
The report on the 'break-in 't
nibbling and nibbling," added her
sister, Esther Wilson, who also is Shear Pleasure Hair StyUng Center
from Toledo. "This way, we don' t and Tannery, 242 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, said a witness told
have any leftovers."
(CoDtinueclto A-7)

Ohioans celebrate Christmas with
getting and giving ,to those in nee4
By Tbe.Assoc:lated Press
Ohioans braved temperatures in
the 30s and gusty winds to celebrate Christmas by helping themselves to gifts, as well as giving
their time and money to others.
In Columbus, about 750 volunteers at the First Congregational
Church for Bethlehem provided
dinner, clothes and presents for
about 2,000 people.
, "We have aD kinds of miracles
'happening," said Arlene Reynolds,
project coordinator.
Also in the capital city, workers
at a military supply center packed

WILLIAM BUCKLEY '

�... . . . . . . ..

'

•

•-·

OH

.

• IColumbusl4o• I

W. VA.

Ice

.

-Don't Miss It!!-

Doz-. of lldaptoq

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10-""''

oquil&gt;moril-at
homO, on 111e-

• C.Oing ldla
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•llnlvorooiACIDC

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adopt...
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Meigs EMS responds to 12 calls

• SpiM I'Oiocillnl

~Plans Cor the annnal Easter Seal

---

WohoYedloludiO
11111 'lidOOIOJ&gt;O diet
you can't flrid at

Do • 10111111 ond

CUSPS 1115-800)
Publilhed e~~ch Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
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Second clau .,._ta&amp;er,id at Gallipo1ia,
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New York Slate, western Pennsyl.
vania and northern New EnJI.uld&amp;
Snow was also expected m tha ,
Appalachilns, lhe n~ Rockid:
tuid tbe notlhern Plains.
•.
Scattered showen were forecasf ·
in the Southeast, Texas and the
Nqrthwest.

·

·:

On Friday night, snow eltlendcd•
from the northern half of the.
Atlantic Coast S.IBteS llld across the;
Appalachians to lhe ·Midwest and•
Great Lakes.
·
;1~
Rain was scatlered across nonth:
em Georgia, the Gulf of Mexia&lt;)•
region, the lower Mississippi Viii•:
ley, eastern Texas and the Nor~~)::

Dissolution -sought ..

Rent a Tux
for 1993 ~
.style this year!

Ftmtastic Selections.
TUXEDO. RENTAlS
AS LOW AS

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Hospital news

~ty Telrlhon to be held March

1

.

mila:

Maxine Robinson

tfeigs County among
·~lethon participants

•
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....

. . . . . . . ,.fpc;_

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one Year...........................·..........._.... us.so
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PRICE

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·
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MAIL liUliiiCRIPTIOI'IB

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Dollyondlandoy
MAILIUBICRIPTION8

·• I•W• Coutr"

IIIIODY CGMPAMSI
With over 6600 localiona
'nationwide, Fladlo Shack
is t1 In alectroniel

··~

. : ··
really puts a focus baCk on fami- put many veterans out of work, west.
In Kentucky, a 55-year-(lld
lies. ~hole families were disrupled · Koruna said. That "has caused
by the Persian Gulf in different problems at home in many of the and a 12-year-old girl were kilki4•
ways," Christian said.
veterans we've seen . ~e ' re pre- in separate snow-related auto acci-:
dents Friday.
:::
"We really ·do want to make an pared to serve the entire family effort to see everybody who needs children and spouses.''
Chimney fire reported ;: :
services. And if they don't usc the
The center, which opens Jan. 4,
program, they might lose the pro- is one of 32 around the nation. The
MIDDLEPORT - A chimn~y
gram," he said.
Department of Defense's budget fire caused minor damage at the;
The center will help veterans funded $10 million to the Depart- Woodrow Engle residence, Shad')'
and family members cope with any .· ment of Veterans Affairs, Christian Cove Road, on Thunday evening.
problems they' ve faced since the said.
. The Middleport and Pomeroy
war, said Bill Koruna, one of three
Columbus was awarded a sup- F1re Departments were called fo
social workers who will staff the port center because about 9,000 Shady Cove Road at 6:08 v.m. for
center.
Ohioans served in Operation Desert the chimney fire, which according
· Downsizing of the military has Storm, Christian said,
to Kenneth Byer of the MiddlepoJt
Barker said soldiers serving in Fire Department, started from'.a
~ration Restore Hope in Somalia
woodbumer which spread to thC
w11l not have the same problems as wall behind the woodbumer. Dyer
Gulf War veterans because the stated the frre started because the
12:05 a.m. Friday.
effort is geared toward chimney was plugged.
::
Abour 12:45 a.m .. Ralph Scou, Somalian
helping
people.
1'7
Byer
reported
there
were
39, allegedly tried to break orr a
Koruna, who served an eight· units on the scene for approximatesupport on the toppled cross and
month
also was charged with disorderly agreed. stint in the Persian Gulf, ly an hour. There were 13 units
from Middleport and four from
conduct.
"You
can
get
a
post-traumatic
Pomeroy. According to Byer there
. Each posted $1,500 bond and
·
stress
disorder
;my
time
you're
in
a
was released. said a Hamilton life-threatening situation, and were no injuries.
County Justice Center employee
Somalia (troOps) are defmitely in a
who declined to identify herself.
life-threatening situation. The difOn Monday, a cross erected ference
would be they're not really
An action for dissolution of
before dawn stood for about four
the
aggressors.
They're
going
in
as
marriage
has been flied in Meigs
. houn before it was knocked down.
County
Common
Pleas Court by
peacekeepers,"
Koruna
said.
A replacement cross was put up
Alesia
Shaulis,
Albany, and
ll
feel
better
about
them·
'They
'
· Thursday, the !27th anniversary of
Lawrence Shaulis, Langsville. . ,selves;"
the founding of the white
supremacist organization in !'Waslei, Tenn.
The KKK obtained the permit
by using the same religious freedom argument thai a Jewish group
used to win a court order allowing
it to display an 18-foot menorah
during Hanukkah.
The menorah has remained
undisturbed on the square.
Celebrate New Year's Eve in

J

MEIGS • Units of the Meigs
Count~~ency Medical Service re
to 12 calls for assis;
tance on Thunday, Friday and Saturday morning.
·
On Thunday at 11:14 a,. m. the
Pomeroy unit went to Mulberry
Heights for Juanita Arthur who was
taken to Veterans Memorial ·Hospital.
At 5:39 p.m. the Racine unit
was called to Route 124 for CoMie

ffea ther

.

Klan erects·cross third time

Nadine Noble

Sale Starts.Mon., Dec. 28- Ends_ Sat., Jan. 2

.Ext--

..

lower 40s over the s0uihwe&amp; Sun- and sunset will be at 5:14p.m.
day •
.
Ac:rca lhe natloD
The record-high temperature for A frigid ait mass from Canada
Ibis date at the Columbus wealher dumped snow cin upper New Bng·
sta!ion was 62 degrees in 1982 · land and lhe Midwest early Saturwhile the record low was minus 5 day . Rain soaked much of tbe
degrees in 1983.
Soulheast and the Nonhwesl
Sunset ,tonight will be a! 5:13
Fll!fries were forecast Saturday
p.m. Sunnse Sunday at 7:52 a.m. · in the Great Lakes re&amp;on, western

. BINGHAMTON, N.Y. - Cressa F. ~ebb Brown of Springer Road,
CINCINNATI (AP)- One of
Binghamton, N.Y., formerly of Midtlleport, died Monday, Dlx:. 14, 1992
three
men who helped brace a Ku
at Laurdes Hospital.
Klux
Klan
cross for the third time
Born on Jan. 17, 1924 in Oothier, ~.Va., she was the daughter of the
in
Fountain
Square said people are
late U. S. and Eloda Webb.
·
misunderstanding
the (lurplise of
She is survived by her husband,· Robert J. Brown, Binghamton, a !()n
the
cross.
and daughter-in-law, Gary .and Vickie Brown, Binghamton; two gr&amp;l)d"This isn't about the Klan. It's
children, Holly Lynn and Eric Marc Brown, Binghamton; and several
about
J?Utting Christ baclt in Christnie&lt;;es and nephews, including Janis and Ronald Evans, Columbus; and
mas,'.
said Steve Anderson of
Jan and Susan Hauck, Minneapolis, Minn.
·
She was a longtime employee, honorary member and retiree of the Cleves, who is a Christian sepaInternational Brotherhood of Electrical ~orken, Local 325, Binghamton, ratist prencher and a former Klansman.
and a member of SL Joseph's Church, Sanitaria Springs, N.y. ,
Anderson, who was the only one
Funeral services here held at the William R. Chase and Son, Inc.,
Funeral Home in Port Dickinson, N.Y. and at the St. Joseph's Church. who would identify himself, said
Burial was in the Calvary Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be sent tbe thrU men were representing the
KKK in putting the cross back up
to Our Lady of Laurdes Hospital Oncology Deparunent.
·
l.
on friday .and llracing it with
metal.
The Klan has a permit to display
the
10-foot wooden cross through
POINT PLEASANT -- Nadine Nollie, 78, of Point Pleasant, died
~ednesday.
A!ld the KKK is deterThursday, Dlx:. 24, 1992, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
mined
to
keep·
the cross up.
She was a member of the Sand Hill Chun:h of Christ
"~e·re
not
going to stop," said
Born Feb. 21, 1914, in Huntington, she was a daughter of !he late DenRon
Lee,
spokesman
for the U.S.
ver P. and Christi (McLeod) Aeiker. She was also preceded in dcalh by her
Knights
of
the
KKK,
based in
husband, Otis E. Noble, one brother, a sister, and one granddaughter.
·
Hamilton,
about
20
miles
north of
, Surviving are four daughters and two sons-in-law, Eula Jean McCoy of
Cincinnati.
Henderson, Barbara and William H. Spears of Point Pleasant, Anna Lee
But many people have another
Harmon of New Haven, Christi and KenTiit Brown of Gallipolis; son and idea
about the meaning of the . udgment spught
daughter-in-law, Otis N. and Anna Lee Noble of Point Pleasan~ sister,
A'd
· has ·been
Helen E. Miller of Leon; 17 _grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren and cross.
JU 1gmen! acuon
A note tied to the cross read:
three greiu-great-gnndchildren.
"To the KKK: YoW" use of a cross ftl~ by Fredenck S!sson, Racme,
The fune1111 will be Monday, ll a.m., at the· Crow-Russell Funeral for this purpOse is a twisting of the agamst Southern Oh1o Coal ComHo.me in Point PleaSant with Charles Boston and Lewis Mikell, ministers, message of Jesus. We are asked to _. papy, I,.anoaster, and other:s .. The
&lt;iffi9.~.Jl.!· Burial will be in tile Austin-Holf"MCJ,.eOc! &lt;;~etery, Render-· lo\'e our neighbon."
· ;'
-suu alleges work-rel~ted IRJUfY,
Two
northern
Kentucky
men
a~d asks for ~ J~r~ trta_l ~o deterSOP, "·''•·
Frie~ may cal' at the funeral home S'unday, 6 to 9 p.m. j
and a Chicago man were charged m,ne .the P!amuff s ehg1~hty to
with disorderly conduct for aaack- ParlJCI_pate m the Workers Coming the cjs, said Officer Randy · pensatton Jllllgram.
Neal.
COLONY THEATRE
He said Devin Kathman, 20, of
COLUMBUS - Maxine ~ells Robinson, 72, 443 Clairbrook Ave.,
Kenton Hills, Ky., and Jeff StrickColu~Dbtis, former resident of Gallia County, died Thursday, Dec. 24 ,
TONIGHT tin THURSDAY
er, 20, of Covington, Ky., toppled
1992, at her residence after three years of failing health.
She was born Feb. 7, 1920 in Carter County, Ky., daughter of the late il over and broke it in half about
William F. and Laura E. Hillman Wells.
She was a retired employee of tli GM Delco Marine Division of Dayton.
.
Survivors include two brothers, Jeff Wells of Patriot, and Roy E. Wells
ONE EVE..NG SHOW 7:30
of Christiansburg; and three sisten, Karen Springer of Columbus·, VirADMISSION $1.60
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ginia McMonegal of Long Beach, Calif., and Helen Meceli of lnbrook,
_..;;;G:::;EORGE STRAIT IN
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS N.J.
;
None.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Lorah WilliiDl Robinson,
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
in 1976.
.
.
·
. Danny Johnson, ~illiam Morris
Services will be I p.m. Monday at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral and Yvonne Sellen.
Home, with Father Albert McKenzie officiating. Burial will be in Mound
FRIDAY (Christmas Day)
Hill Cemetery.
SATURDAY &amp;
ADMISSIONS- None.
ONE EVENING SHOW 8:30
Friends may call at the funeral home on Suf!day from 6-9.
FRIDAY (Christmas Day) DISADMISSION 11.150- 44~
Pallbearers will be Roger Wells, Mike Diles, Jeff Wells, Marshal CHARGES -None.
Wells, Ralph Holbrook, and Charles Holbrook.

''Year End Sale·! ''
'

Sunny Pl. Cloudy CloUdy

Cressa F. Brown

E

.*uced

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Department of Veterans.
Affairs has eslablished a center to
help Persian Gulf War soldien and
their families deal with postwar
problems.
The Persian Gulf War Family
Support Center is set up to help the
many veterans who have psychological disorders. ~d David C~­
tian, chief of Social Work Serv1ce
at the Columbus VA Outpatient
Clinic. About 9 percent have posttraumatic suess disorders, be said.
"Roughly 60 per~;ent of Penian
Gulf veterans were 'married. This

43°

Our Annual

••

'

Sunday Tlmei Sentinel

War support center established
to help veterans and families .

IND.

r---------------,.....__,.....;....;.._____:_. ;. . ,. . . .___. .;_. .,;.;.___....;._,....._:..,

Elvin Tenney and Reynolds also
reponed that the society soon will
60)nd 7 were m~de at .~e recent be pu~chasing a new wheelchair
rrM:eling of tbe River C1Ues Board access1ble van. Over .the past four
· o'Trustees. Meigs County is a part years, the Maricaa Moose Chapter
ot the district served by Easter has donaled about $20,000 to the
slais which has offices in Marieua. society specifically toward pur.; The telethon. which is lhe agen- • chase of a van. It will be used to
cY.s major fund raiser, will be held transport clients and staff. Anyone
o~ ~TAP-TV. Confmned spon·
interested in volunteering to drive
s~s included IGA, Rivert~n
clients on an as-needed basis
Moton. Chevron, Peoples Banking should coniBCt business manager
a~ Trust Co., and Morris Sales
Andy McFarland.
aiid Hospital Shoppe. Wanda · . As for the Watch Me Grow
~J!lolds tS director of lhe telethon. expansion into Athens, Meigs and
· VIP Chairman Brad Dawe Morgan counties, Barbara ChapIf~ that he is aeeldng 132 VIP man, chaitmsn reported thai all hir·
,fepresentatives to answer tole· i ng should be completed this
thanes for an hour during the . month. With new grant funds, the
~elethon and to seek advance
regular and adaptive child pissenfllledges. So far 80 YIP's have con- · ger safety program is expected to
!fumed participatial. An)'IR inter- be expanded.
~sled in a~k:!1 a part of the fund
Paul Callihan reported that the
:..uer is
to coniiCt the aaen- recent festival ' qf tree~ auction in
Jy at 1-800-903-EASTBR.
the Blennerhasset Hotel netted the
The annual kickoff for fund rais, societ:; $6,800, an increase over
!!''¥ efforts will be a reception and last year's proceeds
. ,
~IBtion for YIP's and team capThe boald aa:q&gt;ted lhe resigna•ins at 2 p.m. on Jan. 10 in the lion of board member and past
· !lllennethassett Museum. ·
president, Jennifer Christy. Next
~ SeveralJIIIIIkdlng initiatives are meeting was set for Feb. 11 at 7
e_nder way~·- part of the pre- p.m.atdleEasterSealoflice.
.-lethon acuvn1es. Locally propublic ICrvice commercials "'JIT
.re airing on ~TAP. A music .
tideo by local videogqpher Mike
Extnded 101 ec:ast
l&gt;lckinson, feaiUJ'!Dg tbc 1992 proMonday, cbaace of rain or snow
roo~e. was played for the showen. Lows middle 20s to lower
and 11 available for Easter 30s. Highs In die 401.
epmentativeslllllking spealtTuesday, fair. Lows 15 to 25.
h enpgcmen1S.
.
Highs in the upper 20s to upper
.:_,~board pve lhe go-ahead for 30s.
,.;....;. of a parent ~~tion J111111t
Wednesday, falr. Lows 15 10 25.
: Cb :bolster the soc~ety s ex adna Highs mainly in die 30s.
f1 atc:b Me Grow and lhe Meigs
Soutb CacnJ
. · Qjunty ~PCCCh ~ JII08fl!lll•·
Sunday, partly sunny, breezy
, Finance co~mmee chairmJin and WlnJJcr. The high 40 to 45.
•'
'

By The Allodllted Press
ACnllll Oblo
The high pressure system will
move cast of Ohio on Sunday. This
will allow for warmer readings
over the state as southerly winds
prevail. Skies will be partly sunny.
Highs should range hom the middle 30s over lhe northeast to the

MICH.

- CJ:Qpe 's !furniture qafferies - LifestyCe !furniture - .
Savings 20% to 60% - Storewide!

t=

oonditions and lligh ~~

for

could be purchased at the Ratbbum babies were nestled in bed, I'll name
Drug Company.The first Gallipolis ~illiam, ~illiellldBill,molhersaid;
store to really push lay-aways W8S ~ide was her smile, for triple1S IIIey
Deardorff and Poore(localed in what be. she lays her good luck to Rocky
later became Murphy's).One could Mountain tea."
buy an iron bed a tbe Adams FID'ni· The Epworth League of Grace
ture SIOJ'C for $2.75. They also sold Metbodist showed die spirit of the
onyx tables, mahogany rocten, Jar- SCIIIlOIIWhenthc¥hostedadinnerjust
' dincreSiands,Morrischairs,bamboo for die underpriviiiged kids or the
no\'elties and oak easels.
city. It was by invilalion only 8lld
Locatedat48CourtStreetwasthe nearly 200 children were fed tuJtey
McCormick Department Store.This and alllhe trimmings. The cbildren
store advertised a full line of Hav- were given tre8IS and candies as . ·
iland Otina. Lauelsa Ware vases and weD.Conlributions for Ibis .worthy ·
jardineres,lamps. nickleplated ware, projecl wen: so great, the league bad
hosiery, gloves, mittens, shirts and to refuse some donstions, but in a .
underwear. Handkerchiefs could be spirilofco-operationlheM&amp;hodists
~-·
pureh8setl for one penny apiece.The refered all .extra help 10 lhe Baptisl
..; The above was not good poell')' Halliday store was next door at 46 Chureh.
lflt it was local. Frank Cheney, resi- Court and at44 Court was lhe GalJames Suds is a spedaJ corre• humorist and mayor of Slab lipolis Laundry. AD tbree of lhese spondelltoflbeSUDdayTI_.Sea·
It, was the author. Actually buildings bad been erecled in 1878 . tinel. His lddreas Is: 65 Willow·
ey did not live on Slab Creeic and then R:modcled in 1892 Just Drive, Springboro OH 45066
~tit on Grape Street Slab Creek was after the Christmas of 19051he Galbelieve place where Brolher lipolis L8lmdry caught lire with the
aBrolher Huctleberry (also flames spJellding to the next two
~her) were tbe primary resi- buildings. Botb the McCormick and
tJpts.JQSt before Cltrislmasin 1905, Halliday firms !oat theirenlii'e stock.
9(otherRuskin wentrochurc:b while TheLaundn' building was tom down
• . Ruskinstayedbomewilhacold. and lhe olhe; two buildings were_
~ Mn. bad inalructed Brotber remodeled and still survive.
J\iskin to rememba: die aeunon and S()IJle blamed the lire on faulty
ttl! her about it~ Clujrch. The fJXtures. -lt seems 1905 was a tough ·
~··text was: •An angel came year for lhe two firms thai furnished
~from heaven, lid alive coal lightrothetown.lttumedoutlhetwo
atfd laid it on die alllr.M AD die way firms were in collusion to fix prices.
hflme Brolher Ruskin Jepeated the Whether IIIey also cut back on main-r4\i,t and sure enough his wife's fust · tenance in otder to maximize profits
il)i!uiry was concerning the texL
we do not know. Historically lhe two ·
~ After some study die brotber re- fmns, Gallipolis Gas and Coke and
sponded:"Anlndiancamcdown from GallipOlis Electric Light made profit
Havenllldtooll:alivecoltbythe of 25 pen:ent pq year when they
and jerked him out of the halter." competed fairly. Under collusion,
sister was not familiar with that profits doubled as did the rates. To
tPl but Brolher Ruskin said it so · show what goes aioond comes
tlthoritativelyshedctermineditmust around, the city council bent over ·
bJtrue. TowhichFrankCheneygave backwards to bring natural gas into
lie morai:"'f a penon has the nerve town in 1905 so as to restore comperiiJCl things off in good earnest, they tition.
WohoYeO""'
n go for facts."
C.D. Kerr Drugs advertised that
i~odai&gt;IW·
plug end you
In 1905 some of lhe best Chris!- Rocky Mountain tea was a cure 'for
need.
presents included: Victor Talk- colds, wrinkledskin,lossofvigorand
• Gold-plaiOd
· connocton
ifg _ ~achines,
Columbia vim.Saidonead:"BeBeattifulwith~ones.EdisonPhonographs,
out discomfort." Another ad was in
• AJV dubbing kilo '
siund boxes and horns all of which lhe form of a poem: ''Three liUle

.. .. .

Cold air m·ass dumps -snow in Northeast

'

Accu- Weather• forecast for

MBIGS COUNTY - Tbo Melaa May, Thomas B. :Hart. Donald A. PLAINS - Maxine WieDclr: JACK- l
County Bloodmobile colleeUld 11 May, 'J'beodore C. Pilhcr, Robert SON - Virginia M. Bil!ld; MAN- :
. uni1S Of blood when .die Amtirican ~- Smitb, Jody It Smilb. Calolya ASSAS, VA. , Robert W, CoiiCb; :
Red Croa Yililed die Meias Coun- RlfS•· Jerry ! . Rcltmlre, Nlllcy RI.TfLAND - Mary B. Davidson,
ty Senior Citizens Center on Reitmire, Paul P. Marr, SbeDa J. Irene Lambert, Marta H. Black- ,
Taylor, ~ E. Taylor, Linda J. wood; SYRACUSE - Kalhy J. ;
~~y.
.
Multiple gallon donon were: Foreman, Pamela K. Hoffman, Cummings, Michelle Friend; :
Timolhy Hall, one gallon; Larry Allen T. Downie, Raymond L. RACINE - Carol Justis, Heny D.
Cirele, two pUons; 1-a JPvley, l•nclcn. Cheryl A. Sllllllbo, Ala· Holter, Larry D. Cin:le, Marie A. !
dlreo pllaas; Doaald Maf." SCYel! dine Biker, Leroy Walsh, W1Uiam Bush, Melanic D. Lyons, Willilm !
pllons; Ellis B. Myen. 12.pl1ons. Snouffer, Birley Johnson, David H. Hoback; LONG BOTTOM - •
Ireoe Llmben, Clrolyn Rlgp and M. KinJ. Bryan S. Shank, Steven Laura L. Hawley,,Bruce Hawley, :
and Oris L. Smith; MASON, i
Leroy Welsh were recoJllized as R. MMiD, IIIII Dale S. 'l'boene.
MIDDLEPORT
Michael
R.
W.VA. - Brian B. Johnson and '
first-time cbXn.
Mowery,
Jean
A.
Durst,
Sarah
J.
Brenda
K. Johnson; ~ST
RSVP workers at lhe site ~
Fowler,
Oeorae
Hmis,
Jr.,
Donna
COLUMBIA,
W.VA.- Betty B.
Dorolhy Long, Elmer and Blhel
M.
Hawley,
Gloria
J.
Peavley,
and
·Rickard;
GREENBACK,
TENN. - ~'
Brandt, Enuna Clatwonhy, Peggy
Mary
A.
Sorden:
TUPPERS
Joseph
Stinnett.
Harris, Gertrude Robinlon; I ane
(
Brown, Belly Spencer, Mary Buct,
Gerald ~ildcrmuth, 111d William
.
and I oyce Hoback. Bd Cozart,
Prenetle replacea Billy Inmon, I
Mlchelle Friend, and Dawn Shuler . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ·served as dooor ,..,,.,.. llld lhe The new Ohio Slate Fait lll8ll8get who was fired after Ibis year's fait.;1
canteen was served by Friendly says evcryal!llbould hive to pay The Slate bad to bail out lhe fair's
$3.5 million deliciL
'
Cirele of Trinity Churdl. ·
to get into die fait.
•'M goal would be to definitely ;
Donors by commuliity were:
"'If all lhe millions of people
POMEROY -Don Cullums. Walter · paid to get in, then msybe ibc fait build ~ fair so it doosn't have to •
money... FreDette .
R. COuch, Timolby M. Hall, Fo11na wouldn't have bad to ask lhe state keep asking
said.
''But
lint
you
ha\'e to get die
K. Cullums. Debra D. Mora, Dur- for so much moaey," said Richard
staff's
morale
back.up,llld
I tbink I
ward V. Cummings, Jeffrey J. Fleneae, who- cbolen Wedneswould
go
with
die
flow
and
experi- :
Wamer, J~t K. Peavley, Melody day by the Ohio Expositions Com·
encc
one
fair.".
Ramsburg, GarY Soouffer, ·Donnie m~M.!on.

:
By JAMES SANDS
.;' Special Correspoadellt
: GALLIPOLIS - "On Christmas
early mom;the childreb gel up; S()IJle
have a hom and some a cup.
Don't forget lhe k.a.n. and lhe
rocking boas; The
llew dish pan, it
ain't no loss.
:. The seal skin
fan from amusk- '
ra1 hide. A stunk
.~ hera or a to~ slide.
It: The old man's
\inilana. the old sister's hose; Don't
JGind it Susanna, soon 1905 will

,.

Pomeroy Mlddleport-Galllpolle, OH Point Pl.,...nt, wv

Sunday, Dec. 27

New.manager looking at ticket giveawayS;

$lab Creek, Ga_llia County's
·lnake-believe community .

'-

•

OHIO Weather

!

the GaUhlolll LauDclry Buildln1 burned to the
ground. 'he lllljoiDlDg balldlnp in 1905 boused
lhe Halliday store and the McCormick store:

...

Point P11111nt, WV

Bloodmobile collects 71 units

,,: GALLIPOLIS IN EARLY 1900s- This is
.-,+bat Court Street In Gaillpolis looked like
J119Und 1905. It was iD early January 1~ lhat

,...

..

, December 27, 1992
11m• Sentinel

-- .......

· - · f8Jit

••'
I

t

t

w-.. . . . . . ... . . . . . . .

u w.............................................. $111.84
26 Weeto ............ :............................. S43.16
52
S84.76
..... O.toi... Coaa~
13 w.............................:......:......... n:uo
21
146.150
52 wooto ..........................................

w-,.........................................ssuo
'

..

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Allender who was trealed but not

446 4524

BOWMAN'S
HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

, •,' -" · ·

U •• AU.Moto,..ta 'IUIIOIItoY IMGAIIII NIGNT

trnnsported.

Tlie Middleport and Pomeroy
Fire Departments were called to
Shady &lt;;:ove Road at 6:08 p.m. for
a ch1mney fire at the ~ oodrow
Engle residence.
At 6:11 p.m . the Racine unit
responded to Sharon Hollow Road
for Charles HecJc:. who was treated
but not transported.
On Christmas Day (Friday) at
12:17 a.m. the Middleport unit
responded to North Front for Kimberly Lewis. She was !liken to Vet- ·

erans. • .

HOME OXYGEN SERVICE

"C•niplete Hupltal Suppllet For Home Ute"
24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE-7 DAYS A WEEK
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP
1·100·458·6844
'
446·7283
-.
OH. ST.

.

At 2:30 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
was called to the Pomeroy Police
Department for Anneue 'Charmin
who was taken to Veterans.
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to Route 33 at 12:35
p.m. on a motor vehicle accident in
which Stewart Blankenship and
.. Dorothy Shrumberg refused treatment. Christine Shrum berg. was
transpOrted to Veterans.
AI 11 :10 p.m. the Rutland unit
went to Hysell Run Road for
Angela Wick who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Saturday at12:07 a.m. Grant
Lifeflighl landed at the helipad al
Veterans Memorial and lnlnsported
Sharon Policaro to Ohio State University Hospital.
·
At 12:10 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Village Green AparUnents
for Todd Ackerman. He was talcen
to Veterans.
The Racine and Bashan Fire
Departments and the Syncuse unit
were called at 1:~2 a.m. tO Ha)'ll!lll
Road on a structure fire at ihe
Charlie Powell residem;e. Estherline Powell was trarllpOIWI to Veterans. At 2:51 a.m. lhe Syracuse
unit transported Charles Powell to
the helipad where Grant Lifellight
II trans~ him.to Grant Medical
Center.m Columbus.

,•

PHYSICAL THERAPY SERVICE
(Physician Referral By Appointment)

. '

··--;:=·
---·=
-IO&amp;,O.t
-~­

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

-c.-•t

.Phy1lcal Therapy
•Sports Medicine Program
•Work Recov.ry
-a.ck Ae11ablllt.Uon
oCiirdiiiC Rehlblllbtlon
•Adult Fltnlu
.

"Remember to exercioe your l'i8hl lo ehoo1e
your phy1ieal therapiiiL "• (Medicare Law 1802).
We BID Medleare, IMvanceo and Worken
'
CompeJIII!Ilon For You.

tllr..iL . .
U,At,IOC

Mlil

Prnldlag Phyalal fterapy For Ower 10 Years! -~

"SERVING mE PA11ENT AND THE PHYSICIAN"
Rt. 35 Wut • Gallipolis, OH. • Mlnutaa from Holzer

-

Home Owned

614·446·2206
,,

Home Operated

�•

._,

December 27 1992

. ••.

Commentary and perspective

December 27, 1992 : :

page A4

'

•

•

r=======~===~===========~· =

•
•
•

Stress-related comp claims ·on· the increase

111 Court St., ro._..,, Olllo
(614) w.l-1156

.........

ROBEIIT L
HOBARTWD.SO~ JR,
&amp;

udnEdltGr

wJNGETl'
PATWJllTEHEAD

A•"'ent ,.hlllher-e-troller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, aud the American
NewSJIIIPOf Publilbm Allocillioli.
lEITERS OF OPINION ale welcome. They should be le11 tban
300 won!a. All le:ttcn are subjec:t to editinc and mwt be signed. with
Dime, oddreu aud tclephoae aumber. No unsicned lellors will be
publiljled. Leuers should be in cnod Wte, addreuinc inue.s, not
penonaliliel.
.

Booker's holiday
wish for Clinton
Chuck Stone
During a recent trip to New York City,lfound myself with a c~ple of
extra bows on my hands- just enough .bme to allow me toshp away
from the city's East Side elegance and visit my friend BookC!' Malcolm
Jackson in his Harlem apartmenL I was pleased but not surorised to .see
that he had writlcn another prayer. After all, Booker wntes them as flllh·
fully as Celie wrote hers in "The Color Pwple." Still swbbom about his
private intatessions, Booker refused 10 let me read it But when he .left .
the room, 1 violated the Eighth Commandment -!hen aslced for forgiVeness.

~~·~again. I koowed when I woke up this momin' ,I bad somethin'

1 wanted to pray to you abouL You awful busy this time of the year and
jes' may f0111et who I be. I be Booker Malcolm Jackson, Lord - Booker
for Booker T. Washington, Malcolm for Malcolm X and Jackson for

Jesr~O\lkla cleaned my apartment last nighf. cuz like tha! dude say, ,we
goaa have cleaJ! ban(,ls imd a pure h~ Bes1des, my gJCifrin 1s comm to
visit and have dinner here. Man, that gJCI can bum.
·
1didn't get my cleanin' done, Lord, cuz I was watchin' my 'ncw main
mait Mr. Clinton, at that meeting he be havin' with all !hem experts.
1 dm't unckntan' a word they be sayin'. White folks sure like to use all
them big words, jes' like my homey Chuck; Stone. He sometimes get all
puffed up with words nobody be understandin ·.
But Mr. Clinlllll sure be a big difference over Presidents Reagan and
Bush I don't thint Mr. Reagan be understandin' wbat be happenin' . I
~ you tried to llclp ·him, Lord. But like you say. if we be gettin' wisdom, get understlndin', and nobod)' be gettirt' no underslandin' when
they be sleepin' all the cQne:
The lllin&amp; I dug at Mr. Clinlllll's conference, Lord, was when alllh~
heavy dudes be talkin' and words jes' be flyin' in the air,~ then Mr.
Clinlllll suddenly jumped on the Dian Who is the HWPIC (that'~ head
while pmc11 in c. . l...orll) of the Ford car ~Y - and I !mowed
Mr. Clinlllll said it lite I goc ii here, cuz I taped tt - :·we already are
now below 17 J1CR'CI't of our workforce in manufactunng as compared
wilh 28 percent 111 JIIJIII and 33 percent in Germany."
Now, Lord, you jes' goua ~t that boy was tallrin' that talk. And he
w11111't even readin' no ROleS no bme!
Know wbat's nice llbout Mr. Clinton bein' president? He way smarter
than most folks, even if lhcy do call him Bubba.
.
In school, we teaeh our chil' ren that if !hey be studyin' they books
hatd and get the best glides. they be goin' to the lOp. That don't happen
so much for colmcl kids, Lord.
But it do happen for lotsa other folks - some without the studyin'
pan, like Ronald Reagan.
Another thing !like 'bout Mr. Clinlllll, Lord -and I be axin' you to
put your arms 'round this man and lift up his eyes 10 the hills whence
cometh his help - is that he seem to care a lot more !han Mr. Bush or Mr.
Reagan 'bout (olks who don't look like him.
His cabinet look more like America !han the cabinet of any president
before him. II ain't perfect, but at least he be tryin'- it's got wimmin
and colored people and Spanish people. I jes hope he don't be forgettin'
my Indian brothers and sisters who be here before the rest of us got here.
Lord, this be the time to wish good things for our frins and even our
enemies. I wish for Mr. Clinton to o~n his heart to lhc poor. And I wish
he be a success in tryin' to balance his budget. .
And, Lord, this be so important- I jes' hope he remember that we got
folks in America hungry, jes' like they be in Somalia. Them follcs need
his help, 100- jes' like them folks in B~ia.
·
.
1 Jove you, Lord. I ain.' t nevab done thiS before, but- Happy Hohdays
-and to your son,100.
(C) 1992 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Hawthorne, Calif., metal door· ·symptoms. ~e company's w~ric­
maker, Security Metal Products ers' comp 1nsurance prem1um
Corp., in th.e last several years jumped from $5,000 to $35,000 a.
claimed mental stress for as much monlh.
· California Gov. Pete.Wilson has
as $25,oo0 each. The entire compabeen
largely S\ymied from refonn.
ny, which now ·employs 125,
ing
this
runaway by the various
moved lock, stock; and.'balance
special
interests - namely,
sheet to Oklahoma. where claims
lawyers
who are getting fat off
for stress are not as compensable. ·
of
it.
In
82
perce~t of,the stress ·
·Stress claims can be businessclaims
filed
m
Califorrua, accordbusters for firms with otherwise
proud, accident-free safety records. ing to a California Workel$' ComGary and Brenda Daitch of B&amp;G pensation Institute study, the first
weelc of rumored or announced Jay, Apparel testified earlier this year notice the employer gets that an
offs or plant relocations. California that their apparel sewing fum of employee has flied a claim is from
Insurance Commissioner John 200-plus workers got socked with a lawyer. And a whopping 98 perGaramendi cited one such .example just five stress claims - which cent of all stress claims .-e litigatof a garment manufacwring plant caused their annual premium to ed.
shut down in Southern California jump in a year from $58,000 to
Most states allow stress claims
last year. Twenty-six employees $214,000.
in one form or anotber. The most
.
filed t;nental stress claims, using the
And if DYnamics Elecuonics of typical aild justiflllble is a traumatic
same attorney and medical clinic Montebello, Calif., had not been event - such as a robbery or rape
and filing virtually the same medi- saved by a wealthier parent. fum,
of an employee at a convenience
cal repon. which was constructed they would have gone belly up store - which results in abnormal
by a word processor from a check- from stress claims. Forty of !herr stress directly related to an on-lhclisL
.
.
90 workers filed stress-related job incidenL
In another case, about 30 per- claims on the same day from the
Other than that, most staleS, like
cent of the employees laid ~ff by a same legal orfice with identical Arizona, don't allow stress claims
unless they are "unusual, unex'
.
pected or extraordinary." Thus,
r
Arizona denied the worten' comp
claim of a Greyhound bus driver in
Phoenix who maintained his
1·
repeated contact with lou(! boom
,....
boxes, junkies and vagrants bad
:caused a nervous breakdown.
.t
Today insurance sur.reys show that
• - . almost half of all Americans repnt
their jobs as ''highly stressful.'
Perhaps no one in the Uni!ed
States has a better case for a stressrelated workers' comp claim than
President George Bush, whose
physician, Dr. Burton J. Lee 3rd,
advised Bush last March to "(!&lt;i for
a few days of peace and qwet so
his engine can come back in balance from !he incredible pace that
he normaDy keeps."
If California continues its tole as
trend-setter, tlte National .Council
of Compensation Insurance worries
that stress will become the biggest
and most terrible "comer" in the
comp field, with lhc outer limits of
claims still being probed. Just consider !he jogger in Hawaii who had
a compensa!Jie heart attack, because
he was thinking about his job while
jogging. Then there's the Connecticut Superior Court judge who
dropped dead after picking strawberrtes on a Saturday afternoon.
His widow was awarded a siuvivor' s benefit on the assumption
that the man had been overWorked ·
BIG BIRD VISITS· Columnist Fred W. alleged Jlgbdngs or a huge bird at the TNT area
and was undoubtedly mulling over .
Crow this week recalls ,the construction of this io Mason County, W.Va. Reed and his son,
his future offiCe tasks.
unique Christ.mas gift .to tile late Ted Reed of Tom, IS pictured wiih the bird.
·
'-'&gt;pyright 1992, United Feature
Pomeroy. The bird was constructed during
·syndicate, Inc.

SAN FRANCISCO - Ironic
for such a supposedly laid-back
state, California has become the
capital of workers' compensation
. claims for stress on the job.
And since lhc stale 8ccounts for
• one-sixlh of the more than $60 billion in coSts to this nationwide sys·
tern in crisis; state and local coffers
are being drained by whll might be
called one of the fastest-growing
entitlemen~r:rms·
Stress·
claims in California have leaped 700 percent in the
. last decade, one reason why the
Golden State this year has been
paying off its dtbts with IOUs.
Maybe it's understandable that
Assistant Police Chief David Dot·
son, who wasn't 'getting along with
former Police Chief Daryl Gates in
the wake of the Los Angeles riots,
took a StreSS leave. B.ut what about
at least three Los Angeles cops
who filed workers' comp claims
last year - a11eging they suffered
anxiety and stress simply from
watching the famous videotape of

•

By Jack Anderson

••

and
Michael Binstein

·--

Strange things happen at Christmas time

•

•

•

298 SECOND ST.

~

POMEROY. OH.

•

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., DEC. 27 THRU JAN. 2, 1993.

•
•

•
•

•

,,,.••

(
•'••

AT

TROUBLE IN THE TOY DEPARTMENT BARBIE 1FINDS KEN WITH A BIG-HAIREQ ·
TROLL.

,,

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'"

•

,

"

.

):,

I

must bring the
IM;1111• VeiMior Coupon
Below•• One coupon
per family.)

''
•
~:

••

..,;,

••

$129

SPLIT

•

Chicken Breast.............ta.

•
•

•
•
••
•
•
•

k
.Le
$149
'14 Por o1n................tB•
HORMEL
.
$139
1

•

•

•
•
•

•

••

Ham Patties................LB.

••
•

•
•
••
&gt;

•

BOB EVANS PORK

·

Spare Ribs. . . . _. . . . . LB.

•

•
•
•
•

(
99

USDA CHOICE BONE~ESS BEEF

$ 59

EC, CH ,

$ 149

••

E~KRICH

. ..

·

Smoked 'Sausage.......La. ·

·

$189
.

••
•
:

.

-.

"'

Bologna. . . . . . . -.. . . . La.
s~:MNEER~:~-~~~~~:~:.:~:~69(

•
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.. ..
•

32 oz.

·

·'

'"

c

ZESTA

SALTINES

Apples.........................3 La. aA~

(
99

VALLEY BELL

$ 189

.

..

2°A. Milk. . . . . . . . . . . GAL.

ASSORTED FLVORS

___

·I

2

KEMPS

.

Lotsa.Pop~. . 2 urre-aottle

'

TONY'S

Tomato Juice
........
46 oz.
--;.=
- . •r--BATHROOM TISSUE

(
99

4ROLL
PKG.

Qoocl Only At Powell'• Super Value
Offer Good Dec.27 thru Jan. 2, 1113
Limit 1 Per Cultomer

-

.
La.

~

11
I

FRANCO AMERICAN

SPAGHETTI-O's · 1
14.75 OZ. CANS

-

11

CAMPBELl'S

I

TOMATO SOUP

5/$2 oz. .
10.75

~

·

'

. SUGAR

DOG FOOD

99

SIL

Go~:nly

QQOd Only At Powell'a Super Value
Offer Good Dec. 27 thru Jan. 2, 1H3
Limit 6 !'er Cullomer

•

390Z.

1
----=--~•"
SHOPPER'S VALUE

iUNSHINE

20 LB.
BAG

·

·

99(

At Powell'• Super Value
Otter Good Dec. 27 thru Jan. 2, 1H3
Limit 1 Per Cuatomer

::1

I

I
~

I

.

,

BEtF

1
I

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10 LB. PACKAGE

s1290

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....................~.~~----~---------· . :.

•

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STOKELY
.;;,1 . . -

·POUND BOX

39(
2
$1
MARGARINE.............·. .
$ 99
COFFEE
Ice Cream.............sat. Pail 2
$399
Frozen
Pizza·--··-·
3
f--:-___
GROUND
PARKAY

Today in history .

