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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·

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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.
:
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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

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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

'

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

Low lolllgbt IB mld·Jio.

Forty peiUDt dtuce ol...m.
Tuaclay, blgb IBtllt mf,_.,

....... ·-lA

•

AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONEI

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"

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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

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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

�i."

Monday, December 28, 1882

Commentary
. The Dally Sentinel
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PATwartmEAI&gt;
Aalstaat Pllblldler/Coalrclller
l.I!TmRS OF OPINION. ue welcome.·They obould be leu tlwl 300
word&amp; All Jetien ue lllbject 111 ediiin&amp; IDd muol be li&amp;JIId with name,
llldm~ IDd telopbolle lllll!lllor. No llllliped letlm will be publiabed. Letlm
lbould be in JOOd tum, addreniDI inuea, 1101 penonaiitiel.
.
.'

The Rush
Limbaugh
.p. henomenon
.

.

.: Now thal Ronald Reagan bimaelf has hailed Rush Limba~ IL'l "the
bio. 1 voice for conservatism ill our country," i!'s big~ ume that I
weighed in with a few comments of my &lt;?wn about Ibis 8IJI!WIIg man.
• Limbaugh utterly dominates taiJc radio today. According to ~ Ia~
ij~
his three-hour weekday radio programs leave all competUOrs II\
~1, being ~eard ~y 14 million people every week- three and a half
rililJion at any pven ume. ·
· TV
•· And the sptn-{)ffs are alinost IL'l amazing. His new half-~ . ~
itam is alread~' in the field of nighttime !J111t ~s. despite ind~005 efforts to
it in the wee hours or (as m Washington) not IIIII It al
1111. His
er book, "The '?fay Things ~ To ~·" is No. 1 on
. The New y . Times non-ficuon best-seller hst, havmg sold aJ!CU·
~rd 1.7 m
. . copies already.
~-----·'·

..

WiUiam A. Rusher

'

•

· :: Just what iS all the excitement about? The truth seems to be that Lim·
.i)imgh bas a knack for exp~Wing the views of an awfu! lot of JleOI!Ie -.
t-.ut expressing them more forcefW!y and more enrerta111111gly dum his lis~ers can do themselves.
· ' And the views? They are rock:solidly conscnl!'ive, without any ~cep­
·iions or qualifications whatevet. What's more, m the. peat m8jonty of
cases the man bas done his homework: His figures are.usually comet, and
his analyses sound. When, inevilably, he makes Some. error, he is always
quick to comet it and take full nesponsibility. In addition, he is tmfailingly polite to people who phone in, however much he may disagree with

z-111e oany Sentinel .

'

Pomeroy ' Middleport, Ohio
Mondly, O.C.mber 28,1992 .

HARTFORD, Cam.- Wilen it
COOia 10 bop It tbe trou&amp;b drain.m
thea
wodla
. sys·
: s• c•*'•O•PhOO
tern IIIII tria&amp;eriD&amp; a fJSCal night·
mare for Slllel IIIII h•'n es, the
two biggest guzzlers are doctors
andlawyas. :
So
is wottcrs' romp Ia~ and doctors teamed up to
that Ia
111e screilllling their
servii:cs
billboril. bus plac· enbst tbe unemployed to file
ards, ncwJIIIIIICt Ids and on com· phoney claims. One clev~ CalifC?J'·
nia outfit ran an ad offmng to ~
mcn:ial brelb durin
. g die daytime
.
TV. The COIIIIIICidals, the eqwva- warehousemen. Wben the apph·
lent of d: b&lt;Milc amhJI•nm chas- cants arrived, they were told that
ina. lie Jimed at people with time the jobs were filled, but the interviews didn't stop there. "By the
on their t.ads.
the mter·
Unscrupulous doctors and way. bow is your
lawyers are among a variety of_.. viewer asked the applicants. Do
sons why the $60 billion a year you have any back problems? Do
workers comp system is on the you have any headaches? Insombrink, wby it's wiping out s~te nia?" The ploy generated a ~h
budgets from California to Maine crop of workers' compensauon
and poses an insidious hidden taX claims.
Those 011 the insurance side of
on bnsiDCSICI.
Quite simply, there's big money the street have their oym ·tawrers,
10 be made olf the in· · , real and so they can't dismiss outright the
imagihed, suffer~workers. value of pldlegal advice to some·
And our continuing investigation one who3~l,Y injured. .
John
, seruor econonust
shows that some lawyers have
at tbe Workers' Compensation
worked the S)'llaD brilliantly.
Ads playing ICIOSS the country Institute, argues: "Every dollar
portraY succcuful c1aimanls loung- that.' s spent in""'ligating oc disputm~ on dcct chairs aboard cruise ing the claim is a doU. of cost to
ships Sid m South Pacific beaches the sysiem that doesn't go to pay a
at sunset. One offm a free trip to worker for lost work time.'' In CalLas Vegas. Another features a ifornia alone, claimants' lawyers
lawyer jumping out of a cake and reaped a $1.S billion bonanza last
whisking the injured worker off in yeat.
Workers' compensation was
a Cadil1ac with three beautiful
women, after he tosses off his · created to be a no.fault system,
meaning that no matter what
crutChes.
In California, investigators have caused the injury, if it happened in
even uncovered schemes in which the workplace the employer would

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

bcalthr

i/o~ 'T

You

cover It But lawyers haVe profited
from tliis no-fault system by
exploiting the ticklish problem of
what injury is wort-related and
determining just how disabled a
worker is -laid up for a week pr a
lifetime
· When stateS have attem~ to
reform their systems, trial fawyers .
mobilize for a holy w• to defend .
the lll8luS quo. Texas, for example,
passed sweeping reforms in 1988,
many of them aimM II limiting the
money that gcies to lawyers. In a
lilidilional partnasbip, labor unions
joined the trial lawyers in resisting
reform. They concentrated their
efforts on Texas' 31-member Senate, which could block any reform
the House piSSed. The trial lawyers
and labor unions were confident
they had a lock on that bQ4y of
Democrats.
into the fray for an unforgettable
moment came Lonnie (Bo) Pilgrim,
one of those distinctly Texas t~
of characters. He founded and build
"Pilgrim's Pride"' to become the
·fifth·lergcst chicken processor in
the country. TelevisiOn ads featured bim m a signatme Pilgrim'
hat, carrying a pet chicken with
him. But when Pilgrim dashed to
the capital two days before lhC Sen·
ate vote on the House workers'
comp bill, ·be had more than
Ghicken feed with him.
He stepped onto the Senate
floor, cornered eight separate
senators and gsve them an earful of
bis workctS • e(lmp blues. He was
considering packing up and movi!tg
all his workers to Gov. B 11l

Clinton•s Arkansas, where ~!' :
are so low that the cost of Pilgrun s .
avc:raae workers' comp per w&lt;llkcr :
would be $250 - compared to
$1108 in.Texas. ·
·
···
'Then came Pilgrim's specialll
sweetener: $10,000 checks han~
out 10 the swing-vote senala'S w1th :
the recipient's name le.ft b!an~. ;
(Unde~ Te~as law, thJS d1dn t :
constitute bnbery.)
.
.
In the end, less colotful, more ·
powerful · behind· the-scenes :
businesses won the c~;ay and :
achieved what was manifestly a .
pro-business reform bill. H. Dane. :
Harris, president. of the ~e;"aS :
Association of Busmesses, vmdly ,
recalls the battle.
.
:
" Workers'
comp
was ,
completely destroy~g the ~Uity of ·
employers to stay IR bu_s~· S,~ ·
we made it a maJor, map ISSue,
he said.
·
· B11t it's impossible to $el the
doctors out of tbe , p1~ture.
"Tirey •re paid, in essenc~ ,
depending op, the results of '!te1r
evaluation,
says W1lham
Molmen, general counsel for !he
Califomia Workers' CompensatJon
Institute, "If you don't get the r!ght
result. you're not going to be hired
again by thai side. There are some
docJOrS who uy to sboot down the
middle. But generally, the .forensic
system encourages - !n . fac.t,
requires - advocacy med1cme.
lbese guys aren't like ~- Marcus
Welby. They're more like Perry
Masori."
'
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

YolJR.fSB GUN?

• IColumbus 150" I

Berry's World
1'"~ \-\~SIIfo..N

,," .
•'•I

Ec.oNo M'(

S€-EMS -ro 6~ f'1CKI~
UP. 1'1-\c'('RE. SVILPI~G­
l-015 Of 60A\'S.

•
"

•"
•'

•
•
•
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~2

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by NEA, fnc

:.

.•'
•I

•

'

~:Today
•:

!·

•

in history

·

By The Alloclated Prell
.
: Today is Monday, Dec. 28, the 363rd day of 1992. There are three
'ilays left in the year.
.
:. today's Highlight in History:
.
.
$eventy·five years ago, on~· 28th, 1917, ~New York Evenmg Mail
~&gt;ublished "A Neglei:ted Anniv~rsary," ~ facef:!ous essay by H.L. Menck·
~n on the history of bathtubs m Amenca which asseried, among other
\bings that Millard Fillmore was the ftrst president to have a bathlllb
·install~ in the White H11use. To Mencken's disbelief, many readers
i'cprded his spoof IL'l the truth.
IJ

Watson, Dayton, speed, $22 and
costs; MartA. Tillis,Rutland,$peed,
$21 and cOsts; Sarah Cannan, Porn·
eroy,seatbeltviolation,$25andcosts;
Randy IAe; Pomeroy, seat belt violation,cOslsonly;tloydE.Blackwood,
Pomeroy,failmetoconttol,$20and
costs.

last~

Pt=

s::z'0111t2 - -.....
=

F'med were: Timothy C. Gaus,
Rutlllld, ICit belt violalion, $25 and
COlis;. Philip B. Wilson, Marieaa,
failure to CODirol, $20 and costs;

HOWIId D. Brashear, St Albans,
Inc.

- - - - - - - Weafher·------.._,...,L .
&gt;-:.::;,_ .. "..

Soutb·Ce•lral Ollio

'

Tonight, cloudy with a chance
·. , . . _ forecast:
of, ~le. Low 3S-40. Chance of
:::=y~:rrh~~ a
ram 1s 40 percent Tuesday, mostly ·
f h
Lo
3c 4'5
cloudy with a chance of showers. c~anc~ o s owers: ws .r •
f · · co Highs m the 50s. Fnday, chance of
. h 45 50 Ch
H•g
• · ance o ram IS J
showers. Lows 35-45. Highs 45-55.

--Area.deatbs--

t

Leroy Casto

Charles Vaughan

LETART • Eddie Leroy Casto,
34, of Letart, died Sabirdar.,
December 26, 1992, at St Mary s
Hospital in Huntington.
Born May 30, 1958 in Mason, he
was a son of Benjamin and Mar·
garet (Lyons) Casto of Mason. He
was a member of Our Father's
House Church.
·
He is also survived by his wife,
Connie (Roush) Casto; two sons,
Eddie L. Casto II and Justin N.
Casto, both at home; a daughter,
Latrisba K. Casto, at home; four
brothers, Lenny Casto and Wayne
Casto, both of' Baltimore, MD,
RickY ·Casto of Point Pleasant and

Charles A. va,.ghan, 41, of
Nanuet. N. Y., formerly of Meigs
County. died 111ursday. Dec. 24,
l~:UN:~ug. 31, 19Sl in
Pomeroy, he was the son of Robert
W. Vaug~ of Pomeroy, and the
lateHNeO:as~vangis~=~urse and
an instructor at a lpcal college .in
New York.
. Besides his father, be is survtved by a brother, Tom Vaughan,
Athens;. a step-brother, Fred ~ybum, address unknown, a ste~SIS·
ter, Cathy Worlanan, Rudand, and
several aunts and uncles. .
Arrangements
,w•ll
be
announced by the Ewmg Funeral
Home.

nmmyCastoofMason;fouru~

W.VL, speed, $21 and costs; Berry
A.Pelers,Gallipolis speed $20and
costs; ICdly A. ~ Galloway,
speed. $23 and costs· Donald A.
Moyer, Pickerington, ~ a
''-.._. fi
·......, uearm on a li10ior vehicle,
$100 and costs; Gilbert J. Lanham,
Niles, speed. $23 and costs· Otristopbcr M. Carleloo, Coolvill~. assured .
clcardistancc,$10andcosts;Charles
Eugene Allman. vienna~ w .VL,
speed. $24 and costs; Cmthl8 A.

·'

I

~

Herbert W. Davis, Athens, speed,
$2Sandcosts;GinaD.Wasmer,Oak

Ia'

bus,failureto~l,$15andcosts;

~~.sixmonths~jlil.~

slicensesuspendedindefinildy,
leftofcenJer,CQfiiSonly,drivingunder
suspension, S200 and costs. six

monthainjail.~twithDUI

charge; Jeffrey G. Hilbert, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.,speed.$21811dcosts;
Jay Carsey, Middleport. disorderly
conduct, $25 and costs
'
·
·

BertMetz,Ponland,passmgbed

checks, $25 and costs; Forest G.
Qualls, Middleport, speeding, ~
only,~· costs only; seat be~

~Jt~ :tsiJ~

Offices to close

. 0 flices will be CIVO&lt;OI
,__. to .~.
Leading Creek Conservancy District
u"'
publiconThundaysothatstaffcanronductanend-{)f·yearinvenla'y.

. $10and costs; DianaS . Phill'IJI¥,
,
lion,
Pomeroy,~~· $10 and coiiCS:
Mauhcw ·Richards, Racine, speed~
ing, s21 and costs; Randy R~
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $109
fme, suspended to $20, one }'CJI:
probation; Jennifer R. I..ance, Pomeroy, seat bell violation, costs onlY!
Cathy Lynn Alka,Pomeroy, seal belt
violation, $25 8l1d costs; Margaret
Barr,Pomeloy, specd.$22111d CCIIII;
CbristopberCadctt,l!eeclsville,DUI,
$450 and IXliiiS, 30 days in jail, 1111pended to IOdays. operalor's ~
suspended for one year, one ye1t
probalion, prohibited U·tmn, coils
.only; OuiJtiJphet Ransom, Racine,
DUI, 30daysinjail, suspended to 10,
$450 ·and costs. opeialor's lkenle
·suspc~ for one year, one Yt.1!1'
pobillioo, a1cobol ast:rll"""'.lilil·
me 10 control. costs only.
..
· Fcxfeiti.Jig bonds were: Robert
Haley, Puneroy, seat bell violltiolt,
$60; ~ S. &amp;win, POID&amp;O)',
seat belt violation, $60; Stsctiy
Young, PonJCtOY, speed. $65. ,.~

Christmas winners·named

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super Lotto jaclcpot will grow to $8
million for Wednesday night's
drawing, after no Ohio Lottery
player came up with all six numbers picked Saturday night with $4
million at stake.
Here are Saturday night •s Ohio
Lottery selections:
·
Super Lotto: 8-12-27-28-29-41
Kicker: 9-1-9-9-6-8
Pick 3 Numbers: 8-5-5
Pick 4 Numbers: 1-2-7-3
Sales in Super Lotto totaled
$3,017,219. Sales in the Kicker
totaled $460,854.
· There were 63 Super Lotto \ick·
ets with five .of the ·numbers, and
each is worth $1,317. The 3,748
tickets showing four of the numbm are each worth $69.
··

The foUowing were winners in the December 24 01ristmas contest
conductedbytheMiddleportCommunily Asaociation: AnnamaeHayes,
Sears; Dorothy Jenkins, Frudl Phlrmaey; Bruce Beegle, Dairy q.-;
Frank Krautter,King's Haldware; Kathryn Miller, The Added Touch;
Delores Burton. Dan!s; Earline Ebersbach, Plescripti.on Shop; Jean
Rosebeny,Locter 219; DorothY. A. McDaniel, BahrClothiers; Evelyn
Wofford, Johnscin's Variety Suire; Debbie Wamsley. lngel's ~umi­
ture; Micbde S. SIBII:her, Mill Slrect Books; Emma Rogers, Middleport Department Store; Charlene Frederick, Vaughan's Cardinal; and
Pam Crow, Valley Lumber.

