<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11189" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11189?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T08:24:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42156">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6c83e58b7ac574b5ea482930eec0aed2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>39991d474804892b0180d543c6eb66fd</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35285">
                  <text>.:...

·' I•

;

'

·,

December 1, 1991

'

1

area schools. '7o make it happen,
The public school officials
we will need your suppon.•
offered a number of suggestioas With an inilial focus on middle including working whb $uidailee
school students, the project seeks to counselors an\1 developtng pto"break a cycle of assumpJiQns" gnlms during parent conferencesa~ut highu education, Dr. Dorsey that
. would allow lhe. univeiSitv~to
said.
·
· take the message of tbe B;iter
Dr. Dorsey said the program Information Program into the
will focus on encouraging stpdents schools.
to stay in school and to consider
Nationwide, Obio lags far
taking college preparatory cOurses. behind most SlateS in the ~nt of
The l'rogram will further cenrcr on students who enroll in higher eduprovtding information on college cation. Ohio ranks 35th in tbe
admission requirements, and the nation in the percentage of high
availability of financial aid.
.
school students who go on 10 col"Oilr goal is to work closely lege and 40th in the nation 'in the
with parents and students to con- percentage of adults who have
vin~e them that college .is within completed college. The participathetr reach and that resources are tion rate· for residents of rural
available to help lhern atltlld," Dr. southeasiem~Ohio is even lower
Dorsey said.
lhan the Slate av~:~qe.

aDd you may win a $5 prize riom the ob1o VIIley Publlsblag C.o. (,eave "'ur name, address ·
an\1 telepltone number with J0i1r eard or ~.
No teltpbone calls will be aeeepted. AU conttst
eatries sbould be turned in 10 the newspaper .
olrke by 4 p.m. eaeb Wedlleaday.ln we crl a tte,
the ~ner will be ebosen by lottery. Nellt week,
a.Mel1sCounty farm will be featured by tile
Meigs Soil and Water Conservitloa_!)lstrkt._

Commis.sion
recognized ·
for service

'

'

t

I

I

COMMISSIONERS AWARbED- Con·
antulltlons to tbe GaUla County Commission·
ers ror being selected for tbe SWCD Dlstln·
guisbed Serviee Award. Pictured are (&amp;om left

Farm Flashes

:·rrom

·.

'

lo rlabt) Harold Montgomery, eommlssloaer·;
Mike Hughes, GaWa SWCD chairman; George
Pope aod Kail Burleson, eommissioners.

Gallia fair steer must be
identified, weighed Dec. 14

By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
GaiDa County Extension
Agent, A&amp;rk:ulture
GALLIPOLIS - The Burley
TobacCo·Market opened last week
wilh strong prices. A lot of discussion about a three price market carried right into the market opening,
but within seeonds after the open·
lnga one price market seemed
obvious.
J Buyers followed the auctioneer
with four fingers in the air estab·
lishing a most common price oL
S1.84 per p01md.
Unofficial price averages by
telephone from the Tobacco Mar·
· ket news service in Lexington
revealed a belt wide Monday average of $181 .92 per hundred and a
Tuesday.average of $182.461lCr
hundl;ed. Warehouses are adjusung
' to the new policr that regulales the
size of the dai y sale. You will
want to calf your warehouse prior
1D taking it to market.
·
. O~DC Agricultural economist
· Marvin Balle ·surveyed 64 of
: Ohio's 90 cenifled organic produc: crs. He found those growers getting
lower average yields, spending less
: per acre on chemicals and receiv.: !Df nearly double the avmge crop
· prace for their productS. Based on
: 1990 figures, Balle says that net
, Je1WD5 may not be that diffetent for
· orguic and conventional farmers.
: He not.ea that shoiald organic meth• ods beeome widespread use, premi: ums would dwindle and relative
: prolllabiUty would suffer.
· Scientist at the OARDC Ohio
~ Agriculture Research and Develop- meat Center are reponing a break. throila,h in understanding a puz;. ding disease. The scientists have
- lined a virus called Cononovius
: with wintet dysentery flares
November through March.
"Durin&amp; epidemic half Ill all of
: tile ~ in a herd may be infecu;\1.
· Tile noxt step will be to grow the
·· Coooll0¥ius m the lab and produc. illl.llll'ae am~ of virus need¢
ro hJall a vaccane.
Tile 1991·92 Ohio Bull Test
· -· J'rO&amp;rllllls underway. Some 104
·: buill we~e started at the Washing.. 108 Court House site. Some 212
; buill were lllriOd II tile Belle Val·
:: ICYltire. 111c Jhajority of the bulls at

Vol. 42, No. 147

Westorn hostages missing In Le_banon. !heir age, country and date

i r~aa¥!~iiPe~Qfim~I!AOO!lr(~b!l~n:iji~!·m li'iiii!Jl: u· ·.

'

,#'~

AFPWQ~M!\~lMt~iflili!i!I!Si~l,j!~'IMI6 li .ki:

; ·.

JOSEPH ClCIPPIO • 61 • Am-cr

co~n

&gt;.•

• Cj 12 86

'so.

'

4
'85

•

4

•

•

'86

·. '87

'88

'Q!i

'

•

4

'91

'92

Parade ushers in '91
Christmas season

1990 DODGE -DYNASTY
Champagne In color, V-6, only 2B;D0a mllea. A beautiful
family car tor you to purchase tor your family's Christmas
present.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Sunday's weather wasn't quite
ideal, and the economy isn't in
"Lip-top" shape, but shoppers and
parade lovers packed Pomeroy' s
retail stores and lined the streets as
the Pomeroy Merchants Association sponsored their annual Christmas Parade and open house Sunday.
A total of 47 entries were registered 10 participate in the parade,
ranging from clogging groups,
scouts and businesses. One winner
was recognized in each of several
categories.
Those entries were: Pomeroy
American Legion Post 39 and Middleport American Legion Post 128
'(c()lor gu!"d): Heritage Queen 199·1Holl~ Wtlhams: Stemwheel Festival Queen 1991 Michelle Friend;
Meigs High School Cheerleaders:
Meigs Hi$h School Band; Rufnes
and Flourtshes (winner); Pomeroy
Cub ScoutS #249: Hillside Baptist
·church; Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department and squad; Racine Cub
Scouts Troop 241: Stylettes:
Antique Police Car; Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department; Middleport Brownies #1254 and Junior
Troop #I 039: Farmers Bank and
Savings Company; Rutland Cheer-

BEmR ~ ON .THESE TWO UNITS
t--------------------'1
MDS'I' SILL NOW

ss988
1987 CHRYSLER LEBARON
2 Dr., Premium
blue. Haa only 38,000 mllea. A nice car tor
.
'
your aon e&gt;r daughter for Christmas.

See: Dwight Stevers or Bob Ross
- Call992-2196

leaders: O.C. Cloggers (winner);
Syracuse Brownies #1120:
Pomeroy Brownies #1271; Chester
Volunteer Fire Department; Eastern High School Marching Band;
Rock Springs Grange (winner):
Salisbury Cub ScoutS #246 (winncr): OK ' S Farm Toys; Meigs
County Bookmobile: Letart
Brownies Troop #1004 and Letart
Juniors #1290; Girl Scouts #1309:
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department: Tuppers Plains Brownies
#1316 ; Shady River Shufflcrs:
Justin Good (winner): and Santa
Claus with Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department.
Three or the entries in the
parade, Ruffles and Flourishes,
O.C. Cloggers and the Shady River
Shufners, performed for the crowd
at the corner or East Main and
Court Streets.
Following the parade, Santa
Claus visited area youngsters in the
Court Street mini-park, where
refreshments were served.
In conjunction with the annual
parade, the Pomeroy Merchants
Association held open house. Most
of the merchantS in·the downtown
shopping district will continue Sunday hours through the Christmas
season.

.
AMMAN , Jordan (AP)- A
' Palestinian delegate to the ArabIsraeli peace talks said today that
his group will not go to Washington for the next round unless the
United States grants visas to seven
advisers who are members or the
PLO.
.
It was the second snag for the
negotiations, which the Bush
administration scheduled 10 begin
Wednesday.
Israel objected to that date, complaining it was not consulted ahead
of time. and sa id its delegation
would not arrive until Dec. 9. The
Israeli Cabinet reaffirmed that
stand Sunday.
Jordan, the Palestinians, Syria
and Lebanon accepted the Bush
administration's invitation to the

WE ARE NOW
SERVING HOT LUNCH

.Middleport Gulf
SOON·TO BE

"CITGO"·
382 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992-3397

•

talks, which arc a follow-up to the
peace conrerencc that began in
Madrid, Spain, on Oct. 30.
However, Ghassan Khatib, a
member of the 14-man Palestinian
team, said today, "The Palestinian
delegation will not travel to Washington until the United States
approves visas for seven or our
advisers."
The move underscored Palestinian attempts to highlight a negotiating role for the PLO, whi1h is
regarded by Arabs as the sole legitimate representative of the Pales. tiniiln people.
·
Margaret Tutwiler, the State
Department spokeswoman, said
Tuesday that U.S. law prohibits
entry of a PLO official, repeesentative or spokesman, but that Sccre-

1992 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 1st

45760.

.

1W $4.00

'

FE11AU $4.00

.......______..__________

______

IINitU liCENSE $20.GO

Oww'• ....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - · - - · - - ,

---

~-------

Sleep three In-c small area with this sleek bed ,system made ot
2" diameter metal for sturdiness and styte. A\IOIIable In red ar
enamel finish. this bed will be a welcome addition to any home.
design Is perfect- the price Is ElYEif'l better. and the system one~~
built-In QIJ(lrd ralls. bed slats, and a sturdy iaddel'l

-~-------~---­
r···~·-•4••···········-----~------~-----··--~----,---~
,_

.....

I

,

••

I

..1,

'

COLOI

'

lr·-' If •P.W•
I
I
I-

Hill
...