'"2 by MEA . Inc. ,

'

MoRday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

group, the bird was manufactured
out of chicken wire and covered
with a black cloth resembling
feathers. ·This bird also had two

F r_e___
d W.. C
___

STORE HOURS

'

•

not go into the house until be was in the area newspapers about the · •
told that the bird had been subdued sighting of a flying whatsis · :
by Roger Morgan and Lightning inspired Crow 10 turn from frogs to · :
Boyd.
feathery garudas, mainly, it is supPictures were taken of the posed, as a change of pace. Frogs
Mason Monster captured at the are fun, but they are limited crea- :
Reed residence and the event was tures.
•
-~~o_w__ hjghly publiciZed in the area news"What came out of Crow's !abo- •:
• papers. Ted was a hero to many, ratory, through the crafty combina· I·
large red highway hazard lights for especially those who refuse'! to lion of chicken wire, a bundle of · ;
eyes. The efeclricians in this group come out of lhetr houses at. mght fealhers and a few other odd props, ;
had the lights attached to a battery because of the stones pertammg to was a fierce looking bird that :
complex which caused the eyes to the bird.
would have repelled a Martian ~
flash red at designated times.
invasion all by itself. It stood about ~
Also, this contraption was
Rupe and Rupeue , don't you six feet high and was a haughty ~;
hooked up in such a way to have know that this was the last anyone bird that bristled from every feather
the large ·wings flapping. By heard of the Mason Monster. No tip, but its most slriking character- t:
manipulating the conu:ols of this longer were people traveling to the istic was its glaring, blinking red '
design !he bird looked lifelike and 1NT area to try to sp&lt;n·the bird. As eyes. No question about it. It was ::
could fool anyone at a distance stated before, Ted was a hero to monstrous.
;:
over 50 feet. Credit must be given many people in this evenL .lt should
"&lt;;:row and his co-conspirators ;,
to the above individuals named be noted that Ted was able. to come propped their creation in the .;
herein in the design and operation. to work on the following Monday.
banker's driveway one night and ;.
of the Mason Monster.
As a result qf the happenings in hid in the bushes to observe the •;
Ted Reed always went to church the life of the Mason Monster in results. Their wait was worthwhile. :;
on Christmas Eve and would return Pomeroy and !he TNT area, George When the victim's headli~hts :;
home with this family for a late Condon Wrote the following article picked out the horrifying appantion .,
party snack. The writer was always in the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
barring the way to the garage, the ::
"Some of the practical jokers in quiet air of the,Meigs County night .•
mvited. On Christmas Eve, Dec.
24, 1966, Ted drove his auto irito the Ohio Valley area have goucn was rent by screeching bralccs and ·.
his driveway and saw the bird long mileage out of the rash of hoarse cries of disbelief. Life in the •.
blinking and flapping its wings. He- · l,JFO sightiags in. the. Gallipolis- Ohio River Valley is not dull."
•:
was indeed pel]llexed and later Ted Point Pleasant vtc1mty • but the
Getting baclc to Christmas sea- :;
said that he almost wreclced his car. reports of the winged mons\er son this year, the writer called Mrs. :·:
Pandemonium reigned in the Reed stirred them to their best effort. Jane Rupe at her number in Rut- •,
driveway. It took some time to Over in Ppmeroy, a few miles .to land . .A male voice answered, · .'
calm Ted down, and this didn't. the east, a leading banlcer was VIC· "Grand Central Station." I replied, &gt;
happen until he was told that the . timized by a puckish pillar of the "I guess I have lhe wrong number." ;:
bird would not bite him. He would community named Fred Crow The party who answered said, "No ;:
when the exeitclnent over the fly- you havel\'t, whom do you want." 1 ,•
ing monster was at its height some replied, "t-frs. Rupe."
'!
years ago.
·
·
After my conversation with this . ::
"Crow is a big man in the lady, it dawned on me as to why :,·j'
Pomeroy community in several Mr. Hatfield stated it was grand
By The Associated Presa ·
ways. He is a leading lawyer, a for- Central Station. I discovered .that ,,
Today is Sunday, Dec. 27, the 362nd day of 1992. There are four days
mer FBI man, and a physical giant the house was full of. children and '•
left in the year.
.
who starred in football at Ohio grandchildren. I can understand (.
Today's Highlight in Hislory:
·
State UniversitY in the middle why Mr. Hatfield used the phrase. I ,•
On nee. 27, 1831, naturalist Charles Darwin set out on a voyage 10 the
1930s. He scored heavily a few must admit that I was floored when ;:
PacifiC aboard the H.M.S. Beagle. DarWin's discoveries during the voyyears ag~ when he ~e on~ of 1 heard Grand Central Station as I ' •l
age helPed formed the basis of his theories on evolution.
the organtzers o~ The Ohto Soetety could not I'CC8ll that Mi:igs County ~
for the Promouon of Bullfrogs, had one
· •
On this date:
.
In 1822, scientist Louis Pasteur was born in Dole, France.
Inc., and &lt;promoted. the Big Frog
To ail the Rupes and Rupettes, , ,;
In 1892, 100 years ago, the cornerstone was laid for the Calhcdral
Jum~. cornest thatts held ~v~ry . may all of you have had a wond~ - • 1
Church of SL John the Divine in New York City.
June m Pomeroy. (Others asstsbng '· ful Cbrisunas and to 'Ted the sto
J
In 1900, mililant prohibitionist Carry Nation carried out her ftrst public
Crow in that event were: Dale of the capture of the big bird w' 1 , ,•
smashing of a bar, at the Carey Hotel in Wichita, Kan.
. Wamer1 Roy Holter, Harold B~k- always remain alive as long u the · : ~
ston, Jtm Carnahan, Dan S"!1th , writer is here 011 earlh. . ·
, :,
In 1927, "Show Boat," one of the majQrworts of the American musical theater, QDeJied at the Zieafeld Theater in New York.
Jim C'l!lwo~y .. Earl lng!es, Vilma . Editor's note • Long-lime ·;
In 1932, 60 years ago, Raclio City Music Hall opened in New York.
Ji'!JdcoYja, Mike Custet, Jun ~oush, Attorney Fred W. Crow Is tbe : -:
In 1945,28 Jillions si~ 111.,-eement crelling the World Binlt.
Frog Wayland, Guy E. Gumther, coo tributor of a weekly column •:·
In 1947, !he children s lelevisron program "Howdy Doody," hosted
Roger Morgan, Jean Morgan, and for The Sunday Tlmes-Seadnel. :::
by Bob Smith, made ill debut 011 NBC.
.
mi!)Y oth~.) .
.
. .
Readers wlsblag to applaud, crlt· · :.::
In 1949, Queen Juliana of the Netherlands signed an act granting
Crow s servtces ~~ that ctvlc lclze or comment on any subject : •:
sovereipty to !Ddoaeaia after more than three centuries rl Dutch rule.
movementwererecognimlm 1968 (except rellllOn or politics) are .;.
In 1968, Apollo 8 111d its three astronaull made a safe, nighttime
when he~as named Grand C~- encoura11ed to write to Mr. ;·:
splashdown in !he Pacific.
er, which IS, Of COII!liC, the u!bmate Crow,ln care or this newspaper. · ~·
In I 970, "Hello, Dolly I" elcised on Broadway after a run of 2,844 per·
honor among bullfrog enthUStBSts.
·
.;, "'i
formanccs.
The many stories that appeared
carry on, Fred W. Crow • · • ·

Throughout the years tbere have
been many little odd stories which
occurred at Christmas time which
the writer believes are somewhat
unusual.
·
To begin with, the writer and
the late Ted Reed used !0 exchange
Christmas giflS which were unique.
Who can forget the time during !he
several weeks preceding Christmas,
1966, when the Mason Monster
was seen flying around tl)e TNT
area near Point Pleasant. W. Va
The viewers claimed that the
Mason Monster had red flashing
eyes and black flapping wings. As
time passed, there were many published stori~ of the sightings of the
monster bird. As a result of these
many c~ si~htings, many people m automobiles drove to this
area in an attempt to !let a glimpse
of the huge bird traveling overhead.
There had been rumors that !he
Thought for Today: "What you ~ot find on Earlh is not worth seekWest Virginia authorities were
ing:" - tolorman Douglas, Scotti_sh aulhor (1868-1952).
going to organize a posse and
attempt to track down and capture
or kill the Mason Monster. Many
individuals were scared to go out at
night because of this creature. This
gave the writer an unusual chance
· of taking off on this SIOry.
· To further explain the manufacture of the Mason Monster, the
writer obtained the services of the
following: Arthur Nease, Gene
Triplett, Lightning Boyd, Roger
Morgan and Keams Roush. After
many conferences among this

Berry's World

the Rodney King beating. ·
In California today, it's almost
routine for dozens of streSS claims
to be lodged on the same day or

I

.,.
'

�Pomeroy Mlddllport Gelllpo~l~la,~OH~;P=ol~nt~PI~I~II~I~n1,~WV~
IUIOMIIW fM Ull

1989 MUSTANG
GT
MIT, AIR, CRUISE, TLT, AIIIFM
CASS., SUNROOF, LOW IlLES

AIR, CRUISE, TILT, CASS.,
PW, PDL, ONE OWNER,

LOW IlLES

'7800.00

S9995.00

DENBI6H GARRETT
FORD

DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

RIPLEY, WY 1-800-964-3673 RIPLEY, WV 1-800.964-3673

.

MERCURY
TOPAZ
.

AUTO -AIR - POWER LOCKS
TILT • CRUISE ·ALUMINUM WHEELS
POWER WINDOWS &amp; SEATS
AM/FM CASSETTE

1990 CORSICA.LT

1991 CHEVY S-1 0

AUTO., AIR, STEREO, CRUISE,
TILT, BUCKET SEATS, .

EL, STEREO, 4 CYL., MT,
BEDUNER, PUMPER,
ONE OWNER

4000R

sa5oo.oo

'

$5500.00

DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD .

looks back at
r~ar, optimistic about '93

1990 F-150 XLT

1991 TAURUS GL
AUTO., AIR, PW, PDL,
AM/Ft.' CASS., CRUISE, TILT,
AIR BAG

·sa,aoooo

0

~995.00
DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

•

1993 FORD FESTIVA
'

MSRP

'

7236.00

DENBIGH GARREn DISCOUNT • 341.00 .
-500.00
FACTORY REBATE
-400.00
FMC 1n TIME BUYER'

DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

AUTO., AIR, V-6, BEDUNER, AINFM
CASS.,TWOTONEPAINT,ONEOWNER

,

FORD
TAURUS

11992'

AUTO., AIR, CRUISE, TILT,
AMIFM CASS., LOW MILES

MERCURY
SABLE

AUTO· AIR- TILT· CRUISE· V6
POWER WINDOW5-LOCK5-SEAT
AM/FM CASSETTE-AIR BAG

S7995.00
DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

•a TO CHOOSE'~

AUTO., AC, CRUISE, TILT, PW,
PDL, PS, AMIFM CASS.,
LOADED

BUYER'S CH.OICE

$11,995.00

SJ2,9QQOO

DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD
RIPLE.Y, WV 1-800.964-3673

AIR, CASS., SRW, CAST ALUM. .

WHEELS, ONLY 4000 IlLES

0

•

$4400.00
DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD
RIPLEY, WV 1-800.964-3673

1986 RANGER
4X4
XL TRIM: PKG;' MT
~ CYL, STEREO, ONE OWNER

RIPLEY, WY 1-800.964-3673
'

1985 RANGER
AIR; AUTO., FIBERGLASS
TOPPER, TWO TQNE .PAINT,
· V-6, ONE OWNER

S2995.00

DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD
RIPLEY, WV 1-800.964 3673
"TAX, TAGS, TITL:E FEES EXTRA
FACTORY REBATES AND 1'11'18T
TIME BUYER REBATE INCLUDED
IN SALES PRICE SUBJECT TO
APPROVED CREDIT
SOME QUAUFICATION!I APPLY.

ALL FORD VEHICLES
ARE ALIKE•••

WE HAVE OVER

''.
5
0''
1993 TRUCKS IN STOCK!
RANGERS &amp; F·SERIES
'

ALL MODELS AND COLORS
FANTASTIC SELECTION
AND SAVINGSII

• 8:00A.M.

ENDS THURS., DEt 31 tO.B.
OPEN SUN., DEt 27'" - 1:00
TO 6:00P.M• •
1·800.964·3673

killed during
&amp;0liday Week end

s.

No lottery

.

9{,'EW

if

tiay.

name

olice ...

1993.TEMPO GL

s

i

AIR • STEREO • LIGHT GROUP • 4 CYL.
TILT· POWER M,IRRORS • 0/D TRANS.
TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS 10,558.00
P.E.P. DISCOUNT
· • 817.00
DENBIGH GARRETT DISCOUNT' • 846.00
FACTORY REBATE
• 500.00
FMC 1sr -TIME BUYER"
• 400.00

SALE STARTS WED., DEC.

~· 't\RE

Icy ro·ad

614·221.0888

ALL FORD DE lERS
ARE NOT!!!
~RIENCE T E.DIFFERENC~" .

tn

GRAND .OPENING

AM/FM CASS., TWO TONE PAINT
•BEDUNER, NEW TIRES,
SRW, XLTTIIM

OENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

Snowfall causes minor accidents

to world'S trou ble spots

1988 RANGER
XLT

$4400.00

E

.

Ch ns
• I mas
· bnngs
•
resnz"te

~495.00
DENBIGH GARRETT
FORD

0

Police·issue citation

-state

1992 RANGER
XLT

RIPLEY, WV HI00.964-3673 RIPLEY, WV 1-800.964-3673

1992 THUNDERBIRD

·sider ptaeins ·a major tax increase
By ROBDT E. MILLER
scene.
on the SllleWide ballot if the Legis·
Allll cliled Preu Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George 1a1ure adopts meaningful education
I'J,inovieb bopes the bipartisan reforms.
He said he didn'!lmow whether
perillion that helped solve
GALLIPOLIS - Charles T. McWilliams, 1417 E. Carrie Street, _
it
would
be a sales tax, which he
o's budget deficit will carr. y
Richmond, VL, was jailed Thursday evening for a 3-day commit·
.the new year and help take of has mentioned before.
menton a charge of driving under the influence .
· ~bigl'fOblemsfacingthestate.
" It might be something else.
:;! He said tax increases and some . We will see," he said.
·
nding cuts announced last week
But he said the lax would be
GALLIPOLIS . Gallipolis police issued a citation Thursday
allow him and the Legislawre specifically for education and
afternoon for improper backing and resisting arrest to John W. Bar·
ocus on ediiCIIIion refonns and would be subjeet to voter renewal
sucb as workers' compensa- four years later.
cus, 33. 1541 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
nand Medicaid.
" This governor or some other
"I think that this year was a governor would have to go back to
tinuation of laying the, founda- the voters in four years and say,
MEIGS . The Christmas Day snowfall caused several minor
for Ohio's future," he said at 'We want you guys to renew tbis
accidents
according to Meigs Coun9' Sheriff James M: Sows~y . in
interview last week. "I've been tax," he said.
HOLDS NO GRUDGES • Reginald Deaay, tbe trliCk driver
which
vehicles
slid off the roadway mto ditches. No senous mJW1CS
using on three ar~as: manageOn other subjects:
who
was beaten at tile start or tile Los Aageles riots wblcll wa
were noted as a reswt of the snowfall.
t. education and jobs."
- Workers' compensation
televised nationally, appears wltll his pltrlelld, Krila Hu-., Ill
He has received or soon will reform: "1be good news is that we
Los Angeles Couaty Coart Friday. WbUe Deany bean DO J!l8llce
ve cost-cutting recommendations got !he study done and the bad
against his attackers and expressed foqlveaess, he 111d tbe JDeD ·
those and othez llfC8S from vari- news is the Legislature wasn't able
who atlacked bim should not go unpunlsbed. (AP photo)
BOTKINS - Stephen R. Brumfield, Botkins, was arrested Thurs· us study groups that have heen to get it implemented. That.will be
day morning by deputies of the Meigs ~oun1y Sheri~r s De~ent.
rching for ways to make the our No. ·1.challenge next year....
According to a report from the department, Botkins was mvolved .
vemment more responsive and It's not a labor:management issue;
in a one-car accident on White Oak Road around 4:1'5 a.m. Follow. cient.
.
·
it's a jobs issue."
ing the accident he was arrested ror driv~g · ~bile intoxicated, hav.. "All this stuff, it's like a master
-Government management:
ing no operator's license and failure to mamwn conu-ol, as well as a
· . About two months from now, ••In the areas that we control,
seatbelt violatiGn.
.
are going to unveil what I call spending is below 1991 levels. A
hio 2000,.0hio First,' and I'm · couple of areas are over inflation
ing to get a board up there so (youth se~ices and corrections),
those of you in the media and but the part of governlnent that we
MIDDLEPORT - Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's
lhe public can see all the stuff control is under control. That
Department arrested Marl&lt; Gard, 18, and Marl.: C. Gard. 38, both of
Qlat's ~in~ on, ... 'he said.
doesn't mean I'm letting up on
the'Leading Creek Road, Middleport, on Friday evening on charges
• • VOiiloYich-said lhere have been 'harder and smarter and more for
of disorderly conduct.
ff strations. They included scan- less."'
According to a report from the departme~t, !he youn~er G!ifd
s this year that led to top manbudget: "This budget of
was .also charged with assault followmg an mc1dent while bemg
ment changes in the Department ours has had the least growth of
booked into the jail.
.
.
.
Human Services and at the Ohio any budget for .the last 25 years. I
Both subjects were held in jail and are to appear m Me1gs Couniate Fair. He said many of the don 'I know of any governor that
ty Court.
- blems stemmed from poor man- cut $670 million out of the budget
· ment over many years.
in less than two yeats,''·he said. ·
Voinovich was required by law
· Voinovicb. a Republican cometing his Second year in office, to make most of the cuts 10 keep
· talked about 1994. He said he the budget in balance.
1:'
ill run for re-election. He
-Environment-jobs: He said
ouldn't speculate on potential General Motors Corp. decided to
. ACROSS FROM·PC OFFICE
MASON, W. VA.
lengers.
build a new paint shop in the DayThe outlawed Irish Republican
For the first time, ,he worked ton suburb of Moraine after the
By CHRIS TORCH~A
Army declared its traditional
773·5533
ell this month with legislative Ohio Environmental Protection
~lated Press Wnter
Christmas cease-fire in Northern
· ders of both parties on lhe bud· Agency helped resolve some probChristmas brought some peace Ireland, but gave no indicalion it
to war-tom PB.!IS of the world. A would halt bombings in~nded to
t-balancing bill. He had feuded !ems.
enly in th~ past with llouse
cease-frre held m Northern Ireland. drive the British out of the republiellk·er Vern Riffe, D-WhcelersChristians in .sarajevo, c~eered ~y lie. Cardinal C~al Daly, the head
g. .
a lwl m fighung, had thelf Muslim of the Roman Catholic Church in
He attributed·their differenCes to
•••
netghbors over fo~. coffee. ~nd Ireland, implored the guerrilla
·• tion-~~poljtics and sa!d they
(Continued from A·l)
French and Am_encan soldiers group to end the decades of viol thellf asic!e after the eleeuons.
The vehicle was towed from the secured a Somali town w1thout a lence.
He said he was pleased
that
11e,
.
f rom t he shot fired.
.
From the central balcon
· y of St
'de Stan!
ditch and then dnven
e and Senate PreSJ nt
ey
Pope John Pa~ II. sound~ the Peter's Basilica, the pope
theme of peace m h1s Chmtmas inveighed against those responsible
onoff, R-Cincinnati, worked scene.
ge!her on the budgeL ·
. '
hi 1
messa.ge, pleading for heahn,&amp;, and for hosu'lities in the Mideast and
ld ·~·t see
deaf
."I'm convinced that Vern and , A Gallipo!is·man's ve c e sus- h
10 a wor ,","' . ms
·
d
d
·
1
d
mage
Fr1·
day
ope.
the "planned and inhuman" ethnic
. t to
. solve •he problems o.f tame mo era e a
d
bl
tu
Wan
~·
afternoon on Circle Drive in Gal- an lffipenetra e · a mes.
war jn Bosnia-Herzegovina.
All lire Prices Reduced for Gra•.d Ope•i•t
'State as much as I do. There 1s
. .
. h . I'd'
ff
In Germany, more than 150,000
..
0
1
~ ~ilestion 't hat Vern is a great hpohs Tow~shlp w. en It s
people carrying f andles and .to~hes
All Exhaust Prices Slashed
. leader. Aronoff is no slouch the road 8J!d mto a ditch.
lined the streets of Berhn m a
; : he said.
·· ' According JO the report, R~nald Christmas vigil against rightist vioDUAL EXHAUST:.............. .'..... ;•• $89.95 w/Giass Packs
oino;vich said he would con- L .._Dovenb.arg~r • 46 • 369 Ridge . lence that has claimed 17 lives this
SPECIAL PURCHASE ON 4 WHEEL ALIGNMENTS
·
.
Dnve, Galbpobs, was northbound
Reg. $39.95 .................... NOW $29.95 One Week Only
when he slid off the right side of yearDespite worri~s about ~iolence,
'
•
LW.CENNAMO
theroa~..
.
·
Th
holiday observances were quiet at
· We Specialize in Tires, AUgnments, Exhaust.
"" .
No mJunes were reported. e
AnORNEY
AT
lAW
one of Christianity's most revered
Grand Opening soon. One week onlyl
ed fro m the scene.
vehicle was 10~olice
sites -Bethlehem, where Jesus
8 East Broad SbHt,
See Neal for.the Deal. Call
Ask for Chris
•
born.
Sulte900
,.
.
A Baiboursville, W.Va. youth~s Christ is said to have
. been
had bee
~ By The AssocUIIed Press
vehicle sustained light damage FnSome,ceremorues
n canColumbus, Ohio
·At least ~ people have ~n
day afternoon when it slid off the celed to protest Israel's expulsion
1-8Q0.886-0LAW
right side of Upper River Road of about 400 Muslim fundamentalled on Oh1o roads so far thiS
..ristmas holiday weekend, the
(State Route 1) and struck a utility l~tsre~~ti':,~gf~~ ~~!~~~~e~~
Highway Patrol in Columbus
pole.
Israeli servicemen. Lebanon has
Fnday.
According to the repon, Sr.ephen
The pa'!&lt;_ll will count holiday
Parsons, 16, 1203 Ralston Ave., refused to admit the deported men.
fie fatahues from 6 p.m. Thurs·
Barboursville, W.Va.; was southIn battered Sarajevo, many peathrough Sunday.
bound near the Silver Bridge Plaza pie ventured from their homes for
The dead:
when he attempted to stop at the the first time in days, collecting
inte=tionand slidofftheroad.
wood and water amid snow flurFRIDAY
' LEBANO~- Brenda L. Dean,
No injuries were reported and ries. Following the tr.idition of the
3 , of Eaton, m a four-car acc1dent
the vehicle was driven from the mulliethnic city, some Christians
Interswe 75 in.Warren County.
scene.
invited over their Muslim neighAKRON - Boyd W. Willison
bOrs, though many could offer only
34, of Akron •.in a one-car accia cup of coffee.
ton a Summit County road. .
The Bosnian capital has been
M{_']J IM!P.l{.QW,']J
THURSDAY NIGHT
under siege by Serb fighters since
ELYRIA- Dava Carder. 16, of
CLEVELAND (Al') - There the spring, when Croats and Slavic
In these fast moving times, 'J.l!,w aru£ Improved seems to 6t. t/i.e ortier
·n, iii a one-car ;~CCident on a was no Ohio Lottery drawing Fri· Muslims - together about twot;Fun' County road.
day, due to the Christmas holiday. thirds of the population - voted
of tfie
Some companies fed tfiey atfti a pangfe or a smitcli to a
B'uckeye ~. normally drawn on Fri- for independence from Yugoslav~ .
particu{ar product, cliange its
anti put a new {a6ef on tnt.
. day, was drawn Thursday instead.
Friday was not an official hoh·
The jackpot for Saturdats Super day in the Serbian capital, Belpackage, ~iatefy 6ecomes 'J.l!,w anti Improveti. It's a new
·
(Continued from A·l)
Lotto drawing was wqrth $4 mil- grade where the Serbian Orthodox
lice he saw a subject Thursday in lion.
. ChurCh observes Chrislffias on Jan.
version of anJd refia/J{e tliat ditin 't need improving in tlie first pfo.ce.
· beauty salon.
7.
,The witness, a relative of shop
~ near a.s we can figure it, tliere onfy one reason for tfoing tliings
ncr Sandy Darnbrough, knew
fik.! tliis. It must 6e tfiey needsometfiing new to ta{K_a6out.
person Wl!S not supposed to be
the closed shop and knocked on
:May6e wt.'re way 6efiiru£ tfie times. :Maybe even out ofstep. 'But to
front window, causing the&gt; sus11''1 to flee the establishment
us, gimmic~ liave no pface i'n: o~r 6usiness. Our pliifosopfiy is to treat
~ugh a back window. t
A second witness reponed talk·
our customers tlie way we want to be treated. 'Wfien it comes to
to an out-Of-breath man outside
greeting foC~ witfi a smi{e aru£ Cetting tfiem k.Jww fiow mucfr. we
Gallia Hotel shortly after the
it!:ident, a police spokeman said
·appreciate tlieir 6usiness. Sliowing .appreciation isn 't . done mucfi
'turday . Police searched the
din$ and Cooper fled through a
anymore, aru£ its consitiered o{i£ fasfr.ioneti, so 6e it. If it means
k wmdow shortly· after officers
nd him hiding in one of the
we're not 'J.f!,w anti Improved, tliat 0~ too 6ecause we 6e{itve our

Two arrested for disorderly conduct

DENBIGH GARRETT
· FORD

RIPLEY, WY 1-800.964-3673 RIPLEY,WV 1-800964 3673

1990 Z24
CAVALIER

lost control of his vehicle and went off lhe right side of lhe road. ·
No injuries were reponed. The vehicle was driven from the

Brumfield a"ested by deputies

1990 RANGER
· XLT
57800.00

ment, Thomas C. l'alrick, 22, 202 Skidmore Road, Bidwell, was

SOUihbound on OJ. White Road in Springfield Township when he

Man jailed for commitment

RIPLEY, WV 1-800-964-3673 RIPLEY, WV 1-800.964-3673

•1 0 TO CHOOSE•
BUYER'S CHOICE

wv
..-------:":"
Briefs....- - - - - - - ,
(Cc.tUed from A·l)
OH-Polnt

'Zl, 1992

if

s.

· ESR1124

othing was reJ)O'rted missing
Shear Pleasure.
urther investigation Friday
nd similar beer bottles at the
uty salon and in Cooper's room.
police ·spokesman also said a
ifpqirin' t matching Cooper's tennis
design was found under the
dow used to gain entranee into
salon.
powder residue of dried white
ton Cooper's jacket also conted Cooper with the Wednesday
t l!realt·in at Montgomery's,

nel programma61e
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~[f1]@&lt;31
s~said.
.
down to earth. &lt;9J&amp;!
vid Beaver of the barber shop
rfi:JIIed a theft Thunday morning
COMPLETE SYSTEM
n he discovered someone had
.
(RECEIVER,
ANTENNA AND CABLE)
'
~
b!if:eo .in through a window on the
t side of the building and taken
STARTING AT'1995.00
r.mined amount of cash, a
PLUS TAX - INSTALLED
•
te report said. .
BUY BEFORE JAN. 1" AND RECEIVE A FREE VCR
11\ supplemcntall'llport by Oal·

' .
......

li•lis Police Deteeuve Miebael
ker said Cooper admitted Frito lhl\1 brelk-in at the beauty
• n and llto consented to have
his rriom ~heel.

_,_

_._.

LMS·
SATELLITE
..........__..... ...
............ ,..................

SOUTHSIDE, WV • (304)675-4851

s

Kf.ru£ of service is one of tlie 6itJ reasons our fist of foya.L satisfied
customers ~eps growing year after year.
So at tlie dose of 1992 aru£ tfie beginning of1993, we 'd fik.! you to
K_now we interu£ to continue servi:ngfoC~ as we liave in tfie past.
'We 're progressive enougfi to {isten wlien clianges are needed, aru£ o(tf
fashioned enougli to tlianK_you for your continuedjriemfsliip aru£gooti
wi{[.

!from a[[~~ us litre, to you a!Jd tfio.se dose to you, # is our fiope aru£
ptayer tfr.at tfit 'J{r.w 1tar U'i[{ 6ring you an a6untiance ofgood tliings:
:J{MpJ?{j:SS, (jOO'D :JiEJl.Lqg,(, S:MIL'FS Mf/J Pt.RJ)SPE!JUPY:

INHEARING
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C11 SECOND AVE.

QALUPOtiS, OHIO
(t14l..-7t1t

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MULIEIIIIY HGTS.
POMEROY, OHIO

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(114) 112-210(

~

~

•
"

·~

•

·~,,
~

-•••

j

•
•

•

·~

�Pligl M

Sundlly llm• Sentinel

December~,1112

Pomeroy Middleport Gt'llpolla, OH Point Plnnnt, WV
~--

~, President-elect
.

--

----------------------

Clinton vows to
reverse GOP airline policies
.

levemged buyouts'' that resulted in
airline m~ers and .aecumlilalion
of heavy
Clinton has not detailed the
steps he would take to aid the airr
B t h did led
" I ·u
e'::J~~ n~ tx&gt;Ifcies.~~· wt
Once in the White House, Clinton will be faced with a long wish
list from the induslry, ranging from
tax breaks to an overhaul of the
Federal Aviation Administration to
relief from the costS of lllliDdalory ·
drug testing and other regulations.
Clinton also will have to deal
with the con1roversy of subsidized
foreign airlines seeking to buy
shares in financially_struggling
U.S. carriers.
·
Over the past decade, U.S. airlines have found themselves in
head-lo-head competition with foreign carriers, some of which are
seeking alliances with weaker U.S.
lines.
Clinton said he opposes ,giving
foreign airlines air routes instde the
United States, noting that they represent 50 percent of the world's

JJLAvnlENCEL.K~ON
AW la.... PNIWrlter

WASHINOTON - President-

elect CliDIOD ays "n\111)'" Repub-

lican l"!licies hAve liutdened the
U.S. airline indusuy with crushing
debt and business failures, and he's
vowing to rewne course.
Since 1990, three major U.S.
airlines - ~lerll, Pan American
and Midway- have ceased opera·
lions, and Continental, TWA and
:America West sought the protec# on of the federal bankruptcy

~taggering losses, bankrupt-

~ies, layoffs, cutbacks, labor-man:tsement strife. low morale are all
features of our aviation system
·fbday,'' Clinton said in a recent let.ter to a Washington aviatioo group.
, "The Reagan and Bush admin·jstrations have so distOrted the con·~ept of regulation that we will
$lever know how .it would work,"
.
. ~linton said.
· The president-elect said the
Bush administration has failed to
erifoJCe antitrust laws and thrown
"open the doors to outrageous

,.•
'

aviation market
· During the campaign, Clinton
specifically said he would not
approve the now-withdrawn bid by
British Airways to buy a $750 million share of USAir, a move that
critics said would have given the·
British earlier access to U.S. markets while U.S. airlinc;s are barred
from similar access to British air .
routes.
,
Clinton said any modification of
the ban on foreign carriers flying
U.S. routes ' 'would have to be partof a broader civil aviation paclcage
that seives the United States' transportation needs."
·
In his letter, Clinton said airports and airways are a critical
component of the $20 billion annual investment be has poposed to
improve America's infrasuucture.
And he noted there has been
widespread diss•tisfliCtiDII with lhe
status of lhe FAA, which runs the
national air traffic conD'Ol system
and the inspection foJCe that checks
aircraft for proper maintenance and
safety.

ft'or
Middleport teddy bear maker:..
•

•

:Teddy bears are serious business
'•••

-.

•

,f..;;.'.

Elm Street JJeiabbors. Bammer bas beeD bright·
enina ber neighbor's holidays for the last sevenl
years wltb basket of baked goods. This Is her :
lint attempt at giDgerbread houses. (AP photo)' , -

Retailers act:oss America expect;
good post-Christmas business
''

'

I
.
Jhunday.(APplbh:~::.)
Hospital volunteers"honored

.

'

the holidays, December ~January
6."
.
Mal)y stores planned to open
several hours early. Macy's, The
Broadway and other retailers
offered early-bird S(iecials.
In recent years, the post-Christmas sale has evolved into a way for
stores to bring in some real busi~
ness. It's no longer just a way to
clear the s~lves of old merchandise. .
.
"What they're doing this year,
instead of just the normal imposed
markdowns, is a lot of planned,
profitable promotions," ·said Donaid Trott, an analyst with Dean
Wiucr Reynolds Inc.
With the economy
and confidence on the

1988. While sales figures were still
being !allied, analysts said Christ;
mas sales were up as much as 9
percent over last year.
:'
At Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
Christmas sales ran ahead or
expectations, with clothing and
big-ticket items like appliances:
computers and home electroniCs-·
posting strong gains, said Mat!-&gt;
Howard, senior vice president for
marketing.
At Dayton Hudson Corp.. chairman Kenneth Macke.said shoppers
were more interested ·;n novelty
items, such as cookie jars with
sound effects. than more practical
gifts like robes. In 1991, sheets and
towels -just about the most practical items one could buy -

A couple of craft shows later
and she began receiving mail
inquiries. '111en came some requeslll
from shops and the whOlesale business was off and running.
The Baker home on South
Fourth Stteet in Middleport hasn't
been the same since.
Wbile the work area fllSt occupied only a corner in the dining
room, il now occupies not only all of that room .but an adjacent one.

· "While parents do buy them for their
~hildren, they're usually for display on a
shelf, not something to be played with.''
Susan Baker
lor a wavy moliair 13-irich limited
edition named Mary Krista.
, The bears which have jointed
arms and .legs ate now being s6ld
in 30 states,
Susan emphasizes that she
thinks of her bears as "not chil&lt;!ren 's toys, but collector items."
"While parents do buy them for
\heir children; they're usually for
display on a shelf, nor something to
be played with", explained the
wtist
The business which has boomed
~;ver lhe past Hve years got started
~s a result of teddy bears which
susan made for her children one
Chrisunas.
;.. Her friends loved them and so
did everyone else who saw them.

And they're bulging with bolts of
fur fabric, shelves of supplies,
stacks of bears, work tables, and a
computer on which Susan keeps
records of orders and shipping
schedules.
.
"We're outgrowing this place,".
said Susan, wbo predicts that probably sometime next year she will
have to move into something bigger.
"Working at home has its
advantage", said Susan, "but with
four of us here now, a couple of
dogs and Clts and sometimes kids,
we just need more SJIIICC!." .
The three empi!)yees do wh~t
Susan calls the "drild$e work ,
ll'8Cing the patterns, cutung out-lhe
pieces, sewing the pieces to~~ther,

&lt;1

~ few

r.t

of her favorites

f

•

"
"Get everything you didn't get for first· ~unas~;~~~the~•~dlil~·;;~~~:;se~e;m;e~dto~b:e~t:he:
good holiday
gifts.
.
~. .~~~~;tw;~~pag~e~sp~~~wt~'~th~the~~h~~dline~·;~=;c;~~
· :m:o:st~p:o:p~u:la:.r
~IH PI HE FlJilNI'I~lJRE
ING
t,tS

......

day. Shafer said.
"There are screams and hollers
"Grown men
at MetroHealth Medical Center here," Shafer
. '
have received President Bush's say 'Let me die."
Lynne Yurko, a registered nurse
Point of Light award for exceptionand the burn unit's manager, says
al voluntecrism.
One of the volunteers who volunteers like Shafer provide
received the award this month is indi$p!:nsable assistance.
"Ii's like having an extra pair of
Paul Shafer, 54', of Mansfield, who
was a patient for seven weeks a hands," said Yurko, noting that the
year ago after a furnace full of volunteers don't tend any patient
molten metal blew up in front of without havin$ a nurse or other
medical professional in the room.
him.
Every Thursday, Shafer assists
Tlte ll1e day ell
nurses and offers words of encouragement to patients.
Technically there are no national
As he sat in the nurses' office in bolidays In lbe United States; eacb
the burn unit .last week, Shafer state bu juri141c:ttoa over Ill boll·
found it difficult to describe the days, whlcb are deslpted by tepl
awful. frequent and necessary enactment or elll!eutive proctamachanging of bandages that are fllSt tioa. In pr~C!tice, bowe~. observe the federal tepl pubUc
soaked, then removed from skin- states
holidays,
even tbou&amp;h the presldoal
less, seared flesh. Some bum vic- and Conlf'I!SI
can legally aesl&amp;nate
tims must have their bandages holidays ooly for the District ol Cochanged. as many as three times a lumbia &amp;ad for federal employees.

CLEVELAND. (AP) - Volun-

teers of the intcasive-care burn unit

By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK- The nation's
retailers wooed shoppers with
after-Chrisunas bargains SaiUrday,
hoping for more of the kind of buy·
ing that gave the industry its best
holiday season In years..
·
. Chrisunas Day news~ were
fat with ads for sales, and retailers
expected brisk business.
The Broadway, a departmentstore company based on the West
Coast, had ads on 11 pages in the
Los Angeles Times, wbile May
Co., another departmept-store
chain, had ads on 12 pages.
Pa~re after page in The New
York Times featured post-hoHday ·
sale ads. Egghead Software had a

sars.

MUST SEJ.I.

.· *100
SOUl OAK
PEIESIAL TABLE

FLEXSTEEL GLIDER
BUY BEFORE DECEMBER 31ST ROCKER
RECLINER

4 Chairs
Not

.15H.98

AND
GEl

s6a8''
-

nl
O.C.31ot

S

Not'

Tl

$11H.98

Dec. 3111

38811

.

['SmiBII Biker displays a fewolber favorites, Joe Buster, B~. Boanie

.

•

I!

ENTS
Green Velvet

•s8a••

JULY, 1993

Maude•

'
''
''..

'I

":'J

Teddy Bear Review.
SuSan's name as a bear maker

recently appeared on the front ·
cover of the December issue of
Contemporary Teddy Bear • and
her profile was featured with the
profdes of other American anists in
the December issue of the magazine, Tllddy Bear and Friends.
More and more shops which
SUSAN BAKER, THE TEDDY BEAR
carry the Ohio River Bear Co .
MAKER
- WhatstartedoutasahobhyforSusan
products are including pictures of
BakerofMiddleport
bas blossomed into a booming
Susan's bears in their national
advertising. "This not only results
in lots of orders" Susan said, "'but
inquiries for special kinds of bears whose a big bruiser." quipped
from all over the United States. In Susan. That's Michael Bartrum a
October I heard from Maine, Okla- Marshall University football star.
homa, Florida and other places as a
Many of Baker's bears have
result of advertisements mention- names - like Mary Krista who
ing Susari Baker bears." ·
.
was named for her sister, "her hair
Currently Susan has three repre- and the bear's fur about the same
senlatives, two in the midwest and color", and·Mr. Stoltenhoff for her
one in Ohio. About 90 percent of uncle, "kinda pot bellied with shon
her business is wholesale and that legs".
percentage is moving upwards, she
What started out as a hobby has
says.
···
blossomed into a booming busi ·
, .,S~ applies somewhat of an ness. One which Baker, who
asseml:lly hne process to her bear admits to becoming easily bored
making 'business using three local with just about everything , finds
women.
challenging, ·competitive and very
Sandy Hanning's role is trans- creative.
.
ferring the patterns onto the fabric
With Chrisunas past, Susan is
and cutting out the pieces.
now busy preparing her new line.
Marilyn Poulin and Joyce Samples will be going out to her
Bartrum do the construction, doing sales representatives in January.
some of the machine stitching in
And if this year's soaring sales
their own homes, and then the figures are an indication of things
bears are stuffed and the sewing to come, 1993 could be "the start of
completed in the shop.
something big" for Middleport's
The material used is an acrylic ·Susan Baker, !he teddy bear maker.
fake fur, mohair which come from .
an angora goat and is impOrted
from England and Germany, and
merina which comes from England
and is the most expensive of the
fabrics, about $130 a yanl. •
The clothing is all custom
designed by Susan, who personaUy
does all ,the construction wit!J the
Photos and story by
exception of hand knitted accesCharlene Hoeflich
sories.
Susan's only deviation from
runes-Sentinel Staff
bears is at Easter time when she
makes a limited edition rabbit.
While most of her bears are 13
inches or under, she has added one
bear which is 24 inches tall. "I
named him Mike after Joyee' s son

busiDess. Here she balds two or her limited editioll :
' bears before shelves of the collediblesjustwaltiDg :
for fiDisbing touc:bes.
·
·

Dickens is a darling

~ewing and

· Rftf TWISTY BREAD AND FREE GARDEN FREsH SALAD.
When you order IItTY large, one or more-topping pizza.

SECTIONAL
Teal

Ni7S.sa5t ean usr 446-4040
Point fkasant

C.alipolis

992-2124

783..0030

Pomeroy

Mcnhad

:;~H.BB

·r----·----T---------,
I

Everyday Special

I

Luad&amp; Special

1

Enjoy a

Deluxe Pizza and
four Colas for only $10.99.

1
-·---....... --... -- I1

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_o,._.,.,._,.___
. -0.0
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EqJoy il medium,Pepperonl Pizza

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and two Colas for only $4.99.

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CORNER HUTCH

RESTONIC SPRING
BEDDING ~BEDDING
CLOSEOUT CLOSEOUT

100's OF
OTHER ITEMS
ON.SALE

I PIN

I

II $10.99
:
$4.99
:
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:... 3tot$ 788 II

SOLID OAK

.FINANCING*

Til
O.C. 31et

SUNDAY 1 P.M. TIL 5 P.M.
M~NDAY, TUISDAJ,.WEDNESDAY 8 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
THURSDAY 8 A.M. TIL 5 P.M• .
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP.
.

·,

: AI..a from the start, Marilyn Pouln,ltft, 11111 ~ world•a at the '1lellr factory." Sbe md Joyce Bartnlm, rlaht, ~what Susaa Baker ealll tile "drudge work", sewina the pieces toRether lllld stuMng the bears.

.•••
'

·:•

'

putting in the joints. "Usually by
the time l WOik on the bears, they
· are jointed and sewed up and the
ears are on and it's
fox me to
put Qll the face," she . •
Susan does all the faces and puts
in the glass eyes which are imported from Germany.
All o( the artistic work of coming up with new designs for ~
and their apparel and accessones JS
done by Susan. She usually does
that about twice a year. At the same
time she retires some styles:
Then she also designs bears fox
limited editions, usually four or
· five a year, with just 50 or a 100 of
each style. At the request of doll or
collector shops she creates special
bears, soine exquisitely costumed,
for exclusive distribution.
. This year she created a special
red, wbite and blue costumed bear
exclusively fox Marj's Doll Sanctuary in Grand Rapids, Mich. Susan
went there to do a signing of her
bears f(J{ the shop which featured a
picture of the exclusive bear in the
nationally distributed magazine,

TIL
SOFA&amp;
LOVISEAI

;'

.

: · MIDDLEPORT • They're cuddly, they're cute, and they're valuable collectibles-those handmade
· •teddy bears created by Middlepan's Susan Balcer, now a nationally-recognized ~y bear~. Baker's hom«8Jased business,
the Ohio River Bear Co., is boomillj!. Sales of her original designs
this year are expected to exceed
5,000 at prices iansing from S9 for
a three i!'Ch acrylic "Izzy" to $1;20

HOUS;SIFOR CHRISTMAS· Kitty Bammer, rlgh 4•d Roaald Ball put tbe, finlsbiDJ
touches o lfOIIIe of the U &amp;iaaerbread houses
that Dammer .~~kes fl! distribl;'tion among her

too, Cant., dariDg Christmas Eve services oo the
grounds of the U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu,

o8cembe'r 27, 1992

.

~~

'

CHRISTMAS EVE Eti&lt;;HARIST - U.S.
: Marble LMee Cpl. Wayne L. Decker of Pueblo,
• Colo., di(llllll co•munlon in II wiDe railed dull: ice beld lly Navy I:;Qplaln WiD J1mes
of PeJJdie..
.

Se.ction ·B~

;Along the River

'T

\

�Sentinel

•

December 27, 1102 :

·Wrongdoers get chance
to do good work
McHale - Longstreth
LANGSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Laurence P. McHale, Concord ,
N.C. annQunc~ the engagement of
their daughter, Kelly Ann, to. John
W. Longstreth, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Longstreth, Langsville.
The wedding will be an event of
April 17 in Columb';'S.

· Miss McHale 1s a graduate of
Ohio University and is employed
by CeUular One. Longstreth is also
a graduate of Ohio University and
is employed by Compuserve.
The couple will reside in the
Columbus~

ANG~LA

SLOAN and MARK

P. KRIEGER
·'

Sloan - Krieger
,
KELLY ANN McHALE and JOHN W. LONGSTRETH

Dovenbarger-Yates
POINT PLEASANT, W_Va.Regina Lynn Dovenbarger and
William MaUhew Yates announce
tlleir engagement and upcoming

Mr. Yates is the son of Kathryn
L. Yates of Point Pleasant He is a
graduate of Point Pleasant High
School and is enlisted in the Anny
~ge.
National Guard.
~ Miss Dovenbarger is the daughThe wedding will be held at 7
tff of Mr. and Mrs. Roland L. p.m. Frida~, ~an. 8, 1993, at Good
DOvenbarger and Roben and Shepherd
nited Methodist
~irley A. Jones of Gallipolis_ She Church,
o te 2 North, Point
it a,p-aduate of Gallia Academy Pleasant. A reception will follow in
aJ!d 1s employed at Shoney's of 11\e church fellowship hall.
~int Pleasant

"

~

· Conlde-McCarty

f GALLIPOLIS - Betty L. Conkle
aid 'Terry McCarty, both of Galp,

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert (Karen) Sloan, Pomeroy,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Angela, to Mark P .
Krieger Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Kellough, Fairfield, and Mr.
and Mrs. Marie Krieger. Denver,
Colo.
The bride-elect is a 1988 graduate of Meigs High School. She is
presendy majoring in family stud-

ies at Ohio ·university and will
graduate in the summer of 1993.
The jJIOSpective bridegroom is a
1987 graduate of Circleville High
School and a recent graduate of
Ohio University with a bachelot's
degree in education. He is attending Officers' Basic Course of Field
Artillery for the United States
Army.

PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP) The city court's probation depanment is looking to cities, townships
and nonprofit groups ,for cleaning
or mainlenaDCe projects to expand
its community service pro8J11!D.
Community' service is an alternative «&gt; jail time for people convicted of minor crimes, or misdemeanors.
"I really would like to get all
the villages and townships
involved, so we could give back to
the community," said Nicholas
Cindric, the coun's chief probation
officer.
Thanksgiving dinner at th~
Morse Avenue Community Center,
for instance, was prepared after
four misdemeanor defendants
helped get the center tidied up.
Other workers have put up snow
fences in Leroy Township and
helped the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service collect used
motor oil, old latex paint and other
household hazardous wastes .
Defendants have bagged litter
along roads in Painesville, Leroy.
Concord and Madison townships.
Melvin Marbury, 20, of Geneva,
has worked on such. crews. Convicted of theft, Marbury had his
choice of 10 days in jail or 10 days
of work detail.
He picked up trash, installed
snow fences, collected leaves.
Physically, he said, it was demandin~ work. But "it was fun," he
S31d.
Th~ volunteer supervisors
"laughed and joked, and they
didn't treat me lilce 1 was a criminal. They treated me like a person." He said it boosted his confidence ''to worlc with people who
didn't look down on me."
Leroy Township seemed ~ually
pleased with the work, according to
Sharon E. Rodgers, cleric-treasurer
for the Leroy Township trustees.

••'•

'-'-~==

Winners named ;~
RACINE - Winners in the •
Christmas lighting contest at ,.
Racine have been announced.
In the non-religious ca1egory, ...
the wmners were Larry and ':·
Delores Wolfe, first; Roger and · •,
Jane Ann Hill, second· Jack and ' •·
Pauline Bostick, third; J&gt;i.ul· Dailey · ·
fourth; and Joe Kirby, Jr., fifth. ' ..
There were no entries in the religious category. The contest was ·;
sponsored by Star Mill Park Board ~
of Ra~ine and judged by out-or- · .
town J~dl!es. The board expressed ~~
apprecmuon to the residents who ·
decorated their homes malting the "
town festive for the holidays.
:.
'

1-T.~'-T.~

Deported teens allowed to return
PRESENTS CHECK • Neil Morrison, (right), district man&amp;Jer
and camp secretary, recently presented a $3,881.60 check to Tma
Russell (center), and Cindy Frazier, (left), president of the
AddaviUe Parent-Teachers Association during a special presentation at the Gallia County Board of Education. Modern Woodmen
and Frate mal Life Insurance Society members from Camp 6335,
sponsored the PTA's annual winter carnival. The money raised
wiU be used in
or the various projects the association pro-

!'!ASHVILLE, Tenh . (AP)Garth Brooks and Billy Ray Cyrus
ar~ ')eading a resurgence of COWitry
music on networlc television.
Network TV had five country
music specials in 1992, and three
more will be broadcast in early
1993. Programs showcasing the
Nashvil!e sound are commanding
strong ratings and drawing solid
support from advertisers.
"COWitry music has become an
important part of the entertainment
world and part of the social fabric,
and TV has jumped on it," said Ed
Benson, cxecuuve director of lhe
Country Music Association.
Brooks had his own high-rated
special on NBC last January and
also appeared on ABC's "Best of
Country '92" on Doc. 10.
Cyrus was on "Best of Country
'92," and his own ABC special is
scheduled for broadcast in February. He is under contract for two
more, thanks to the popularity or
his single "Achy Brealcy Heart" ,
and his album "Some Gave AU."
"A Country Music Celebration," a two-hour special marlcing
the 35th anniversary of the CMA,
will air on CBS in early 1993. ·

t

Oallia County calendar
'
GALLIPOLIS - Dean Warner
. S11nday, Dec. 27
EUREKA - Ralph Young will ·w•ll be preaching at Mina Chapel,
be preaching at Christ United Neighborhood Rd., 7 p.m. EveryMethodist Church, 10:30 a.m. No one welcome.
evening service.