EMS units answer numerous calls
Meigs Emergency Services units answered the following calls over
the weekend: SATIJRDAY,4: 14 p.m., Racine unit to diesel spill,SJate
Route 124 and Third Street; S:02 p.m., Tuppeis Plains unit to Slate

tm, Linda Powers or Mason,
Janice Birtchfield of Henderson,
Rhonda Casto of Mason and
Tammy Cremeans of Columbus,
Ohio. ,.,
.
~·nce-wu
'"-"'"''!'""
' '"'tilnesda
LJIIt' ileld
h
~.'
Party plalmed
Potluck refreshments will be
December 30, at t p.m. at 'the
The Loaridge Communi9: Cen- served. All members are urged to
~g Funeral Home wilb Rev.
ter
will· have a New Year ~ Eve attend.
~p Fields and Rev. Mike Fin·
party
Thursday from 8 p.m. to mid·
nJCum officiating. Burial will fol·
Combined watch Services
night.
All bands are welcome.
low in Broad Run Cemetery.
·
A watch service will be held
will
be
served.
Refreshments
Friends may call at the funeral
Thursday
at 7:30 p,m. by the Midhome from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Everyone welcome.
dleport Wesleyan Bible Holiness,
Tuesday.
Rolland Bible Methodist and HarWatclmlght aervice
.
Hobson Church of Christ in risonville Holiness Church aJ Cal·
Christian Union will have a watch· vary Pilgrim Chapel on Route 143.
night service Thursdl.y at 7 p.m. Speakers will be Rev. Amos Tillis
Pastor Theron Durham invites the and Rev. Victor Roush, pastor.
public. There will be different There will also be special singing.
speakers.
Revival
Anl Ele Power....................32 3/4
Racine Apostolic Church will
Asbland Oil....................... .26 SIB
New Year's Eve aervice
have
a revival beginning WednesATclT.................................52 1/1.
Faith Full Gospel Church in
day
at
7 p.m. with Jerry Cotterill,
Barlk &lt;&gt;ne...........................S2
Long Bottom wiU have a New
evangdist
Everyone is welcome.
Bob Evllll$ ........................ .18 318
Year's Eve service Thursday at 9
Olanning Shop.................. l?l/1.
p.m. There will be special music
City Holding............. ~ ......,.21
and fellowship. Pastor Steve Reed
Fedelal MOIIII.................... l6 1/1.
invites the public. 'Ibele will be no
Goodyear 'BR ..................67 314
services Friday.
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Key Cenlurioll ...................22
Protesters angered by a Ku Klux ·
Lands End..........................27
Danc:e plaDDed
Klan cross erected on a downtown
Umitecllrlc....................... 28
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post public square.knocked down and
Multimedia Inc..................29 114
No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will broke the wooden cross early today
Rax RestauranL.................. l/8
have a .round and square dance Fri- in the latest in a series of attacks on
Reliance Electtic................20
day from 8-1~.30 p.m. There will the symbol, police said
Rcli:JIJirls&amp;.Myers •.•.••••••• ~ •••• 17
be a potluck ·oliO' from 6-8 p.m.
Police said they arresJed three
Shortey's Ilk:......................23
Music will e provided by the Cincinnati residents on charges of
Slar 11aDk ...........................36 1/1.
Smoltey· Mountain Drifters. Every- disorderly conduct. Police Capt.
Wendy 1Dt'l........................ l3
one welcome.
Walt McAlpin identiHed the three
Worthington Ind................22 314
as Gregory Knox, 25, Cbiquaua
S.toelll report• a,e tlae !~
' PTOtomeet
The Portland Elementary PTO
LJD. quotes prcMded by ~~-~
FJlil ud Loewl rl Gdipolia.
will hold a: special meeting Tuesday .at 7 p.m. at the school to discuss the future ri the PTO.

Route 681, Louise Posey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 9:06p.m.,
Rutland units to State Route 124 and 325, auto accident, Tony Harris,
Richie Gilkey refused, Jason Whobrey to Veterans; SUNDAY, 1:12 ·
a.m., Pomeroy squad to the police deparbnent, John Demoss to Veterans; 1:18 a.m., MiddlepOrt to North Front. Kim Lewis to Holzer
Medical Center; 5:38a.m., Middleport !lalion 10 North Third, furnace
fire at ~Johnson JeSide!J;c; 8:28 a,m~. Middleport to LiDcoln
Heights, Ann Griffm to Veterans; 9:31 a:m., Middleport to Pomeroy
Cliffs Apartments, Donna Hendricks to Veterans; 9:37 &amp;Jtl., Pomeroy
to the sheriff's office, William Lemaster to Veterans; 6:07 p.m.,
Rutland units to Stale Route 124 for an au10accident, David Reynolds
refused Jreatment. Lee Matson, Jact Peterson, Shannon Walker and
Kenda Reynolds to Veterans; 8:26 p.m., Middlepon to Ovabrook
Cenla',Ralph Frank to Veterans; 10:38 p.m.,Rscine to App~Grove­
Dorcas Road, Sharon DoncUouis to Veterans: 10:4S p.m, Racine to
Hoback Road, Clarence Wicldine to VeJerans; MONDAY, 5:24a.m.,
Pomeroy unit to Pomeroy NltlSing and Rehabilitation Center, Sarah
White toO'Bleness Memorial Hospital; 8:17p.m., Tuppers·Plainsand
Pomeroy units toStaJCRoute681 and Sumner Road, HelenF'mdleyto
Veterans.

Hospital news
VeteraDI M-lal
,
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS ·.
Earl Frecka-, Pomeroy; Ckrtrude
Stivers, Pomeroy; and Louise...-..
Reedsville.
.
• -.z
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES,-

None.

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS _. c
None.
•
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ••
Helen White.

,' .

The Crater of Diamonds, near Mur·

ARE YOU HAVING AJN YE I ? ·.

freesboro, Art., IS tbe Ollly U.S. dla-

mood mine.

Klan cross knocked down again

Our moral o.bligation to stop Serbia
Hodding Carter III

lfi!l.speed.$21 andCQIIS;Ma_xGe.y:
Middleport, seat belt violallOD, ${£
~costs; CliiWAlll Bailey, Ch I ,:
~Y conduct, ~ and cosd;
Dale Wilfong, Coolville, 001, $SOil

where they ,were treated and released.
Damage•to Peterson's 1986 Ford Tempo was listed as heavy and
disabling. Damage to the 1986 Ford Mustang Walker was driving
was listed as moderate and disabling.
The patrol is investigating the accident.

L 0 ttery num bers
.

MicbaBI S. Spas, Huntington,
W.VL,speed.$20andcosts,seatbelt
violation, $IS Sid costs: Amy E.
Campbell, Racine, speed. $23 and
costs; Buddy W, Eggers, Jr., Colum-

Contlnlled from page 1

Stocks

'

Though Serbia has committed
aggression against other soverei~
states, a clear violation of the Uruted Nations Ouuter, it is inconceivhands of the Serbs. Much of the able that the United Nations would
territory of the former Yugoslavia field a force on its own. Incapable
is also. The historic hatreds that even of protecting relief workers
impel the Serbs are fierce; their against the kind of minor-league
sense that their cause is just may be marauders present in Somalia, it
irrational but it is no less deep-IQOI- has neither the resources nor the
ed.
backbone to move forcefully
Nor is there much taste for a against Serbia unless the United
milil¥}' showdown with the Serbs States is in the forefront.
among our Eu~~ean allies, the · All of which leads to the same
nations thai log' Y should be tak- conclusion. To the extent anything
ing the lead in forcin~ a solution. is going to be done to save
They have lost the habit of decisive Bosnia's people and contain impe·
leadelship when the subject is wu rial Serbia•s ambitions, it can and
or peace.
will be done only if the United
It bas been a long time since any States takes the lead.
of ~ fou~ht anyth~g larger than
The arguments for doing so are
a police scuon or comiC opera war, . as plain as the U.N. Charter, as
as with .the ~ritisb exercise against hlunanity itself and as self-interest
Argentma m the Falklands. The On the lalla' one simple poinL The
French bled over Indochina and kind of "ne~ world chaos" fore·
~geria, but that was over a genera· shadowed by Serbia •s "ethnic
uon ago. Germany, bound by the cleansing" is a world out of con·
cons~nts of history, by its ~e!gh· trol, one made safe for predators
bors barely submerged suspiCIOns · and insecure for all others. Such a
and its o~'! laws 1 ~~uld face a world is panicutarlr uncongenial to
severe poliucal cns•s .'f the Kohl economic coope1'111l011 and economgovemment actually bled to go to ic development. And yet Serbia's
war, no matter how noble the e~ample, unchecked,. will be a
cause.
tempung one for voracious demagogues and angry nationality
groups around the world. It unforOn this dare:
tunately already is of gxeat interest
In 1694, Queen Mary n of England died after five years of joint rule to the ICIL'lt •savory of the factions
with bel busblnd.IGDg William m.
.
maneuvering for control in Russia.
. In 1832. Jolm C. Calhoun became the first vice pesident of the Uniled
As for the appeal to humanity,
States to resip,ltepping doWn over cliffem1ces with President Jackson.
we ignore it at great peril. There ,
. In 1846, Iowa bec.e the 29th S111C to be llllmitted to the Union.
will be no excuse of ignorance this
In 1856, die 28th presideat of the United Stales, ThomiL'l Woodrow. time, an excuse that was no more
. Wilsoo,- born in Sllunton, Va.
' ·than a fig leaf for many American
In 1869, William Finley Semple of Mount Vemon, Ohio, patented officials during the Holocauat but
chewinggml.
that was a reality for the vnt
In 1937. compoeer Maurice Ravel died in Paris.
majority of d1cir fellow-AmericanS.
In 194S, Congress ollicillly reeogni2ed the Pledge of Allegiance.
No, this time we will all be com·
In 1945. authorTheoclore Dleiser died in Holl~
plicit in the shcddin&amp; of innocent
In 1973 Aleunder Solzbenillyll published ' Gulag Archipelago," an blood, because we ..e all only too
expose of the Soviet Jrison system thai led to his expulsion from the Sovi- aware of what is ~g in the
et Union.
Balkans. The phrase ' moral mon·

Carolina, where a winter weathel:
advisory remained in effect early:
today.
•
'Highs today were expected to;
hover around zero in the northern •
Plains; in the lOs and 20s in north-:
em New England, across the Great•
Lakes and into the central Plains; in:
the 30s and 40$ across the nalion'a:
midsection; in the 50s in the Clr·•
olinas west 10 Los Angeles; in the:
60s across the southern tier; and in:
the 70s in southern Florida and•
along the Gulf. ·
:
The high temperature for the:
nation Sunday was 83 degrees at•
Fon Myers, Fla.
:

Local· b' rt·ef:s

Meigs announcements _

·~ ~ only ~o fears concerning him. The ftrSt (haPJ!.ily unjustified to

•..

uzo in 1950. Sunset tonight will be Nevada and Colorado and the
at 5:14 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at southern Siena Nevadas in Califor7:S3 Lm.
nia. Winter storm warnings
· Arotmd tne nation
.
remained in effect early for much
The onslaught of snow and rain of the Northwest and parts of
persisted in the West early today, nonhem California.
while sleet and freezing ram pelted
· Sleet and freezin~ rain was forethe Southeast
cast from interior Vuginia to southThe huge low-pressure system ern portions of the Northeast and in
that brought heavy precipitation to the mountains of Maine. Intermit·
the Northwest and northern Rock- tent drizzle WIL'l likely in the Misies on Sunday was expected to sissippi and Ohio valleys. Dry
exl'8Rd inland today, accompanied weather was forecast for interior
by high winds and heavy snow and New Enaland.
-.
rain.
.
Tbe freezing rain on· Sunday
A winter.storm watch remained was blamed for at least one lnlflic
in effect early today for parts of death and 2SO accidents in North

Meigs Caulity Court Judge Pat·
rick H. O'Brien prooessed 38 cases

W.VA.

was·HF'P;N&lt;?J
FoR SoMe.Tf4 iN~ WiTI/
~· SiTMor&lt;e.
$ToPPiNG PoWeR.

The old president and the new
president - and the nation they
represent - stand at a moment of
decision that few of us anticipated
or welcome. How and when we
choose to act in the tortUied land
that was once Yugoslavia will
determine not only the falc of mil·
lions of people there, but quite like·
ly of mfilioils more in lands as far
distaDt as the Indian subcontinent
and the Eurasian land mass of what
w&amp;'l once the Soviet Union. It will
also reveal the nature and quality of
our national aJRSCiencc.
The issue is simple. Are we
going to stand by and allow the
· continued mass murder of Bosnians
by Serbs, and after them quite
probably of Croats and Albanians
and Hungarians and Marateooians
living in the~
· ly separated ethnic
enclaves:1 old Yugaslavia?
The
I ·on is not simple and ·
it wiiJ not
fiec. whatever its
nature. Ha lng dithered and
delayed for so long, it is no longer
possible to envision a peaceful or
tidy ouu:ome. short of appeasement
and capitulation to what the "realists" • already pronounce as
inevitable. Most of the guns and
armaments of a once formidable
national Yugaslav ~y are in the

P8gl 3

Judge O'Brien processes 38 court cases :

erows bloviates and denoun«s; but there is always an underl;unmt of
.self~ting humor thai mates his dephanline egotism bearable. At
1he same lime, he never takes his eye off the baD: At die end rl e-r pro. gram thele ~ liberal ~ all over the floor. Fnm Ted Keonedy to
Hillary ClintOa, and froin 'ferninazis" to anlmal-riBhts activists, the busi·
ness end of his rapier (or Should I say bludgeon?) IS felt day after dayand it hurts.
.
What is Rush Limbaugh like personally? He and I wer_e two of ~rhaps
10 at a lunch in Los Anieles a year or so 1180· and I was Impressed by (of
·#, thiligs) his modesty. ~e regarded himself~ a relativ~ la~er to the
-conservative wars, and sunply hoped to do h1s pan. He 1s domg flU' more

..•

By Tile AMOCiatecl Press
Milder weather is forecast for
Ohio leading up to New Year's 1
Day. Scaaeted showers are also
pouible.
Lows ll1llight will be 35-40 and
hiJ!Is Oil Tuelday rangin from the
mid-401 to the low 50s, ~ Nation. al Weather Service said.
Higbs seDually will be in the
50s Wecloeaday through Thursday
before tempcralllreS start to cool on
Friday.
.
The record·hish tempuature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1984
while the record low was 10 below

IND.

;r's GRe~r. DaD. ·

·oN I.'/

The Daily SenUnel

.Mild conditions ·are expected most of week ·.·

IMansli~ 1411".1•

~iKe.

~iiinbaugh 's biggest assel, though, is his rollicking wiL He cbortles,

"date) is thai, in dancing along the perilous precipice of public issues IL'l
often and as volubly as he does, he may someday open himself to some
false but damaging c~- probably of some sort of bigotry. As I say,
he hasn't done so yet, which is an enormous tribute to his fundamental
.decency, his teen ear Cor nuances, and his rhetorical skiU. But every dawn
the danger is reborn.
.
.
.
My other 'fcar is wbefthe liberals may manage to do to him, even m
• •th·e absence of arbciOrical slip. They have had very little to say about him
~ thus far because they don'tl:now what to say; but you can be sme that
~ they 1~ to dcslroy him. TJie la!e Westbrook Pegler, who .made a career
" out of spearing FDR and his family, used to say that every ume he opened
' a closet door two IRS agents fell out.
·
l With Bill Clinton in 'the White House and the media on the prowl,
: Rush LimbaUP bid bcUer beware. If he ever spat on the sidewalk when
' be was IS. orbas been guilty of any other ttansgression in the course of a
: busy life, :Oay the Lord help !Jim. Meanwhile, he is an incalculably valu~ able resourc:e to the conservauve movement
(C)l992 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

OH IO 1//ccJIIlcr

Workers' ·comp ruined by the unscrupulous .

I=
··

ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publlllier

Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ster" was invented to describe :
what we will become if we contin· ;
ue 10 staDd by IL'l observers while ;
the slaughter unfolds.
•
It is worth noting that, retroac- :
tive scorn notwithstaDding, circum- ;
stances seemed no less m~!f9 and 1
the options equally unappealing to ~
those who sought to appease Hider.·,
Men no less sophisticated a.nd ~
@nt than the'sfitesmen who now :
advise us to steer cleat of military •
involvement thought ihat reason :
cleatly dictated accession to Ger- ·'
many s rape of Czechoslovakia in
1938.
•
The truth, now IL'l it was then, is '
that to s1and rum is to risk much, :
including a war whose cost could ;
. be high to all its participants. But, 1
just as in 1938, to back away is to :
guarantee a much higher cost in :
blood and treaSure jn the future, as ·
'w.ell as shame and dishonor.
,.
It is orir responsibility as a great ~
power to lead. That means at the
United Nations..That means within ·
NATO . That means within the •
nation of Bosnia, a land we have .
recognized diplomatically and to ;
which we owe more than a mourn· ·
ful burial. .
'
The rust order of business is to .
give adequate arms to the Bosnians
so that they can beuer defend themselves. Bpt the need for military ·
interVention by U.S.-led forces may :
lie at the end of the road despite ·:
anything else ~ do. If that
it takes. then that is what the
• .
dent of the United States sho go ,
10 the Congress and country to rec- :
ommend
,
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTBRPRISE ASSN. .
:
Hodding Carter 111, former State ,
Deplrtment spokesman and award- ;
winnin1 reporter, editor and pub· '
Usher, is president of MainS'*l, a :
WashlnJIOR. D.C.-based televisiQtl : ,
producuon company. ·
· 1

is:l ;.