I

I

I

~~~!At:.~ A~~-llkr M -.-h- r- 'k rlrtv.,. W...~ J.11at-- . Siwt.~~-1---- ~

:

' I

I

I

I
I

I
I
I

I

I

I

I

1

I

1

I

I

I

I

I

1

I

I

I

. ,._1-f.

I
I

I
I

I
I

11
I
.,

I
I

I
I

1
I

I
1

: I

I

I

I

I

1

I

I

I

1

I

I

I

I

I

I

1

I

I

I

1

I ,

I "

1

I

I

I

I

. I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

r---L ...

_

I

JI • • • L----~---l---'·---~---J~-----I
I
I
1
I
I

1
-- I··l---·'·-1
I

IL---•---~---~----~---~--·~----~---~---------~----,----~
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1

L---~---,---r---,----r-··r··------,--------~--------~
I
'
I
I
I
:

1- • • • 1• • • •
I
I '*
I
'..,
1
1
' I

.!.- ••
I

I
I
I

•··········~

'

I
I
L • • • •1 • •• • • !.
I
I
I

I
1

J

I
I
I

I

1

j

••• L ••••1• • • • 1- ••••• ""'- •
I
I
1
I
1

I
I
I

I
I
I

I
t "
1. - - • • L--I
t
'

I,
I
0

I
I
1

1
I

~
1

1
1

····r······· J •.••••••••••••••••...•.....•• ,
I

.

' .

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) American hostage Joseph Cicippio
was freed in Lebanon today by Shiite Muslim kidnappers after more
than five years in captivity. He said
he was told by his captors that
other Western hostages would be
released by year's end.
The 61-year-old Cicippio said
he was moved more than 20 times
during his captivity and that he was
rushed to a hospital last month for
an operation . He did not specify
what surgery was required, but
appeared more healthy than in photographs and videotapes seen during his long ordeaL
"I'm happy it's over," Cicippio

.
said as he was welcomed by U.S.
Ambassador Christopher Ross at
the Syrian Foreign Ministry.
Syrian Foreign Minister F811)uk
al-Sharaa said Cicippio reached
Damascus after being driven across
the mountains from Lebanon by
Syrian army officers. Cicippio's
·Lebanese wife was also in the Syrian capital.
Asked if the hostagef ordeal
would be ended soon , he said:
' 'God willing, we hope so ... there
is encouraging information .:.• we
hope that within a week there will
be other hostages released.''
Asked if that included journalist
Terry Anderson, the longest-held

f''

c}sh

THE BIG GUY • Instead or riding in a reindeer·drivea sle~gh,
Old Saint Nick was escorted into Pomeroy aboard a lire truck on
Sunday afternoo~ . After riding in the Pomeroy Christmas Parade,
the jolly old elf look a rest in the Court.Street mini-park, where he

tary or State James A. Baker can
recommend a waiver.
"Our policy has been and will
continue to be to consider requests
by members of the PLO for visas
on a case-by-case basis," she said,
recalling that permission has been
granted for humanitarian reasons.
Israel refuses 10 deal with the
PLO, which it regards as a terrorist
group. But a shadow delegation or
PLO offic ial~ assisted the Palestini·
an delegates to the Madrid conference.
PLO leaders also gave the goahead for Palesfinian rcprcscntati .ves from the Israeli-occupied
West Bank and Gaza Strip 10 form
a joint ~olegation with Jordan to
circumvent Israel's refusal to deal
with the ~roup.
A scmor member or the Jordanian delegation said today that the
Palestinian objections about PLO
visas would not affect his delegation. Jordan' s group " will surely
travel to Washington as scheduled,
even i[ the Palestinians balk," said
the official, who spoke on condition or anonymity.
At the Madrid talks, Jordanians
and Palestinians fonned a joint delContinued on page 3

KIEV, U.S .S.R. (AP) Ukrainians voted overwhelmingly
for independence, according to
unofficial figures today, in a referendum that could wreck Milchail S.
Gorbachev's efforts to hold together the Soviet state.
. " An independent Ukraine is
born, " said a beaming Leonid
Kravchuk, the former Communist
who reportedly won a presidential
contest also held Sunday in the socand most populous Soviet republic.
Kravchuk, the republic's parlia·
mentary chainnan, told a news conference that 92 percent of voters
had endorsed independence and
that he had won the presidency
with 55 percent of the vote.

Free Delivery

. ill

RUTLAND FURNITURE

$tat1 Route 124
Rutlaad, Olllo
3 Milts Off Stall Route 7

742·2211 .

"Rudy", an elf and other colorful Christmas
characters were represented on the bank's
aanual noat.

Ukrainians vote for independence

299°0WITH BEDDING

1
Financing Available
•
IWiher•eYou Can Buy Quality Furniture If You Don't Mind
Paying A Little Lees! ·

"' •

heard Christmas lists from area youngsters. (Perhaps the adnnt
of deer season diseouraged Sianta from bringing his reindeer into
t~wn yesterday.)

BANKERS ON PARADE· The gan~ from
Farmers Bank and Savings Company, thear cbil·
dren and grandchildren, .took to Pomeroy's
Christmas Parade route on' Sunday. Red-nosed

5

.

sign reading " Free at last'·' on a
billboard on the lawn of his brother's home.
Thomas Cicippio , who kept a
running tally of his brother's captivity, said: "Thanksgiving certainly did come on a Monday this year.
Not ooly Thanksgiving, but Christmas and every other holiday you
can think of."
. The tally for Joseph Cicippio
swpped at1,908 days today. It continues for Anderson, the chief Middle East correspondent for The
Associated Press who has been a
captive ror nearly seven years, and
lor Steen , who was kidnapped
nearly five years ago.

~

Avalabile II Red, Bitt 114 Woad Trill II Twli/FIII or Twii/Twll

90 Daye Same Ae

captive, Sharaa said: "We hope
so."
. The United Nations also issued
a staiC!Jlent indicating the last two
U.S . hostages in Lebanon Anderson and educator Alann
Steen - may soon be free.
Earlier today, U.N. spokesman
Capt. Daniel Madryga confirmed
Cicippio's release based on a report
by U.N. envoy Giandomenico
Picco - a key negotiator in the
U.N. erron to arrange a broad swap
of hostages, Arab prisoners and
missing Israeli soldiers.
In Norristown, Pa., Cicippio's
hometown, his ramily rejooced,
prayed with a priest, and nailed a

f

·auNK BEDS
STARnHG AT

.

.

•

SALE

DUDUN£ FOR PUIOIASE OF 1992 DOG IKDISE IS WIIIAIT 20TH. f'GUI DOUAU ($4.001 PINALTT IF UcENSE IS PUROIASED
Aflll !HAl IIATL 101 JOUI COIMNIENa USIIIIIWIDT APPUCIIOit IIANI AND IIA l 10 TilE COUNIT AUDIIOI AI !HE
COUIIIQISE NOW. lEIS All fOUl DOlW !SUO) FOIIAOI DOG.IWE 01 FIIW. (IENNll UaNSE PIIIALTT $20.00~ AlSO
II ON SAlE 'AJ Ill HUIIANI soam lCKAtiD At THl CORNEl OF NOIIH SKOND ST. AND WAIJIUI SI.IIDIIUPOII, OltiO

A llulllmedlo Inc. Newspaper

Delegation won't go to Washington
unless P~O advisers granted visas

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
.STOREWIDE CHRISTMAS

FRIDAY'S HOT
SPECIALS

, 'Ali.#.~~.$J'~~l'fii$g!!i:M!!tl~AAHI1!~4iQt:\\·
HEINRICH STRUEBIG •
German \' ~/,l;m!Jili\i :1!/i()i
THOMAS KEMPTNER • 30 • German !!§!1§/~.~ !Lii !r.fii {\.

"'' :

$9888

1 Soctlono, 10 Pageo 25 cenlo

Kidnappers release Cicippio
Released Dec. 2

NEW
usUPERLOnO"
IS HERE!!·

I·

Low toqhlln mld-40L ' ,
Tuesdar, chance of rain 70 percenL Htgh In mld 50s.

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Monday, December 2, 1991

Copyrlghled 1991

461 SOUTH THIRD
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

I

each of the calves and used this figure along with weight and birth
date to project the optimum finish
weight.
The computer program cali lllen
estimate the daily gain needed to
attain that finish weighL Last year
the total weight for aU of the eight
class winners was only 2S pounds
less (3.125 pounds Jicr head} lhan
liad been project~ in December.
The average difference between
ac)ual fair weight and projected
weight for the top ten steers was 29
po,unds. The total fair weight on the
top ten steers was 12,400 pounds.
In December we had projected the
weighlto 12,110 pounds.
We feel reall!ood about 'the
accuracy of last year's results and"
lcok forward to working with this
edueational component of the steer
project for 1992.

the Washington Court House site
are Angus. The initial on test
weights were taken at Washington
Coun House on November 13 - 14
and will be taken at Belle Valley
Oecember 4 - 5 Twenty eight day
weigh periods will take place. I
usually get the results about one
week after the weigh day for those
interested in tr~~ing a particular
bull.
·
On Saturday, December 14, ail
steers that members plan to exhibit
at the 1992 'Gallia County Junior
Fair must be identified and
weifhcd. This will take place' at lhe
Gal ia County Junior Fairgrounds
rrom 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. It is the member's responsibility to make sure
lhat lhe $lW' is there at the proper
time.
~
~ .
: During the past five years we
have measured the hip height on .

.

By CONSTANCE S. WHITE
Gallia Couaty S&amp;WCD
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soil and Water District announced
the Gailia County Commissioners
as the 1991 winner of the Distinguished Service Award. This award
is given to individuals, businesses,
organizations and agencies that
work closely with the district in
their efforts to put conservation on
the land.
Each year the commissioners
participate in the Farm City Day
· field event and ~ist with provid. ing lhe lemonade for the crowd of
approximately 1,000 visitors
' More imporlallt is !heir commit·
ment to conservation through their
continued support and funding to
the
district.
realize the impor- ·
tance
of theThey
technical
and conservation education prognuns the dis·
trict carries ouL In the past year the
district has been able to offer their
own forester to work with
landowners in management of one
of our most valuable natfaral
resources since about 53 percent of ·
Gailia County is privately owned
forestS.
The commissioners have realized the value in lhe State Matching Funds that their financial commitment i~ able to generate and
bring state funds back into the
county. The. match from the state
has risen over the years and now is
approximately a dollar-to-dollar
match.
The programs of the district
could not exist without the commissioners support and with the
growing needs that our ·society
places on our environment we
appreciate th.eir efforts.

gram." The progr1111 Is designed to in~ lbe
eollege.golna rale or sludenta in southeaslern
Oblo aod northcra West Vlrglail.

BETTER INFORMATION PROGRAMUniversity or Rio Grande President Barry M.
Dorsey met with nearly 40 area edu.e ators
reeently to diseuss the "Better Information Pro-

Pick 3: 445
Pick 4:7356
Cards: Q-H, 6-C,
K·D, 4·S
. Super Lotto:
1-5-17-30-35-41
Kicker:
264570

Page4

MYSTERY FARM • Tbis week's mystery
farm, featured by lhe Gallla Soil and Water
CoilservaUon District, Is located IDI!Iewbere in
GIUII County. lndlvldnals Wisllliag 10 par tid·
pate in the weekly contest may do 10 by guessing
tbe farm's OWDer. Just man, or drop orr your
pess off to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 815 third Ave., GaiUpolls, Oblo, 4Sci31,

'

.

Ohio Lottery

Bengals
defeat
Giants

+
' -

RIO GRANDE - ''The imporIaiit lhing is 10 get students 10 lhink
about and prepare for their
futures." UniveiSity of -Rio Grande
President Barry M. Dorsey told
~ly 40 area educalors n:ccndy as
he sought their help in implementing lhe "Belter lnformauon Prognun.•
The program, which was
launched m October during a meeting wilh superiniendents and representatives of 13 local school districts, is designed to increase the
college-going rate of students in
soulheastern Ohio and northern
West Vir$inia.
"If thts works it has to be a
cooperative effort," Dr. Dorsey
said at the November meeting,
which included
from 23

~

I

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt PI-nt, wv

..

.

" ;

'

CUTE! • What's a parade without kids? Justin Good witb bis
pony and earl made an especially cute entry in yesterday's Christ·
'mas Parade in l'oineroy. Justin and his carl took first place honors
In tbe equestrian division of the parade.

23

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS
f

Election officials said Kravchuk accounts (or nearly a fifth or the
won a clear first-ballot victory, Soviet Union's, can legally secede
allowing him to avoid a runoff from the union without recognition
against any or his five opponents.
by the national legislature. or GorReleasong preliminary Ci~ures , bachev.
the Central.Election Commtssion
'But if the economically and
sai~ 83.7 percent or the repubUc 's · politically powerful Ukraine suc37.5 million eligible voters cast 1 ceeds, its independence would
~allots.
· severely cripple Gorbachey'$
With the passage of the referen- errorts to preserve the union.
dum and pledges by ail candidates
The three Baltic states arc the
in the presidential election not to only other republics 'lo have broken
sign Gorbachev's proposed treaty completely from the country.
on retaining the central govern- · Raising another concern about
ment, the Ukraine has shown its secession, Kravchuk also reitcialed
detennination 10 break from Krcnl- his position that the Ukraine should
lin con uol.
receive joint control of nucleai:
It not clear whether the Ukrainc,
Continued on page 3
whose po~ulation of 52 million

J,

,

�..
.

Monday, December 2, 1991

Commentary

.•.
Page-2-The.Dally Sentinel .
. Pomeroy-Middleport,_O..hJo .. :
MOnday, December 2; 1"1 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

How did U.S. technology end up in . ~iby~?

WASHINGTON.- An Iraqi
middle man who has already been
identified as the linchpin behind a
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
chemical weapons plant in Libya
may also have been involved in
supplying Iraq's nuclear weapons
fjMU.TIMEDIA, INC.
development program. And he was
· able to openly buy technology in
: the United States desJ?ite tl)e fact
ROBERT L. WINGETT
, that the U.S. government knew he
Publisher
, was shopping for dangerous
clients.
PATWillTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The .Iraqi, lhsan Barbouti, was
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General' Manager · identified by the U.S. government
as a Libyan agent by January 1989.
.
Earlier this year, press reports also.
AMEMBER o!TheAssoeialed Pre!S,Inland Daily Press Association and
surfaced
about Barbouti s role in
the American Newspaper Publ~her Association.
developing the Iraqi chcmi(al
.LETI'ERS OF OPINION are· welcome. They should be less than 300
weapons program. New evidence
words long. Allleuers are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
now suggests that chemicals were
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lettors
not his only weapons of choice.
should be in good taste, addressing ~sues. not personalities.
Our associate Dean Boyd has
obtained a leuer wriuen on Feb. 23,
. 1990, from an official of the Iraq
- -,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' National Oil Co. to Barbouti. The
Jetter (efers to Barbouti's assur,
ances that he would help Iraq
·acquire "the coatin$ technology"
required by Hussem Kamel AI·
Majid. Kamel is saddarn Hussein's
son-.in-law and at the time was in

111 Court Street
P9Dieroy, Ohio .

Kentucky wo.man injured

placed
On the new. horse

•S
A har~ess I

The federal government created by the new Constitution in 1789 can
be compared to a powerful ne"' "work horse," and the Bill of Rights can
be understood as a harness on that horse. Many Americans thought the
power of the new national government halllo be harnessed before it could
be productive. It was up to the Frrst Federal Congress, meehn~ m New
York in 1789, to carry through with the "gentlemen's agreement reached
during the ratification debales to add a bill of rights to the new Consbtution.
James Madison, elecled to the House of Representatives from Virginia,
opened the discussion on May 4 by proposing that debate on amendments
to the Constitution begin in the House of Representatives that month. As
the principal architect of the original Constitu~on •. Madison had op)Xlseda
bill of rights at bollt the PhiladclphmConvenhon m 1787 and the_Ytrgtn!a
Ratification Convention in 1788. But the near defeat of the Conshtulton m
his home state, and the wide popular support for a list of fundamental
restrictions on the new government, persuaded him that a federal bill of
rights was necessary, and he took the lead hand in shaping i~ drawing on
language in the Virginia Declaration of Rights of 1776 and other state
bills of rights.
Madison reduced a large number of suggesled amendments - many of
which .had been suggesled in the state ratifying conventions -to twelve.
The speeific and pragmatic nature of the Bill of Rights owes much to
Madison. For example, instead of accepting Anti-Federalist demands for
an outright ban on a federal standing army, he crafted the Second and
third Amendments, which recognized the right of the staleS 10 maintain
Stale armies or "militia," but did not prohibit the federal government from
maintaining its own, professional army.
· Pressed by other business, including the establishment of the new fed·
eral government, Congress did not hurry its consideration of Madison's
proposals, but on September 24, 1789, the House and Senale agreed on
twelve proposed amendments and submiucd them to the stale legislatures
for ratification.
The first two proposed amendments, which dealt with the apportionment of seats In l!'ie HOUSe of R~e!ilil\lves and Cc:mgtesSIOffiil slillii'lei!,
were rejected by the states. The other ten were approved when Virginia
became the eleventh state to ratify them on December 15, 1791.
'

Letters to the editor
Thanksfolks
Annual Turkey Supper a huge sucDear Editor:
The TUpJlCrS Plains VFW and cess. To all the people that came
Ladies Auxtliary #9053 wishes to out and supponed it a big thanks.
thank everyone that donaled pies &amp;
Rose Carr
cakes and worked to make our
Rt. 2 Box 167
Coolville, OH 45723

Given the runaround 9 years
Dear Editor:
I have tried to believe and count
on our child supr.on system for 9
years now. I don I understand why
Je 11!:'1 .~iscriminated against in

ing Father" Jives in has delayed and
sat on the papers until he is now
"Laid orr· and his unemployment
has run out
Could someone please explain
to me and my child whY. in 16
months the county in question has
not collecled one cent for him? Let
alone why over $8,000 dollars is
due and probably will never be

~-· lyJftm ellrorce '!he
to pay child suppon,

~coillforders"

if you are not on ADC. For 9 years.
I have been given the runaround
and the line "you have 10 give him
a chance to pay."
paid . •
Now for the last 16 months,
afler I found out he was employed ·
again so that the case could be
.reopened, the county. that the ':Lov"

Dottie Sclly
1671 Lincoln Hts.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.•....•'.. •
·. \...
.' ..''
.
.........,
... ... ...
'
·. .' .. ·..:. ·...
·••..t., ••,,..•.··:··.·.. ••....
*"'
'
.. . . . . .
===}·
.
l.:.:.
. . =======
' , ' -......
... . ..........•'·... -·"..:..:.:..:.....
=
',
.
.. ...
..........
,:.. ... .: ... "
!-' • .,.. )

"'

~

..... : ~:·.:

:

'.

•

• •
t ••
:

t

••

..

~-

.. •

••• ••

.

MINI-EDITORIAL - The. Justice Department didn't do Dan
Quayle any favors by showing his
Drug Enforcement Administration
· file to the Indianapolis Star. The
newspaper read the fi1e and concluded that the DEA had cleared
Quay lc of any allegations that he
tought cocaine in the 1980s.
Apparen~y the story was made up
by a drug dealer tryins lei impress
his friends. But Amencans would
be more reassured if they heard that
from someone besides the newspaper owned by a company founded
by Qtlaylc's grandfather, a compa•
ny in which Quayle still owns ·
stock. Unfortunately, the Justice
Department now won't show the
file to any other newspapers .
Quaric would have been betler orr
to see his story played out in
"Dooncsbury" instead of on the
news pages.

Listening to television interviews with prominent Republicans
recen~y. I have detected an abnost
obsessive concern with one panicuJar aspect of next year's presidcntial campaign.
The first person I heard voicing ..
this particular concern was Ed
Rollms, a former White House
political adviser and guru for
Republican congressional campaigns who now makes his Jiving
as a political consultant Drawing
on his supposedly vast experience,
Rollins told a TV interviewer that
the whole secret of winning a ptcsidential campaign was "the economy, tlte economy, the economy ."
But Rollins has been wrong
before, and I didn't become scriously worried until I heard White
House Chief of Staff John Sununu
tell another interviewer !hat the
three most important factors in any
presidential campaign were (ticking them off on his fingers) " the
economy, the economy, and the
economy."
Now, both Rollins and Sununu
arc right - up to a point. A robust
economy, or at least the public's
perception that the economy is

improving rapidly, is almost essential to any president's successful
campaign for re-election . The
American people think, rightly or
wrongly, that the president is in
charge of the economx and capable
of doing something about it. If
that's all Sununu.and Rollins were
saying, I have no quarrel with their
point.
.
But a healthy economy is, for a
Republican president at least, only
the beginning: the indispensable
precondition of a winning campaign. It is not - certainly not neecssarily- enough by itself. That is
becau se the Democrats·, whose
whole stock .in trade consists of
offering to do more for the voters
than the Republicans will do (or
have done), will invariably outbid
the GOP when it comes to proposals for spending the ripe fruits of a
husky economy.
There is nothing the Rcpubli·
cans can propose in (for example)
the maucr of health care that the
Democrats won't instantly, and
however irresponsibly, double. The
same goes for every other category
of government "services": uncm·
ployment benefits, child care, help

for the handicapped, protection of
the environment - you name it
That is why a Republican candidate for president must seck 10 tum
the public's mind away from purely economic considerations to the
whole series of social concerns that
impelled roughly 20 percent of the
American electorate to leave the
old Roosevelt coalition in the mid1960s and start voting conservative
(usually meaning Republican) in
presidential elections. Without the
support of this key bloc, the
Republican Party will swiftly
shrink again 10 the roughly 40 percent of the electorate that it hung
onto straight throu gh the New
Deal'
One man who understood this
very well, and never made the mistake of running a presidential campaign on ''the economy, the economy, the economy" alone, was the
late Lee Atwater.
Atwater is one of three conservatives- the others being J. Edgar
Hoover and Bill Casey - whom
the liberals, brave souls that they
arc, enjoy beating up .on posthumously. They detest Atwater

••

l ·::'
'

'

DEAD HEAT
,

That long-ago Christmas I had
quit college because it was hard. I
was lazy, and $64 a week sounded
like a lot of money. It wasn't until
later that I discovered $64 was
never a lot of money, even in 1971.
So it was the penance of my
impetuous youth that year to work
amid myriad gift delights, none of
which would be purchased for me,

nor by me for m)'.haplcss loved
ones .
To add to my seasonal malaise
that year, my employers were lite
son of foll&lt;s who would slit a Cabbage Patch doll's throat in front of
a mother who'd camped out all
night in an icc slonn to get il. Some
of the customers were almost as
nasty, and I had to perform pirou·
cttcs to earn the commission that
would keep me from having to
move back in with my parents. As
they paraded thei r credit cards in
front of me, I hated them as a stray
dog resents a house poodle with its
own bed and rhinestone collar. The
day before Christmas I'd just about
had it, when my salvation walked
nervously into our store, head
bowed and carrying a .cowboy hat,

to buy a present for his wife.
I looked at him across the herd
of heads bent intently over the
stock and our eyes locked. We
were two flimsy boats awash on a
treacherous sea of crash commercialism, and I sensed his terror. I
could feel he was about to bolt, and
I empathized. My soul had been ·
trying to heave itself from my body
and this place all day: 1 asked him
gently if I could help him , and
something in my manner must have
hit a responsive chord. He asked
me the one question no one had
asked me that year, the one I was ·
just aching to answer:
"If your husband or boyfriend
were in here buying you a present,
what would you want?"
·
He didn 'I have to ask twice. I

William A. Rusher
because he brought Bush's 1988
campaign from 18 points behind in
the polls to ·a stunning victory by
demonstrating - with the help of .
Dukakis' furlough policy, ACLU
card ~nd disdain for the Pledge of
Allegtance - that the Democratic
candidate was a liberal right down
to his fingernails. Wben the voters
realized that, the cooleSt was over.
Americans arc rightly concerned
about the economy first and foremost But once they are satisfied on ..
that score. t)tcy can and do t,~~m to
the whole series of problems
summed up in their much-misunderstood response to pollslers that .:
"the country has goUcn off on ille ·
wrong track." They believe deeplY' :
(to take only one example, but the ·:
paradigmatic one) that self-disci-. ·i
pline is more important than free ·
condoms and needles, and they w~l
vote for the presidential candidate
who believes it too. If the GOP for- ,
gets that in 1992, it will deserve '
defeat.

Sarah Overstreet
took him straight to the shocking- '
pink, fake-fur bathrobe I'd had my
eye on sincel'dgonetoworkatthe
store. As I remember it now, it was
a hideous thing, a giant bath mat
run amok. But it was almost like
the one my gorgeous sister-in-law
wore to waler the poolside flowers
when I was a teen-ager, and she
an'd my older brother· lived in the
big house in Southern California. It
symbolized everything I wanted to
be but was not
The cowboy must have been as
enamored of gaud as I, because
when I held up the bathrobe, his
eyes lit up and the color returned to · .
his ashen face .
· '·

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS by Lane and Miller
PET E.Y, l 00'-I'T
HA~e MUCH

AllOWANCEl
SA~ED

ME.

NEtll\ER,

PATiY.

FOR

WHAT'RE

CHRISTMAS

Wt'GoNNA

F'RE~ENTS

THI5

DO?

'

·Seven calls for assisWK:e were .answered over the weekend by
units or Meigs County Emergency Medical Services. _
On Sunday at 1'1 :04 a.m., Middleport sqlj3d went 10 Ash Street
for Celia Hite. She was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
. 12:04 p.m., Syracuse unit went ·lO Long Run Road. ¥ax Folmer
went to Vejerans. At 3:39p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Country
Mobile Holjte Pallc for Ronald Eakins, who wa,s taken to Veterans.
At 4:03 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Pleasant Ridge Road. Herman
Martin went to·Veterans.
On Mond.ay at 1:46 a.m ., Middleport squad was sent to
Stonewood Apartments. Dano Longstreth was taken to Velerans. At
1:57 a.m., Rudand squad was sent to Mei's Mine No. 2. Quincy
Oldaker was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At7:23 a.m., Syracuse unit went to toeust Grove Road.' Mynte Dame.wood was sent
to Camden-Clark Memprial.Hospital.

- --- Are~fdeaths-Edna Reeves
Edna Mae Reeves, 76, of
Pageville, died Friday, Nov. 29,
1991, at her residence.
Born on Nov. 21, 1915, she was
the daughter of the late Albert
Marshell and Eliza Russell Reeves.
She was a member of Our
Father's House at PageviUe.
She is survived by a special
niece and nephew, Leonard and
Bonnie Boring of Albany, and several other nieces and nephews; one
sister, Shirley Berenberger of
Albany, and two brothers, Albert
Reeves of Johnstown and Ronald
Reeves of North Carolina.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by three brothers,
Eldon, William and Marshell; and
two sisters, Mary Boring and Florence Boring.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the BigonyJordan Funeral Home in Albany
with the Rev. Marvin Althouse
officiating. Burial will be in the
Wells Ceme1ery, Pageville.

Elsie Forbes

Is GO~obsessing on the economy?

I approach this Christmas season with less buying power than
I've had in the last few, due in one
part to the recession and in the
other part to taking a year off to
write a book. I went to the mall last
weekend to get an early start on
Christmas shopping, more for self·
proleCtion thari any particular joie
de vivrc. I suffered an out-of-body
experience last year at the mall during the last-minute crush.
But my trip turned out a lot better than I'd expecthd, thanks to the
memory of a gift that probably
meant more to me than to the
woman who received it. Shufning
along carrying my heavy wool coat
and wishing I coul~ stuff it down a
wastebaslcct, my feet screaming for
Rocsports instead of the pointy.. toed iron maidens I'd worn to
work, I dragged myself wearily
into the older wing of the mall and
sat down on a.bench. A sign in the
window of one of the stores cau~ht
my ey9, and I realized I was sitbng
right in front of the shop I'd
worked in 20 Christmases ago.

.~-:.:::

..... 'i

Today, Barbouti's acti~ities are
being investigated by several congressional subeommitlees, the U.S.
Customs Service. and some of his
old business partners. But for the
U.S. government, the truth about
Barbouti and how he was able lei
arm Iraq using American suppliers . ,
may prove too embarrassmg to
admit.
NUCLEAR TIIR,EAT - Secretary of State James Baker says the
No. I t~reat to Asian security is
North Kt'irca' s nuclear build-up. ,
HMe is why. For y.ears,-Northd
Korean scienti~~- have. ~tl!!!.i9d at
the Soyict nuclear research center
at .Dubna. They bave been sighled