(30&lt;)

~:::: '-

FRE!~~~~~~!!.E
for nellt summer at 1992 Low

:r- r
.
DISCCUnl Pnces-$100 Holds Your Purchala.
lee •lullllle ot spas
startlna as low as $1.850.
Dilcount pncea on

Wtntet COYif'l, •

wl- kill, lnti-lreeza, heal8rs
IN STOCK

__.,., ...... • • •• 1:30-2..
~Ill

SHIP U.P.S. DAIL

Strow, Amber Montgomery, Angie
Saunders, Melissa Lester,
Stephanie Stapleton, and Shawn
Montgomery.
During their stay, these teens
will be involved in various activities including Teens-N-Talent and
Wesleyan Bible Bowl competition,
ministry outreach to the street people, seminars, and rallies. ·
Event speakers and singers
include, Bob Laurent ; Buster
Soaries, Hicks and Cohagan, The ·
Imperials, The AUies, AVB, True 4
U, and Walt Whitman's Soul Children.
Crown City Wesleyan. Church
pas10r is George Holley.

'cHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP)

the SS Minnow when it got caught
in a storm and wound up shipwrecked. But maybe "Gilligan's
Island" star Bob DeJlver can make
up for it by fllling in as a weatherman.
;Denver has agreed to appear on
WCHS-TV during the February
sweeps period.
Denver first appeared as a TV
weatherman in a July stint on
WVV A in Bluefield, near his
southern West Virginia home.
Denver said he uses such
appearances to promote a miniature
golf course he is developing. The
profits from the course will benefit
the disabled, he said in Friday's
The Charleston Gazette.
" I've found over the years, if
you want to promote anything, do
at on the weather spot because
everybody watches it," he said.
LADUE, Mo. (AP) - Jimmy
Hoffa's daughter was awed by Jack
Nicholson's portrayal of her father
in "Hoffa."
"I thought the acting was
tremendous, and I thought the
appearance was spooky," said Barbara Ann Crancer, a St. Louis
County circuit judge. "My dad was
kind of short and wide, and he
never walked. He just charged into
a room.''
The movie, which opened
across the COWitry Friday, depicts
the career of the lOugh Tcamsiers
boss from his days as an organizer
in the mid-1930s through his disappearance in 1975. "Hoffa" was
directed by Danny DeVito.
"I thought that if I hadn't been
prepared for how good the malteup
was going to be, I would have been
shocked," she said.
•
Crancer said she wished the
scenes depicting Hoffa's mob ties
weren't included, but added, "On
balance, I think ir you listened
carefully, you realized this was just
one or the tools Dad had to use in
the early days."
'.
"They got no relier.from law
enforcement, there were no civil
rights acts, no National Labor Relations Board. There were the company goons, •' she said.

4 Gilligan was of little use aboard

25%oFF

Family Planning
. It Makes Sense•••

STOREWIDE

·-..

ONE WEEK LEFT

"'

.
~

Confidential Services:
' Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
~regnancy Testing

!' Shdlng f• scale. No -

GOOD TILL DECE.ER 31ST

refused swVkts Hcause of lnaltlllty 10 paf.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

CARL'S SHOE STORE
J

.

...
...
-...
...•

-..

NAMED TO COMMITTEE. These United
Methodist pastors from Meigs County have been
naqted to the Unite1t Methodist Church
Appalachian Development Committee. They
are, 1-r, Rev. Roger Grace (Racine!Ea$t Letart),
Rev. Florence Smith (Snowville/Pearl Chapel),
Rev. Kenny Baker (Morning Star/CarmeUSut-

CINCINNATI (AP)- It took
and
it might not work out,"
·auomey Pepny Manes .more. ~ a
she S31d.
. .
year to cut through the mtemauonal
U.S. Imm1grauon and Naturalbureaucracy Jo adopt a Rus sian 1 IZaUon Serv1ce. offtc1als said the
orphan.
fall ofcommumsm and the subse"You need patience, you must
quent mterest m ado~ung ~hadren
be w1lhng to make a total d1sclofrom the. former So.v1et U11,1on has
sure of your life and finances, to
resulted m sh~tly mcreased numspend large sums of money, and be
bers of fore1gn-born Children
able to go with the ups and downs
adopted by Amencan parents.

'

a _

ton/Bethany), Rev. Sharon Hausman (l:llesterf
St. Paul Tuppers Plains/Alfred). Appointees DOt
pictured are Rev. Eunl)ae Kee (Pomeroy), Rev.
Frank Smith (Heath Middleport), and Rev.
Keith Rader (Rock Springs/Enterprise/Flat·
woods). (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J, B.eed) ·"

,,

STOREWIDE
SOFAS•••••••••••••••••••• Startl1g at
HIDE·A·IED SOFAS ••• starting at 1449°0

'

lMIDDUPOIT
GAWPOUS .
;S09 S. 3nl Ave.
414 Stcollll Ave., 21111 Floor
:992·5912
446-0166
:8:30 ta S:OO Mottday·Frlclay ~30 to S:OO Molllarfriclay
:Cio··... TII sda
8:30 to 12 Sal1nlay
~ an •
.Y
Cloud TIImy
ALSO: JaCkson, CMI;.ake, Athens, Chlllcoth., Lap &amp;McArthur
J

buttheday herpapersarrivedatthe;._
Sovie~ consulate's office in San -,
Franc1sco m December 1991, the ""
Soviet Union dissolved.
"'The Soviet consulate processed
the papers immediately anywar.
Ms. Manes said. Each country s
required documents- birth certificates, passports, income tax returns
-had to be translated, costing Ms.
Manes more than $15,000.

20% TO 70% OFF
CASH SCARRY

•Oak Quilt Racks ............................. 52S
•Maple • • .
.
S
· Shaker L1v1ng Room Tables ...... 49

-camel Back • Traditional • Country

$

:

49
*Lamps ............................... Starting At $4 9

•Oak Plant Stand............................

The. Perfect Choice '

DAYBED

5 PC. CARD TABLE &amp; CHAIRS

Reg. s379

~OFF NOW

5

189

By Samsonite
Reg. $199

~OfF.
NOW

$99

Not Exactly As Shown
Turn of the Century Camel Back Iron and
Brass Daybed. Pure Brass Finials.

ALL MATTRE.SSES
AND BOXSPRINGS
NOW ON SALE.
CHOICE OF FIRMNESS
CHOICE ·OF COLOR
CHOICE OF STYLE
FlEE PARKING
OPEN DAILY

OF
. SOUTHEAST OHIO

Ms. Manes' search for a child
from Romania began in early 1991.
But a U.S. and Romanian mora10nurn on adoptions of Romanian chi!dren, created in part by stories of
baby-selling, took effect the day in
July 1991 that Ms. Manes' papers
arrived at the agency that was helping her search.
So she looked toward Russ1a,

~:

LE

Discontinued

York
Acres Oak

5 PC. BEDROOM
ftc~. s1533 SALE $999

ITEMS SUBJECT TO
·PRIOR SALE

'IllS PM
FRI.'nl I PM
446·3045
Vla11, ••tarCar•

CORNER OF THIRD &amp;
OLIVE STREm
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

l .·

.• !

P8ge

CfOWn City ch:ur~h group Girl from Russia at home,finally, in Cincinnati
to attend convention
r~lZe

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
radio station is appealing a
$105,000 flne levied by die Federal
Communications Commission for
raunchy broadcasts by Howard
Stem.
KLSX-FM said Wednesday that
despite the commission'&amp; fears ,
practically no children listen to the
morning show, in which Ste'rn
regales his audience with tallc of
sexual practices and bathroom
habits.
The show, which is syndicated
to 10 cities, is the No. I morning
show in Los Angeles, New York
and Philadelphia.
KLSX was ·fined in October.
The FCC also has voted to impose
a $600,000 fine against Infinity
Broadcasting Co., which employs
Stem and owns his New York radio
base, WXRK-FM. The company is
appealing.

•

--.

The quadrennial assemblies are
In conjuncuon with the assembly, a book of models for jointly lpCIIIIOred by the ApPalachi~1:/d~lachian ministry was com- an Development Commutce and
p'
inclllding a detailed descrip- the National Program Division of
tion of the Meigs United Methodist the Genezal Board of Global Min·
Cooperative Parish, which is the istries of the United Methodist
oldest cooperative parish in the Church.
In addition to their appointWest Ohio Conference. It was
ments,
Rev. Grace and Rev. Frank
begun in 1971.
Smith
were
responsible for helpin~
The stories returned show an
interesting variety and an exciting to draft a response to the Bishops
history, according to David pastoral challenge, presented at the
Andrews, staff coordinaiOr of the assembly by the btshops of all of
Appalachian Development Com- the conferences represented.
The Meigs cooperative parish
mittee.
had
a display at the assembly, out"Many are from human service
lining
the ministries of the 24ministries serving people in
church
operation.
The parish operdepressed areas. Others tell of the
ates
a
food
bank
for
needy families;
renewal of home through the developmept of coopera~ve parishes. The Parish Shop, where persons
Some record the enthusiasm of can purchase good, clean used
local churches which have come clothing at nominal cost: church
alive under inspired clergy and lay auxiliary services such as bulletin
leadershiP, in addressing communi- printing, paperwork and corresponty needs, ' Andrews said.
dence: a singles ministr}'; and an
The committee to which the annual School of Religion, which
Meil!s County delegation were has dealt with subjects ranging
appomted represents the 24 annual from human sexuality to prayer and
conferences serving the region, the · church officers' training.
The parish is operated in the old
mission projects worlcing there, and
Wildermuth
brewery on Condor
the general church program boards.
Street in Pomeroy.

-Names in the news-

late Frank Sears.
Mr. McCarty .is the son of Olga
, announce their engagement McCarty of Gallipolis, and the late
apjiioaching marriage.
Oscar McCarty.
ss Conkle is the daughter of
The open ceremony will be held
Sears of Middleport and the June 10, 1993.

-

By BRlAN J, REED
Setttbael News Statr
POMEROY - Several United
Methodist putOrS from the Meigs
Cooperative Parish have been
named as members of the United
Methodist Church Appalachian
Development Commillee.
The committee addresses concerns relative and unique to
churches in the 13-state area designated as Appalachian America .
Those named are: Rev. Rogec t.
Grace from the Racine/East Letart
charge; Rev. Florence Smith,
Snowville/Pearl Chapel charge;
Rev. Kenny Balcer, Carmel. Sutton,
and Morning Star charge; Sharon
Hausman of the St. Paul (Tuppers
Plains), Alfred and Chester charge;
Rev. Eunhae Kee, Pomeroy: Rev.
Frank Smith, Heath (Middleport);
and Rev. Keith Rader, Enterprise,
Flatwoods and Rock Springs
charge. They were elected to the
comm1uee at the United Methodist .
Church's Appalachian Assembly,
held November 30 to December 3
in Lalce Junaluska, N.C. The theme
for the assembly was "Appalachia:
Signs of Hope" . .

CROWIN CITY - Eleven teens
and sponm lfrom the Crown City
Wesleyan Church will be attending
Chicago '92 at the Chicago Hilton
and Towers DeC. 28-31.
Chicago '92 is the North Central
area teen convention of the Wesleyan Church. Approximately
3,000 teens and sponsors from
Wisconsin, IUinois,lndiana, Michigan, and Ohio, are expected to
attend.
The convention theme is "Celebrate His Mission ... My Life Sentence!"
Attending from Crown City WC
are, Aaron Holley, Matthew Holley, Michelle Burcham. Nikki

.

, OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - A teen- body there. "
aFt said Friday that prayers and
Asked what lcept.him going,
h!lpe sustained him after he was Lopez said "praying ,and hoping."
altested at school by immigration One of the first thing~ he did after
o(f'ICials and deponed, dropped off returning home was to go to midjl(lt across the Mexican border night Mass with his family:
Wlihoul any money.
He and another boy, Augustin
; Ambrosio Lopez, 17 , was Antunez, 16, were pulled out of
r=uted with his family late Christ- high school on Nov. 6 by Immigranias Eve. He returned to Omaha tion and Naturalization Service
ater the Jnstice Department over- agents. Antunez's 21-year-old
r~ a decision to deny him and
brother, Francisco, was arrested at
two other young Mex1cans a his job il\ a restaurant the same day,
cOance to stay in the United States and all three were deported to
~ they seek to live here legally Nogales, Mexico, shortly afterward.
Wflh their parents.
Gov . Ben Nelson, Rep. Peter
in a telephone. interview after he
r med home, Lopez said being Hoagland and other Nebraska offis nded for a time in Nogales, cials had worked for their return,
protesting the way the youths were
~ellico, was frightening. "I had
n~er really been IO,that city. It was
arrested and shipped to Mexico
sary for me because I didn't have without money or a change of
nc) money .. We didn't know any - clothes.

Sunday nmea Sentinel

UMC pastors named to committee

.

"The last two young men that
were sent to us ·-- were very good •
workers, and actually worked · ·
longer than their required boun.'' :
she said.
· Another defendant, Ken 1• •
Finnemore of Painesville Township, agreed that wmcing on a trash . ,
c~ew was preferable to jail.. ,.
Fmnemore, 35, was sentenced to
three days of community service
for driving on a suspended license. , .
He picked up trash each of those , .
days.
·"
Nearby Willoughby Municipal •.:::
Coun also uses community service. • ..
1udge Dennis Callahan recalls a · r;
woman who had been jailed sevezal .'::
times for drunken driving and "
wasn't changing her behavior. The '"
coun arranl!ed for her to do com- • ~
mumty semce at LakeWest Hospi· -:
tal's emergency room, and the
woman was impressed enough with ,.,
the people she met to go back to
SChCJ?l and become an emergency
...
medicaltechnician.
"It was really the community ·· ·
serv1ce that made·a difference " ,
Callahan said. "This is a big ~
of potential."

· See Puzzle on Page D-2

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

December 27, 1102

I

�14 Sunday nm• Sentinel

Pg

December 27, 1112

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WI/

Sunday Times Sentinel Page 85

'

Readers chafed by Ann;s suggestion
\

Dear ADD LaDders: Are you
C!Ry'llt aure SOIIIIded like it when
you rold your readers the best way

10 ~void blgage pilfcriDg is 10 carry

Bachelor cooking skills
require strong stomach
•

Welcome rp Bachelor Cooking.
I' m your bast, Kevin Pinson.
Todly's lesson is a step-by-step
guide 10 meal
• .
STEP
the the
SJH BW, g· !your onlcr. You may
have JePe&amp; '1'Jo I don't want a hot
apple pie. several limes through

f:~p

That's why m~ enjoy cooldng on.
~ barbec~e gnU - 16.ounces of
hgh~ flwd proVIde addillonal pro-

tecuon.

The single male's culinary skills
also drasticall limits his diet The
. •~~1 .
, lbe b8ChfilYe bas IC
lUVU groups .or
r hd f . h
'
e1or difrer s 18 Y rom w a1 we
were taught in elementary school.
the cheap inlacom system.
There's the hamburger group,
STEP TWO: PuU up to the window and ucbqe American cur- the macaroni and cheese group, lhe
rency for a peasy bag of hamburg- Pepsi/Budweiser group, the fro~en
dinner group and the take-out
er and French fries.
STEP THREE: Plfcc the drinlc group.
Fast fOOd, TV dinners and otller
between your legs, dump the bag's
tlllllalts jnro the passenger seat and frozen fpods are lbe only reason I
feed yourself wilb your right hand haven't starved 10 dealb.
as your drive with your left.
The freeZ7r compartment of my
Remember .to keep your eyes on refngerator IS l'acked dangerously
the llllld.
full of frozen piZZas, frozen FJ'C!Ich
This is the prefcmld method of fnes, froze~ hamburger patt!es ,
bachelor meal preparation, but frozen TVf dinners and other frozen
sometimes Guns and Roses or means o sustenance.
The lower compartment conMetaDica puts out a new album and
the money I!IUSt go to lbe record tains an expired gallon or milk a
ootueofcatsupandtwobeers. '!be
catsup is a must- poured in liberpula the the bachelor in lbe
uncomfortable situation of having al amounts, it ldlls the taste of just
about anything.
to prqiiR a meal at home, which
"Hey Kevin, have you ever had
makes the SI0 a month spent on
frog legs?"
g,ocaies come in handy.
Bachelor cooking is an art form
"Yep, I fixed some just the olber
111110 illelf. Born of despemtion and night."
"What do they taste like?"
exaane bonger, the culinary skills
"Catsup."
of the American bachelor amaze
Every
time I open the free~er
people
the world.
door,
I
risk
having a solidly-frozen
I pti!iOiillly have had many peoHungry
Man
break every bone in
ple comment on my culinary skills
my
foot.
If
authorities
don't find
as dlcy s1811d next 10 the old Jennme
dead
of
smoke
inhalation,
they
AK and watch over my shoulder as
may
find
me
buried
under
an
I prepaml the evening's repast
avalanche
of
thawing
Swanson's
MYou're not going·toea/ that are
ptoducts.
'jOG?"
Luckily for us professional
My cooking skiDs are very Iimbachelors,
lbere .is a youth organiiled. Usually, the rust step involves
lll:ing a box out of lhe freezer aild zation lhat trains us 10 eat our own
puaillg it in the oven (Sometimes I lousy cookin~.
Molhers, 1f you have any young
cw:o remember 10 remove tile box
boys
who you imagine may somefust).
Step two usually involves delv- day becom~ career bachelors (i.e.,
iftl in10 some other little project lhose of us for which no woman on
wbich fully occupies my limited Earth baa enough patience 10 live
mental capacilies, such .as trying· to with), enroll them in Boy Scouts
lllldcrstand the appeal of lbe ·The right away..
Scouting will teach them lhat no
Oprah Wumy Show.
matter·
how badly charred a piece
Because I'm busy pondering
fOOd
is,
no matter how many limes .
Ibis complell mystery or the univene wilh my pea brain (the equiv- it has been dropped in lhe ashes of
llalt of diging a swimming pool the cooldng rrre, it's still perfecUy
·
fo tion with I plastic spoon), it edible.
On a campout, Scouting activiIIIIa the incessant beeping of the
smote alarm to remtnd me to ties keep young men busy throughout lbe day ana help them 10 work
- 1 0 the ltiiChen.
My First Alert is the most . up a horrendous appetite.
important piece of equipment in
Trust· me, when you have to
meal preparation. Without it, the
stand over an incredibly hot fire
fire depanment would find me with a piece of meat fastened to tile
lyinc dc:ad on the couch with a dis- end of sticlc, you don't give a hairy
gliSICd lodt on my race and Oprah rat's paiOOtie if the former USDA
taUrU.. in the background 10 Men Grade A chopped sirloin resembles
Wllo Love Men and the women a burnt log.
I would even imagine that there
Wllo Love Them.
Mega-charbroiled is the only are Scouts out there who actually
way 1 single man prepares a meal. ate a burnt log after dropping their
We never slick forks in somelbing dinner in lbe fue and fishing out a
or time it with a timer to determine piece of lumber by mistake.
Scouts are famous for lbeir honwhlln it is done. Wc prefer the tossesty, blavery and appetites. l ,imagit-ill, cbeck-oo-it-Iater melhod.
Tllis process frees us to handle ine there are packs of wild dogs out
saious projects, such as beer there who were beaten up by a
ca ICIIIpllftS. It also insures that a troop of Scouts for stealing their
live tapeworm overlooked by a pancakes.
I also do not doubt· that th e
b-e-over meat inspcc10r doesn't
Scouts recovered their pancakes ,
IJllllc it iniO our intestinal tract.
Real men don't mind eating returned to ·the campsite and ate
dc:ad lllimll flesh, but they do have lbem.
Kevin Pinson is a bachelor
a problem with eating live parasila. Tile two-hour charbroil .,.-o- chef and writer ror Ohio Valley
cess eliminates any such nsk . Publishing. ·
·
1

~

·-Ill

.thei1rf iuqtiF abolnl the plane.
you are a frequent flyer, I'm
sure you've opened the over~
compartment to put 1 coat .m
and found absolutely no mom .
W!'Y7 Because there were so many
SUitcases up there. You th~n have
to go up and down the 81sle i!~d
rllld a place 10 stuff your coat m.
"Yben y~ get off•. th~ coat looks
like you ve slept m 1t for three
days. , . ,
. Why ihdn t you .sugges! .that
aupons beef up their secunty so
passengers can check luggag·e
. wilhoutfearoflooling?,You'regoing
.10 hear plenty of hoiTQr stories from.
your readers on Ibis O!le. Annie. -UPSTATE NEW YORKER
· nEAR UP y · · h
,
; . ou re ng ton target.
Heres a sampling of what my.weet
has been l'L I
.
B I
u.e. nteresung,
yes. ut
was unprepared for lhe anger Read
on·
·
F.
.
. .,
. rom Pompano Beach, Fla.. If 11 s
so.easy for baggage han~ers to~
suitcases a~d take thmgs out, .1t
seems. pla~lble t!Jat they could also
put things m -- hke a bomb. Those
employees should be ~arefully
sc~ned before they are h1red.
Manhattan ~each, Calif.: My
luggage .story 1s mo~ · humorous
than trag.c. I was Oymg from Los
Angeles 10 Denver for a high school
reuniQII. I packed (foolishly) my
gOOd gold "'we'"' and 8t the last
"' u'
•

.

A
r•·-----------nn
L d
an efS
ANN LANDDS
"Uf2, 1M A.r1~•
TlooeoSJDdl&lt;olo _,

c-.,...._..

minute, eight IV.,...,.,.,. lhat COil

SI apiece. My luggage was lost
for dm::e days and showed up just
before the reunion dinner. II had
gone to Hawaii. The gpld jewelry
was all there; bultheaWJC'Niocowere
missing. Apparently the Agriculture
Oepartment did its lhing, but I have
10 hand it 10 lhem. They'rchonest
Fort Worth, Texas:Wesolvedthe
problem of missing (and messed
wilb) luggage two years ago after
our Juaaoae
disappeared somewhere
00...,
·
between Dfllas and Knoxville. We
had purchased gi(ts for our,family,
. .• kow
but lhere was no room m ure ._s
so' we sent them United Parcel
·
Service. The gifts arrived. Our bags
did not. The airline. gave us !I
pittance for "compensation." Since
that lime we have sent our luggage
UPS and have never had a minute's
trouble. It's expensive, but it's worth
il
.
. Southfield, Mich.: Baggage
handlers aren't the only ones who
steal. The U.S. Postal Service has
some Jight-fmgered people, 100. On
· two occasions, I senl my granddaughter a package (one containing
J·ewelry another a ponable phone)

•

·

Wrong .woman held by polt'ce
LOS ANGELES {AP) - Police
acting on a tip from 8 viewer of
"America's Most Wanted... kicked
in a woman's door and held her in
handcuffs for an hour before determining lbey had the wrong person.
"I was scared. I was really
shaking," ·S!id Birtulan Alemu,
26.
Officers expected to find a murder suspect when th ey went io
Alemu's North Hollywood apartment Monday night.

Alemu was the " spit and
image " of the woman sought ,
Detective Andrew Monsue said .
Bolb women are from Ethiopia.
Police kiclced the door in when
Alemu refused to open it, Monsue
said. She was handcuffed while
officers searched her apartment and
car, he said.
Arter police realized their mistake, Monsue apologized and told
her the police would pay for the
damage.

\

:PBABMA£Y

incon~.

Springfield, Ill.: On June 6,
1992, I new 10 the Holy Land on a
· Catholic church pilgrimage and
checked my luggage at Cbicago's
O'Hare Airport. The night was
delayed several hours. My fellow
LANGSVILI.,E - Lorena Oiler,
passengers' Iugpge was sent down daugh~er or Keilh and Gloria Oiler,
the conveyor belt while mine waa Langsville, was recendy chosen to
laced over 10 the side, which made appear in the 26th·anniversary edip
I
· ed · Tel A ·
tion of Who's Who Among Amen-·
me uneasy. amv m
v1v, C!lJI High School Students.
but my luggage didn't Five days
Lorena is a senior at Mcigs.B,igh
••••• 1 ·was rold my luggage was
UOK&lt;,
School
where she is enrolled in lbe
found Ot had gone 10 Moscow ) 1
·
· b ,.:..._ computerized word processing
opened it 10 find no~mg ut .u~"" vocational program. She has won
·large ba~ rowels. Did the atrltne regional awards for administrative
~e it nght7 Of course noL
assistant and for information proDEAR READERS: My advice is cessing assistant. She has also comsend your luggage ahead by UPS peted at the state level.
or~ on what you can and have
·She is president of Business
inslirance that covers the J'CSL
Professionals of America and is
Lonesome? Take charge of your active in Future Homemakers of
life and turn it arotuld. Write for America, Pep Club, the RuUand
AM Landers' fleW bookkt, "Huw to Softball Team, and she is a memMake Friends and Stop Being !ler of the National Honor Sociery.
Lonely." Send a se/f-Mdressed. long, She was a reserve varsity c~eerbusiness-size envelope and a check leader for three years and a mem-·
:
or money order for $4.15 (this ber of the reserve softball ream.
She is a member of lhe Danville ·
· /··~and ha- ... )
me. .....,s postage
.....mg to: Church of Christ
;
Fr~ends, c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box
Following graduation she I'Ians:
II562,Chicago.111. 606II-0562.(ln to pursue a career in the busmess
Canada, send $5.05.)
and secretarial field.

Named Who's Who

VINTON BAPTIST .CHURCH
VINJON, OHIO

HURRICANE, WV

HUNTINGTON, WV

MIDDLEPORT, OH
NITRO, WV
PROCTORVILLE, OH
ATHENS, OH

WINFIELD, WV

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;·

�December 27,1992
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page BB Sunday Times

December 27, 1992

1992: some good, bad; triumphs ·and setbacks

The case is unusUII because the •·. •
• Outdoorsmen slayings: A task
on the fairgrounds. And he angered delegation will be smaller. Ohio
fair-goers by charging for rides, lost two seats in redistricting fol- force of federal, state and local · map-makers, mosdy Republicans;.. ··•
lowing the 1990 census, going authorities has been working since didn't uy to break up '-ge blocks . :
which had been free in the past. ·
from 2lto 19.
April to solve the inystery behind of black vOiei'S in orilcr 10 guaran- • · ·
He was fired after the fair.
Ohio voterS also decided to limit tile slayings of' at least four men tee the election of willieS. Rather,
AmeriAora '92, suffered a simitile tenns of members of Congress, who were hunting, fishing or jog- they created city districts with large •
lar fate.
The $93 million botanical theme the state Legislature and statewide ging alone between April 1989 and majorities of black voterS and small • • ·
Aprill992.
percentag~s o~ b'!~Cks in adjacent, . ·:
..park., promoted as the centerpiece officers.
Investigators believe someone largely whlle disUJCts.
for the nation's commemoration of
•· · ·
What is in store for next year? drove through eastern Ohio and . Democrats argued that t.his ' ·
Christopher Columbus' arrival in
the New Wcjrld 500 years ago, fell Environmental issues, crimes and shot tllem, apparently at random. imp-operly diminished ~lac~ inOu· • :
short of expeotations and was coUrt cases that were not resolved One of 12 suspects is in custody on ence in those suburban distncts. , · ·
unrelated weapons charges. He has
'The natipn' s highest court heard
fraught with money problems.
will continue in 1993:
Planners had hoped the six·
• East Liverpool incinerator: not been ~~ed in the slayings. . arguments this month. A decision •&lt;
month show would attract4 million With construcuon of the Waste
• Legtslattve remappui$: The is expected next year.
·
to 6 ·million visitors. It ended up . 'l'echnologies Industries hazardous- U.S. Supreme Court is conSidering
with about 2 million.
For good or bad. one thing
waste incinerator completed this whether Ohio's new state legislayear, there wen: numerous demon- tive districts discriminate against Ohioans can e~ol next year is •
Ohioans flexed their muscle in strations at the site by opponents blacks by reducing their voting higher taxes. LoPIJtors passed a · .'
the presidential election as Ohio urging regulators to prevent it from ' strength. The House and Senate bill raising varia~ jpes by $1 bil• , •
became a major battleground. Pres- operating. Dozens of people were districts were redrawn this year lion to help k~ 111e state budget
.
ident Bush, Bill Clinton aild their arrested.
because of population shifts reflect. balanced. . . .
running mates made more than 30
Start-up has been delayed by ed in the 1990 census.
Happy ~ew'Y•!
trips to Ohio after the primary in court action, and the plant's fate
their fight over the state's 21 elec- remains a question. Vice Prcsidcnttoral votes.
elect AI Gore is seeking further
When the smoke cleared ihe study of the plant, but the U.S.
.''
night of Nov. 3, Clinton was the Environmental Protection Agency
''
victor.
under President Bush plans to act
U.S. Sen. John Glenn survived before the Clinton administration
his toughest challenge in his 18 lakes over.
years in office, winning 51 percent
• Demjanjuk: I?&gt; federal appeals
of the vote in a bitter contest with court in Cincinnati in June
Lt. Gov. Mike De Wine.
reopened the case of John DemjanT... o members, of Ohio's con- juk, a retired Cleveland autoworker
gressiOnal delegauon were ousted. wh.o was convicted in Israel of
Mary R,ose Oakar, a Cleveland being Nazi death camp guard
Offer Ea:plre1 12/31/92
Democrat,lost ·IO Republican chal- "Ivan the Terrible."
·
ONE DAY SERYICEI
Ienger Martm Hoke, and Bob
The appeals court, which had
McEwen, a Repubbcan of Hills- . approved Demjanjuk's extradition
boro,was defeated by Democrat in 1981, reopened the case after an
Ted Stncldand.
Israeli prosecutor admitted some
Bec~use of those two races and doubts about Demjanjuk's convicthe rellr~ments of Ot/!er congress- lion. A federaljudge in Nashville,
•••
men, Oh10 wtll have stx new mem- Tenn. is hearing evidence
bers of Congress in January. But its
'
·
,. • .
' '

Workers union called a strike over
local grievances at a GM parts
plant in Lordstown. The S!like lasted nine days and idled nine assembly plants nationwide.
In December, the automaker
said it will close a parts plant in
Euclid, eliminating 550 jobs.
• But there was good news in
Toledo. Chrysler Corp. announced
in July that it will move Dodge
Dakotl! production to Toledo, saving hundreds of jobs. Chrysler also
began production of the Jeep
Wrangler and right-hand drive Jeep
Cherokee In Toledo.
Youngstown was hit hard on tile
economic front when the discount
drugstore chain Phar-Mor Inc. in
August said it uncovered a $350
million fraud and embezzlement
scheme. The company fired 'its
president and founder, Michael
Manus, and its financial officer. ·
Phar-Mor soon after fjlcd for
bankruptcy protection from creditors.
But tile bad fortunes of anotller
Ohio drugstore company reversed
this year. Revco, based in Twinsburg, emerged from bankruptcy
court protection after four years.

By KEITH ROBINSON .
Associated Press Writer
If Ohio ever had a year of ups
and downs, it was 1992.
Ohio sustained about $30 million in damage from floods, tornadoes and other stonns in July. Two
people were killed July 26 in
M.assievillt, near Chillicothe in
sou them Ohio, when a stream overflowed.
July was the wettest month on
record is some parts of Ohio .
Columbus had more than 12 inches
of rain. the most in the state.
The torrential downpours, however, ended a drought that had persisted for more ·than a year.
The .tornado season started earlier and lasted longer than normal.
The tornado season normally
begins in April and ends in July.
The first. one occurred Feb. 15 in
1-lardin County, in nonhwest Ohio,
causing only minor damage.
The last one was devastating.
On Nov. 22, a tornado tore lhrough
western Ohio, leaving about $16
million in damage. Hardest hit was
Arcanum and other areas of Darke
County, where 13 .people were
injured and about. 25 houses were
destroyed. As many as 100 other
houses and businesses were damaged.

Bring Your '
Christmas Prints
To Tawney's a.nd
Get ASecond Set
of Prints FREE!

Two major entertainment events
in Ohio took economic jolts.
The Ohio Expositions Commission, which was tC! be run more like
a business under new General
Manager BiUy Inmon, had mounted a $3.5 million deficit after the
State fair. ·
Inmon had been criticized for
several business decisions, including a $2.6 million contract with
Pepsi for exclusive soft drink rights

It was both a good and bad year
for business.
In 1anuary, General Motors
Corp. announced it intends to close
its Moraine engine plant jn suburban Dayton and move the work to
Mexico by 1996, resulting in the
loss of more than 500 jobs.
In August, the United Auto

.Living and learning in urban· violence
By CLIFF EDWARDS
Associated Press Writer
ClllCAGO (AP) - As the first
bell rings at 7:45 a.m., David Stenson heads down the hl!ll, eyes darting.
The high school sophomore
knows the peace can be broken at
any moment by a cross word, a
gunshot, the flash of a knife.
"I'm always on guard," he
says. "Last year,! got jumped."
Gangs exert terror inside and out
at David G. Farragut Community
Academy, one of Chicago's most
dangerous schools. It's one among
many inner-city schools throughout
the nation where youngsters have
to learn amid danger.
"Kids are carrying weapons to
school, not because they fear getting shot or knifed .in school, but
because they fear the gangs on the
way to and from school," said
Patrick Bums, assistant director of
the American Alliance for Rights
&amp; Responsibilities, a nonprofit
group that studies schools.
At Farragut, students walk in
large groups, hoping to find safety
in numbers.
"I have to walk by myself
because I live far away or someLimes show up late because I didn't
get up in time," Stenson says. On
this particular day, he barely gets
inside after four Hispanics throw
bottles and rocks at him, yelling,

:.

it."

"You might get ShOt just for
nothing, " says freshman Juan
Reyes. "Outside, inside doesn't
matter. They start inside and finish
outside."
Students talk about death as
casually as they do about what's on
the menu for lunch.
"I ain't scaredi' says freshman
Morgen Sutton. "You got to go

'

Our Annual

'

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS 446-1615

COOLVILLE - Presentation of
Half:Century Club pins and communtty scrvtec awards was a feat\"'C of the annual family ChriSimas
party held at the Coolville Lions
Club rccendy.
Receiving the Half-Century
Club awards plaques were
Ambrose Howard and Fred Justice,
Belpre, The community service
awards went to area journalists,
Harold Hawk, -Parkersburg News;
. Charles Runser, Marjorie Stright,
Charles Reamer .and Roy Cross,
The Athens Messenger, and Bob
Hoeflich, The Daily Sentinel.
The opening service· was conducted by Jessie Brooks, Coolville;

Couple celebrates
51st anniversary

•
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Junior
"o••un. Racine, celebrated their
wedding anniversary .on
Eve. 1bey ha.ve six sons,
Roger, Bill, Bob and
~~g ~:!~u.and one daughter.

1

.'

and MRS. JUNIOR SPAUN

'

4iddle places in
afea pageant
.

~CINE - Beau Royce Diddle,
17-)nonth·old son of Chris and
Gilia Diddle, Racine, was recendy
aWllrded first runner-up in the overa!~ tiny boy category during the
Saiaburst USA Pagent at the Grand
~4'atra1 Mall in Vienna. W.Va. He
Wl!l sJ!9Dsored in the pageant by
hi ~randparents, Jim and, Linda
D· c, R~~Cine.
•t.s .first -runner-up, Diddle
reeeivr-d nrophy and $200 as well
as :Paid cotty fee to Natio~ Sunburst USA Finals in Adanta, Ga. ,
in :August. In Atlanta, he will be
CO(IIpeting in several categories for
tho grand prize of a $10,000 savings bond or several other prizes.

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''Year End Sale! ''
s

- rr'ope j'urniture (ja[feries - ·
- Lifestyle j'urniture Savings 20% to 60% Storewide!

"Nigger! "

The changing demographics of
Farragut's West Side neighborhood
are part of the problem - fights
are often racial. The student body,
98 percent black a decade ago, is
70 P,Crcent Hispanic and 30 percent
black now.
The Hispanic and black gangs
often avoid each other on the
streets, but they're thrust together
in school. Classes are orderly, but

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• BEAU ROYCE DIDDLE
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1993 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 7I 1992
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1993 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. FOUR DOLLARS ($4.00) PENALTY IF LICENSt.IS PURCHASED AnER THAT DATE.
fOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THE HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE FOUR
DOLLARS ($4.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR fEMALE. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $20.00). DOG TAGS WILL ALSO BE ON SALE AT THE HUMANE
SOCIETY LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF NORTH SECOND ST. AND WALNUT ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760.
.
MALE $4.00
SPAYED FEMALE $4.00
FEMALE $4.00
KENNEL LICENSE $20.00

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Wll.llam R. Wickline, Meigs County
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The new head of the Ohio Council
of Churches said she hoped a
statewide conference on racism
would encourage churcheS to promote social justice.
The Rev. Debra L. Moody . a
minister of the African Methodist
Episcopal Zion Church, was chosen last summer as executive director of the Columbus-based council.
She immediately began planning
the racism conference, which was
held earlier tllis month.
About 100 people at the conference explored ways to combat
racism and promJ&gt;te economic
equity between wtiites and minorities and srudied models of cooperation between black and white
churches.
.
"My major vision for the ecumenical work of the council is to
get people to learn how to love
each other and to recognize that we
are Jll'r! of the universal chureh and
of the fiiJIIily of God that includes
. all people," she said.
·
Moody said the council, which
tries to promote human justice by
lobbying the Ohio Legislature and
Congress, will.focus on issues such
as a just tax structure, a· universal
health care plan, adequate public
assistance, decent housing and
equal education.
Moody, 36, took over from tile
Rev. Carlton Weber, who retired in
March. A Trenton, NJ., native, she
previously directed ecumenical
ministries and chaplaincy services
for the Pennsylvania Council of
Churches.
·"
-She is the top ecumenical religious leader in Ohio, heading a

...

••

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees hold an end-ofthe-year meeting Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Shade River State
Forestry Building.
SYRACUSE- Sutton Township
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal Building for the final 1992
meeting. An organizational meeting will follow.

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8ug.AMaiiM31

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,oc:k of Agel offer~ you • choice of 8 different colored
grenltel. Whetever your requlrementl mey be, co.mplete
..tllfactlon i1 eaured with Rock of A!!'•·
.
.oqen Mon .• Tues .• Thuil, &amp; Fri. 9:00 e. in. 'tU 4:00 p.m.
.,thet Hour~ by Appolntment-1183·•1111111 or 440-ll:t27

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5 MINUTES

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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At Shoneys Breakfast Bar, we've cooked up one of the
best New Year's Eve panics ever. So come on by. Its one pany where you
can get loaded and still drive home safely.

•

All-You-Care-To-Eat 40-Item Breakfast Bar.

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Breakfast Barn P.M.-3AM. N!wYears&amp;

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THIS AREA KMAlT HAS APERMAIEIT nUDIO OPEN:
Montlay·Salurday, 10:00 a.m.-7:00p.m.
On Sunday lr011 .store
to One Hour Before Closing
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SAVINGS ON MOST ITEMS
AND MORE!
ON BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM AND DINING
CORBIN AND SNYDER FURNITURE
955 Second Ave. • Gallipolis
Flnencing Available wilh Approved Credit

GalllpeRs, OH.

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STARTS WED.,~ 30(CLOBI!D NEW YEAR'S ~Y)

(614) 446·1171

STA.EY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

.2 'rlllrd Awe.

PASSPORT
AIID I.D.
PHOTOS

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Salt Good lhrw Wtd.1 Dtc. 30

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to avoid explosive points in human
relationships," she said.
Moody said personal experience
made her an activist She said her
grandfather was victimized by the
Ku Klux Klan when he lived on a
farm in North Carolina SO years
ago.

AT CORBIN and SNYDER FURNITURE
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council that inti udes 17 ProteStant, .
Roman Catholic and Eastern
Orthodox denominations . The
denominations have about 2.5 million members. ·
Moody said the conference on
racism was planned in response to
the crisis stirred in Los Angeles
after the acquittals of white police
officers accused of beating black
motorist Rodney King.
"We are taught by the gospel
not to beat up on each other, and
not to put people on a guilt trip, but
to team from one another and also
to learn how to live together on
God's planet," she said.
Mobdy said the conference tried
to find ways to bring people together.
'
"Churches should be able to
work together to provide people
with love and strength to help them

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Churches: Fighting racism a priority

Trustees of Columbia Township
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the fare station for the regular endof-the-year meeting. The 1993
organizational meeting will follow.

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PORTLAND - The. Lebanon
To~nship Trustees wUI meet Mo~­
daY. ·at 7:30p.m. at the townshtp
building.

distribute tbe items. Pictured with church representative Denver Rice, in truck, are student
council representatives: David ADderson, Wbit·
ney HaptonstaU, Billi Bentley, Jodi Sissoa, Lau·
ren Andersoll, Staci Price, Amy Clonch, Amy
Jones, Myca Haynes, Stat} Stewart, Melissa.
·
Ramsburg and Melissa Canan.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Following an annual Christmas custom, President Bush telephoned
American military people around
the world as he celebrated the holiday with his family at Camp David,
Md.
The family spent Christmas
morning opening presents and
playing volleyball.

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nati riverfront with the Cleveland
lakefront. Columbus would be the
midpoint of the trail.
The central Ohio part of the
statewide trail would pass through
Newark to the east and Madison to
the west
Some of the ConRail and CSX
Transportation rights of way along
that route are still being used, but
Rails-To-Trails officials said they
could also 1M: used to accommodate
a hiking and biking trail.

FOOD DRIVE H,ELD - The student council
at Meigs Junior High School sponsored a food
drive for needy residents of the area during
Christmas with over 800 items collected. Carmen Manuels homeroom collected the most
items In • homeroom competition by bringing in
178 items. The Middleport Church of Christ wiU

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
group that advocates acquiring
abandoned railroad rights of way
for hiking and biking trails has tar·
getcd 168 miles for the trails in
central Ohio.
·
One of the rights of way that
Rails-to-Trails Conversancy of
· Ohio have identified is the potential central Ohio link in a 320-mile
path that would t9nnect the Cincin-

LARGE SILECTION

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Group ID's rails to convert to trails

CARPENTER .• The Board of

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By JOHN NOLAN
"We'll see what these children
Associated Press Writer
need and what more we could do·
CINCINNATJ (AP) _ A hospi- for tllem when thoy leave hefl:. ''
tal is trying to determine whether
A child's psychological reaction
young children severely injured in could be complicated if the accicar accidents suffer from long-term dent was disfiguring, multiple
stress.
repair operations were required or a
Kate Zink. a psychiatric clinical family member was killed in the
nurse at Children's Hospital Medi-- accident, M.s. Zink said She hopes
cal Center, will focus on patients . to get money from the hospital and
aged 7 to 15 at the time of their a nursing foun$tion to support her
~ea:7s.who are hospitalized at Chil- stu~: Bessel van der Kolle:, a HarFor the study, the patients must vard Medical School psychiatry
have either been passengers in a car professor who specializes in study-·
during an accident or pedestrians or mg and treating post-traumatic
bicycle riders hit by a car.
stress disorder, questioned whether
It will take two years to enroll the study would reveal anything
the 185 young patients and parents new about the stress young accineeded for the study, Ms. Zink dent victims suffer.
said. .
. ~·"! think it's sort of a given, isn't
She began soliciting patients tf. ' van der Kolle: said. "Kids do a
this month to study whether the lot of re-enactment ... tlley replay
children need extended treatment.
it, they become constricted.''
The children and their mothers
But Dr. John E. Helzer, chairare to be interviewed while still at man M the University of Verthe hospital and again two and six .mont's psychiatry department,
months later. Mothers will be asked praised the study concept
how the child behaved before and
"That sounds like an excellent
after the accident.
design," Helzer ·said. "1 haven't
Ms. Zink said her goal is to help heard much about PTS D srudies in
keep the c)lildren from developing children."
post-traumatic stress disorder, a
Helzer said working with chitpotentially long-term psychological dren soon after an .accident could
ailment found to have plagued help. Much of the treatment for the
some Vietilam veterans. The elisor- disorder is designed to treat symp"
der can cause children to mentally toms which developed from traurcplay the traumatic event, disrupt . matic events that occurred some
their sleep or concentration, or time ago, he said.
result in increased mental or physiMs. Zink said 'the idea for the
cal tension.
study came from her experience.
"I believe that psychologic dis"I had a personal experience
tress, just like injuries from acci- when a brother-in-law was killed
dents, can be prevented/' she said. suddenly. We didn't get good sup- .
"This is a pilot study to see what p,ort at the hospital,". she said.
type of symptoms these children 'There was suppon, but it wasn't
have, beclluse we don't know much the quality that I would have
about it There isn't much literature liked."
on it.

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Hospital studies stress levels
in child accident victims

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SUNDAY
.CHESTER - Ken Amsbary
Chapter, lzaalt Walton League, will
have a muzzle loader shoot Sunday
at r: p.m. Prizes are the same as for
the other shoots.
,
MONDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
last regular meeting for 1997 ()n
Monday at 6:30 p.m . at the
Pageville Townhall.