'

Hospital news

Services set
Hillside Baptist Church will preThe Daily Seutioel
sent the movie "The Passion Play"
(UIIPIISl~
, on Thursday a1 7 p.m. Following
Pullli- .."'7 ~. MandaJ
the movie will be a service from
lh....... Prldoy. 111 c-1 81., ........ .,,
the word of God and special
Ohio by the Ohio Vallq PWrliohi. .
singing
by the sin~ers at the
Compoayllrlullimedia Inc.. "-""'·
auo 4117111, Ph.PUUWN),
11112-21M. c1o1o
church.
The
evening will close with
ado.
prayer. Refreshments will be
Member: The A•.,;•f.ecl P'reM, aDd.• the
served
at the midnight hour. Every·
Qrio · ~ ·Auodolioft, Nau-1
Oile is welcome.

...... paW.,

.....-.a,.c.m---

~
Ne""l"'l'"': So1oo, 733 Tlrkd Mnao,
New York, Now 'hit 100)7.

P08TMAIITER: 'I Ioad- ella..- ..
. The Daily S..llaal, 111 Caart 81.,

1\ca•,.,, Omo4&amp;781.

IUBIC&amp;IPTION IIATI:I

ao....st.ao
0... w.u. .........................................
01&gt;0 Monlh..................... ,.. ,,.,, .. ,... ,.....M.e!i

Clne Year.................................- -..$83.20

SIMGL&amp; COPY
PBICB

0.11J0 ............................................26 Conll
~- IIIII ...bloc lo po.y lho oaninarllla ........ 1o The

,. ma)'

.....

. . . . - ................ 12

--...--·m..
-p =

lrulo. Clndl&amp; will .. """ - -

.... ..

No rhrrll'l

'-7 ..0

pll'llliUed. In

a•ailoble.

:.=..·.:....~

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1...............

'··'.,.

Blake, 28, and Wi!ton Blake, 25.
McAlpin said be did not know
whether the Blakes were related.
The three were booked at the
Hamilton County Justice Center,
cited to the Hamilton County
Municipal Court and released,
McAlpin said.
The 10-foot-tall cross was broken at its base in the attack sometime around 1 a.m., McAlpin said.
Police will send a report on the
vandalism to the ~· Klan owners and wUileave it to them if they
want to press charges of criminal
damaging, McAlpin said.
.
Ron Lee, a spokesman for the
U.S. Knights of ~ Ku Klux Klan,
a Hamilton-based Klan facuon
which obtained the city permit to
display the ~. was not available
for comment Calls to his telephone
number were met with busy sig·
nals. ·
The cross, erected Sunday, was
the third cross the Klan has set up
since Dec.: 21. Tbe newest cross
had been fitted with metal braces in
efforts to keep ~rotesters from
brealcing it, Lee SBJd. .

Clutstmas shoppmgls fun. Paying blls Isn't.
Aim the halclay5, ta151der a cxnoJJdatlon Joan rrom ~pies IMk.
Unllk.e mosr JendeiS. ~ make personal loans In amounts as smaD as $500,
And alter all. me afbdabJe n101 llllly payment Is a lot ea5ler1D deal with
than a stack ot oedll: card bills.

We rea11ze l1llt applying ilr a ID.vllsnt much run ellher.
So let us make It v.aUI YfJAI whle. ryou cxme 1D Peoples Bank foryos
ClwJstmas ancldatlon loin. ~11 w.M the applcallon feel
Of~ ytJAitlme Is v.aUI ~too. F'orytJAiarNenlence,

at•

we r - pe!SOIII1 lenders oo duly
otour otlk:es.
But If you prefer. Just ttllliplete the appllcallon below ancJ maD It 111:
ftausiiAN(

P.O.llox518
l'l:*t Pleas;rt, YN 25550

We will gilt back 1D )IOU Wlthn Ulloln ot
~ytJAI request You "'"' \Bier no obligation.

TruiCee8 to meet
The Beclfml Township TrusJCes
wiU meet Thursday at 2 p.m. at the
town hall.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,...,,
446 452'.

'

; .
IIU50N

Granses to meet
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet Saturday a1 7:30
p.m. at the grange hall ncar Salem
Center. Baking contests will be
held. Members bring non-perish·
able products for tbe barrel.

NlWHAVEN

8112-2135

nl-5514

Rlllt out. Send It ln. Pay them off.

I

-------------------------------------------'-===-- Co~\:~1~·~·:.::-::·~----_;·
lfooow

...,_~

-

~

Names omitted

Kathy Bernard, a junior at East·
em High School, was inducted into
thai school's National Honor Soci·
ety. Her name was unintentionally
omitted from an article in The
Dailr Sentiilel. She was absent at
the ume of the pbolo.
The name of Tracy Murphy,
who was pictw'ed, was omiaed.

,_~ .

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1'hank 'Youf
•-·-- '-a...-·
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'._.;t;;;
..,41$1(;

,,

lhlPeoplesBulk
G:ill
-""'

'

'

�I

•

•

Sports
1882-1113

.•

JAN. 5 - Southern - Away
JAN. 9 - River Valley - Home

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
' .

'.

1992 GIRLS'

1992·9.3 BOYS' S(HEDULE

GIRLS
JAN. 4 - Warren Local - Ho...e
JAN. 7 - River Valley - Home

DEC. 29 - Rio Grande Tournam•nt
DEC. 30 - Rio Grande Tournament-

GIRLS
DEC. 28 - Alexander - Away
JAN. 7- Meigs - Away

NOV. 30-EASTERN
DEC • .7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21- AT FORT FRYE .
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN.11-AT. EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 2o-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
...u~n ..i£r-TRIMBLE
28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB.15-AT~ SYMMES VALLEY

DEC •. 4-'SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 12-MILLER
DEC. 18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC. 19-UNIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE- At OUC
·.
DEC. 29-AT RIO -GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 3D-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
.
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 30:-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB.29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 3G-AT TRIMBLE

.
BOYS
JAN. 5 - Federal Hocking - Ho111e
JAN. 9 - At-hens ·

'

GIRLS
JAN. 4 - Trimble - Away
JAN. 7- Southern- Home

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

BlUM LUMBER

CHESTER

Middleport, Oh.

255 Mill St.
992·3345

915·3301

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS

AND RADIO SHACK
106 N. 2nd

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

~

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ILY RESTAURANT

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'

·

St. Laaio 3,

2 (OT)

ae•- .._."s

21-171oss to Indianapolis in tbe
. Sunday. Tbe game JQarked the end Gf M
13-year career. (AP)

FAREWELL, FANS!- Ciaclnnati Bengals
tackle Anlhoay Munoz (center) waves goodbye
to the fallll in Cincinnati _following the Bengals'

Soulll
Mo:ylond 103, M..... SL 63
Soulh&lt;m c.t 82, Flarido AlionticS&amp;
Mid""'
Cin&lt;innoti 61, Tcmplo 45

SUDCiay'• ICOI'IS
l'lllllmF 4. llllfrllo 2

Saul-

Touo 19, l11inalo 72

NowJ-6,11adf«d2

F.rWftl
San Joatl SL 7.., Fra:no St. 62
UNLV94, Molqucuol8
Utah 96. Wii.·MUwa.W. 62

~6,0aowol

TanBD ~ SL ~.Gaia 3
Willlipca7, Uio: •at.a4

• .:M DrJirZ.

~1,Edm=••3

Suaday's scores

Do&lt;ioit4,0Ucooo0

v - 5 . Miialrcd 1

SOulll
NE IAuiJ!ono 14, E. W11binpm SB
Southern c.l86, Miami 66

No P- toaJcbt

a.JLY.Moe

.

.

By JOE KAY
His teammates also felt lhe loss. season," Esiason Slid. ..If rdJis u
CINCINNATI (AP)- Anthony
"We're going to miss him,'' where it ends, fme.
Munoz and Boomer Esiason got offensive lineman Joe Walter said.
"In no way, shape ar~az I
standing ovations and uibiltes, but " He's a great player. He's a leader. see myself here with die FW
missed out on the best going-away We're losing the best."
situauon. I don't say 1118 to 'be
present - a win.
" It was emotional to walk off antagonistic. I'm beiJ1&amp; '
Munoz was visibly disappointed the field and know you won't have
Esiason already hid d
' Gil
after the Indianapolis ColiS rallied Anthony anymore,'' safety David his locker at the team •• sa· )
to beat his Cincinnati Bengals 21- Fulcher said.
Field w!dout site.
17 Swlday. The 11-tirne Pro Bowl
"It's· cleared out 'll1d it's . ...,
The Bengals have had more
offensive lineman wanted to head time to get used to losing Esiason, locker anymore.'' Friww aii4. .,
into retirement remembering a win. who hadn't played since Nov. 22. gave it 10 Joe Walter. l • wul
"It was very emotional," said General manager Mike Brown has my name abel put ·his I!P·••
Munoz, who received halftime said he 'II either trade or release
tributes. "It's the last game I' ll Esiason, who makes an estimated
play, and I wanted to win it''
The Phoenix Cllldinds. wllo
$3 million, as the club rebuilds
Esiason? He was more behind Klingler.
also played in SL Louis ...S Oiicaimrospective than inspired in what
!:It's been kind of a bumpy train go, originally were ·u.aod 6e Nc!lrprobably was his last appearliJ.ICe in ride of emotion for me this gan Alhletic Club.
Bengals stripes. _
The quarterback threw an
·_incompletion on his only attempt
after Don Hollas hurt his knee in
the fourth quarter. He spent lhe rest
Children draw
of the game roaming the sidelines,
looking like an outsider in his
jacket and baseball cap.
"I didn't expect it to happen the
way it did,' ' Esiason said.
There were a lot of surprises
Sunday for a Bengals team that
started coming to grips with the
what they
loss of its two biggest names.
Munoz, 34, announced last
Monday that it would be his last
game. Chronic shoulder problems
and a tom knee Ugament made him
quit after 13 seasons.
The Bengals had plenty of lime
to prepare ~ send-off. Teammates
gave liim a framed jersey during
and whaf they see .
the week, and Riverfront Stadium
was decked wilh banners wishing
him a quick trip to the Hall of
Fame.
He got his rust standing ovation
from the crowd of 47,837 when the
offensive unit was introduced
before the game. He came out of
the -locker room for halftime
tributes, which included a silver
planer engraved: "Anthony
Munoz, The Best Ever," and a
proclamation from Mayor Dwight
Tillery declaring it Anthony Munoz
Day.
f
· Forrest Gregg, Munoz's first
I
coach in Cincinnati, stepped onto
!
the makeshift stage and told
'
Munoz: " You've been a credit to
the Cincinnati Bengals and a credit
to professional football . You're
everything that anybody would
ever want or expect from an
athlete."
.
Munoz, surrounded by his
family, spoke only briefly.
"Thank you, Cincinnati, for 13
years of great memories," he said.
There were several sign s
wishing Esiason well, too. But he
was a solitary figure until Hollas
got hurt late in the game. With
David Klingler inactive because of
a bruiSed hip, Esiason was the only
one left.
The crowd rose to iiS feet again
when No. 7 led lhe offense onto lhe
field one last time.
Help redraw their world . .
"I' ve always said I appreciate
Call and get free information
the fans of Cincinnati,'' Esiuon
on how to protect your ctilaen
said. "They've appreciated me.
from _drugs and violence
They showed me that today. They
in your neighborhood.
didn't have 10 show me anything
c.n ·1-aoooWE PREVENT
because I know where their hearts
are.•,
Esiason's only pass was
incomplete, and the Bengals never
got the ball back. It turned out to be
an awkward ending to two stellar
5

-

21•• ,. 0

ll

Mid""'

Tuesday's games

_ , _ ..
TcauaiOII N.Y. Ialladal,7:40p.m.
N .Y . Raaaas at Washin11on, 7:40

Noflh Dotau 97, E. Manw!o 62
ParW•

~ . 7:40p.m.

-

Hawaii Pacirw: 101, IllinoiJ Waleyan
•

90

Tournaments
Cawbo)'Sh-ul

flntround

TeuoTech79,MarlwloSL 70
Teuo-Adlnpm 79, Wyando1 70

Haaoler Cludc
flnt reund
Calondo79, SLFnncia,NY61
hwliant 90, Buller -41
lblnbow ct..lt

lnlheNBA •••
EASTERN CONFERENCE

AIINIIcTW L Pet. GB
NewY.-..............16 9 .640
a.-..................11 10 .545 2.5
-_ ___
, . ........
.531 . 2.5s
,_....... 14
12 12
15 .444

..., 7

pu 1 \' ·• ---···· '

16 .333
---·-------..---7 17 .2!12
' . ,., ·-"--"' 19 • •»9

"

M--w.........

7.5
I.S
9.5

Hawaii 83, Fordham 64
Kanou 93, Jocban SL 15

Ohio high school
boys' baskelball scores
-Wood 69. B. Comao 63

T-

Jo&amp; D-DA

...-

---~~
..__

NLT-Jio- - ·

IatlleNHL•••

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WAUIS CONIDENCE

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LA. I.K..........14 10
U~ ------~14 12
O.W.Iiooo .......13 13
- ---·--·"·' 16

7l

.Jal

GB

3.5
4
6
7
I
11 .5

'

Cudiold71,--41
eu-, y...,, 70. C1o. W."T.ch 67
a.......... 62. MA:Ciainl9
Cin. l'oA 52.1Aa.-. 0.. 47
"""'"'"'"' 65, w. lfnian 60
lftd1lll Vall. 70, Oan••1 ~
Laodolown 59, EdUan N. 31
MoM:mi6,SoodJVolL56
-IIIIM, Wuh. 75,Cin. MaoU.

4.5
4.5

6
6.5
7.5

!

llntround

WESTERN CONFERENCE
·u.m .................16

is a crime.

Tulane 64, Ho&amp;tra 5S

S..Ja-. a V..:ouva",1 0:40 p.m.

FISlER - Ow•er/Oper•tor

253 N. StcoRd

Saturday's scores

57

PUnt Vo!L 7S, Cal. BJiap 47
SLHonly 53, ICI1i4a 49
S. W-42. ZonoT.... 34
Saulhlllatm S7. Lo..nvllle 51
Vanci.U. B..W. 57, F - 31
Wheo1&lt;nl&gt;urJ 63, ltidwaod Dolo SB
W'llla4 7!, Co. SaWt 62

Transactions
BuketHII
N•tl-.1 l•kr'"0 Aaladatm
PHOHNIX SUNS - A&lt;:tivotocl KoYin
Jotw:aa, p.M. W1ivtd Alex SdvrW,

r....--.. .

Saturday's scores
-

careers.

J-119, l:LIM!LAND 114

\ltolll~.-91

Dlnit 99,

97

. - 106, OOIIodO 100

~"

-113.
O.W. -

10!

110.Dolloo16

."

1

Munoz, Esiason say goodbye

see,

Nalional college
basketball action

•

C_DI...Iao
7 .731
Cloodoioo ............ l.4 11 .360
CUVI!LAND ...... IS 12 .5.S6
o...&amp;--------13 11 .542
w-..........:...13 13 .500
- - - - -11 13 .410
~---- 11 14 -

Fo1· All Your -Prescription and Sund; y Needs
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I

lloolalS, T.....,l

Jtlil.a

.

992·5432

Prescription
Shop

1SB104
159136
105147
123141
109181

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CJiiato..............l9

, Pomero , Olio 45769

JUST DO IT.

3 45
4 44
5 31
3 ":19
I 13

Indiana at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Cl!icoaa •• O.ulaao, 7:'!0 pm.
CLEVE.LAND a1 Allla11, 7:30p.m.
Golden Sme at Houlton, 1:30
Boatm n . Scau1e al UK! XiDJ
10
pm.
Dlllu u Sacnmeawt. 10:30 p.m.

a;;,p"' o-M, 7:40pm.
- . .. w...,..,·a:40p.m.
.. Edniaoton. 9:40p.m.
Pllilodclpllio 111M AnaeJ~ , t0:4o

-.011.

Your Local .

Tueaday's eamts
50 141113

Saturday's scores

. ., .. . . .

FISHER -FUNEUL HOME
P. 0. Box 613

4

li.Y. ..._6,......,5

. PHONE
(614) 992-6451

. &amp;

s.,u..-

.,,. s ,,_......
5ef

Allank .t WahinJllln, 7:!0 p.m.
MilWiube at Orlaado, 1:30 p.m.~
LA.lA1ccn ot Miami. 7:30~m.
Deuoit It CLJNEL.\ND, 7:30p.m.
Golden State at s., An~. 8:30p.m.
Minneacltl. d Utah. 9 p.m.