there within the last three months.
What concerns U.S. officials is that
Soviet hardliners without the
authorlly of Mikhail Gorbachev are
continuing to supply nuclear knowhow to North Korea. The next slep
is for the hardliners to get bold
enough 10 smuggle actual nuclear
weapons into North Korea.

3N HIV~,..eGaTiVe
DoCTo~ iN
Hou~e?

EMS units answer calls

Here's to a.Christmas in the pink

Berryls Worto
•

the law. ·Lloyd's of London has
refused to pay his life insurance
claim until the company can prove
that he is indeed dead.

i$ THeRe.

THe.

A Ken"!cky )'o'Oinan was injured in a one-car crash Salurday at 5
p.nL mSalisbury Township on S.R. 7, 4.8 miles north of the GalliaMe~gs County line, according to the Stale Highway Patrol's GalliaMeigsPost.
·
Renita S. Tackett, 31, OfPikeviU~. was taken by the Pomeroy
EMS 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital, where $he was treaied and
released for bruises. ·
"
· Tackett. driving a 1990 Dodge Spirit, was heading south when a
deer ran into her car and hit it in the left side. The deer got away.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

charge of llaq's weapons· develop· methods of financing the deal that
ment program and industrialization were tied to a.U.S. bank. The leucr
including 'the oil industry. The let· says Barbouti could "move funds
ter says the oil company needed the with Babil In~ . " Babil is based in
technology for " future oil France, and as of January of this
~ipelines" and Kamel needed it for year was run by Safa AI-Habobi,
'atom projects."
. the director of Iraq's AI Nassr
Beginning in 1988, Barbouti weapons complex.
·
showed a keen interest in an oil
Babil is suspected ()f bcin_g ·a
pipeline coating formula that had front for sensitive Iraqi purchases.
been developed by a Dallas busi· Habobi himself solicited millions
ncssman. The process used a mate· of dollars from the scandal-ridden
rial that could also be used as a Atlanta branch of the Italian Banca
protective lining for parts of a Nazional.e del Lavoro (BNL),.
nuclear reactor. Barbouti ivas so according to a 1991 U.S. indictecstatic over the possible nuclear ment. BNL officials in Atlanta
applications that,he went into busi- were charged in that indictment
ness· with the unsuspecting Dallas with illegally lending Iraq $4 bilman in Augustl988.
lion in credits and unsecured loans.
,The Texan severed those tics in
U.S. officials say another princi1989 and reponed Barbouti to the pal in Babil was Pierre Drougal.
government after learning that His son, Chris Drougal, is one of
some of the technology was headed the indicted BNL-Manta officials .
for Libya. It is. unclear whether
The shadowy Barbouti is not
Barbouti was successful in gelling available for comment, His family
the technology to Iraq himseU, but claims he died of natural causes in
his cronies had reportedly learned July 1990, and there is a headstone
how to develop it before Barbouti bearing his name in England. But
and the Texan parled ways.
even Barbouti's death is a mystery.
The letter to Barbouti from the Some of his fonner business assoIraq National Oil Co. suggests ciates suspect he is merely duckin~

.

'·

"

The Deny Sentinel-Pill• 3

r--Local news briefs---. Blast of ~ohl air expected .· to hit Ohio The~day ·

.

The Daily Sentinel

.

Elsie L. Zahl Forbes, 93, Min. ersville, died on Saturday, November 30, 1991 at Overbrook Center
in Middlepon following an exlended illness.
She was a housewife, attended
the Minersville Uniled Methodist
Church and was a member of the
Uniled Methodist Women.
Born on June 22, 1898, Mrs.
Forbes was the daughter of the late
Frederick and Susan Grueser Zahl.
She is survived by a son, Paul
(Dorothy) Forbes of Minersville;
three daughters, June (Brooks)
Sayre of Syracuse, Matjorie Reuter
of Pomeroy and Helen Jones of
Belpre; two sisters, Helen Keller of
Cleveland and Mildred Fenstermaker of Strongsville; several
nieces and nephews;-.1.2 grandchildren and 14 great·grandchildrcn.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Forbes
was preceded in death by her hus-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................31 3/4

Ashland Oil ......................27 3/4
AT&amp;T............................... .35 3/4
Bank One ..........................43 7/8
Bob Evans ........................ 20 7!8
Charming Shop..................20 3/4
City Holding .................. .. .16
Federal Mogul.. ................ .14.1/4
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. .471/4
Key Centurion .................. .14 1/4
Lands' End ........................ 25 I(2
Limi1ed Inc . ...................... 25 1/4
Multimedia Inc .................. 20 1/4
Rax Restaurant .................. 5/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .34
Shoney's Inc ..................... .l9 7!8
Star Bank ........................... 24 I(2
Wendy lnt'l......................... 8 7/8
Worthington lnd ................ 19 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loew/ of GallipoUs.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Aora Bailey, Pomeroy; and Rober!
Riffie, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS • Hil·
dred Carson, Middleport; Celia
Hite, Middleport; Max Folmer,
Long Bouom; Edwin Burne~,
Middleport; and Herman Marun,

r ro~r,. lll'am...- '

18 --~~

band, Eugen~ Forbes; a son in law,
Ray Reuter; six brothers and two
sistel's.
Funeral services wiU be held on
Tuesday at 3 p.m.'lll Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Wesley Thatcher
officiatin~. Burial will be in MinersviUe Hill Cemelery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 2 p.m.,10 4
p.m. and 7 p.m. 'to 9 p.m.
Memorial donations may be
made to the Miner·sville United
Methodist Church, in care of Mary
Pugh, Racine, Ohio 45771.

George Hart
George Glen "G.G." Hart, 55, of
Route 3, Box 147A, Albany, died
unexpectedly on Friday, November
29, 1991 at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital.
Born on September 18, 1936 in
Burlingham, he was the son of
William T. and Ethel Ziegler Han.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Hart is survived by his wife, Ferol
Frash Hart of Albany; two sons,
William Ralph (Jacqueine) Han of
Athens, and George Henry Han of
Shade; four stepdaughters, Mrs.
Steve (Patricia) Ward of Great
Falls, Ill., Mrs. Karl (Andrea)
Schmi.dt of Albany, Mrs. Joe (Vic·
lOria) Basler of B'tementon, Wash.,
and Mrs. Stephen (Stephanie)
Reed; a stepsiln, Geoffrey Taylor
of Albany; a brother, Reed (Juani·
ta) Hart of Athens; two grandchildren; six step-grandchildren; his
first wife, Helen Hart of Shade;
special friends, Larry and Dottie
Jones of Pomeroy and several
nieces and nephews.
He was a member of Modem
Woodsmen Camp. 7230 and was
known throughout the area by his
CB handle, "Big Valley".
Funeral services will be· held on
Wednesday at II a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Ed Min·
gus officiating. Burial will be in
Burlingham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 2 p.m. 10 4
p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. and on
Tuesday from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

MurtShain

By The AIIOClaled Preu
A blast of cold air from the
northern G!ell Lakes is expected to
send Obio temperatures into a tailspin on Tuesday. Late aftempon
temperatures could be as much as
20 de~ colder than the previous
oven11ghtlows.
·
The National Weather Service
said the stale will be hit with heavy
rain and some thunderstorms
tonight Snow may be 'mixed with
the rain in the northwest ·
Runoff could cause some flooding problems in southeast Ohio on
Tuesday.
Lows tonight will range from 30
in the northwest to 45 southeast. .
The precipitation will end Tuesday
beginning in the west early and in
·the east during llieWtemoo1l. · · ·
Highs on Tuesday ·should reach
the mid-30s northwest and around
55 southeast before temperatures .
start to fall.
The record high temperature for
this dale at the Columbus weather
station w~s 12 degrees in 1982:
The record low was 1 in 1886.

I'I

on Sunday before a c.old front
moved in from the Great Lakes
. region, where it left a blanket of
snow.
''
Record highs Sunday included
83 degrees in B~n Rouge, La., 79
in Atlanta; 78 in Cape Haueras,
N.C., and Norfolk, Va.; and 59 in
· Molupelier, Vt.
Highs as much as 20 degrees
lower were expecled today.
Snow fell in Idaho and Mootana, where winds gusting to 80
mph created blizzard conditions
anil forced the closing of .a I 00-

mile StreiCh of lntetstale 90. '
Higb temperatures today were ·
expectec!. in the ieenS'Ind 2()s in
' part of .the Plains, the Great L1bi :
region and northern New England; :
the 30s through most of lhe Mill- .·
west, and New England; the 40s :
and .50k jn the Pacific Northwest. :
the Southwest, the 50s and 60s in •
· California and the mid-Atlantic :
region; and the 70s and 80s in the ·
Southeast and Aorida.
:
The high temperature for the ·
nation Sunday was 87 at Naples, :
F1a.
•

Weather
South·Centnl Ohio
Tonight, occasional rain, heavy
at times. Thunderstorms are possible. Low 40-45. The chance of rain
is near 100 percent. Tuesday,
showers likely P!IY with decreas. ing afternoon cloudiness. High
around 55 with temperatures falling
during the afternoon. The chance of
rain is 70 percent
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of snow northeast
Wednesday, fair elsewhere. Pair on
. Thursday. A chance of snow Friday. Highs in !)le·20s Wednesday
and Thursday and in the 30s Friday . Lows in the 20s Wednesday
and 10-20 Thursday and Friday.

TREES DECORATED · Students from
Pomeroy Elementary, in cooperation with members or the Polneroy Merchants Association,
have decorated Christmas trees in Pomeroy. The
students made the ornaments which pertained to

stores sponsoring the trees. Pictured are students from the school decorating one or several
trees. Following the tree decorating tlte students
were treated by the Merchants Association to
bot chocolate in the larger inini·park.

One injured in Middleport Court news

auto accident
One person was injured and
both involved vehicles demolished
in an accident on Mill Street in
Middleport Saturday night
Jennifer W. Davis, 22, a passenger in a car driven by Mark Sleven
Davis, Clover, S. C. was taken to
Ve~erans Memorial Hospilal by the
Middleport unit of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice. She was held overnight at the
hospilal ·for observation before
being released.
According to Middleport Police,
Laura R. Cleland, Middlepo~ driving a 1974 Chevrolet, struck the
left front of the 1991 Mazda driven
by Davis.
It was reponed that Cleland was
passing another vehicle on the
curve as she came down the hill
when the accident occurred. After
striking the Davis vehicle, her car
continued about 30 feet down Mill
until it struck a tree where it caught
fire. Middleport firemen were on
the scene 10 extinguish the fire.
.Neither Cleland nor a passenger
in her car.-Terry R. Little, were
injurod.

Charles E. Estep, Middleport,
· was fined $200 and costs on each
of five charges of aggravated menacing when he appeared in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman last week.
Others fined in the court were
Michael A. Davis, Gallipolis, SIO
and costs, running a stop sign and
$100 and costs, driving under SUS·
pension; Kevin E. Heaton,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, allowing
an unlicensed person 10 operate his
motor vehicle; Timothy E. Ebers·

mischief, and $25 and costs, open ·
container; and Nonna Ratliff, Mid·
dleport; $25 and costs, disorderly
conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were Delmas
K. Goff, Langsville, $460, physical
control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, and $60, left of center;
Ronald Reed, Lucasville, $40,
speeding; Claude J. Humphreys,
Pomeroy, $74, speeding; and
Aaron J. Davis, Middleporl, $60,
running a red light

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446

•. • .

4~24

'

-·

bach, Pomeroy, $10 and eosla, no

valid registration; Aeee E. Rowley,
Gallipolis, $25 and costs, consuming alcohol tlllder age 21; William
H. Wells, Crown City, $25 and
costs, consuming alcohol under age
21.
. Also fined were Gary G. Rose,
Middleport, $425 and costs, and
three days in jail, physical control,
and $50 and costs, insurance suspension; David R. Crittendon, Vinton, $50 and costs, disorderly manner after a warning; Tammy L.
Quillen, Rutland, SIO and costs,
expires registration; Paul E. P~,
Syracuse, $10 and costs, ficuuous
tags, and $20 and costs, no operator's license; Jerry R. Moore, Mid·
dlepo~ lO days in jail on.criminal

-Meigs announcements--

Murl Shain, Fredrickstown, Pa.,
dance on Saturday from 8 p.m. to
a former Antiquity resident, died Women's Fellowship to meet
The Women's Fellowship will II p.m. at the Henderson Commuon Monday, Dec. 2, 1991.
nity Center in Henderson, W.Va.
Arrangements are under the meet at the Bradbury Church of Roger Steele will be the caller and
Christ
on
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m
.
direction of Ewing Funeral Home
New officers will be installed and a the dance is open to all westernin Pomeroy.
video, "The Festival of Lights", sty lc square dancers.
Parish to take applications
will be the program.
·
Applications for Christmas food
OES meeting slated
baskets
will be accepted at the
Continued from page 1
Past matrons of gvangeline
Meigs
Uniled
Methodist CooperaChapter 172 OES will meet at the
weapons on its territory, and even- home of Emma C~atworthy on tive Parish at 311 Condor Street in
tually wants them dismaniled. ·
Pomeroy Tuesday through ThursT~esday at 6 p.m. .(or a Christmas
Although some Soviet re~blics, dinner meeting. The cost of dinner day from 9 a.m. until noon each
such as Georgia, .have satd they will be $7 .50, and it will be catered day.
will recogpize the Ukra(ne ·~ inc!e· by Gibnore's.
Council to meet ·
pendence, Preside~i Gorb~chcv's Amateur club sets party
Racine Village Council meets
central government ts reSJSung.
·Monday
night at 7 p.m. at Star Mill
Amateur Garden Club will have
Park
Building.
their Christmas pany at Gilmore's
on Thursday at6 p.m.
Boosters to meet
TI1e Daily Sentinel
The Southern Junior High
!USPS 213·960)
Boosters will meet on Tuesday at 7
p.m . at the Junior High School.
Publi11hed every Al'\ernoon, Monday
f II 1Y Yl AHS /\G O 1()[11\Y
hrough Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Bylaws will be voted upon. All Ohio
by lhe Ohio Vall ey Publishing
interested persons are urged to Company/Multimedia
Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45169. Ph. 992.21156. Second cia"
anend.
poatage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Dance slated
The Gallia Twirlers Western
Me mber: The Aasociated Pttlss, Inland
Preas Aasociation a nd th e Ohio
Square Dance Club will hold a Daily
Tokyo transmHs a secret code
Newspaper Association, National
Advertising Repruentati'Ye, Branham
phrase ordering hs Hawaii
Newapa per Salu, 733 Third AOJenue,
attack force to proceed wHh the
New YOrk, New YOrk 10017.
attack on Peart Harbor. On the
POSTMASTER: Send address cbanses 10
Soviet front, German patrols
Continued from page I
The Daily Sentinel , Ill Court St ..
Pomeroy, OHio Ui769.
reach the northern suburbs of
egation for the initial conference,
SUBSCRJPTION RATES
Moscow, less than 20 miles
but they are functioning as two
By Curter or Motor Rov.te
an. w..k........................................... st .so
\P).Il.g...... ....
independent I!IOtJps in the bila1eral
One MonU. ......................................... I6.96
talks with ISI'liCI.
One Year........................................... $83.20

Now

Ukrainians ...

I

$319

I. •

.WORLD WAll II

Delegation...

StNGLECOPY
!'RICE
Daily...... ~. .................. .................... 26 Cent.a

Milton Hood and Nannie Moore.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Nov. 29 • Mrs.
Christopher Davison and son,
Eugene Heeler, Elman Neff, Mrs.
Michael Smith and son, Deanna
Tucker, and Tonda White.
Births, Nov. 29 · Mr. ad Mrs.
William Patterson, a daughter,
Henderson, W.Va.
Discharges, Nov. 30 • William
Hall, Mrs. William Patterson and
daughter, and Roger Shoemaker.
Discharges, Dec. I · James Craft
and Edna l:lalley. . ·

Sunrise this morning was .at
7:35 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:07
.p.m.
Around the nation '
Rain covered mtich of the East
early today aqd temperatures
drOpped along ·the northern half of
the Eastern Seaboard as a stqrm
that dumped snow in the Midwest
pushed into the region.
Rain extended before dawn
from Gecrrgia north to New York,
and as far west as Texas.
Unseasonably warm weather
prevailed from Louisiana 10 Maine

1•

SubJer!bera not. dairing to pt.)' the tal'Ti·
er may remit in ad.vanctJ direc~ to The

Gallipolis Daily Tribune on " 3.6 or J2
month baais. Cn!diL will be given carrier
each week.
No sub1cripttont by mail permitted in'

areal where home carrier aervicfl ia
available.

November 18-December 15
Now you can deck your halls with a collectible !holiday glass and get
a juiciful Homestyle' Single Burger, hot crisp 'Tries, soft drink, and
a delicious, J.!ove-this·tasle sundae .. . all at
one great price. Stan your collection now.
Just ask for the Holiday Full Meal Deal':'
At Participating Dairy Queen' Brazier' Stores.

Ma118u.btartptlom
IMide GoUla CHnb'
13 We"'s......................... .... ............ $21.84

26 w..u .......................................... $43.16
52 Weeb .......................................... $84.76
O.totcle Galla Coanl)r
t3 w.. u .......................................... &amp;23.40
26 Weeb......... ................. t............... &amp;45.110 .
62 w..u .......................................... $88.40

.

® ._u.s.....c:w.. ,. o.o.c.,. :

�The Daily·Sentinel

Sports

.

Monday, December 2, 1991

·' Pag&amp;:-4

r .',

;~:M~o~n~da~y~,D~ec=e~m~be:_:r.!2:.,1~9:::9:_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __...__:_ _ _ __:P~om~e~r5oy~~:=;AI~d~dl~ep~o~rt~,~O!!hl~o-...:.----------....-~Th~e~D~al~ly~S:!:e!!nt~ln!!:e~l~P:!ag~e::!5

:Logan, Marietta put two each on big-school "all-state team . ·'~-·
\

.Cincinnati, Cleveland record victories ln NFL's 13th·week
'

.

~

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
Look out below! And ~bove.
At !he beginning of 1991, !he New York GianiS
and Buffalo Bills Slaged a memomble Super BowL
As 1991 heads into iiS fmal -weeks, !he Bills seem
primed for anolher run at !be big ~arne.
The Gian!s seem ready for a b1g cmsh.
· Buffalo, bolstered by !he return of defensive lead·
cr Bruce Smilh, beat !he New York Jets 24·13 on
Sunday, clinching its fourlh consecutive AFC East
crown. II was the 17th slraight home win for !he
Bills, winners of nine in a row overall against !he
Jets.
"Just his .presence out !here has everybody (on
offense) worried," safety Leonard Smith said of
Bruce Smilh, last season's Defensive Player of !he
Year. " He's a key part of our defense. He made
some good impact plays and got some good pres·

Lawrence Taylor, couldn't make any big plays.·
49ers 38, Saints 24 - Anolher team to watch out
for might be !he 49ers. They won their third straight,
got over .500 for the fli'St time this season and handed New Orleans iiS third consecutive defeat.
Steve Bono threw three 10uchdown passes, the last
a 47-yarder to Jerry Rice with 1:36 remaining. It was
Rice's firSt touchdown catch in six games.
Steve Walsh had !be Saints moving in the final
seconds when he fumbled while attempting to spike
the balL Johnnie Jackson picked it up at midfield,
running 49 yards before being tackled by Buford Jordan. Tom Ralhman dove into the end zone to clinch
·it for San Fmncisco (7--6). ·
Dexter Carter also remrned a kickoff 98 yards for
a touchdown.
Floyd Turner caught two.. TD passes for New
Orleans (9-4).
'
.
Falcons 35, Packers 31 - At Atlanta, the Falsure."
cons staged a big comeback to help !heir wild-card
While Buffalo was upping iiS gaudy record to II - . chances.
2. best in the conference, !he Super Bowl champion
The Falcons (8-5) slrUck for two touchdowns in
Giants were smmbling in Cincinnati. That's nothing
11 seconds to erase a 28-14 deficit early in the final
new -!hey are0-4 at Riverfront Stadium.
period Chris Miller, coming off a sick bed, hit Andre
But the Bengals never have been as bad as !hey
Rison for a 20-yard ID, !hen Joe Fishback scooped
arc !his year. Stil~ they mllied from a17-7 hole, got a
up Charles Wilson's fumble on the ensuing kickoff
78-yard punt ru~back by Mitchell Price and some
and returned it 16 yards for a score.
.
.
· 'charitable penalues from New York 10 wm 27-24. . .
Miller, who dido 't play until starting the second
That dropped the Giants 10 7-6 and placed them m
half because of a 103-degree fever, connected on a
serious danger of not making lhe playoffs.
16-yard pass to Rison with 41 seconds remaining to
"We've got to have the instinct to put them
win ·it. The score was set up when Green Bay punter
away " said receiver Mark Ingmm, who had a costly
Paul McJulien bobbled a snap and was forced to keep
fumbie. "We let lhem hang on and hang on until
the ball.
!hey got momentwn, and it cost us."
Mike Tomczak passed for three IDuchdowns, two
Elsewhere it was San Fmnciseo 38, New Orleans
to Sterling Sharpe, for Green Bay (3-10).
24· Atlanta 35 Green Bay 31; Washington 27, the
Redskins 27, Rams 6- WashingiDn (12-1) sent
Lo~ Angeles Rams 6 as the Redskins clinched the
the host Rams (3-10) to !heir sevenlh successive loss
NFC East· !he Los Angeles Raiders 9, San Diego 7;
in clinching the NFC East title for !he fifth time in II
· Denver 20, New England 3; Kansas City 19, Seattle
years under Joe Gibbs. In two of !hose seasons, the
6; Miami 33, Tampa Bay 14; and Cleveland 31, IndiRedsltins won !he Super Bowl.
anapolis 0.
Mark Rypien threw for three touchdowns and 269
On Thursday, the Lions beat lhe Bears 16-6 and
yards. He hit Ricky Sanders on a 30·yard. scoring
!he Cowboys took the Steelers 20-10.
pass for a 14-6 lead in lhe lhird quarter. Ricky Ervins
Tonight, the Oilers ean clinch lhe AFC Central by
turned a screen pass into a 24-yard ID later in the
beating Philadelphia at Houston.
period.
·
'
Bills 24, Jets 13 - Buffalo's defense, anchored
Raiders 9, Chargers 7 - At San Diego, .Scott
by Smilh, c~ted four tuinovers - two fumbles and
Davis blocked John Carney's 44-yard field goal
two intcn:epuons - wh1ch 1ts offense turned mto 17
attempt in the fourth quaner momeniS after a 22-yard
poiniS. Thurman Thomas mn for 124 yards and Jim
TD pass by John Friesz was nullified by a hol~ing
Kelly threw touchdown passes to Andre Reed and
penalty.
James Lof10n.
Jeff Jaeger kicked first-half field goals of 37, 19
Smith said he worked hard rehabilitating his knee
and S3 yards - the longest of his career - in lhe
and thanked team owner Ralph Wilson "because he
Raiders' founh s1raight victory and sixth in seven
stuck beside me the very first minute that he heard I
games since being upset 21-13 by San Diego on Oc1.
was going to have knee surgery. "
6.
The loss seriously damaged the wild-card hopes of
Los Angeles (9-4) is tied with Denver atop the
!he JeiS (7-6).
.
AFC West but has the tiebreaker in its favor by virtue
Ben gals 27, Giants 24- Tmiting 17-10, Cincmof beating !he Broncos twice tliis season.
nati (2-11) went S8 yards in 13 plays, h~lped greatly
Broncos 20, Patriots 3- Denver beat New Engby three third-down penalues - two agamst Everson
land (4-9) for !he sevenlh straight lime and !he ninth
Walls for pass inlerfcrence - to tie it on Harold
straight at Mile Higb Stadium.
·
Green's !-yard run on fourlh down.
John Elw~y. calling !he plays again after doing lit. : The Bengals took !he lead on Jim Breeeh's 35tle of lhat the laSt six weeks, ignored a sore shoulder
yard field goal, stopped New York and ?'fice. rambled
and hit 18 of2S passes for 215 yards.
78 yards wilh Sean Landeta's punt to clmch It
Chiefs 19, Seahawks 6 - Nick Lowery became
The Giants got )hree TD passes from Phil Simms,
Kansas City's all-time scoring leader, moving ahead
~tal:tini for the flisuime in nearly a year as Jeff
of Hall of Famer Jan Slenerud. l.owery -made field ·
' Hostetler is out with a back Injury.
·
goals of 20, 28, 36 and 39 yards and one exira point
:, • illlt ·thoi• defense,··playing without injured
'

.

and has 1,236 points in 12 seasons, breaking the
mark of 1,231 points set by Stenerud from 1967
through 1979. Lowery also has 280 field goals for lhe
Chiefs' career lead.
·
The visiting Chiefs (8•5) virtually eliminated the
Sealtawks (6-7) from !he AFC wild-card mce.
Dolphins 33, Buccaneers 14- At Miami, the
Dolphins (7-6) had !heir biggest offensive burst with
468 yards against Tampa Bay (2-11). Dan Marino
was 20-for•32 for 307 yards, with IDuchdowns of six
yards to Mark Duper and 26 yards to reserve Tony
Martin who caught five passes for a career-h1gh 106
yards.
went over 3,000 yards for the eighlh
straight year, a league record.

Manno

Mark Higgs replaced fumble-plagued Sapu~ie
· Smilh, rushed for 131 yards and sparked a 24-pomt
second-'luarter as the Dolphins (7•6) scored oil six
consecuu ve possessions. Ptite Stoyanovich kicked a
career-high four field goals and Vinny Testaverde
was sacked four times.
.
Browns 31, Colts 0- .Cleveland had four iakeaways, upping its league-leading turnover ratio to
plus-20. The visiting Browns (6-7) scored four TDs
m the secoqd quarter, w.ilh Kevin Mack getting t~o
on a lhree-yard recepuon and a 51-yard run. h1s
longest in three years.
Jeff George of lndianapotis (1-12) was sacked six
··times, including three by lineback!:{ David Bmndon.

v game.

Division I
•. The Wildcats, behind 21-9 at !he
': half slruck midway through the
' ihird quarter when quarterback
Xevin Mayer hit Dean Lamirand
:,pu alone behind the secondary and
· Lamirand completed a 72-yard
::touehdown pass and run. Fernando
::Paez's extra-point tick cut Center!
"ville's lead ID 21-17.
::.. Then in the fourth quaner, St.
.Ignatius (12-2) started at its own 25
·.lvilh 9:S7 left. The WildcaiS faced
: a tliird and 11 at the Centerville 38
· when Haddad lOOk a lateral from
:Mayer, then pivoted and threw
:deep over !he middle 10 Sako at !he
·:18 Sako spun and eluded one tack:lcr ·and then beat two potential
:tacklers to the end zone for the
·!core with 7:10 left May&amp; then hit
:Haddad on !he two-pomt conver:sion pass.
·
·
· "On the sidelines, !here never
. ::was any doubt," said St. lgna~us
'head coach Chuck Kyle. "The kids
jUst kept coming.:• .
•· He alto laudild h1s players and a
iitJc: thlt was difluent from the two

coming into !lie game, led 14-10 at
lhe half. But !hen Jelovic and Jure1vicius hooked up for touchdowns
Of 49 and II yards. Terry Linnen
added touchdown runs of I and 4
yards and suddenly it was 38-14. ·
Both teams were stocked wilh
underclassmen. That wasn't good
news for CAPE coach Steve Shee·
han.
"In that case, we're going to
Division IV," ~e said with a laugh.
Division V
Even J.D. Graham, who is an
incredible 220-3(). I in 21 years as a
head coach at Newark Catholic,
realized that the Green Wave's sev,
enth Iitle was special.
"Even though I'm in Massillon,
I recognize what this means,'' Omham said. "Moeller for a long time
was judged as the epitome of at
least modem high school football.
We set a goal that if we could, we
would someday like to be compared wilh those people someday.
It was Newark Catholic's seventh state Iitle, tying it wilh Cincinnati Moeller for the most crowns
since !he ·ohio High School Athletic Association began the playoff
system back in 1972. No other
school has ever won more than
four.
Rob Kellv lived up to his billin~
as Division V back of the year by
scoring touchdowns on runs of 13,
2, 53 and 8 yards for Newark
Catholic (13-1), which was the reg. ular-season AP poll champion. He
10taled.154 yards on 27 carries.
Bluffton, third in the poll, lost
for the first time after 13 victories.
The Pirates became !he fll'st team
to score in double figures against
Newark Catholic this season.
The Green Wave also extended
moSL'
existing playoff records for victoCounting a halfback-option ries (35), games played (44), and
pass, Lake Calholic passed for 307 title
appearances (11).
yards.
Koontz's 42-yard field
CAPE, ranked No.I and 13-0
Bluffton set a record for

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, lOSE &amp; tHROAT·•ALLERGY
•HIDING AIDS • HEAD I NECK SURGERY

· iJtat~iL

&gt; • We might have had players

C1tt F1r

·lvilh more laltnt but to a man this
:learn believed in itself," he said.
:. Centerville (12-2) won the 511·
'iisucai beUic. with the edge in fiB[
:uowns (19_.14), rushing yardage
(174-40), toCal yards (304-281) and
time of possession· (26:48 to

y,.,

ltdkare&amp;
SUITE 112 VALLEY
-

·1,,1....

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

lard ofToledo-woodward· and
Travis McGuire of Massillon
WashingiDn headline the 1991 Associated Press Division I all-Ohio
high SChOol football team.
Stringer was selected as the lineman of the year while J&amp;~~uillard

In th~~L ...

Paclllc ill&gt;toloo

L.A. Lobrw......,.....ll 4 .733
Ooldoa s................ 9 l .643
PCX1land ......."........10 6 .625
s..t~e ...................... s 1 .m
~ ................... !
9 .471
L.A. Cllppm.. ......... 7 LO .412

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Elatem ·DIYIIIon
TW L T Pd. PF PA
1-Buffllo ... 11 2 0 .1463'79 267
N.Y. !"'
7 6 0 .ll1U8233
Miami
.... 7 6 0 538 2l6 Z75
Now Enalond 4 9 0 .lall7l2l6
lndianopoiio .. I 12 0 .077116306

SICflmcr~ta ..............

.

PiluburJb

Wellern DlvilkMI

Tonlgbt'' came