Owner's Name·-------------------~-----------~---~

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offering was taken for CARE and
group singing of carols was led by
MarjOrie M.alone, Coolville. Treats
were given to the children, and
gifts from the Christmas tree were
distributed 10 adults. Fruit baskets
and cards were sent to shut-in
members. door prizes were won by
Sharon Smith, Coolville, and Jerry
Hawk, Tuppers Plains.
The cooks, R. C. Henderson.
John Breedlove, Howard Russell
and Eddie R~. all of Coolville, ·
were given a round of applause. A
New Year's dinner will be held
Sunday, Jan. 3 at 12:30 p.m. and
members are to take a covered dish
ordessen.

Meigs County calendar
•

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Thelma Henderson and Don Elliott,
Alfred, and Dan Stright, New
Marshfield.
Letter of thanks for group carryin dinners were received from Carolyn Johnston, Coolville, and the
family of Roger Swartz, Coolville.
The following officers of Camp
10900 were elected for 1992. They
are C. W. Henderson, Alfred, consul; John Breedlove, Coolville,
advisor; and Jennifer Caldwell and
G~e Gilben, Coolville, and Lisa
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains, trustees.
Hemocult teSts were made available to members by Edith Van
Dyke, American Cll!lcer Soci~ty
representative, Athens . A silver

Bush greets troops

Sale Starts Mon., Dec. 28 - Ends Sat., Jan. 2

-Don't Miss It!!

Sunday Times Sentinel Plige 87

Club recognizes area journalists

Tawney Studio -::

one day,"
· .
keep records.
In Chicago, police post two offlPrincipal Steve Newton watches
cers in each high school. Metal each day as Farragut's 2,500 studetectors have been installed in 45 dents are frisked and wait in long
of the city's 67 high schools, but lines to go through the metal detecstudents find ways to sneak in tors.
·
weapons. Or they make do with
"We have a battle llne.that has
scissors or sharp pencils.
so many fronts to it that we're
As of mid-December, police had almost overwhelm~d," he says.
made 3,760 arrests in the schools "Not only are the gangs struggling
· this year, including 152 for murd~r. for' control of turf and territory, but
rape, robbery or theft. Eighty-six they are also struggling for control
handguns had. been seized, some of the school." .
from children as young as 10.
Newton and teachers at Farragut
In just six weeks in November say•ihe problem is society's, not
and December, there were six just theirs. ·
shootings at Chicago schools. They
''You've/at 10-, 11-year-olds
left four students dead. Many more · going aroun selling drugs, .toting
students have been wounded at guns," says teacher Glendora
school, but police said they do not ~ngram-Carter.

stepping into the hall can spell
trouble.
"It's lit~e fights happening all
over school every day," Stenson
says as he heads to his midday
class. "Gangs. Race. Those are the
big problems. The only thing you
worry about is getting away from

Pomeroy-Middleport

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Pomeroy lldcleport Oelllpoll., OH Point Pl•unt, wv

Sunday Tim• Sentinel

December 27, 1182

U.S. celebrates day for giving

TOYM'AKER DOING WELL - A big hit
with kids this year are the Fisher-Price "DiDoRoars," right. The toymaker bas refocused on

its tradltioaal lille fl ioys fiR' pre-sclloolen ud .
bas made a complete tinuelal turlllii'Ound. (AP
Photo)

•

asked their children what they
w~ted f~·Christmas, and they
•'
said they didn't want anything but bags of~ toys.
"He
satd
·
to
me:
'Santa'i
to help .
else"
' Mrs
. Shank alive,"' Hacha recalled. '"The
said.
.
The family of Tom Hacha, 35, only thing I aslr. of you is 10 pass
an unemployed meatcutter in the word thai Santa is alive."'

soc-

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WE ARE. OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS.

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Medicare &amp; Insurance Billing Done

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1480 Jackson Ave.

(304) 675-1675
Dee Dillon, R.N.

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-2206
Mark Dillon, Sales M

"'imts- ~entinet Section .C

Sports

December 27, 1992

Playoff-bound New Orleans
blanks New York Jets 20-0
By BI\RRY WILNER
EAST ltUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - The New Orleans Saints
came, conquered and went home
for the playoffs.
The New York Jets, undermanned and overwhelmed, gladly
said goodbye to 1992.
Sam Mills ran a team-record 76
yards with a fumble and the Saints
defense recorded its fu:st shutout of
the season ifi a 20-0 victory Saturday. New Orleans (12-4), second in
the NFC West, will be at the Super·
dome next weekend for a wild-card
playoff 11ame · against either ·
Philadelphia or GreenJlay. ·

FAMILY PRACTICE

really deaf al&gt;d impenetrable" to
the presence of a god who came
''to heal the ,wounds opened in
humanity's side," he said.
In Somalia. French legionnaires
and American Marines secured
Hoddur shonly after dawn as they
continued to wrest Somalia's aid
distribution centers from marauders.
But fighting broke out over the
wheat delivered by U.S. forces at
one feeding center in famine-ridden
Bardera. Wimesses said one person
was badly hurt, and some of the
sinallest and wealcest were pushed
aside and got no food.
In the capital, Mogadishu, 'there
were morning Catholic masses at
the port and airport.

Craig HeyWard scored on a t~o­ lose interest while the Saints - as
yard run in the third quarter and sloppy as .they were - dominated
Morten Andersen ~~!&amp;de 27-yard the second ltalf.
New York fmished what began
and 36-yard field goals into a brisk
as
a year of promise with a 4-12
wind, giving him 20 straight soc·
record.
A playoff qualifier last seacessfulkicks.
•
son
and
5-0 in the preseason, the
It wasn't all artistic for the
Jets
expected
to challenge in the
Saints, however. Dalton Hilliard
AFCEast
fu~bled on their first play from
Instead, the third year of Bruce
scnmmage and Bobby Hebert was
Coslet's
coaching regime turned .
intercep~ three times, once at the
dismal,
disastrous
and then tragic.
New York one by Mo Lewis.
The
Jets
lost
their
first
four games.
But the Je!S, minus nine injured
were
ravaged
by
inJuries
and, on
starters and without any running
Nov.
29,
lost
defenSive
end
Dennis
backs who were with them in
Byrd
to
a
broken
neck
that
left
him
November, were no match for a
partially
paralyzed.
playoff-bound te,am. They had
Sllme chances early, ~n seemed to

Nets defeat Cavaliers 119~114 '
B CHUCK MELVIN
. RICkFIELD, Ohio (AP) _
Earlv morning flights bad room
servlce, hostiie crowds.' The things
that make life on the road difficult
for most NBA teams don't seem to
bother the New Jersey Nets.
"It's kind of stnnge We play
with more emotion on the road ..
Drazen Petrovic said Saturday after
the Nets im ved their road record
8-5 by ~ting the Cleveland
10
Cavaliers 119-1 14
The victo w~ unex ted for
~-~n ThepecNets had
I of ·~ s:
a coupe
not won in Richfield since March
15 1986 _a string of 14 regular·
swon and two playoff games _
'd'
.
an d t he Cava_Iten v;ere n mg a
·seven-game wmnmg streak
The Nets are 6· 7 at·hom~.
"I haven't been able to figure it
out, •• Nets coach Chuck Daly said.
"At home, we kind of sit back and
say we'll win it at the end. Arid we
always :1~rselves in trouble.
Obviously, w en Derrick Coleman
plays like t. is, we're a difficult
team to.
me or away."

Coleman led New Jersey with iind foul shot by Peuovic with 8:00
30 P&lt;?ints ~nd 13 re!Jounds. Cl~ris to play ..Morns took over at the
Moms fimshed the JOb by sconng end, takmg advan.tage of Cleve10 of his 18 points in the last 4:10.
land's double-teamm_g ~f Anderson
. Kenny Anderson scored 26 and .Coleman by hlltmg several
points on 11-~f-16 shooting an~ l~yups and Jumpers from the base·
added 10 asststs for the Nets . lme.
. • .
. . .
Petrovtc scored 2~ . •
Morns layup .wtt.h 1.42 left
Brad Daugherty scored 28 and gave the Ne~ therr btgge.st l~ad,
Mark Price and Gerald Wilkins · 113·1.04, forcmg the Cavaliers ~to
each had 18 for Cleveland
,
a senes of desperate three-pomt
. New Jersey trail.ed.by 12 at half· attempts. Cleveland got no closer
tune but got back m tt as Coleman than four~ that
hand
scored 16 points in the third quar·
The Cavaliers were short·
•
ter A 14-2 run capped by Morris' ed for much of the second half
·
•
· ked
his
20-footer. put the Nets ahead because Larry N~e pte . dup
briefly at 79-77 before Cleveland fourth foul earlY.~ the thir
came back to lead 88-86 after three ter. after Jobn WtUll1111S !Jad le. .e
quarters
game because of a brutsed htp m
"I th. fi half ·
real!
th
nd 'od Nance scored 12
n e trst.
, we were
Y
e seco pen .
in. sync," Daugheny said. "In the points in 1he ftrst quarter. none the
tlltrd quarter, w_e got away from re~,or the way.
y.'hat we were domg. ~at happens
You take a good ,Part of our
IS, when we start gettms a~ay fr!Jm
defense out of the hne~P. wtth
our offense, we lose our mtensny, Larry and Hot Rod. (Wtllt~ms)
and ev.~rrbody starts to stand out, coach Lenny Wilkens srud.
around.
. Ne:ov Jersey shot 67% from the
New Jersey moved ahe!ld for fteld m the second half and 59%
good at 97-94 on a 22-foot Jumper for the game.

TO

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SOFAS, LOVE SEATS &amp; SLEEPERS
Save On Every Size In Every Style
From Country To Classic!
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Retluctlou Oil
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a-blee,Tool

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.

. By GEORGE ROBINSON

skaters Bonnie Blair and Cathy
Turner; and mogul skier Donna
Weinbrecht.
TRACK AND FIELD. Olympic
hopes dominated, starting with Dan
O'Brien's failure in the decathlon
trials and Dave Johnson's painracked bronze in the Barcelona
event. Carl Lewis claimed his third
consecutive Olympic long-jump
title. Jackie Joyner-Kersee again
proved she has no equal in the hep·
tathlon. Gail Devers won a drama!·
ic battle in the women's 100-meter
dash.
FOOTBALL. The Miami Hurri·
canes have the best college team.
Led by QB Gino Torreua. the
'Canes went undefeated for a second consecutive year in an effort to
win back-t.O-back national titles.
Meanwhile, the defending Super
Bowl champion Washington Red·
skins struggled. San Francisco
(with Steve Young and Jerry Rice)
and Dallas (with Emmitt Smith and
Michael Irvin) looked flashy. But
the NFL lost another court battle
over free agency, this one threatening to set loose some 400 players in
'

1993.
HOCKEY. Pittsburgh won its
second consecutive Stanley Cup,
defeating Chicago, 4-0, in the NHL
final series. In the WiQter
Olympics, Eric Lindros led Canada
to a silver medal as the old Soviet
team won its final gold . By the
way, Tampa Bay tried a woman
goaltender, Manon Rheaume, in an
NHL exhibition game.
TENNIS. Monica Seles won
three of the four majors, losing
only to Steffi Graf in the finals at
Wimbeldon. Martina Navratilova
won her !58th tournament, a pro
record. On the men's side, America
was beautiful ag!lin, with Jim
Courier winning the Australian and
French Opens, a11d Andre Agossi
surprising everyone with a Wim·
beldon victory.
BOXING. The defeat of the
year was suffered by Mike Tyson,
who was found guilty of rape and
sentenced to six years in prison. .
Riddick Bowe became the sport:s: ·
new king after decisioning woi'lil':
heavyweight champion Evander
Holyfteld in a ferocious bout.

'tl:

1

SlocuiD finds himself reshuffling
TexasA&amp;M offense after scandal

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iJ

•
•

eclipse off-the-field headlines

NEW YORK (NEA) - As has
been the case all toO often in recent
years, many of biggest sports head·
lines of 1992 were made off the
field. ·
Even so, it was a year with its
share of. thrills.
After a summer of turbulence,
the major·le&amp;~~ue baseball owners
ousted CommiSsioner Fay Vincent.
But not even the owners - from
interim czar Bud Selig to controversiii\·.Marge Schott - could
stand in the way of the game.
Toronto's Dave Winfield
. By ALAN ROBINSON ,
o~ ~. 6 - · their season could be of pride. It's frustnltin~ not being
PITTSBURGH (AP) - For ihe . down to one game. .
in the playoffs. but we ve come a, capped a wild World Series with ao
Piusburgh Steelers, a game that fig"We can't go into the playoffs long way from three years ago 11th inning RB,I double in Game 6,
giving the~ Classic to the Blue
ured to be insignificant has become with a three-game losing streak," when we were 3-13."
cia! For the first time
all too meaningful. For the Cleve- cornerback OJ. Johnson said.
Sreelers running back Barry Jays. Oh,
ever,
the
r
t American Pastime
land Browns,~ game that figured
The Steelers also could use Foster has come a long way from
really
has
"world"
champion.
to be significant has become all too another week of practice ~ reaccli- being a pan-time back wbo rushed
In the fmal game of the National
meaningless.
mate tight end Eric Green to their for just 691 yards in his ftrst two
The Steelers (10-5) and Browns offense. One of the NFL's biggest NFL seasons. With 1.587 yards, he League playoffs, Francisco Cabrera
(7·8) close the regular season today threats _ in more ways than one holds a five-yard lead over defend· had driven in a two-out, ninth·
in dramatically different positions _ before his six-week drug sus- ing champion Emmitt Smith of inning run to give Atlanta a pennant-winning victory over Pittsthan either would have imagined a pension, the 280-pound Green Dallas in the NFL rushing race.
, cou~le of weeks ago.
hasn't played since mid-season.
"I was shocked when Smith burgh. Weeks later, outfielder
Ptusburgh hoped to have home- And this isn •1 the time of the sea· went out and got 174 yards" Moo- Barry Bonds left the Pirates and
field advantage throughout the con- son for on-the-job uaining.
day in the Cowboys' 41-17 victory signed a record $43.7. million pact
ference playoffs alrea~y clinched,
"Eric is big as Santa Claus, so over Atlanta, Foster said. "Now, with San Francisco.
Among the stars of the regular
only to ~ose 30-6 to Chtcago and 6- getting him back is a gift in itself," it's going !0 come down to the last
season were Robin Yount and
3 to Mmnesota. If the Steelers wide receiver Dwight Stone said. game."
don' t win and San Die~o (W-5~. "We need some fresh blood to
The Steelers have come~ long George Brett, .who became the 17th
and 18th men, respectively, to get
beats Seattle (2-13), Ptttsburg
motivate us again, we need a spark ~-V. ~:0
~e:·:~n~%
3,000 career hits.
must play a wtld-card game next to got it going, so maybe Eric can can shake off their fmt significant
Here~s what happened in other
weekend.
be that spark.''
sports
during !992:
The Steelers have visited the
The Browns would seem to slump of rookie coach Bill
BASKETBALL: The Dream
pla&gt;:offs only once. since '1984, but require a spark of motivation for a . Cort~~s ~~'feis win and Miami Team of U.S. Olympians, led by
a.wild card game ts one they defi- game tha:t .has little importance takes the AFC East, the Steelers Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson,
m~!Y d!Jnl'~ant to play.
other than determining whether will earn home-field advantage Lariy Bird and, especially, Charles
Tht~. like a playoff game for they finish 7-9 or 8·8. They were
rolled to a gold medal,
usno~ ~ard Carlton H~selng. eliminated from playoff contention throughout the AFC playoffs. They Barkley,
winning
14
games by an average of
sa1d. W vc got to begm our with last week's· l?-l 4 loss to haven't had that advantage smce
playoff rolla week early."
.
Houston, one of a succession' of the 1979 season, the last of their 50 points .
Off his Olympic showing,
. The week off could pr.ove stg- come-from-ahead defea~s for four Super Bowl championships.
Magic
unretired (rom the NBA,
mfic~t because 11 would ~tve recu- Cleveland. ·
"No oQe around here's panicle·
peraung quarterback Net! O'Doning," Cowher said. "y&gt;e've creal· · worked out with the Los Angeles
nell's cracked ri~ht fibula another
But, as quarterback Berme ed a great opportunity for our- Lalcers, but then retired again. He
week to heal. 0 Donnell resumed Kosar said, it's still Browns vs.
selves. We have a chance to play had run into cries and whispers
about the remote possibility of
practicing last week but still is Steelers~ and that's usually motivatwo at home."
limping, so Bubby Brister expects lion enough.
Right now, the Steelers would spreading his AIDS virus to other
to make his third straight start at
"It's always a highlight of the
take not playing at home next players. His old rival, Larry Bird,
also retired - with an aching back.
quarterback.
' year," said Kosar, who didn 't (JiaY
weekend.
"Air" Jordan and the Chicago
If the Steclers don't start scoring in Glcveland's 17-9 upset of Pius"lt'.s very imponant to get that
soon -they haven't scored a burgh on Oct. 1l .'"Even though
week off, to let guys heal, to get Bulls won their second consecutive
touchdown since the fourth quarter the playoffs aren't.on the line for
Neil even better and more ready," pro title, after racking up a sterling
67-15 record in regular-season
of their 20-14 victory over Seattle us, we-have to come and show a lot Stone said. "We really need it."
play. They beat Portland 4-2 in the
NBAFinals.
In the college ranks, Duke also
repeated, trouncing the Fab F1ve
freshmen or Michigan 71-51 in the
NCAA title game. The thriller was
the Blue Devils' 104-103 overtime
er Warren Gilbert of Dallas.
the NCAA to restore the players' victory over Kentucky in the East·
By~STAPLETON
regional final. In the women's
The newspaper said Gilbert, one eligibility on an individual basis, em
game, Stanford won its second
DALLAS (AP) - Texas A&amp;M
coach R.C. Slocum is on the defen- of the largest operators of public but will make no effort to have NCAA title in three years with a
sive and worried about his offense housing in the City, wrote the pay· them reinstated in time for the Cot· 78·62 romp over Western Kenfollowing an internal investigation ments off as maintenance fees at ton Bowl on Jan. I, where fourth- tucky.
·
OLYMPICS. It was a Last Hur·
that led to the suspension of star his low-income units. Gilben, 67, ranked Texas A&amp;M (12-0) wl\1
running back· Greg Hill one week who played for the Aggies in 1946- face No.5 NoP'C Dame (9·1·1).
for the old Soviet powetbouse
47, is being investigated by federal
Slocum said the Aggies have rah
before the Cotton Bowl.
and an impressive return for reunit·
, "I'm exuemely disappointed to auth(lrities for possible misuse of been hurt both physically and psy- ed Germany. Russia and its.neigh·
\ chologically by the suspe~sions . .
be in this situation," Slocum said govemment funds.
The
school's
investigation
He said sophomore wtde recetv· bors, competins as the Unified
Saturday. "Avoiding this 'has been
Team, led the medal count in
more of an objective for me than revealed that the four players were er Wilbert Biggens, who .Played Barcelona with 112, and finished
overpaid at their summer jobs, b~t running back in high school, would
winning games."
found no cvideilee of exorbitant or switch to the backfield to hack up · second to Germany's 56 . in
Hill, wh\) rushed for 1,339 yard's
Albertville.
'
and IS touchdowns on 267 carries, year-round paymeniS•os alleged in Rodney Thomas, who gained 856
Unified
Team
gymnast
Vitaly
was suspended along with backup the newspaper article; Slocum said; yards and scored 13 touchdowns on Scherbo led all summer compett·
"This is in no way an indict· !54 cQriies this year.
offensive linemen James Brooks
nient
of our program,'' he said,
Slocum said he also would con· tors wi!h six medals; U.S. gymnast
and Darius Smith and backup
Shannon Miller surprised everyone
receiver Percy Singleton, all fresh- adding that the univenity's quick · sider activating freshman tailback with five. American swimmers
men, after a school probe revealed action demonstrateS Texas A&amp;M's Leeland McElroy, who has red· dominated once again, but strong
NCAA rules violations following a dedication to complying with sbirted this season.
by the Chinese ·
NCAA regulations.
·
·
•'I will this week visit with Lee· performances
published repon.
.
women led to accusations of
Texas A&amp;M president William land and Leeland's parents and say, steroid use.
The Dallas Morning News
.
¥obley
said the scltool alse found 'In the event that we lost Rodney,
reported on Dec . 20 that Texas
At the Winter Games, women
no evidence of institutional impro· would you want to trade Cotton won the five American gold
A&amp;M playeJs had received payprieties, and Slocum said he doubt· Bowl ex~ for a year's eligibil- medals: figure skaters Kristi Yam·
ment for work not done at apart·
ed serious sanctions would resuiL
, ment sites o~ by ,Aggies boost·
aguchi and Nancy Kerrigan;. speed
Slocum silid the school will ask Ity?"' S ooum said.
·
'
".
'

Steelers, Browns see themselves
:h~aded. ln _ unexpected dire;ctiops
I

Rickey Jackson (right) during Saturday's NFt
· game at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford;
NJ., which the Saints won 20-0.(AP)
·•

ESCAPING THE SAINTS is the thought
foremost on the mind of New York Jets quarter·
back Browning Nagle (left) as be gets away from
New Orleans linebackers Pat Swilling (56) and

w:· Bulls' title d.efense, Olympics

.In their final regular-season game, ·

Woman celebrates
1OOth birthday on
Christmas
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Friday was more than just Christmas
for Lena Day of Indianapolis. It
was also her birthday. Her IOOth
birthday.
A lot has changed about how
she has celebmted the holiday since
she was born Dec . 25, 1892, on
what she figures was just another
snowy day in southeastern Wisconsin.
Presents. for example. As a
child, she·doesn't remember getungany.
"We didn't know what presents
were in those days," she said. "I
guess we couldn't afford iL Birthdays would come and birthdays
would so. and that's an.··
Not to WOTfr - "I get plenty of
presents now, • she says.
, One reason is there are plenty of
people to give them. She married at
a~e 20 and over the years, raised
etght children - seven of them
still living., She has 39 j!fandchil·
dren, 59 great-grandchildren, 25
.great-great-grandchildren and one
great-great-great grandchild.

appeared II their door with gifiS. .
"He said he and his wife had

Oxford, Mich., also expected a
bleak holiday - until a stranser
showed up at their door with 24
bags of groceries and four huge

ROBERT .M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Christmas brings respite
to world's trouble spots
Christmas brought some peace
to war-torn parts of the world. A
cease-frre held in Northern IrCiand.
Christians in"Sarajevo, cheered by
a lull in ftghting, had their Muslim
ne(ghbors over for coffee. And
French and American soldiers
secured a Somali town without a
shot fired.
Pope John Paul II sounded the
theme of peace in his Christmas
message, plea!ling for healing and
hope m a world that seems "deaf
and impenetrable" at times.
In Gemumy, more than 150,000
people carrying c1111dles and torches
lined the streets of Berlin in a
Christmas vigil a~l!inst rightist violence that has clwmed 17 lives this
.year.
Despite ,worries about violence,
'holiday ob~wlces were quiet at
one of Clufstianity 's most revered
sites - Bethlehem, where Jesus
'Christ is said to have been bOrn.
Some ceremonies had been can- ·
celed to protest Israel's expulsion
,of about 400 Muslim fundamentalists, including 25 from Bethlehem,
in retaliation for the deaths of six
Israeli servicemen. Lebanon has
'refused to admit the deported men.
~
In bauered Sarajevo, many people venwred from their honles for
the first time in days, collecting
wood and water amid snow llur·ries. Following the tradition of the
multiethnic city, some Christians
invited over their Muslif(l neighbors, though many couta offer only
a cup of coffee.
The Bosnian capital has been
under siege by Serb fighters since
the spring, when Croats and Slavic
·Muslims - together about two·
thirds of the population - voted
for independence from Yugoslavia.
Friday was not an official holiday in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, where the Serbian Orthodox
Church observes Christmas on Jan.
7.
.
The outlawed Irish Republican
Army declared its traditional
Christmas cease-fire in Northern
Ireland, but gave no indication it ·
would halt bombings intended to
drive the British out of the republic. Cardinal Cabal Daly, the head
of the Roman Catholic Church in
Ireland. implored the guerrilla
group to end the decades of violence.
From the centnll balcony of St
Peter's Basilica, the pope
inveighed against those responsible
for hostilities in the Mideast and
the "planned and inhuman" ethnic
war in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
"Listen to the voice of love,
both sweet and powerful, especially you who brandish violent and
murderous arms," the pope pleaded before a crowd of 15,000 in the
square below.
''Sometimes the Earth seems

Strangers gave away presents
and cash ec. Chrislmas, SIOml victims got helping hands and a few
National Ouilrdsmen sent to Spain
to help in the Somalia relief effort
got to came home in time for the
holiday.
And while some people had a
white Chrisunas and cbildren got 10
try out new skates and sleds, in
Southern California !here were new
swfboards to he tested and families
suolled the beaches with tempera.tures in the 70s.
·
"Well, it's not really that much
like ChrisE out here right now, ••
said Malillu lifeguard Lt. John
Moryle. "Bu it's a beaotiful day."
But in HuntingtOn, W.Va., Dennis and Robin Shank and their three
sons faced a gloomy Christmas
without gifts because he lost his job
earlier this year. Then a man they
didn't know, and still don't know,

,.

•

WE'RE HEREI -Member ot tile Unlvenlty of'Nebnllut fnot.
ball team step otr tbe plaae at MlamiiDterlllltloDal Airport IBd 11ft
greeted by 111emben of tbe Orm1e Bowl. Com111lttee. Tile Com· •
huskers will tace Ute Florida State Seminoles In the Orup Bowl llli ·
New Year's J)ay. (AP)
. )

.

.' '
'

.

�I

·.•

December 'ZT, 1992

Paae

C2-Sunclay nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport G8lllpolla, OH Point Pleaaant,

wv

December 'ZT, 1992

tfcDonald's-Wolfe coalition take fourth in points; Wolfe top driver
..· .

•• Local McDonald's restaurants
!Cnd Scott Wolfe Racing again
jpined forces for the third straight
stock car racing season in 1992.
: The team was recently honored
rpr
its fOW1h t~ flllish in season
points at KC
way near Chilli·
&lt;othe, and Wolfe was nllmed as
~· ~portsmanship-Driver of the

tear."

.• Wolfe, a 12-ycar racing vetmn
•
Skyline Speedway
was again sponsored by
s Restaurants of GalAthens and Nelsonville and
W.Va.

The local racing team raeed 32
times at eight different traCks, racing regularly at Skyline Speedway
at Stewart on Fridays and K.C.
Raceway near Chillicothe on Satur·
days.
.
Besides placing fourth in points
at K.C.Raceway, the team had nine
top-five fulishes and 22 top-10 fi~­
ishes overall at aU tracks. In addition, the team won six heat races, a
heimet dash and two B-mains.
The team began the season with
a 1991 Mark Richard's Racing
Bullitt Chassis ani! a Dave Shain

built 430 cubic-inch small block
chevy engine. The fJ.£St night out
the team won the fast car dash and
placed seventh in the feature at
Skyline, while posting fifth fast
time.
The 430 Chevy feanires a fourinch stroke and 13-1 compression
in its .030 over cylinders. The
methanol-buq~ing, carburetor-aspirated power plant produces from
650 to 800 IKncpower.
The followins evening, Wolfe
won an exciting ten lap heat race
over national!y ranlced driver Del·

mas Conley of Wheelersburg:
Wolfe led the fii'Sl eiaht llqls before
being passed by C"onley on the
ninth cuauL Wolfe.repassed Cooley for the win.
During the seventh race of the
season at Southetn Ohio Raceway
at Portsmouth, an accident broke
the spur gears in Wolfe's rear-end
an~ as an end result blew up the
number one engine. The race team
was foneed to use its 406 cubic inch
back-up for the duration of the
year.
Despite missing a week to malce
repairs, the race team placed consistently throughout the season to•
plaee in the points at K.C.
Dave Shain of Shain Engineering at Antiquity provides all of the
. engine work and much of the
.mechanical work on the car. Kevin
Layne and Wolfe lalce care of the
maintenance and repairs on the cat,
while Layne, Jason Shain .and Jim

"Ozie" O'Brien 1re regulan in the
pita.
The youn&amp;eat Sbain Jeuers the
car, while Wolfe's Garage and
Body Shop does the Jllinting.
Other valued sponsors on the
car are Eber's Citgo in Racine,
O'Brien Produce and Adams
Farms, Lcllrt; Mark's Auto Salea
in Middleport, Twin City Machine,
Pomeroy: Precisim Automotive in
Darwin; Amy Wolfe and Associates Accounting in Pomeroy and
Racine·; C &amp; M Motors,
R!IYeMwood; D 4: M Pizza in
Syracuse; Baum Lumber, Chester;
1'\ &amp; A Auto Rental, Ravenswood;
and Anderson's Home Furnishings
in Pomeroy.
"I couldn't race competitively in
the Late Model ranks without the
help of my friends and sponsors.
My sponsors and many friends

have helped financially, aod
becan.. of Ibis, we ~ "'""f ! ·~ d
and occasiCl!!llly beataliCIDIS with
unlimited budgets." said Scott
Wolfe.
·• "The crew volunteets its time ,
and puts in many houn of long
work. Often frieods who are IDible
to regularly ao 10 lbc races stop by
and help us II lbc gmge. I really
apprectate the help. The racing
team is actuilly a community
effort."
The racing team is currently
looking forward to next '"'on.
The team is expecting the deliverly
of a new Rocket Chassis to repllce
the Bullitt frame which was
destroyed at lbe NJobnny Appleseed CJusic" at Eldora Speedway
last fall In that accident, Wolfe
di$10Cliled his shoulder, but says he
is almost back to nonnal. ·

Sports deadlines posted

.• ' McDONALD'S RACING #14 - Tbis ear is
•the late model stock car driven by Racine driver
:~tt Wolfe. Wolfe and local McDonald's bave
:teamed up tor the past three years. The team
'Placed rourlb in overaD points at K.C. Raceway
,near Chillicothe, and Wolfe was nam~ "Sports·

The Gallipolis Daily Tribu11e,
The Daily Stlltillel, the Poi11t
Pleasa~t Register and the SundayTimts-SentiMI· value the COI)ttibutions their readers make to the
spons sections of these papers, and
these contributions will continue to
be published.
, However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for submissions of local
baseball- and softball-rela~ photos and related articles, from T-ball .
to the majors. as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the
day of the last game of the World
Series.
Likewise, the deadline for pho·
tos and related articles for football
and other faD sports is the Saturdar.
(Jan. 30) before the Super Bow .
The deadline for pboiQS and related
articles for basketball and other
winter spons is the last day of.the
NBA Fmals. '
,These deadlines have been in,ti.
tuted to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from the
photography studio of choice and
10 give the staffs the opportunity to
publish these sports photos and
articles ·during .lbe appropriate sea·
son for that,spon.

mansbip-Driver or the Year" at the track.
McDonald's restaurants in Gallipolis .and Henderson, W.Va. sponsor the car as well as
McDonald's restaurants in Athens and Nel·
sonville.

four Texas A&amp;M players declared
ineligible
following
school's
probe
..
&gt;

-

.
By MIKE DRAGO
ments off as maintenance fees at Roben Smith, the vice president of
·: DALLAS (AP) - Running his low-income housing units.
finance and administration. He said
: li'ack Greg Hill and three other
The players were paid year- Smith is responsible fo'r NCAA
::Pexas A&amp;M players have been round in apparent violation of rules compliance and reports
· declared ineligible after th.e school NCAA rules, yet in some eases did
to Mobley.
·
:launched its own investigation into no work, current ancj former directly
If
new
allegations
concerning
·allegations of improper payments employees of Gilber.t told the
the
school's
football
program
are
:Ii9m a prominent booster.
newspaper,
proved
to
be
true,
A&amp;M's
athletic
··:. Hill, offensive lineman James
Federal agents served subpoenas
.Btooks, receiver Percy Singleton on Gilben's properties last week department could face major sanctions and possibly the NCAA's
:and offensive lineman Darius seeking records, the report said.
"death penalty" - which can be
:SpJith were declared ineligible late
Gilbert, who said the players assessed on a university's· second .
·Friday, according to a release from worked only during school breaks
'university president William Mob- as allowed by the NCAA, and major violation within five years.
The Texas A&amp;M football proley.
school officials denied any infrac- ~ was placed on two years pro; ·Spokesman Rene Henry late Fri- tions.
·
. banon on Sept 9, 1988, with a oneday refused to elaborate on the
Mobley said its subseque.rit year ban on bowl appearances and
release. He said Aggies coach R.C. probe found. no proof of wrongdoa reductiOn of five scholarships, 10 '
·~1ocum would discuss the matter at ing by Gilben or the school.
recruiting visits and a ban on
.a.press conference Saturday in DalHenry said the school's investi- recruiting by two assistant coaches.
·las. where fourth-ranked Texas gation is being conducted by
:9M is preparing for its Cotton
.ffiiwl march against Notte Dame.
: , The release said the school had
found the players "ineligible in .
:accordance with NCAA regula11:1'iions, but will consider requesting
. ~I0£81ion of eligibility based upon
-.die circums1811CCS of each individu·

~f;l!~r;~r extensive research, we

£,.Ve concerns regarding the
(nlount of work performed by
these four athletes and as a result
nave taken this action," Mobley

8

'

1419 State Route 1

GaiUpoUa, Ohlp 4l6'••
"" ..
614-446-0756

~~he school's action was trig- L.;;M;;;;•;;It;;e.;.;rCe;:;,;rd:...,_N_ear~-ltaa--a-up
_ _DriY
__..
_Jn___..,!YI~S~AW
gered by a story in The Dallas
Menning News last week that a
tlrominent Aggies benefactor, Dalli!S,developer Warren A. Gilbert Jr.,
Jll¢ at least five Texas A&amp;M players'for work they did not do.
: The report said Gilbert, 67, one
. c:il the largest operators of public
Jflxlsing in Dallas, wrote the pay- .
•

INVENTORY CLEARANCE
SALE! PRICES SLASHED!

PBL
. results

SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL CARS IN INVENTORY

.

'

poMEROY- These are the
re'sults of recent action at the
P&lt;1.JI1eroy Bowling Lanes.

1986 DODGE
TRUCK

Mixed
: T.eams {in order or finish) RDtland American Legion (87),
· SJ?Orts &amp; Stuff (74), Banks Consuuction (72), Hackeu's Roofing
((($}, Tony's Carry Out (62),
T._rord Golf &amp; Trophies (48).,
: IJI&amp;ll seriel- T~ Seidenabel
(s_§2) and Marlene Wilson (468)
. Second·hl&amp;best series - Larry
DDPn (500) and Becky Ellis (448)
• Hl.h same - T!:IYY Seidenabel
(~} and Becky EUis (176)
•5eeond·biah aame -Terry
·Soidenabcl (181) and Shirley Simn\PilS (170)
.
eerile- Rutland AmeliLegion
•'r•m pme - Rolland AmeriLegion (655)
: ·~
Dec. 9
• J:.ea1ue - Early Wednesday

4 speed, Sla1t Six

&lt;:
Dec.l6
; t;eague ·- Early Wednesday

· reams (In order or finish)~~tand American Legion (80),
Dints Construction (70}, Sports &amp;
Soief ( = e u · s Roofmg (64),
TollY's
Out (60), Teaford's
(jolf &amp;.
(42).
' · HI1II serlea - Larry Dugan
(5o{1) llld Bec:ky Ellis (SIS)
: ~eeoad·lllllleat series ~wey_ Smith (540) and Dottie
Will (SOIJ)
.
• Hflll pme - Vtnee Mossman
(200) and Dollie Will (189)
·
,Setond·lllgh· 11me - Jack
FOHrod (195) and Dollie Will (182)
&lt;Jum series - Banks Constfoction (1973)
• !feam aame - Banks Con-

struCtion (711)

•

. THURS., DEC. 31 10 p.m. • 1 a.m.

Southerners'conneback
gives them 27-17 victory
.in Blue-Gray All-Star Classic

$1~rson

- $20/couple
Includes Bowling,
Shoes and Snack
Table

By PAUL NEWBERRY
MONTGOMERY, Ala. ,(AP) _
Maryland's John Kaleo threw two
touchdown passes, including an 18yarder to Clemson's Larry Ryans
for the winning score with 2:50
remaining as the Gray rallied to a
· 27-17 win in the Blue-Gray All·
Star Classic on Friday.
·
· Arkansas linebacker Raylee
Johnson sealed the victory 27 sec·
onds later when he knocked the
balf'away .from· Blue quarterback
Alex Van Pelt of Pittsburgh, piclced
it up and ran 40 yards to the end

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run ·thoplay in his career.
The Blue pushed its margin to
17-7 on a 22-yard field by Missouri's Jeff Jacke, capping an 18play, 79-yard drive that featured 14
straight running plays. But that was
to be the final hurrah for the North

Before the third quarter was
over, Kaleo hit Alabama State's
Horace Brooks with a 25-yard pass
to make it 17-14 heading to the
final quarter.
The fmal period remained score- ·
less when· the Gray got the ball at
; zone. ~
its 37 with just over five minutes to
.•
The Blue squad totaUy dominat- go. Kaleo .threw .three passes for .41
~ ed the fust half, building .a 14-0 yards - mcluding the game-wm·
~ lead while piling up a 2'59-100 ner to Ryans.
~ advantage in yards. But the final
Kaleo wa~ named the Gray
~ margin was much closer', with the MVP, compleu11g nine of .IS, passes
' 1BlUe ahead'3!72•3U, ,
·- " ~or 147 ~ants ..~Yl¥18, ·was h1s lead- .
:• The Gray~ a .Bobby BoWden tog recetver w1th Tour eau:hes for
~ specialty, dte "'fumbleroosltic," to . 64 Y~·
• turn around things in the second
Indiana quarterback Trent Green
half. .
· ~as the Blue MVP. He com~leted ·
• After taking the kickoff and etght of 15 ~or 99 ~ ~d direct~ driving to Ute Blue 18, the center ~both of hts team ~ sconng drives
laid the ball on t,he ground on the to the ftrst half.
.
• snap and Houston guard Ja~on
The ~luc had five good sconng
· Youngblood picked it up and ram- chances to the first half, but Jacke
: bled around left end for the touch- missed two field goals and a falce
~ down. It was the fii'Sl time he had field goal JJlaY was thwarted.

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CHRISTM~S SACK- ne Blue squad's SbiWII WDI!ams (36)
or Rutgers wraps up lbe Gray sqliad's 'John Kaleo (IS) of Maryland
for the sack during the Blue-Gray All-Star Classic Friday in Mont·
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MIDDLEPORT, OH•

tt2·3011

,

•

�•

. '.
December27,1892 ••

Pomeroy Middleport Galllpoll8, Ott · Point Plrunt, WV

Pqa C4 SUnday nm11 Sentinel

.....- . .

On Christmas Day,

• • •l

In Ohio's year in sports,

.

:::·

;r

Reynolds' suspension, legal victory headlines 1992 roll
I

•

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sparta Writer
If ever a man could reach tbe
very bouom and top of die cmotiona! scale in one calendar year,
that peasoo might have been Butch

which oversees U.S. IJ'ICk. But then
in May of this year, the IAAF
voted to back tbe origilial suspension.
So Reynolds went to court,
eventually relying on an lith hour
Reynolds.
decision by U.S. Supreme Court
The Akron native and former Justice John Paul Stevens to comOhio State runner began lS\92 by pete in the U.S. Olympic track and
serving OUI wbal he thought wou)d field trials in Louisiana.
be the final eight months of his
Reynoldacompetedanddid well
IW()oyq" blnishment from intema- in the preliminary beats befD~~? fintiOIIIl track for his alleged use of ishing fifth in the finals, missmg a
steroids.
spot on the team. 1be IAAF ruled
Yet as I993 dawned, the world- that Reynolds wo~l.d noL be
record holder in tbe400 meters was allowed to even paructpate as an
-at leasl on papu and in a federal alternate on the u.s. team in
courtroom '-- richer by $27.3 mil· . Barcelona and then extended his
lion.
. suspension through the end of
Reynolds was banned by the 1992.
Inteml!tional Amateu'r Athletic
But Reynolds' lawsuit, seeking
Fedenbon on ·A~~~· 12, 1990, aft&amp; · lost earnings and punitive damages
an alleged pouttve test for the · for the two years of his exile, proanabolic steroid .N~ndrolo!Je. gressed before u.s. Dis~ct Court
Reynolds, who dentes ever usmg Judge Joseph IGnneary m Columany drug, said the tests were bus. Finally, on Dec. 3, Kinneary
bou:hcd by tbe IAAF's sanctioned ruled that Reynolds was due the
labcnlory.
full amount he had sought - $27.3
In October of 199I, Reynolds is million _ from the IAAF.
essentially exonerated by a comKinneary wrote that the IAAF
miltee of The Athletics. C~m~ss. had acted with malice and revenge

ing the club to a world champi- Carlos Baerga. 1be imp,rov~ent
onshi_p. He ~as tbe man- CIIIIO just u c:Onsll'llclion bcpll on
track.
·
. ager m Seaale. Abo gone was flee
tile tam'111ew Gaeeway llome.
As tbe tumuiiUOUS year wound agen~Gre Swindell, and possibly
nc University of Cincinnati.
down, Reynolds was tired but · the
• Boomer Faason. who llllbnina blct to tbe days·of Paul
hopeful.
was reptaced late in the year by Hogue and Ron Bonham in the
" I' m looking fdr a good Olrist- rookie David Klingler as tbe start- early '60s, made it back to tbe·
mas and a h'aP.PY new year," be ing quarterbllck.
NCAA 'a Final Four. Phio State,
said. ·'I haven t had a good ChristThe new additions were home- · conclQdinJ a msve1oua S3-10 twomas in two years."
run slugger Kevin Mitchell, year run, won its second straight
In C::incinnati, it was a year of acquired in. a trade, and Dave Big Ten title and lost in ovi:rtime,
scandal and titmover.
Shula. who stru~ed through a los- or else the Buckeye state would
The big news was the bonfire lit ing season in his fa'SI year as head have been ICJH~ half the
by the racial remarks of Reds coach of tbe Bengals after replac- field on tbe final
owner Marge Schott. Several pco- ing Sam Wyche.
.
Jim Jackson, a first-team Allpie, including some of her own
In Cleveland, Browns quarter· American, dcc:ided to turn pro after
front-office employees, quoted her back Bernie Kosar missed much ~f his junior year at Ohio State. He
as referring to several of her black the season with a broken bone m was drifted fourth in tbe first round
players with racial slurs. As 1992 his ankle, but former Ohio State but disdained millions from the
came to a close, the remarks _
signal-caller Mike Tomczalc: ke{lt Dallu Mavericks, who offered less
which she said were not meant to the team competitive in hts money and less SICCUrity tban those
be hurtful or to be talc:en seriously absence.
picked after Jackson in tbe draft.
_ were being investigated.
The Cavs once again .ran into
Once again, OSU football coach
Cincinnati's football team , the the brick wall known as tbe two- Jol!n Cooper received heat- even
Bengals, also was rocked by scan- time defending NBA champion during an 8-2-1 season. But he did
dal. A Seattle woman claimed,20 Chicago Bulls. Meanwhile, the get some security: a new four-year
current or former Bengals players tpdians fmished a surprising fourth contract in July and a vote of confiraped her at the team hotel in 1990. in the American Leag~ East with a de nee in December. In contrast,
The matter is still in coun..
•
young and 'promising lineup that basketball coach Randy Ayers
On the field, the Reds said mcluded two budding stars: pit.cher seemed to flip all the ri~ht · Jevers
goodbye to manager Lou Piniella, Charles Nagy and second-baseman - such as adding instde force
who quit just two years after leadtoward Reynolds, who once again
began planning a return to the

•

.

•

By RUSTY MILLER
fcOLUI'rf~US, Ohio (AP) ~n Ohid State meets Georgia in
die Florida Citrus Bowl Jan. I , tbe
~~nie will feature much well~ talent on both sides, includUW Bul~ running back Garrison
Iearst, thtrd in balloting for the
ltlisman Trophy this season.
~ The last ume Ohio State played
i4 the Citrus Bowl, against
BNham Yoling in I985, its roster
~ filled with future NFL stars
lite Pepper Johnson, Keith Byars,
Clris Spielman, Vince Workman,
($s c.ter and William White.
• Yet the unlikely hero of the
B~ckeyes' I0-7 victory wasn't
B_tigham Young quarterback Robb~e Bosco Or any of the Buckeye
piyers now in lhe jlros.
·
was a guy who had quit the
lef.D twice during his junior season
atjd who was given a third and final
ciJance by Ohio State coach Earle
~ be on the team his

yards for the touchdown.
"That was a honey." Bruce said
with a chuclde.
"Heck, he was a great, skilled
athlete, •' Blackney remem_bers.
"He ran ahoul a 4.7 in the 40. He
knew exacdy whallO do with it. He
wasn't your typical middle guard

who bats the ball down. ... A lot of
middle guards might have caught it
and tben tried to eat il."
Ohio State's defense made tbe
10-7 advantage stand up. Four minutes later, Kolic intercepted Bosco
again. The two interceptions by one
man still shares the Citrus Bo-,vl

record. Ohio.Siate's four interceptions that day also shares a bowl
record . .
"KoJic fit right into the game
plan with his old linebacker experience,'' Bruce said. · ~He always had
good hands."
KoJic, chosen the ,1!811le's most

tured tbe Cleveland Grand Prix; •. •
Craig Stadler captured tbe World:::·
Series of Golf title and David '• '
Edwards wan tbe Memorial Tour- ~ ;~•
nament; also in &amp;!'If, Ohio nativ.e :•:•
Jolin Cook llad a big yelt by bank- ~::
ing more than $1 million, while .••
Jack Nicklaus made his money ·=·
designing rather than playing • :
courses; Cen(fal State won the .·:
NAJA Division I national champi-'·:•
onship in football for the second :.:
ycBil in a row, while F'mdlay J.lickeil:::
up its second NAIA Diviston n•:•
national crown and Youngstown · .:
DSta1.J~si~AAdeu.~deneodinn.ag'~t-NCAmm
· uteA ·
·""'
field goal; Pete Sampras .beat Ivan ,
Lendf for the ATP tennis title in ::,
Mason; and the Pro Football Hall ,. •
of Fame opened its doors to AI : -.
Davis, John Riggins, John Mackey ··
and Lem Barney;
•
•,
~
•

•

• •

valuable player, says- he bumped bead coach with two bowl victories
into Bosco later at an all-srar game. and two conference championlhip;
"He said, 'Jeez, of aiJ. peopJel in two years. Bruce had more sue-•
You guy~ have Pepper Johnson and ccssful seasons at Ohio State but·
Chris Sptelman arid you're the one was fired in a bloody coup two
picking me apart,'" KoJic say~ years later.
· Kolic played three
with
with a long laugh.
.'
Now Blackney is a successful the Mi8ll)i Dolphins o the NFL.