.. :zo 14

Oipry .-....... 2310
v -......... 2110
LooAaploo ....... 20 12
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20 16 3 43 162137
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Tilllpo llaJ ....... 14 Z! 2 '!0 129141
ILJ.auio ...... .12 19 S 29 123 143

•!;110~.::.::::
_._,_

--

Sunday's J!C()res
PhoeniA 129, Den"a-18
PbiWe]plrio 110, LA. C1ii&gt;oora 110
Socnmtdo 111.8...... 1~

£hiar·-----~-Doo.o;i.. .~ ...........

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Milwo.U.102. N..., Yodt 100 (OT)
Ph..U.I13,S..W.110
PorWad 121. Pbi1adolp!1ia liS (OT)
San Antmio 104, LA. Lakcn 92

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

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SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
5TH STREO

228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

:zo 12 6
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Bulralo.............. 15 15 6
lladfanL.......... 11 Z! 3
Oaowa ............. 3 33 3
~-----------

6 • --

LA.-7' · - - -- - 2 . . . .125 1&lt;0!12

Peoples
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AMI!UCAN COii'III!UNCE
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.--111·------- 2113 4 46 154127

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IatlleNn..••

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC . . 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1G-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT"MILLER
DEC. 17,..8ELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-.AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2o-AT SOUTHERN
,JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
· JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE·YORK ·
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB . .1-AT BELPRE
FEB.4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. &amp;-TRIMBLE
FEB. 11-AT EASTEfiN

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

Where America, Goes 'Ill Relax··

"He' s sman with the football
and accurate throwing it," coach
Dave Shula said. "He knows how

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. &amp;-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS ·
JAN.12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 16-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. 19-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 26-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 29-AT .BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING .
FEB.12-SOUTHERN
FEB.16-VINTON COUNTY

\

®~·

77yards.

U&gt; run 1he offense. He bad 1 good
day going for him. Too bad it
ended that way."
The Colts recovered his fumble
ai their 44-yard line and took the
lead by catching the Benpls in a
blitz. Rodney Culver ran ~ yards
on-1 draw play for the go-ahead
touChdown with 7:311eft.
That's when the drama began
for the Bengals. Boomer Esiasori,
who proba61y will be traded or
released in the off-season, made his
rust appearance since Klingler was ·.·
promoted to starter five games ago.
The crowd of 47,837 gave him a
standing ovation, hoping the
quarterback who led them to a
Super Bowl would finish with a
flollrish.
"We would have loved to have
Anthony go out on a winning
note," Klingler said. "There would
have been no better way than io
have Boomer come in and do iL' •
" We had one last chance,"
Munoz said. "It would have been
great to be involved in the last
drive and, with Boomer directing
it. have a game-winning drive.;'
Esiason was sick last week and
missed practice. He ~nt most or
the game as a sohtary figure
roaming the sidelines, not
ex~ting 10 play again. He wasn't
thmking about · directing a
comeback.
"It was, 'lust don't throw an
interception,' " he said. "Actually.1 guess I was kind of overwhelmed
a litUe bit"
All the offense produced was a
three-yard scramble, a four-yard
run by Fenner, and a third-down
incompletion thilt was too far in
front of Craig Thompson.
The ColiS got the ball back with
5:S3 left and ran out the clock
behind Culver, who fiilished with
92 yards on 14 carries.

1

.1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

Put One Under Your Tree This
Christmas

for 10uc:bdowns lhat bpilt a ·17 -0
balftime leld.
"I got JOOd blocks from
Aatbony aod Koz:," FeliiiCr Slid.
" II was wide open. All I bad 10 do
was run.••
It was easy - far too easy.
While Munoz accepted an
e~~~J~w.d silver platter and lributes
at halftime, coach Ted
Mm:hiiJroda tore into bis Colts.
"We just weren't emotionally
ready 10 play.·· Marchilxoda said.
"Ted got on us preuy good,"
Trudeau Slid. "ltjuat seemed that
everyone was looting past this one
with noching on the line. We were
fortuna~e tbete was enough time to
cane back and win.''
They were fonunate Trudeau
got in the game. Jeff GeQrge went
out with a concussion al the end of
the first half after leading the
offCIISe to just three first downs two by penalty - and 24 total
yards.
.
.~ Trudeau came on and led the
Colts 10 a comeback win for the
third time fu their last live games.
He completed IS of 19 for 183 ·
yards and threw touchdowns of 7
yards to Kerry Cash and 19 yards
10 Bill Brooks.
Then· the defense came into
play, forcing Don Hollas 10 fumble
on a scramble that set up the
winning points and left the backup
qulllterback seriously hurt. The
initial diagnosis was a torn
lipment in his left knee that will
require surgery and sideline him
far six months.
HollaS, filling in for the injured
David Klingler, completed 12 of 17
for 103 yards· without an
inlerceplion and ran nine times for

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 5-UNIOTO - 1:00 p.m.
DEC.1G-AT WATERFORD
DEC.12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
DEC.17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN. 7-~IVER VALLEY
JAN. 9-AT MEIGS-3:00p.m.
JAN.11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAI. HOCKINa-.:1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
JAN. 23-MILLER -1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1..!.AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. 6-MEIGS - 1:00 p.m.
FEB.15-'AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC: 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-:~T FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 8-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12- AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12- AT WATERFORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

BOYS

Mondly, Decam'a r

Indianapolis beats Cincy 21-17
to post eight-game·turnaround ·

1992·93 GIRU' SCHEDULE

1992·93 IOYS' SCHEDULE

EASTERN EAGLES

·

To jilin• }ilst trilutillg 1~ason in ff!ur years,

' .

THIS WEE 'S
GAMES

The Daily Sentinel·
a.1•

' JI • ,vc.y sad Jcnowing you're
not gmnf t~ be out there
tomorrow,' Munoz said. "When I
wake up, it'll be the last time I
wake up feeling run over."

..

�I

•

--"-a•

'

•

. '
Monday, December 28, 1882

.

.
.;(Southern defeats Coal .Grove 53-47 in McDonald's Classic
6 The Dally sentinel

.

Monday, December 28, 1182

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

,

nr.,,,,,, .

By SCOTT WOLFE

t •!:•; SetltlMI Correspoadeat
~, .. ' The SDiltbcm Toinadoes boost:.l,tldtheirm:mlto3-1 Saturdaywilh
:~ 0.53 -4 7 triumph over Coal Grove
'":'ill theM 'Onald's Holiday CJass!c
.. a S'a maker CCDter on the Ohio
Uuhallity-CbiUicothe campus.
,. . . . . . WIS led in scoring by
'"-Mic• E-. who had 20 j)Oinli
1114 lix rebounds, ud teammllte
\ 1 ~ Williams, who had 10. Greg
!. ~.led Coal Grove with 13,
' " Evans was named Southern's
Most Valuable Player by the tour)lament staff and· the so·uthern
1• cbeerleaders, guided by Sandr-_
Baer -and Romaine Frederick,
c;laimed the c~rlcading award.
~'',S;tuu won the Hornets' MVP
I

.~~~entire Poe was rilled with

• miscues and missed opponunities
'- · *bich prohibited eilher tearn l'rom
laking a fDlll command.
~ ~ Southern took a 2-0 lead on

! t~-foot jumper by

a

sophomore
: F'IShcr, then went up 5-0 on a tbrcc
: poincer by Evans some two minutes
.IDIO the ·game. .southern never
trailed, but. tip-toed to an 11-6 fmt
period lead
Eilrly in the second quarter,
Southern had a chance to. blow lhe
game w~de open when Williams
: .AOlched a short jumper, Fisher
1:-ll:ored on ·a drive, lhen Fisher hit a.
r-IJair of free throws to push the
score to 17-10. In between,
1 Southern came up with two aborted
fast bmak opportunities.
Later in the frame, missed
'~IS' and a 1-4 stint at the free.
i · 91 'line eliminated a possible
1•
-16'$HS lead, that instead held
·fast at 24-16. Soulhem did get lhe
last shot of the half, a 15 foot
jumper by Williams at the :03
mark, as the score ended 26-18

I
I

!

the first. Coal Grove's height
enabled .them to push the ball
inside, but i.ts post gam~ was
lackiog aDd produced ounierous
misscdsbots.
. A&amp;t &amp;Om.4 up 39-28 with 1:49
· left in the third l'rame, Southern
scttlcd for a 40-32 advarnaae at the
buzzer.
.
Wilh 3:05 left Southern led S().
37, its bigest lead of the day, but
desperation three pointers by Coal
. Grove cut into the lead at lhe fmish
for a 53-47 tally.
·
. Southern hit 16·46 from two
poim ~ and hit a meager 2·11
from thrce-poiDt
Southern
· Grove hit
hit1S-2lallbe 1M
18-49 twos, 2·14 lhrces and S-7 111
the line.
. .
· Southern outrebouoded the
bigger Horoets 35·28, led by
Singletoo's oioe, Fisher's seven , .
and Evans' sill. Six·foot·six Jason
Fields bad niDC for Coal Grove.
Southern had four steals, 18
turnovers, three assists a.nd 11
fouls. Coal Grove had 11 steals, 11
tumov013 and .U fouls.
· Southern plays 111cbon in the
Rio Grande Tournament at Lyne
. Center on Tuesday, December·29
at6 p.m.

. By RUSTY MILLER
i . "ORI;ANDO,
Fla. (AP)- As
~ged

up and bruised as a Holly,
wood stuntman, the Ohio State
Buckeyes spent Saturday afternoon
on a toor ofUniveisal Studios. .
- . Players were either nursing
1 injuries or juSt coming back from
them after the Buckeyes' fifth
1 workout Saturday morning at
Thunder Pield while preparing for
-,:~~with Georgia New Year's
~
y iD die Florida Citrus Bowl.
"There's a risk you take when
.-...r u go agaiost yourself," said
Ohio State coach John Cooper.
"You know you're walking a fme
, line ... you're either ·not dl:&gt;ing
enough or doing 100 much.''
Among the walking wounded
Tte place-kicker Tim Williams,
, backup quarterback Bob Hoying,
linebacker Alex Rodriguez,. offen. sive lineman Jason Winrow, defen·
sive back Jason Louis and running
back Eddie George.
~
Williams broke a bone in his
right wrist during the first w&lt;rkout
on Dec. 20th, while Hoying missed
a day with tendinitis in his left
knee. Rodriguez and Winrow each
broke a finger but didn't miss any
worltouts, ,while Louis broke his
nOse Wednesday.
George bruised a shoulder dur:
ing Saturday's worltouL
.
The team has hit MOM Studios,
Sea World and Universai 'Studios
so far and plans to visit EPCOT
~cer Sunday.
Ahead on the social agenda are
to Walt Disney World's Plea. 'Ofe Island, Gatorland, Church
:Jilect Station and Sea World.

I

!
I'

I

I
l

~

1
1.

NEW

YORK ·(AP) a.stetball was clearly the sport of

Mark Allen 1-0-0=2, Ryan
Williams 4-0-2=10, Jemny Dill 2·
0-0=4, Michael Evans 2·2·10=20,
Robert Reiber 1·0·0~2. Mason
Fisher 2~-3=7, Russell Singleton
4-0-0=8. TOTALS -1'-2·15=53
.

...
•

1M.,

c·

f11101aious

l
r
,. .
I

nothing.

,...s,...... ...

" DEAR JACK:.Thanks forimprov·
ing on that very old atory. I
don't mind being nccdled by my
readm •• especially when they're
as sharp as you. Write again some
time.
Gem of the Day: Cleaning out
the kids' rooms while they arc
still at home is like shoveling yoor
sidewalk while it is still snowing.

Clinically obese people must get
counseling· and fmd out why they
ANN LANDEIIS
tum to food for comfott, satisfac"199i, Loo .bpi~~
tion and pleasure. Good COUIIJCiing, Cftolons,.......,.
coupled with a sensible diet oNl
exercise, can give )'Our dad many
more years of life. Jan. I is a restaurant. Of course, I was
wonderful day to starL
included. Naturally, everyone
Dear Ann Landen: Your column ordered the most expensive steaks.
in the Jacksonville, Fla., paper When the waiter arrived with
recently contained a story lhat was the steaks, he had several plates
so old it had whiskers. It was lhe lined up on his arm. I marveled at
one about the turkey that was how l)e balanced them so well.
dropped on lhe floor. Even when When he went 10 serve my falher.
lhat story was new, around lhe tum the. steak slid off lhe plate and onto
of the century, it was a "turkey."
the floor.
I'll tell you one that. actually
The waicer apologized pofuscly,
happened. When I was about 12 then picked up the steak and said, '
years old, my father took me on a "I'll be back in a few minutes with '
business trip. We lived in ano~one.• Mypoppipedup, "No
Lyn~hburg, Va., at the time, and lhe
wayl Leave that steak here and go
trip was to Richmond.
get me IUIOther one!"
Dad took six of his best customI learned that evening how
ers to dinner at a very nice smart my falher really was. (P.S.

Awards presentedRibbons were presented 11, the
recent meeting of the Hemlock
Grange for those whO participlled
iD the slate contesiS.
Rosalie Story. master, presided
at the meetiog. Contests for the
coming year were discussed and
reports of standing committees
were given by Helen Quivey. Ziba
Midkiff gave the legislative report.
'

Drugs art tvtrywhere. They•r.:

easy 10 get, easy to uu oNl tw!ll
easier to get hoolctd Oil. I/ you ltavt
questions about drugs, )'011 need AM
LAnders' boo/dtt, 'The I.Awdown on
Dopt." Send a self-addressed, long,
busilless·size tnvelopt oNl a check
or monty order for $3.65 (this
includes pos/Ogt oNl handling) 10:
I.Awdow11, c/o AM l..anders, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

The gioup voted to install ~ fail
on the oul$de basement steps. •
An appeal for a Darice County
member was read by Sylvia Mid·
kiff and a contribution will be ·
made.
·
Members reported ill were Leo
Story, Octa Ward and '; 'Art
Shumway.

.

A report on the State Grange

Convention was presented ':by
Christine Napier and PauliDe Rife,
delegates from Meigs County. .
Refreshments were served to 15
members and two visitors.

•The Area's Number 1
·Marketplace

.

Days

durlog Salarday night's McDonald's Holiday Classic game agaiDst
Coal Grove iD .Chillicothe, which tbe Torudoes woo 53-47 to boost
their record to 3·1 011 the season•.

To.place an ad

Pittsburgh hands Cleveland.23-13 .loss
performance neCded to take the
burden of Piusburgh 's offense off
Foscer' s sore upper back. ·
"We had to get Ibis one - we
couldn't go into lhe playoffs with
tbrcc straight losses," cornerback
Rod Woodson said. "We had to go
into the playoffs with some
. momentum.''
·
Brister, subjected to harsh
criticism by even his own fans after
failing to produce a touchdown in
two slraightlo~. came very close
to gloating.
"A lot of people didn't believe I
could get it done," said Brister,
who didn'tplay untillhc.Jllh week
of the Season. "With a little lime
and protection, I can do it with
anybody. It's tough not taking a
snap for 10 weeks like I did ...
(and) having people expect you to
step in without missing a beat,~ '
Foster's 1!2. 100-yard games
matches Eric' Dickerson's 1984
NFL record, and he ran for at least
100 in all eight Steelers' home
games. Foster also was the only

Call992-2156

back all season lQ gain 100 against
the Browns' defense.
What killed lhe Browns - who
lost three straight to fmish 7-9 was an inability to turn a
succession of long drives into
points.
Trailing 7-0, Cleveland ran
more lhan 11 minutes off the clock
on a 17,-play, 90-yard .drive early in
the second quarter, only to settle
for a 22-yard field goal by Man ·
Stover.
"It's been like that all year,"
center Jay Hilgenberg said. "We
put toge~ long' drives, but we get
get no IQUChdowns."
·
·
· Later, lhe Browns drove to the
Pittsburgh's five, only to again
come away again with a 22-yard
Stover field goal. A second-half
drive ended when Rod Woodson
intercepted
backup
Mike
Tomczak's pass on second·aod·12
from the Steelers' 14; lhe ~rowns'
final drive was stopped on
Tomczak's fumble at the Piusblir~
15 wilh'1:09 to play. ·
·

MoN. thru Fa1.