New YOik~ tOwklae, 7~0p. m.

Team
W L If Pet. PF PA
o·Wuhlngton
12 I 0· .923409169
Dollu
. .... 8 S 0 .615 263256

Tuesday's games

Ptii.l.ddphla ~1 N~w Ieney, 7:30p.m.
Portland It Miami, 1 :30 p.m.

Phila&lt;ldphio .. 7 5 0 .583216177

lndiinlat OdrQ.t, 8 p.m.
PhoeniJ. at Minne10ta, 8 p.m.
,\llan&amp;o II Dollu, &amp;JO p.m.

.. 7 6 0 .538 226 224

?)J. . ~}~Jll

L.A. Liken 11 Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
. l':lrmvcr at Houstoo., 8:30p.m.
Wuhiai'O" a1 Soaule, 10 p.m.
Utah at Golden Stale. I0:30p.m.
San Antonio at SacramenlO, 10:30
pnt.

Central Dh1sJoa
.... 9 4 0 .692231 2114
9 4 0 .692267 2M
" 6 7 0 .462248 2Al

.. 3 10 0 .231216 258
2 11 0 .!l41S8309

Saturday's college
football scores

Watcm Dl~lslon

New Orleans
9 4 0 .69227318!i
Atlanta
..... 8 S 0 .61S2'n280
7 6 0 .5 38 289 189

L.A. Romo

3 10 0 .2311 !17 316

East

x-elinehcd divWon.
y-c!U.chod ployolf bath.

ar

South

Atlanta 3S, Green Bay 31
Bu!f'alo24,New Ycdr.leu13
Mi.ami 33, Tampa Ba)' 14
K.&amp;rw.a City 19, Scltllc6
Denver 20, New Enaland 3
San Francilco 33, New Orlt1111 24
ClndnnatllJl Newr York Clanb ~
Wuhinpo 21, Los AnROia Rams 6
l.ol Anaeles Ra.iden 9, San Diqo 7
OPEN DATE: Phocnia, Minneaola

Alabama 13, Aubum 6
Ccrruon 33, Duke 21
E. Xmtueky 14, Appallchian St, 3

28

Mondoy•s game

Midwest

Next week's agenda

N. Iowa 38, Weber St 21

Young.aown SL 17, Vill&amp;nova 16

Sund.a)', Dec, I
Denver at Clewlandt 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Chicaao. I p.m.
lndianapolil at New England, 1 p.m.
New Odew at Dallu, 1 p.m.
Phillde.lphia at New York Giants, I
pnt.
Pitllbut&amp;h at HCQiton , 1 p.m.
San Dicao 11 Kaniu City, I p.m.
Atlanta ati.J:lt AttJdca Ranu, 4 p.m.
Bull'alo 111M Anaclct Raiders, 4 p.m.
New Yari leu atDeuai.l, 4 p.m.
San Frueiaco at Scaule,4 p.m.
Walhinpwlat Phoenil, 4 p.m.
MinncaW at Tampa. Bay, I p,m.

Southwest
Teu1 Tech S2. HoUlton 46
1\Wo 31, Sn Mothodirt26

Far West
Nevada 22, McNcac SL 16
Notre Dame 48, Ha.waii 42

AP.Top 25 college
basketball poll
.The .Top Tw.nty Five \cams in the

Monday, Dec. 9
Clndnnal.lal Miami, g p.m.

Auocialed

110tc md lalt wcet's_rankinp:

Patrick Dhillon
W L T Pis. CFCA
... II 8 0

N,Y, Ranaen:
PltoburJh .....

30 108
29100
21 S7
11 67

M......t

Hartford
Bufl'llo

Q»-

92
77
91

83

f

CAMPIEU. CONFl:RENCE

D1~tm61t 24

Norrll Dlvlaloa

Tum

W L T P&amp;o.GrGA

3 31102 !7
..... 1195 7:18285
.. .... 10 12 5 IS 88 89
Chicaao
Minn-.
.... 9 12 2 20 75 79
Toronto
.... .. 7 16 4 II 66 94
Sroylbo Dlrillon
Vanc:(I;IVet ... 16 8 3 35 98 76
Winnipo8 .... 13 a 5 31 11 73
t.o. Anaetca ... ll 9 6 28 94 99
Cugary ...... II 10 4 26 97 83
........ 14 9

Detroit

StloWJ

Edmonlm
SanJ01e

... 9 13 4
.... .. S 20 2

22 83 92

12 69122

llonlord 3, Mor&amp;...,12

San J01e 2, Calpry I

Minnaota 4, Tmunw 3
St, Louis 7, Oc:troit 3

· Sunday's scores

..

THE DAILY .SENTINEL
---- ·-· ·.....

~

----

~-

.....

W L
S
BCIItm .................... IO 6

PcL
.643

Pltiladclphio ............. 7

.431

.533

9

Cenllal DIYillon
Chic:alo.................. l3 2 .867

Clevclond .................9 5 .643
Allam .....................8 8 .500
lleuoh ............ ..........l 9 .471
.438

.353

13 .235

SL Bonaventure 82, Cent. Connccli·
78
St. Francia, PI, 84, Buffalo 5S

CUI St.

Vennont72. N.C.. Gft:crubcro 58
Yale 71, Sw arthmorc 46

AllAin Pr.ay 87, Ouilliari Brothen 84
Benedict 73, Auausta 70
Cl...... 114, Mo.W.d SL 69
Oavidlon 71, Sewanoe44

1luko lll.lluvml ~

GB

3
4

6.5

3.5
l.5

6
6.5
I

10

.467

e;46J

10 .231

-·

&lt;Joaraia Sl.ll9, Piedmont 76
JacktOnvillc 97, Lon&amp; hland U. 82
. Ubony90,Md.·E Sn""65
Louiaiana Tech 93, OkJaboma Bap'till '
62
Morylond 93, Amorican U.61
Miniuippi lOI, Pniric ViewS()
t.ti•ai•lippi St. 16, SW Lo.tiaiana 77,

OT

N. Cato1ino St 101, W. C...!ina79
NW J..ouiliana 116, 0\Nichita 89
Nonh Cuolina 98, Towaon S1. 88
Radford 95, Mcqan Sl."'
S. Cuo1ina St. 74, WU.tluop 56
s. D.linoU 109, Mumy Sl. 98

Somfartl SI, Air F0100 4ol

PoL ·· Gl
.769
.643
l.l

I

E. TC!MttiCC SL I09, Oral Roberta 93
Em Carotin• 79, App~bchian St. 76,

Furmon 87, M= 74
Geora ia Southern 103 , Tennesaee
Tochl6

3

Midwest Dlvlllon

8

ar

1.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

7 .l63

Champl,.nhlp

Weber Sl l 08, Cit.adel 74

Third Place

...... , l9, VMI53

Sunday

East

Soutb

Midwest
Comell.lowa 6S, Simpson. low• 63
Kno:t 86, Iowa Wealyn 78
Lake Superior S1. 122, Mllwau.lcc
Eng. 68
Tounamenll
Great Alukl ShoolOut
Third Pblce
Oftaon SL 87, E. Mit:hiJan 72
Flfth Place
Alalka-Anchorap 64. Idaho 61
Seventh Place
s.... Clan 69,Coa!'&gt;~ Carolina 62

HaWaii Tip-oft' Tournamtnl
Champlctnllllp
• Arizona IS, Hawaii 7l
Third Platt
MCI'Iwta St. 89, 0aytOn84

San Juan Shootoul
Champlonahlp
Texu Christian SS , E. Kentucky 48
Third Platt

Miami 72, Tennesacc 60
f1Rh Plate
Iowa St. 70, Maine 63
Sennth Platt

Aorida Soulhcm 78, Amcric1n Coli.,
P.R.65

Transactions

Syraa&amp;OC 83, N.C.-Aihevillc 68

'

L
3
l

22

South Carolino81, SL Jooeph'o67

.429

.375
.200

WSU Military Clwl~

Alobuno 80, VirJjnia 69
Gco,P 93, Bucknell 90
Nonh Cato1ino 109. Comoll66
Roanoke 94, Va . Wcaleyan 74

Hofrtt18l, Manhatun 79, OT
Princetcn 72. Wayette 49
Rhode bland 8l , lona76
Rutaen 91, Wagncr 70

-~

7

SL Francis, NY..J)'8, Campbell 76

19

Hutlord Sl, o..tmoud&gt; 53

AllanUt Dhillon

25

4

4
7

Baseball
Amrle~n Ltaaue
CHICAOO WHIT E SOX - An·
nounccd Lhe rai;nalim of Sammy Ellis.
pitehina coach, to become bullpen coach
fo r the OUcago Cube:.

-

..

-

,

'

.,.

-

Basketball

"Rio men hand Denison
70-56 loss at Newark
Jeff Brown seared 16 points to
lead the University of Rio Grande
to a 70-56 triumph over Denison
University Saturday night in the
Newark Lion s Club Collegiate
Classic at Newark High School.
Mark Erslan and Bmd Schuben
also contributed 10 points apiece to
the Redmen offense to help the
team to a 12':point lead over Denison at the half. The win boosted
Rio Grande to 4-2 on !he season,
while Denison went to 1-2.
Shooting 40 percent in the half,
John Lawhorn's club paced its
opponents each s1ep of the way .
Denison, which drew 14-point performances from Alfoster Garrett
and Mike Foster, kept up the pressure by utilizing some of. Rio
Gmnde's 12 turnovers, but in tum
lost the ball 21 times. However,
Denison assumed domination on
rebounding, posting 36 to Rio
Grande's 26.
Cen1ers Troy Donaldson and
Tim Christian had five boards
apiece for Rio Grande, while Garreu and Adero Robinson each
brought down seven.
The Redmen were successful on
23 of 55 field goal attempls for
41.8 percent, including 10 of 28
from the three for 3S.7 percent.
Brown, playing on his home turf,
was responsible for three of lhe trifecta shots, while Erslan, Schubcn,
Brett Coreno and Matt Powell
accounted for the remaining seven.
· From the foul line, Rio Grande
connected on 13 of 19 tries for 68.4
percent:
.
.
Dcnis&lt;in was cred1100 wtth 45.3
percent (24-53) in its shooting, but

failed 10 sink any of its nine threepoint (\J.tcmpts. Eight of its II tries
from the free lhrow line .wcnt in for
72.7 perc'cnt. George Miwn added
10 points 10 the offense and Garrett
posted six assists.
The Redm ~ n will be at home
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. against Central State.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (70) - Jawanza Childs, 1-0-2; Lyndell Snyder,
0-5-5; Mark Erslan, 2-2-0-10; Brad
Schubert, 2-2-0- 10; Brett Corcno,
0-2-().6; Jeff Brown, 3-3-1-16; Tim
Christian, 1-3-5; Troy Donaldson,
2-3 -7; Walter Stephens, 2-1-5 ;
Matt Powell, 0-1-0-3. TOTALS
13-10-13-70. .
DENISON (56) - Lance
Watkins, 2-2-6; Mike Foster, 7-014; Dwayne Romine, 1-0.2; Kevin
Frye, 2-0-4; A! foster Garrell, 5-414; George Mixon , S-0-10; Jerry
Samson, 1-2-4; Chris Kestner, 1-02. TOTALS 24·8-56'.
Halftime. score: Rio Grande
34, Denison 22.

'

ancmou PM....... ~. 110, Sr. Kkw-J•~
J••~;.';:.l.~!;.1'~!; Colo, Sprinlflol4
S..lh,6-l, 210, ~r; PoW .eom. ,..,rodd Sinl«,

~Jii: ~::; .g::~.'it~! ~=

6-S,

m. s,.; c..., o~u,, cu.oinnoo - ·

~~· /i~.~~~:llt.''~~~~:

Ocveland st.r,.til• . ._ 3, 221, sr., , ... ,_,

Cinoinnoti Prin"'""'· 6-1, 195, s.'.; a.,., XJna,
Dublin, 6-1, 2ll. S..; Enc Wnah1. MunUoo
Wullin .... ,5.11, :100, s,. Bo&lt;ko-'-O&gt;rey Scwdl,
Franont llON. 6-1, us. sf.; Oory Kuhn, Tolodo
Start. 6-3, 210. s•.; '- ~"""· aro.. Ctty, H
195, S•.; Don c.~son, Middl....,, 6-0. Ill, s,.;
Tony E'orh"', Middl""""· 6-1, til, S•.: s....
Pooton,Lo~·~r. HI, l70,k Pun..,-Mau
"il:;,==·r~~~i~~ T.W.
Woodward; Tr..la McCuin, Mlllllioo wu~~.
lnaion.
unman or••• y.., tcony S&amp;rlnaer;wor""""din~

c.. •••11h•yu" BryanO..l, Dublin.
Second team ·
orr.,.. , Endo-Stove Biohop, WCIICrvillc
so,th, l-11 . 175, s..: o.. Millo., Sprinaficld
S..th, 6-~ 185,Soph.: Notc B~d.Eaa U"'J''OI,
H
190. k Uncmoo-lmmioh v'"'"' Toledo
sc F..,.cio, 6-0, 310, s••;.Miic Howud. w...... ·
ville Nonh, 6-1, 265, Sr.: Steve Shceu, Columbus
w.... 6-5,238,s•.: MikcMca1... EutW..~orih.
6-5,250, S..; s.... Miller. Mwillon w....,....,,
6-0, 2ll,S..; M••C•mno,ContdVillo,6-4,240,
Sr.; Robctt Bllo::k, Cincinn•ti Princeuxt, 6-0, 2AO,
s•.; J..un Ch•bot. Oofmd T•l•w•nd•, 6-6,230,
1is~J~:;"t.:~:~ ~~~~;.";);,~~:
11, 110, s•.; 0oo !antonio, M&lt;nto,, 6-2,205. Sr.
BKko-Chad Lincoln, Marku~ 5-lt,16~ Sr;;
Tyrone "Toddy" Price, frt:rnont Ro11'1.:~1. 17),
~&lt;.: Rooohu"l Jomi1on, Euolid.5-9, no. k; s...
M;~hcll. Piquo,5-IO, 190, Sr.: Foi&gt;ndo Aohcnf'
Muaillon WuhinJLon, S-10, 19S, Sr. KickerBrian Brown, Borb&lt;:rton,5-IO;&gt;.l§0, Sr.; Bill
Boclwn~CinciMotiSt. X•.-i,, 5·9, 135,Sr.

Dtrtnoc: Linemen- Joe Blp , Barbonon,
6-1 , 225, Sr.; Lamont Brown, Akron Ellet, 6-4,

uo. Sr.; Juon Kaylor, Stow, 6-l 112.245, s•.;
Jeremy Hcnoon, Gwve c;t,, 6·3, 215, Sr.
Lineblckcrs- Pete M1uhews, linesville, 6·2,
m. s•.; Bryon Lombon, Loa••· 6-l,ll, Sr.;
Andr Todoru.W, Toledo c..uat Calholio,5-ll,
19 ~ s•.; Pot OToole, W.wood, 5·10· 115· s,.;
Bm Conley, CinQnnlli La Salle, 6·4, 200, Sr.;
T'")' """..,· MUldlcrDwn, H 240, s,. a,..,_
Joe Lcwondowoki, Clmlond s•. lgnati", 64,
l90,Sr.; JuonTn..,;. y...,.....,a,_,._
0, 1~. Jr.: Durell BoW... a...!uwl m.mn., 5·
10, 110, S..; Mou F..,.y, Hillilrd, ~. uo, Sr.
l'lmtcr-MiicMollou,Oublin,6-3,lll,Jr.
Special mendoa
D.J Fain , Sprinafield North; Hank Ray ,
Cincinnati Sycamore: Chad Plolller, Olfard Ta·
law a~~d.a ; Tom R.e~~enberaer, Cincianali Elder;
Chrio Calihon,IWN!&amp;on; Duone Btalor, Tmtwaod·
Madison:
Todd RiiCM)', Zanesville; Tim McGeehan,
Ean Limpool; Juoa NCWIOn, Zanonille; sSchwtz, l!ut Uv"J''OO; Brian Smith, Eut U.... .
pool; Ch1d Smilh, Zanavillc; Brian Blanton.

Zane~ ville;

Chad &lt;hen, Manor: Dorniniafte Bey, Bedford: ld"'" Smith, C1e&gt;oelond Eat; KcYin ABu,
Bnmwk:k; Matt ~Witt. Laicwood St. Edward;
Mike Sfem, Painaville Rivmide; Danean B•

doll, Bora; lom Stiller, Lokowaod;
Awtin Loiue. Lancll\et; Scott Dune. Lin·
cuter, Mau r.f•Wicr, Llnr;:11Lcr; Fred Yin&amp;fina.
Chllli~e; Adam McKiltkl, Marktt.a;
Quincy Noble, Toledo Woodward; Larry
ShWI, Mullf&gt;C!d Senior, Rob - · M.wfscld
Madison; Steve Gfdl, Toledo St. Jahn's; Juon
Copeland, Toledo Wbhmer; Dive CIOCi, Toledo
SL John'•; Tll'TI. KwiiUcOWiti, Tolodo SL Fr~PN;
Bill Youna, Toledo Woodward; Josh Waancr,
Toledo SL Francio; Gq F.;., Toledo S..lol&amp;a'~
Damon Walker, Fremont Rou; SUaer WriJht,
Sanclualty; Mike Ueb, S.ndualty; Lamie MUOn.
Tolodo S~rt; 1... PnyJ&gt;rloki, Os.aon.O.y;J"""'
lahnoon, Maoortclcl MaGioon; o., ~. Tolo-

do Sl.lcM's;

•

·

SIC!Ve Biahop, W•1emDe Soulh; Mau CriU,
Westerville Scul.h; Tyler Riddla, Ncwari; Tony
Ymic:hek, Pic:kcrinpn; Dwayne Huril, Coi:~~~D­
bus S(l;lth; Di.mitrious St.anley, Thoma W~ ­
ton ; Tony Ford, Mount Vemon; And)' Nice,
Coiumb&amp;as Broaihavm; Mati: Gamer, ~
Madilon; David Oiblon, Oahaana-LiDda; M.a.
H.&amp;mi1loA. OaUoway W..al,aad~ ~ aw-.
Marion lla'""'&amp;; ClrOo Mln1o. Upper Ailiiiiao;

Mike K.toma, Vlurot Haniiaa: ShiDC Reid.,

1e,~ail; 1ay Meriele, Younptown
Boardman ; M111 Winten, Allianc;c; Juoa

SlOw Wal1h

Wouhard , Mauillon Wuhin11an; Tremayne
BanD, Allanc:e; Brmt BOwen, Muaillon Jac:Uon;
Oud SmilhberJ•. YcaanptoWn Boanhan.

--Sports briefsGolf
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) U.S. Open champion Payne Stewc
an made a 3-foot birdie pull on !he
14th hole to earn $260,000 and
capture the overall Iitle in the Skins
Game on Sunday. The previous
seven holes in the two-day, fourmao, made-for-TV event at PGA
West had been halved.
John Daly, the power-hilling
PGA champion, finished the competition with $160,000 and Cunis
Strange earned $120,000. lack
Nicklaus, bothered by a chronic
back condition, failed to win a skin.
S1range made a 10-foot birdie
putt on lhe 17111 hole for his lone
skin.
Daly, who earned $120,000 oo
two skins Saturday in winds gusting to SO mph, added $40,000 to
his total when he edged S1range in
a two-hole playoff for the final
skin.
Golf
MELBOURNE, Aus!ralia (AP)
- Wayne Riley of Aus!ralia made
a 40-foot birdie pull on..tl!e final
hole for one-stroke victory in tile
Auslralian Open on Sun!lay.

SoTTiltfiing (jooti's Jll'U/ayS Coofjng .::It

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT ·
LOCIIICI on RL 33 beside Mason Exxon.ltld Mason MoW!, Maon, WV
Sundlly 11w Thursday, 10 am-9 pm; Friday &amp; Sllurday, 10~m- to pm

HOMESTl'LE LUNCH SPECIA15
111onduy Friday, 1 1

CUlL

to :l p .m.

Nallonal Buketball AIIOCIIIIOn
MILWAUKEE BUCK S - Fine d
Larry Klyai.owiak, forward; MGict Mal·
CI'IC, ccnler; Alvin Robertson, guard; and

Dale Ellia, guard-forward, an undiscl osed
unowu for nW•ina pr1r:tice No11. 29.

Football
Nallonal Foetball Lu11u•
BUFFALO BILLS - Activued
Bruce Smith, defcmivo end, from injured

"'"'"'
LOS ANOELES RAIDERS - Acti·
vated Nick Bell, NMin&amp; back, from in juml raave. Place4 Rory Onva:, olfm-

live uckle, on injured reaerve.

SAN FIIANCISCO 49ERS - A&lt;li·
va10d Jim But~, nose ucklc, from injured

IIIIICIVC.. Waived Milk Lee. come:tblck.

SEA'ITLE SEAHAWKS - AcQ.vu·

ed Michael Sinclair, defonlive «1d, from
tho pncdoe
Waived Richud New-

-.uad.

bill, linebacker.

South Alabama 91, Jatk10n SL 84

Sooth Plarlda 90. Old Pominion 71
StcUoD 1•3, St Loo 125
w. Ken~»dtr 7l, r ....-Martin 61
Wo!teF- 91, Flidic!d 62
WiiiUm AMary 12, N"Y 77,0'!

79

11drdPiac:t

20

N.J. ~l

EASTERN CONFERENCE
New Yodl: .... , ..........9

UCFCI. .Ic
Ch~mpio&gt;nohlp
Ilc{awt~re 92, Ct.nt. Aoiidl

.Drown71, Providence 69, ar

South

1'eam

E. KMtueky66, Miami 61
Teau Christian 73. Tcnnc&amp;.~oe 59
Couolallon lracktt
towo Sl 108, Amertcon Coll., P.R. 74
Maine 63, florida Southern 50

18
17

B01ton Collqc 77, Brooklyn Col. 53
Oeorae Wuhinaton 66, Morunoulh,

In the NBA ...

II
~ -~-·

,.

13

23

Toronto 11 Hartford, 7:35p.m.
VanCQivc:rlt M(mual, 7:35p.m.
St. LouiJ at Minnmoll, &amp;:OS p.m.
Bull'alo 11 Wimipeg. 8:35p.m.

Twn
W
San Antonio...... ., ... lO
llcM&amp;suln ................... 9
V&amp;oh ......................... 9
Da.llll ................... ,, .. 7
Denv« .....................7

14

East

WedneSday's games

Clwiolle ..................4

12
2
15

232

Calpry 11 Douoi• 7:35p.m.
YIIICOUVCI' at Quebec, 7:35p.m.
St. Louilst Minne~«a. I :OS p.m.
Pituburgh at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m,
Lol Anaclctat San IOK,I0:3!i p.m.

Milwautee ...............7 9
Indiana .....................6 11

10

21
.-

Tuesday's games

-~

l .Q7S

1,017
976
735
696
656

20. Dol'ouL ................... l-0 397
21 . Jowa...... .......... ...,...... l-0 393
2l Micbipn SL ............ J.O 385
23. Wake Forest ...,......... ).() 335
24. UNLV ...................... 2-0 247

Tonlgbt's game

Minn..... ................ ~

.

16
9

1,188

i
II

SaiUrday's action

Philadelphia at N.Y. Ranp, 7:35p.m.

Oriando ...................6 8
Wuhinaton ............ ..6 10
NewJency .............. 3 12

7

623
491
452
44S
"419

Winnipeg 3, O&amp;icaJIO 2, OT

MwnL. ................ 8

1,216
1,204

ll. Alobuna ..... .... .......... 3-0
I~ LSV ........... ............... :!-1
17. Oooqio Toch .. .......... J.l
18. Goart.ct.own .............. Z-0
19.01.Wiomo ................ J.O

801ton 3, Hlrtford 4

.

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRENDA OR DAVE
992-2156

~-

SCIOn full (1 ) ............2.0

7. SLlohn' s........ .... ....... 3·0
8. Ollihoma SL ............. S-0
9. lndiana....................... 1-l
IO. Kanns ...................... 3-0
11 . Ati:wu ...................2·1
12. Connceticul ..............Z-0
13.U&gt;oh ....................... ,3-0
14 . Kentucky .................. l·l

F.dtnontm 7, Vaneou11erO

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas. in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24tli.

·---.,.-------"---·..,--------·

~

5
6

Weekend college
basketball scores

NCW Jersey 4, Lol Angde~ I

\

I

4
3

Other rec:elwlna wolu: Pitts bur,n
199 , LOIUovillc 76, Florida SL 39, Mil·
•ouri 38, Syncuse. 22, HOUII.on 20, Pepomdinel6, Ariionl SL 15, MwochUICIII
iS, Tuu IS, Virginia 14, E. Temcaaee
St . 12, New Orfcana 12, Temple 9,
Xavier. Ohio 9, Baylor&amp;, M.inrtc:~ota 8,
Southern Mill, 7, Pmn St. 6, Richmond.
6, Texu Christian 6, Wyomina 6, La
SaUe 4, MemPi'tis St. 4, Nebmka 4, S®"'
Carolina 4, W~hinJIOrl SL 4, Southern
Cal 3, New Melico St. 2, Stanford 2,
Wis.·On&lt;n 8oy2,81iJWim Y"""&amp;L

N.Y. IslandCDI8, Washington 1
Pltob"''h 5, Philodolphio I
Quebe:: 4, Buffalo 3

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung
by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
Christmas encompasses ;armth and good cheer as we
'
cherish the blessings we've shared this past year.
For us it means saying 11 thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
· treasure. Doing business with you if our
. greatest pleasure!

I~99

2S. M.ichipn .................. 0.0

Saturday's sco"tes

•

PLI. Wctk

l UCLA ....................... 2.0 1.415
3, Arizona ....... ............ ..2..0 1,403
4. Ohio St......................2.0 1,348
S. North Cuolinl ..........4-0 t ,260

Adam• Dlvb:lon
....... 17 10 2 36 92 60
....... 11 10 4 26 91 89
...... 11 11 3 25 81 87
9 12 3 21 70 80
...... 6 17 2 14 81109

s.....

Tu11d1y,

Los!

Team
Record
I. Duke (63) ..................2.0

;!6120 85
31 IS 81

I~

10 I
ll 8 4
NewJenty ... 14 10 I
N.Y. Islandcn . 9 12 3
Philadclph.ia .... 8 n 2

C6tlllmll
tJt11llng Edlllon

1991-92 colleae baslr.et·

th"es, records throush Dec. 1. total
points buod on 2S poinll for a first pllce
11o1.a tluvuah one point for 1 25Lh place

WALES CONFERENCE
Wuhingtoo

~

ball poll, wiLh fU'It·plac:e 110tt1 in paren ·

In the NHL ...
Team

Floricla14, Florida-St. 9
Florida AllM 46, Bethune·Cook.man

Gel:qia 18, Gcartia Tech tS •
Mariha112t, W.lJUaob 17, OT
Miami39,SanDiegoSL 12
Middle Tenn . 20, Sam Houston St.
19,01'
Soulhem U. 31, Orunbling St. 30
Tenneuoc45, Vandcrllill 0

Philade.lph.iaal Jbuton, 9 p.m.

back Phil Simms In the fourth quarter or Sun- :
day's NFL game in Cincinnati, which lbe Bengals came from behind to win 27-24. (AP)

Jamca MadiJon 42, Delaware 35, 2
Slmford 29, New Hampshire 13

S~ndoy's scores
Cleveland ll, IaiUanapolll D

WE GOT IBM- CiDcinnatl Bengals defend·
ers Tim Krumrie (69) and David Fulcher (33)
lower the boom on New York Giants quarter-

--~ ~
and McGuire shared back of the~ - were based-on the recommenda- ·
Also in the backfield are Fairyear honors. Jaqu~lard w~ also the lions of a media Pi!Del from amund born's Tmcy McDaniel, who averback of !he year 1n the blg·sehool the sta!C.
. aged seven ylirds a carry for 1;202
division a year ago. · .
. Strmger.• a!l -6-foot-S, 2.95 tolil, plus eaught!Opasses for 256
Bryan Deal' of Dubtin was cho- · pounds of hun~ IS a repeater on !he yards·, averaged 37 yard~ on 16
sen as !he state coach of~ year.
fust telUJl· pun~g the 1990 ~n. kickoff returns, 16 yards on 16
The team and spe_Clll hooors i he Sj)CCial!Zed .m run-blocking ~ punt returns and scored 2 I touchHarding captured the state champ1- downs; Grove City •s Brian
onship. ·
. •
Thomas, who was called on 10 re.
.
This year, witli Harding gomg ID place·the injured Louis Willard and
more of a run-oriented offense he respooded wilh 1 175 yards and 14
'
J 'h M
proved he cou ld also han dle run- touchdowns; o n andato of
blocking.
Eastlake North, with 1,417 yards
Midwest
Abon 80. Miu. V111cy SL ~
The
Trumbull
County
player
of
on
242 carries (six yards per atBndleyll6, Tn. ·O.-oop~.OT
the
year,
Stringer
has
led
Harding
.
tempt)
and IS touchdowns; and
CinciMoli I~ lofiamj, Ohio 62
·~
222
d
••
last't
0
c·
.
.
•s J ames
P«roit 74, Bowling 0tec:n 71
~ a · • recor over u&amp;e
w
mcmnall. p rmceton
E.llliaoia 14, NE lllinoia 75 .
seasons.
He
also
played
tackle
on
Olverson,
who
had
1,709
yards on
Dlinai195, NE l..aJ.ili.ana 70 ·
· defense, where he was credited 205 auempiS (8.3 yards a tote) and
Indiana !17, Q&lt;ulu73
Kw.u 83, Cent. Miacwi 54
wilh S2 tackles this year. ..
seored 23 touchdowns.
Kent71, SliooorY Rock 46
. Slringer has·atready qualified . The kicker is Josh Jackson or
Minnalau ff,lfoward U. S4
Mioi0Wi77, TOUIA&lt;lM47
academically for freshman eligibil- Logan, who converted 16 of 17
N. D11noio 94, A...., 59
· an d IS
· bemg
· recru1te
· d b Y a pomt-a
·
rter k'IC ks an d was ll of
1ty
Nonh.....IOm 11, Colwnbia 60
Ohio S~ Ill, Cl&amp;lcq6'SI. oM
string of top·25 teams.
14 in freld goals, including a 47Jaqu1'liard, a 6-Q, 2()5 -po und se- yarder.
Ohio U. '72 YounJ!deWI SL 12
w. Nicltiaon 71,11oly C:oll6l
nior, pushed his ~r ~ing ID_tal
Up front on defense are: Spring\\ii,ehiti:Sf: 71, Delawlftl St. 61
to more than S,OOO yards by g31ll- field South' s Terry Cole; Paul
Xovier, Ohio 94, Colpto ~
ing 1,688 yards on•223 carries (7. 6 Conn of Mansfield Senior; LakeSouthwest
yards per attempt) in only eight full wood St. Edward's Darius Card;
Atlcwu St. 65, Alt.·Liale Rock 60
H""""' 89, North r..., 11
games. He scored 22 touchdowns.
Tim Robbins of North Canton
OkWtuna 119, Mo.-St r:.o..;, 78
Jaquillard
rushed
for
2,000
Hoover; and Corey Glass of
SW Tnu St. 91, Conctrdia Ll.ltbmn
IS
yards a year ago and was ·named .CinciMati Princeton.
Te1u Toch 71, Texu·Paa American
fiBL-team All-Ohio and back Of !he
The linebackers inclUde Jayson
63
'
.
· B kh
Tuu·El Puo 95, Houttoo Baptilt6S
year,
Gwinn 0 f C0Iurn bus roo aven.
Tuu-SaaAIIanio99, Tuu.A&amp;I 75
McGuire, a 6-0, 185-pound se- Many Kilbane ofOeveland St IgV ondllbilt67, Soui!i.m Moth. 55
nior,
carried 179 times for 1,414 natius, JOsh Johnson of Cincinnati
Wii.·Oreen Bay 66, Tcua Sootbcm
r Ma 'l
46
yards (7.9 per attempt) oor SSI - Princeton, Dublin's Benny King
Ion. He seared 22 touchdowns.
and Eric Wright of Massillon
Far \Vest
He saved his best for the last Washington.
Colcnclo St. IS, N. Colonclo 48
game of the regular season as he
The secondary includes Corey
NGbrukai06,S. ULih 101
New MWco SL 80, New Mexico 73
led h1s team to a v1ctory over·nval Sewell of Fremont Ross, Gary
Pq&gt;pamne 70, Bode Sl 48
Canton McKinley by running 36 Kuhn of Toledo Stan, Lancaster's
SoulhcmCall07, S.mmemoSL 94
Stanford 71, Colorado 58
times for 301 yards and five touch- Steve Poston, and a pair of MiddleVC lmne 79, Son DicJIO St. 64
downs.
.
town players, Tony Everhart and
UCLA 68, LMa Beach Sl S7
IJNLV 76, LSU 55
The overflow of quality ends on Dan Colson.
WilccNin 96, Pon1and 87
lhe
first unit are: Findlay's Aaron
Cincinnati Colerain 's Matt
Wyom.ina 85, Sam H01.11tm SL 70
Gralak, who had 57 catches for 860 Hirsh, who avemged 43.2 yards on
Toumamcntl
yards; Ronnie Burr of Canton 33 punts, handles the punting.
Central Fldellly Holiday Claulc
McKinley,
wilh 36 receptions for
Deal, in his first year as lhc head
Champio&gt;nlhlp
Riobmond 78, Lo Salle 6J
432 yards; Warren Harding's Omar coach at Dublin, pushed lhe Rocks
ThlrdP....
l'rovitt, who caught 40 pas.ses;for 10 a 10-0 record. Dublin had gone
Colif...U. 61, Vir(pnia Tech 59
630 yards and six IOuchdowns and 1-9 against Ohio Capital ConferCoon Llaht Clulk: ·
returned two kickoffs for seores; ence opponeniS the preceding four
Ch~mplo&gt;nohlp
Fresno SL 77, Gonz.p 76, 0T
Reynoldsburg's Jeff Cummings, seasons. but in its first year as a
ThlrdPIMe
who had 65 catChes for 1,126 yards member of lhe OCC went 9-0 and
Baylor 80, Nor1heute:m 6B
and II touchdowns; and Oxford made the playoffs.
Grot Alukl Sltoolout
Talawanda's Thad Persinger, with
Here's th e 1991 Associate&lt;!
Sunlnnlll
39
catches
for
843
yards
(21
per
Press
Divisio n I all-Ohio high
MauacltUMCta74, Oreaon Sl 6S
Now ()d..., 76, E.ldicbipn 60
catch) and 12touchdowns.
school football team, selected on
COMolalJon Bracktl
Joining S!ringer up front are: the recommendations of a staleAlaU·Ancc,.OO:,'o 7Z. Santa Cim 71
Idaho &amp;3,
~~ 11, 2 or
Juan Porter of Cleveland St. lg- wide panel of sports writers and
natius (6-4, 315); Eric Wendt of broadcasters:
Hllo BukttbaJJ.Cialllc
Cincinnati
Moeller (6-5, 275); Jim
Champlonahlp
First learn
Orand C.n)'OII67, Rider 59
Rosko of Youngstown Boardman
OHcnu : Ends- Aaron Gra lak, r:indlay , 6·
Third Place
(6-2, 22S); and Larry Nqsse of Eu- foot· l , I B5 pounds, Senior; Ronni e ll~n. C..n10n
Canisil&amp;I8Z, Hllwaii·HiloSI
clid (6-8, 235). That avemges out McKinley, 6-2, 174, Sr.: Omar Jlr0111lt , Warren
Hardina, 6·1, 165, Sr.; Thad Pers inger, Ol.ford Ta·
Lapc:hkk Memorial Tournament
to 6-S and 269 pounds per man.
llwand.l, 5·10 , 156, Sr.; Jeff Cummings.
Ch110ploollllp
Stlol&amp;n'o8l ,ll101o161
The fli'St-team quarterbacks are Reynold1burs, 5·9, 160, Sr. Lincmcn-Korey
Wmen Hardi ng, 6·5, 298, Sr.; Ju1n
Third f ....
Jeff
Stewan of Reynoldsburg, who Strin&amp;er,
Porter, Cleveland St. Ignatius, 6-4, 315, Sr.; Eric
N.C.·WWninpn II, St Muy'o, Cal.
completed 94 of 160 passes .(59 Wendt, Cincinnati Moe ller, 6-S, 275, Sr.; Jim
62
Youngstown Boardman, ~ 2 . 225 , Sr.; Larpercent) for 1,544 yards and 15 Rosko,
ry None, Eu clid, 6-8 , 235, Sr. ~rtcrbid-Jcff
RIYtr Cit1 Clullc
touchdowns and did not throw an SLewart, Reynolds bur&amp;. 6-3, 170, Sr.: Tim AullCha~npklnahlp
Mo.-Kanou City 73, Cleve1ond St: 67
interception, and Cincinnati Elder's ing. Cincinn1ti Elder, 6-1 , 190, Sr. Bacb-ChrU
Jaqu ill ud, Toledo Woodward , 6-0, 205 , Sr.;
ThlrdP....
Tim
Ausling, •.wbo nil on 103 of · Travil
Mr:Ouire, M.lillon w..hlnzton, 6-0 , 115,
SE MiAow::i 76, Nicholh Sl. 73
187 passes for 1,941 yards and 18 Sr.; Tracy McDaniel, Fairborn, 6-1 , 190, Sr.; Brian
Th omu, Grove CiLy, 5-8, 165, Sr.; John Mandato,
San Juan Shootoul
touchdowns.
Eastlake North, 5· 10, 185, Sf.; James Olvcrron ,
S...lllolll
1

Sunday's scores

Eutem Division

San Francisco

6.5

Detzait 94, HOIUton 87
.
Ponlond 91, Walhlnlll'll 11

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Chica'o
Detro&gt;!
ldinnoo""
Green Bay
Tamp11 Bay

s

.3 13

Dallas 79, Minnelw. 78
San Ant.cWo 119, SMale 101
Milwaukee 137, Indiana 119
Deaver 107, New Jcney 97
Pl&amp;oa&amp;i1 134, llllh 125, OT
I.A.Cllppm 130, O.uiouc 112
Oticaso 118, Sacramento 102

L.A. IWdcn
9 4 0 .692250213
o.n...
9 4 0 .692246195
Ken... c;,, . 8 5 0 .615261186
S..tllo
...... 6 7 0 .462 211202
S.n Diogo , .. 3 I0 0 .23120:5 Z75

.l!I!Q!I!ik •

3

4

I.A. Lok• 93, Pltiladclphio91
Orlando 105, Miami 99
Allan&amp;o 129,BOI!an 102

• 111 I .15U11374

N.Y. Oion&amp;o

11

l.l

Saturday's scores

9 3 0 .75qlUI94 .
6 7 f MZU2U7
s a o .m 2:12 293 .

...

Clndnnall

s

!.l

New YOlk 103,1letmil. 96

Ctnb'al Dlvll&amp;oft

,II""'""
..
C...... · . •

·Cleveland·St. Ignatius, Lake
Cathol~c, Newark Catholic champs
21:12).
But were still left wondering
what happened.
"Ri~ht now I'm numb; we're
numb,' said Elks head coach Bob
Gregg. "It's lOugh when you think
you have it and you lay your guiS
out there and watch it slip away
like that. It's as hard 10 take as anylhing you'll ever see."
St Ignatius was mnked lith and
Centerville 12th in the final regular-season polL They were just
about that close on the field as
well.
Division m
Joe Jurevicius and Pete Jelovic
have gone to !he same school and
been in the same class ever since
!hey staned back in kindergartco.
On Saturdily. they moved in10 a
class by themselves.
Playing pitch-and -catch for
much 'of the game.lhey led Mentor
Lake Catholic (13-1) to its first
state championship ever by using a
28-0 spread in the third quarter to
roll over tO!}-mnked,CAPE.
Jelovic completed 10 of 19
passes for 275 yards and three
tou.chdowns and Jurevicius caught
eight passes for 188 yards and two
of !he scores.
Jelovic's 19 attempiS matched a
Division Ill championship game
record and his 275 yards almost
doubled the previous-best The 65
points matched the highest searing
game in state tournament history.
Jclovic's shon sereen that Carmen
Ilacqua turned into a 62-yard
touchdown pass was the longest
ever in division championship hislOry.
"This is when it all counts."
Jurevicius said. "A state cham:pionshi~ game is when it means the

•

Scot·eboat·d

"'

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Cleveland St. Ignatius proved
!hat it's nev&amp; 100 late.
Overcoming 14-0 and 21 -9
deficiiS, St. Ignatius rode a 38-yard
halfback pass from Eric Haddad to
Mike Sako in !be fourlh quarter to
beat Centerville 24-21 for !he Division I state championship Sundljy.
St. Ignatius, winners of three of
!he last four big-school state championships, appeared to have its
empire in ashes after back-to-back
losses in midseason.
But the WildcaiS regrouped to
'not only make !he playoffs but to
once again take the state's top
prize.
In Saturday's games at Paul
Brown Tiger Stadium in Massillon,
Mentor Lake Catholic beat topranked Cincinnati Academy of
Physical Education 4S-20 for !he
O"ivision lii title and No:t-rated
Newark Calholic pulled into a tie
wilh Cincinnati Moeller with its
seventh state championship, beating Bluffton 34-13 in !he Division