-

"

M.J. JAM- No, this isn' t the newest rap star on the charts, but
• yet another Michael Jordan dunk in front of the New York Knicks'
Patrick Ewing during Friday night's NBA game in Chicago, which
: tbe Bulls won 89.,_77. Jordan had 41 points in tbe contest. (AP)
•
•
•

;r~

•' I
.•.

""·
• •
t;,
•••
•.•
•••
•

•••••
•'•.
••••
•
•••

....
•••
•••
. :.

:r;

s.

.

leers

:It

' Larry Kolle was a 6-foot-1, 225pciund senior from Smithville· who
Wis. a$ he says. "disciplinoo on tbe
f~. " 1be RlSI of tbe time, it was
, _ 10 debete.
--;.~··There'll always be a little kid
in'bim," Gary Blackney, tben Ohio
s~·s defensive coordinator and
nctw head coach at Bowling Gteell.
said with a laugh.
·
Brigham Young, 11-3 on the
·
, went into tbe game as the
· 's 1eading offense, averaging
S points a game. Bosco led the
..,...nn in total offense a year before
the Coug~ won the national
pionship, and was second in

ByJJMUTKE
CHICAGO (AP) - Of, all the
things that can be accomplished in
the span of two minutes, making up
a tO-point defiCit against the best
defensive unit in die NBA didn't
figure to be one of tbem.
At least that was Bulls coach
Phil 1ackson said to his team at
halftime Friday nighL
"I told tbe guys you don't mak~
up a big lead like that in the first
two minutes," Jackson said after
Chica~o l s 89-77 win over New
York. 'But we did."
To be e11act, it took all of two
minutes and eight seconds. And !he
uwe, was mere like a "he" - the
" he" being Michael Jordan. And
Jackson probably knew better.
With Chicago trailing 49-39,
Jordan scored the fust eight poinrs
Qf the tbird period and 10 during a
12-0 run that carried the Bulls to
their first lead since the opening
quaner.
"Down the stretch, sometimes
the other guys are tentative about
shooting and they'll look to me,"
said J.ordan, wbo finished with 42
points and eight rebouRds. "I don't
mind that. I accept that as a leadcr."
Patrick Ewing ended New
York's drought after 4:01 with a
short jumper, but things improved
only slightly alter that. The ·Knicks

00

another Indy-Car drivin~ champi- ·~t:
Olllbip and Emcnoo Firupaldi cap- ~;.;

'

•••

:::

·-·••!·
•

'·.
• •
•• •

•

•• •

~~ ~

With 40MB
harddrlva

[ _,_. J

made just 6 of 21 shots in tbe period for 13 points, then managed
only 15 in tbe last qiWtel'. The 28
points were tbeir lowell output for
a half this seuon.
" We didn't play with tbe same
intensity Or aaiwde that we had in
the first half. We attacked all the
time, •' Knicks coach Pat Riley
said. "In tbe secopd half, we just
sat back and waited for them to
come to us. We wound up fighting
for our lives."
In the NBA's only other game
Friday, San Antonio defeated the
LOs Angeles Clippers 103-94.
The Bulls' win was a payback
for the Knicks' 112-75 Joss at New
York on Nov. 28, tbe worst reguJar-season defeat of Jordan's eightyear career.
. That game, coupled with the
Knicks' seeking their first regularseason win in 13 games in Chicago
since, March 1987. raised antieipatiQn that the Christmas Day
rematcll would feature the same
intense, physical play of last
spring's seven-game Eastern Conference fmal between the same two

fight' We had to adjust at the half.
We licked our wounds and went
out to play hard."
The Bulls' victory, their third
straight, supped New York's win
strealc: 81 five. It also kept them in
lint place in the conference standings, 1 1/2 games ahead of the
Knicks.
If tbe two teams do meet again
in the playoffs, the. natio~ televised match probably bel
bwld
ratings. Like their last meeting, it
featured a .Jittle of both basketball
and Wrestlemania - with one
im~t difference. Friday night,
the referees siCOJ)ed in between the
· combatants early and often.
They set the tone by wbistling
New York'S Charles Oalc:ley for a
loose-ball foul on the game's opening pilssession, and followed it up
by assessing a double-technical
against Oal&lt;ley and Chicago's Bill
Cartwright for a brief scrap alter
only six minutes.
John Starks added 17 points and
Ewing 14 for the Knicks, while
.Scottie Pippen scored 16 points fot
the Bulls.
teams.
Spurs 103, Clippers 94
Then coaches Jackson and Riley
Sean Elliott scored 28 of his 32
traded digs on whether the clubs points in the ftrsl and fourth quatrespected one another.
ters as San Antonio slayed unbeat"lf I had to summarize the en under new coach John Lucas by
game in just one word," Jackson winning at Los Angeles. ·
said aftetward, "it would be 'dogThe Spurs never trailed en route

'Proud observer' of
Thurmond's career
dies at 84

•
,:·.

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Andrew
Thurmond, 84, the father of retu-ed
National Basketball Association
srar Nate Thurmond, has died after
a tbree-week illness.
Born in Cedartown, Ga., Thur·
mond came to Akron in 1933. He
worked for Firestone for 31 years
before retiring in I973 .
"I would say he was just the
best father that anybody could
have," Nate Thurmond said.
He said his father was a " very
proud observer" of his basketball
career.
Nate Thurmond played center
for Bo..&gt;Jing Green State University
and, in the NBA, for the San Francisco Warriors, which became tbe
Golden State Warrioa, and also the
Chicago BuJ.Is and aeveland Gavaliers before retiring in 1977.
Andrew Thurmond, who died
Thursday, is also survived by his
wife Leala and· another son , Benjamin.
·
A funeral service is planned for
I p.m. Monday 81 Mt Olive Baptist
Church in Akron.

.•

to only tbeir second victa:y against
a team with a winning record dtis
season.
Ken Norman had 22 points and
13 rebounds and Ron Harper · ·
scored 21 points for the Clippers ·':·
who trailed by 25 points early in •.. 1
_ the second period, then closed •,
within three po!Ats in the third .
quarter,
I .,. I
David Robinson, the Spurs' ···
leading scorer,'scored I2 of his 21 ., •
points in the fourth ~r as San •
Antonio regained control.
·..;,

.

Sports brief

•

..

.-,~

Basketball
,
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) ....:., :
Clyde Drexler is expected to miss ·
the Portland Trail Blazers' next ·
two games because of his sore righ( ·:~
knee.
.
.• ,
The six-time All-Star guard has ..
been slowed following surgery '
shonly af~ he pelped the U.S. to.,"
the Olympic gold medal last sum-, :
mer.
~
Drexler has skipped only two' "
games this season - Dec. 4 at ,
Chicago and Dec. 5 at Cleveland. ·.~
In the other 21 games, Drexler has "
averaged !9.7 points in 35 minutes.
Portland goes into Saturday's
game with Philadelphia in third •:
place, 3 1!2 games behind Phoenix: !·
in the Pacific Division.
-·

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GALLIPOLIS, NELSONVILLE, ATHENS, OH. AND HENDERSON, W. VA.

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Bu,ls, Spurs victors in light NBA action

Lawrence Funderburke, late or ···~
· Indiana - ai!d was locked up :::
duou&amp;h tbe end oftbecenwry by a :•;
new contract.
••
In other sporting pursuits,:&lt;
Dublin's Bobby Rahal won yet: :

Kolic remembered as star
of
last
OSU
visit
to
Citrus
Bowl
-

.

,'

.

Ohio State, featuring quarterJim Karsatos, running backs
n Wooldridge, Workman and
ars and wide receiver Caner,
sn 't too shabby either. The

~;.::w~:t ::r:~~:::

*'

of two great offensive foot!Jf. teama,"
Blackney said.

r, "A Jot of times, when everyspeaks of tbe high-powered
ses, it begins to really upset
defensive players," KoJic said.
think BYU came into tbe game
· I· 'If we can stop Ohio State's
nse, we know we're going to
a bunch of points.' Or so they

~~. Ohio State's defense
~ over. It forced six turnovers,

inpcepting Bosco four times and
f~g on two .fumbles.
decision made during bowl
pJ~W~~r~~tionS .by Bruce and Blackn4 helpCd tum tbe tide.
, "We watchc;d the movies of
tJwir Texas·El Paso game (in which
Btu was upset 23-16), and they
wpe tbe only ones who really did a
gOOd·job of defending BYU,"
said
.

;A

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T

- ••:

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co@n.' up"

off. to start the aecond half. Rich
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BW ~ Vai Sibheml, who
wis lknoned at his own 10. On sec~ llld 9 II the ll, Boaco rolled
:f:'tbe~ for Sikahema
O.Iy Bosco didn't see Kolic
•IIIItia&amp;. nc former hilh·SChool
flllkk picked it off and ran 14

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: {right) beats San Antonio's Antoine Carr to the punch on tbis
- rebound during the second quarte.r of Friday night's NBA game in
"' Los Angeles, which tbe Spurs won 103-94. (AP)

..

III

,

at Colorado State. "They ran
man rush and dropped Jiine,
tbM 90111ehow affected Bosco's
~ when he was passing."
~ became the chess piece in
th'- little slice of strategy. As a
n01eguard, his main job was to
blockers so another teamm4e cioukl tnake the stop. Instead,
BllckDcY and B!llce !tlld him fake
..a·tRitclt!ne talk and drop l!ack
in'- the passing lanes where he
coild c:reate havoc for Bosco.
or·~ of going into a' nickel
(a Jive-back defense against the
pail), we. went to a five-linebacker
ilddall!lmelllll;,'·' KoJic said. "We looked
vulltnble to tbe ~ because we
di4n't go to tbe ntekel much. But ·
.wlfn tliey daopped me back, that's
wlllen all those turnovers starting

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PIQI C6 Sunday Tlmll Sentinel

w

'

December 27,

P11111nt. WV

/11 Alo'f•~fBowl,

15

.

-

Kansas hands BYU.23-30 loss
By BEN DIPIETRO
HONOLULU (AP) - Even
before he ~eored the game-tying
· touchdown emy in 111e fourth quarter, Kansaa quarterback Chip Hil·
leary knew the Jayhawlcs were
going to beat Brigham Young and
win the Aloha Bowl.
Hilleary's one-yard run wilh
11:26 ri!maining and ensuing twopoint conversion run tied the game
20-20, then Dan Eichloff lticlced a
48-yard field gQal with 2;S7 left,
givin_g Kansas a 23-20 vierory over
the No. 2S Cougars Friday.
The field 'goal capped a sevenminute, lS:play drive. that gave the
Jayhawb (11-4) a win in their fiJst
bowl game in II years. Brigham
Young finished 8-S.
'They kept missing field goals
and giving us opportunities, and the
momentum was staying with us,"
Hilleary said. "Time was a big factor in the fourth quarter. When
you've got the ball, you've got to
do something with iL''
BYU kicker David Lauder
missed three field goals, including
two in the second half, and also
misfll'ed on an extra poinL He hit
the left upright on a 31-yard fidd
Wright af!F being unable to ftnd a receiver durgoal try with 4:02 left in lhe lhird
YOUNG ON THE RUN - Brigllam Young
ing Friday's IAloba Bowl in Honolulu, Hawaii,
quarter, giving BYU nothing after
quarterback Tom Young (14), a descendant or
where Kansas won 23-20. (AP)
an four-minute, 67-yard drive.
his university's founcler, moves the ball upfleld
"He's been good all year. He
under pressure from Kansas .lineman Sylvester
just missed them," BYU coach
LaVeil Edwards said. "l was dis·
appointed we didn't score, more
potnts. We had our chances and
didn't do lhe job."
BYU gained 187 yards in the
third quarter, but could only score
they gel i•. ,, In the bowl game, have every offensive lineman back once. Hilleary and the other JayBy RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bowling Green was trailing 34-28 including the tight end and our hawk seniors sensed things were
going their way, and didn't want to
Fresh off Bowling Gteen' s liCCOIId with a minute left when the Nevada entire defensive line is baCk.
straight Mid-American Conference punter muffed a perfect snap. The
"If we can get bigger and blow their beat chance 10 prove lhe
~hampionship and bowl victory,
Falcons ended up with the ball at stronger and bellt1' up front in the revival of the once-downtrodden
the Nevada 15. Five pl~ys later, trenches, I think we have some program was complete.
~oach Gary Blackney acknowlThe Cougars led 14-12·at half.
~dgcs that someihing unique is they scored the game-winner.
young skilled players that will
time,
and increased the margin to
II ' s a refrain that has been come along.''
going on.
20-12
when quarterback Tom
, "I think people in Bowling played out again and again over the
This season Bowling Green
Young
found
split end Otis Sterling
Green and northwest Ohio are real- past two years for the Falcons. If went 10-2 overall and 8-0 in the
with
a
10-yard
m pass with 10:06
istic," said Blackney, ·who has they don ' t win big, they are so MAC, desjiite a brutal non-conferto
play
in
the
quaner. Sterling
never lost a conference game in his close that when the opponent ence schedule (at Ohio State and
leaped
higher
than cornerback
two years as a head coach. "Obvi- blinks, they lake advantage imme- Wisconsin, home with East Caroli·
Dorian
Brew
to
puD
down lhe pass
ously, they're enjoying our success, diately. Three MAC games could na). Next fall, the Falcons soften
in
the
comer
of
the
end
zone.
which I'm happy for. They think ' have gone either way this season, that SOIIICWhat with Virginia ;I'ech,
·
Y
ouog,
brother
of
San
Francisco
we have something .speciaJ going but each time Bowling Green did Cincinnati and Navy. Just what a
quarterback
Steve
Young,
finished
here. And I think we do too.''
what it had to do to win.
young team needs 10 get ready for
with
15
completions
in
31
attemptS
How special? Before he took
That might change, however. conference play.
.
over the Falcons, Bowling Green The losses are heavy for the Fal"!don't think it'll be the end of for 262 yards. The sophomore was
went 3-5-2 in 1990. Since then they cons. Playing their futal game were the world if we don't win a cham· making his first coDcgiatc start
are 16-0 in MAC play, have won · quarterback Erik White, receivers pionship next year, although that
two titles and won at both the fmal Mark Szlal;hcic and Dave Hankins . will be our goal,'' Blackney said.
California Bowl and the inaugural and running back LeRoy Smith on
Immediately, his mind started.
Las Vegas Bowl.
'
offense, along with taclcle Jeff Rot- racing to what the next hurdles
The latest example of the Fal- tinghaus, linebackers. Kevin could be.
.
.·
cons' special !alents was Friday' s O'.Brien and Artie Mangham and
"I don't know the last time a
35-34 victory over Nevada in the defensive backs Carlos Brooks, team won three (MAC titles) in a
Vegas Bowl.
Ken Burress and Dave Bielinski.
row. We've still goulot ofcibjecThe most common lament of
''We lost some really good foot- tives: we could break the string .for
· coaches wtlo play' Bolwing Green ball players," Blackney said. "We most consecutive wins," he. said.
is, "Every ltinie they need a break, lost most of our sldll players. But "I think we'll be in lhe thick of lhe
on the other side of the coin, we race for the championship.''

because of injurie-s to three BYU

q~

His only inten:cption came with
2: II left when safety ' Charley
Bow1111 llfellped in front of a pass
tlw Youn1 fon:ed up becaUBe of
pressure from defensive tackle
Dana Stubblefield.

zone.

May your
holidaysbe
filled with Jog...
and may
the coming year bring
you health &amp; happiness
CAIOU

SIIOWDIII

J42s-.1Awe.
...... Ol
,._ 446-4290
tt-C4HSII
ITAfl FAIM

Blackney, northwest Ohio enjoying
success of BGSU football program

!

BYU's Hema Hcimull ~
. the C4lCDins ltickoff94 yards for 'I!'
touchdown, the iooaest recum e¥F
in Ibis bowl game. lkimuli llii11ICf
up the middle of the fteld. then cat"
to the sideline near midfield and
scampered untouched to the end

INIUIAHCI

•'

PHONE ·

By DENNE H. FREEMAN
t IRVING, Texas (AP) -

State Farm Insurance Companies
Hillne Offices: Bloomington, Illinois

Like agood neighbor; State Farm is there.

91 CHRYSLER
92CHRYSLER
5th AVE.
5th AVE.
Feclory ,_.
loaded, aii loaded, all """" options, juol
tided. SAVE S.

.llthough the Dallas Cowboys
$!ready have clinched the NFC
iaslern Division title and a rust·
~und by~· the playoffs. Emmitt
Smith has ork to do in the final
game of regular season.
,: Smith, bidding for his second
consecutive NFL ~bing title, on
will sian Sunday five yards behind
Piusburgh's
Barry
He's runtrying to become
onlyFoster.
the ninth
ning back ~ and the first since
Eric Dickerson in 1983-84- to
win consecutive rushing titles.
Smith said his primary goal is
f6r the Cowboys to reach the Super
Bowl, but he wouldn't mind winning another rushing title. And no
team with a rushing champion has
ever appeared in lhe Super Bowl.
"I guess I'll have to tank it to
make f.Ure we get to the Super
Bowl, ' Smith joked. "I can tell
you I want to win the rushing title
ifl can.
"It would prove I' m no fluke,
not just a one-year lucky deli!.'·
Also, it would line Smith's
pockets wilh more gold,
"It would put a lot of money in
my pockets in incentives this year
and next year," said Smilh, whose
conttact e~pires at the end of the
season. "! wouldn't mind that at
aU.''
• Foster and the Steelers play
Cleveland in a noon game, so
Smith will know what he has to do
when the Cowboys take the field at
4 p.m. EDT against ·the Bears.
And here's fair warning to the
Bears: Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson believes the Cowboys are on a
good enough roll to win the Super
Bowl.
•

Bengals looking to give Munoz winning sendoff against Colts
By JOE KAY
·another eight-game turnaround some tough injury probl~ms.
-It's not (they were l-IS last year) and They've hung tough. 'and now lhey
~tirely surprising that the lndi- make Marc.hibroda lhe first coach have the possibility 10 have a winIIIIBpOlis Cofts are on lhe verge of to do it twice. ·
ning season. That's something I'm
111,a1ching the best one-season
The Bengals (S-10) have shown sure they're very proud of, and
l\lfll3f0UIId in NFL hisuxy.
much more modest improvement in shooting for."
', After all, their head coach has coach Dave Shilla's first year. A
When he was named head coach
dQne this before.
·
victory today would double their last January Marchibroda was one
Ted Marchibroda turned the win total from last year (3-13) and of the few
thought the Colts
Colts from a 2-12 team in 1974 give retiring offensive lineman could be playing for a winning
into a 10-4 club the next year, set· Anthony Munoz a nice send-off. record the last' week of the season.
tiiig the stanjlard for best year-to- But they're still a long way from His confidence rubbed off.
~ear improvement. Two other clubs even thinking about playoff con"I'd been in situations ,where
~ave improved by eight games: tention.
we'd turned it around the first
ljlew England (3-ll in 1975, 11-3
The comparison makes the year." Marchibroda said. "! came
t)le next year) and Cincinnati (4-11 Colts' accomplishments Seem more m knowing it could be done and
. ip 1987,12-4 the next year).
remarkable.
having a lot of confide~ce tha.t it
• A win today over the Bengals
"It's a real credit to their could·be done. I'd bee~ m the sttu·
would leave the Colts (8-7) with team," Shula said. "They've had ation where I ·saw 1t could be
~ .. CINCINNATI (AP)

:,hO

NISSAN SENTRA
XE
· caoene, tilt, cruise, local
lilclnew.

89 POfmAC GRA,NoiiS
PRIX
SE, pawar roof, allom~,

f'lFL to herd rookies into seven-round draft
By JOHN NELSON
:: NEW YORK (AP) - NFL
rookies will be signing for less and
rllight be waiting longer for it under
11!:W rules adopted in the ten!ative
collective bargaining agreement.
: According to the settlement,
r~ached on Tuesday 8nd scheduled
t0 be ratified on Monday, teams
r~portedly will be able to spend
arty $2 million total on draft choic$ in any year. And the draft, which
&gt;Atas 12 rounds, will be reduced to
seven.
.; "As the represen!ative of the
~rst player taken in the draft three
ol the last four years, obviously,

I've got some doubts about this
agreement," player agent Leigh
Steinberg said . ."But I feel like the
agreement is probably in the best
interest of the majority of players
in the league."
The obvious question now is:
Will college players be as ready to
come out early as they were before.
The answer is no, indubitably.
ln last April's draft, Steve Emt·
man gave up his senior year at the
University of Washington to sign
with Indianapolis for foilr years at
$9.165 million and a $4.165 sign·
ing bonus. Heismtlh Trophy y.inner
Desmond Howard, represented by ·

record occasionally but doesn't
pressure herself to'achieve it.
•
"It coml=s ~ross my mind every
now and ~. but as far as sconng
goes, l just kind of take that for
what it is in each game," she said.
"I don't set scoring goals for
myself."
Whether she thinks about it or
not, lhe record is likely to fall this
year, considering Stollings' 40
point·\)er-game average and the
968 pomts she scored last year. She
is averaging more than 40 points a
game this season.
She has been chosen Division
mplayer of the year in the state by
The Associated PreSs and holds 14
school records.
StoUinp is third on the girls alltime sconng list with 2, 773 points,
after passing ~e Smith of Logan
last week at.'2,740. Lisa Cline of
Millersburg West Holmes is second
with 2,858. . .
Stailings has signed a letter of
intent to play at Ohio State next
'
season.
When Pendell began co.aching

NE JOHNSON C

a

·'That is something that not a
high number of players are going to
do," Gene Ford said. "But Geno
has worked hard and was fortunate
to have the opportunity produce
itself.' '

E!

,

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1·800·521·'0084
I

'

Gene Ford, w~o knows a little•
· something about scoring points
after a 1,717-point career at Musk-'
ingum College, is also proud of·
Ge,no's maturity.
·
''The thing that means more'
than the points is the way he han-:
dies himself with his teammates,
with opposing players and with
opposing coaches,' he said. " He
was fortunate to have unselfish ·
teammates. And those kids have no ·
idea how many points Geno has, all '
they're thinking about is winning." ·
Ford passed the 1,000-point
mark early last season, and later in the season became the Bobcats' alltime leading scorer. He entered the
1992-93 season with 1,809 points
and now has scored 217 points
(36.2 points per game) for the sea- '
son.

ALL CARS AND TRUCKS

YEAR END
92 NISSAN TRUCK

The Bobcats didn't lose Tuesday night, thanks in in part to
Ford's 33 points. That total included ~ints 2,000, 2,001 and 2,002
which came on a three-point basket
at 6:43 of the second period.
Ford needed seven points to
reach 2,000 when the game started.
He didn't waste much time scoring
the fust six but dido 't score for the
last 5:33 of the first quarter as
teammates Scott Navicky and Josh
Chrisman tallied eight and seven
points, res)iectively:
Despite the accomplishment,
Ford doesn't think it is any big
deal.
"Those kinds of awards and
accomplishments aren't in my
mind before a game," he said.
"Winning comes fust. How many
points you score doesn't even mat·
ter unless it's a one-on-one game."
Coach Gene1Ford also didn't
know how many points his son had
after· the game but felt that win·
ning, along with other things. was
more important.

ized she had a talented athlete on
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) - In
her hands but wasn't aware of what most athlete's households, how the
was to come.
individual player performed in
"! wouldn't say that l was so competition would be the dinner
sure she'd be one of the top players · table discussion. But not at the
in the country. l was confident see- - Ford residence.
ing her as a freshman that she
As a matter of fact, if Geno
would be collegiate player," Pen- Ford's dad wasn't the coach of the
dell said.
Cambridge High School team and
"It just seemed like she went his mother wasn't the cheerleader
through a growing spun. I was con- adviser, you wouldn't .think his parcemed about her height when she ents had been following his sensaflfSt came in. She was abou~ 5-foot- tiona! career at all.
8.and she just developed in strenj!th
Neither morrt, dad nor Geno
and in all areas. It'S just been really seemed to be aware that Ford was
nice to watch her dedicate herself going to score his 2,000th career
to the sport.
point in the Bobcats' 79-45 victory
"! guess that's been the phe- over St. Clairsville Tuesday night,
nomenalthing - tQ see someone But in fact, none of them cared as
with her work ethic . Jt1s just so long as the team won, .
nice to have a kid say, 'Coach, can
"! have no idea how many
we come in and shoot? Can I s!ay points Geno !)as scored,'' Karen
after and shoot?'
.
Ford, his mother, said. "I worry so
"I've been'in it for 1.2 years and much about winning that I don't
maybe a dozen times a kid's asked care what he scores. I think Geno
me to do it, but not throughout four feels the same way. It wouldn't
year$ of her career."
matter if he scored 100 points if
they lost."

.. . ··~ S lE CO

__..,

$4,000

'

:
receiver Sean Dawkins of Cal, as great now," Steinberg said.
"There
may
be
someone
who
guard Aaron Taylor of Notre Dame
and linebacker Marvin Jones of goes ahead and challenges lhe rules
Florida State are all juniors who ... arguing that the NFL veterans
could enter the NFL draft next ought not be able to restrict the
rights of college seniors who aren't
spring.
even
r:!fL players yet," Steinberg
And running back Marshall
SSid.
And they'll argue that the
Faulk, the Reisman runner-up,
reslrictions
of a salary cap an: vioapparently h.as been thinking of
lations
of
antitrust
and shouldn't be
challenging rules that would keep
allowed
to
stand."
him out of the draft after completThe problem, Steinberg
ing only his sophomore season at
acknowledges.
is that "it might be
San Diego State.
difficult
to
find
a draftee who
What about them?
wants
to
halt
his
pro
career while
"There's no question that signwailing
for
an
adjudication."
ing bonuses and salaries will not be

would res.ult in a labor agreement.
" And what was also clear was
that under any collective bargaining scenario imaginable the veteran
players would always concede the
resbictions of a rookie salary cap.in
exchange for their ability to be free
agents," Steinberg said
Now, players know what the
rules will be for lhe next six years,
"so the only players who will
come out of school early will be
players 3111dous to get into the pros
and earn money."
Quarterback Drew Bledsoe of
Washington S!ate, runni~g b~ck
Garrison l:fearst of Georg1a, w1de

.Ford's parents care more aboul team's
vict~rY than son's 2,000th career point
Stollings ·three years ago, she real-

·

ONE ACRE BUILDING
LOTS AVAILABLE IN
COUNTRY- C.LOSE TO
'EVERYTHING

in 1993 season

LET·OLDS·GEO ·

The Affordable Dream!
HIGH QUALITY
NOT HIGH PRICE

Steinberg, came out after his junior
year and signed a $6 million, four·
year deal with the Washington
Redskins that also included a $2.85
million signing bonus.
. "In the past, players fearing a
future rooltie salary Cll{l have found
that a heavy motivatiOn to leave
school early," Steinberg said. "It
was part of Desmond Howard's
decisiOn." .
Steinberg also said it became
clear at this time last year that
Freeman McNeil would be successful in his lawsuit, which eventually
led to the demise of the Plan B free
agent system, and that the suit

staG~ing

glll!',es. Last Y~· we lost lhem.
Last week: ts a Jood example.
We got down 10 potnts early. lall
year, we would have bec:n folding
up our tent."
The Colts actually were in playoff contention until last week,
when victories l&gt;Y Houston and
Miami ended their wild-card
chances. Now, they're playing for
another share of that turnaround
record.
"We .:want to finish on a high
note," Marchibroda ,sai~ "We've
got a four-game wmmng streak
go mg. We talk about how you
can't just. turn it on; I don:t think
you, ca~ Just tum ll,~ff, . etther. I ,
don tthinktheywtll.
•

peaver Eastern's St~llings places state
tourney ahead of top marksmanship.honors

lo-.ABS.m ....

i--~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~----------~-~--..-----11!1!"'111!111111!1

done."
Defensive end Shane Curry was
Not many people thought this falally shot in Cincinnati last May,
Colts team had the temperament or Quarterback Jeff George strained
talent to do it The Colts took care his passing lhumb in an exhibition
of the talent pan by adding lineman at Riverfront Stadium and missed
Steve Emtman and linebacker the fust three games. Cornerback
Quentin Coryalt to their defense Ashley Ambrose, the Colts' secthrough the draft. A 14-3 season- ond-round draft pick, broke his leg
opening victory in Cleveland ·in September. Coryatt broke his
turned around their attitude.
wrist in October. Emtman tore knee
"It started with that big win ligaments in November.
over Cleveland," linebacker D~e
But here they are, winning their
Bickel\ said. "We had played good last four games, all by six points or
football in the preseason. That less. They rilllied to beat Ph9Cnix
helps you to get that confidence."
16-13 last week .as George threw
The confidence has withstood a for 328 yards. '
lot of hard times. This isn't a team
"We thought even last year that
enjoying one of those years where we had a lot of good players,"
everythinggoesrighl
Bickett ·said. "The difference is
that we're winning the close

'

~

il1

s·undey Tlmee Sentlnei-Page-C7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, WV .

BEAVER, Ol)io (AP) - EastPike senior Marlene Stollings
a shot at the state scoring
rd, but she'd rather get to the
toumament.
·
My goals for this season are
gfiltty much team-oriented - 10 go
further in the tournament than we
4id last year and ultimately going
W!lhe state tournament because I'm
l senior and I've never been,"
tlollings said. "As far as individual goals, just to keep improving
~n things from past seasons.''
t Eastern coach Becky Pendell
nfmns that although Stollings is
ly 215 points away from the
hio record of 2,988 career high
Si:hool points set by Joanne !nnerOan in 1982, scoring isn't her fust
PJiority.
' .
~ "! don't think she' s thinking
aJ&gt;out ~hat," Pendell paid. "I
believe she's a player that's doing
What's best for the team and indi. ~dual goals are nice but it's not
~r main concern."
' So far, Eastern is 6-0 this sea. Stollings thinks about the

•

"The only time we're going 10 Vikings lose, Dallas will play the
get giddy is reaching the ultimate winner of the other wild-card
goal," Johnson said. "Our goal in matchUP.
training camp was to improve on il
The Cowboys spent little time
year ago. We talked about getting celebrating after they defeated
to the point where we could play Atlanta 41-17 Monday night to
for the conference championship." · clinch the NFC East title.
Dallas will play the Minneso!a
Johnson said he now thinks the
Vikings on either Jan. 9 or Jan. 10 team is good enough to get to
if the NFC Central champions win Pasadena for lhe Super ))owl.
their first-round game. If the

o.c.m..r 27, 1982

I

Smith pushing for two goals in Dallas'
regular-season finale against Chicago
!

,.

"Have A Safe &amp; Happy New Year"

�'

•

Pomerot-Midclleport Gllllpolla, 0H Point PIUIInt, WV

Pqr Cl Sur.cllitTimn S1nii!IM

_ _ _.....;___ _ _ _ _ College bowl schedule----~_.....----....
· ; rn.

IJ'not •m

1

Here is a scMdllle of colleJC
bowl 1
, fnm dlis week's Silver Bowl 10 New Year's Day
aCiioo 10 ..a-rewpid'*' pmes
before die Slp:r Bowl

Dec. II

LlsVepaS'-Bow!

BowliD&amp; a.- 35. Nevada 34
Dec.25
Bllle-GnJ C1lsit

AtMt....

),All.

Gray 17. Blat 11

Alaloallowl

At"a

.. ._
Kansas (8-4) 23, Brigham
YOIIIII (S.S) 20 ~

Tllelday,~. 29

Copper Bowl . ·
AtT.-,Ariz.
Washinpln State (8·3) vs. Utah
(6-5), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
.
Freedom Bowl
At Auhelm, Calif.
S.oulhcm Cal (6-4· 1) vs. Fresno
Swe (8-4), 9 p.m. (Rayoom)
Wednesday, Dec. 30
Holiday Bowl
AtS.aDitgo
Hawaii (10-2) vs. Illinois (6-4·
1). 8 p.m. (ESPN)

A! Shreveport, La.
Wake Forest (7-4) vs·. Oregon
(6-5), 12:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Jolm tlaDc«k Bowl
AtEIJ'IIao,Texas
Arizona (6-4·1) vs. Baylor (65), 2:30p.m. (CBS)
Gator Bowl
At Jacbonvllle, Fla.
Florida (8-4) vs. Nonh Carolina
State (9·2·1), 6 p.m. (TBS)
Liberty Bowl
.
At !'tfemphls, Tena.
Air Force (7 -4) .vs. Mississippi
(8·3), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Friday, Jan. 1

T•ar&amp;day,Dec.31 .
lncleP'ftdenc:e Bowl

Hall at F. .e Bow!
At T. .pa, Fla.
Bos1011 CoUege (8-2-1) vs. Ten·
nessee (8·3), 11 a.m. (ESPN)
CottoaBowl
At Dallas
Texas A&amp;M (12-0) vs. Notre
Dame (9-1-1), 1 p.m. (NBC)
Citrus Bowl
At Orlaado, F!a.
Ohio State (8·2·1) vs . .Georgia
(9·2); 1 p.m. (ABC) ·
• Blockbuster Bowl
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
P~nn State (7-4) vs. SWifonl (9·
3), 1:30 p.m. (CBS)
Fiesta Bow!

At T-JII• Aria.
SytX~~~e (9-2) va. Colondo (9-

1·1),4:30p.m.~

RoleiiOwl

AIIL:t t'U, Cdr.
Michigan (843) va. Washing·
ion (9-2), 4:4!! p.m. (ABC)
Oraqellowl
AtMlull
Nchrasta (9-2) vs. Florida Swe
(10-1), 8 p.m. (NBC)
.
Saprllowl
AtNewOrleus
Alabama (12..0) vs. Mi8mi (110), 8:30p.m. (ABC)

l'elldl Bow7
AtA!IIma
Nonh CaroliDa (1-3) Yl. Mi
sippi State (7-4), 8 p.m. (ESI'N).!II!II•

Saturday,Jan. 2

S.l&amp;idaJ,JIL"
Se.iarlclwl
Molllle, AIL
2 p.m. (ESPN)
Hlllallowl
Atlloliul I
3 p.m. (NBC) • •

s.....,.. J-. 2l

East-W.a SU. Cl\.;-11:
At Stufanl, c.Jil.
4 p.m. (ESPN)

J&lt;

Em

--Ri

·P... dlily. 4tH .

.

:wSa:ar~

:•• W••' +•• Canmiuee.

::A•

•tk Coucnalioll Automation

.,..aiooiic
~ ... --- Oilier
· . . -wOia ASCS.

•.-C:l'~
.. .
.

~ produce

': )i••Jw ••w. ~-bedding
:JI
Mlyll• co.
:~.. S~··~~m Easte!n
. mp
as
c:tonan m
•J913, acid lias 113 ccedit hours
;faa Olio Ulli"'"sity widlu A.S.
.,. Ms. Collies - u d as a pro·
:. - - •s•i
• far 7 yars. i.D the
Mcip 0
1 ASCS Off~~:e:. She
b slned Ill teOIIio SIIIC Train·
: iag Co-•iuee, tk Oliio Slate

01-., J, 1993, We Must Pay Person11/ Property Tax On .Our Rem11ining Inventory.
111 Order To Lower Our Tax Uability We Are Selling All New &amp;Used Cars
At '111e BARE MINIMUM And Passing '111e SAVINGS ON TO YOU!

-.~Ms. C"'hs received lhc:

'

. ' '
~:....

:u., NASaF Sa'" 10 Agricul·

(

December~. 11182

Coshocton, Delaware, Muskingwn;
Sandusky, Scioto, Adams, and
Brown. She also attended Nsdonal
CEO Management Training in Little Roclt. AR with 19 other trainees
from across the United States.
The Gallia County ASC Com·
mittee: Walter "Dick" Neal, David
W. Pope, and Tom Woodward,
selec!ed Ms. Collins from a field of
6 candidateS on Nov. 24, 1992. She
~~ her offiCial duty on Dec. 14,

GAI.I.II'WS - net!~
orFli•4 t A. {Usa)
as
UWJ czrnMi~ dim:tor (0 the
Gallia 0
Apicalhnl Stabili .~ • 8d
valiiw SC:rvice
(ASCS). - ft:CII!IIIIy - - e d
by co 1J ccw•Wee &lt;:hainnan,
·oa· NeaL
·
.
· Ms. CoP' is a Meip County_
uliYC wllo lias been actively
; jiwohed wiiii111Jic:ahme all her
:tire.
inolw:d witii4-B fer 10 ~ lldd affia: 011 lhc:
~!'rip a-ty J.mcw Fair Baud
: . - 4 ~ ... - • IDCIIIIIer o(
•JIIe Us , d Jw!Ptl T-. She
;as llad aperieacc wi .. beef,

sac-_,

•

lute Awad for

Ia efforts in help-

ELIZABETH COLUNS
ing to advise Ohio ASCS employ·

ees of USDA policies and ways to

n:lay them to producers.
In February, 1992 she was
selected by t~Je Ohio State ASC
Committee as a county operations
trainee. This selection began 7
months or intensive progi3111 train·
ing in lhc: foUowing counties across
the state: Carroll, Clark, Clinton.

The county ASC committee.
through the oounty executive director, is resporisible for .local administration of governmen 1 farm pro·
grams such as tobacco, wool and
mohair, dairy refund, commodity
loans, consenisdon cost-share, feed
grain and whea~ and disaster. The
.county operates under the guidance
of the state ASC commiuee and
applicable Federal laws and regulations.
The Gallia County ASCS OffiCe
is located in !he newly constructed
C. H. McKenzie Agricultural Center located between the Ohio Val·
ley Banlt and lhc: Gallia County Jr.
Fairgrounds. An open house set for
Jan. 9. 1993. 1-3 p.nt ., offers a
good opportunity to stop by and see
the new office and meet Ms.
Collins and program assistants Car·
ol yn S. Petrie and Brenda L.
McNickle.

•

-Farm Flashes

~ilk
•

c trEx• •

A&amp;ed
Ap' ••e.&amp;: CNRD

GAU.JPOUS- Milk prod~ ­
• tioa iii Gallia 0
y 1m aadilion·
~ all]' lldd te - h e r one or two
: 'sp~~ fur its aiDirihuticn 10 die agri·
:

• calbiral iac:_, for the ,county.

: T-.15 iii llilt Jll""'ei:rim lR mea·
: s.al ..,. poolactiun levels in 21
-:Ky . . . . . ~
.
: nc paodac:tioa in. those 21

.,.at

3.5· percent this
10 a year elfa
:-lil:r. 'Jiiis ' I te sDIIII SllaiPt
::.011tto wltere the pr0duc1ion
:--.ilu
I J.4 pti
ii
lban
pevitas ,ar~ lao
d areas
as c.Iifonlia. Idaho, and
~.W: 1· &amp; * .-iii
I heavily to
:·doe owaaU iacnase. Idaho pro... . . . 10.4 p:iCUil- llill. this
:.Nos htz .._ a year earlier. In
• Miuesola, dairymea produced
~ 2 p:iCUil- milk with 3

: ·stall:$ was ap
~Noutwba

••

'=

:-die
·:S.C•

'85 CHEVEnE

6 cyl.• auto.• air con d.

Black, Std. Shift. Rallye Wheels

WAS $2495

1,488

IGW S

'II PDIIVEIIUE
Local1 Owner. Grey, Aluminum Wheels
luggage Rack, Loaded

WAS '8995

IOW.S6,500

WAS 51995

. As--

·,_-re--aMS.

IIOW SJ488

·e •an • ' ., 5lolw in mid-west and
I
=-hmePKfongeand
GO •t liiJ aduaselj affec;ed by
.... _Sc.e ..... •istt fr.d lhat
• . . . . , ; . o( Ibis magni-

: ... . .

'18 CUTWS 2 too1

,

I

Blue, Locally Owned, ~oaded

WAS'7495

flOW

6200

illlo willa months,

Jkse nl iody !lip incJeases are

:"P* woallliitidat: 1993 milk price
·la ' •ar 1S c:ae to me dollar
: .mrl992..
.' Two prop-s are being

JI

1

lOr 1i

Jay, Jm. S. Both

:.iril iiiQ:e ~ Hohkt, D.V.M..
·J;J.IIeaSita Vaeriuriu from the

'17 FORD TAURUS

'19 CAVALIER 4 too1

Auto., NC, Good Economical Family Size Car

Red. Auto.. Air, Tilt, CruiSf, AMIFM

WAS '3995

lOW $2,800

'17 IUKI CEIITURY 4 too1
Clelln, Silver With Grey Vinyl Top; Tilt, Cruise, Cassette,
Aluminum Wheels,"92 CENTlJ.RY TRADE-IN

WAS 14495

lOW 53,688

'91 CITWS SUPREME COUPE
LOADED, ONLY 17,000 MILES

WAS 111,500

IIOW~9,788

'

'91 lEO IIETRO COIIYERnBLE
WAS

.:sa..Air;;r,,888

'91 IUICI REIIL 4too~

Til!, Cruile, Pow8r Locka &amp; Windows,.
26,000 miiH. ~ ~

WAS '11,900

BW 5

10,888

'19 FIIIIIID FORMULA
Loaded. Tu-Tone Paint, Alum. Wheels

w;; ....c;~r,i88

WAS 55995

IIOW~4995

'83 RENAULT ALLIANCE
Only 60,000 Miles,

WAS'2495

Auti..,NC

IIOW

1790

'87 BUICK PARK AYEIUE
Local owner, just traded
WAS$5595 .
•ow 5

3,H5

p.IIL.,.

::PIOO 5I* Ulii.asily. _A session

:!t- 1-3

MeiJS County

•

loisiDlic lr.ns scaaered
tile Cayahoga Valley
' NaM¥•1._.,. Area races a

:.

10 -

·)Uoolp
••

..
.

Iaiit.
old Fabheo barn in
!Bn:dsYillt. for naple, is not a
•pm.y sia•t. nc dilapidated
•falll. I •Jie ._. - SO feet long
.... 42 kd wide- is falling IIJaiL
;Jloe .,.. I • ercJ wood elUerior
ly r+ bed It . .
' loeca boarded ro keep inunclers

..' nc

)las.......

AMIFM, Power Windows, Tlh Wheel
Rally Wheels, Dark Blue

WAS 11995

IIOW SJ ,488

'86 POIITIAC 6000'4 AMIFM, Til, Cruise, Wire Wheel Ccw•a

·WAS'2995

IIOW$1,900

'89 SUIIIIID 4 ....

WAS,;:;~A1r·;;;14,410

a. GmF Hoy. Purietor of
iloe 1M at ....,.,._ Falls, aad
. liis fduw "" sol,. Soulhem

--=dlb---

IWs . _ , Cllb,- pqaed 10

~

iii

..... s-

Jwdcjt h ce
lady 10 llll:tll: lhc:

MYSTERY FARM -This week's mySiery
farm, featured by the Gallia Spit and Water
Coaservatlon District, is located somewhere In
Gallia Couaty. Individuals wishing to par!icipate in the weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may wil!_ a ~S pnze from the

ROBERT L, DONNET .

Receives award
CHESHIRE • Roliert L. Donnet,
Assistant Shif! Operadng Engineer
at lhc: Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant,
~ived his anniversary award for
35 years of service to the company,
according 10 N.H. Tarr, plant man·
ager.
Donnetjoined OVEC in 1957 as
a Laborer in the Labor Depanment
and transferred to the Operations
Department in 1966 as a Utility
Operator. The following year, he
advanced to Auxiliary Equipment
OJX'rator and in 1975 he advanced
to Equipment OperatQr.
In 1980 he was promoted to
Unit Supervisor and in 1991 . to
As.~istant Shift Operating Engineer.
Donnet arid his wife, Virginia,
reside at 53 Vine Stree~ Gallipolis..

Ohio Valley Publishiag l:o. Leave your name, J
address and telephooe number witb your card •
or letter. No telephone calls will he accepted. AU :
coolest entries should be turned in to tl!e news- ;
paper otrte:e by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case •
or a tie, the winner will he chosen by lottery. :
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be rea- ~
tured by the Gallla Snil and Water Conservation· •.
District.
;

·USDA raising fee for plant
protection certificates to $2,600
WASHINGTON - The Agri·
culture Department says it is
increasing the fee for issuing a
plant variety proteCtion cenificate
from $2,400 to $2,600 to cover
administrative costs.
The plant-variety protection pro·
gram provides patent-lilc.e security
to developers of new and distinctive seed-reproduced plants ranging
from food crops to omamentals.
Administrative costs include
processing the application, search·
ing for information that might chal·
lenge the uniqueness of the variety
and processing the cenificate, said
Daniel D. J.Wey, administrator of
USDA's Agricultur'l Marketing
Service.
The fees will increase from
$250 to $275 for the application,
from $1,900 to $2,050 for the
search and from $250 to $275 for
processing the cenificate. An appli·
cant denied a certificate pays no
processing fee.
Current fees have been in effect
since 1989. Haley said.