CLOSED SUNDAY
• Ada outaide 1M couty your ad nm1 •Uit be prepaid
• Recti.,. di-=oal for ada paid i• adTU~Ce.
.
Ada• Ci-way uti FCHIIOd ado ....lor 15 -tda will M
nddarcataoehup.
·
• ·Prioa ol ad.for .U aapilalleu.n ia doublo price of ad ...,
• 7 polatliDelype ooly uaad
• S..titlttllo 1104 ,.......u.to for "'"" after
day (oheek

• r,..

r....

for erron rant day ad IWUI ia .-.per). c.u Wore 2:0() P·•·
dayafler puhlic•tioa to -~• correction
II!' Acil 'aJaal •UII lHJ pUd ill ad.YUICO are:

n.uw

Card ot
Happy Atlo
Ia M-ria•
Yard Saleo
• A d ...itoad ad.-..,, plooad Ia !he CaDipolia Daily
Trilnoae (except Cluaifoad Dioplay, 8111laeot Card or l.epl
No-) will aloo appear ill tha Poiat Plouut Ropier aad
tluo Daily S.ntboel, r...hi"l o""r 18,000 ho•ea

Trevor Linden, Greg Adams and
rookie Jiri Slegr also scored for
Vancouver.
·
Nordiques 6, Senators 1
Steve Duchesne had a goal and
three assists as visting Quebec
scored five pawer-play goals to
hand Ottawa its seventh straight
loss and mpve into a fmt-place tie
with Montreal in the Adams Division.
..
Joe Sakic had two gOals· and an
assist and Mike Ricci scored twice
for the Nollliques. .
Red Win11s 4, Blackhawks 0
Titn Cheveldac stopped 32 shots
for his third shutout lhe season
as lhe Detroit won at Chicago.

ol'

l

Hannan Holjday .
Tournament set
for Thesday
The Hannan Junior High School
Holiday Tournament will be held
Tuesday and Wednesday at Hannan
Junior High School near Ashton,
W.Va.
Start times will be noon and
I :30 p.m. for bolh days.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults ·
and $2 for students. Admission is
good for bolh games of that day.
In addition, tournament T·shirts
will be sold to lhc public for $7.
The host Wildcats will entertain
Ohio Valley Christian Tuesday at
noon. That game, will be followed
by the Hannan Trace-Wahama
game at 1:30 p.m.
The losers will play Wednesday
at noon in the consolation game,
while lhe winners will meet at 1:30 .
for lhe championship.
All-tournament team players
will receive T-sbirts, and the cham·
pion team will get a team troPhy.
For more information, call tour·
nament director Charles Boyd at 1·
304· 743·3212 (school) or 2455053 (Rio Grande)

Jim Carson, Steve Chiasson,
Sheldon Kennedy and Sergei
Fedorov all connecled for DettoiL
Peoguins 4, Sabres 2
Mario Lemieux recorded his
98th and 99th points of lhe season
with twO assists as Pittsburgh won
at Buffalo.
Pittsburgli built a 3~ lead in lhe
second P,eriod on goals by Ric.k
Tocchet and Bob Errey. Jaromtr
Jagr and Kevin Stevens also scored
for Pittsburgh. Alexander Mogilny
had both goals for Buffalo.
Flames 7, Oilers 3
Gary Roberts had three goals

Public Notice

.
111141

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueodlly
1:00pm. Wednesday
IOOp.DI. Thursday
I :00 p.DI. Friday

Rate

Over 15 Words

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

992-Mil\tDeportl

S67-Chealllre

Pomeroy

3118-VIa~oo

9Hs..a-..r
843-Pordaad
247-i.et.n FaRo
949-Radae
742-Rudaad

245-Rio c••.;..
2&amp;6-G.,. •• Dlat.
643-Ar.W. Dl:t.
379-Wal...t

675-1'1. P I 458-Leoa
S76-Applo Grove
773-M-a
882-New Ba•ea
895-Lotart
937-lhatralo

667-CoolriDe

Public Notice

c-

and Paul Ranheitn scored twice as
Calgary won ·at Edmonton for its
sixth slraight victory.
Maple Leafs 6, Blues 3
Douj! Gilmour had a goal and.
two BSSISIS and Grant Fuhr stopped
Brendan Shanahan on a penalty
shot for Toronto.
Fuhr made 37 saves and faced
19 shots in lhe second period.
Jets 7, N~rtb Stars 4
Rookies Teeinu Selanne and
Keith Tkachuk each scored two
goals as Winnipeg took a five-goal
lead and held on to beat lhe North
Stars.

-

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

c.n•.

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC. ·
•EAR, NOSE &amp; IHROAI •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY

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

.... ~ ...... Cere Fer Vo11r flnlil¥

Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignment Acce!pled
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANt I

Public Notice

Public Notice

Robert Concte, • I ' - • entitled Paul Ill. Rood,
Unknown; Ollie Conde; Aclmlnlalretor WWA of tho
OF IIIIIQ8 COUNTY, OHIO Acfdreaa Unknown; the Eotola of Kalla Guth,
Uilllnown Halla, Nelli of Kin, Decoaaed, vo. Loulae A.
"~' II. REED,
.
!'.idMintatnlor WWA
Devloo•, L111•t••· Aij,- Condo, ot 11. Thlo acUon hao
mlnflllratora, &amp;Mu- 111d boon aaalgned · Caae No.
of tile l!lla.. of
Kale Gull, Dt: usd
Aealgne of Ollie
27,220 and Ia pondlng In lhe
Pllltloner Acfdr••• Unknown;
Plan Court of
ward Condo, Addreu
County, Ohio,
LOUIIE A. CONDE, IIC II.,
Unk-n; tho Unknown
Dlvlolon, Court
AI apond•ta Hofro, Next of Kin, Dev·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ne. 27,210
lo-, Ll!lll-, A*lin~ 45769.
.
Dut 111.'-147
olrotoro, Exoculoro and
Tho object of lho Petition
NDTICI! IIY fiUelJCATION Aaolgno of Edward Conde, Ia to determine lhe helra,
Te: Dl- Con., Laat Acldr-• Unkno-; Bedle nut of kin and poreono
Garrloon Conde, AddrMo entitled to tho oateto of
land, Current • '1 11 Unknown; tho Unknown Katie Guth, Dec•oed. In
Unbown: lite Unknown Holro, Noxt of Kin, Davl· order that a dlotrlbutlon of
He1111, Nellt ef Kin, Devl· oooo, Logatooo, Admin!- uld oatate con be made.
You 111 hereby required
• - · Lapteee, Adtlllni- otraloro, Exacutoro and
otratoro, Exeoutoro end Aealgno of Sadie Garrloon to anower tho Petition withAoalp8 of DIMo Clin., een•: tho Unknown Holra, In twenty-eight (28) deya aft·
• ' t ·s· Unknown; Ch•· Noxt of Kin, l)ovloooo, or tho loot publlc1tlon or
lao Conde, Addrou Un· Logatooa, Admlnlalratora, thlo notloo which will bo
· known; 1M IJfllon._ Helra, Executor• and .Aeolgna of publlohed once a week for
· "eat of Kin, Devl. .eo, Kalla Guth, 0.0-ed, and aiX (8) IUCCIIIIVI weeki.
L-uateea, Admlnllllratorl, lho Unknown Holra, Noxt of Tho loot publication will be
Ex10ulon 111d Aealgna of Kin, · l)evloooo, Logateoo, made on the 7th day ol
ChaiiH
Addr- Admlnlotrotoro, Executora Jonuary, 1193, and the
Unllnown; Robert Condo, and
of Auguat twonly-olghl (28) doyo for
Adclreao Unknown; tho Condo,Aaalgno
Docllllll
1
II
Unllnown Helre, Nat of Kin,
You aro horoby notiftod onawor ng w I commence
~, on that date. In """ of your
Devte-. Admlnllltnltorl, that you havo beon nom...
fallllfl to anawor or olhorEx10ulofa and Aoalgna of
Dotendanto In • legal action wloo roopond • required
_ _....;,;.__ _ _ ___,_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 by lho Ohio Rulli or Civil
Real Estate General
Procedure, Judgment by
default will bo rondored
agalnat you for the relief
dernonded In thlo PIIIUon. 1
Doted lhlo 25th day or
November, 111112.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Jucfgil
Lana It Neeaetr...cl, Clerk
(11)30; (12)7,14, 21,28;
(1) 4, 610

$.30
$ .42

ForSolo .. T...Io

I \ I; \I 'l I' I 'I II

·s .60

,\ I I \ I ' I I

$.05/day

Rates are fur consecutive ruM, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

==;-----!

II

I'

............ a.,

32- Mobile Ho•• for Sale
3l- Fa..., for Sal:
34- 8.. _ Bulltlblp
1
3~ r... 18 a &amp; - . .
36- Real Eota1o11'aatad

1

' .I

U..lock

Bar a: Craia
s-1 6: Fonllioer

'' '

lll\1\1,

A - for Sal:
TrucbforSalo
"•
41r.. a...
v... a: 411'D'•
42- Mobile ao- f.. R•t
•
Mo .....,....
43- r ..... for Beat
II&gt;- DOOU 6: Molon·for SOla
44- A......... t for Real
45-- Furaiohad a....
46- Space for R..t
. 47- W
to B-.t
4S- Equipa•t for Beat
'I 1: \ I I I '
49-ForLeuo

u.-

••ted

2-la.M-ory
3-- ADDOUDCCIIODtl
+-Giveaway
~Happy Ado
~Loataad Fouad
7- Loot and Fouad
8- Public Solo 4
Auction
9-WaatadloBuy

11- Help 11'aatad
12- Situalioao Wanted
13---- IIUW'&amp;DC8
14- B•iaeu TrainhtC
1~ Schoola 4 laotructjoa
16- Radio, TV 6: CB Repair
17- Mu..llaaooua
18- Waated To Do

Public Notice

cl.ite; or the director rovlo- ,..;g. Locol Schoola will be
-ithdr-• the propoeed held lll320 Eat Meln Str..~
octlon. Any pe,roon moy Pomerov, Ohio on Januory
aubmlt commonte ond/01 • 12, t-,oU:OOA.M.
J - Fry, Tr..ourer
mHti"ll r~rdlng any droll
action wittun 30 deye of the Melge Loclll School Dletrlct
date Indicated. "Action", •• (t2) 28, 1tc
ueed above doea not
include receipt of a verified
Public Notice
comploinL If elgnlflcant publie interut exilte, a public
meeting moy be held. Aa to
NOTICE 10 BIDDERS
ony action, lncludl"ll receipt
FOR SAL£
of verified complolnta, any 1985 Ford Crown 'llotorta
peraon mf1Y obtain notice of Serioll 1 2FA843GIFX217616
further ectlona, end eddl·
.
tloiial Information. Unleaa Pol!"• pec'!-ge. Plua
olherwlae provided ' In pollee ~ulpmenL The ...,
Nolie eo of particular and equlpmont .cen be,..,.
ectlono, 1111 communlcadono 11 lh• RuU.nd Civic
ohall be aenl to: Hearing at Rudoncl, Ohio.
Clerk, OEPA, P. 0 . Box 1049,
Se!'led bldo mual be
Columbuo, OH., 43266-0149 received by 12:00 noon,
Ph. (614) 644-2115. COnaull Januaty t 2, 1883· Bide will
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC be opened 11 7 p.m. January
Chapa..3745-47 and 3746-5 , &amp;..a.:C~c~::~.lc Center
.
. Tho board fllorvea the
'':" requ~rementa.
DRAFT NPDES Perm1t
.
Renewlll- Subject to Renght to refuae any and a.ll
..
bl.
VJalon.
(121 ;,., .,.. 30 3,.,
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
..., • ., •
P. 0. Box 4110
Atheno, OH.
Public Notice Date 12116192
Receiving Watera: Eaot
Branch - Raccoon Creek
PermllNo.
OIM00003'CD
GUN SHOOT
Final loauance ol Notice ol
FORKED RUN
Regiotration
Pomaroy Service Center
SPORTSMAN
2115 Springville Lane
CLUB
Pomeroy, OH.
Effective Dato12/18192
SUNDAYS
Appli ...tion No(o)
12:00 Noon
0653009993 G001
(12) 28, He
Factory choke 12

Public Notice
PubliC Notice

\II il( II

\\IH~I.

8

51- aouohold Coocla
52- Sportlac Coocla

,..

..

Pl. .hlai 4

a•llac · .

Exeafttbat

•·· ,

Eto.trical 4 lloofripo•tiool
C....ral aauU.,
,

,. ,. _ .,., . . a.-

53-Aatlq54- Miao. Mercbaatliae
5~ Buildi"l Suppli•

Repair : .

Uplaolotory

gauge only
STARTS

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Bl• will be received until
4 P.M. on Jonuoty 25, 1993
lor the following ducrlbed .
r..l eotate which h• bHn
·e xcue property
VIllage of Middleport
enacbnent ol Ord.
1269-92:
A 12-foot otrlp of Logan
StrHI rlght-of-wey, botdered on lhe aoulh by Lot
12 of Hartinger SUbdlvlolon.
on the eaot by Lot 10 of
Hartinger Subdlvlolon, on
lhe waol by Boaworlh Street
right-of-way and on the
north by the remainder of
lhe Logan SL rlght-or-wey.
All bldo muol be oubmltted io the Mayor'• office,
237 Race St., Middleport,
Ohl 45760
.
T~e village renrvea tho
right to accept or reject any
or all bldo and to walvfl any
lnformalltieo In bidding.
Fred Hoffm1n, Mayor
VIII•- of Middleport
....
14, 21, 28; Jon. 4,11, 18
.

Quality ~
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

. 6637

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :~ ·
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE ·...,·
PUILICAnON
1 would like to thank all the
customers on my · news·
paper route who gave me
cards and gifts during this
holiday season. They were
very much apprepiated by
my family and me.
Thank you,
Kevin Hoffman,
Sentinel Route Oliver

WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa
36970111Raai..J
P-ty,OIIio

HOLIDAY SPECIAL!
,.SOA Te•
SIZED LIMESTONE
.,.... 16lla'll

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

992-3470
12·S..t2·1

...
.

'

'•

.,

·..

lEVIN'S UWN
MilliE NANCE
949·2398or

l·IOO·I37·1qO .

Lawn Mowing,
.,.rtlllzlng, Weeding,
· and Seeding. :·
· Shrub and Tree
Trimming • Removal
RMidlntill a ComrniiMI
ff'M E.tlmiiiN

1

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
.

8-28-'82~1n

''

TROllEY
UAIION CRAFTS

992-2259
POMEROY- Vacailt lot on Spring A'If!. would be a good
mobile hollllllita u Ill utilidH 1111 avllllable. IMMEDIATE
~SSIONI
ASKING $5,11110

614·992·2549
HOLIDAY HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 10-8 p.m.

·r

IIIDOLEPORT- A Gorageoua home locallld nelir lhe
whldl mU8a lhla home wry convenient lor ahoppl"ll.
banking •lite. 10 roomo, 5 bedrooma, 2 1/2 balho,
, . . _ , woodbumer, garage, lhed, patio, very nice
home 1n-. a outl
181,11110

Sun. 1·5 p.m.

POMEROY- t..ara- 3 atory building with a 50 ~ 100
f*lllng lot hal alot of poiOIIIilll, could bo uoad for an
ep111n1111t buHdlng wlfl 3 unlto.
$29,&amp;00
MIDDLEPORT· Lagoon Rd. jull out of town, 2 aiOry
~ home wlfl 3 becfrooml, bofl, encloaed front porch,
24 x 24 u-g~, odded lnaulalion.
• S27.000
' .

ALBNIY· Splb Ioyer.home with 4 bed! coma, 2
dlcl&lt;lng, garage, appllancea, baaement with
'iiitklhc,P: 8.35 IICnla wllh thad. lru~ tra111. Clo10 to both
Alhenl and P011181oyl . ,
$54,100

IIIIUICE

THE BEST

lOll

HENRY E. CLELAND..........-·--·-··M1t1
TRACY IRIIAGER..................................M.Z431
.lEAN TRUISELL---··--·---·-"t-2110
OFFIC:E...---:-,.... _ .................... -.112-22il

111111 HIVIIG
COIITY

!

ISA
WANT AD

CHARLIE'S

O.K.'s ,
fARM IOYS

SllllL DOZE(:
WORI. ·
DRIVEWAY

wo-.

1 Shd 11*11 ·CoiiMllllla

'Ridon In 8tocl!:'
Special Ellllon • BM·PiooM
Sea At

••d' LIMESTONi'

DlliVIRY IEIVICI
loa. Wedl
$25.00Pwlll!'

•••II

QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
. 255110 St., lllddlopotl, Oh.

m-mc 1111y1, 742-3020 E"'

Handmade Gift• For

. 1111&gt;4 pm Wookdlyo
lom-12 pmS....,. untl

Everyone, and Great

c~

Gift ldeu.

WE WISH YOU A SAFE • HAPPY NEW YEAR I

111-111·

IWOUIUU~

992•7553

POIIIIOY, OL
11-13·'12·1 m!i '

Atk for Doloo
11127

GARRY'S
GENEUL
MAINTENANCE
'
742·3305
'

AFTER
7:00P.M.
12·17·'92·1 mo.

t
' I

'·

" :

Fru1UA\'11w- -,

G.Wa County Meip County · M11110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Coc1e 614 Area Code 304
~olllpolla

Pet. for Sal:
M.k:all.;_b

$ .20

Cltmified page• COTJer the
follovJing tekphone eschanges ...