I

By RUSTY-MibLER ·AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) Warren Harding'sKorey Stringer,
a massive ·lineman who is adept at
both 'pass- and run-blocking, and
dumble running backs Chris Jaquil·
'

Hockey
NaUenal Hockey Leapt
NEW YORK RANOERS - Coll'd
up Randy Moller, dC£en1eman , from
Binahamton of the American Hockey

Leaaue..

IOWOPEIFOR
CBRII'fMAI SUIOI

Poinsettias 4... to 10"
Poln11ttla Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus Baskets
Holly Trees
Cut Christmas Trees
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays anil

Vaus

Large House Plants

Cactus
10" Foliage Baskets,
all varieties
Open D•lly t:OO •.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sundlly 1:00 p.m. to 5:00p.m.

HUBBARDS GREEN ,HOUSE
SYRACUSEJ OHIO
su-Ha-~ns

·

MONDAY • Ham or Turkey Dinner, Mashed Potatoes/Gravy,
Green Beans, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUESDAY- Turkey Club, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
WED~ESDAY - Philly Sandwich, French Fries, Soup &amp; Salad

THURSDAY -Mushroom Burger, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
FRIDAY- Fish Sandwich, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
TVB8DAT a111UR80AT, CHILDREN UND!R 12 ltAT nta
FROM CHILDREN'SIIINU. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER'll
UJOT 1 CHILD PER ADULT

I

CARRY OUT ORDERS AVAJLABLE 13041 77S:!fi1
SENJORS GET

10% DISCOUNT

VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN

ACCEmD

,..

I

ExPRaa

�'

Hy'l'he Bend

'

'

'

Monday~ Oeeember 2, 1991 .

The Daily Sentinel
Monday,

(

leport, Ohio

I

Business -Services

December 2, 1991
Page--6

Ann

Landers

i

TO
'AN
CALL 992-2156
MOINDA' Y thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

ANN LANDERS

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

"llttl,· Loa .tn1ele1
11mai Syotl"""'
Crea&amp;ors Syndlt.ale.''

6
10

MonthiV

In Memcifl•m ·

1- Ctrd oi Tha'lkl

2 - In Mtmcrv .

4 - GivtiWIV

· 5 - Htppy Ad1
~
6- Lolt tnd Found
7--Yard Saltfplid in tdvancel
8 - Public $.-le &amp; Auction
9-Wantt&lt;l to ~~Y

. .

·

coniNG

1 3-lnsUrence

61 - Farm E9uipment

,

" 14-Buiin•s Tr1ining

- 2:00P .M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M FRIOAV

'"· 949·2101
or Its•. 949-2160
Day or Night · ·
NO SUNDAY CALlS

949·2206

e2.- W1n1ed to Buv
63 - livtltock
64 - H•v &amp; Grtin
65-Sttd &amp; Fertiti,ter

16- Schoolt &amp; lnttru ct ion
16- Aidio. TV &amp; CB Rtptir
1 7:..Misctllaneous
1'8 - Winted To Do ... ·-

2 :00P .M TUESDAY

·~ ltasonable PricH''

. BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

&amp; Livestock

1.2 - S ituation Wtnted

CAY BEFORE PUBLiCATION
. ,_. 1·1 OQ A 1,! . SATU~OAY
- 2:00P .M. MONDAY

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

CUTIING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

Siiiliii iP.S

111141111 mo.

·

Tr ansporla tion

Classified pufies.corer the
. DECORATING GIFfS • Jo Ann McGnw or
Gallipolis has created a number or craft hoUday
decorating items which she has presented to the
Exlended Care Facility at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Pictured with holiday trees are Sharon

21- Busln•• Opportunity
22-'-'oney to Loan
23 - Prof•llontl ServicH

fol/otdnflle/ephonf' exchanfleS ...

VIckers, left, activities dlreciOr or the raclllty,
and Lois Deem or the nursing sc.rr. Mrs.
McGraw made five or the trees plus the snowman which centers the table for tbe raciUty. She
is a sister 10 Mrs. Jackie Starcher, who beads the
hospital's nutrition department.

Gtllit Countw-

Meigl Coumw-

· Area Code 614

Aru Code 614

, ~rea Code 304 . .

317-Ctt•hire

98~ - Chelter

256-G uvtn Oisl

247-leten Falls
949- Rtcine

843 - Portland

143- A,.bia Disr

379 - Walr'Ull

34-Busin•sBuMdinos

576 - Apple Grove
773 - Ma•on

388- Vinton
245-~ i o Grtnde

75 - 8ottt &amp; Motor~ tor Sale
76-Auto P1rt1&amp; Aec•tori•
17·- Auto Reptir

78 - Camping Equ•pment

79- Campers &amp;: Motor Homes

35 - lot• &amp; Acr1191
36-Real Estate W•ntltd

882-New Htven
896- Lettrt
937- Bufttlo

742- Rutltnd
667,- Coolville

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Begins Sept. 1S

74 - Mcnorcvcles

31-Homet for S1 le
32-iYiobill Hom•• for Stle
33-FIIrm•1or Stle

675-Pt . Pleuant
458-lean

992 - Middleport
Pomeroy

446- GtUipol is

71 - Au tot for Sere
72 - Truckt far Sele
. 73 - VInl S. 4 WO 's

Rea l Estate

Mtson Co .. WV

I llifillild
· 41-Houses for Rent
42 - MobHe Homes for Rent
43 - Fifmt for Ren1
44 - Apartment for Rent

•

81 --Homtlmprovemtntl
82 - Piumbing &amp; Huting

45- Furn ishtd Ro oms

83-EII.c:l\l•ting

87 - Uptlolsterw-

Jr. Goll Sets
GrapW!t' .
,. .... - M•llll

aus

Custam Filling
Bags, Head
Covers; 11c.

84- Eitctricll &amp; Rlifr igtrltion
85- Gtnertl Hauling
86- Mobile Home Rep1ir

-~

Engraving

614·985·3961

FOR SALE

BISSEU &amp; BURKE
CONSTIUCnON

1111311

CHRIST
'TREES
35975 Flatwoods Rd;

Pomerorr Ohio

mo.

CHRISTMAS HOEDOWN • The O.C. Clog·
gers took nrst place honors with their dance
routine during Sunday's Christmas Parade In

992·2156

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Charles
Bronson, the epitome of the macho
male on screen, bristles at any suggestion of wimpiness off screen. ·
In the upcoming ABC movie
" Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa
€1aus,'' Bronson plays a journalist
who falters when his wife dies in a
nu epidemic. Bronson lost his wife
of 20 years, actress Jill Ireland, to
cancer last year.
In an interview in TV Guide,
Bronson adamantly denied any parallels between his role and his life.
"A strong man docsn ' t allow
himself to break down," he said.
" If a man can't withstand what's
happened to his life in a strong
way, if he breaks doW!!. that, to me,
is a little wimpy."
But he also doesn't pretcnd .he
wasn't deeply affeyled by his
wife's death.
" I started to mourn from the
very moment I found out Jill had
cancer,'' he said. "There's no end
to the mourfling.''
"·

;

••..
~

F.ipley couple to speak, at Christ Episcopal Church
: ChriS! Episcopal Church wi II Union during the attempted overlio6t a special preseiltation by John throw of che Gorbachev govern(nd Colleen Samson of Ripley, ment, and will be discussing their
memben of the church who recent- experiences during that time, as
lr•·returned home from a two- well as presenting a slide show of
ml5ilth visil 10 Russia, on Tuesday. their travels. Mr. Samson, whose
Dec. 3, at 7 p.m. at the church at parents were Soviet immigrants,
804 Main St., Point Pleasant The speaks fluent Russian, and will
share his experiences of how the
public is invited.
The Samsons wete'i.n the Soviet Russian people view the United

.._

ANNAPOLIS, Md . (AP) Harrison Ford's entourage tried 10
keep fans away during .filming of
the Tom Clancy thrillet ''Patriot
Gam es." But the star couldn't
resist the sight of the bridal party
trying 10 cau:h a glimpse of him.
Catherine Moore was enjoying
her wedding reception at the Naval
Academy's Officers Club Saturday
when she heard Ford was a few
hundred yards away.
With bridesmaids in tow , she
sprinted in her wedding gown
toward Ford, who agreed to a picture.
· "Where's the groom?" Ford
asked.
The groom, Kyl e Winston
Moore, also got a chance to take a
photograph with Ford, star of the
"Indiana Jones" movies.
· But he was a less enthusiastic
than his wife, who said she might
like to see the picture in their wedding album or their living room.

States, democracy and Christianity.
The Samsons have made frequent visits to Russia, where they
still have many cousins and other
NEW YORK (AP) - Sarah
family members livin~ : They .have Owen says she was physically and
also hosted visits by family mem- psychologically abused during her
bers from that country to America.
four-year relationship with actor
Following the presentation, the James Woods. At one point after
Samsons will entertain questions · she threw him out, he returned and
from che audience. Refreshments put a gun to her head, she says.
will be served.
Woods, 44, strongly denied the

·,

.

allegations.
"I feel angry, embarrassed and
betrayed by someone I once deeply
loved and trusted," he said in People magazine.
Owen, 28, told People that when
she threw Woods out of their Beverly Hills home, he returned five
days later, held a gun to her head,
insulted her and forced her to strip.
She said he later begged for forgiveness.
Despite the problems, Owen
agreed to marry Woods in 1989.
The marriage lasted a few months.
Woods played misfits and murderers in such films as ''The Oriion
Field" and "Against All Odds."

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Chari. ton Heston has played Moses and
Ben Hur. But did you know hC also
pla~ed Santa Claus?
'You 'd think it would be a
great part, wouldn't you? But actually I got it only because there were
only 13 pupils in the school I was
in 1n the eighth grade," Heston
said during Sunday's 60th annual
Hollywood Christmas Parade.
"Two of them were my cousins
and half of 'em were girls, so I
.didn't have much competition for
Santa Claus."
·
Heston was grand marshal of the
parade. Crowds estimated at I million lined Sunset and Hollywood
boulevards.
Among other celebrities at the
parade: Gregory Peck, Donny
Osmond, Clocis Leachman and
Bruce Boxleitncr.

the climax swine
time festival

CLIMAX, Ga. (AP) - Chitlin
eaters and pig impressionists came
from miles around for a slice of
hog heaven called the annual Climax Swine Time Festival.
The 17th annual event drew
about 25,000 visitors Saturday, said
Cliff Wells, president of the Climax Community Club.
"I've had people tell me this ,
was the best one yet,'' Wells said.
Eddie Pellicer.of St. Augustine,
Fla., won the coveted hog-imilation
prize, stunning the crowd in a
"squeal-off' with two-time winner
Royce Mercer.
·
Other highlights were the
greased pig chasing and li cornshucking contest.

1. _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ __

1------1
3----- 1
12. _ _ _ _ _ ii

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn
SINCE 1868
'

i

,•

·------

8.

SANTA'S
CHRISTMAS

,•

t

REDUCED! A very cute one lk!or block home · with 2
bedrooms localed in Aeeasville . Fearures one car gam~e.
rear screened porch, storage building, ceiling lans, Situ ·
aled on .6051 aae olland. HAVE IMMEDIATE POSSES.
SION FOR ONLY $20,000

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRAC.
TORS STATE OF OHIO DE·
PARTMENT OF TRANS.
PORTATlON Columbus,
Ohio November 22, 1981
Contr80t S.teo Legal

111 lorth In the bidding pro-

.. CoDv No. 81-1112

.

poll I."

Eoch bidder thlll be r•
qulred to lite with hit bid 1
clrllfled check or c11hler'o
ciMck for tn omO..nl oqutl to
Hvt ..., - o f hlt bid, bulln
no event more th1n fthy lhoudoll•ra1 or 1 bond or ten
per Clllt of hlt bid, poytbloto
the Director.
,
Blddero mual opply, on
the proper lonna, lor qulllfl·
cttlon tltMatten dtyt prior
to the· dell all lor opening
blda In occordonct with
Chopttr 5525 Ohio Rtvtatd

r ' •'UNIT'
I'IIICe CONTliACT
Build propaollo will be ••nd
r_.v.d 11 the office ollhe

&lt;-

RUTLAND, OHIO
RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER
THURSDAl DEDEMBER St.
Pllfw••ttll 6:00 &amp;1:00 ,_
O.k C..t•
100 Mlnul• ct Th~n. anc1

*'-""' ......

DINCtOr' of the Ohlo Deplrtm""t of Tr1noportatlon, Columbuo, Ohlo, unUl 10:00
A.M., Ohlo Sllndord Ttme,
Tund1y, Dlcemb« 17,
1gg1 IDtlmpro..,..nllln:
Melga Counl)l, Ohio for
Improving Structure No.
MEG-33-1808 on UnlledSIIte
Route 33, Section 18.08, by
ropleclng dlllrloratld etetl
ond perform other rotated
work.
Pro(lct Length: 0.00 r..t
or 0.00 mill Work Length:
0.00 1111 or 0.00 mlle
"The d1t1 Milot compl•
tlon or thlo - k oholl be u

Code.

Ptono oncl opoclflcotlono
tro on flloln tho Department
of Trontportllllon tl)d tho
oHioo of lhe Dltlrlct Oopul)l
Director.
The DlriCior ,..ervn the
right to rlject ony ondol bldo.
JERRY WRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(12) 2, •

Laughs

v

1G--31

mo.

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

GUN SHOO.T.

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
lnvcstrrUJnt"

Bashan Building
EVElY

WHALEY'S .
AUTO PARTS

RACINE

FIRE DEPt
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept. 28

· Fortery Chakt
12 Go..• llootgun Only
Strirtly lnfenod
9-13-'91 -rln

beautifully shlar'ed.
White and Scotch Pine
5 Ft. and up
Good selection of
large trees.

1-100-141-0070

742·2979

' '•

.
~

..

,,

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpels, Headliner &amp;
Seat Covers-and

Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST, MASON, W.VA.

COUNTRY CHARM-In a 2 story older home thai bas been
remodeled. FeaMes 3 bedrooms, bath, utilily, on appro•.
2 acres ol tewl ground with a large suawberry patch.
ASKING $29,900

773-9560

WE NEED LISTINGS!
YES HOMEOWNER....THERE ARE WINTER SALESI
WE HAVE BUYERS CALLING AND STOPPING BY EV~N
DURING THE COLD WEATHER SEASONI....GET RE·
SULTS... lF YOU WANT TO SELL..
GIVE US A CALLI
HENRY E • CLELAND....................................2.01V1
TRACY BRINAGER .....................................148-2438
JEAN TRUSSELL.........................................V.t-21110
. JO HILL•••.- ................................................98~

OFFtCE ..........................................................H2·2251

Homegrown, ·

614-742·2143 or
1112~

] 131 1'91 ttn

PLEASANT RIDGE· 1 112 slory lrame home with 6 rooms,
3 bedrooms on lois ol 50 ' tOO each. Includes pauo.
insula~on. Located on nice paved meei. ASKING $21 ,000

RACINE· Take IMMEDIATE POSSESSION and slart that
larm you've been dreaming ol TODAYI2 story lrame larm
home with 80+ aaes. 3 bedrooms, fireplace , B.G. healer.
coal &amp; wood space healer, relrigerator &amp; range . Ciste~n
water with TCP available. ASKING $54,000 NOTE : ThiS
owner wants 10 selll Will consider any 10asonable oHer I I

. WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

Sptciatiling in
C,stom Fr-1 l1pair
NEW &amp; USED PARIS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013
or 992-5553
01 rou fiH c:
DAIWifl, OliO

DOWNING C"ILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

IN·SURANCE

POMEROY, OHIO

Home
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpel,
In family .room with
W.B.F.P. all in good
i
good lacationl Home
was once advertised al $59,500 owner has reduced the
price 10 $49,9001 This won'tlastlongl CHECK IT OUTI

ONE DAY ONLYI

949·2826

11/20/lmo.

608 EAST MAIN

H3041
9/11191 1 mo. pd .

742·2U1
3·14-'91-lln

11-111 ... pd.

, .RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT H~ULING
•FIREWOOD
·
.
BIL~

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
Choke Only

FOREVER
BRONZE

RACINE, OHIO

992.2259

•Re11onable Retn -,
'
•Quality Work
•Free Eatimetn
•Carpet Has Fall Dry
Time •
, ,.
•High Glou on Ti\11
Floor Fi~i1h
··
·'
MllllliWIS. Owrw ·
II. t, lullriool, OH.

USED RAILROAD TIES

4. _ _ _ __

5 . _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ __ 1 v • - - - - -- ll
1--·---.,..---11
7.
1- · - - - - - - il

IIIDEHffD111 · ..
C&amp;IPET ClEAIIEIS ·
and TilE FlOOI CAK

667-6179

For $20.00

614·949•2202

9 . _ _ _ __
10....__ _ __

s..-.

.

'15·4473

9 · 1 1· 1 mo. pd.

Coil our office for paid in iulVGnce rlllea!

Frllil Ctrt Dthl ~ Gnwa

1111411rnt.

Starting Sept. 22

Otter Ends Oct. 31

PH . .614-992•5591

Real Estate"General

TRE 5READY
NOV. 21. 1991

...

11100 SR' 124- ~:. ...
•-

Long IIDI1cn, OltiD

CHRISTMAS TREES
Mail Sti R•tl• Ol

Fumactt;

Air Conditioners

SLACK
992-2269

20 SESSIONS

Uceneed end Bonded

Tum your clutter into ca11h,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 ·d ay,
3 gagers,$6.00

Pomeroy. The group was one or three who performed at tile corner or Main and Court StreeiB,
much to the deUght or the spectators.

-Names in the news- Hog heaven at

MARCHING MARAUDERS • The Meigs the season, the band performed popular Christ·
Marauders Marching Band, under the direction mas music for the parade-goers lining East
or Tony Dingess, marched in the Pomeroy Main Street.
Christmas Parade on Sunday In keepin11 wltb

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

Heat Pumpa,

949·2734 .
FOR SALE AT BOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

King, Miller, ,

Luulre, lnalder,

12 Gouge Fcxtory
' 9-6-tftl

IALL fESTIVAL
SPECIAL

.
PONDS
SEPTIC &amp;'(STEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEM&amp;NU . &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Limestone. Dirt,
Gravel and Coal

CLASSIFIEDS!

i

··-

)Ye Sell &amp; S.rviC. "
Weather

5·31-'90 tfn

BUlLDOZifG

Call Sentinet

&lt;.:'

.

C. L. Heating &amp; .
Refrigeration '.:

RAQNI,9lf.

mo.

HARLEY HANING'S
RESIDENCE.
11· 8,1

1!

M
. I'Rnl- RIJT LANO. 011JU
\IIOD~~P"'R' · f""J\1.. ~

.,

Owner

UKE

61H47-3oSl

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
It modeling
Stop &amp; Comport
FrH Estlmotes

REASONABLE

I

ARCHING SAND_ .

5 Extra IO Ski1
MAPLEWOOD

1/.f/"'/ua

~

CLARENCE ATHERtON .

1

$IO.aop
C1pH 1111:00 e.m.

Factory Guns Only
9/9191/2 mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

• ••

'25 (It &amp; Wralllltd

&amp;y ...

Prol1ssioeal

Every Sunday 12 Noon

Serv1 ces

46- SPICI for Ritn1
47-Winted-to Aent
48 - EQu ipment for Rent
'9- For lea~t •

Teaford
Country Club

·GUN SHOOT

CA~H?!!

•

· H6-16-ffn

and
WUPPING

.. ......

'

••

--.--·),. ...

DEER CUniNG

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

HILL'S DEER

·want tc:
PIN down EXTRA

day's Christmas Parade in Pomeroy. The
parade was well-attended despite scaltered rain
showers throughout the day.

Acres• ,,.. ,.., Offici
117 I, s.-1 St, ,1
POIIIOY, OliO ':r.

52- Sporting Goodl ,
53-Antiques ·
54 - Misc. Meretltndile
56-Buildint Suppli•
56 - Peu for Stle
·
57-Muticallnltrumentl
!18 -Fr~iii &amp; Veglttbl•
59-For ·Sale or Trade

1 1 - Helo Wtnttd

Oet RecuJtc Fast

QUEEN MICHELLE • Michelle Frlt~~d, who
was crowned Sternwheel Festival Queen in
October, greeted' parade goers during yester-

992-5315.,
915-3561 '"

538 Bryan Place
MlddllpDrt, Ohio

51-Hout~old Goodt

Form

Serv 1r.es

polis Deily TribOne. retching over 18 .000 hom•• ·

SUNDAY PAPER

.q&amp;ldor

d..,., will btctler;ld

Employn11:n l

cept- cl•1ititd displ..,, 8usin•• Ctrd tnd legal notictl)
will tlso IPPIIf in the Pt . PIIMtnt fhgitllr tnd tt'tt ,G tlli·

-

..--~

3-~nnoucements

"A cltuifiMI tdvCirtisem~~nt pltced in 11-\a Deily Sent inel I all·

• MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
F,FUDA'( PAPER

broken up

lEN'S li'PLIAftCISEIVICE · ..

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

.eo

•

N ... ..·· .

Merchand i se

Ytrd Ssl•

COPY DEADliNE -

.42

AUIWIS .

11114ftfn

. tltppy Ads

C.rd of Th.nkl

.30

$9.00

L

lri• It t. Or We . ..

•Insulation

fnr ittr.h rl""'

:~•'*."! 1.10 discount tor tds ptid .in tdvtnce.
tdl - Giv.,WfY tnd Found td$ unct .. 16 words will be
run 3 diVIIt no ch•Qe.
•PtiCI of td far all capittiiiiUtrs •s double price of td cost
•7 point line type only uMd. ·
•Stnlintl is no1 rMponsible fOJ enon •fttJ first d~ . (Check
for en ora tint d.,. td tuns in PIJMt) . Ctll befOre 2 :00 p m
dw
publiclt ion to mtke c:orreetion.,

•ft•
•Acfl thlt n'iust be Plid in •dvl!nce tre

16.00

"

•caowa

•Vinyl Siding
, •Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing

.20

..

.

OVEI .:liPAll '

. INSULATION

..

o13.oo
tt .30/dov

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

. J&amp;L

ov,r 15 Wordl

u .oo

fht• •retor

Meigs, G1IH1 or M110n coul'lt i• mult be pre·

any more about how brutal and
barbaric men are. I work in an
emergency room in Queens, and last
night five men carne in after-having
been auacked. Three were beaten up
~y ' their wives, but one was banged
around by his girlfriend and the other
by a drunk woman who lived next
door. She said his TV was on 10o
loud. Case closed as far as I'm
concerned.
Escondido, Calif.: Consider these
words from Norman Mailer: "I
used to think women were better
than men. Now I realize that they
arc not. I find l)l~l women, having
achieved more power and greaiCr
recognition, arc the equal of men
when it comes to stupidity and vice
~nd misjudgmenL"
Feeling pressured to have sex?
How well·inforllll!d are you1 Write
for Ann Landers' boolclet "Sex and
the Te en-ager." Send a selfaddressed, long . business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) ro : Teens,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1/562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

Rato

Words
15
15
15
15
15

1
3

'-

'

• The Area's ·lumber 1 Marketplace

the power to act out as they please

while women have been the gcnUer
sex, the nurturcrs. But things are
chan~ing. As women gain more
power and assume more of men's
traditional responsibilities, the-rate
of violent crime by women is rising.
The highest incidence of child abuse
occurs in families headed by single
mothers. We now have female gangs
and KKK members. How are we
going to put an end 10 war when
women are clamoring for combat
roles?
Vancouver, B.C.: The drug
Depo-Provera diminishes the sex
drive to almost zero. Men who
commit violent acts should be put
on this drug pcnnanently' if they are
returned to society.
Jacksonville, Fla.: Mothers have
taught their sons from a very early
age that they must not hit girls
and that they must respect women
1-J.H.
and protect them. In recent years, as
· From Flanders, N.J .: Most men the feminists become more shrill
~~e successful in cont.rolling and aggressive, they let us know ..
_lhcir primal impulses, but everything that women do not wish to be
-changes when inhibitions arc "protected" and that they want no
:removed, judgment is impaired ex u-a privileges. This "new" message
;and behavior is changed by is causing males to feel very
-an addictive narcotic which is confused.
:legal and socially acceptable. I
Corpus Christi: This is for
:am talking abo.ut alcohol. It is a your correspondent who expressed
.m ~jor contributor not only to consternation at the brutality of
-domestic violence but traffic men. In bygone days, maybe this
4caths, unemployment, the serious was true, but no more. What about
:rate of high school and college drop- that woman in Texas who aUegedly
;outs. crowded courts, overflowing sought a hit man to kill the mother
hospitals and homelessness.
of her daughter's cheerleading rival?
San Diego: Men have always had
New York: I don't want to hear

..

'

:Ann addresses aggressive behavior
DEAR READERS: Rarely do I
:devote two days to one subject, but
:the mail on the aggressive behavior
·of males has been so compelling I
want to shan: more of it with you.
This is from a married couple in
:Anderson, Calif.:
; .Dear Ann Landers: Your corre:spondent raises the question: Why
·are men so violent and cruel? The
answer is simply: because they feel
powerless.
· Actually, they are not powerless.
·The endless litany of rules set
down by family, society, church
and state makes them feel that
way. A powerful, in-control man
does not beat his wife or do in his
neighbor.
We need to wake up and smell
the coffee. If we don'tlikc what we
:arc o"'~hat we have crcaiCd, we
:must take responsibility for our
:choices and change them ... L. AND

The Daily

THE BASKET WEAVE
Now Clpe1 01 Satvrtl.ys

for tho Oll'ist.as Stasoa.
Give a .,anlwovttt IMnht

to thai ~dalsam110111 on
your Owist111C1sllst.
Wming supplies also in
stocl
Localed on Rocksprings
Rd . in Pomeroy , 3 miles
lrom the Meigs ·Co. Fairgrounds.
' 992-6855
,
1111511 mo. pd,

HANDRI
OF CASH
BETTER

THANA
IARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

h· :
:SfHk/1

'

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUAI'S and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE.&amp; DOUILEWID£ HOMES
. . . . . . . . ... . . . . . .. . . ...... ....... .
-

MOBILE

ao•

BENNETT'S "::~~=6'
loet~tld

On SaHord Schtolld. off lt. 141
(614) 4U·94l6 or 1-100-172-5967

, DK's FARM TOYS

by ERTL

Displayed at ne
. Qualty Pritt Slrop
HOURS:
8:30 ain-4:00 pm

614-992·3394
Or Coli
742·3020 Evelliags
12-2-91·1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
e.(LUMINUM SipiNG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New HOrllts 1u11t
··Free .Ettimates··

PH. 949-2801
· ar Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR • UTEIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out af

painting.

Lit lit •• It for rou.
. YERY REISOUilE
lAVE IEFEIENCIS

·. (6141 915-4110
, ll-23-91 1 ""· pd'

ED'S

PAINTIJtG

tnllrlor Polnllng,
Free Eollmoloa
30 yearo ex.,.r!tnce.
Four tenore of
recommottdallon. Honest
ond dependable. .

RIGGS
TREE FARM
Cltoooe and Cut
Your Tree or We'U
Cut It For You.

39507 Rocksprings Rd.
!At c... tf u.s. 33)

Pomtfoy, lllllo

614·992-5702
12·2·91·1

ATTENnON
FIREWOOD
SELLERS

I

Hardwood ·slabs

For Sale
Great Price!
.CALL

OHIO PALLET CO.

992

GRAVE
BLANKETS

Homemade with
Long Lasting GrHn
Scotch Pine.

$20.00~

Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

614·949·2058
11·251 mo. pd.

USED APPUANaS .

fO DAY W&amp;IIAm
WASHIIS-$100.,
DIYIS-$69 .,

IIFIIGIIAtqiS-S t 00 .,
UltGES--...a...-$125 ., ·
FMIDIS-S 125 ., . '
MIO OV111S-$7t .,.

(1_ ......... .,
lpeclallyl

KEN'S APPliANCt

Call Ed Battin

"2-5335 or 915-3U1

collect at

1-614-667·6474
1111111 mo. pd.

S£RVKE
Aero.. Frorft ..... Olfke

POIIIIOY, OliO
10.10/lt tftl '

�..

'

.

.

.,

•

Monday,
. December 2, .1991 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;NAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

. KIT 'N' CA~LYLE.® by Larry Wright -

71 .

· Monday, Oecem.ber 2, 1991

The Dally Sen!lnel~age ·

: BORN LOSER

.for sale

Television·
.Viewing

-~

-"'"

-•

·~-+&lt;--

~

"'

I

. MON.. DE«;. 2 .
0·

·.EVENING

ill

1:00 we
111e • • •
o~~ewa·
Ill VIdeo ,..,.,
~~qua,.~ TV Stereo.

2 .. btiltoOnt furnloltod opt, Hud
occojllo~. 814-4411-2200.
2-Bdntl furnlthod opt, Ill
utll~loo paid, $300 month,
Pomoroy, 114oM2·1538 or 114141-252tohrlpm
2·BR In Mlddlopoll .. No .polo.
own ldnltloo,
par mo.'

Pay
$200
DeDosltiRitertPC* • required.

Ftnanctal

IM-112·23111 doyo.
3 Room Fu.mlthtd ·~Pirtment,'
· ~111 · Milo Eut Of PO~or, On
RUM, 1271/mo.l14-311.fif3.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!r,, .5311 Joclclon , Pika
1rom .,......,o. Walk to ~!top &amp;

Ptymoeh Omtct l'llry,, 318
luto, smG• ~14-1112·..11 ·
1117 Cho!fY _ , hlah mlloogo, .

mov.... C.lll14-44e-2818. EOif.· ~-=========Jr-:;:::===:;::::;:::::;::::j

Eflenclencv apt lri Pt. Pllt..nt,
ntoo nllghborhood. Hud accopo
·~· 1~U7WIM2
.

~~V:~~ Second Avon111, 814-

3 B.ckoom HOUit, 118 Kinton

Drive, Galllpollt. Living Room,
Dining Room Kltchtn, B.ath,

Central Air, VInyl Siding, CtrA

polocf, 2 . car Gorogt. Within
Walking Dlotanco 01 Tho Pool,
Golf C"ooroo And Clinic. Gol·
llpollo Clly SChool Dlllrlct. 814245-5152.
4 roomt tnd btlh, good condl·

lion, on Old Alvtr R01d, Oltn.
wood, WV. 114,000.304-llt-2141.

By Bulldor Now 3 Btdroom Full

B11tmtnl Whh 2 Car Gartgt
Famlty

Room,

Lirgt

Kllchon And Dining, . U1nHy

Room, 2 Full Bttht Walk In

Clotolt,

Lorge

Lot,

Cllr

Schoolt, ,. Mrtet From Town
151,1100 C...ldor Trod•ln Ot

Mobno Homo, I14..C4e-8038.

Sale or trtdt, 501:100 lat, 2 ' bed·
roomt, nice tht~M, loctt.ci New
HIY.n within walking dlllanct
of IChOOI tnd ltOI'tl. 114-&amp;67•

13511.
MuHI Unb Ronlal, 1 Yoor Old.
VInyl Siding, Low Malntononco,
Cenlrolly LOcotocl, 1511,000. 814448-8~.

CONSTRUCTION
CarponiOtt To 122, Labor1r1 To 32 Mobile Homes
&amp;11, Dryall To $14.711, Maoo..
lor Sale
And TanciOtt To 122.50 Call 1·
100.02·21111.
1m 12x80 2 . BR gao
MalleiOYI,
CONSTRUCTION- ca._.,. to relrlgtrllor,dlthWiaher,
c•r·
122._Laborlr1 to &amp;18, Drywall to potoil lhrouohout.. Vary good
SM.TD, MIHnl •nd Tendlr1 to condlllon. 114-258-8237 lftlr

!ob
6441.

$22.50, ,CIII , ..~.2f7t

lpm

I

'llantod To Buy: Junk
With or Without Motora.
Larry Llvoly. 814-3Uoll303.

Fumlohod Efflcloncy, &amp;1150/mo.
UtllltiH Pold. 7 112 hloll Avanuo,
Qolllpollo. 614-4411-4411 Ahor·
~p.m.

Oroclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·
roOm- IP-trtmtntl 11 VIllage
Manor " ond
Rlvorolilo

Apanmente In Mlddtapon. From

1111. Coii614-1182-T711l EOH.
In Ml-pM, bltlo. 1 ond 2
btdroom fumllhtd apt, 101111
whh utiiHin pol~. rlftronco and
dopoa~ roqulr1d, 304-182-2588.
Modom 2 BR opt. 114-4441-4310.
Nlco ~ BR, 4-112 ml """' Gol·
llpotlo chy ochoolo. No poto.
$235/mo. 814 448 8031.
Complolly Fumloltod mobllo
horn.. 1 milt bllow towl'L ovtr•
looking ~vtr. No - · ""'· 614448.0338.

One 'blldroom apt lor r~nt,
Spring Ava, no ~~. $11!10 mo,

l!OO ~opoon, &amp;1446140113•
Slnglo Efflcloncy, Pa~loi!J Fur·
nllfied, Wtter Included, ~h
Roqulrod. can aot-n a A.M.
And 2 P.M.I14-44e-8720.
1 BR.
. 7 Cou~ St.
.....
&amp;
mo. plut
r.fartnces.

45

Fumlshacl
Rooms

.4th Avo, Mlddloport, Ohio,
2 room apt, utnbloo pola, 304No~h

CONSTRUCTION
S.bdrmd0o2•bath, 14x70 homo, tlf2-2~.
C.rponiOtt to 122. Labortr1 to
:1
~~~::rror~:5• . :,R::oo..:m.:.:o..:to~r-ron...,t:-.---;-k.,.or_m_o.,.nt""'h.
&amp;11. l)rywoll to &amp;14.711. Mason
and Tondarl to 122.50. 1-t00Slotting at 1120/tno. Gallo Hotol.
112-2m.
1114-446-11580.
CAST
Stooping roomo wbh cooking.
Aloo troltor · - · All hook-upo,
Tho Boot Soatln Trucking.
tall aftor 2:00 p.m., 304·'173IIISI, Maoon WV.
Picture Younolt Bohlnd Tho
Employment Services
Whool Of A.Stato Of Tho A~
46 Space lor Rent
CAST Ttlct« Traitor Whllo You
- - - - - - - ' : " " " - ] WO!k tor oldo~y lodv In hor R-lvo:
Country Mobllo Hotnt Park,
11
Help wantacl
homo, P0011ror or~o. 2 ,.,....,.
Route 33, Nd ol Pomoroy.
Wanted motlvotod ooloopor~on,
121,0CJ..I52,txltl1ot yoor, tr1lnlng