The i970 act authorizing plant
variety proteCtion requires collec·
tion of fees to cover the costs of
issuing certificates. Required salary
changes and changes in the federal
retirement system account for most
of the cost increases, Haley said.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
three-member Fann Credit System
Assistance Board bas voted to dis·
solve itself and transfer its remain·
ing legal obligations to the Farm
Credit Syslem Insurance Corp.
The recent vote formally autho·
rized an action the board
announced in October.
"When we announced our
intent in October, I said this would
be a case where the government
stepped in, did its job and now is
stepping out," said ·Agriculture
Secretary Edward Madigan.
The hoard consisted of Madigan, Treasury Secretary Nicholas
Brady and William W. Erwin, a
working fanner from Indiana.
The board was created by
Congress in 1987 as pan of the
Agricultural Credit Act to aid the
recovery of financially suessed

lending institutions within the Farni
Credit System.
The Fann Credit System is a 75~
year-old financial cooperative f~
fanners, ranchers and rural cooper•
atives. It finances about one-third
or all agricultural credit in the Unit~ ·
ed States.
'
Earlier this year. because the
Fann Credit System has recqvered
relatively quickly from the 198o&amp;
recession1 two system banks pre-'
paid their assistance debt II year$.
ahead of schedule.
:
The board said no further fmancia! assislallce has been requested
by Fann Credit System institutions
and none will be provided.
·•
'
WASHINGTON (AP) - The'
United States will donate 50,00Q
metnc tons of feed wheat to
Belarus. one of the independent
srates of the former Soviet Union. j
''This donation will belt!
achieve two objectives," Agricul~
ture Secretary Edward Madigalt
said. "It will supplement Belarus~
animal feed supply to help enswt
adequate prodUCtion of meat, paul~
try and dairy products. ·
·.,

Forest management in southern OhiJ.
•

'

By CINDY JENKINS
to educate themselves on the best
Ir you are confused about thct
District Forester
way to produce their timber, the conditions of your woodlands andGaUia S&amp;WCD
best way .to harvest their timber so need some technical assistance oR;
GALLIPOLIS · Forest manage- as to sustain minimal damage to the how to manage them, call the Gil&lt;;
ment here in the upland central environment and the best' way to lia Soil and Water. Conservatio
hardwood forests of southeastern market their timber that wiD boost Dis!rict Forester for information ol(
Ohio were ai one time limited economic conditions for them· how to better manage your woods. ,
almost exclusively to an oak·hicko· selves and their area.
On Feb. 18, 1993a meeting wi!£
ry association of hardwoods. The
There are government agencies be held at the new Gallia Count)';
hardwoods which make up this that realize these problems exist Agricultural Center about wood )
a.ssociation ·have been cut exten· regarding the nation's timber sup- land management and timber bar;~
S!vely and althoug~ much regenera- ply. These agencies have individu· vesting. A panel of three profes-\
llon of lhc:se spec1es has ~urred. als that are schooled and trained in sional foresters will have in-depth;
on certalll slopes th?"e •s stiJ,I a lack the area of forest management. The information they will be sharingi
of oak, the wood .mdustr,Y s. most . Ohio Department of Natural with the public. Call the Gallia'
valuable cc:xnmerc•al spectes m the Resources Division of Forestry and S&amp; WCD at 446-8687 for more:
eastern Uruted States.
local agencies such as the Gallia infonnation. Refreshments will ~
have
County
Soil and Water Conserva- served.
Even
though
researchers
i
Hoy's group hopes to fmd indi·
project.
been
aw~
l'f
the
slowly
declmmg
tion
District
are
just
a
few
of
the
The
Gallia
SWCD
and
SCS
pro
Hoy admitted it would be a big villuals and community groups
regen~rauon of oak and ~ve. been agencies that are willing to offer grarqs and services are offered on a(
job, but said it would be worth- willing to rehabilitate and maintain study.mg
bow .to reestablish 1t. no technical assistance and sometimes nondiscriminatory basis without!
the abandoned barns, as.well as to
while.
pract1ca1
soluuon
has CO!fle about cost-sharing when conditions meet . regard to race, color, national on-:
"The valley will be less inter- find new, suitable uses for them.
as
of
thts
umc.
In
most mstances, the criteria. These services are at gin, religion, sex, age, marital sta-..
The structures. built with old·
esting if we permit the old barns to
the
only
way
one
can regenerate no charge to the landowner.
tus, or handicap.
:
disappear," he said. "Letting them time craftsmanship, are generally oak ts to clear cut an
area
so as to
'••
disappear creates a hole in the land- sound and capable of being saved,
scape. With them, the valley is he said. Each would cost from esrablishaneven-agedstandofoak
vta already present reproduCilon.
more interesting, more colorful, $10,000 to $30,000 to repsir.
However, many environmentalists
more historic. We can't permit
Hoy said the hardest part may who will not comprehend the truth
negatively, the po1entiil exists for
By STAN EVANS
these pieces of our past 50 fall into be finding suitable uses for the in this matter have put a stop to
less
aggressive fiScal stimulus from
GALLIPOLIS- After arise to a
disrepair and disappear...
barns after lhc:y are restored.
clear cutting on some of our nation· 150 year high, the yield curve is be· the new Administration. The fixed
Hdy heads the Benevolent Asso·
The buildings do not have sewer al and state forests where this prac- ginning to decline from its peaks as income markets are more comf~
ciation for Rural Nostalgia or water and all uses must be tice has been a successful, legiti· shon term rateS rise relative to long a&amp;le with imp10ving business activ;
(BARN), which is worldng closely acceptable to .the .park. ser-'ice and
mate silvicultural practice for sev· ity because it means rising gov~
with the National Parle Service to compatible wtth 1ts miSSIOn. Storment receipts. A weaker economl
eral
decades.
termThera:-sofmosave seven old barns the service age may be the best usc, he said.
The
powerful
lobbying
of
the·
menwm
is
a
'uncmay imply big~ budget deflcits:J
owns in the Cuyahoga Valley.
environmental factor has a tremen•'
(Stan Evans is an investment b·-~
dous innuence on the American lion of long tenn
ker for The Ohio Company in its Gal,
Lincoln Electric buying public, who is not always totally ratesfl1111ingwhile
lipolis office.]
~
,_
infonned on what is best for our shortrermratesare
General Motors p'"nt
forests.
beginning to im·
'
'
EUCLID, Ohio (A,P)- Lincoln
Today, forestry is becoming a prove, it is not
WELLSTON- The Travel Sflop Electric Co .. which makes small very technical profession. Specifics likely that the
of Wellston ~ntly aniiOuliCed the motors and arc &lt;Welding equipment; run the gamut from hydrology Federal Reserve will cut lhc: Dis·
addition of.Bill Eshenaur, Gallipo- expects to double its potential (water quality in our forests) to sil· count Rate any further. The Discount
\
lis, to its staff. He comes 10 the motor market with an acquisition.
vicultural to forest entomology Rate has tended IOparallelshonterm
CHESIURE
·
Larry
D.
Cleland
~ '
uavel industry with over 15 years
The Euclid-based business (particularly the Gypsy moth).
rates (90 day Treasury Bill) over the Maintenance Mechanic-A at the"
of experience in group, vacation, announced Wednesday it signed an
Becoming informed as how to past two years. ,
Ohio Valley Electric Corporation •
and corporate travel.
.
. agree·ment with General Motors better manage your woodlandl is a
While shan tcnn rates have the Kyger Creek Plant, received his'
Eshenaur entered the ind!JSIIY in and the Dayton-Phoenix Group to must if they are to produce com·
te tiaJto
b' her · 1993.
· th e eItc5riC
· moto," assets an d m
' •-,·ally
valuable
products.
It
t'sn't
po
n
mooe
'"
•that
we anniversary award for 35 years•1
1976 at the age of 16 years. He gam
~~
currently are not oftgthe opinion
serv1ce to the company, liccording l
g!lduated from Gallia Academy several service centers of GM as simple as never culling another the ·u
· h'ghe
1
Y w• move materially
r, to Nonnan H. Tarr, plant !ft8JIIIier ;
Hlgll School in 1980 aad alil!llded Delco Chassis Divisioo in DayiOil. · tree . lf it were, no more trees
Cleland joined 0 VEC on No~ '
"The acquisition of this cast would be cut and that would be unless President-elect Clinton prodie Wilma Boyd Care« School in
22,
1957 1!5 a Laborer and trans:.;
Piusburfh. Pa., where he received iron products line doubles the that or course we would all have' posesasignif1C811tstimuluspackage.
degree m Travel Aaency Opera- potenilaiiiiO!Or mllltet for Lincoln to do without the thousands of The current low rate of inflacion ferred to the Maintenance Depart.'
and complements the line or alu· wood products we use daily. The should be a critical variable 10 that ment as a Maintenance Helper inq
titn llld Relations.
Along with ·everyday travel minum and steel frame motorS CW'· United StateS will never outgrow oudook.On~otherband,longtenn 1966. The follo~ing year, bC will
plannin.J, Eshenaur will he the renUy manufactured by Lincoln," its need for wood. Better manage- · interest rates performed weU follow- promoted to Mamtenance Mechail&lt;l
Travel :shop's ~ialist for group said Donald F. Hastings, Lincoln ment practices by todays landown- · ing the election as rateS on the long ic-C.In 1969 he advanced to
uavelllld leisure IDOIOrC08Ch trav- Electric chait'lnail and chief execu- ers are a ll!ust. 57 percent .of the Treasurybonddeclinedfroma~nt tenanc.e Mechanic-S and in 197 8· '~
live officer.
,
woodlands m the U.S. are pnvately peak of 7.75'11&gt; 50 7.45'11&gt;. Although 10 Mamtenance Mechanic-A C1e • '
el
land and his wife Susan _;.._ . • ~
He continues to reside in Gal- ·
Lincoln Elec!ric employs about owned.
the credit marlceiS have JCI)miiy Chester.
•
.......... IR ..
lipolis with his son. ChriJtopher. 6. · 2,400 people. ·
.
'
It is up to those private 'owners viewed stronger business activity

:m~ult task ahead for
:·• AKll()N (AP) - A group bop-

' ~·

'86 CHEVY.CEUIRm 4 ...

Extension Office in Pomeroy will
feature !'Dairy Herd · Health
Update". Dr. Hoblet will highlight
new concerns and be available to
answer questions. A second session
will be held at the new C.H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center near
Gallipolis (beside Fairgrounds) at 7
p.m . The evening session will
focus on health concerns of raising
baby calves. We think that people
raising "bucket" calves for dairy
feeders or raising dairy replace·
meat heifer calves should attend. I
consider Dr. Hoblet to be one of
lhe best specialists th!!! I have had
an opportunity to work with in
Extension. 1 hope we will have a
good wm-out for these classes.
The Gallia Cowlly ·catUemeQs
Association and Extension will
host one of the Regional meetings
for the Ohio Cattlemens' Association on the evening of Jan. 13. The
meeting hig!Jiight wiD he "Production in Focus". Mr. Ellrl McKams,
Presidem of the Ohio Cattlcmens'
Association, will be one of the
speakers. The evening will slarl at
7 p.m. and wiU inclUde a free hamburger fry. It will be held in the
meeting room of the C. H. McKen·
zie Agricultural Center. Since this
is a regional meeting, we hope this
will give our neighbors iJI other
counties a chance to see our new
building.
Fanners TAX Guides are a little
late coming out this year. M,any
farmers use them as a tool i'n
preparing '1992 returns. We should
bave them available free of chatge
at the extension office by Jan. 11.

'

By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer

production up

By I!DWARD VOLLBORN

•
•

'14 ClmoLIT CAMIRO

D

ASCS announces new
county executive director
w.._

••

~hnts-~eutinel ·section

.:Farnl/1 lusiness

would-be renovators

Money Ideas

Joins staff

Interest rates

Cleland receives anniversary award ·;

sl

Main·,

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Pomeroy-Middieport-Galllpolla, OH · Point Pl..-..nt, .wv

Pta• 02-Sunday llmH Sentinel

•

December 77, 1812 ·~

Pomeroy-Middleport , G"lllpolla, OH Point PINunt, wv .
.

December 77, 11112

Sunday TlmN SenUnel · Page D3

. Economy was improving significantly well before Election Day
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Eeoliomla Writer
. WASHINOTON - Every day
smce the election, the headlines
have·cast a bright reftection upon
the U.S. economy: Consumer con!1dence !J lUlling, unemployment
IS dropping llild factay output has
~non the upswing.
The &amp;ood news, developing so
abruptly after Election Day, has
raised some eyebrows and some
suspicions.
Was there a tendency among
economists, and in the press, in the
days before the Nov. 3 election, to
suppress. news of an economic
recovery that.could hltve improved

-

President Bush's chances of win- existed.
ning re-election?
·
"It wasn't the big bad press,"
One oould be foirgiven for think· Martin said. " A lot of people
ing conspir-.:y. But Wle's no evi- looked around and tbe (improvmg
dence of it; even Bush's die-hard statistics) didn't match what their
suJIPOI1Crs dan 't claim that an evil SIOilUII:bs were telling them.''
toalition of liberal OCOII1llllists and
Martin said the administration
jOIDllalists sabotaaed their man. itself aealed a credibility problem
Instead, they say, the sudden by twioe prematurely declaring that
turnaround was an accident of lim· reoovcry .was at band - in 1991
ing: the economic news was turn· and : , i n 1992 - only to see
ing favorable, but 100 late to help the re
stall.
the presideat
"Many Americans ·weren't
(abor Secretary Lynn Manin, ready to believe things were Bettini!
who ua~led the count..y·during the bdter," she said. "They thought tl
campu.ign defendina Bush' s eco· was just election rltetorill."
nomic record, said she doesn't
During the fall. campaian. Bush
believe that a good news cover-up complained that news organiza'

.

lions consistently overplayed bad July of this year, peaking at 7.8 refute these claims."
economic news. He often cited pticeaL
Tbe flVUD:lDenl's wide range of
statistics compiled by a conSome conservative Republicans econonuc llatistics continued 10 be
live media watcbdo&amp;BTOUP show· blame Bush's opponenta for 111.1k- dominw by bad IIC'IIIS duouJbout
ins; that 91 peroent d th1l oconomic ing things loot worse than they the summer and early fall. Oood
stories over the past 1'1110 YQ11 had were with a steady drumbeat of news did not start rolling in until
been ptimari!Y negative.
criticism. Bot they fault the presi- just before tbe election.
Private oconomists say the nega- dent for failing to fend off the
"If one was following economic
tive dnunbeat reflects that the IIC'IIIS attacks.
reporta in August and September
" The Demcic:ratic theme was and into October, most of the indiwas ba.!~JC~~rolonged period.
While
.
tbe economy has that we were in tbe worst economic vidual reports remained, if not
been growing SJnce the spring of times since the Great Depression bleak, cenainly not great," said
1991 - a trend officially con- and that wasJllayar over and over Bruce Steinbers, head of forecast·
finned last week .- that growth again," said Paul Weyrich, head or ing at Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. "AU of
was the weakest on record coming the. conservative Free Congress a sudden the numbers began to
Foundation. " It wasn't a conspira- shift, and the shift took place ri&amp;bt
out or a do'lllllium.
·
It .was so sluggish that the cy by the media but a complete around the election."
unemployment rate kept rising until · inability of the Bush campaign to

r

.Condemned .killer to become first
U.S. inmate h~nged since 1965

NEW LOCATION • Handing over tbe keys to
Sue Johnson, (center), Outreach Center director, is Msgr. William Myers, (left), of St. Louis
Catholic Church. The former Head-Start build·
ing is owned by St. Louis and is tbe new site ror

the Outreach Cenler. Also pictured is Lynn
AngeU, (right), Outreich Center board of direc·
tors member. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kris
Cochran)

CHECKlHE

Outreach Center prepares
for move into new facility
By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel StaR'
GALLIPOLIS • Moving on to
bigger and better things is what the
Outreach Center will be doing to
ldck off its new year.
' Beginning Jan. 4, 1993, the Out·
reach Center will open its doors at
its new location on 285 State .
Street. Gallipolis, in the building
that previously housed GalliaMeigs Head Start, owned by St.
Louis Caiholic Church.
The center provides clothes furniture, and emergency funds f~rnot
only needy famil_i~ in the1U'e8, b,ut
for anyone who tS m need of asstS·
tance. The center will continuously
be 0pen throughout its move from
Thii-d Aveooe to State Street.
The Outreach Center will be
moving into a larger facility, maleing services more widely available
for area residents, according to Sue
Johnson, director.
.
.
"We've out grown our current
facility," she said. "More things
will be.reaclily available at the new
site."
I )
·
Despitd some opposition, the
Outreach Center and Woodland
Centers were in negotiations with
the renewing of the lease with
Head-Stan. which is a division of
Woodland Centers, according to
Msgr. William Myers of St Louis.
However, during . September,

Woodland Centers Director Bernie
Nichm, signed the lease to the Out·
reach Center.'
Also during September, Wood·
land Centers hoard members voted
to pursue other arrangements with
the Gallipolis City School Board
and Clay Elem~ntary. The school
board late.r_ dectded to pm HeadStart in Clay ~lementary. HeadStart moved tnto Clay Oct. 1,
acc.ordmg to Msg_r. Mye_rs.
'The arrangement wnh the Outreach Center is interest free,"
according to Lynn Angell. OR
board of dtrectors member. "The
same offer was made to HeadStan.'_'
.
Wtth lease tn hand, Johnson
hopes the Outreach Center will
own its new facility at the end of
65 months.
"By owning our own facility,
we 'II be eligible for more grants
that otherwise wouldn't be avai_J.
able if we rented or was located m
a public facility," said Johnson.
"We'll get from underneath in
time."
"But by no means does the Out·
reach Center have the affluence or
ability to purchase a building,"
added Johnson. "We still need help
from the community."
According to Angell, 50 percent
of the money received at the Out·
reach Center comes from the local

community . Local money that
comes in, she added, stays in Gallia
County.
Unlike the Outr.each Center' s
previous location, the Red Cross
will also be located in the same
building, making services more
accessible, said Johnson.
Already looking toward the
future, Outreach Center board
members are looking at ways to
further assist those in need.
"One of the goals ihat have been
discussed include a tnlllsient shelter," said Johnson. "People have
been going to the Gallia County
Ministerial Association or the 'Gal·
lia County Sheriff's Department"
"We' II be looking mto a grant
for a new site for the shelter," she
added.
Other added features ~the State
Streei site include a basketball
court, playground and room for
future kitchen.
"There is so much more poten·
tial," said Johnson.
In time, Johnson hopes the Out·
reach Cenrer "will not be just like a
store, but look more like an agency".
.
"We'd like to be a permanent
fixture in the community," she
added.
Those seeking assistance from
the Outreach Cenrer, can call 4467555. The number for Red Cross is
446-8555.

::-.......
"'~-~

·~

...

CLAS5Iflf05
For All

Your Needs

By JOHN K. Wll.EY
Asaoclated Press Writer
SPOKANE, Wash. - If three·
time murderer Westley Allan Dodd
gets his wish, be will become the
fust person executed by banslng in
tbe United States since 1965.
Dodd bas fought efforts to
appeal or delay his Jan. S execution. He says he wants to die by
hanging because he strangled the
youngest of his victims, a 4-yearold, and hanged him in a closet. If ·
granted clemency, the 31 -year-old
Dodd told the court
"I will kill and rape (children)
again and enjoy every minute of
it"
Although the state Supreme
Court approved Dodd's request to
waive fnrther a~, the American Civil Libetties Union has said
it will appeal on Dodd's behalf.
'. "This action ~g) is abhor·
~nt. It's not somethmg a civilized
country
should do," said Jeffrey
,,

'" '

' ••

"

...

..

SUNDAY PUZZLER
"1 "Ganlerbury - "
6 Couch
10 Protective ditch
14 Muscular
contractiOn

19 Highest point •
21 Cash drawer
22 Unemployed
23 Infant's lootwear
2~ Schedule ol
events
26 Pamphlet
28 Touch
29 Vast age
30 Kind of collar
32 More competent
33 Wedding band
34 The - Gees
35 Cut
37 Spirit; courage
39 Swiss river
40 Tardy
41 Young boys
42 Trade lor money
44 Atmospheric
disturbances ·
46 Pilal ingredient
47 Play part
48 Foray
50 Illicit drinking
ptace: slang
52 Teeth in wheel
53 Wonder 10
55 Three feet
57 Babylonian deity
58 Narrow opening
59 Butter squares
60 As lor as
62 Moccasin
64 Steak order
66 Yes, to Juan
68 Sanlord 10
69 Roll call reply
70•Edge
7t Promptly
73 Repulsive woman
75 Cylindrical
17 Transaction
78 Choir voice
80 Heavenly bodies
8t Japan onder
82 Go In again ··:
84 "Altered -"
86 "The Green- ··
87 Imbued with

89 Short sleep
92 Bay window
95 Procrastlna·
lion
98 Summer
highlights
99 Essence
tO 1 River banks
103 Rockfish
104 Grain
105 Rachel or Sela
106 Sun god
107 UK Princess
108 Musical
Instrument

1t0 Yellow ocher
111 Mr. Paclno
112 lndellnhe number
113 Keen
1t5 Savannah's St.
111 Defaces
119 French article
120 Baseball's
Bucky121 Prolound respect
124 Inlets
126 Qcc:ldent
127 Speechless
128 Ancient Hebrew
ascetic
130 Silkworm
132 Every
133 P•ohlblts
134 Perform
135 Stalk ,
137 Establishment:
abbr.
139 Belli
140 Lease
141 Ceremonies
143Vetv8
145 Glnger146 Sculptured
llkenes8es
148 Abates ·
150 Splash
152 More uncanny
. 153 ~ strongly about
154 Olympian Spitz
156 Extras
157 Fear
158 Assistant
159 Blemish .
160 Public storehouse
DOWN

1 Records

2 Dress
protectors
3 Crazier: slang
4 Urge on
5 Withered
6 " - Elsewhere"
7 Castor 8 - market
9 Cotton State
tO Distance runner
11 Baltic Sea Ieeder
12 In music, high
13·.Tellurium
symbOl
14 Melody
· 15 Vessel
16 IC;ettledrums
17 Withdraw from
a federation
18 Apportions
20 Consumes
23 Skeleton part
25 Cries like a
cow
27 Flat-bodied
bOttles
28 Quote
31 Strelsand film
33 Full ol zest
36 Frolic
38 Run easily
40 Roster
41 Ship's records
43 Fabrlcat.or
45 Cause
46 Lifts
47 Repetition
49 Haul with etfort
51 Choice part
52 Calling
53 Quarrel
54 Decrease
56 One-humped
camel

59- jelly
60 Baked clay
61 Hebrew measure

63 Give approval
65 God of love
67 Those holding
office
69 Helium symbol
70 Baby's
playthings
72 Memoranda
74 Proceed

76 Concerning
77 Scoff
79 Music variety
83 Anlsh
85 Occupant
86 Foot part
87 Portico
88 South African
Dutch
89 Greek letter
90 Come on the

.....

...
...

Scene

91 "War and - ·
92 Ancient
93 Rules
94 Roman lour
96 Dye plant
97 - Unlventlty
100 Danson 10
102" - Trek"
105 Need ,
109 Great Lake
112 Intertwine
113 New Jersey 114 Builds
116 High cards
118 Ranee garment
120 Say
,12t Stunted person
122 Holds In high
regard
123 Grafted: heraldry
125 Old Blue Eyes
126 Restaurant
worker
127 Le129 Morays
131 Slumbering
132 Facilitated '133 Tavem stock
134 Passageway
136 Tourists' guides .
138 Brief ·
140 Regretted .
141 Willis or Rex
142 Break suddenly
144 Back of neck
147 Aunt in Spain
148 Oahu wreath
t49 Full house: abbr.
151 Make lace
153 Astaire 10
t55 "Body Heat"
star: lnits.

,,,

,...
....·-··-•
~

-.-.

•

••

President Bush to collect significant
pension b~nefits when he _leaves

••

••
•

.....
•••

I

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i.

'

Recreation
Paib DepanmenL
Am ·
wortcrs have main·
tained. the conservatory and its
plants since th~ exposition ended in

_______ {~~------------~~----~------------~----------~~--------~~--

.,,c.
..
"

.'-' .'"

I

the ~nla towD or the same name. Tbou·
sands or people gathered on.the frozen banks or
the river to mark tbe blstorlc event, wblcb took
'plaee 216 years ago. (AP photO)

DELAWARE CROSSING REENACTED· A
reenactment or George Wabinpon's Cluistma
Day crossing or the Delaware River durin&amp; the
Revolutlona~y War takes placed Friday In tbe
waters betMen Washington Crossing, NJ., and

. ,..

.w§~-tive
. for till Cui

Associated Press Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. -The wait·
resses were as fully dressed as the
turkeys at T.~. 's Showclub when
the ordinarily topless ni~htspot
served a free Chnstrnas dinner to
the needy.
''They're only about pving and
sharing," said Edwin CII!Dpbell,

-....

..

*'

By ARTHUR H. ROTST~

·~

~-

October.
Among tbe things that will
relllllin in the J)llll&lt; for public . . II
the Franklin l'ark ~.

Topless club covers up to serve homeless

·-

"'
~.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) AmeriFiora '92 offtcials have until
Malth 31 to remove the mnains of
the floral exhibit llld • up mainlenance plans for !'* will 1.
ill
Franklin Part, cny I GMIOil officials say.
·
.
The gg.aae park was the stte of
·the•six-month international horti·
cultural exposition that ended in

Den'

...

...•

'· AmeriFlora has clean up deadline

Chinese mark Mao's 99th
birthday, gear up for centenary

..

'

whicb previously llonltd Gallla-Meip Htl4
Start. Pkt.. ed rr- left, IIJ'e: llelt T.,...., Rick
Schaefer, Sue Job•aOD, director; a•d Mar)'
MUter. (Tbaes-Seatillel pbolo by Krll Coclii'M)

TACOMA, w~~- (AP) _East
According to recently .declassi- ~ete~ Kro~er, ~o~iet spies then
drug deals, news reports said. Tbe paintings,
RECOVERED ART • Italian pollee omcers
Germany claimed in 1967 .to have fied State ~ent reCords. the tmpnsoned m ~ntatn.
.
stolen from the Massari Palace in Ferrara, Italy,
carry stolen paintings Saturday in Bologna,
five or six U.S. servicemen cap· newspaper said, the swap was 10 be
But tJ¥: Uruted States was du~ton Dec. 3, were rec:overed on Christmas Day In
Italy. Pollee recovered some 32 paintings Worth
tured in Vietnam and offered to brokered by Wolfgang Vogel, an ous Amencan POWs were really·•n
Boitano, an Alpine area near the borders or
more thaa $15 million tbat bad been spirited to
swap them ror two Soviet spies East German lawyer ~ho arranged · East Ge~many and sought more
Switzerland
and Austria. (AP photo)
lhe Alps ro.r .sale to coUectors and for barter in
held in the West, u. newspaper the retuf!1 of manr pn_soners from tnfo'!"auon ..The East refused to
reported.
communtst contra dunng the Cold prov1de dewls such as · na~es or
serial n~~ the .rec:onJs S81d
The traile, which never took War. ,
place, is detailed in State DepartVC?gel s West German partner, a
In addiuon, Bnwn refused to
ment telegrams from Washington man identified only as Stang~,~ ~e ~e Krogers and the COIIlii!U·
'
to East and West Germany and pqsed the sw~ 10 U.S. officials in msts rejected trades for other sp1es
other locations The Morning News 1967, accordmg to the records. o~ for Vietnamese prisoners in U.S.
Tribunere~Friday.
,
Acco~ng to. the offer, five or_ six hands, the report said. British offiThe Pentagon has said there is Am~can a';'Jators were .then m a cials reportedly swapped th_e
outside world, ·the· Peopie'S_Daily run by private businessmen whOin . ·
By KATHY WILHELM
no firm evidence that North Viet- hospital outs1de East Berlin.
Krogers m 1969 for on~ of thetr
Mao's day would have promptly ·
newspaper reported.
nam ever sent any American pris- . In excbange for the POWs, the own men held by the Sovrets.
AuoclatJd l're5ll Writer
been cl!lpped in jail35 capt!alists. ,
Many
of
the
tenets
of
Mao's
BEUIN$ ...:.. The childhood vUoners ofwar.to Eastbloe countries. East Qerl'lans demanded the
Most of Mao's key theories :
·
"Krogers," apparently l{elen and
. Juse of Mab Tse-nmg once attract- .brand of Communism have been
have
been scuttled by a man he .;
ed tens of 'millions of pilgrims a abandoned since his death in 1976.
purged
for being 100 prO-capitalist, ·
Despite
the
ambivalence,
·year, but only about 300 came
Xiaoping. Deng dismantled .~
today to a ceremony marking the Shaoslilin is going all-out to mark
99th anniversary of his birth. No Mao's birth centenary. The village Mao s huse farming communes in · •·
is planning to unveil a Mao statue, favor of family plots, resuxed pri- · top leaders attended.
In speeches at the ceremony in a Mao library, an exhibit of Mao vate enterprise and repla:ed MIM&gt;'s . ·
Shaoshan, some 800 miles sOuth· "relics," and a memorial garden, policy of Self-relianc:o with appeals ., ·
to foreigners to invest and lrlldc.
:
west o{ Beijing, officials began by the China YIiiith News said.
However,
Mao
remains
the
sym;
Hundreds of souvenir stalls have
urging loyalty to "tbe principles of
bolic
father
of
China's
Conununist
Mao thought," but ended uR been set up near· Mao's former
preaching "change of thinking, ' homestead, the Youth News said, revolution.
faster reform and opening up to the

..
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·-...

..

PREPARE FOR.._.""'"
tured In frollt or tile OullrmiOh
Joeatlon on Tblrd Aveinae in
are
dng r.eady to move. 'n!e eenter
be
at
·285 Stale Street, Gallipolis, In the building ·

Veltry Johnson.
· Dodd's mother, Carol Collins,
50, has said she wished her son
chose lethal injection.
"I just think anyone given the
death penalty should be given •
shot and put to sleep,'' she said.
Dodd was sentenCed to death in
1990 after admitting he strangled
4-year-old Lee ·lseli in October
1989, and fatally stabbed !()..yearold William Neer and his 11-yearold brother, Cole, a month earlier.
Dodd said be started molesting
youngesters when he was 14. He
was sentenced to sex-offender
treatment, but said he agreed to. it
only to avoid jail and continue
molesting children.
At Dodd's insistence, trial
lawyers said, witnesses weren't
called who could have testified that
he was well regarded by teachers
and relatives, or that his criminal
behavior could be related 10 a troubled childhood.

:)leport: East Germany held U.S. POWs

See Answer to Puzzle on · Page B-2
ACROSS

Cohen, an ACLU laW).er 1ept :smt·
ing death-penalty oppolleriis.
The last prison ban&amp;inss in the
United States were carried out in
.1965 in Kansas, when four murder·
ers wm executed. Two of the condemned, Richard Eugene Hickoct
and Perry Edward Smith, became
the subjects of Truman Capote's
book "In Cold Blood."
Today, death by hanging
remains legal in four stateS: Wash·
inston, Montana, New Hampshire
and Delaware.
It's Washington's official
method of eJtecution, ilthouah.condenined prisoners can opt for death
by lethal injection. The last han!!·
iilg in Washington occqrred 10 .
1963.
Death by hangiilg is c•deted
so gruesome that a thin screen will
be lowered before the trap door
opens on the gallows so witnesses
see only a silhouette, said state
Correctioll8 Department spokelmm
I

I •

..
. .....
~··

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"~ ·

...

, t.,,
.

t• 1

I

....

By DONNA CASSATA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - All those
jobs President Bush held before he
ran .the co1imry - congressman,
U.N. ambalslldor, envoy to China,
CIA director and vice president add up to a good pens1on when he
leaves the White House.
The annual allowance, based on
21 years of government service, is
·in addition to the presidential pension of $143,800 and Bush's own
personal income from a blind trust
valued at $1.3 million.
As be writes his memoirs in
Texas, Bush will enjoy the monetary benefits of four YC!US in the
House of Representatives, two
·years as U.N. ambassador, Jl!Ore
than a year as envoy to auna. two
years .as CIA director and eight
years as vice president
. .
Separately, four years m the
House would not entitle Bush to a
congressional pensiDD, acc~_gto
the National Taxpayers Unton,
which says a minimum of five
years is required.
But the pension is calculated on
"all government service," said
Mary AnD Maloney, a spokeswoman at tile OffJCC.of Personnel Management
When Bush departs Jan. 20, he
'wiD submit to OPM the .paperwor~:
on his congressional pensiOn, and

.. .

"a formula will kick in" to determine his yearly annuity, Maloney
said.
The formula is fairly simple:
The average of the three highest
salaries, multiplied by the years or
service, multiplied by 2.5 percent.
l}ush's average highest salary
was $104,567 during his tenure as
vice president and based on the
prescriptioo, his coogressiooal pension works out to about $44,000
annually.
·
,
The pension for former presidents is equal to that of the cwrent
salary of a Cabinet secretary and
this year the amount is $143,800.
The federal government also
provides for the rental .of office
space and staff salaries for the
remainder of a president's life. The
salaries can total SISO,OOO ror the
first 2 1/2 years, and $96,000 a
year after thaL
·
That limit doesn't go into effect
until July 1993 for BIBb, who will
~e $1.5 millioo to spood on the
six-month transition from olflce.
All told, Bush's IW!ual
amount to $337,800, flf
than
the golden parachutes given to
chief executives at some of the
nation's major corpondons, but
handsome nonetbeless.
Personally, Bush reported taxable income of $197,000 in 1991
on his blind ttust ,that Will valued at

=sims

\ II
;"

·~

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01.'

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$1.3 million and cash on deposil,
including Individual Retirement
Accounts for him and his wife,
Barbara, of Sill ,000.
The Bushes also own a vacant
lot in Houston valued at $79,000
and their estate at Kennebunkporl,
Maine, worth $2,196,000, according to the president' s most recent
financial disclosure. The couple
plans to build a home on the Texas

one .of about 800 people who
received a meal Friday. "What
they do the rest of the year doesn't
matter at all to me.: '
About ~0 volunteers and club
employees -:- waitresses, dancers,
bartenders ·ud managers - pro·
vided dinner,, served up with holi·
day music, Santa Claus and donal·
ed gifts.
.
A dancer who goes by the name

Plant fir,e kills three
Unable to break windows, they
NEWARK, NJ. (AP) - Three
workers hurled chairs at the wire- went into the smoky hall, l!ut the
reinforced windows in a doomed kitchen door locked behind them,
effon to escape a frre at a power and they apparently were ovmome
by smoke, he said Firefighters had
plant ·
Firefighters bad to use sledge- to break down metal doors to enter
hammers to break the windows the locked plant
Fire officials could not immedi·
open later to bring the bodies out
Fire investigators said a data ately determine whether the apparrecorder similar to an airplane ent lack of another escape route or
"'black box" may give clues to the way to open the windows viol!lted
cause of the Christmas Day blaze at the law, Krieger said. He said the
the O'Brian Newark Cogeneration plant had the proper operating perPlant Inc. , in which fuel oil is mits.
burned to produce energy.

....

was

Jewels said the diiiner
"Slving :·
back to society in a productive ·.
..
way. "
,.
"One guy said I looked just as ·:
pretty with my clothes on as off," ·
sheadded.
:
It is the fifth rear the club has ·
offered a free Christmas dinner.
When the club held its first dinner, "the public's P.Cfteplion of a
topless bar was btkers hang out ·
there, you get your girls with the
drug problems;··· s&amp;id promotions
manager Tony Dellheim. The dinner "opened the eyes of a couple
:
of people in the community."
Dellheim estimated this year's :
dinner would cost $4,000, in addition to donated goods and volun- ' ·
teer help.
·
BiU Williams, 49, said he and
his wife, Jessie, had their doubts at
frrst about going to a topless c;lub
for Christmas dinner. But, he said,
"It's all righL It just shows there's

tw~~~~e~d~:rth:f~~~~~~ bls :
wife, "I doubt if she lets me come ;

back,"

"

thi~:'!:~~~u~~f'c~~:i..~;;; Tamil rebels ki116 including official

Department spokesman I,.arry
Krieger-said "H thm's a malfunction, it will show us.''
The three workers - believed
to be the only people in the plant at
ush also 'is expected to inherit the time - ttad tried to oseape
money from the estate of his moth- through ~· windows in the
er, Dorothy Walker Bush, who died kitchen, Kti~er said. The 1'1110 4by-6-foot wmdows had double
in November at the age of 91.
In his retirement, the president quarter-inch panes embedded with
also will be able to continue the wire, he said.
"They obviously tried breaking
health plan he joined under the ·
Federal Employees Health Benefits them with chairs, and you can aee
the pockmarks on the glass,"
program.
Krieger said.

P1rw·

trict, and five others were travelina
COLOMBO, Sri LaJika (AP) Six civilians, includin~ a govern- to Polonnaruwa town at the time.
More than 17,500 people have
ment official, were killed today
·
been
killed since 1983, when Tamil
when their jeep was blown up by
rebels.
started a violent campaian
Tamil rebels in eastern Sri Lanka,
for
an
independent
homeland m the
milinuy officials said.
north
and
east
of
Sri
Lanka.
It was not immediately clear
Tamils
form
18
percent or Sri
whether the jeep bit a land mine or
17
million
people. They
Lanka's
if a rem~ntrol device detonat·
say
they
are
discriminated
against
ed buried explosives. The exploby
the
Sinhalese,
who
account
for
sion occurred at Valaichchenai,
75
percent
of
the
population
and
about 133 miles east of Colombo.
the government and miliMohamed Osman, the assistant control
nuy.
.
administrative officer fqr the dis-

Niger holds first multi-party election in 32 years·
.By DALATOU MALAM
MAMANE
Aaoc:lated Prell Writer
NIAMBY, Niger - People in
this West African desen nation
voted on a new constitution today
in their ftrSt multiparty elections in
m~. than 30 years.
If appr9yed, the constitution
would lead to mulliparty presidential and legislative eloouons next

....

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year. Thoie elections have been
poslpaned three limes.
- Niger is now run by transitional
Prime Minister Cheiffou Amadou,
who was chosen by a national
democracy conference in Novem·
ber. The conference sttiwecJ Presi·
dent Ali Saibou of bts powers,
although he still has influence on
the milinuy.
· Saibou was forced to, call the

.

·~ .

!.... . .... - '

·~ ~

have voted tlillkr a mulliptuty S)'l·
.tern since independence from
France 32 )UIS ago. The elections
were momtored by international
observers.
About 4 million or Niger's 7
million people were registered to
vote.
· Many voters in the Jarae. splinely 1JOOU)aled country hail to travel
dead.
1 It was the fust time _
Nigeriens toni ilistancel io cast bolkN,
.
.}

natiooal conference by the kind of
violent strikes and protesu that
pro-democracy forces have
.launched across Africa.
Tuareg rebels have threatened 10
disrupt die elections. Many of the'
desert nomads are fighting to
secede, and their clasbes with the
government have left hundreds

. . . . ......... . . . ·' ..... . .
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•
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Pomeloy l!tfddleport 01 mpolle, Ott Point Pla••nt. wv

Legislature closes two-year
Bl..,..._.,.._writer
ROURT E. MILLER
COLUMBUS - Tbe 119th
Oltio Geaeral AuemNy wiD quiet·
ly go out of 11Qine$S next week
after a ~yar lllllld tblt may be
besc remembcml for raising tlliCII a
week befOftl Ouistnw.
· The newly elected 120th con-

venes Jan. 4.

Ahhough the tax boost was
among the last of the bills, the
House and Senate churned out
more than 300 othcis which have
affccled or will affect millions of
Ohioans in the months and years
ahead.
Gov. G«qe Voinovich has not

yet acled on riiole than' three dozen.
· sent. him by a December cleanup
SCSSion.
.
Fcnmost among those is a bill
promising increased access to
health care for an estimated 1.3
million OhiOans who Jack insur-

ance.

The lawmakers sent Voinovich
on Dec. 18 and be siped Dec. 22 a
bild incleasina ~ taxes on the
wealthy and flo sales till 011 products such its .beer and ci¥arettes
while closlni loopholes m other
taxes.
Most of the taxes take effect
Jan. l. They 'Will raise about $195
million to balance the budl{et for

sta~d

the fiscal year ending June ~ and
another $990 million in the next
two-year budget period to try to
keep it in balance.
. Gongwer News Service, IDe., a
daily newsletter that reports onlefislative activities, reported that m
the last two years, the House
approved 202 bills and the Senate,
109, for a total of 311 . Voinovicb
vetoed four bills.
That compares to 317 by the
1987-1989 session- 223 House
measures and 94 ·from the Senste.
Six were vetoed by former Gov.
Richard Celeste.
About two thirds of the latest
bills, 210 of311 , passed this year.

a!'d· authorize permanent expulSions.
-Allow use of pictures of
delinquent youth In JJ01ice lineups .
-Rcgulare IDISOficited facsimile
(fax) tnnsmissions.
-Specify autopsies of the bodies of certain children. ·
-Mandate the swe to clevise a
model science cwriculum.
-Revise barbersho~ regulations
and allow them to g1ve Sunday
haircutS.
-Provide for regulation of electrolysis (hair removal).
'
-Extend housing laws to ban
discrimination based 011 family sta- ·
IUS.

Food routine set, but big question
hatf,gs in Somalia's $Ultry air ·
.By CHARLES J. HA,NLEY
AP SpeW Cui I I] .lllldeat
BAIOOA, Somalia - Micbacl
O'Reilly doclil't miss his old "SOCII" yet. But this gentle Irishman
S.ys he may start pining for the
lndly heavy machine gun before

The dilemma is crystallized in,

the two-sided question heard e'Vcry-

where around Baidos: Grimc-&lt;sked
Marines asking each other how
soon they can get 0111, aid wor1ter:s
and Somalis asking how long they
can stay.
The U.N. Security Council
long.
authorized
the international miliMore than two weeks after the
tary
force
to
end the chaos and
U.S. Marinea r.olled ashore in
the
swvali011
that resulled
relieve
SOO::;,~n Rcsrore Hope from years of civil war
- comhas
-dependable food
bined
with
a
severe
droughtin
siiJII!Iy linea iato the homeland of
At
least
this
east
African
nation.
famine, But for aid workers like
O'Reilly, and for millions of Soma- 3 SO;OOO people are believed to
lis, uncertainties still gnaw away at have died.
When the Marines arrived, they
hope, like locusts on a spring hardisarmed
tl!e &amp;ee-lani:e "security
vcsL
force"
that
had guarded food ship. Tde O'Reilly's gun. In prements
arriving
at Baidoa's airstrip.
Marine days, the men hir¢ by his
Other
guards,
intimidated,
hid their
relief organization, Concern,
111011111Cd the .Sikaliber on a vehi- weaponsWI'th ·their guards disarmed, the
cle they UICd 10 escort emergency
food deliveries to the starving in aid agencies complained loudly
that the advent of the Marines
outlying vin.,.
Conccm crews surrendered the might actually set back their food
big gun 10 die M.ines after Ameri- deliveries. But practical-minded
can and Preach
.arrived in young U.S. officers got to work on
this inland eros
town Dec. the problem.
"1 think it's pretty much been
IS.
But the gunmen have faded into fixed,'' said Army Capt. Kevin
the bush. and die Marines are not Cahill, a civilian_affairs liaison
guarding mobile medical ICIIIIS or here.
The American uoops still conother small sonies of the halffiSC&amp;te any heavy weapons spotted
dozen aid poups in Baidoa.
"Not having the gun could be a anywhere. But they're allowing
problem i( the 1100(18 don't contin- IIJ.CIICY guards to keep their assault
ue die optllllion and disarm every- nfles and brandish them outside
body," llllid O'Reilly, Concern's Baidoa, "as Ion$ as theY, don't
around m
' Cahill
local diRct.lr.