PAOUft COURT

10••c••us
.........
•ICI1161 ·

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueeday Paper
Wedneodlly Paper
Thundoy Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Words
1
15
15
3
15
6
10
15
Monthly 15

. I

N.Y. Rangers edge Boston; Penguins"win
By JOHN KREISER
AP Sports Writer
Alexei Kovalev' s limited
English requires him to use an
interpreter. The Russian rookie's
play on the ice needs no translation.
Kovalev, the · New York
Rangers' top pick in lhe 1991 draft,
completed his fmt J:{HL hat trick
by scoring with 36 seconds remain·
ing, capping a four-goal rally in the
fma16:41 as New York stunned the
Boston Bruins 6-S on Sunday
night.
"I told everyone I could play
this way and I'm showing I can,"
said Kovalev, who was the·
Rangers' best skater and hardest
hitter all nighL
The winning goal came when
Kovalev punched his own second
rebound past Andy Moog, left
defenseless by his teammates as the
Rangers roared in.
"I took lhree swings at it, so it
had to go in eventually," Kovalev
said.
The Rangers trailed 5-2 and
appeared headed for their third
slraight loss before goals by Milce
Gartner and Kovalev in a 16-sec·
ond span provided a spark. Gartner
scored a power-play goal at 13:19
and Kovalev got his second of lhe
night on a breakaway.
·"When it was 5-4, I just had
this feeling we were going to rip
through,''. said Kovalev, who has
been a totally different player following his recall from lhe minors
four weeks ago.
The game looked lost for the
Rangers when Boston's Sieve
Heinze scored his second goal of
the game early in lhe third period.
But with c.aptain Mark Messier
gone wilh the flu, the Rangers rallied behind Gartner and Kovalev.
Gartner connected on the power
play at 13: 19 and Kovelev sconcd
on a breakaway 16 seconds' later.
Wilh the sellout crowd of 18,200
back in the game, Gartner tied it
with 2:03 left when he put Sergei
Nemchinov 's blind pass behind
Moog.
.
In other games, it was Vanc6u·
ver 5, Montreal 2; Quebec 6,
Ottawa I; Detroit 4, Chicago 0;
PiUSburgh 4, Buffalo 2; Calgary 7,
Edmonton 3; Toronto 6, St. Louis
3; Winnipeg 7, Minnesota 4; and
New Jersey 6, Hanford 2.
Caoucks 5, Caucllens 2
Pavel Bure scored twice in the
final period as VaDc:ouver beat the
slumping Canadiens for its fourlh
win ina row.

8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12

POLICIES

·'

In NHL action,

DOT-DOT-DOT: Georgia,
ranked No. 8, is an early four-point
favorite over 15th-ranked Ohio
State. ... The teams have never met
before. :.. The Buckeyes earned a
berth into the game wilh an 8-2-1
record and a ·second-place fmish in
the Big Ten Conference. Georgia
finished second in lhe Southeastern
Conference's East Division and
was selected for the bowl over
Florida by virtue of its superior
record and ranking .in the CNN·
USA Today poll. ... Georgia coach
Ray Goff is l·l' in his fourlh season
.as head coach. John Cooper is 0-3
in his fifth year at Ohio State and is
2-4 in bowls including his three
years at Arizona State. ...
LiDCbacker Steve Tovar played the
role of Santa Claus when. lhe Ohio
State team and staff held a Christ·
mas Eve party at its hotel.

RATES

JUMPER IN THE PAINT- Slll'l'OIIIIded by Coal Gl'llft's Jason
Fields (50), Bob Hall (behiDd Fields), Travis Layae (23) and another
H~t, Southern's Masoll Fbher (32) shoots a juml"r iD tbe paiDI

EVANS GOEs AIRBORNE - Southern's Michael Evms (14)
goes alrbonie on his .way to a game-high 20 poiDIS during Sahlrday
night's McDould's Holiday Classi.c game agaiDst Coal Grove lo
ChiWcothe, whidl the Tornadoes woo 53-47. WalchiDg Evans' work
are an aaldentlfied teammate, Hornets Gref Swarts (32), an
unid~tllled Horoet (behind Swarts) aod Jason J?telds (50). ·

By ALAN ROBINSON
''There's some surprised people
PmSBURGH (AP) - Bubby outlhere."
Brister, often a better talker lhan a
No. the surprise was on the
thrower, couldn't wait to shut up Browns (7·9), who stacked their
his critics. Barry Fosler, who defense along tile line of
sometimes doesn't talk at all, scrimmage to contain a Pittsburgh
waited until the last minute for offense that had run aground in two
something they'll talk about in straight 'losses: mostly due to
Piusburgh ·ror years. .
Brister's ineffective lhrowing. ·
Finally, the Steelers are lhe talk
The ~tech~:t·s ran Fos~ eno~gh
of
the
town
again
after
years
and
to
get h1m hts NFL record-tymg
Ohio State's roster includes years of being little more than a . 12th
100-yard game- he got 103
three native Floridians and one conversation piece between y~ on 26 .c arries- hu~ '!'e big
player from Georgia.
Pirates' playoff flops and dtfference was the prectston of
Coming home for the bowl Penguins'
Stanley
Cup theiqiassinggame. , . .
,
game are free. safeiy Chico Nelson champiol)Ships.
·
.
Brister's first two.~s we~
and tight end Cedric Saunders from .
Perhaps it's too early for lheu dropped, but he didn t miSs agatn
Sarasota and cornerback TiiO PaUl fans to dust off lhose "One for the in the fii'St half, completing ltis next
of Kissimmee.
Thumb" signs, but the Steelers are 11. No wonder the Steclers surged
back in the playoffs for only the into a 17-3 lead on Foster's seven·
Opposing him home state will second
time since 1984 -and yard touchdown run and Brister's
be cornerback Tim Walton, who they'll have homefield advantage two-yard scoring throw to Tim
went from Columbus, Ga., to lhroughout the AFC playoffs.
Jorden '!if a play-ac~ fake.
Columbus, Ohio.
"We're in lhe playoffs, we.' re
Playmg probably his best game
. Georgia has but one native getting a week off and we' 11 play since taking the Steclers two games
Ohioan on its roster: Madison's right here," F.ostcr said after lhe . into lhe 1989 playoffs, Brister was
Tom Wallace. The Bulldogs' sev· Steelers' 23·13 victory Sunday 18 of 25 for 223 yards and a
enth leading tackler, he will start at over the I Cleveland Browns. touchdown .,.,. .just the kind of
defensive end

crusader," former Boston Celtics
all-star Dave Cowens once said of
' 1992.
Johnson .."The iml!or.t~nce &lt;?f
Though Mike Tyson's rape basketballts almost dimu:ushe&lt;! 10
·'conviction
last Feb. 10 was voted · th~ eyes of thos~ watc~10g htm.
1
• tl)e top sports story of the year in Wuh . all the d1stracuons, the
! , .'~~lloting by Associated Press scr~lln~_. the tal~ sh?)YS, the
l ;.sports editors and broadcasters, P;"CCtdent ~ comm1ssto~_. 11 s not as
1 basketball stories accounted for
stmple as 11 used to be.
,
I ~ ~of the fii'Steightselections.
~e ~oronto Blue ~ays World
~ ': Tyson's conviction for lhe rape Senes vtctory snuck 10 at No. S,
of beauty contest contestant foll&lt;?wed by thr!'e ,mo~ basketball
j'pcsirl'C Washington received 22 stones: Lany Bird ~ retirement and
1 Grst-place votes and 448 total repeats by th~ Chtcago Bulls as
I
ts. Voters were asked to pick NBA champ~ons and Duke as
·
· wtt
· h pomts
·
NCAA
',
eu top 10 stones,
..1. champton.bel' bl
.
• ~on a 10-9-.8·7-6-5-4-3-2·1
twas an Ill! teva e season
~i•
for me and for us as a team,'' the
7.T.i.fr. Tyson is lhe most famous Bulls' Michael Jordan said. "We
convicted mpillt in the went ~hro~;~gh . a long test of
lilarld," bis own defense lawyer, adverstty; 11 mtght not have all
' JOa Dcrshowitz, once ealled him. been pretty, but today we stand
•· &gt;"He wears a scarlet 1etter on h1s
· tall"
· Bl J ., .
.
~" ·
The ue ays .SIX·game v1~10ry
The No. 2 story was lhe ouster o~er Atlanta rec:etved 272 pomts,
of baseball commissioner Fay Brrd got 262 pomts, the Bulls had
~.,"'inc:enl, but five of the nextsix top 173, and Duke 167. ~oronto had
-»*'"~were basketball stories
five fii'St-plai:e votes, Bird four.
with ~c Johnson at lhe heart of
"This is one we'll talk a lot
the
rwo
biJICSI.
about
all summ~r,',' Duke coach
1
Third place, with 304 votes, ~ Krzy~wski said. .
.
~Ito the Dream Tcsm, the U.S.
Vmcent s forted I'CSignallon .on
9!ympic basketball team that Sept. 7, four days after maJor
bieezed to the gold medal at the league
owners
,voted
· Barcelona Olympics, led by overwhelmingly_ for . a n~­
Ao~~naon. The Dream Team confidence resoluuon, receiVed 323
received 11 first-place votes, points, including six first-place
IIICIDIId only to Tyson's conviction. votes.
Johnson 's own story, his
The dual national football
comeback and second retirement, · championships of Miami and
• vOiled No.4 with just OJ)C point WashingtOn (109 points, one fll1i,l·
f'leu thlll the Dream Team, 303, place vote) and Ricl!ard Petty s
fn4 eight lint-place votes.
retirement (103 points) rounded out
"He's an tcon now, almost a the Top IOstories.

I

could die 10011, I set shaky. I know
you Willi us to have lhc best of
everythiDg and lhat you make a
lot of money, but if you die, all
the material thiDgs would mean
Did Is exlrcmely overweight, and
Mom and all of us kids
he blows it, but his eating is so out would be heartbroken. The pain
of taiii'Ollhat he bas just &amp;iven up. would be unbearable.
Please print the letter I have written
It is a&amp;ony to watch you cat
to him. He fCIIIa your column every yowself into an early grave. Your
morning. Maybe he'll recognize auill and shirts get tighter and
himd, and it wiU belp.
tighcer. Surely you must see Ibis
Dear o.d: I care about you, and yourself. Please, Daddy, get
rm ICII'ed. Your weight problem some. help soon. We love you so
is beyond ..Ce limits. Eating has much and ,arc all worried lick. ,.
bec:o11116111 ob ssim. Your obesity A SAD DAUGHI'ER IN LOUIS·
has driveil a wedge between you and · VD.LE
your family. I realize your problem
DEAR DAUGHTER: Your
is (llyChological.OO I can~ help you, beautiful love lelllf to your father
Dad. You have to see a professional wiD be _, by thousands or other
•• and you must do it of your own fathen who share his poblem.
l'rec will.
Quiclt·fix dieting won't do iL

I'm 76 now, and that incident is as
sharp in my mind as if it happened
yesterday.) •• D.J .. JACKSON·
VD.LE, FLA.

page 7

SOUTHERN

.- '

•

When I think about what you

are doing to younelf and that you

Ann
Landers

(11-1~14-130=53)

l ~~son saga 1992's top AP story ·
I

111 euclllive and has an extremely

lllalful job. I've lclmed that most
people in his kind of aituation
develop a vice. Some drink 100
111uch; othen IIIIOb a lot. My father

Hoying, Rodriquez among
kOSU's walking wounded
I

ne.r An Lallden: My father iS.

r

ran&amp;:i

COAL GROVE
&lt;'-12-14-15="17) .
Jason Lucas 3·0·0=6, Jon
Ferguson 1-0-0=2, Bob Hall 4-01=9, Chad Kelly 3-1-0.9, Greg
Swarts 4-1-2=13, Jason Fields 3-0~thern.
0=6, Rod Dillon 0·0·2=2.
a The second half was much lilce · TOTALS - 18·2·5=47
.

!

Father's eating is out of control

.

The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlejlon, Ohio

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.
949-2734
12·1·'12-1

GRAVE .:·.
BLANKET$

Far Your Lost·
.' .

Loved One...;
Handmade with
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$20.00
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.,.

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�The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

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KIT 'N' CARLYLE® lly Larry Wript

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EAST

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fullollmo And Pori·T!ono ......

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And loiiol?t .........

WANT ADS bringVacation Money

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44

11. . . . . .

21

HOLZER IIEDICAL CENTER
100 ............
Oolllpotla,
OHWood
Attn:.
Dli 1 rOf.....,.Rn a.

!I 1]]

houl -

Financial

IIIII Al._ AND SALARY
IISTORY lO:
.

t'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil=======
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Wti,

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

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IWAIPI
I1444WIU.
AIJCT10II I I'I.I!N'IUM, II
Olwk,O Wpolt ,._,..._
2 lA · opo"""'R In Oolllpolo 1!!m!11ft, ~ W 1 n 1

Buslnen
Opponunlty

!NOnCE!
OliO VALlEY PIIBLISHINO CO.
-you-,
JOU do bull-with
poopte
ond
NOT 10 Mnd ..,_., tlorough the
INIII WJI JOU lllve lri-iptool

"-'Y. wv 304-t7WI4I.

Fumlohod Aal: 2 lA, t2IO,
utlllloe Del. 1Dt 4th, OolllpoiiL
IM 441 4411 tlw 7 p.m.

.... _,..

2bcho. opll., toW -..to, ..,.
pl'"-o lumlohod, loundry

tt.ooo -kly Polonllal Locot
llriook
lllodo """'' Soli 1•
ICINJI.VEHD.

In Vllloae ~Q,_ AIIIL 0141
of:
oolll144e2-m1. EON.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

RACINE GUN
.CLUB
.GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

-n.

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84

Hay •

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Mia - ..... au ••• .....

New Homes • VInyl Sldl~
N
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.· ew arages • Rep1acement nd ows

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.:

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or

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Room Additions • Roofing .

12N1 mo. pel.

Sflllllll Me.j,1tt2

ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985·4107

sentor cntana $8.00

lElNEn
SANITATION

DecemberSpecW

- ·pd.

sa.oo

nyou need traeh pick·

up or mora Information
call

1'holles Whitt
915-4)52
er • • • • • "

IU-1116

Aulhorlnd Agont

....................................
rhe {IBrlect Christmas Gift frx ·roor /raid to buy
on yoor list.
fOI pe!SOII

LIMITED

urvaaru.

TIME ONLY~
95

!lorY-RotH
from S1Uii por

.$69

month. ono ,..,

r oqutncl.

3114521A

Ploln"

232 2nd St.,
Pomeror
.992·2036
Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12·1·2 mo.

•Replacatnent
Window

CARPENTER SERVICE '

~Addlllono

..