•

1

...
::~::.~:::~::37::::~·~pPay .
'Hiett Mltoo

~

Pirtolon And P10IK Sharing

SMALL
\llllNT
ADS
YY#\

provided, experlene• prwterr..r,
Hnd ,.,ume to Dellr S.ntln.l

PO Bo• 7218 Pomeroy, OH

45761

Rnldenl miJ'Igtr, mllnt•nance

tor 1p1utmtnt complex
In Gaillpolll. Full-limo with
apartmont I Utllltln ln~udod.
Sond. rnumo to: 801 '1320
War-vlllo, NC 21781.
TY REPAIR M.50 por hr to llort,
uporloncod only, HEC 3111 W.
Main St, Pomoroy, 114·192-~4
coupll

J""'

DAf\11
,

AUIU
Dlf:l Ill lllf\HI.
r Ul1ll

~:."'urtnce

,a.....:;" rani~
f t ..•

. ~~~~~----33 Fanns for Sale
MaJOn County • Leon. 3 bed-

Ouo•arly

"

In, Fltll Out Dlopotch
•'Flrot
wt. No
Touch Frt'ehl:

room h9uM, blm; county wltir;

Prlood Roduood. -·11118 or
4511-171111.

35

• Job Stcurltr

Minimum Ago 21 Y01ro
lmmodloto ()ponlngo For E•·
lnd Drlvor Trol-. On S~o
H~lng If You Quallly. Apply In
PoriOn At Ebhor LocOIIon:
oorioncod Drlvoro, Studonto,

Holldor Inn CiviC Contor •
Ac- From Tho Civic C.ntor
Chlrl...on, WV
,
Wodnolday, Dlcombor 4, 11111 ..
I P.M.

Lots &amp; Acreage

10 or 12 KrM firm land, oxcol·
lont ooll 0111 bt lwlgltod. 304llt-2894. .
. Building ktii~-ICtl and up, TP I
C wtt•, Elll•n Mtlat Co.,
quo~or milo o11 SR7, 114-18531184 .
3 ~~~ loll (Rt. 35 w tronla•o),
~ od land •
vo 814-:MM441,
' unroot 1 '
conriel,

1:

Rentals

OR

[Darvest ABargain...

Holiday Inn
Golllpollo, OH
Thu111d•r, Dlc•mber 5, 1111
10A.M.

Reap The Rewards ...
len You_Turn To.

41 Houaes for Rant
2 Btdroom 1200 Month In
Mooon. Pluo U1QIIIoo, Roforonco
And Dlpoolt, 304-87!1-12IMI.

1-t00-7211-2778

3 Room houH In town: Wtttr,
traoh paid. Soc. dop. r!MI'od.
$1Wmo. 114-441o4172 or 441'
1034.

The Classfieds,

MIThe Boun~ Is Yours!
Now that the weather lw cooled
down, why not •eatthlags up bit .
by clearing your closets, attic ot
basement of thpse uaftllted items
and advertising them for sale Ia
the ClWiftedsP
And, you can put tbat extra
cash to good use by dteddog
the CIWifteds for local prage
sales, flea markets and bargains ·
In your aeck of the woods.

a

..

To put the CliNiftedJ to work for JliU,
call our ad-viMrt, Monday-friday 11

446-2342
675-1333
992-2156

3-BR on Lincoln ·Hg1o.,
Pitmoroy. 114-112-718t aftor
8:00pm
3l&gt;r Ho-· 112 Milo From Chy
45831,
Llmllo, Gnoon School Dlotrict,
DRIVERI NEEDED
.RoflriiiCO And DlpooH R•
· fjl400-IOO-Otlll5010 wllly, wilt train, drivt qulrld.
oftor lp.m.
co 01r, 1-I00-28t-Sif7.

Entry Lavll Rlloll Mona~ont
Poolllon
,Avallbo lo
fond
R....,.. To: 1oM CLA 100,
c/GGolllpollo. DollY Tribuna, 825
Thl"' Avon.., Clollipollo, OH
4A31.
WO!k """' homo 160 · per 100
proportng ..R. lnlonnotion
IOnd ....., to IU. EnlorllrhH
P.O. llol 1117-JIIWm'1~;\,do, NJ
07201. Phono 201·
,
12

SH.u atlon
)Vantacl

·--nl

_,.1141

'

.....
hot110
Pontoroy,
lmmodlotod,

In
poe-

lion, 114-1112·2112 ovonlngo I

wookondo, 112-~111 dop
S1nall Unfumlohod Houoo 3
R.._, Bllh, Air Condftlon\ng 1
C.rpotod, Dr.,.,.... serPorch, Prtvatl Paning, I~
2102.

Taking ai::,':lono !or ranting 1
11-bdrm
In Roolno, 1250
ptuo dop, ond oloct I goo, 614141-2217
.

42

MobRe Homes
torRent

FOntllo..--to
....,.. l!liriMonl· wnhrM alhor 2 bdrm moltlto homo for ront,
glrlo; I min. from o.U. c...puo, oppm. 3 mlloo """' Pomoroy &amp;
ooll 11+H242M or 114-ltZ·
:Z~· tolol -ric, 11411027

';,:"hod•

2...
8 112 ntiiH
N.W. of ·
Co. Coutloll Rt. :11. llitiutlfut - I Y oat·
•!nl. Lilli, ,.,.,.. an. ind

=· =·
713-1.7

utli'l:.... ":'J:

•z:?'
=--~· . . .

2 .......

-~

ilmllhld

with
Run Ad,·

...,n..,_,

Rllroln _ ljowlllloo-llom a lA, furnllltotlar
ll•lntrt ~ 11111n1 v."er Clllll M'ltll't. llludful rtwer
Plaia. ca11 Totltiy, f'14.411.4mn - ' " ICorloUtla. ,......lloblll
Algl•tratiDn~'mll.
Home Ptll. .....111•1.

.....acl to Do
18 W.,.,

211rHomo With au Hoot
On 11U11 . ,PIO'trto. Pluo

Wll ....,." lrl My Homo Olpoolt, 1M 44111111 Allor
Anwtiorto.
fle!lrtoy
Ml..l lp.111.
A¥ttfliblo. Cd lit I~IR::-::In-:-==-=:::l::,-no.__p:t=e.-:12:::00::
:_ . ,
mo. plut
• 11t • 31fT.

:.':r:""

Household

Goods
GOOD • usED APPUANCES
waoMnl, dryor-.;--..rttgtmcn,
rongoo. Skotlfll • - • ·
U- Rl- R&lt;l. Boo~ Slone
~1. Cl!l 114-4411-~.Hoopltal bodo, ~· flU

Cni"'

56

lor Sala

===··

Loti, rtnllll. pwta, NIH. Clll

114-1112-11171.

111e ~ CIIMrl
I£.~.AifllrD

48 · E:qulpment
lor Rent
Loa Spllt1or

For Rant. Evono

Moloro,l14-441~

Merchandise
51

Household
GOQds

5 ploco oil whno BR oullo wtth
mlltMO I bot&lt; oprlngo. ldoal
gift tor young lady. 114-441·7231.