::C

said.
.
The agencies are ~leased with
the accommodati011. • Thi: Marines
are doers, .not ralkers." said LOckton Morrissey, the Australian who
heads CARE International's
Baidoa stslion.
Other problemS do plague Operalion Restore Hope:
-On Christmas Day, hungry
crowds waiting for food distribulion in Baidoa and Bardera, town
the Marines entered the night
befcre, got out of control. At least
one Somali was repOrted killed in
the Baidoa melee. The Marines
have not mastered Somali crowd
con1rol.
-A bottleneck hss developed in
getting food supplies inland from
the port of Mogadishu. A plan to
bring in 100 U.N. trucks from
Ethiopia has stalled because of the
-opposition of local truekers. Only
20 of the trucks are in use.
-Aviation ruel shortages in
Kenya this week slowed air ship· ments to Somalis. Thursday, only
three of five scheduled Catholic
Relief Services food flights arrived
in Baidoa
.
Despite new and continuing
obstacles, the operation is building
momentum. The Marines will soon
be escorting three, rather than two,
food convoys into the famished
countryside each day - about 72
tons of grain per day, enough .to
feed200,000people.

in

I

United Nations beating famine in .
Madagascar by breaking rules :·

.first service
since blaze

foodreacbes ·beneficiaricsinSoma- ~

Jia."
.
'·
When a ship arrived recently in .
Taolagnaro, 460 miles from the
capital, Antananarivo, local supervisors fanned out to aleri villagerswhen the food would arrive ancl
advised them to send workers to'
guard.,..""""" and deliver iL
-

.ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~-~""··

·

deposits- including long-term
c~rtificates of.deposit - are forfelted to the Fedm!J Deposit Jnsur,
ance Corp. ·
·'
The Bank of New England
failed in January 1991 but the
FDIC didn't begin countiJig the ISmonth period until July 14, 1991,
~ date ,Fleet F'mancial Group Inc. :
of Providence was awarded th11:
right to take over Bank of New .
England's remaining assets.
;
That means former Bank of" •
New England depositors have until' .
Jan. 14, .1993 to claim their ·~
accounts.
•·
•

~'Your

W''Birthday
tor opportunities In the year
the realm altha unusual. 1/enturea or anterpriles olthlsllk could pr~
vtdll you with yaw g111111eatsuccesees.
CAPIIICOIIJI (Dec. 22-.1811. 11) Don'l
be lnllmldated by challenges today. reg8(dleu of their lize or acope. Once
you meet them head-on, they COI[Id tum
out to be paper dragons. Major
changes are llhead lqr CapriCorn in the
coming year. Send lor Capricorn's Astro-Grapll predictions today. Mall $1.25
plua a long, Mil-addressed, stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o this
.......,..,..., P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to stal'l your
zodiac lign.
aquANUa c•. 20-Feb. 111 Try IIPI to
be stingy with your riiiiOUI'cea or pas, ',ouatoday. bul. by the same tol&lt;en,
II -/au have 101nelhing you would rather
nolland to a poor rill&lt;, say "no."
I'IICII (Fell; liD-MarCh 20) Your leadltlllip qualities will be evident 1o your
pews today, although you might not
rec:ognlD Jllem. Don'llake a back seat
II lllay llt8 calling lor you up Irani.
AAIII (llenlll 21-Aprll111 You might
. have to deal wllh aoma uncertainties I~
day, bUt don't tellhls disturb your blithe
spirll. Find ways to enjoy yourHif regard- of the circumstances.
TAUIIUI (April :IIIHier 201 You may
leal a ationg daalre to socialize with
lrlands today. Try to oeleCI ~ quiet aiIIICIIPI*e. b«:au.. althOUgh you might
need c:ompanlonllllp, you don't ..- a
toud anwonmant.
EFIII (U., 21-.IUM 201 You have a
subtle, authorllatlve charisma today.
lillian- -~ could enable you to
take conimand of situations without
shaking -vane up.
.CAIICIII(....,. 21-Julr 22) tnllead of
milking IMP judgmenta today. tal&lt;e adequate time to sift through all of the lnfonNitlon at your dlaposal. Each fact'
COUld be lligntiiCanlln Ill own way.
·LIO (.llllr 21-AIJI. 221 Procead cauIIOully 11 you •• required to make any
ftMJ alii or co-clll commll!'*'ll
today. Alit loll of queatloM II you leal
Be alert
8heed In

'

Deaths prompt action at ..
railroad crossing in Elyria .:,: :

Burlington express hub expands

e

bique, you have 4U percent losses,
and no one knows how little of the

Depositors in fail~d bank
risk losing $10 million

BOSTON' (AP) - More than
famine thanks to a World Food
Program operation that lias 17,000 former depositors of the
byPBSsed the government and gone failed Bank of New England could
lose a 1Qta1 of roughly $10 million
directly to the people.
"We've all survived the 'kere unless they claim their money in
PAM,"' said Ivolamiza, using the the next three weeks.
Those depositors, most from
Malagasy words · for "WFP
famine." Like many Malagasy Massachusetts IMid Connecticut but
people, whose ancestors came here also some from Maine, are at risk
from Indonesia about 2,000 years from a little-noticed section of the
ago, Ivolamiza usea oitly one name. feclerallaw that ensures ~its of
Rather than working with gov- up to $100,000, The Bost011 Globe
ernment bureaucrats, the World reported Friday.
Under the law, deposit insurance
Food Prnmm. or WFP, is relying
ping
~. n'OCKING UP FOR NEXT YEAR - Rosalie
exv.ires
18 months after a bank
on
drought
victims
themselves
to
after-Christmas
retailers wooed sboppers
·!':~bt, Ellie Foerltl,ler, ceater, and an
·
fa1ls.
At
that point, unclaimed
,
distribute
food.
That
~has
halved
bargains, llopillg ror more or the kind or buying
'II'Ulllan 1011 throiJih piles or Christtransport
costs
and
kept
losses
low.
that ~rave tbe Industry its best !loliday season iD
mas c:udl and aiftwnD lookia&amp; for bargains at
In Africa, war, inelrwiency, coryears. (AP photo)
Lord &amp;: Taylor ln the Water Tower Place sbopruption and ~litical squabbling
often tum a smgle dry spell into a
famine of insurmountable proportions.'
· .
That
happened
in
Ethiopia in
; WARREN. Ohio (AP) - The
Walker had been pastor of SecELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - Offi1984·85,
when
the
government
paslor oil church has been arrested . m•d Baptist Church and Unity Miscials
have begun reviewin~ the
refused to allow food deliveries 10
followiaa a fire at his church- SIOnary Baptist Church of
need
for
crossing gates al a railroad
regions
where
guerrillas
were
figbtownodhome.
Cheyenne before coming to Third
crossing
where two teens were
ing for independence.
• The arrest early Friday came Chnstian Church in Warren in
killed.
It is llaPPening now in Somalia.
•bortly after the parsonage in 1985.
GLANDORF, Ohio (AP) - A A U.S.-Ied intervention was needed
Responding this week to tearful
whicb Jwo 1;ved wu destroyed by
No one was in the house at the 116-rear-old church in this small
pleas
from the victims' relatives,
food deliveries.
6re and~ dctemlined he was time of the liJe fll'St spoa.ed at2:30 farmmg community has reopened to auarantee
·
Pittsfield
Township officials, the ,
l! ut in Madagascar, an island
1wanled in Cheyenne, Wyo., on an a.m. Friday. Fire department offi- following an Aug. 14 fire that
Public
Utilities
Commission of
nation in the Indian Ocean. off
!lfleSI wmllll aDesing robbery. the cials said the cause is under investi- caused $1 million in damagCII.
Ohio
and
L.orain
County commis- ·
southeastern Africa, the WFP
IJ"ribune-Chronicle of Warren gatiOII.
More than 800 people crowded turned instability to its advantage. sioners beglln reviewing the history
reporled Slllllllay.
WKBN-T:V· in Youngstown the St. John the Baptist Church on
the site 10 see whether a crossing
The Rev. Lionel Walker was reP.JI'ICd Fqday night that Walter's Christmas Eve for a midnight It launched a relief program in of
gate
is warranted.
1991 while the government
beinl held in the city jail. A police wife went ID police about a dcmes- Mass, the first service since the AUaust
High School seniors
Wellinaton
was distracted by an S-mooth-long
~ 011 duty Friday niaht said · tic dispute shortly before the fii'C
blaze iii the cburch, in northwestern gene{al strike for democracy•
Chad Coon, 18, and Scott Wright,
.no information about Walker occurred. ·
Ohio.
Attempts by PresicJent Didier 17, were killed in the Dec. 12 acciil¥ould be a~ until Monday.
''It wu a miracle that we were Ratsiraka and the opposition to dent M the Webster Riled crossing.
in there so soon,;, said 66-year-old reach a political consensus for the Two other youths were seriously
Chuck Upbaus. Uphaus' IU8JICifa- nation of 12 million people have injured.
·
thu donated the cliurch's f'11'81 bell kept the government paralyzed and
"The boys did not see th'at
for the church's 22S·foot~hi&amp;h
train," Tom Sheffield, the father of
.' TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) . Avera~ nights are running steeple in 1876, the year the cb~~~Ch out of aid womn' way.
one
or the injured boys, told townWorld Food Program officials
·Burlinaton Air Express has about 1.4 iili11ioii pounds, the com- wubuiiL
ship
trustees this week. "My son .
say government inactioo has been a
. eJPII""id iu wort fORle and added pan~ said. '
.
"We still can't get over it," plus.
saw It coming, but by then it was
· Burlinaton also has spent Uphaus said. "If you had seen how
'new Mrvice • its $70 million hub
··It die Toledo Expma Airport.
SSOO,OOO to boy 200 new pnnent bad this. was after the fue, you'd
. J!laploylllllll bas grown to 157 eontainera mainly to handle
have never
we could have
. 1'uJI.dtM . . ~ s-H1me wodten impolll from Central America and done
lbla in
four months. .
Is of nec.ber, compared with the Clribbean.
The rue
out in the room
BERLIN (AP)- Up 10 200.000 ers to live 10gcther u a family,"
The company recently opened that contaiM the clerf::y's robes people c:anyin&amp; c:.cJJet and IOidlel said 28-yar-old Ahmet Ouenes, a
llboDl 200
and 107 full:Jinle
Ill wb1J1 die hub flnt new flel&amp;lrl forwllllin&amp; officea in after two boya, qe1 2 and 14, lined tbe IUOOtl of Berlin In a , Tmtilh Kurd. "But things ~ ac:tRio de fanlero and Sao P10lo, were p1ayina with a bot-IJ&amp;hter.
:!"*- Bati811oollid.
Chriltmas villi apiaat neo-Nazis ting wcne and wone."
OrgJnlzers feued Christmas
., The hab, wba ••
I SqJt. 4, Brazil, Ita fust South American
Tlie &amp;of• escaped nahumed, and other ri&amp;h&amp;-wina iiXIIMtl•.
celebrations
and below-freezing
:,1991, bas been crldCized by !eli- fw:llldes
The demoastrators stretched
later cb.-ged with 1111011.
Burlington claims to be the and"We
.dents who comnlelnecl about the
temperatures
would
keep down the
111ere very fortunate," ·nearly five ~QUea into east Berlin.
largest international frel&amp;ht for- Uphaus sai4. "A few minutes Some protesters were in turnout. But police spokesman
• :nolle from~ air lllft'lc.
. The hub !was deliped 10 handle warder, with service to 160 coun- Ioncer 81)11 UJt whole church would wheelchain, a reminder that nco- Wolfgang Schultz said about
·lbout 1.3 millloJI pounds of f!ellht lriea. Most of iu business is in · have been tone-"
Nazis also have attacked the handi- 200,000 Germans and foreigners
:,.ell n!Pt. but 'WO!mne has topped heavier parc:els, averaglnl about
took pan in the peaceful. half-hour
The fire destroyed tum-of-the·! Jllllioft pcwnl• 0111ev«aJ COil· 160 pounds. About half of urliag- coo~ veatmenta valued at · ~ lilre ~and fORiign- . vigil.
1011'1 caraoes ~n~vet cwen~a.
· $20 .
Participants ranged from chil:lliaedday ~-lhiftl.
'
.
I

!'asiOT ofl¥arren church in jail Church has

By SUSAN UNNEE
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov·
ina (AP)- The U.N. commander
in Sarajevo says he was the target
of mortar attacks because of his
effons .to get' civilians out of the
embattled capital.
Gen. Phihpe Morillon said Fri- .
day that monars were fired on his
residence from Bosnian·conttolled ·
territory for a second day.
The attacks indicate someone
was upse1 over negotiations to
demilitarize the city's airpon and
allow civilians free passage, Morillon said.
•
.
"It is clqr I have been targeted," he said. "It was a very elegant way to wish us. a Merr.y
·
Christmas."
SaraJevo was otherwise quiet on
·

•

.this iso1aled region are staving off

'

By MARCUS ELIASON
·Assoc!Med Press Wrhtr
TEL AVIV, lsrael· (AP) Israel on Friday banned aid from
reaching deported Palestinians
through Israeli lines, and Lebanese
troops pulled nine expelled men
fr'om a hospital and forced them
back to their freezlng .tent camp.
The developments were the latest in a standoff between Beirut
and Jerusalem over who is responsible for the 415 Muslim extremists
Israel deported to Lebanon last
week.
The International Commiuee of
the Red Cross had asked Israel to
let supplies be delivered 1o the
Palesunians via Israeli-controlled
southern Lebanon.
But the government, in a sharply
div.ided vote; said supplies could
easily be delivered from Lebanon, .
and that the Red Cross was being
u~ as a ~Ito score propaganda
pomts aga10st·Israel.
The 8-6.Cabinet vote In favor of
the ban dramatized the concern of
some ministers that Israel, having
~wn international censure for the
deportations, would be made to
look worse if it blocked the supplies.
.
,
The vote, with two abs~ensions,
was also instructive in giving
insight into the hawk-dove lineup
in Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's
6-month-old Cabinet. This may
prove critical ncx1 year if the
Mideast peace talks reach a ~tage

"!'eek•.The }taJestlnlans said they were usiiJI up , ,
their lasl food rations Saturday as the Lebanese ,
prime minister.appealed to Washington to press ,
Israel to take them back. (AP photo)

PREPARING FOR PRAYER- One ofthe415
Palestini8Dli expelled by,larael and marooned Ia
southern Lebanon, washes his feet before noon
the makeshift teat camp
prayers Saturday
where the men have been stranded for over a

w!1=h:r=~=~!~

.

'

-Regulate child day-care ::
camps.
. •
- Require doctors 10 ad~ the
staic if IIIey test positive foc AlPS. '
- Allow betting 011 horse races
ielevised live from other states,
.
-Make stalking or menacing •
others a crime. ·
..-Regulate. bun~ee jumpiilg.
-Provide vending machines 111 •
roadside rest stops;
.
·
-· Reduce froiD 21 to 11 1he
members of the ·Ohio Board of
Educati011.
- Authorize borrowing $1 bil- •·
li011 for state constructi011 projects. ' :
- Tigbten open meeting laws by ·
specifying advance notice requirement.

, . .

w.h~J:~:
_

~

•

where Israel hss to decide whe~ intemati011al ~ 011 lsnlel to
to make painful compromises to take back" the Palestinians, InteritheAmbs.
orMinisterAryehDerisaid.
Israel expelled the Palestinians
Lebanon, deteremined not to
on Dec . 17 in a sweeping crack- become the fl11ldamentalists' exiled
down on Muslim fundamentalists home, hu demanded that Israel
m the. occupied territories after six assume responsibility for the
lsraeh soldiers were killed.
expelled men:
.
·
Lebanon has refused to accept
On Friday, five Lebanese sollhe Palestinians or allow relief to . diers burst into a hospital in
reach lhem through its lines. The Rashaya in southern Lebanon, took
showdown has stranded the out nine deportees and brought
expelled men in a barren no man's them back to the lent camp nine
land between Israeli-held territory miles south. The soldiers refused to
and land contJ;Olled by Lebanon.
comment, but hospital sources,
. The Israeli Cabmet met Fnday speaking on condition of anonymim a. hasuly arranged sessi011 after ty, said the troops forced the PalesRabm and his longtime·rival, For- tinians to leave, ·over the objections
eign Minister. Shimon Peres, tool&lt; of doctors.
different sides on the Red Cross
The Defense Ministry, closed
request
,
for the lloliday, could no1 be
Led by Peres, dissenting minis- reached for comment.
ters argued for flexibility,, saying
Three of the Palestinians were
Israel had nothing to Jose by letting · taken out on stretchers. Lebanese
aid through its lines.
ambulances that ferried the men
"The deportation would in no · back to the ciunp were carrying 450
way have been undennined had we pairs each of socks, gloves and
decided to make a humanitarian underwear, and several boxes of
gesture and a'ree to the Red medicine, said Dr. Khalid Fassid of
Cross's request,' Tourism Minister the Palestinian Red Crescent Soci·
Uzi Baram said.·"J really tliink the ety, the equivalent of the Red
government made a mistake Cross.
today."
At the camp, the Palestinians
Rabin's supporters said letting had fasted ~ro!" dawn to dusk
lhe supplies through would be tacit Thursday, c.laimmg they.were preacknowledgment that Lebanon was se!"mg therr only remammg supright to refuse responsibility for the phes - potatoes and pa~ta. ~ut
deported men.
F~day they were seen cooking nee,
"If we give in, that will trigger chd:peas and canned meat, ~pparently drawn from caches h1dden
8 slow process of extremely heavy
·
from n:porters.

United Nations commander fired
upon, Sarajevo otherwi$e quiet

csac:a::r:rth
as sbe spoke lif her !!OIIb~.

{

Rabin bans aid to deportees,
narrowly wins cabinet backing

•

a

By MICHELLE FAUL
' "We lose less than half a per-ABK:lated Presa Writer
cent of the food we bring in,'' said
ANKAZOFOTSY, Madagascar Dominique Ftankefort, a Dutch
- The heavens torment the scrag- woman who is deputy director of
gi,Y bwh of soutbem ~da.gBSCI!f the U.N. aid program in Madagasw1th sue~ frequency that Its inhab1- car.
"Normally, you have losses
tants g1ve names to the worst
dro~gltts.
. .
.
from a bag that falls overboard,
My ~usbJ!nd died m. the upn- broken bags, to theft at warehousbelt-getung-ti~h~r famme and I es, in the harbor and during
lost 1 grandchild ~~ the tro~- tranpson and delivery. In Mozam· too-big famine," said lvolamtza, a
··
'

,..-time
:z=;

-

-·

after passing 311laws

. Their subjects fll!lge far and
Wide. Some of them will:
-Allow immediate license suspensions of cnven failing sobriety
tests.
.
-Allow use of photos to publicize parents delinquent in child
support.
-Increase to $25 from $10 the
fine for not usins auto seat belts.
-Require usable seat belts in
twticabs.
-Create health insurance coverage of 11l8111Jll0l[r8es.
-Man~te public heanngs in
permits for infectious waste facilities.
·
-Outlaw weapons in schools

1992

December 27,1912 '

'

•

•

too late. They had already been •
hiL'•
_.,.
Relatives of the boys presented·
PUCO represenlalives with ·a peti- ·
lion with 1,700 signatures calling ••
for the crossing gates. Fred Agler · •
of the PUCO told the families new'
crossbucks would be installed oa
signs at the crossing, and said the.
agency would work closely with •
county government.
'" ·
At the request of Pittsfield and · ..
Wellington IOwnships, street lightS,
have also been installed at the ,;
crossins.
.,
Because the road belongs to the ~
county, the decision on crossing"
gates will rest with county officials', ~
The PUCO, Lorain County Ensi- "
neer ~en~eth Cariley and county., ;
~omm1ss1oners are studying thO •• ..
ISSUe, and a hearing is to be hold in 1 "
mid-Marc:h at the Pittsfteld Town-• :
ship Rail.
" •
"'

--

'

'

About 20~,000 demonstrate against neo-Nazis ~~:

'

dren to those who lived through - :
Adolf Hitler's Nui regime.
• ·
Similar candle-light vis111 were; '
held earlier in Munich, Fraald~ ,;
and other cities to proteat the 4- , ·
month-old wave of rlahtlst vio- · •
lence.
"No one Is really doina any• ·
thin' ~ these people (the
Nazu), ' said Ruth Stunz, 34, wbQ' ~
stood boldin1 1 small toreh wltli ,
hu 12-yelr-old c!Ju1pw, Rebp!dca, · &gt;
.n~~·sBmadenburgOato. . '••

neo:
I

yaU

••In(AIJI.
need of - s:
• lipl. :a) Tll&lt;e palM

VIIQO

to ·be extra tolerenl of people wllh
w11om you dell on a -to-ene bula
t~ey. KIIICII'IIII and underatandlng will
help you _.......,.your objectives.
~ (lepl. a.oct. 21) ProjiCII
WllfN you utiiiH your Imagination and
~- oould prove to be •pea.~y ~~~~~ lor you today. Keep
'yaw locua on GrMtlve endNYOI'II.
ICOIII'IO (Ool. :114 No,, 221 People

0

•

.

w

Christmas, allowing many, people
to venture~ut of their homes for .
the first ti e in days, collecting
wood and ater under falling snow
and a weak winter sun..
Continuing a tradition of sharing
holidays in a city once known for
its tolerance, many Christians
opened their homes to their Muslim
neighbors. But this year most could
offer only a cup of coffee.
Eleven planes brought 110 tons
of aid into Sarajevo Friday. Relief
flights had resumed Tuesday after a
three-week hiatus.
The .city has been besieged by
Serb gunners for about nine monlhs
and has been without water, electricity or telephones for the past
month.
The fighting broke out after
Bosnia's Muslims l!nd ethnic
who already Hke you wtl be even more
enamored loday, beCIIuae they wtlt see
exceptiOnal quallllestn you that are ab...,t In others.
·
SAOmARIUI (Now. 23-Dec.. 21111 Is
very tmportani at this time that you finalize something you rcantty started
before laking on any ,_ endeavors. It
wtll give you gratiHcatlon to know you
have finished what you started.
Dec. 27, 1992
Generally speaking, you should be
lucky in the year ahead. HoweiJer, you
are apr to be most fortunate in love.

Croats voted last February for independence from Yugoslavia. Bosni·
an Serbs have seized most of the
•republic since then, and at least
17,000 people have been killed.
Slobodan Milosevic, the president of the Serbian republic who is
widely blamed for instigating the
war, consolidated his hold on
power in the face of international
opposition.

PHILLIP

ALDER

gift. Send 1or Capricorn's Astro-Graph

predictions for the year ahead by mail-

+a

11·11-11

., 8 6

tAIOS43
+A8732
WEST

,

+97 5 2
'Pi09743
• 9 76 2

EAST

+.K QJ 10
'PKJ
+ K QJ

••••

+KQJ9

SOUTH
+A643
.AQ5 2

t8
, +10654

Soutb

Wtsl

••

(I

Pass

+)

Pass
Pass

East

s+

Obi.!

Pass .

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Feeling

sorry for yourself today is an unproduc·
tive use of emotion and energy. If you

The transience
of silence

. .

18 Wanted to Do
Oozor A 1ont1 cloorlng, aoavat-'

tnv -to. woldtng, trUdtlng-

or t...bor on llillbod oloo wll
houl oqulpnwd. I:GO tilt I :OQ ,
woolulayo 304-GJ'.3411.
,
E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. l~.

Trlmmlnv, Troo RltltOVII,
Trlmmtnv, Froo Eltlmallll

1

Mloa Psuto'o Day C.. Contw 1
Block Woot Of HMC On 1o I '·
Plila JI.F I A.JI. 4:JO P.JI. H
QualhJ And Elljlorlonoo 1o 'Tile
., Conclm For Your Child'a
Caro. Call Ua For A VI... lnfonl
ITodcUera 114 Ul 122?.

Pfw..

~-Ago·1224.

P-

·--·

invitation and will not be
diacriminated againat bn
the ground• of race, color,
or national origin in
consideration tor an award.
Minimum wage ratea for

..... 14-~t&amp;.
LOST: Pl P......,., Hsnnon

Tonlor,
whllo/graJn.., rod . - collor,
old, RtOOtty blind and cleal,
Umpo, neads tnodlolns. 40121111.
Part.

•-

Sl. :JM.n!l-1:120.

'

.

aet for completion of thia

work sholl be ool lorUt in
the bidding propooal."

1--------Galllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

PI•• and Specifications

are on file in Ute DeparbMnl
ol Transportalion and the
olliee ol the Diolricl Deputy
Director.
JERRYWRAY,
Direclor ol Transportation
DEC. 27. 1992; JAN. 3, 1993

ALL Yard Solos IIUII Bo Paid In
Ad-. DEADUNE: ~ :00 p.m.
the dsy bolorw the od Ia to nm.
Sundly odltlon . 2:00 p.m.
Fliday. JlondiJ odllon . 2:0Q
p.m. SIIUrday.

Public Notice

&amp;AuctiOn
Rick Plouwn Auclkoft Company,

By Pbitlip Alder

8

205 North Second Ava.
Middleport, OH
MIDDLEPORT - S. Fifth - A 1\\ story 3 ·4 bedrooms
home with fenced rard and central air. I( you want ~~
convenience of liv1ng irr town you better \ook at th1s
home.
$32,000.

RACINE - Fomily N-.1 - For lhis 1y, story 3 ·4
bedroom home with 4 porches, halt basement, dining
room family room, and small outbuilding, good sizad lot.
.

$26,500.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Alee Run Road - Instantly
appealing is this 3 bedroom modular with 2 baths. You'll

by 1- and are set forth in 7
Yard Sale
the bid proposal. "The dale .;....,_......;~..;.,;...,:__ _

love to coma home to cook supper in this beautiful

kitchen and then 111lllll in front of tho fireplace. This is
sitting on approx. 1\\ ac111. Was $45,500. •
NOW 543,500.
• •

Public Sale

lull tlmo OUCI...,_, complolo

auction A·vtrglnll,
Uclltlod
ltti,Ohlo
WM1
-.
77).1715.

Wodotneyw'o AUGIIon Sorvlco,

Rio Orandl, Ohio 114-246-1112.

cuss a matter that you are enttt~siastic
about with a negative friend today. His
or her dark perspective could over·
shadow your optimism.

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 Be sure you

knoW what you want today . Otherwise,
you may stnve very hard for something
only to discovef .It provides you wilh in·
signHtcant.gratlflcatiOn when attained .

W.nlod old lubo typo ......
TV'o. Old rodlo fllriS A lubn.
Old Jukl boir•. 111101 too ottlor

GEMINI (MOJ 21·June 20) If you lac total fa1th in your ideas or plans today, it

Ha-.

lhon 1810. Cal Chuck - ·
2220, P.O. 511, -

will be very difficul1 for yOU to gain the
endorsement of others. Believe in your
cause or bow out.

WV21211.

Wllnlod llondtnv llmblr, - r .
oak ond olno. -.a»4te

Be realistic

-tloya 1:30 tiii:GO PJI.

regard ing what you expect from others
today, or else you could ~e severely dis~
appointed . Put yoursellln others' shoes
to get the proper perspective.

Wllnlod To Buy:
Wllh Or Wlthoul

~-

.

MIDOLE PORT - S. 5Ut - Has 8·9 rooms, 4 beil~oom.;
and 2 full balhs. look at the extras - has mainlanance
lrae siding, heat pump, lanced backyard, open stai-y,
lonna! dining room with bay windows, full basement, and
it is close lo tho schools.
$46,500.
LANGSVILLE• Deltler Road- Apprax. 2 actUs of beautiful
bottom land. Waler and electric available. Agreat home
site or mabie home site.
$6,500
MIDDLEPORT- N. Second- Acommercial bwtcing with
2 bu sinesses downstairs, and approM. 23 rooms, and 10
baths on lha 2nd and 3rd floors . Could be convertad into

apartments.

ONLY 545,000.

POMEROY PIKE - A one story home with now siding,
newer roof, newer double pane window $, and plumbing.
Has 5 room s, 2 bedrooms and a one car garaga on

approx. ons acre of gtound. Was $25,900.

Autos

Jlot- Colt
Lorry llvefy. IIWII-11301.

LEO (July 23•AIItl. 221 You will be SUPportive ol people you love today, yel
you might respond only in a lukewtll'm
fashion. Go all out instead ol straddling

Top -

Paid: All

Old U.S,

eotno, Gold Rinas,- Co1n1,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin tlltop,
.. '-"1 A - Qslllpolla.

lhe fence.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Although you
won't try to neglect responsiblllly loday,
your heart won'l be complelely in your

Employment Services

work. A poor attitude could produce un·
desirable results.

LIBRA (Bepl. 23-0ct. 211 At social
galherings you are the one who usually
knows how to enjoy yourself and have a
good time. bUt today you mlghl "' a
sheda too selective. Don'l neglect
others.

SCORPIO (OCt. 24-NOV. 22~ Try nol lo
be overly proteclive ol thooe In your
charge today. Your lnlenlions will be
good, bUt they might lind the riBtrllnts
too reslrtctive.
SAO ITT AI\IUB (Nov. 23-0ec. 21( Usually you express yourHII In way• th1t
land ld encourage others. Bul today
your praise and enthullasm might lac%
lhel' customary sincerity.

"

CLASSIFIED ADS
as"'rm&amp;fket

lor evefything.

.

367·1157 Aftar 4p.m.

Found: Built Hound. 304-675-

Wilkeoville and - ·
F.....: Bulovl.. Plila, lloc:k,
Whllo Spaniol.· Juol A Grool
and upgrading e.xloling Uttlo Dog. 11447-GtOI.
hlghWIIJ oigning.
F.,...:
Dog Ylclnhy:
The Ohio Deparlment ol ~ CroOk Rood, Has Rid
Charcoal Groy, 814-446Tranoporlation hereby noti· Cotlli,
fieo all bidclero Uta! it will IMO.
affirmatively Insure lhal In lool: 1100 Rotnlngton Shoe Gun,
lm..-tlott .01 Yolo
any contract entered into On lulovl.. Plks To
pureuant to thia adver· lie,_
Brtoll lie,_ Rood, Rewanll
lisemen~ minority buaineu
enlerprises will be aHorded
malo Soil Point Himalayan
lull · opportunity to sub mil lool:
est, vary lrlondfy, Nayloro Run
bida in reaponae to thia

want 10 leel good about yourself. do
th&lt;ngs that are helpful to others.
ARIES (Morch 21-April111 Do nol dis-

CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 221

•r:.:t

lleg.-127118.

OFFICE 992·2886

Laurelville, Murray Clly, 6
Lost &amp; Found
Pomeroy, Rocine, Rutland, =~=~~~~==­

predetermined aa required

Nortb

A..raln
Nowlltlou•h tam
a-~.
Ylller·
PIUe. CMI Todlir, •1
4M?ft•

Real Estate General

Grande, Vinton, Glouster,

thio project hue been

Vulnerable: Bolh
Dealer: South

Business
Tralnlnll

shire, Crown Clly, Rio

ArUtur,

your zodiac sign.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You have

21•

Zaleski, and varioua routes
and eection• by reMoving

ing $1.25 plus a tong, sell-addressed.
Opening lead: • 10
stamped envelope to Astra-Graph, tlo
this newspaper. P.O. Box 9t428, Clove- - - - - - - - - - - _ _ J I
land . OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state L
excellent leadership qualities which are
likely to be obvious to everyone except
yourself today. It's a shame to rain on
your own parade.

Eldotty .... NMdo Homo With
PUtiiUC NOTICE
Nuroe Aid Caro, Pay $e00111o.
NOTICE TO CONTfiACTORS
Townahip John AobiMtte, 114-4414040.
STATE OF OHIO
IT;:::~;: 1:.:m:eet:ral7 P.M., Hailalyllat Noodod: Paid
DEPARTMENT OF
II
28, 1992 Vacallona Osurantaod Wllgoa.
TRANSPORTATION
Rl ns.
114-441-7217.
ColumbUo, Ohio
Howtll'd J. Footer
RANGERS
o.-nber 18, 1192
Goeen Township Clerk GIIM PARK
· Wardenl,
S.Curtly
Conlracl Sal•
DEC. 24, 27, 1992
MaiN.enanc. Etc.. No bp.
Legal Copy No. 93-35
Noc:o110ry. ,.,._ Info Call
'MN648 Ell. ITtO 8 A.M. To I
P.M. 7Daya.
~~UN~I~T:P~RI~CE~~CO~N~~TRACT
·STP-FY93(t)
Announcements
will be
Ston tho now yoar right wfth tho
received
office of the - : - - - - - - - - Of&gt;ponunhJ to wO&lt;k In 1
Director
lhe Ohio 3 Announcements
prog,..atve and tum Dritnled
Department ol Tr'!"•·
cs..lal office. We are tooklng tor
portation, Columbue, Ohio, No Troo- on Klngo Fonn I dodicl&lt;tocl, onergollo ond HI~
molivalod lo loin uo. If
until 10:00 A.M.. Ohio 011 tOnvo - Rood, ar- your
IN CN..Ivti and lttrac1ed
Standard Time, Tuesday, Townolllp. ·
to dllalt whh 1 poohlva onhude,
January 21, 1193, for lm·
pleue end a comptetH r..urn11
plovt~~~~antaln:
lo: Dr. LitTY itonnody, 441
o-aJ Harllngar Pkwy., lllclo
Alheno, Gallla, Hocking, _:4:-=~G;:I:.;.v;.eaw~a~y~=- dloporl,
Olt.
Meiga, Vinton Counties, :: ..u a
Pu
Ohio lor Improving oeclion &amp;:. sho::!'J WJ::;. u:',:; Wllnlod: Phonnacy Tach 1r Big
ATH·50·3.36 on United Kldo.llld Flnl Serloo ur Shala, Bend AtN PMrmacy, U•
oeMnce helpful, Mnd r..umn
Staleo Route 50 in lhe lf4.411.12M.
Tho Dally Sontlnol, P.O. 7291',
Villageo
ol
Albany, Ten chicken., 22 whH1 clucb, lo:
Pomeroy, Oltlo. 41718

Syracuae, H1mden, Me-

NORTH

14 ·

·Help Wanted

Amesville, Buchtel, Chaun· 10 ~ duc:ila, 114-1115o3118.
cey, Coolville, Jeckaonville, UKC Aoglotorod malo Trilling
Trimble, Cent•vllle, Che· won.... clog,l14-1112-3tl'l.

unauached.

receive more advice than substantia!
assistance. Parting with your resources
could be a p8intul experience tor you.
Capricorn , treat yourself to a birthday

__P;..;u:;:b:;:llc:....:..::Na:.:t.::lce.:....._l11

r

BRIDGE

which could be the most Important of
all. Times ahead look promising lor the

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan..191 People
who come to 10u lor help today might

Public Notice

:eiiien.t-ltnet .,. Feels lb home
bedrooms, one bath, beaublul kitchen cabinets. newer
roof and FA NG furnace.
$1t,500
DOmE TURNER, Brokw.............- . .....991-5111
- BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................992-3051
DARLINE STEWART.................. ..............992-IHI
SANDY BUTCHER............................... IINJ71
JERRY SPAADULNG...............-..(3114)1124411
OFFIC:E.......".--···········.................-o.. •••ll2·2111

.•

�.. •..
Times-Sentinel

18 Wanted to Do

!&lt;IT 'N' CARLY LE® by Larry Wright ·

...

e14 441-1110.

"""' . . -. Wolk to ohot&gt;

a 46 Space for Rent

mow11a. C.U IM ttl 31fl EOH.

INOTIC£1

lo-.. . .,

0000

EST,I[!'£8, Nl Jocban Plu

OliO vALLEY PUB~ CO.
nnamnwndl•thlt wou do buel-o

:r·

- h · - .lddlepool, Ollie,
fvmt.hecf 1. room
utllttiM
Included, clop a r nqulrad,
304oll2·21116.

- - ~ j ... knOw and

...

Nq!
I""""'~
lllitll·u..l JtM1 ha" lnvMIIgolod
lha 'ollotln§.
.

· Fum- Apl: 1 BR, 1120 4111.
$260. UtlltiH paid. Itt 4tt ~41d

fi,OOO Wooldy Polonllol L.ocol
- k 1Sac1o lloulo M.... Sol1 1·

-7p.m.

1111-1!75-VEND.

Ell,

Fum-

1120

Fourth

Avenuo, ClllllpOila, tlll$/llo,
Utii•IM Paid, IU Ul t411 Aftlr

Real Estate

Mobile home lot tor re!ll In
Chnhko. 114-141-1788, f14-IGH37.

'

CIIAF.TS

neon TowniJ.Ip. 1'14-256-1147.

Homes tor Sate

•l

chao,
- · 1£, ..
..,.,
nrrta.-ator,
..___...,.,
HOlM

Nat:rBank. Racine, OH. 114-141-

'D 1911 &lt;' ~Y

~E"

1------------.,----------1
II'IC

42 Mobile Homes
f R
Or ent .

2210.

2:11c!rY. ~ bod- s 112 bllha,
2 . . . garage, cantril air, in:

pool,*'---

-nd
1;;00 PM, loto cof ...,_

41 Houses.for Rent

BE.lliTFUL HO\IIIE FOR SALE
:l.lalorlcalCOnw Lal· 81e
~.!.l!..· 1"·n~alacl'·
1·F~~~-·

HauM lor In Muon, 304Tn-8587aftortlpnL
Larae 2 . 1101\', lth •

~.-

Satlla, 3 ~ lodroorno, -

Mar., Pl. Pit. S largo bodroomo,
2 tuft bollia, _,..._, dining,

HYAC, Haw Corpot. Anltabla flmlty, lfolng, , toundrr """""·
l~latty.ll~ 141 2211
::::·~~ ooonth, rwlaron- a
Alncll OIJIO ""-, 3 bodrooma, A ·•ta~--~~,!~' 2205.
1' both, ~~~- garogo, •• _ ...., - · -·
- - ...-.; conlral air, Nice 2frdnn, home In Pomeror
t~~ ~ ~.. llaon. for ..... Of' buy on contr~ct.
S30ot mon., 1300 ~h. no
poll In hama, HUD oecoptONI,

2 bodr- ~. por month

paldtiSO,• .s£~tt"aHkon
' ~lr~no
polo,
U115;00 M.

2 1- - W.tor Pold, Ne
f100

=·~ ~~~'r.i ~··

44

Apartment ' .....
for Rent

_...'"" and HI up, oklrtlng
ond ....... 1o1100o837-&amp;25.

llodrm.,
116o12,
lumlohod,
.nr11 air, aiUrtlng, will llnance,
$100 cjown, $1381....,., 614-11112z:!I1,11+311H22l

'

1· card of Thanks

Real Estate General

ac•

-- _.,
-...~•v•llne.

New "'- ,... , _

................... ..
the chtalll pMI

ThiN'• an ...,pliMM
the! . . always laL

For thrH y..,. C8111101
• - your winlling
smile and gentle woye,
In our hearts we love yo"
still.

We remember you todly
and 1lweya will.
Your loving fomUy and
friends.

J

1nd

Uir AI. 2DIIIIala Route 141, 114-

-1422.

...,..----- ..

~o..uao~ $11 8~~ 7+ ftUtllllltl~~!!,o

·-·

~,

.~

Complotly Fumlohad mobile
hom•, 1 mile below tol!fn, over·

looking river. No Pete, CA. 61+

, 32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066

Allen C, Wood Reoltor/Brpkar-448-4523
K~ llo!llan, llealt~r/Brokllr ~8-097'1
oae C'aniJrbury etdtor-446-3408
-Ia oore, •ltor·2lil-1741

Lordy,Lordy
· Sandy is 40
and Neal
• t 00.
..I
zs,

Hope
C40

Moore!

'

Help Wanted

1•
BIG BEND REALTY, INC~

•

rlilil. _. 81
I~......,

510 SECOND AYENUF. GAWPOUS

PROPERTY LOCATEO WOODSIDE ROAD- 2 mcbi1e
hom11, one a t076 Allen , one bedroom, onoi t073 ·
~.:..~ bedroomo on a ISO'x 455' lot. Call lor
~M~

'

HUNTERS PARADISEI Approximately 8t
acret. Can be yours. Deer and other emal
glll!lllbound, includng wid turtley. 'Thera .,.
bulking altea with no mtridion&amp;. limb.- hal
not been harvelted lor yHII. On OOLIIIy
with electric availellle. Act now and you Will
· have a place to hunt IIKI cal yow own. , . .

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINEIB • Located on Rt. 7
(Eureka), 30'Jt38' block building with ·stor&amp;~~e In
ta r--.nt. 70 I. bcwll8(je on Rt. 7 . Lot Nns to Olllo
Rivlr. W.e ul8d u ODIIMtjent man, DRASTICAllY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $32.000.
LOCATED IN OAWPOIJS. VINE STREET· o4 ranltd
unitt, good ~ J1I'OPI'IY. Cal tor mora lnlormllllon.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Rodney vllagell. Call lor
FOR YOUR CONVENIENcE TRY
lOLL FREE NUMBER
'

BUY ON LAND CONTRACTI • 3 bedooom,
beth, living room, kitdlen, .850 acre lor
$35,900. Ownara 11y make an ollllr. Wll 11110
oeM on land a&gt;nlraCI with $6,000 down. 1411
CHESHIRE VILLAGE Is thla wei eatellllohld
uaed car business on Rt. 7 wllh two bey
garage end office. A mobile home llat hat 2
, bedrooms, t bath, livina rm ., dining nn . .nd
kill:hen. Asking $99,500.WIIhout rnobill homil:

$89,500.

.., .,.
.-

til

r•

London Frog top coal ,..
lx"h;,t liM IM-441-

-

Sailt _ , ..... ,Army SUipiUI
tor,... ... - Olllce,-

l ;flll Pll, ';;. ~ .!r,'

Jr ..... .. ·-·

.
_
,. _
In

Cn.. na • Utile Southern Eleganae In Your
W.? Than you mull aa thia home. Be
lmpovlled u you 11ep Into lhe owmxed formal
·living room &amp; dining room with 2 firacllecea.
CozY family room, kitchen and beth. Llpatalra
you will find 2-3 badroama, plul e large beth
witt whlrtpoal tub. Ample outdoor ..... .._..
large WWited in perch, aun pdO, 2 ca- garage
with lhed and 2 horae llails..Cal todllj lor 'frAil
chanol to own your 'Mini-Ta...• Priced at only

(CALL US ANYTIME)
446·7101
-or
1·800·585·71 01

-

Don't Milia Anolller !lowe... WitlOulllllinO ·
this home firolll Located in a quia! lanlliy
orianted rieighboot\ood, !hit 3 bedroom home
olferl a lot without aJking lor a lot. l#ge
kitchen/family room ... with ... tedial oaillng
and okylighta, lliving room, 2 IIIII ballla,
weer ted in pon:h, allao:hed ~sge . l.rtlge lot.
City achoolt. $59,900
lliOP

LAKE FRONTAGE
Nice 6 moms, 3 becilnom cottage locetad with frontage
on BLUE LAKE in Clay Twp. Gallia COunty. '!-~• acre,
Boat, Fish and enjoy tha lake. You MUST -this beautiful cottage and locetion.
.
1700
BUSINESS OFACES ' SAU:SROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT ~USE .

,

=

...,,*•• v_.

'*""·
'I:
0

Here'• Your Comw of Country! Vary nlosly

remod&amp;led home telling on.2.M acm of Gollia
County. Oak kitchen, teii!Odalod bathroom, nliw
windowl &amp;more, leava you with ittle to do. Free
gao heel 3 bed-oomi, t l8rge bath, living room,
dining room. Bam I outbuilding. $51,900. 1224

.

• •'-'SSELL WOOD, Broker
PHYLLIS MILLER
MARTHA SMITH
PATRICK COCHRAN

Real Estate General

e ....

Carolyn todey. $77,500

...

tar

~·

M.

Ut ·

.,s

PROFISSUINAl SlRVI&lt;l MUlS THI DlffiiiiKI
VI"GINIA SMITH, BAOICEII .................. -1111
EUNICE NIEHtl, IIUU011................ .4...T117
RUTH BARR, REAlTOII .......................44141it
DEBORAH SCITES, REAliOR. ...........4 - UNDAfRALEY, REALTDR .............-.1111111
MICHAEL lllllEA, REAlTOR............. I'll lfll
PATRICIA ROSS, rounon. .... , ........:141-ISJS
.rnEti ~WORDS. . .... .....
.. .....141-1101

'llDJ._ .___e1 tAl
............

King Blza, Ml""' a
IJtjlit On Neitd Board, Hloh
-olol, Good CondKion. Bf4.
~4116130.

•
•

t ...........

1762. FOUR BEDROOM HOllE - 2 batna, roomy
ranch home located In the country.

Exter'IIM

wort!;

completed as tolows: new Thermo AMikil wndowa,
security doors , steel siding, hea._y 1001, ldtcMn,
ceramic lie entry extended Into klcl1on, 16.&amp;3 - ·

cement walks and pad. See thiS Mme and ltop
looking elsewhefe.

t6 3 0 .
E J( CELL EN T APARTIIENT 81.00.
INVESTMENT - Good money maker IN TOWN.
Large apt. bldg. wttl'l 3 rwo bedrOOm apts.; 2 one
bedrm. apts. pkls a COllage wlh two apll1merU. This
properly nas been wot&gt; malntalnecl. Raducad price.

IRICK RANCH - SHuoJIO on 1 c. m.l upper
Rt. 7 close tolhopptng center. Tlis home toot"""' 3
bedrooms. 2 lull balhS, ktlcnen ana dining area, 2
belkooms, utllty room, Jamly room, ktlchen i1 basement, 3 car garage and a 6 car detached gwaga . CaM

•

::

lor more lnformlllion.

•

·.

·.

OWNER SAYS MAKE OFFER! IMMEDIATE
POSSEliSION • Just wailing lor youl 3
boictoom randl style home, lYing room, family
room. 1 C81 gerage wllh .,Ia. door QP8II8I' IIKI

1HI COULD BE YOUR YEAR TO LIVE !N STYLE!
Unique style thet 11 with this lovely A.frama homil In
Pameroy. Feawras tO room1, 5 bedroom•. 2 betha,
fir8fll*», deciWig, patio, C*patllroughoul, woodblmer.
AiiDA·II'ame atyled 8"'8111'·1 outbulding on 2.725 actllt.
Clole to town with a alight feel of oacluaionl CHECK IT
OUTI $05,000

st .

lktllcal

:

lnstNIIIentl

:-. i ,,·estock

toUII

'

.
"

.. .
i •

'

..

HARD TO BEUEVE IT'S NEARLY THE END OF tll921
WE WANT TO THANK YOU FOR YOUR BUSINESS
THIS PAST YEAR AND LET YOU KNOW WE'LL BE
RIGHT HERE TO SERVE YOUR HOUSING NEEDS IN
tll931

446 4465

~--------~------------------~------~~~--~~
'

THE .EST WAY TO IEGIN A NEW
llol A NEW HOUSEl "BRAND NEW"
hr.rne Cllmllltly under oonllrUCIIon It neerty ready
nLw family to occupy I Home located In .fairview
Sllbdivillon teaturae 1aoc&gt; eq. It, 3 bedoooma, allic ,_..,
2 car garage, full bel8mat~ on 1 ecra with asrobic aeplic
sytttim. COME SEE TODAY! $85,000
.

YOU'VE 8EEN WANTING TO START A·BUIINESS?
WAIT NO LONGER! 380 eq. it. commercial building
wllh t bediaom apartment upstalra. On Main St. in
haevlly traveled na. HIY acce11. Worth taking e
MCilnd look all $t 7,000

441·1514
379-2184
446-4255

245-9697

71 : Autos tor Sila

.,

.•

••••

1717. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land lays
wall. 01&lt;ter 2 story brick home wlh 4 bodroomo and
hOmo In need ot rapatr. 121 ac. 1M. 011 SR ctosata

Pinecrest Nursing Home .

• .3 lobed ooom

iii~ ......... 1110.