~olt.=t'=; ~

~~~-ood,

Mown.
,

-=

-On._-

1112 14•70 Wlndo"' a Bodlotha, (Ox- Tub),

Air, Front. ..... Pot'
- . SIOrlgo Bulhlng, A1oout 1
Aore, 114-441-1113 E-...,

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772or
539 Brran Place
Middleport, o•1o

oftor
...............
Lorao
771-1117

Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent ·

Box 1'89
Middleport, o•io 45760

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

.~Jn P'DJ, Oltlo

"'-·-

lprn.

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'
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Polo In - . HUD .-ptod,
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for Rent

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lopllo Tonlo ............ 110 Colli . :
eo; RON EVANIINTERPhiii'i, • ,
oloollaon,OH 1-.aHNI.
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Wll build ...... _

ttew.._.n2bldNIOnl.8jlt~

nlahed or unfumllhed, _..,..
• refll"''"tCe, 304ola4511.
-

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lltartl.... - - . - ?lolol.

Pillows, Anlmala,
lots of ~m~ll •nlcles.
10¢1nd up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER

885 4356 '
1140-1 mo. pd.

IAVIISOI'S

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J anti T Gas Serwice

614.f4t·2072

Rd., Chttlef, OH.

OYEII
••II VCR REPIIR

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTIOII
•lewHo••

lt.124rbc1H

lLliiUU
1r11:
Ill Or W.

IEN'S~ANCE
SERICE
992·5335 or .
915·3561

....

0

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Wanted 10 Rent

Wanlool To Rorot: Motor IIDioo

w-

For
TolD T o IMd, Cllll PIII11H11 IJIL

Elactrlcal&amp;

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a.-

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3'ood

Oo-=t

-"••rv BE IN~ 4

:

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

.'

CA~H~ll

:·...

'•

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.~

I' .

"

.

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-

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"""' .. .. -,.
... _,.,
c:c=....
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......... ' tpnllill
Col f.

ANYTHIN6 L.leEFUL..
11-J ecHOOL.

rework that.
A. There are two problems, in facl,
with your sentence. THEN.- with an E,
is an adverb meaning "at tha~ time,"
or sometimes "soon after that"; the
comparative word that you want is
THAN, with an A. Also, when you use
THAN, it should properly be followed
by a subject, no.t an object. Use "I'm
taller than he" (with the verb implied,
as in "taller than he is"), and your
~w&lt;&gt;rds will measure· up guictly .

I LeARNED HONID BURP
WITH M.Y MOIJ1l-l CL.OeEDJ

r'L.L. SoAY
I DID!

TODAY~

..•
'•

-·,.

''•
'

12.._ _ _ _ _ 1
13•._ _ _ __
14. _ _ __
15.___ _ __

look lor romance itnd you'lllnd It .The CANcltl ( . - 21-.IUIJ 22) This COUld
Aatro-Graph Matchmaker lnttantty re-· be one of thool days where you mlgh1
'
....,. which ligna .,. romlllllcolly per- create probteml lor youi'HII In .,_
ASTRO·GRAPH
lllc1 tor you. Mall 12 plui•!OIIg, Mil-ad·• where !hire ore no nouona tor probd1'811ed, atllllpld envelope to Pem110 ex181. Oon'1 rock the bcHit.
Mllclvnlker, c/o 1hll ,_PI!PW, P.O.i' ;.ao (,., II-AIII- 21) Be holplul to
Box&amp;1428, Clewland, OH 44101-3428. lrlendllodoy, but try not to beeame100 '
I;QII•- (,_ ......_ 1t) Tod8)ri 1111rMiaed In their problemt. Getting In
BERNICE
you might be • bl1 more generOUIIhan' too tar could a loll of objletMty,
BEDE OSOL UIU8I In your ~ dlallnga. 111'-! and your ability to holp could decmn
could be ol1her good or bad. depend?ng1 WIGO (Alii- • ..,._ 221 TocltiY you
upon how lwyou 130 In your giVIng~ · ~ do oertoln ttotngo llllltore worthy 01
I'IICI!S (,_.II Ill •1 Slluetlortl .
actmowtedgment.
you perglllly
or dlrwt couldi you won't took good II you btow 'your
haw bettw ~ tor M"''
todoyi _..hom. Leltheoceoladoo como lrom
than"- ........ you . . under lhe ell- olheq,
rwtlon ol anothor . Do your O!UI'Ithlng.
~ (..,._ 11-011t. 21) Someone
AIIIIS (IIMIIt 21·Aprll II) Don't Pet ,_help you mlghiMnltoday oould
~liD 111111 occurred In lhe ,_1
bec:ll ott PI he or lhe fwll you'relilclng
'Birthd~ . ·p
u t - you to PNJudge wllat II de~you can do tor
.. Vlloplng todtiY and make you n anlfut. )'Oinlll. When req...ung llllatance,
Deo. . . , .
~ The two .... unrellled.
be .,.. Pt'l out of dlra 1'1«11111)'.
TAUilUS (April. 1111' 10) 8eak com-• tCOIPPO (0111. II Now. II) Don't be
Either by chOICe 01 olrcu- you panlonl loel8)r who rMich you In DIM'•. uPIJII or jlli?oua today PI you
~ undergo • change ot altitude In the 1 Ollty llld tllorlng. If you mako ~ . . 1 IIU geto more llltent?on from atherl
~ahead. Your ol1eNd ptriOMillywiHI toctlont, you might llld up • gl...,; , thin you do. Evertlhfiog 1T10VM In C)'Giel
make you ~~ranger n more poolttve.
IUti'OI!nded lly Ilk...
·• . 1nc1 lhOrlly ?t . . be your tum .
CMAICO•t (Deo.IWo!l.1t) You... WRIIII?tir 21....... 101 E._lhpugh I · IAGITTAIIUS (lltltr. D Dea. 21) Dowry I*...,.,W today ond PI tltouldn'tl you 11111Y -.ay lhlnlllhll your ny of: IMIIICoondlllolll In general?ook l'l!ther
be too dllllcull tor you to know'"'*' doing llllrtgltoday II better thin your / 'pi!
ot today, puwlcled you don't,.
aomeonellnotlollng the truth.
conltnopoollllee' m8lltocll. tor fllrmo. ' hMII., aid
dloNpter, you would be wlollo kelp your per-i ny'tlilce, Pet ..-yane haw oomo mot eel lhe ..,Ply.
oepttonl to yourwolf. Know .....,.. 101 of lftiiU1 .

t!Wl•

8 . -_.....;..._ _ __

H-.

.,.,_and

'\bur

1---....;...---------~

Gallipolis Dally Tribune ~

....,_In

44&amp;-2342

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
· 992·2156
Pt. Pleasant Register
~
675-1333

..

P I - eaD dte elllee Ia •••

...•'

'-

~.

•

o'

------~ · L--L--~~~----~~ taller then him"? I've been told to

I

-•&amp;

tool
47 Walks

21 lleQoZine
name
Social ronk
Proceods
811mloat
En - I:
t111clng call
. 27 liorYOIII
28 A Groot Lake
211 llonaatery
31 Stompod

These days you can get a calendar
featuring just about anything~ cat ph&lt;&gt;tos, curmudgeon'quotes, jokes, sports
trivia; the Jist is almost endless. Now
you can even buy a calendar contain·
iug bridge deals. It is called "The 1993
Tops and Bottoms Wall Calendar"
(.12.95, Granovetter Books, 2111-371·
5849). Tile 12 deals, taken from the
book "Tops and Bottoms," are a mix·
ture of technical and humorous. My
favorite is iii toclay's diagram.
You are in six hearts. West leads the
spade seven~ six, jack, ace. How do you
CQDtinue?
South was Henri Szwarc, a great
French player wbo won the World
Team Olympiad in 1980 and the European Championship three times.
After winning with the spade ace,
Szwarc drew trumps in three rounds.
Then be cashed the diamond king.
When East discarded, the hand bad
counted out. Taking East's pre-emptive opening bid into account, declarer
knew Wesl had started with 1·2·7·3
distribution and East with 7-3·0·3, It
looked as though Szwarc had to guess
which opponent was holding the club
queen. H it was West, Szwarc could
take the finesse. H it was East, he
could be strip-squeezed in the black
suits.
Yet Szwarc found a play that avoid·
ed the guess. He led a club to, dummy's
king and cashed the club ace, discard·
log bis diamond 11ce. Nut, he ruffed a
club, wbicb brougbt down the queen .
Finally, declarer led biB laat dia1nond 1
toward dwnmy's jack. West had to le1
Szwarc into the dummy to cash a cour~~~ clubs and discard his spade

EXTRICATE ("EK-strih·kate")
pulls free or removes from difficulty:
"Extricate yourself from this predica·
ment.' To spell this intricate verb, end
EXTRICATE like INTRI(;ATE.

••

~-~--

o:oiiStl

20 Acct.

'U:1£:J 1:41:tlll;l l:t .'. II I

unsleadlly
48 AHirmoUona

DOWN

......

·~·· -

5 Rapture
6 Morlto
7 War god
8 Wandel
9 Teutonic

1 City In Taus
(2 wda.)
2 AIIIIIS
3 Numoro 4 Prlnceu-

11 Pollllclln
M•to- ..
1311ako lull of . ,
16 Ono whO - · ;
ontorll?ns _ 19 Poem ot
••

dotty

10 Grated

Parnonfallon • :

20 Romovod tho
~ centor

I

H-:

._,.11111,_11y

o?

1 22 Fruit drink
1 23 Prollta

11rt--t , 25 Horoellko
:

momma!

• ;:

. 26 Wheot, o.g. ·:,:
28 Tanc!ency to . •
blundtr
29 VortiCIIIY
30 Hoircuttor

Opening lead: +7

By Jeffrey McQuain

'·

CaU our oflice for paid ill ..........,e rflleof

~~~~;17~-----

auaetlon: PI a lrWialle ?n lhe ' - 1 and no one'•
...,nd, and h lib • mime, don ..-.yone c.e?

~

;

11 . -:------1

··-·"··

IJU,R'(

~

PIN down EXTRA

-~
· ·.

111 Jeckota or

"s+
Pass

OUR .LANGUAGE

HE~!

9.___ _ _ _ ,
10. _ _ __

Stop &amp; Compare

TAA~M

TIII~KIEt&gt;

s

· . Tum your clutter into ctuh,
Sdl it the eau way... fa vhone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your cluajfied ad todqy!
15 word. or le11, 3 dap,
3 gapera,$6.00

oG.,
....
o(o~lett

Pass
Pass

,.f.ilf.. YOO KIDOINC;, ?

(,(£,'lOOt&gt;

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DID 'IOU' L.EI.Rt-J

::::..,::=. .':".':1tJW"
Q

f.......,Es

~ .

~1.:1111. C1n HMf ~
----~.;;...._ _ _ '

48 Space torRent

purchua.
Loc.lld on Seoul Ctmp

. 915·4473
667·6179

0

YOOR

•

IP~rttet~a. Baglnner Seta,

Youlh Cuotom Drlvera.
leotono Included with

0

1:10\ol W6

oa.

tElFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10%·20%011

•100 lb. Cytindero
•R.V.'a
•Goo Grit? T•ka
·v.n-He...rs

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

........ IIIII,-2:00
Wtl.

Col

L........;99_2·-38.Wl3tt:J8IDIII Till PAR SIDI

Ferrellgas

OQ

,, r,~I~G,'

Frwmon'a·-...., And c.tna,
lnololtotlon And llortlao. RIO

84

month

41 Dovourod
I 42 Actrooo
Fisher
• 43 Wotor pol
45 Sc:ulpiOt'o

Nor ..

Q. What's the problem with "I'm

fumw.d, 2 or 3bclrm., tor rwnt
In Country Uoblll Porto. - r f

12·5·1fn

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o1-Z8!

p'ng ,...,. wlh Daallll. .

,..

M'itie~--·

•

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A..ot...., ..... AIItlaak~

I '

PH. 614·992-5591

Need-' Gift?
Rugs, Placen:ate,
Qullta, S Types

HolM ....,
Aoolno, Cillo. -~~-

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:1210.

¥

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS

n.l..,,

Fumlahed
R9QIIIt
"-lor ... · - o r -

·
PONDS
~
SEPTIC SYSTEMS .

FREE ESTIMATES

••
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::

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Dirt, Gl'llvel and Coal :

NE16H60Rf.IOOD

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LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER t)
UNES
·~·
BASEMENTS I.
HOME SITES
,
HAUUNG: Umeatone,."

WORLD, !-lUi!!'?

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Aport- For
Rent, IM-388 8020

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JUST AROUND

.

Oroclouo ll.tng. 1 ono1 ·a loo!lroom opaotmonta ot Vllloao
U.nor
and
R~Yeraiae
Apaotmonto In Mkldloport. F,_
tllll. Call 114-112.aatl. EOH.

-

ALL OVER TI-lE

Mt..m.

Fumlahocl, 3 R""""' l 8oth,
Cloln, No Pot" Ro..,_ I
Dopoolt Roqulred. 1114,.._11111.

Fumlohod

I'VE DECIDED I'M NOT 601N6
10 COLLEGE .. 111-IINK I'LL
TRAVEL INSTEAD...

lilt Thundoololnl, ....., good,

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Complotiy

•

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Trollor Lot ,.. Rorot tl10 W!lh
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for
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Rentals
41 Houlel for Rent

'

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lilt OIIC, Colo Cow, CUnunlno
lng?ne; 1112 AI- 4211.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
'""""· ......
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ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY =··~
,...,...... 114 441 2201.
A¥illllblrl•rtJ DICimber.
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Ro~y R.

Pli?nllng

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fumlehod Ell, 120 FourUI
A..,uo, Oolilpollo, t1MIIIo.
Lltiutloe Pold, 814 418 4118 Alor

Llllltloo Pold, Shore
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4411 Aft• 7 ~.M.

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YOUNG'S

lumllhld 1 ........ opt. ullllll•
lncludool, dop a ~ ,., ~roquiM,

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llonovotool: Now
Full
Bllha, S ~B-.
HVAC, Now CorpoL Avxlllltlo

•Roofing
oln•ulatlon

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32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

•Vinyl Siding

TOTALLY /IUTOIIOTIYE PERFORMANCE

6 COUI1Iy loco!

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
'HEAliNG, INC.

J&amp;L INSULATION

CEllULAR

movt.. C.U 114 4tl 1111. EOH.
- h St- Uloidloport, Ohio,

54 MIICellaMOUS

1 lA, 120 4lh.
1210. Utllltlea p11ld. 114 141...,.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR sALE

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HOMEMADE
PIES

"""' ttowmo. Wolk 10 OMD a

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PEANUTS

71 Wllrhn 111 -......,. M ft. t

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Home 304..12·25111.
Not'r.lon~on~~, Roctno, ott. 114-MJ. Fumlahocl Apt:
2210

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FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

1211411

room, l.t::'lu-. 3bdrAL, wotk'
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614-949•2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

OPEN TO PUBLIC .
12 GAUGE ONLY

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-= . . .

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

usa-'·· ..;.;.;;;_,______

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!Ii. 5311 Jocllaon Plu

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40 Hobrow

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Sing the song of great joy .. that the angela
began . Sing the glory of God and ol goodwill to man. - Whittier.

WORD
lAIII

"I

1

A" K y E N E

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2

I

HOREN

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II
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3

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"I never wear ties lhat cost
V I S EE
1---,-.;....;...,:;....,.--1 ;__~, over three bucks." announced
~~
a co-worker. "l'v.e discovered,"

I

I I_ he added, '1hat expensive silk

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L-.J._J..
_ _.J.L-.L.- - '

....------ ---,lies are the only ones that at·
L A J N E G 11rac1 ·····.'

I1--..,1;---ri-Tols'"'lr-,1-1 0
_

Comple te the ch uckle quoted
by fi lling in the missing words

L
. .......;.L.......i.-.1.._.._.......__, yo u d eve lop !rom step No. 3 below.

@t PRINT

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

A UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE .lETTERS
U

TO GET ANSWER

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SCIAM-LETS ANSWERS
• !-!~
Nutmeg -Pouch · Knock · Trudge - ENOUGH
At the annual steak and shrimp night at the college
cafeteria, one coed sai~ that her sceak could be .a little
more rare. "Quiet!' whrspered another coed , Steak
once a year is rare ENOUGH !'

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Pill 1o-TM Deily senune1

Ohio.Lottery

49ers win
24-6 over
Lions

Pick 3: ·
584
Pick 4:·
6972

' Low ........ .W-401.

c~ o~..- 10

SOL

Page4

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'VaL 43, No. 173
Copyrlghled 1882

SHELLEY A. MODESTOW and MARK E. RICE

Troops in Somalia
move·to new phase

David Rice, brother of the
. REEDSVILLE - Shelley A.
Modesrow and Mink E. Rice were groom, sei'Vf;d as best Dian. Ushers
united in marriage by Father were Cpt. John Reilly, Cpt. Brian
Micbacl BaffBJO during an Oct. 17 Imiola aDd Lt. G. g.) John Rice. .
Following the ceremony a
ceremony.
reception
was held at the Florence
The bride is the daughter of.
Country
Club,
Florence, Ma.
Doctor and Mrs. John Edward
Following completion of their
Modestow, Florence, Ma. The
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. . German tour of duty, the couple
wiU reside in San Antonio, Texas.
John C. Rice, Reedsville.
The bride is a captain in the
Trumpet music was provided by .
United
Slates Army Nurse Corps.
Ms. Valerie Fisk and vocalist was
She
served
in the Persian Gulf War
Bradford Fisk.
with
the
12th
Evacuation Hospiw.
The bride was esconed to the
She
obtained
her bachelor of sci~
altar by her father.
ence
in
nursing
from Northwes1elll
Ms. Janine Modestow, sister of
Univenity
in
Boston,
Ma.
the bride, was maid of honor.
The
groom
is
a
captain
in the
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Ruth Bog'
United
States
Army
with
the
34th
gan , Ms. Maureen Rose, Mrs.
General
Hospital.
He
received
a
Leslie Kennenberg and Ms. Jill
bache!Qr
of
arts
in
English
from
Robcnson.
Ohio State University.

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or tllat event. Items
must be received weD in advuce
to BSSure publication In the calendar.
MONDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
last regular meeting for 1992 on
Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Pageville Townhall.

of-the-year meeting. fhe 1993
organizational meeting wiU follow. '
TUESDAY
wEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees hold an end-ofthe-year meeting Wedn.esday at
7:30 p.m. at the Shade Rtver State
Forestry Building.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
PORTLAND - The Lebanon 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse MuniciTownship Trustees will meet Moo- pal Building for t_he _final 1992
dar. at 7:30 p.m. at the township ' meeting. An. organ!Zlluonal meetbuilding.
ing will follow.
CARPENTER - The Board of
· RACINE - The Racine AmeriTrustees of Columbia Township can Legion Post will serve a dinner
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at for members and their immediate
the fire station for the reJiular end- family on Wednesday at S p.m.