Boautltul Solid Ook Dining
Room Sub, Almool 2 Yoaro
Old, Llko hlowl &amp;1,100. can Aftar
4p.m. 6'+418-8411.
County Appllonco, .Inc. Good
uood. appllon- T.V. oMo. Ol&gt;on
8 t .m. to 1 p.m. Mon ..Sat. h4·
441·11'!.,. 127 3rd. Avo. Gal·

Slgno: -blo .......... Cltongooblo 1.111• Sign $281. Fr•
UltotiiDollvory. Jllolllc 1111.,.
$47.60' boM. A.U Signa 1-

Llve,s tock .
.,...............,......,...,.;l;,..;.,;..~~ Sioux Volvt Cirindor, 3 Yoaro ,
10 wook o1o1 baby plga, 814-148- Old, Uko - ; Sloult Soot OUt· .
2017
·
IM, Quldo Toolo.t. AIIIIOII 5K In- .
-tad. Orton ur Tr- Con-' .
11M AOHA llf - 1 Mar1; oldorod, 114-441-2301.
Big 11110 AQHA Cltlltnut otidlng; 2 Honoo Trohr, Now Polnl, 79
campers&amp;
t1.tt5. 114-281 1522.
Motor Homes
VETERINARIAN.
Dr. Bill Crank, DVM. Largo A·1 cOndition, Dodge, 2311., 360'
onlmal opoclaMr. 304-1711-'173. motor, new tires 1nd brak11,'
304..lt-11161. .
114-1112-21114
Cullom Llvootocl/ Hauling. Can
Haul To Hllloboro Sllol Dr L,o.
col~,
Cltucll
Wllllamo
Trl oc:II.OCinlok TNCklng. 81424-60111,
Groin fod, y~lr-·• ~r,
holt or wltolo, 11. tb on tho roll,
8144111-27U
Ll,....ln Solo • 8 r1glolorld

:""u:~n"

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

U,....ln and nlco
~3-3451 Anytime.
yoa~lng Llrttoutln&amp;nto bulle,
SUrDI.. Army camoutlauge lolling cowo - u • of lnl....,,
llpoUt, ut1
clothing, lnoulltod · docron · I..14-8=1118-:.;:.27U,::..__,,...---camoufl•uge co¥tr1lle 130, ::-Pon 1
loathor US .Combtt 8-. CorYhoroo tor oolt. Call
Ita~ clothing, old timor kntfl onytlrno, 1.14-441·1171.
doalol. Som llomorvllo'o .t.!""" &amp;4
Groan Yolvoloon oolo and chair, dyvtlo wv Poll unlco,
Hay &amp; Grain
304-8711-1832.
Rt. 21 N. F~, 811, Sun, lliJOIIof:OO :.O~~~~.;,;:.=-.--"~LAYNE'S"FURNITURE- Complole homo lumlohlngo,
1 numt..IM-2
.
Houri: Mon-Sat, 8-5. 114-4411- Uood Ulolllto oqulpmont, In0322, 3 mlloo 0111 Bulovlllo Rd. cluding wholo oyotom with Ground llhll ••n, l110/lon 1 12
Fr10 Dlllv•ry.
·
docodo111 rocolv•, dloh ' I
parcont Food, 112011on nay
docodor, o14-IIIH173 •
rol111 US. llcwgan Form, .Itt. 35.
-Mtyt1g.1Uto Wllhtr, good cOnd
304..
Yottulo wood otovo w~h bloioor
working cond, 304,.7(-35!14.
&amp; Ill -.odod to oM up. Vary Hay lor lllo: $1.28 per bolo 114PICKENS FURNITURE
1h1rp. $271. Stepmnttr lllllr· l'IZ-2411 or 114-317-11111
'
hlow/Uood
...... 150. 114-2411-11380.
HouHhold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Hly: lntoll boloo. lolunloy only
Jorricho Rd. Pt. Ploount, WV, Whht R1bblt Fur Coli, Erttf.. pickup. _,..1132.
lont Condllon, SID 'Modtum
call304-8711·1410.
Wornono, tall Ahar 7p.m. 114- Now
Fa,_.
Tobacco
RENT20WN
441o0014.
wa-•,
Rlllloy,
Ohio.
s.to
114-4411-3158
Floor Avoroao tl.14.011 Nov. 21.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
V1'111 Fumltu~
R- ~~- 111.14.14 Nov.
Sola I Chair, &amp;11.10 Wook· Ron Allloon, 1210 Socond Solo
211. Will ooll 4 diye - k until·
Roctlnor, 15.47 Woak, Swtvol Avonuo, Gallpotlo, Ohio, 114· Doc.
11. Call colloct 11:1-:112·
.
Rocker" $3.113 Wook.~unk Bod 4411-43311.
4311 oo1t lor Orvlllo Whalon or
Complllo M.41 WMk, 4 Drawer Wu~ltzor Plono, Good Condi- Ed.._,M-.30M71-1181.
ChaM, U .28 Wook; Pootor Bod· lion, ~load AI: SIOO; AeroOm Suhe, 7 pc., $11.11 W..k, kl
-· ••• - ·
lncludiO Boddlng.COiottry Plno ng:
··--··
.
Transportal ton
Dlnotto WHh Bonch I 4 Cftolro, 55.
BUilding
110.111 · Wook.OPEN: Monday
ThN Sllurdoy, to.m. to lp.m.1
Supplies
Suitdoy 12 Noon Thl llp.m. •
71 Autos lor sate
Mlloo Oft Routo 7 On Routo 141, Block, brick, -or lllpoo, win1141 WIIIYI Joop, ncollont
In Centenary.
dow, llntlt.. etc. Claildl Win- !hapo,
112 lutfernUI Avo.,
SWAIN
IOtt, Rio Orondo, OH tall 114•
AUCTIDN &amp; FURNITURE. 62 .:2;,;45;;.-11;,;2;.;1;..,_ _ _ _ _, Poritoioy, - 1ml Oldt Cutluo, porting out.
Ollvt St., Golllpollo. Now &amp; Uood ,111111 1M2.
tumn.... h~o\'le .wootom a 56 Pets for Sale
31511.
o.~;-;;;r-s;;j;p;-;;p:iiiti - Toblrct, 211!, $700. 1177
Uood rotrtgorotor lor oalo. Call
~ 111iOCI
••, obo.
-1AI
·Dodgo
loW
mllllga
after a, 114~
112 ton lruok, -311:11.
YrRA FURNITURE
~~
- Cllrnlor ~ 380 q,
10W?UIIII.
LIVING ROOM: Bolo • Choir,
Coeur
$1111.00~ Rocllno'6o t148.00; Me · Roglolorod
- 1 -kor, 118. ; Cottoo a lponltlo, WOmtod And-· I 1lli Dido II A - , OICOIIonl
End T-, ...00 . ..DINifjO Woolto01d. 114-31H112.
- ·... tiOOO; 114-112-:11011
ROOM: Toblo ,With 4 Padclod
!Ill BJII!tl 4 Cvtlndor, Good
Chalro, $141.00i. COiottry il1no
~n:...... $800,
Dlnotto With nnch And 3
Chalro, 8211.00;' Mota= 2
Ita~ 'fawn oor, OXCIIIonl
0.... HH~ 1341~
.00
Sol; 0111 llblo,
2
•
oond, now Mlcholln llrM~.c now
low
....
·Chalro,
YI"Yf root • hoodllnor, ri,ooo
.....,, M,OOO, 114-112-3410
-Ai.IIOROOM: _ . , room lull• Cl "-~• 1341.00; 4
Drl•r CltoOI, 144.11; l..,k DrlgoiM,iMI CatiiiY ......... 1111 Comt10 Ill, mint oondlltd, 122116o·Camplot. FuN lion
lton. Laodoil. T~opo. - · olr,
lot. 1101. ..;_ 7 _110. Coder 1M 411 ....... 7,....
onAto, tilt, AMIFM c o -.
llldroont lilllo, -.OO.DI'IH:
wfndaw dolroMor, lUSt 1
~ Tltru . .-~~IIi. to
mH11. , _ cw ltft.311
........ Sundar 12
n11
per month. - - • .._,
lll.rn., 4 Mlloo Oft A- 7 On
mlllplo. cat! 114-44N711 or
A'oute 141 In Contonory.

..

:nii~~=~.-::...~=g :,~ ""c:'ar.~~*:.-~:

37-2011. '.

- boot..,

w.

•

(RI Stereo. C
(J) M_...-ot Mldlligftt (P1
(J)

boxer·a r . dlughter.

til (l)

I

=r. .

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

·~-·

82

•

114-

Plumbing &amp; ·
Heating

84 · · Electrtcal &amp;
Refrlgaretlon
-nllal or - wl~ng. now or ripolro.
lloolor Uoonood -~alan,
A - Eloctrloll, 104-m1711.

ff1

Upholatery

;:::::::~=-~~.:..,-,_
-..,.·o Uphoi ..-.. !ntllrf -~•roo iii;:_, Tho

fliit In tumburo upnolitorf""
can
30W711-41M tor ,... 0::

,..
S1ereo. .,.

·

ill • • 1!...........

Th&amp; flre dePirlr!tlnt rncues
Wood from I batllroom

windOw. s-. D
\Ill. MOVIE: PeriJ Muon:
Tha C.u ot tha Avetllfttg

Act (2:00)
0 Mur!Mr, lha Wnllll
an Stlge stereo.

a
aIll ,,Prince
..,•"•••
Vafllnt

EEK AND MEEK

Q

i:OIHil MOVI!: Gone Willi tha

"'IU DON'r HE;AR MUCH
Aea.IT" "'THE 'NeN KIDOON
THe et.OCK" AI-NNm.FE.

Wind (4:401
1:30 We fiJ 111ooaom Blotsom
and Six wonder what ~
would ~Ike to ba lllatera.

I V.ONDER
WHAT eE'CloME
OF TI·II:;M •

Stereo.
ill II M110r Dati The
Major'a new lob ttaa him

HK
tu

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

-

Eul

rtporting to Lt. HOiowaehuk.
(R) Stereo. I;!

111 an 1t1ge s -.
llllltlck 8tlftiOn Q

ACROSS

1:00 We 11J MOYIE; 'A Llltll
Pre. of HN-' NIC .
MontlaJ Night 111111 Movlee
12:001Stereo.C
(J) !lle AICMondaJ Night
Foolblll Eegiea 11 Ollera(LI

t - Evono

til &lt;!l Cfi!ltlhootlln America
Five pretaped oegrnente from
the ChildhOod Ht'lel are
played biCI&lt; In • I1Udlo
where a group ot15-20
proiUtiOilalt comment on
tha reporta. 11:301 D
Ill • • MulpltJ lifown
Murphy. CIUMI I pullllc flap
when a joke Ia liken aa a

~~=·&amp;.
Wrealllt~t

8~~U:'M;111rlet
Gl Nllllvtlle Now Stereo.

•

BARN
AUNT

1:301-~lOUigrtlng women .

I DIDN'T AST FER
WHDt.E DADBURN
CAKE II

LOWEEZY··

CAN I HAVE -·
A SLAB OF YORE

BODACIOUS
CHAWKLET
CAKE?

ID
......
ACe-Big Eaot Challenge: ·
North C.rollna State vs.
Pittsburgh at Hartford, Conn.

.

AIIIWOtlo ,..,loul

40 llllllcal king
42 DIWn
43 Hlghwar

5 Arllat Stlv•

s-.c-

1HI!l ~ GIRI5rMS
cruEcrtCJ..J OJ &lt;AS5€1TE5
AUO COs 15 IDr PA.AIU\8&lt;t

44 Spoon bancll r - Gtlltr
46- tnd
dow no
48 DloUkod
50 -ROHLH
53Cor-mbltrt' 111n.
54 Platt
58 Actrlll'lt Perlmtn
58 Mollttr of
Mite.
sg Obltctlvt

80 Flrat·rale
(2 wtll.)

61 .N.., lltlp

prtf.

I Otnllll't

82 Televlolon
award
83 Hardy'o
htrolnt

2fndlanmaltl

6 Trtumpltani
'"clam IliOn
7 SNnkt
•

4 Uneuc:ceeoful
car
5 Chtll of
drtwtrl

DCenter of :
lltleltl
•
1D Tonnla lholl"

dog.

3 Fulen

DOWfll

n::-....9
0100 Club

RoblrtMn
10:30til Fonllft

tltnotoo.

11:00&lt;11e Ill II._IIJ Newa

§e

I'

I

•

Cout,t ~

CZ)Nimatul•
AIMitiO IIIII Stereo.

IICICNI

,

40 Fllltl wtt1t

•

reverence •

51 Sneaker,'·" ·
52 Wlthet (If•• •

a~L. ·

531aklntlplt "

55 lltlec:fiWe

~~,

Spaclll ·

57 Romlft

11:30(1)~

bronu

till!
Journal
A1un1o Hal Ster10. l;l

CELEBRITY CIPHER

..---.. ---...- · ....

c

.
EecltiiiiW In 1M ......... for lnelhr. Todly'l cAit: J..,.,... V.
Ctlolwtty~-'F
y Me • l'
F L
zK M
CliME

GIOII-S!Qo.
• lplltiCenllr
811aiiiYIIM

0 MOVI•: I!ICipt ollha

·

...1.1(2:001
11:35We 0 T._lltow

OY. KZZ .

. . _ CatliUdlft

CWY

OTIIt..,...,.

Gl Net.wli. No,. Stereo.
ID c;ollele lllttllllltt Grlat
Alaakl 8hootout,
oltamplonaltlolram

r

I•

Ancllorlge, Alllkl (L)

' ZFGK ·
l_ .

HMIIIYJPKT,

w

NF I Y

MIK . '

p

c

••

'•'
••• •

,M

C ME

OBKE

YJTMHCKT

Sllreo.
12:00 Ill !lle Nawa
fl]) •

I

'•

IClttna• 'lwldilllulltl'
Tlml Alllr Prtme
Tlnte Stereo.

:

lfiPII'atUI •
45 Local flllltct
47 Htrrtng
•
48 Stconcl-rltl

a....

(J) Nlgllt

11 Alpftabel

c1t1rtng

thla epidemic aN examined.
(0:40) Stereo.
• Clook Inti

'

,,

Plcl

of prenatal drug use and tha
problema lnd aolutlons to

I

•

21 ExUng'*h
24No
25 Blend
2~ Unique
OlfiOII
•
28 Ancient Ito~ :
ian famllr
30 Routine
•
3 t J111111ntH •
htrbl
32 Undormlntt
34 Food ftoh
38 About
3D catch lllght :
ot
•
41 Channe~

A New York dOctor aufforo
culture altock In Alnka. (R)

to look lor romance and you'll 11nd It GEMINI (Mor 21.JuM 20) Time tends
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly to enhance your lucie today Instead of
reveals which algns sre romantically · dlmlnhtltlng it. Be optimistic regarding
perfect lor rou. Mall $2 piUs a long, sell· the outcome of events and proceed In a
addreseed, stamped envelope to positive mlrinar.
.
BERNICE
Matcftrl\akar, c/o this MWSpaJ)er, P.O. CANCEl! (Juno 21.Julr 22) You might
BEDE OSOL Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. ·be a bit more restless than UIIUII and
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-.llri. 11) Some- deolrous of doing something active and
thing you've been hoping would happen 1\!n todar. Fortunately, you should lind
In the near future might be much closer some friends who are of the same mind·
\
than you thin~ . Keep proceeding on set.
your preaent couroe.
· LEO (Jutr D-Aug. 22) Your Hnanclal
AQUARIUS (.lin. 20-Feb. 1tl Be watch· prospeetslook quite atrong today, snd
lui lor commercial opportunities today. gains are probebleln two areas. Onals
They might coma about In an U'18XfliiCI· 1rom your car- while lho other could
ed man-. and you'll have to think and come lltrough a relailve .or family
respond qulclcly.
, member.
.
.
PIICEI (Fill. »Moi'CII20) You could VIRGO (AIIfl. G-lepl. 22) All you'll
be quite !UCkJ today In your one-to-one have to do today to get .othalo to 1111p.
Dlc.3,18t1
deallnga with olltera, especially with two port your propouls Is to lftOW proper
p8Qple with whom you've been prevl· Initiative. Lead and they will fOllOW,
You may be luckier In the year ahead oualy fortunate. .
'
LIIRA (lept. D-Oct. 211 lnnuencea
being with lndlvldualo you know casual· ARIEl (Miroh 21·Aprtt 11) Your probe· that have 111 en.ct upan your material
ly than being with friends of long otanel· biiHioo lor material ~tlon look well·ball)tl •
promlolng todar, not to
lng. tilOn't neglect your old pals, but · vary encoureglng todar. Focus your ef. mentloh unuiiUitf. Othorl might end up
continue to make as many !1tw ac· , for1t on developmentt that are mater!· doing more lor you thlll you'll do tor
· qualn- as poulble.
.
. ally r-dlng.
• )'OUI'IIfl.
SAGmANUa (NoV. D-Oec. 21) Chal· TAUAUI (Apri»MMIJ 20) You're vary ICOIIPIO (0111. :M-Noor. 22) Thall
Iengei tend to awaken your better qual- charismatic today, and the lmpresalon .might be unexpected revtalone In your
!tiel end nobler attrlbutet today. Tha you'il make on othorl .wlll be favorable. · IOCfal pl11no today, but don:t 181 It upset
methOda yoil'll uae to I'IIIOive problema · You'IINPtCiall)iwow those nieetlng you you, You'll 1t1joy you!Mfl wherever you
could ba quite lngenloua. Kn"?W where lor the flrat time.
·
O!llnd whltever you do.

8 Not cletn

II Forf111

10:00(1)-·.
Ill 111• Nor1ham ••patUN'

(!) Drug lllblel The

""ule

curvt

dor9 Guma
12 Group ollwo
13 Blblau14 Crowd
15 POVChol
11 wr•tt17 UK broatl'callert
t8 Soltlond20 Pralu
22- Anr.le•
23 Sign I HI~
out (abbr.)
24 Flying IIUCtr
(lbbr.)
27 Look II
zg Sou11tt11t
Wind
33 Gltnt
. lttktrl
35 Soft tll(nlt
36 Cuttomtr
37 Hlgfleet
brtnch

(L)

ASTRO-GRAPH

241.fll2.

Ill • ...,_

MacGyver trlto to ,.!IC)Ue a

Stereo.

SOlll'll
UQJ 109
UKQ3

+

1 ol2)(2:00)

- - . ,.,..... wv

put up YIIIJI

t QS
.QJI03

Rabbi Shapiro bad just said goodbye-·
Pus
Pus
Pus
to the last of the Hanukkah worshipPus
Pus
Paa
ers. He was happy. Not only did.he like
Pus
Pus
to tell tbe story of the Maccabees, but
also be had a bridge game organized
Opening lead: K
lor the afternoon.
·
And that started beautifully lor the
Rabbi. His two-club openiDc iD the
first deal ,.as strong, artificial and
forcing. He alerted his wife's threeclub rebid, uplaining that it was a king doubleton. A greater risk wu a
double negative showing a very bad bad trump break. The Rabbi· led tbe
band. Regardless, the Rabbi wa5n't spade queen from bill band.
·
kolng to stay out of.game with one of
U East won with the spade kill&amp; ani!
tbe best bands be bad ever held.
playecj his' last club, tbe ruff would be
"I did warn you, Sam," said the Rab- taken iD the dummy. Therefore, Eut
bi's wile as she tabled her cards.
ducked. But now the Rabbi enleretf
West led the club king, under which dummy with a heart to the jack ud
East dropped the .queen, indicatiDg el· .took a trump finesse. When it WGII, be
ther a siDcleton or the Q-J. West coa- ~the spade ace. The king dltla't
tinued with two more rounds of clubs, tlrop _but be was able to claim bill eoq.
1
tbe Rabbi rulllng.
· · ·.• trac&lt;, cubing lila red'iwt wiiuiei'i uii!
The Rabbi could enter tbe dwnmy til East opted to ruff.
•
and take a trump finesse, but be saw
"Well played, darling!" uclli111ei
that there was little advantace in .this the Rabbi's -Wile. ·-'
•
play. It would benefit only if East bad
"Thank you, Lucyle."

blaement.

gtt trapped In tha

763

•sa

By nllllp Alder

7:35(1)11nlonlllctn
8:00
tiJ , ..... Prince of
Ill ,.. Will lnd hit glr1frllnd

304-811~ Ohio ·~41-2484 .

oltl~lng.

EAST

A happy result
.on a happy holiday

IIICtouftlt

FtMmort .. Plumbing And Hool·
lng, 114-l!le-1111.
Ron'o TV BorY1oo; -"'llzlng
In ZanMh oliO llrYiclng moOt
oUwr lnnda. ttou. Clllll, a!ID

••ltd
roant,
oldlng cw troller

.K

-

,_u,

Roofl!!ll,

Will build polio ....... dockol

2
'J94

ALDER

Gl Ia 1 Slit Stereo.

I 'l.. :1.

11-1-11

•a

PHILLIP

; WhHI of For1une Q
a•
Foud .

Kltaltono And Botho. FriO EitlmatMI 'A...,.,..ctl, No Job To
llg Dr Smoiii114-441-G228.

~214.

NpRTH

•vu

IJl• Mai'rled...With Children

~

--Voo

I

. +97643

f~,lnment Tonight

STCR'S ...

Dlvto
Sor\llco,
01a. CNelc Rd. Plitt. eupo
plloo; jllckup, ond doiiVOtJ, 114-

I

I

' ~L,~r~S

Newer Home._ Room Acldhlont,

-

bv filling in the miuing words

develop from oltp No, 3 below:

7 30

a

Work,

· YO&lt;J

JRIDGE

IIIMoneJIIne
Ill Tilt WIIICIIII
7:05 &lt;ll Add8mt Family

Hom
Improvements

Foundation

Complete the ch\'Cklo quotod

YOUNG!"

Chlllenge:
Wake Fornt VI. Connecticut
at Harti!)Od, Conn. ILl

Serv tces

eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,
Uncondhlonol 111otlmo guol'llt- .
too.,Locol roflrlnc• turillohod. .
FtM otllmatoo. "C.Q colloct 1·.
114-237-D411, day or night.
A.... a-.. nt Wotorpr11'!1~pl ..t Mobllo Homo SM·Upo,_
Ropolro; Comntorlcol, Rooldon1111 lmpro-o. Including:
Pl"'"blng. Elec:trlcol. ln•ronco
ClolmoAi:coptod. 114-211·1111.
Curlla Homo . lm-lniO:
Yooro Experlonco On. Otdor &amp; .

.

ACC-Big

(IJ 1HE

81

. . •

leollaae.2
.... .
East

1004'/3.1516.

63

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~ THESE SQUARES

~t.':~

----1

Matahlnlion and womono
roautar
loo, 1naroon with
wliltowoH I r10, llko now, $110.
for bolh, 304-87S-$l13.
Rill Dr Mlct? In Your - ?
Buy ENFORCER, Kille tllo a·
mlu In only 1 foodlng;
GUARANTEED! Avlllablo ol:
Bo- TNO Ylltll Storo, 11 w.t
lloln Slrlll, Cftoolor, OH
AMI Dr Mlco? ln .Your - ?
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo &amp;
mtco Itt only 1 foodlng,
GUARANTEED!. Avolloblo ol:
0'0111 Tt111 Yoluo Lu_,, 134
Eoll Main Strlll, Pomeroy, OH ·
Rocondh- W-tl I
dryor1, oach 1100 ond up. Wo
oarvtco.ol moltn. Tho Wo- 1
Dryor Shoppo. 114-4411-21144.

A
9

•

SCL\M.LETS ANSWERS
.. .. ,
Domain- Grope- Taunt .:. YOOder ~ ToO YOUNG
Alter a long time of never ending bad news on our
local newscast.my daughter got up !o leave t,he room
and announced, "I can't listen anymore, I m TOO

b::!!t~

-··--·

•

ANSW~

~=tr.=a­

uctod 72 ll'iJCkS fOr sate
coil ng lono, '114'411111-4227
AKC
liog'od
mlnllluro 1810 GMC S - Plck.Up, ~Y ,
Schnauzer puppl•: flmalt utt ~ Tlr• Good, Rune Good, Air, PS,
52 Sporting GoodS
&amp; poppor, &amp;150. tall mornlngo &amp; , PB, Ellro II!Jior And Tranomto-;
wookondil. 114-2.111-1313.
lion. 614-448-!3112.
1811 Chevy Luv, $410. 304-175Shar-Pof Pupo: Juo1 In Tltno For 2148.
1
· Chrlot..... II400·Eoch. 304-5211- :::1m='GM=c~s::torr=o-:.314:::-:ton=-=-,:::hH=vv=
5114, 304-823-zt08• • -.
d
dtooal " PSIPI .~
lilY,
. ~r,
'or-•·
~- Howklno Cougoro. S7
Musical
e14 o4a 2358.
•
Motch aot 45 1 50 conbtr. Oor·
tnon ollvar lntar. Coli 114-2411Instruments ·
1441.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
lou~~ :ZOO, Coil Mlko Kin·
11111 DodfiO Holt-Ton Yin With
53
Antiques
cado!
15-2410.
311 Malor, Excollont Tlrooi -::'/
~~-=-'--:--:::-:--:
Bonor Than Fair, $87S. I 4
Anllqlil Rooowood Stodo~ 58
Fruha&amp;
01511 E-lngo.
.
Plano Wl1h Lyr1 Shopod Foot
-lo, Modo Bot-1150 And
Vegetables
1171 CJ8 . iMP. aood cond,
1180. Calll14-241-1152.
Ajl~lot- R..-bio Prlcod. Fot· $2,000. 304-f711'4431,
Buy or ooll. Al-lno Anllq-, tor o Fruh Form, 811 143 1 milo 1111 Chevy · :1/4 Tori, 4 1124 E. Main SlriM, Potnoroy. SOI!Ih of C.rponter, follow Drlvo, 4 Si&gt;ood...._3f10 Air Can·
1 Slft'001.
Hour1: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00 ~gno.OponSIIurdoylom-llpm · · dhlonlng, nn· ...._,.
p.me!'r* 1:oo to a:oo p.m:
114-m'ml.
. .
114 -asaf..
1~ Dodao Mull YMt, oqutp.
Farm Suppl1cs
ood tor camping ind troYollng.
54 Miscellaneous
Ex!ro -n. aood point, - • no
&amp; Livestock
Merchandise
oil. tall A. E. Knatto, Sr. 1114'
. 4441-lillll
Attonllon Buol- Dwnlrl And
1188 ~or Crutoo, TIM,
Emptoytoo: Anordoblo · hloofth -61-F--""-•1
tnouronco · For Tho Sol~
arm Equ pment
AMIFM ta•••••· xLT Paokogo.
EmiiiOvtd, WV I OH. 614-&lt;146- Alii• ..chol- D-17, Oioool, Loto ~~-~ n.ooo
NASUnytlmo.
Ptowo, Cullvotcw.._ !Jroln 'Drill, Mlloo. I
117.
•
50 MF Hllh Mowor, 1188 Ford Ranger STX, $34110.
CHRISTiiAS TREES, 1"1"" on $2,750;
Plow• Cullvotor, 13.2!01..Ownor 114-441.ont. ·~
·
:
Sonlo'l Foroot, cut olmool dolly. Wlllrlnonco.
IM-28i-U:O..
Largoot ooltctton In oroa. Prlcod
to •II. lint•'• Forett Farm AHention Dllrymon And . F•· ::74::::-::::Mo~t:::b:.:rc-i:y::-c~le=s:::-':::­
oo111 lOCI opon at tonn on Rt. 17 ,.., Affordable hlooHh lno
and Pr~omlption Sh-, 21th ouronco For Tho Solt-Emolond. 1171180 4 Cyllndor HOndo, 61481. and JockOort Avt, Doc. 4th.
WY I OH. l~.lSE, _44.;....;.113111.=-----Anytlmo.
Chrlotmu T,_, Sontl'o EIYH
76 Auto Pans&amp;
Troo Form..J m11t1 fivnt Point Jlm'o Fonn~ulpnonl, SR. 35,
,..._, ':;... 2_Nort..!!t, Eckard W_, Oolll
Accessories
, 114-448-lm;
Cltapol Rd, """", ...,.., '
Wldo
·
now
I
uood
firm
troctoro I , lmpletnonto. Buy, 11 112 n. .truck bod. 114-4411For oolt: 420 John DIOtt Dour Hll, kodo, I :ON:OO wlllldoyo, 33118.
I 11188 Oodao 1-lon Uuck, 114- Sot. Ull Noon.
2·111517S/14 otuddod onow Ur1o,
112-:1117, coW aftor Bpm
•
- now. 1-31" whbo olonn
For oolo: Ladloo olio 11, cantil Joltrt
DoordlllenJrttlollock,
4020, dutl - ·
·
hydrallct;
John
color wrap eoel, ,..,., worn.
front ond good 14 Pontile Grand P~1 Y-11
Aloo, ml-o IIIII 14-18 dtMoy Door s14-11Wta
motor. 17.000 actUII mllea. $350.
ciOChH, vtry ,ro-oblo, 114- cond.,
112,.111
'
MF :zt11 Troctor, Shlrpl MAllO; 814-211H111.
MF WMh Buth Hog, oko, Now 111 t•nu, body porto, ...
GoUla Tl- Producto SptM U
Boler, And MoWing IJachlno, ton
whoolo, rodlaiOrl;Fl-ood DIRvorld, Wo A-.&gt;1 13,150;
Owner Will Flnonco, 114- fl- lruelt
..... lie. D I A All.o,'
hloop And .::;,...., Ae- 211,.522.
.ttlnce, 814-4
•
Rlploy, WV. 304472-3833 or' 1·

.