"" ChiWi . , lla1ion •aon
•!!!f: - run """'· ._ .,. •
21"i
IIIIIJI .. 111to1o '""
ueo.
J~Mi~7N410.
'

HEttRY E. CLELAND...._ ...........,.......... - •••• ..112.. 111
TRACY BRINAGER--··..

··-----·--1411-2438

.lEAN TRU88ELL ...........- -·--··..--.. ~-..M•ZIID
OFFICE.--.............................................- ..112-2211

tntormation.

1940. NEW LISTING ~ 4 bedrooms , 2 batns ranch
wilh llnlsl10d basemen!. Home Is located on

'

basement wllh family room, 2 car garage, pool and

SALEM TWP.• SET BACK, RELAX ... ENJOY! lliil
home hal M.U and .-.,., need a thtngl Modem brick
ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 112 batha. lull flnlohed
bailment, 2 car garage, attic space, llrepl-•.
lfiPianoa, ~ road wiitt 22+ - · .... lncluda bam,
gond, lenclna, and extra trlliler hook-&lt;~p. (A MUST SE~
HoME I) S130,100
.

•

:w

palio.

REEDSVILLE- JUST STARTING OUT? lliil af!otdable
home could be juat what you need. One lloor block home
witt 2 bedrooms, bathl, one ca- ~age. ,.... ..aeeoted
pooch;11K1 proclJcll bulking. $t8,000

..'

il830. CHARMING HOllE • L-""lual o11 SR 35
- Immaculate ranch wllh new inpi"D\ffH'Mnls. Lo~ely
carpet ltvoufP'QLt, new Old!:, root 3 years otd, 2
drms.,LA, din. nn., ldl., ..-~n~nporm , onice
rm. or SI&amp;Ktj and basement .

fill. SPECIAL NOnCE • PRICE REDUCED - 6
ACRES 11M. - Tlllefully dt&lt;:orotOd. 11 toto! rms., 415
bedn&gt;oml, 3 baills, l.R, DR, kit., utllly rm.. lui divided

No

F;• · rn SL•ppl1es

-.Oppoowoly~~~ IIINDEPENDENTLY ·OWNEii NIDOPEAATED

on Sl ate route. $15,000 .

equip. ' kllchen, breaklast room ha9 a .tg. window,

own Mme along wiltl a mnlal income. Gal tor more

=~~CUlL

'

1817. SWEET AND LOW - Comlortabto small 3

bedroom home. Lot 66o160'. nrral water, b. gas heat

apaftmenls. Full baths, living room. kitchen, Total sq .
n. appro• . 1440 . Enjoy the fre edom of owning your

ll4lalw od Hl. .layan ldtlona,
,.,_; Aagl . .rod Coeur

-larllw NAF• ..... _IIConMy 21 Rool EIIMCOopai•lll• Equal

This
rE!markable spacious home with a view of the country
Italian llle Ioyer. cathedral ceNings With balcony, 3 BR,
2 112 bathS, ttvlng room with woodbumlng fireplace ,

1796. GREAT INVESTMENT.

~
Enallah
cHolrnd, Dapandali'la Hound To
Troj!n Pupa, 114-146-1857.
·

PICTURE YOUR HOUSE HEREI ·Yancant
land. O.J. Whllt Road. 2.52 IICI9s, Iota of
. . .. Good builclng ...... lor $11,100. Mt2

1849. DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING -

storoo speakers throoghout, brass Mghl tlldures, and
much more. 2 car affached garage, ante storage. 1 A.
m/1. This house Is maintenance free, of best quality.
Make yoor appolntmenl to sae if you dOn'l agree.

CLOSE INI • Ef1oy a view of the river from fie
great room thillovely 6;- old. 3 bedroom, 3
bath home with l~~mliy-4110m .nd finlahed
basement, nine clo18tl, 2 . . walk-Ina. Tu
free lor nine yaara. Too many 11118111tiea tD
mao olian here. Clll br mora information. Aaldna
$80'1.
M7f

TAMMIE DEWITT
J. MERRILL CARTER
CATHYWRAY
CINDY· DRONOGWSKI
JUDY DEWITT

•.

ample,.,._

.'

cy~ q{. Q/md{ ~/~fak.

WWot&gt;ad

MAIN St. VINTON it this 2 bttdtoom t beth
brick home, will ki~en. living room, laundry
room and e large welk~n ante that could be
oonverlld to a third bedroom, nice collllf8d
front porch end lalge rtio, a one Car garage
Md mora. Clll today II
ti503
.

446 4618
256-1136
379-2651
4468655

',.

a..Jna IDr ........ Friendly H bedoOCin, 2
beih- bf~evel located in one of the belt
rieighbcNhooda lor ~ cttildran. l.rtlge living
room end clning room; n101 kitchen. large
~:r.,.room with pool table included, ntoe lot.
w
~ 1 -garage end
throughout. Thi• 11 eV&amp;rylhlng e lentlly ODOild
wan~ Delay mlaht mean dlsappolnlrl*l~ cal

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER· 446·9555

1We Olft!OISIY lola,
Men•r Olt&amp;lllnll. t1 at d11 2
and 2 - - . tziOO;
11~ 1111111.

..

M71 ·

CHEAPIEI S11,0CJ0o M MILL QREEKI l.Mn(l
room. flltchen IIKI dining room oombo,
bedroon, bath end oMrad cowport. Call IDdayl
Immediate
poeMIIicnl
1102 '
.

•·

SLOWDRAINS?

DIWN CARE Ends- Dnlno.
01 IYIIdup 1n
And l'a To U...
--lluy
CARE AI.; 1'llantM Do I
171 MoCormlctl Aoall,

·. • ;,.

VAcANT LAND ON UNCOLH PIKI!- M 11Cr81,
emal gond, ptue tllx24 ahower house. AlklnD

.

~·
.,

LEADINGHAIA REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

M73

.

,,

City ~y, Country Oirll ·Here'o 1 houle that
w~l lltisly both. Within walking c i a - to
downtown, thia home's ~lion 11 graa1 Wh&amp;a
II fie lime ifl ~tad In a quiet Ia I' 1
backed up bj acres and of woodland

4m&gt;44

Corllail

-

''i:AN YOU
THIS
REDUCED AOAINI
ASKING - •.uuu
NEW LISnNGI LOCAnONI LOCATIOHI
What more could you aak for.
LOCATIOHI 242 Llrlat Drive- Wei conatruc:tad
In__, poaperty. 2 Slory homil idMi ftlr 2
brick ranch atyle homa consisting of 3
apartmentl with little work plue 1 fully
bedoooms, 2 betha, l'oling room, kitchen, dining
equiDDed 14'110' mobile home including
areao, family room 1 mora. t car attached
wlllhlr &amp; dryer. Both In super condition.
cowport. Calllldly bran appoirttment. 1505
Nicely locetad on Third Ave. on 43'1 174'
• &amp;ppnll. lot CeiiOdeyl OWNER WANTS AN
OFFERI
.MQ
cozy &amp; CUTEIS1t,IOO.GG ·Whether alartOlg r-=~~~~
out or retiring this home lsloryCXJI2 boictooma,
living room, kitchen, beth, alum. elding.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1417
i,:367.Qji2flft2-e5113

mora.Excalent~donl

-

REAL FS IAIE 1l'C

'ot..r

od-.,c~,

~
..- .....
trainChrlaltor Jan 3, 1111

COMMERCIAL- 470 JACKSON PIKE· 1 ecra
lo~ approa. 311'x58' building with two bay
garage, 8lphalt ptrtq lot.
...

$a6,!00.

NICE LOCATION FOR A HOME· 12 acre M or L
Approx. t 112 milo from new River Valey High Scllool,
on blacktap road . .Rural water available. Priced at
$t5,000.

mono lnfonnanon.

f' "· •

Public Sale
t'Auctlon

' Real Estate General

3 bttdtaclm, 1
beth !Wich.With vinyl liding and raplacement
wlndclwa. llil• home hu a one car attached
garage iond a ~ tlllot io less then a year
'old. The priott II $48,500,
1502
Truly .Aflorda...Cr11p, ciMn

•·.
., .... ,

~~=--=~----~~~$1",

'*

BUILDING FOR SALE IN JACKSON- Put buoineso
tlownatal11 and Mlilts a 3 bedroom apartment upolairs.
S~our own business and live upotalro CALL
A
THISONEI
'

...

..

01k ehodod lot. Cloae to town location.
Roomy .bi·lovel homil. Family room lltrted iol
lower 1o1ve1 (Nol much to finioh), 3 bedtoome,
eat~n kitchen , living room . Prio:ld to ... al
~.900
-

1

•

.._

..
fl.: ..

Fenton, black amethyst, Bavarian, Smkh brass kerns:
silver kerns. banks wicker items; oil Ia~. mirrors; '
wardrobe, art deco, sideboard and night ·sand, drcop{ ['
leaf table, center dresser, · tables, chest of drawe1rs;·j
small desk, vanhy, pipe bed, old floor Ia~. sewing ··
machine, chairs, toys, typewriter, chain driVe scooter;
watch, shoeshine box.
'
All typea of merchandlea coming In
befora aale datL
For Information Call Auctlonaer Flnle "lka" IIUC
at 3~9370 or 388-8880.
Lie. &amp; Bonded in Ohio 13738 end W. V.. t1030
Not R•ponaible lor Accidanll or Loat h...,a.

' Re.al Estate General

1, ·

Large .. bedo~ home will .... 2100 14
2 112 bah, lmna room, dining room ....
kitchen I family room. Screerted In 'pon:t~,
large fllllo I above gmund poci. 2 - buiJI.lft
garage. Good -.ge $95,000.
1217

SATUR,DAl JAN. 2, 7 P.M. 1993

Angie Q.
&amp; Virgil

2

SIMI but llneppy Em~hotalj daaft llld
unckltlond 3 bedroom P.· No honlrj do
project~ hera. Don't mi.. iltil one- CIIIIOf an
appdntrneoit today. You _., believe lht . . ,
of$37,000.
...

,..,

PA~TIAL UST: Fireking depression: Japan items,

a••

on

..
=

. .

ANnQUEOR(OLUcnBUSA~cnON

REDUCED AGAINI NOW NS.ooo- WAS
ASKING $84,000 •.0WNER .WANTS OUTI
Good 1n-1ment property lituated at 3rd. Ave.
4 bedrooms. 2 baths, n•furnace.
Mobile home aleo included. Good rental
income
1412

REIIODEL£D ONE AND ONE-HALF STORY HOME·
Located on State Route 7 at Eureka, 3 bedrooms living
room, dining room, kitchen and bath localsd
32.0
acre mil. CALL TO SEEII

Services

.' ...

JACKSON ST.- VINTON, OHIO

Happy
Birthday,
C. Moore

1

Real Estate General

window:•·

••·

.ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE

Now I got you •
But don't be
blue 'cause
I love you.
Happy
38th
Birthday

Uu,

.ow ,.._., WW

•.

You •,.., o/Jer for mre.
Happy Birdaday
Jim Clarlt
34!

8~

w

30447J..1'111.

lo bell.,.,e

8

IN VINTON VILLAGE! Here you will find this 3
beclloorri 1 112 beth one story home with ivinQ
room, kitclien, laundry and dan. A detaChed
one ca- garage, blown~n lnsulaiOii and more.
Ona127'1115comerlot.Aikingonly$30,000.
Call today lor your eppointrnent..
...

100 ACRES M OR Lon Friendly Ridge in Clay Twp
Water and electric available. Prlood 11 $32,500.
. ·

P' d

:=s:.

JUST LISTED JUST RIGHT FOR .YOUR
FAMILYI ·3 bedroom ranch atyle home
consisting of lull basement, 2 beths. living
room, clning room, fllllllly room and mora,
appro1. t .6 acre lawn, detlched 24'132'
garage with concrete flooring. Call tod8y for
your showing!
.
1&amp;00

HOUSE AND S ACRES II OR L Located on State
Route 588 Houl8 has 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms t beth
PRICED AT $25,000.00.
'
'

llalllf

Desi{p!d _, meet your
needt.AnY lizt.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
ESTIMATES ON ,

,...,.nco,

o~a: ""

campers&amp;
MolorHomes

LOCAnON. LOCATION. LOCAOON. Thir It
e~lllf Important In COIJimsrCial property.
II M.ABI.E-IIEST LOCATION In - . . Comer
of State SIMI (Rt 588)1 2nd Ave( A!. 7) GraM
expoaure from atop light. Comer display
(Ooalt oandltion. Over 2,000 14 ft. of
=·~~~~~·~oled~
ratallapao1
epee).
Plus oflee
I
. Rental
on seQond
flaw:lpiCS
3~
1 4 room o111ce 111 up owr!OIIking
Ctdl Dave Wlaamen lor mora

rnc. ~19 .
Spet:jalilJng in Pole '
.

. . . ---= .
R•l•nllll

Real Estate General

Camelbu_119•

Now Mann 2 bod,_ apllurnlallad ar unha'nlohod, dapoll
&amp;
--2581&gt;.
SmaH

79

'10 .} •

Metchancllle

~

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

~~~--~.:,.~

D.C...... W..IIc.

Ronl, SM-388 8030.

Complotl~ Fumlotlad

_..Irina

82

Pllllll LOCATIOII What n the thiM moat

. •..

Alver1lcle

Home
lmprov11118ntS

lmpor!lnl conlidal8tlonlln buying .... ..-?

--- - --i•..·
54 llalllneoua

Happy Ads

and
bodat 2·
VIllage

81

---..............I!Gn'a TV - .

Motorcycles

•.

"

Apanmanto In Mlddlaport. From
f1118. Coli 614-ltl:l.aa&amp;l. EOH.
Lafa- Apar!manto Far Rant In
OatnDOIIo, 614-44eol788, 614- .

Wood' $salty, Inc.

lri Memory of
Edna Cox.
· Earl, Connie and
Marty Maynard.
David Morris,
December 27,
1988.

go .way,

M•nor

NO rual •

Real Estate General

~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •·

In Memory

And !hay uid the hurt,
thouth eurely ral,
day
end
begin to ...1.
They l8ld the - . would
-IDiall
n..t • ..,. would paw· .
them beyond rSCIIII. •
And they oaid the sun
would one dly ohino
Tlvo"'QQh the cloudl end

Oraclou•
living. 1
room 1p11rtrntmte

Real Estate General

Burnette

In Loving Memory of
ORMAN S. SWAIN
Jan. 21, 19240ec. 27, 1989
They told uo the pllin
-uld nota lay,
That given time it would

~

RaquiNCI.I14-446-151t.

Busy Ch lropractlc
office needs an ener·
getlc, neat appear·
lng, personable front
desk person.
Position Involves
some dally· book·
keeping, typing 60
words per mlnule.
cand ldate must be
aggressively friendly:
Absolutely top quail·
tY only. Send resuma
to: Fronl Desk
Person, P.O. Box 282,
Middleport, Ohio
45760 before
January a, 1.993.

:::=~~.:~~
Aotw,l
·11". Evoningo.

friends.

~

11

1111 Mo'IO Wlndocr 2 Bodo

Sadly missed by
family and

~===Y===:::;

5

Sa!lnlt Dn All vtnrl 6 CorIn lit-. Mollohan Corpota,

11112-5851.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

r6oma. B-. (GWen Tull),

and to Centenary
United Methodist
Church for their hos·
pltality and love
ahown to our family.
Mr. 6 Mrs. Stanley
Harrison 6 family, Mr. 6
Mro.. John E. Harri,on 6
!emily, Mr. &amp; Mrs . Jam•
E. (Jeani~ Trout 6
family, Mr. &amp; Mr1. Paul
Northup, Mrs. P-1

o.-•

s -m•

Mulberry Avenue, Pomerow;

-·

the memorial service,

Happ Ads

a ....

Homl
lmprovlllllnts

81

lmprovameuta

111 1111.
II, WY,&gt;

.......... h .tlp~J. ~!!..... • ,.
Work boola. I~
·, .....

Two bedroom epartment on

Mo'lll ~ Bodroomo, 1 112
lolha On Largo Aonlod Lot, Will
!!liM On Land Contrld. 614-388-

The family of Helen
Mildred Harrison wish
express our deep··
sincerity to all
. . hftaa who suppo r1ed
·during the lou of
mother, sister and
We
twoulld like to send a
apecial thanks to: Dr.
A. J • Sattler for his
devotion to our moth·
er, alster, grandmot~·
and to us. Waugh·
Funeral
J H·ome. Rev. Jamee &amp;
1 Clharles Lusher, Rev.
Chapman, Rev.
Sue Smith and Rl!v.
Leon Holderby for
U~oAir participation In

Fum-.
II Bol~,
Claon, No Plio Rotoronco II

446-G331L

~2 Mobile Jio'!!.es
$2.17 I* month Including oil
IDDitiM " " lot rani, .... 1~170,

5

c- S..

74

lont·

AUCTION fo FUIINnUIII. . . :,
1111-. •• _,..., - . Ueod.-

1 1 2 Podroom Trauor, Dopoolt
I Rota,.... Roqulrad. No Polo. :;:111:1: : ,. : 13137.:,·: .....,..-.....,.......,.--=~~~ ~~~ ~f7V, Dr 114-71'1-4345 •
Haw 1 Sadroom Apa~manl For

614-698-7244.

fOr Sale

Good UMCI FumHurw.

w
304-47U2&amp;

Home

81

Point Pleaaant, wv

•"

.._...A""aau1po11e,
•- p
4411Afi•7KII.
·

1¥

{;,~~t::ir

aero

15M Sq. A., -11
lal, 2lll
wall, 2 comptoto bollia, dlntiiO
roo~n.- Mvlng roc¥1'1. 3bdnn., walk:·
In-., lulty oarpo!od, 2 pol'

. .

Wo Hawa Crolla And Crall a,..
otlea, Alae Will Cuotom ~
Your Shlrta. Wa IUY And Sol

Autoe for Sate

I '

FUANITUIII

Hoi """"
Rd. Pl. PI
Coii-.15-MM.
SWAIN

~~
~=-.
·~ 1••111o

..........
Iumia....

-

APfiLIANCU

Mobil Homo Lola Noor COmp··· home ' ~
Houri!: 811, N. f14-44f.
Kanojrga, 114o441-r781, ·~· 1!322.
3 mllol out
Ad.
116:17.
' F. . Dollwty
• .
Traitor Lal F.- RMt 1110 With
Pond, Garoge, wat• Pold, Mar- OOUNTAY FURNITURE .lHD

71

a.om.lol, Fanf, J)odge- pickup

•., .•

........ 114 Ml .1L

LAYNE'SI'URNITURI

7 P.ll.

Fumlahad Elllcloncr. f1'15/11o.
Utllftlol. Paid, Sharw BoJ~. 107

USED

Sell

-.-. ·
. . -.... tm..
.,
1211.
tor .. ··. .

GoodS

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDCET PJUCES AT JACKSON

BUSIIIHS
Opportunity

w.,... -

-

AuiOI for

._... . . . - , Tr ..-~~ ·
.
aolt wrt~l l
_.. - t Curt,
• t, l 5, ..- .. "~~

f.1erchalld1SC
~
..,_
...
AIC •~Stooplna
roomo
whh
- . ...
.~
. . i~~::::!!!!!!!!.
-rm.
...,..a
.,..
.
.......
~,
AIIO
trallor
·
All
,..,.,. no polo, -!II mon.,
plus aallltlea, 114-1116-3131.
Call oft• 2;00 p.m., 304"'
Houullold
5651, Mason WV.

'

2

Room a

~· "'I

101 4th,
7
1

F1r1anc1al

31

Houllhold
GoodS

~o.~ ~-rtl tor...~.lm·--ormo.-Hol......
Galllpoll-.
;~~~JAart~tt.,, ~~~B~R.~121

WIIIIOIW ... ....., lniRf ""-,
11tM:II'It

21

...

lf1 Wanted to Rent

Fum railed

45

Apllnment
tor Rent

OH

December 27, 1•2--:

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Pofnt Pleasant, WV

.

1804 - ENJOYABLE TO LOOK AT- Fun to 'IVe In,
has space lor lamlly entertainment in a sunken
reaeation room with large lire place . 3-4 bedrooms,
spacious screened In patio oH kitchen. Thl! home
awaits you and your family. II a~ates your needs.
~
SI~uii&gt;II'I~moon~1!."ac.
O
~ . PRICE REDUCED. Call lor an
::'!::
see this spacious nome .
1843 .

SELL NOW

-

BARGAIN NEAR RIO

GRANDE - Space is something your family- · 4
bedrms., 2 full baths and very targe ltvlng rm. and
country ·Size kitchen. lamity rm. wlwoOIJlumtr, utltty
rn'l., 2 deckS, sloraga OOUdlng. pool, 7 acres rM lOme
~ · Alllh is lor il very lOw prtoe .• $45,000.

.

.

•'

1808. BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN with constant
Income . Lovely resl home plus separale IMng
quarters. Lice nse~ tor 10 residents. AU furniture and
equipment Included. also 2 bedroom Falrmonl
Wlgartlen tUb and tumMure. 3 ac. rrvt

M03. QUALITY - LOCATION - SPACE - Quollty Is
In 1. . blldl capo Cod homO lhlt 11U I friendly home
al~ . Hfaolur.. 4 bedrooms, 2 bAths, living
room wlh fnp&amp;ace, alae. heat pump Wld cent. alr.
- ·· 1800 oq. ft . Location II OVIIrtooldng the 01100
River and a large a.ke type boctr of water adjoin
prop..ty b o u -. Sf*» loa :l6x48 molal bulking.
Perfect lor oomoono thai has abu._. and noads a
Iaiiie starogo ..... Plus a 14124 building ,. ., coul&lt;t
be UHd tor I showroom Of' &amp;lind Jpaltment. Clll for

1832. FAMILY
HOME - With ebOw room
10 S·P· A·E·A·O O.U·T - 4 bedrooms, bath, ki., DR,
LR, tam. rm., 1st noor btdrrn. and 3 up. Enctoud

mo-.

trOfll ard bacl&lt; poocll, lull t&gt;asemont, allachad 1 ac. m.l. REDUCED $42,500 .

·

1614. LARGE COMMERCIAl BUILDING - On
Stat-ute 2. 2 bodrm. apt . on tst lloor. P - 3
LOOKING FDA A PLACE
TO HAVE YOUR OWN BUSINESS IN YOUR
HOME, than this lo thO properly. 2· 3 be&lt;lrOom, 2
balM, LA, FA, oll·ln ldlcl1on , olac. 88 Mol , DW, uti.
rm. and alorage on 112 ac. mil. can be • '3 BR single

more

.•

.'

....
i'

•

�. ..

Pligl DB Sunday Tlmea S1ntlnel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt o.tHpoll8, Ott Point Pluu nt,

wv

December 27, 1912

New labels omit some, vitamin information
By DIA~ DUSTON

Allioc:laled

Press Wrlt~r ·

WASHINGTON- You may
wonder where all the viwnins went
when you see the new nutrition
labels on food packages.
They'll still be in the foods, but
they're no longer considered essential. health information.
That' s because diseases like
beriberi and pellagra haven't been
a threat to Americ1111 health since
anyone can remember.
·
It's cancer, diabetes. heart disease and a myriad of ailments
caused by overeating and poor
nutrition that health expens worry
about now.
So the label is tieing retooled to
.discourage diets of excess rather
than guard against diet deficiencies

- emphasizing fat, sodium and because people are suffering from
cholesterol instead or B-vitamins scurvy, a Vii8Jilin C deficiency, for
like niacin, thiamine and riboflavin. example.
It's mostly the B·viwnins that
The new labels aren ' 1 out yet,
have
been eliminated from the
but they should begin appearing
label.
.
ne~tt year. The government is giv·
This family of nutrients IS
ing food manufacturers until Mlty
1994 to phase them in.
· essential to overall good health, but
The National Academy of Sci· found in a wide variety of foods
ences recommended temoving regularly consumed by ~ Amersome vitamin information after sur- icans, including whole gnuns, dried
.veys showed that even Americans beans, eggs. meat and leafy .green
·
suffering from hunger are not at vegetables.
Additionally.
during
food
prorisk of diseases caused by lack of
vitamiris such as those seen in the cessing, vii8Jilins and min.erals are
routinely added. said Regma HildThird World.
Vitamins A and C will still be wine of the National Food Proceslisted alo111 witli iron and calcium, sors AsSociation.
Americans eat abundant prop(jr·
because there's an interest in them
for other reasons, says the Food · tions or processed fopds from
and Drug Administration, not white bread and cereal to

microwaveable dinners.
Hildwine said enough vitamins
and minenls are spread rJuouah the
American food supply that people
can Cjuit woayi111 about them.
Dietary deficiency "hasn't been
a problem in this country for .the
last 20 years, •• she said.
Nancy Schwartz of the Ameri·
can Dietetic Association says it's
been a lot longer than thaL
.
Beriberi and pellagra are nervous disorders associated with a B·
vilamin deficiency originally
observed in Asia when the staple
diet became white rice instead of
brown. They never were overriding
health concerns in the United
States, said Schwanz.
Vitamins A and C, however, are
believed to minimize cancer risk;

calcium is Important in the fiBbt
againsr osteupeiOsiB and iroq helps
prevent anemia, health officials
say. So they'D slay on the label.
Hele's wltatelse y011'1l find;

drales and fiber comprise

Southern
wins 53-47 tilt
over Hornets

a 2,000

calorie diet IIIII a 2.SOO calorie diet,
- How to convert one ~ ol
fat, carbohydrates IIICI procein m10

Ohio ·Lottery
Pick 3:

155

Plck4:
1273
. Super Lotto:
11-12-27-28-2!1-41
Kldr.er:
!11!1!168

calories.

-Serving size.

As a whole, the new labels wiD
tell consumers twice as much about
nutri.tion as cumndy on roods and
likely will seem more complicated
at first.
Schwartz said her organization
already is preparing educational
matenals and programs to help
JlCI!Ille use the label to plan heallhi·
erdiets.
"This new label is a grad11ate .
degree .in nutrition," said Jerf
Nedelman of the Grocery t.{anufac. :
turers of America. "Your children
may be the fust consumers who
will be able to understand it, and .
that may make it worth doing."

-Servings per container.
- Total calories and calories
from fat per serving.
-Total fat , saturated fat,
cholesterol, sodium, protein and
IOta! carbohydrates in sugars and
dietary fiber. .
-Amount of Vii8Jilin A, Vita·
min C, calcium and iron.
-How the nutrients fit into a
daily diet of 2,000 calories and 65
gramsoffaL
·
-Exactly &gt;ftow many grams and
milligrams of total fat, saturated
fat, chol~terol, sodium, carbohy-

Page 6·

I •

~~.

a

Vol. a, No. 172

_'~1171lgloW1H2

man riding with at least seven oth· pants and saw it· veer off the mild
ers in a pickup truck opened fire . as the convoy sped by, Davis said.
with an AK-47 assault rifle on a No Marines were hun.
Marine convoy of 12 vehicles
Davis said the attack took place
returning to Mogadishu from a half mile south of Af~oi, about 35
Baidoa on Chrisunas.
miles west of the cap•taJ. None of
Marines in the lead vehicle the Marines was hurt. .
returned fire at the approaching
The attack .wlll! the second direct
pickup, hit at least three of its occu· assault on Amencan troops since
they arrived in Somalia on Dec. 9.
A squad or Marines on foot patrOl
in the ca,pital was fired at two
weeks ago along the line that
divides rival clan factions in the
war-tom city, They also returned
fire and hit a Somali y6uth manning a machine gun mOI!llted on the
back of a vehicle.
Meanwhil'e, a Somali woman
was killed and and a number of
other people, including children,
were badly hurt in the riot in
Baidoa on Christmas, Cynthia
Osterman of CARE International
reported.
Osterman, a spokeswomali for
the charity in Mogadishu, said
CARE employees in the central
Somalia town reported by radio
that the disturbance erupted after
Marines delivered a truckload of
food to an aid center.
She said about '20 bags of grain
were left on the truck when the
Marines left and dozens of people
in a large crowd waiting for the
rood began fighting for it with
sticks and clubs.
The CARE workers saw one
woman killed, a child badly
maimed and several other people
left unconscious and possibly dead,
Ostcnnan said. A similar riot was
reported at a feeding center in.
U.!\. Marine seaport camp in .Mogadishu, Thurs· . Bardera, about 120 miles south of
day. N~Wtnan's wife made bim the desert cam·
Baidoa, on Chrisunas.
ounage yarmulke be wore during tbe service.
The tumult, and three attacks pn
(AP photo)
journalists in Bardera, underscored
that even as troops reach new Jl8ClS

mission in Somalia becomes .more
apparem the further the troops pen- ·
euate !he country. Saturday. an
armored convoy of Italian troops
went north to seize the town of
Gailalassi.
Capt. Joe Davis, an air force
officer briefing reporters in
Mogadishu today, Slid a Somali

HANUKKAH HUG • U.S~ Marine Rabbi Joel
Newman, right, of Vista, Calif., bugs Marine
2nd Lt. Ron Stephans of M.. hattan Beach,
Calif., as Army Lt. Elad Yoran of Pound Ridge,
N.Y., looks 011 durin~ Hanukkah servkes at the

of Somalia.'s starving mterior,law·
lessness continues just beyond their
h
~erican ~are in Somalia
as part of a mulunatiooal fQC~:C to
ensure that food gets IQ the needy
and is not lost to IOOierS. An esti·
mated 350,000 people already have

Warlords- announce
year-long war is over

died in the famine and 2 million ;.
more are thieatened.
,
Baidoa, aboUt 170 miles north· .
west of Mogadishu, was used by
Marines and French Foreign
Legionnaires as the jumping off.
point fa their seizure on Chrisunas
Eve of Bardera and the taking ofi
Hoddur on Christmas.
:
·

.

Have A
Happy
·N ew Year

:·Perennial
effort
.
f
or
D~C.
.
atatehood faces defeat

·SouTHEASTERN BusiNESS CoLLEGE
446·4367

.

Reg. No.I0-05·1274B

'

., .n

..

-

....... .. -

·~

~

·-

.. .--

... - '

.

-~.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Boost· · changed.
emof"""""'od for the naticn'scapi·
Always dicey at best, chances for
talbaveafriendheadedfa'theWhite D.C.statehoodhavebeenharmedby
Houac, but ebbing suppcn in Con· recent events that have raised law·
---~ away their hopes. makers' eyebrows anew about the
. !""-~BlliCiinton~candi- politicalacumenofdlecity'sleaders
dace said he would like to see stato' and voters and the ecOnomic wherehood fa the District of Columbia in withal to support a saue govemmenc
hilfinttam,Piaident-electClinton
-A fisc!~~ crisis that Mayor
!IPIJC8CS unwilling to spend much Sharon Pratt Kelly largely ignored
political capital to make it happen.
her fli'SI two ye~n in offace, and that
. .''Congress would hive to act, but persists despite a40 percent increase
I believe in it ... and I assume a bill in fedelal payments to the city.
will be introducCd and I e~tpect to
-Election of former Mayor
IUJlilOII it," Clinlon, told reporters Marion Barry to a City Council seat
recently.
after his release from prison on a
. Moreover, thebiggestissueof all misdemean&lt;rcocaineconviction.It's
- whelher the Constitution would conceivable he caul~ be elected
have to be amended for D.C. state- governor if statehood comes to pass.
hood - is far from resolved.
-Continued flight of middle·
TheConstitutiongivesCongress class taxpayers, black and white, to
theright"toexereisee&amp;lusivelegis- suburbs in Maryland and Virginia.
lalioninallcaseswhatsoever"fathe The capital city's population has
Jillion's capital.
shrunk20percent,by157,000people,
Staldlood supporterS say that over the past 20 years.
JDeiiiS Congresa can erect any f!ll'fll
''People who have been here a
Of JD¥ellllllent it wants. including a long time have never seen the Dis·
state,butevayauomeygenmlsinoe trictinatmire~bleJ!O'ture,"
RobertF.Xennedy,aswdluseveral lamenled one statehood activist on
-lepllcholarswhosupportsllldlood, Capitol Hill, speaking on the colldi·
maintain the Constitution must be lion of anonymity. "It is devastating

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The Answers You Need.;.

Mogadishu residents from either side of tbe
green llne joined on a demonstration to call for .
an end to the civil war and voice tbeir support
for U. S.led coalition
.
.. in Somalia. (AP)

MAHDI'S ARMY • Somali soldiers faithful
to Interim Presldeni All Mahdi Mohamed
parade diii'IDg • rally held near the parliament
bulldlna !Monday/ Tens !lf tbous!lnds or

JOIN US FOR WINTER QUARTER
ENROLL BEFORE JAN. 4, 1993

"Accntdltecl member CCA" ·

1 s.ctlon, 10 Pogea 25 ...., ..
A Mulllmodlo Inc. IMwapoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 28, 1H2

Italians prepare move on Gailalassi; Marines under /ire ·;.
By REID G. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
MOGADISHU, Somalia
Somali gunmen fired on Marines
on the road from Baidoa, where a
food riot left one person dead, a
. child maimed and several other
people injured:
The dif(iculty of the U.S.-led

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AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONEI

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for sallehood and it even hurts home
rule."
Meanwhile,Clinton'ssuppMfor
statehocid. in contrast to opposition
from bolh Presidents Bush and Reagan, has intensified Republican
antipathy·
.
"We RepUblicans view itu re·
ally a method by which the DemocraticPartygctstwoautomaticsenaun in pelpCiuity." said House GOP
Leader Robert Michel. "We'reon the
margin right now. Soldon'tseehow
weRepublicans,exceptmaybeafew,
w011ld be amenable to statehood for
the Districctof Columbia."
"New olumbia" statehood bills
have been introduced in every Congress since 1987.
Nonetheless, Eleanor Holmes
Norton, the district's non-voting
delegate in the House, plans to rein·
troduce it as HR51- for 51st state
-when the 103rd Congress COO·
venes Jan. 5.
Norton has no illusions.
"We d9n't e~tpect the votes are
going to fly down from heaven the
fnt time, but we hope to make a
respectable showing," she said.

BELETHUEN,Somalia(AP)U.S. and Canadian soldiers today
seized this famine-wracked town, the
final target oftheir campaign to make
Somalia secwe for food shipments.
The capital, Mogadishu, was awasb
in celebration as two warlords promised to reunite the city.
MohammedFarrshAididandAli
Mahdi Mohamed, the two warlords
who conlrol the divided, war-dam·
aged capital, met at a public gather·
ing for the first time in more than a
year and announced their war was
over.
Thousands of their followers,
ululating, clapping and blowilll iniD
concb shells, celebrated the promise
to reunify the capital, but it wu un·
clear how soon the pledge would
become a real.\ty. Shooting incidents
around the edges or the rally indi·
cated gunmen were angry their days
of plunder and mayhem might be
drawing to an end.
Journalists in the area were hac·
rassed, robbed and one was shot at,u
AididandAli Mahdimetfaahout20
minutes amid the shell-shaitered
buildings around tbe old parliamenL
American Marinesexchangedfire
with three Somalis who tried 10 rob a
television crew from Britain's
Visnews outside the main gate of
Moga4ishu~s in~O!Iai airport,

now a military base.
One ofthe bandits was ldlled,and
a South African soundman was
slighdy injured in the elbow. The
Visnews cameraman and soundman ·
said they were accosted by three
armed Somalis as they approached
the aiiport gate.
Some 200 members of the 2nd
Battalion of the 87th Infantry Regi- .
ment and 40 Canadian soldiers entered Belet Huen unopposed, as wu
the case in seven other cities secured
by the U.S.·led force sinoe il hegan
arriving in the country Dec. 9.
The·U.S.·Canadian fQCI:C Swept
onto BeletHuen' s dirt airstrip aboard
IOUH-60Blackhawkhelicoptersjust
afta' dawn after a flight from Deli
Dogie, a town about 100 miles west
of Mogadishu that has become the·
operationalcenteroftheU.S.Army's
lOth Mountain Division.
Hundreds or Somalis watched
from the edges of the S1rip as choppen and,later, C-130 Hercules cargo
planes disgorged soldiers and returned to the air.
"We passed the word yesterday
thaf anyone that has a weapon para!·
lei to the ground iS II threat and will be
dealt with," saidLL CoL CarolMathieu, the Canadian comnianding the
operation.

By the end of the week, some 800
Canadians will he in Belet Huen,
which is 200 miles north of the capital ReliC the Ethiopian border, and the
Americans will be withdrawn for
other tasks.
With the ports and airports at
Mogadishu and Kismayilsecured and
largeamountsof donated food begin·
ning to pour iniO the country, the
coalition plans to establish distribu·
lion centers in the six interior towrui.
From theceilters,supplies will be
moved out into surrounding villages
and the countryside in an effort to
flood southern Somalia's famine belt
with food. Butfmding trucks capable
· ofmakingthetripshasbeendiffteuiL
Somali truckers, whose vehicles
often are relics from the 1950s, on
Sunday protested the Wald Food
Program's hiring ofEIIIiiJI)ian truck·
ers 10 haul the rood aid.
More than 350,000 Somalis already have died in what has been
called the world's worst hwnanitar·
ian crisis, and 2 million more are -'
risk of starvation.
Presideal Bush, who is to vis'it
Somalia fa New Year's, has exJRSsed hope tbat the Uniled Nlliol)s
will take over the mercy mission and
that U.S. liOOJl8 could start coming .
home by Jan. 20, whell President·
elect Clinton takes office.

Legionnaires' disease cases up · in"Ohio
ductedin Summit and Franklin coun- American Legion convention in ·
ties. Hospitals are testing all patients Philadelphia in 1976. Thirty-six
peopledied.
.
who have pneumonia.
Many~ofLegionoaires'dioease
"It's not that it suddenly apLegionnaires' disease is caused
went llllteJXX1ed until health care peared," said Dr. Michael Moser of by a bacteria that thrives in soil air .
officials began looking more closely the Ohio Department of Health. conditioning ducts and water ~- :
at respirllory illnesses, officials say. "Legionella is a lot more common The infection usuallyisnon-f81allllll •
Officials for two years have stud· than we knew about or suspected c:an easily be lrea!ed with antibiotics, '
doctors say.
ied and jlerformed more tests to de- even 10 years ago." ·
Butthestudyhasnotfoundcause
tect Legionnaires' disease, which
It can, however, be deadly if a
mimics other respiratory illnesses for concern, Moser said.
pers6n has a weakened immunologiAbout25,000 cases are reponed cal
such as pneumonia, said Dr. Katllryn
system or suffers from another
Arnold of the infectious diseases nationwide each year, said Dr. Xilla disease
.
section at the U.S. Centers for Dis· UsseryoftheCDC.Manymorecases
Since Augus~ two patients at the
ease Control and Prevention.
may go undetected, she said.
Veterans Affairs Medical Center in
''There is a need to know more
"It is very much under-repxted. Dayton died of the disease, and a
about the specific causes ofpneum~ The cases reponed are ·10 times less third patient wu diagnosed with the
nia so that people can help plan pub- than what we believe they are," infection, said Dr. Jack Bernstein,
lic health strategy," Arnold said. A Ussery said. ''There is an additional the hospital's chief of infectious dis·
number of cases go undetected since unknown number that may be af. eases.
doctors don't always test fa Legion· fected with mild sytnptoms or no
One of the victims had AIDS and
naires' disease, she said.
illness at all."
the
other
had a kidney transplant and
About 100 ~ of the disease
It is difficult to ciJmpare how
was
suffering
from a weakened
are reported in the ·state each year, Ohio ranks with other states in the
immune
system,
Bernstein said. The
said Randy Hertzer, an Ol)io Depart- numberofcasesreported, since many
ment of Health spokesman. So ·far states are lax in turning over the in· third patient was diagnosed with the
this year, 147 ~have been doeu· formation to the CDC, Arnold said. disease last month. He has been remented, he said.
The disease takes its name from leased from the hospital and is being
In Ohio, the study is heing con- an outbreak at the Pennsylvania treated with antibiotics.
By JERI WATERS

Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)

r.----Local briefs-- Dayton police say .'joy killing' claims five lives
. Man charged after accident .
George Sauer, 43, of Rutland St., Middlepon, has been charged
with failure to control and leaving the scene of an accident by
Pomeroy Police.
PoliCe reported that Sauer, driving a 1990 GMC truck owned by
Fairf~eld Homes, struck the parked 1983 Oldsmob.ile of Edward
Venoy, 49, Pomeroy, a.bout 7:53p.m . Wednesday night. The
Venoy car was parlced at a meter on West Main Street when it was
struck in the rear damaging not only tbe rear end but bolh quarter ,
panels. 1\ccording to two wiblesses, the car was pushed appro~ti·
miltely 40 feet into and under a fence on the fanner Jacobs property
causing extensive front end damage.
There was neither damage nor citations in an accident Wednesday at 11:4S a.m. on East Second Street. Pomeroy Police reported
that Kathryn Crow, 72, Pomeroy, stuck the rear of a UPS truck as
·she adelllpted to par1c her 1987 Ford station wagon.
Snow on ChriStmas day resulted in one accident, police reported.
Robert Bowles, 48. Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy, slide into a ditch
cauaing light damaj!e to the passenger side of his 1986 Ford.
Middleport Pollee reported that there were no wrecks or inci·
dents investigated over the holiday weekend.

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Holzer Health Hotline
1-800~462-5255

..
Five injured in two-car wreck ·
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"!!aPive people were treated for mina injuries after a two-car wreck
'Qlhio 124 in Rutland Township Sunday around S:50 p.m.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Palrol, the Wreclc involved two cars, one driven by Jack B.
Peterson, 46, Rutland, and another driven by Shannon Lee Walker,
17, also of Rutland.
Petenon, Walker, and three passengers in Walker's car, Kenda J.
Re:t!tolds, 15, Middl=,Leah M. Matson, 16, Racine, and David
W. Reynolda, 11, ·
n, were uansponed b the Mei s Coun·
ty Emergency Medical ervice to Veterans Memorial ~ospital

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Caatlaaecl OD page 3

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -Five
~pie have been shot to death in a
'joy killing" spree thai began
Thursday, police said.
The latest victims, a man and a
woman who were shot in the head,
were found Sunday in a former
landfill in the western pan of Day·
· ton, police.said.
The shootings "started out as
robberies, but it became easier and
we think it tomed into joy lcilling,''
Sgt. George Hammann said. "They
(the usailants) were like a sharkonce they tasted blood they
couldn 'tstop."

Police believe the deaths Sun·
day are linked to three other slay·
ings and two shootings during rob·
beries, Sgt. Larry Grossnickle said.
The latest victims "were found
using information gained out of the
investigation of the other slay ings," Grossnickle said. Their
identities weren'treleased.
Police arrested two juveniles
and two adUlts Saturday in connec·
tion with the earlier shootings,
Grossnickle said. Their names were
not released pending charges.
Grossnickle said police believe

only the two victims found Sunday
were known to the assailants.
On Saturday, police found Joe
Wilkerson. 34, shot ID death in his
home, which apparendy had been
ransacked. The two adults and two
juveniles were arrested after they
allegedly were seen taking items
from a car registered to Wilkerson.
Also Saturday, two people were
shot during the attempted robbery
of a convenience store.
.
Sarah Abraham, 38, of Dayton,
a store employee, was in cntical
condition late Sunday at SL Eliza-

beth Medical Center. A customer,
Jones Petws, 64, of Dayton, also
was wounded during the robbety.
He was in serious condition late
Sunday at Miami Valley Hospital.
Richard Maddox, 19, of DaytOn,
was shot to \Ieath Friday. His body
was found in a wrecked car.
'Danita Gullette, 18, of Dayton,
was lcilled Thursday. She was shot
seven times while standing at a pay
telephone in an alley, police said.
The slayinf-! brought the num·
ber of homic1des in Dayton this
year to 59. There were 53 homi·
cides in tbe city last year.

U.N. chief warns Yugoslav president about intervention
GENEVA (AP) - U.N. Secre·
tary-Geneml BouiiOS Boutros-Ghali
warned Yuplavia's JRSident today that foreign armies may intervene in Bosnia's war unlea !here are
steps to end the fiJittina. a lpobaman said.
·
The warning came amid a flurry
·of diplomacy at the U.N. Ewopeai
headquarterS in Geneva. Sedlia·
dominated YIJBOilavia IIIIJIP008 the
Se!bs who have captured more than
tw~thirds or Bosnian lenitory in a
war !hat began last March.
The U.N. chief asked Yuplav

President Dobrica Cosic to use his
authority and influence to appeal to
Serb forces in Bosnia to end the blood·
shed, said Dragoslav Rancic, a
spokesman for Cosic.
"Boutros' Ghali is apparendy
under.enormous pressure and wanted
Cosic to know this," Rancic said in an
interview.
Cosic, though a strong Serb na·
tionallst, has opposed some of the
ICiions of Serbia's powerful president, Slobodan Milosevic, who ad·
voc:aa full support for Serbs in
Bosnia IIIII Croatia.

Boutros-Ghali held separate S. Eqlebwger, also in Geneva, said
meetings with Cosic and Croatian he expected the U.N. Security CounPresident Franjo Tudjman,, who cil to adopt a resolution this week to
warned the Bosnian war could esca· enforte a grounding of Serb warlale, with Islamic nations coming to planes over Bosnia.
•·
Boutros-Ghali and 'internatiOIIII
the aid of Bosnian Muslims and
Russian fighters intervening on be- mediators Cyrus Vance and l.cxd
Owen have opposed such a resolu·
half of the Serbs.
The Bosnian war has claimed at ticin, appealing for more time to aJ,
least 17,000 lives and forced 1 mil· low the 4-month-old peace talks in
Geneva 10 find a political seulement;
. lion people from their homes.
They hive warned that enforceBoutros-Ghali plans to fly to the
besieged Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, ment of the flight ban might lead 19
in the next few days, his spokes· stlllCks 011 U.N. peace-keepers in
Bosnia, and jeopiKdize their effiXIa
woman Therese Gastaut Slid.
111
aid civilians.
U.S. Secretary of State Lawrtnoe

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