----Names in the news-PARIS (AP) Jacques
Cousteau', named at age 82 the
most popular person in France for
the fifth year in a row, doesn't
sound like a man with many
regrets.

Asked by the Journal du
Dimanche what he would have
done differently in his life, the
undersea explorer replied:
"I'll answer with a story my
father told me. One day he was
invited to England to celebrate a
woman's 115th birthday. He was
welcomed by an old lady in an
armchair holding a glass of cognac
and a cigar. A journalist asked her ·
the same question, and she
answered, with a delicious British
accent: 'Oh, the same thing, but
CableVision collected over more often! ' " ·
•$3,000 worth of toys donated by
The annuill poll, published Suncusrnmers who received free instal- day, was conducted by the Journal
1ation in the COlllpany's special du Dimanche and the polling fmn
holiday campaign, it was an- IFOP. ·
nounced by General Manager Lester ErretL
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Customers who ordered cable or Jim Bakker was allowed out of
·upgraded their existing cable ser- prison for the day to visit his .86'vJCes and donated a new toy valued year-old father, who suffered a bro- at $10 or more during the holiday ken hip in a car accidenL
The former TV evangelist was
011111paign were $iven free installaaccompanied by a.supervisor from
, tion, regularly pnced at $39.95.
'J'hb toys were turned over to the Federal Medical Prison in
Mason County Thls for Tots, Rochester, Minn., during the visit
Meigs County Biker s Association, Sunday to the Carolinas Medical
Gallla Academy Key Club, and Center ro see Raleigh Bakker.
"I'm so grateful for visiting my
Ravenswood "Mopt-a-Family," to
be distributed to needy families in family at this time of need,"
Bakker said in a statement.
time for the hOlidays.
•
'Despite our troubles, we give
"We're v~ pleased by the
thanks
for so many blcssinp."
response ro this campaign," E~
Last
week, a federal judge
stated. "It shoWI our commumty ts
his sentence from 18 to
reduced
very interested in helping less for·
eight
years.
and Bakker plans in
tunate familiel through this
program. We an: pat.eful for their January to ask for parole. He went
donations IIIJ!I Jiacl to assist the to prison in 1989 for billcing his
followers·out of millions.
·
community in this manner."

Holiday toy drives
receive donations
from CableVision

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MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- With their primary military
objectives secured, American and
aUied ttoops today began doing in
earnest what they came to Somalia
for - feeding the hungry and
extending their authority.
U.S. Marine foot patrols were
crossing the so-called Green Line
that divides the fiefdoms of rival
warlords ~ the capital and moving
for the first time into northern
Mogadishu, a haven for the law-

less.

DO TATE CHEV.-DLDS.·CAD.-G£0
HOURS:

Mon.-Fri. 9:oo-8:00; Sill. 9:00.4:00\..Sun. 1:00-5:00
TAX &amp; TlTLE FEES NOT INCLUDt:D
·

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SU~IJEI;r TO BANK APPROVAL

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And Marine helicopters were
being used to hopscotch across
mine!ields and deliver food to the
starving in five villages within a
50-mile radius of Bardera, one of
six vital inland aid distribution cenTRAFFIC JAM - Armed U.S. milltary per·
Mogadishu, loading trucks have lined up. tbe
ters.
' sonnel stand ldlJ in a trt~ffic jam outside
road leading to the port, creating traffic havoc
Marine Col. Fred Peck, a
Mogadishu's port Tuesday. Since tbe resump •.
in tile SomaU capital (AP)
spokesman
for the U.S.-Ied mililary
tlon or aid relief shipments to the port of
coalition.
said the Marines had
'
begun twice-daily patrols into
northern Mogadishu and would
~ually strengthen their presence
· COLUMBus; Ohio (AP) - ·· ponies, cdws, pigs, chickens and others sh?w~ up Monday to per- m the area.
,
Gov. George Voinovich apparen!ly dogs to the S~tehouse.
suade Vo~Ylch 11&gt; block plans for
"Our aim is to provide security
. was not swayed by a protest against
Dane Lavm, spokesman for the a federal pnson near Elkton.
.
in Mogadishu, and that means the
About 40 ~n. w_ome~ and chi!• whole city," Peck said.
a prison site by a group of farm Farm and Family Ass~iation of
'
families who brought horses Columbiana County, sa1d he and dren marched m a crn:Ie m front of
the Capitol, leading or carrying ani'
mals. Some rode horses.
Others included a woman who
could barely lnanage a black-andwhite pig that l!Quirmed and ofien
squealed in her arms. ·
Lavin said they hoped the governor would see "what this means
to farmers of several generations
(AP)- Buywho want to raise iheir kids and ersWASHINGTON
rates
fearing
rising
mongage
keep their way of life.''
pushed
sales
of
previously
owned
Voinovich did not meet with the homes up 5.8 percent ,in Novem~r
group, but some aides did.
the h•ghest level m nearly S!X
Michael Dawson, press secre- to
years,
a~ estate trade group S81d
tary, said the governor supportS the
today.
.
·
prison because of the j_obs it w~uld .
"Many
to
buy
after seebring to an .area of Ohto that needs ing a spike pt interest rates during a
them.
time of econ mic recovery," said
Voinovich visited Columbiana William
Chee, president of the
County nearly a year ago to National S.
Associauon
of Realto_rs,
announce that 1,800 ltcres near Elk- which compiles the monthly
ftgton had been selected for a $40 ures.
million federal prison. County offiSales or-existing homes were up
cials have said they suppon it
in
each re~ion of the nation, the
But Lavin said at least 20 to 50 Realrors
S81d,
landowners could lose their farD)s,
Nationally,
totaled a. seaHe said the prison also could bring sonaUy adjustedsales
annual
of 3.85
problems such as drug trafficking million in November. uprate
from 3.64
and disease.
·
Lavin said opponents would
take their case to federal officials in
Washington in necessary.
PROTEST RIDE • Ke!U Pastore rides her horse in Croat ofthe
, Statehouse In Columbus Monday as she and a Columbiana County
· gr011p of parents, members or ·the Family and Farm Association
• and children with farm pets were protesting a proposed federal
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
; prison tbey fear wiD disrupt their rural way or life. (AP)
government is preparing to mail its
MIAMI (AP) - A Cuban air- New Year's greenngs: 107 million
liner flew into Miami International federal income tax packages.
Airpon this morning and many of
The Internal Revenue Service
The Galli a- Meigs Post of the Tucker Road, Coolville, was ueat- the 53 aboard requested political said Monday that letter carriers will
State Hi~hway Patrol reported ed and released from Veteran's asrium, officials said. The pilot begin delivering the tax forms on
\hree accJdents in Meigs County Memorial Hospital following the sa1d reportedly said he had been Saturday.
Monday and a:Iso completed inves- first one-vehicle aceidenL
Most taxpayers will see little
kidnapped.
tigation of a Sunday afternoon
The Soviet-made Aero change in the forms, which cost
According to the report, Findaccident that left five people with ling was southbound when she lost Caribbean twin-engine turboprop $12 million to print and another
, mi!tor injuries.
conuol on a patch of ice and ran off was flying from Havana to the $19 million to mail. That's 30 cents
Shannon Lee Wallrer, 17, Col- the right side of the road and s~ck tourist reson of Varedero Beach on • a paclcage.
lege Ayenue, Rutland, was cited an embankment
Cuba ' s north coast , said Anne
By the time the April 15 filing
She was transponed to VMH by Eldridge of the Federal Aviation deadline rolls around, the IRS
for failure· to~maintain an assured
clear distanc in the two-car wreck Meigs County Emergency Medical Administration in Adanta.
expects to have n:ceived 116 milon Ohio 12A · Rutland Township Service. The vehicle sustain!ld
lion returns, including 60.5 million .
Sunday BJOU 5:50p.m.
from lllltpayers using 'Form 1040. It
heavy, disabling damage and was Pomeroy Council
· According to the report, Jack B. towed from the' scene.
expects another 18.5 million to use
Pelei'son, 46, Rudand, and Walker
The second vehicle, driven by accepts insurance bids Form .1040A and 16;8 million ·to
were westbound on when Peterson Edna M. Householder, 34, 42350
Insurance •ids were accepted by return Form 1040EZ.
attempted II&gt; tum left inl-0 a private State Route 7, Coolville, sustained Pomeroy ~lllage Council at a
It anticipates that another 14
drive and Walker, who was follow- heavy, disabling damage when it recessed meeting held Monday million taxpayers will use tax preing, slid left of center and struck was unable to stop on the ice and night at village hall.
parers who return forms electronithe left side ofPeterso11's vehicle.
cally,
rather than by mail. And it's
suuck Findling's vehicle. HouseThe bid of the Wiseman AgenPeterson, Walker, and three pas- holder was not injured and her cy, Gallipolis, for health insurance looking for 6. 7 million .to file
sengers in Wallrer' s car, Kenda J. vehicle was towed frorn the .scene.
for 1993 was accepted. The clerk returns prepared on home computReynolds, 15, Middleport. Leah M.
reponed that .there were three bids ers using tax preparation software.
Matson, 16, Racine, and David W.
Loose gravel on County Road but that of the Wiseman Agency
The IRS sa)'s that half of all taxReynolds, 11, Middleport, were 35 reponedly caused a one-vehicle best fulfilled the needs specifica- payers use the less complicated
uansported by the Metgs County accident Monday night in which a tions. Wiseman now has the health Forms I 040A or 1040EZ, or an
Emergency Medical Service to Racine youdl 's vehicle sustained insurance on village employees.
elecuonic fili.DJ format.
Veterans Memorial Hospital where heavy, disabling damage.
Earlier lhts month, the IRS
Downing, Childs, Mullen, and
they were treated and released.
·According to the report, Musser Insurance was awarded the mailed more than 11 million postDamage· to Peterson's vehicle N ichOias 0. Adams, 17, 28440 contraclto pr'!vide liability, proP.: . cards to farmers and self-employed
was listed as heavy and disabling. Tanners Run Road, Racine, was eny and fleet msurance to the vil- taxpayers who used a paid preparer
Damage to the Walker's vehicle eastbound w~en he went into a left- lage for 1993. That agency was the last year. The postcard included a
was listed as moderate and dis- hand curve and stnlclt loose gravel. insurer this year.
pre-printed label and told taxpayell
abling.
The youth lost contiol of the vehito take the cards to their prepare:§
cle, which ran off the left side of
who will have the necessary tax
A p~tch of ice was responsible the road, struck a ditch and overforms.
Due to the lack of a quorum
fDr two accidents within five min- turned.
The tax rates and, for the most
Middlepon
Village Council did not part, the forms will be unchanged
utes of each other Monday morning
NQ injuries were reponed an~
on County Road 36 in Orange no citations were issued. The veht- meet for its regular meeting Mon- from·laSt year.
day night: Next meeting will be
The basic rate for upper income
' TownShip.
.
cle was towed from the scene.
bracket taxpayers is 31 percent.
Helen E. Findling, 70, 42730
held on Jan. 11.
.

.G9vernor favors prison despite protest

The new emphasis on extending
the military 's authority and reach
came as the last of eight supply distribution centers, the town of Belet
Huen near the Ethiopian border in
western Somalia, was secured
Monday.
It was seized in an airborne
operation mounted by 200 mem bers o£ the 2nd Battalion of the
U.S . Army's 87th lnfanuy Regi-.
ment and 40 Canadian troops.
The Canadians eventually will
put 800 soldiers in Belet Huen and
the Americans will be withdrawn
for other tasks.
But even as that last objective
was being taken, new violenge
erupted in Mogadishu and reports
surfaced of clan atrocities elsewhere in the devastated, famineplagued East African nation.
More than 100 prominent members of a rival clan were slain in
door-to-door searches in the southern port of Kismayu in the days
before the Marines landed in
Mogadishu· on Dec . 9, The New
York Times reponed today.
The killing was done by militia-

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men under the control of Co,l. •
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Willing Workers meet recently
The program was opened by the
pr.esident reading the Christmas
scripture story from Luke. Other
Chnstmas readings were given by
Doris Koenig, Edna Harmon, Mildred Brooks and Glenna Sanders.
Terri Soulsby celebrated a
December anniversary.
Enjoying the celebration and
drawing names for new secret pels
were Hazel Bamhill, Terri S~by,
Pauicia Ha:ll, Joanna Weaver, Mildred Caldwell, Glenna Sanders,
Mae Vineyard, Mildred Brooks,
Mary Vineyar&lt;l. ~.r.~ Jamison,
Evelyn Spencer, Be
~bach,
Edna Harmon, Doris Koenig, and
two .JUCSts, Dorothy Cashdollar
and Tyler Sanders.
The DeJ&lt;t meeting will be Jan. 12
at the church when new year's
work will be planned.

1 Section, 10 Pogee 25 CM!tl
A Multimedia Ina. ,._~...,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December
29,
1992
-· . .
-

Shelley Modestow, Mark Rice
are united in marriage

An early Christmas was celebrated when the WiDing Workers
of St. Paul United Methodist
Church of Tuppers Plains met .
recendy 11 the church.
A dinner party was enjoyed
secret sisters were revealed. Group
gifts of sachets by Beulah Zorn bach, deconiled pine cones by Terri
Soulsby and 1993 program books
by Joanna Weaver, along with
many Christmas cards were preSCIIted to each member.
Glenna Sanders presided and
prayers were given by Mildred
Brooks and Mac Vineyard.
. Reports were ~ven by Mildred
BJoois and Patncia Hall. There
were 25 sick calls reported •.
A $100 donation was made 11&gt;
the Meigs Cooperative Food Pantry
and $400 was paid on the church
building fund.

,.rm...

WeclaadaJ, blaJala 11M upper

'

Omar Jess, a warlord allied witlaGen. Mohamed Farrah Aidid, the:
suongman who holds the soiatheril•
half of Mogadishu.
..• •
The Times quoted U.S. envoY.
Roben Oakley as saying he toli!:
Jess that "we knew exactly· what
went on and we won't forget it;!•.
Oaldey and Jess met on Dec. 12i
the day before American nnd BC!•
gian uoops entered Kisinayu. :::

....
.
•

Jess and most of his follower$·
are members of the ~eni c~:
which has its roots m westet.a:
Somalia and the neighboring deseit:
region of Ethiopia known as t~ .
Ogaden.
·.;
The victims , were all from the·
Harti clan, native to the Kismayn:
region.
:
The newspaper said all the·
killings occured in three nights
searches before the allied mill~ :
takeover and were an attempt tO·
eliminate educated Somalis wlio'
might support the American-led
forces. It said the victims included
religious and business leaders and a
nrominent doctor.

or:

S_~le ~f existi~g v
homes

tJP.
5.8 percent in November.aided

Cubarts seek
asylum in U. S.

Patrol probes three wrecks

million a month earlier and the~- November, to ' $102,9-00 from
ond straight increase.
$103,400. The median means that
It was the highest since a 3.89 half of the homes cost more and
million rate in De,cc:mber 1986. half cost less.
Sales totaled 3.22 m1llto~ m 1991.
The South posted the biggest
. The Realtors. Sfi?UP •s forec~t, sales increase in November, up 7.7
u1g that sales wiU nse to 3.44 mtl- percent to a 1.4 million annual rate.
lion units this year, the best since The median price there inched 1IJl
reaching a similar level in 1988. It 0.3 percent to $92,000.
also predicts that sales will total
Sales in the Midwest rose 4.9
3.67 million in 1993, highest since percent to a 1.07 million rate. The·
3.83 miUion in 1979.
median price was $82,300, down:
According to the Federal Home 0.1 percent from Octuber.
•
Loan Mortgage Corp., 30-year,
In the West, where the median·
fixed-rare mongages averaged 8.31 price fell 3.2 percent to $137,900,:
percent in November, up from 8.09 sales rose 3.8 percent 10 an 820,()00
percent in Oc!Ober.
rate; Sales also rose 3.7 percent in
The Realtors also reported that the Northeast, to a 560,000 rate,·
the median price of a previously despite prices that rose 1.5 percent
owned home dipped 0.5 percent in to $137.800.
•
•

Mail carriers will.beg!~ delivering ·
IRS tax forms on Saturday, Jan. 2
The rates for the lower brackets
remains 28 pen:ent and 15 percent,
although the income ranges cov-

ered by the brackets have been
adjusted to reflect inflation.

-

Meeting called off

SPECiAL OPENING - Fishers Ill Wheel of Laarel ClUJ'"
Road, Pomeroy, bad a speda1 two-boar store QDeDiu 10 t11at tH
residents or tbe Pomeroy Nunlaa and Rebabllitidoa
Cllald .
enjoy Cbrlsllllas shopplq at a 211 perceat dlscouat. Pldured ben · ·
with Herb Roush, front Ia Jon Campbell, store mau~tr, Rlc:k ·.,
Kornspan, ac:tlag Ceater administrator, and Mar~tret R1t1el, ·•
another resident.
·

C••

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