Ill New Zorro Q

'D.

siqe." sayslhemom. "'hclad."
theda. ~ght. eryeils, •••• said --·!"

I

.., UNSCR.AMBLE FOR .

1:35 (I) AiNIJ Giltllllt
7:00~· 11J W11M1 ol For1une

. Bioodld, 1 Mal01_ 1 l'imolo, 8
-k• Old.I14..C,..7113. . 4. malo pupDioo, I wko old,
ml1od, 304-11'11-20711.
.
AKC Chow pupploo: con hold
tor Chrfllrnao. 1200&gt;
dlt-

I
.,I-..TI G

ER 0 M· M Y
~s:-rl·"·"'.;.;1;.:6;;.·-i~~.
'"'-l

ae cae."'*' Q

110.-.

.~ .

r

1;1

WHcl
Anll!lcl'
~,.
Ont
.
Stereo.

I 2 Anlo~on Eoklmoo ISttlll) Filii

•oo.

l

"Can 1 !;lave ·some ice

'1.- 1 1 r cream." the~daughter nagged.
1
'":~-~-~~-:;;::·~..:.,"I'm on the phone.. Go .out·

Ws

.I

1

.,.A_B.,.- t~ ! :t,.

t--r.H_E-r-C

1:30~~~ :C~"C Q
. (J) Ill. Aile
Q

~~~~:.hodPold, ~~;';',:'[' Silo~ :u~~"':lt:r:• .J~'l:,a,': . :~.::.~~~.:~~~.

31 Homes lor Sale

And

51

Fumlohod .1 BR, .~A, oal·ln
kKchonj lg.,porch1 $2111 mo. Soc.
d•t· ruroncn. o14-44&amp;-2238 C.!
11
2581
'4411·
'
.
Fumlohod 3 Rooml • Both,
Cloln, No Pot~ Roltronco .I
Oopoab Roqutr~ . ~-44&amp;-1111.

Rea l Estate

IDUpc:to.
·
Ill World Tacley
Ullin Tin Tin, K·l Cop
1:01 &lt;ll a...t1y Hlllfllel

114,4411-.....

- cor.-~.
............
lion
111,100,Good
For 1mora
lnforo
motfoit Call 114-44W3&gt;12, Aok
lor"""'·
.,
&gt;
1188 HOndo -.r LXI . 5
~. 1 ow~ 42,000 mh..,
oxc oOnd,
304.e7S-43011.

"

gi!i:SQ

At-lD IT SAYS TI-IATALTI-IOV6H HE I-lAO FAME AND FORTUNE, l-IE
NEVER SEEMED HAPP'(, A~D NO ONE &amp;EALL.'t' KNEW Wl-l!( ..

, . . . Oltflrnoltllo• Dolti . If
~1 _E1r¥00 Mlloo, 15,500:

"

A J p

-·.

CK

.
¥

WI P

OKIK

EMTGKY

' .

IIWJHC., ,;

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Tha worat pan about baing tno Is
Wltll me to mako them Iough." - Jeck Lommon.

F

'

F

"'I '

wflon PIOPII",.

�.

•

•
I

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich
The business sections of our
towns really look attractive for the
holiday season-nice atmosphere.
And I have never seen so many
lights glowing at homes so early. I
hope you or I don't wreck the vehicle as :~~e gawk at all of the sights.
Thanks to all of you who go all out
to make the county so anractive for
the rest of us at this time of the
year.'
And what did Mary Wise, dedicated Middleport Arts Council
worker get for Christmas? Unfortunately, a fr~ctured ankle. Mary ·
lost her footing in some wet shellac
while working at the council's
quarters with the broken ankle as a
result. A bone fracture probably
was one of the last things Mary
wanted for Christmas.
Mrs . Charles (Leona) Karr
markCII her 86th birthday last Friday. It-was observed low key since
Mrs. Karr is having health problems. She does make her home at
the Extended Care Facility at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

•

Public officials .are constantly
under criticism so it was refreshing
to hear Meigs Sheriff Jim Soulsby
receive high praise for his work
and cooperation at the annual
Meigs County Fair Board appreciation dinner. Board member Dan
Smith was enthusiastic in his praise
for the work of Sheriff Soulsby and
his department during the fair.
Smith commented that at convention he hears constantly complaints
on what a problem security is at the
fairs in other counties. Members of
other fair boards are amazed at the
cooperation and help provided by
Soulsby, Smith concluded.

' wanted to place a
If case you

heart on the memorial ttee of the
Meigs Division, Al!lerican Hean
Association, located at the front of
the courthouse you can call, Den·
ver and Nora Rice, at 991·3759:
Millie Midkiff at 992-5728 or 992·
2133; Donna Carr at 992-3222; or
Sandy Iannerelli at 992· 7039 or
992-7606. The cost is $5 per heart.
There seemed to be some confu·
sion on just how to go about get·
ting hearts placed on the tree.
Hence, the phone numbers and that
should get the process all cleared
away.
·
The Meigs Home Health Nursing Service will be holding an open
house from I to 3 p.m. at its quaeters in the Meij§ Medical Building
adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Everyone who has used llle ser·
vice-and there are many-are
welcome to turn out for the event
which marks the 20th anniversary
of. the service in Meigs Countythe IOOth anniversary of the service
on a national b~sis. Employees of
the service which is headed by
Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, RN, will be
serving refreshments.
On Saturday we will mark ' the
50th anniversary of Pearl Harbor
Day. Many of us easily recall the
shock that went across our nation
that day-by radi~as we learned
about the attack. How do we handle remembering-) mean since
everyone seems to have kissed and
made up after all of that tragedy?
Do we stop our Japanese cars along
the highway for a moment or
remembrance; not use our Japanese
cameras that day-or perhaps, even
shut down our computers? Don't
look at me. I don't know the
answer. I just know that whatever-you goua keep smiling.

•

··r

In. Washington, 150 peopl!l
turned out in the rain to light candles and 2,200 Christmas lights
dedicated to AIDS victims at the
Whitman Walker · Clinic. The
crowd included many AIDS
patients and friends and family of
AIDS victims.
In Seattle, 1,600 panels of the
14,000-panel International AIDS
Memortal Quilt were displayed.
Another section was.. displayed at
the High Museum of Art in
Atlanta.
,,.

.'

I-

•

I

.'

'

.Os.

Page4

l

•

.•

•

·••'•
•

•'.
•'
•

'•.
~~.s.......DOLL DISPLAY • A portion of Suzy Carthere. Tbe display wUI remain in place tbrough·
penter's doll collection is on displ~y at Bank
out tbe bolidily season. ' ·•
One in Rutland .ror the enjoyment or customers

•
Vol. 42, No. 148 .
Copyrighted 1181

1 Secllone, 10 P-un 25 0111111
Allulllmedlll Inc. rill•• prper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 3, 1991

Alternate bid accepted on·new sewage system
By BRIAN J. REED
' Sentinel News Starr
. Pomeroy Village Council·
approved a portion of .the village's
new sewage system when they met
in regular session Monday night.
Council voted last night to
approve a sludge de-watering sys. tern 10 use in conjunction with the
new system, with Council Presi dent Larry Wehrung casting a dis-

senting vote on the proposal.
· Tile system~apploved Monday
night was pre:rented tO· the village
by the project engineer as a
"dcducti ve alternate" to the base
bid.
The low base bid on the project
was received from Titus Construe·
tion, Inc., and was considerably
above the architect's estimate. The
purpose of last night's action was

to replace the expensive vacuum- from the base bid.
assisted system included' in the
·wehrung urged other council
-base bid with a similar system at a members and Village Administralower price.
tor John Anderson to continue conThe project engineering firm, sideration of a third alternative, that
Burgess and Niple of Parkersburg, of a "gravity-type" .system, stating
W.Va., had proposed 1wo alternate that it could be more cost effective
bids, but only the one approved than the alternates recommended
was a vacuum-assjsted system. The by Burgess and Nipl~.
··
alternate accepted last night will
"You owe it to the people of
allow for a $120,000 deduction Pomeroy not to spend more than

you have to spend," Wehrung said
last night. Wehrung also stated that
he felt the system 'ivas,''over engineered" for Pomeroy, requiring
more cost and more facility than
will "ever be needed".
Andersen said that the third system was given careful consideration by both him and Burgess and.
Niple. Anderson pointed.out that
the challenging location of the sys-

..

·tern (in a "canyon" behind Bob
Roberts Field) prohibits the usc of
the grav.ity system, which by design requires a lal'ge space.
.
The award of the project bid has
not yet been made, although the 60
day period between the bid opening
date and the.award date will expire
on December 28.
Continued on page 3

:State board approves $10 million
for juvenile jails in .southern Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- built statewide.
. The Ohio Department of Youth
"In Butler County we have one,
. Services won release of $10 mil- in Belmont county we have one,
lion from the state Controlling and we have a number of others
. Board to build the first of two juve- that are going,to be built, so the
nile detention centers in southern youth will be held locally in dcten·
Ohio.
tion centers and be served more on
Controllers on Monday also a local level. We also are planning
. agreed to let Ohio University buy to build another southern Ohio coran abandoned railroad right-of-way rectional faci lity," Ms. Rankin
· through the Athens. campus despite said.
_
an opponent's objectiOn to the .
A site has not been chosen for.
$12,000-pcr acre cost.
'-'the second center, which will house
The board approved without dis- no more than 150 teen-agers.
cussion release of money for the · Spokeswoman Carol Rapp Zim150-bed juvenile detention center merman said the departments popncar Circleville.
ulation is about 2,220 and climbGroundbreaking is to be held .ing.
Dec ,' 1'0, and construction is
'.'We would ideally have about
~xpected to take 18 months. The
1,400 kids in all nine institutions,"
center will house teen-agers con-. she said.
victed of felony theft and other · "Our general philosophy right
non-violent offenses.
now is that we don't need larger
Teen-agers will be sent to the overall ~apac i ty for the state syscomplex from the Buckeye Youth tern, " she said. The agency faliOrs
Center in Columbus, a 300-bed diversion of offenders into elcc·
institution that is to be phased out.
tronic monitoring, drug rehabilita·
Caroline Rankin, the department lion and other local programs.
legislative liaison, said other
Controllers agreed to let Ohio
youths at the Columbus center University spend $470,000 to buy
would be transferred into regional 37 acres of hmd from CSX Transrehabilitation units that are being portation.

FAREWELL PERFORMANCE· Naomi
Judd, left, wipes lipstick off the face of ber
daughter, Wynonna, at tbe American Music '
Awards In Ibis 1987 file photo. The Judds' last
concert is scheduled for Wednesday In dareweU

concert by tbe motber-daugbter country !JIUSic
duo, airing live on a pay-per view televisioJI spe·
cial. Naomi Judd, wbo suffers from chronic bep·
atitis, plans to become a spokesman for tbe
· American Liver E'&lt;iundalion. (AP)

John Kotowski, the university's
director of facilities planning, said
the propcrt{.scpariucs the residential part o the campus from the
academic and administrative sections.
·
"The tracks ·arc still there, but
they have begun the process of
removing the tracks. As part of the
deal they continue to maintain llle
right to the mil, the ties and the
stone ballast and they're going to
remove that," Kotowski said.
·
Rep. Raben Netzley, R-Laura,
opposed the sale.
"It's ridiculous to pay $12,000
an acre for a narrow sblp of land
like that through Ohio University.
It doesn't have that kind of value in
any way, shape or form," Netzley
said.
In other action Monday, the
board:
-Approved 4-3 an Ohio
Department of ·Develo{lment
request to use $2.8 million frOm the
Ohio Enterpr~se Ji!ond fund to
expand operations of Cons~mer
Direetlnc. in Stark County. Con·
sumer Direct will usc the money to
build an addition and buy machin·
Continued on page 3

Steen freed, leaving only Anderson~
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) American educator Alann Steen
was freed today after nearly five
years as a hostage of Shiite Muslim
extremists, Iran's official news
·agency reported. His release would
be the second in two days.
It would leave just one American, journalist Terry Anderson. still
captive in Lebanon, and augur a
speedy end to the hostage drama.
The Beirut office of the Islamic
Republic News Agency said
Anderson, who was seized in
March 1985 and is the longest-held
U.S. hostage, could be free by the
end of the week.
..
· !RNA, which has been accurate
in reporting previous releases, said
Steen was freed at 10:15 a.m.
somewhere in Lebanon.
He would be the-eighth Western

MID.DLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
observe Past Master's Night on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. with work in
the Master Mason degree. Refreshments will follow the meeting.

In Brilain, Princess Diana was
an honored guest at a benefit
dance, and a chapel was dedicated
as a sanctuary for prayers concerning AIDS.
The French put candles in their
windows. About 1,000 members of
the activist ~roup ACT UP
marched in Pans, where a Christ·
mas tree was hung with 800 ornaments signifying ROO children
afflicted willl AIDS.
The Colorado AIDS Project
held a.candlelight vigil at the state .
Capitol in Denver.

'

••

POMEROY • Application for
Christmas food baskets and toys
will be taken at the Salvation Anny
in Pomeroy on Tuesday and
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon
and Ito 4 p.m. C!ICh day.

By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Skylines
' dimmed in the nation's largest
cities, museums hung blank can·
vases, and condoms were distributed in cities around the globe in
observance of World AIDS Day.
Some 90 New York structures
,_,_ including the Brooklyn Bridge,
the World Trade Center and Times
Square billboards - dimmed for
IS minutes at dusk Sunday.
Skylines also dimmed in. San
Francisco, Chicago, Miami, and
Austin, Texas, and U.S. museums
and galleries observed AIDS Day
WI'th "A Da~
. Without Art."
. Dr. Got ieb Lobe Monekosso,
Africa di'rector o.f the Geneva·
based U.N. World Health Organization, which started the annuaf
event four years ago, spoke at an
observance in Brazzaville, the
Congo. . the 'd . . d .
He SBld
ep• em1c 1s uc m
part to "illiteracy, malnutrition,
poor living conditions, unemploy ·
ment, as well as the lack of facili·
ties for testing blood."
·
South African Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, winner of the
Nobel Peace Prize, spoke at an
interfaith service about AIDS in
Atlanta, where the Martin ~uther
King Jr. Center for Nonviolent
Social Q~nge was offering anony·
mous AIDS ICIIS.
·
Tutu urged people of all fai~s
to abandon the notion that AIDS IS
divine punisbmcnt for homosexuals

Pick 3:434
Pick 4: 3J93
Cards: 2·H, 9·C,
. 8-0,6-S

•
•

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The F.O.E. Auxil·
iary No:· 2171 Christmas dinner
will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m.

shopping centers 'in 'Portugal.
In Bangkok, young women
wearing scout uniforms and whis·
tles passed out condoms.
the American University in
Cairo's AIDS Awareness day featured a videotape of Magic Johnson, the basketball star wbo retired
when he learned he carried the
AIDS virus.

~tt'~

..

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Susan Pullins.

and drug users. ·
' 'It was a neat theory - all too
neat to fit the complexity and mystery of life," he said. "The self·
righteous must find ano!her reason
for gay-bashing."
At the Art Institute of Chicago,
muscum-gocrs saw a blank spot on
the wall where Monet's "On the
Seine at Bcnnecourt" ordinarily
hangs.
New York's Museum of Modern Art put up 13 framed, blank
papers and canvases to "represent
all the works that will never get
shown" because of AIDS, said
Raben Storr of the museum Projects Committee.
The names of people who died
of AIDS were read aloud at the
museum for. five hours. A bell
toUed there and at the Studio Museum of Harlem every I0 minutes to
mark another death from AIDS.
In St. Petersburg, Fla., people
wore red ribbons at the Salvador
Dlili museum and other galleries in
a community program prom01ing
AIDS awareness.
In the Soviet Union, where
homosexuality is a crime, members
of the Russian Union of Gays and
Lesbians passed out free, U.S.·
made condoms and sa,fc-sex litera·
ture ourside Moscow City Hall.
At Tel Aviv University, condoms were handed out and a quilt
bearing names of Israeli AIDS victims was displayed
Lisbon Un1versity pharmacy
students distributed condoms at

,

•

MIDDLEPORT • The First
Baptist Church of MiddlejXlrt will
have a craft bazaar on Monday
from 4 to 8 p.m. at the Western
Auto Store in Middleport. All proceeds go to the church building
fund.

Fourth Annual World AIDS
Day: condoms, art, solemnity

"

· ;&gt;'r"'~......

Chanceor snOW' 60 portent

SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

CONGRATULATJONS • Courtney Baber, rlgbt, of Cincinnati,
receives a c:onRratulatory hand shake rrom Lisa MicbeUe Allison,
left, of Gahanna, Sunday following tbe Miss Obio USA Pageant.
Ms. Baber was crowned Miss Obio USA and Ms. Allison was
named rlfSI runner.-up. (AP).
·

0 hio Lottery

tonlgbL Wednesday, b]&amp;b In 1111d

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or tbat event Items
must be received weD in Jlllvan.ce
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
clerk, Sarah Gibbs.

POMEROY • Women Alive
will have its annual Christmas ban·
quet Monday at 6 p.m. at Dale's in
Gallipolis. Mrs. Millard Downing
will be the speaker.

·~

Eagles
jolt .
Oilers ·

Community
calendar

REEDSYll..LE • The ReedsviUe
United Methodist Women will hold
a soup supper and bake sale on
Monday in the church social room.·
Serving time will begin at 11 a.m.

.

Monday, December 2,

Pomeroy-LQng
Bottom group
holds meeting
LONG BOITOM • The monlh· .•
ly meeting of Pomeroy-Long Bottom Flame Fellowship was held
recently at the Full Gospel Church,
Long Bottom.
President Mary Folmer opened
the meeting and Brother Glen Lawson led with prayer. Donna Bogart
led the singing, accompanied by
Kelly Eichinger at the piano. Vice •
Pres1dent Vivian Humprey blessed
the offering. There also was special
singing by Steve Cox and The Joy
Singers.
Guest speaker was Rev. Hazel
Life of Little Hocking. She spoke
from Matt 12:9-21 and Is. 42:1-6
Rev. Life taught on "How NQt To
Be Discouraged."
President Mary Folmer closed
the meeting with prayer and invited
everyone for fellowship and
refreshments following the meet·
ing.
.
The next meeting will be Dee.
10, 7 p.m. at the Full Gospel
Church: Speaker will be Mary Dia·
mood of Addison. For further
information calll-614-843-5416.

-

.,

'

·..••
..·.-

Lasting Kitchens Start With
Quality Kitchenaitr Appliances

,----Local
brlefs-.....,
.

·I
I

-

.

Road construction underway

KltchenAid' KltchenAid' KltchenAicr
DISHWASHERS

REFRIGERATORS

Performanc~.

(onnnltnct, Durabllly,

Durability, Quality

Quality

Road construction is expected to begin this week on Letart
Township Road 97. The culvert installation work is being done by
Dravo Basic Materials Co. Inc. directly off State Route 338, and an
access road will be available to motorists.

WASHERS

Washallllt}; Durablll'f,
· Quahly

Patrol probes two-car wreck
Two Shade residents escaped irijUry in a two-car wreck on S.R.
681 in. Bedford Township Monday afternoon ..
According to a report fr:om the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Timothy A. Gilkey, 24, attempted to pull.from a
· private drive intending to go ':"est on S.R. 681 and pulled 1~to the
path of a westbound car, driven by Stella S. Blankenship, 37.
Blankenship's car then struck the left side of Gilkey's car.
·
Damage to the left-front of Gilkey's 1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass
was Usted as li~ht. Damage to the right side of Blankenship's 1988
Fofd Thundcrbrrd was listed as moderate.
According to the report, no citations. were issued. Hmvever, fail·
ure to yield on the part of G1lkey was listed as the c:ontnbullng fac,
tor.

5

25

INSTANT
REBATE
IWillUOll2201
-sure CIMn Water Heating
•Automatic RlnH
Dl.pen•er
oExclu•lve Triple Filter
WeterSyetem

699 ··.

5

for our new almond or
white KTRC18KX refrigerator.Gallon door storage,

adjustable glass shelving.

Model KAWE480

419

Hunters bag 512 deer in Mei~s

. •Direct Drive Syatemri
·•'/, HP Gold S..l Motor

· A total of 512 deer were killed jn Meigs County on the fli'St day
of the deer gun hunting season, according to a report from Keith
Wood, Meigs County game pro.tector. .
·
Wood said that the kill was down from 747 last year probably
because of the rain.
Cheeked. at the various locations were 87 at Baum'.s Lumber,
Chester, 90 at Eber's Gulf, Racine; 35 at Ellis and Sons Sohio; 18 at
McKinney's Taxidermist, Pomeroy Pike; 80 at Joe's Country Market; 53 at Forked Run State Park, Reedsville; 39 at O'Dell Lumber,
Pomeroy; 47 at Pick and Shovel Grocery, Langsville; 12 at Stew·
art's Gun Shop, Rutland;.and 17 at SunFun Pennzoil, Racine.
.
Continued on page 3

•Long Strong Warranty

KltchenAtd• FOR11IE WAY IT'S MADE'

INGELS F'URNITURE &amp;JEWELRY
106 North S•cond
992·2635
I

hostage released since August,
when the United Nations began
intensive negotiations to arr.mge a
swap Of Western hostages for Arab
prisoners held by Israel ahd its
proxy militia in Lebanon.
Quoting an informed source,
!RNA said Steen was on his way
overland to Damascus, Syria, a trip
which normally takes two and a
half to three hours.
Tbc report could not immediately be confirmed by Lebanese
authorities or the command of the
Syrian forces in Lebanon, which
normally takes delivery of freed
hostages and escorts them to Syria.
Steen's captors had announced
Monday that they would free him
within 48 hours and, if the release
time reponed by !RNA is accurate,
freed him nine hours later.
•

Middleport
"

•'

The pro-Iranian or~anization of
Islamic Jihad · for Liberation of
Palestine said Steen, a native of
Boston who was grabbed on Jan.
24, 1987, was being released under
a U.N.-brokered agreement to
resolve the plight of the hostages in
Lebanon.
On Monday, American Joseph
Cicippio, 61, was freed in Beirut,
turned over to the American
ambassador in Damascus and
flown to a U.S. military hospital in
Germany for tests and debriefing.
Besides Anderson, two Ocrmans, Thomas Kemptner and Hein·
rich Streubig, arc still being held.
An Italian, Alberto Molinari, is
missing, but reports say he is dead.
Another underground group,
Islamic Jihad, holds Anderson, 44.
The Germans were captured by
Shiite_m,i!,itants s•~kin~ the release
of two brothers Jaded m Germany
on terrorist charges.
Steen, 52, is a native of Boston.
He was an editor at the Arcata
(Calif.) Union be(ore becoming a
journalism teacher, off and on,
between 1970 and 1981 at Humboldt State University and at California State University at Chico in
1981-83.
Continued on page 3

SE.iUOUS WITH SANTA ·Little Tommy
Lavender, three/ear old son or Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Lavender o Middleport, was serious with
Santa about what he wants for Christmas. The

OVER-ALL !lEST ENTRY • 'l'his ''Winter
Wonderland" float created by Central Trust
took lhe lrophy for the over-all best float in lhe
Middleporl Christmas parade Monday night. It
featured a lamp post surrounded by elves, a

Central Trust drive-tbru provided a dry place
ror Santa lo greel the children and distribute
candy treats following the Christmas parade in
Middleport Monday night.

sleigh with reindeer, ' and a large wreath. Riding
on the float were several bank employees and
lhtir children. The Middleport Merchants Association sponsored the parade. Bob Gilmore was
chairman.

FlQod waters recede in southern Ohio
By DEB MARTIN
many roads remained impassable,
Associated Press Writer
authorities said.
Flood waters were receding as
The flash flooding caused by
the rain tapered off in southern and heavy downpours of up to three
eastern Ohio this morning, but inches of rain Monday night
washed mobile homes from the
foundations, ovenurned cars and
forced some evacuations . No
deaths or injuries were reported.
By daybreak, flood warnings for
the areas had been lifted or downgraded to flood watches and the
National Weather Service said the
threat of additional flooding would
end during the morning.
In Scioto County, flood waters
that washed out one bridge and
co¥ered roads were receding .
Emergency personnel Monday
night rescued the occupants of a car
that went into a creek. Another
·vehicle was reported to have gone
into the water but a search turned
up nothing.
"It's a night for heroes," said
DAYS UNTIL
Phil Malone, county sherifrs dis·
CHRISTMAS
patcher.
,
Malone said residents of 1wo

J!l .

mobile homes were evacuated after Dispatcher Dean Kettelson said

flood waters pushed the trailers off evacuations had been ordered in

their foundations and down a creek.
Washington County Sheriff's

the county, apparently affecting
mosUy rural areas.

State, county roads
flooded; schools closed
Numerous county roads and state highways wete closed by
flood waters Tuesday morning, according to reports from the
State Highway and County garages.
A spokesman at the county garage saicUate Tuesday morning
I hat many roads were closed .and reports of more were coming
in all the lime.
•·
As for state highway closings, the garage reported closing on
Roule 33 at Burlingham, Route 124 at Rutland to Route 325;
Route 143 at the old landfill entrance, Route 681 from Darwin
toward Snowville and between Tuppers -i'lains and Route 33,
and Route 248 between Route 7 and 124 at Keno.
Schools In the Meigs Local Districl were closed due to tbe
. high water road closings, but all schools in botb Euter11 and
Southern School Districts were reported open wltb few
absences.
I)

.:
:
·.
:: ..
•·
•
•

&lt;
.'

•
I·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="317">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9608">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35287">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35286">
              <text>December 2, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="450">
      <name>forbes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="725">
      <name>hart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="66">
      <name>reeves</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1648">
      <name>shain</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5652">
      <name>zahl</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
