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                  <text>Page-.10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Con~emporary Living
Cindy S. Oliveri
Co. Ext Agent
Home Ec. and 4-H
Have you thought about ~iving
gifts of food for the hohday?
Homemade food gifts are special
and can be made-persona-" for
friends and relatives.
Cookies, muffms, breads, snack
mixtures. jams and jellies are all
fun to make and fun to receive. Try
using recipes that have peanut butter, pumpkin, nuts, fruit, oatmeal or
nonfat dry mille in~ents. They
will add to the nutritional value of
the food product.
WQen giving. food as a gift,
attach the recipe or add kitchen
utensils, dishes or towels. Also
consider when you will make your
gift and how long it must stay fresh
before you give it. The following
information may help you with the
storing of food gifts.
Fudge. Store in a tightly covered
container in a cool place or wrap in
moisture-va porproof wrap and
store in .the freezer. It will stay
fresh for two weeks; three months
if frozen.
Divinity and pralines. Store in a
tightly covered container in a cool
place. They will stay fresh for 2
weeks.
Hard candy. Store in tightly
covered container in a· cool place. It
will stay fresh for one month. .
Crisp cookies. Store in a loosely
covered container or wrap in moistpre-vapo!p!OO{_wrap and freeze. If
cookies soften, heat 5 minutes in a
300 degree oven. They will stay
fresh two weeks; 9-12 months if
frozen.
Soft cookies. Store in a tightly
covered container or wrap in moisture-vaporproof wrap and freeze.
They will stay fresh two weeks; 912 months iffrozen.
Calces. Store tightly covered in a
cool place or wrap in moisturevaporproof wrap and freeze. Thaw
wrapped at room temperature 1-3
hours. They will stay fresh 1-3
days; 4-6 months when frozen; 2-3
months with a cream frosting .
When thawing a frosted cake,
unwrap so the frostin$ does not
stick to the wrapping as tt thaws.
· Qui'ck breads. Store tightly
wrapped in mois1ure, v.!!pQrproof

TYLER ANDREWS
,I

.,

'

New-a~r.iua/ __
Tyler Ray Andrews, son of Raymond and Megan Andrews ,
Chester, was baptized Oct. 27 at
the Heath United Methodist Church
in Middleport.
Rev. Frank Smith performed the
baptismal rites fot Tyler, born Aug.
5. The entire congregation took
part in the ceremony with Tyler's
family standing by him at the altar.
Tyler's parents hosted a buffet
brunch in his honor after the ceremony.
In attendance besfdes his parents
were his grandparents, Ken and
Nancy Cale, Marprct Andre.w~.
Susie, Roger, Jess1ca and Valene
Karr Melissa, Drew and Mason
Conde. Marcia and Jessica Cale
and Laurie Wayland.

.,

Guests attending were Sister
Fidellis BeD and Rev. G.race Kee.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace· presided
at the meeting in which two members wel'e reported sick MrS. ·Nan

ML Club celebrates the holidays ·

Moore and Mrs. Bernard Fultz. .. - ·
The hostess served refreshments
· and the theme of Christmas-was;
carried out ·ln the decora.tiQ!is~
throughout the home.

Mrs. Wendell Hoover presented having the members arid gu_ests
wrap in a cool place or m the freez- a program of Christmas. music and . singing "Silent NighL"
· ·
er. Iffrozen, thaw wmpped at room sang som.e of the songs as .she
temperature I 1/2 hours. They wUI accompanied herself on her elecstay fresh 2 days or up to a week if tronic keyboard at the recent meet.
very mois~ 6-8 months if frozen.
ing of the Middleport Litelllfy Club
Yeast breads and rolls. Store • held at the home of Mrs. Richard
tightly wrapped in moistwe-vapor- Owen. ~
proof wrap in a cool dry place or in
Mrs. Hoover stated Handel's
the freezer. If frozen; thaw Messiah was written in 24 days.
wrapped at room temperature 2-3 Her selection of songs included
hours. For a crisp crust, thaw "History of the Carols" which has
unwrapped ..They will stay flesh 1- pagan origins. "I Heard the Bells
3 days; ·9-12 months frozen on Christmas Day," "Away in a
unglazed; 6 months if glazed.
Manger," "In a Bleak mid-Winter"
Cheese balls and cheese.spreads. by Christina .Rossett_i wnich ·she
Store tightly wrapped in plastic wrote for the poor chtldren of her
wrap or foil in the refrigerator for Sunday school class in London in
3-4 days.
1870; : 'Rise Up Shepherd and Follow" a Negro spiritual; "Some
Margarine spreads. ·store tightly Children See Him" a modem day
covered in the refrigerator for up 10 carol. She closed the program with
one week.
Home-canned fruits, vegetables,
•You want alter1ative heating
pickles. Store in sealed jars kept in St. Nick delivers marry
a cool dark place for no longer than
one year.
·
Dry snacks. Store in an airtight Christmas to woman
•You don't Willi a chimney or you CIJA'I pill a
container at room temperature for
chimney on your house
_
up to two weeks.
Just to get you started, here is a
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) ~
GREAT
reeipe from The American Heart , Santa Claus delivered a present
Association Cookbook that you early to a 21-year-old woman.
•You don't need onel
could make for a food gift. The
Bentley Richert talked his girl Come In and see the finest pellet stoves
cookbook makes for a nice gift friend. Connie Penner, into sitting
also.
available today. They do not smoke and do
on Santa's lap Saturday night dur·Raisin-Oatmeal
Cookies ing a visit to. Hutchinson Mall and ·
not need a chimney.
(approximately 70 calories per getting her picture taken.
cookie)
When Santa asked her what she
I cup flour, sifted
wanted for Christmas, Miss Penner
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
laughed and said "a Mickey
1/2 teaspoon-baking soda
Mouse sweatshirt."
I cup brown sugar
"Anything else?" Santa asked.
I teaspoon salt ·
"A diamond ring, but I know
1/3 cup oil I 1/2 cups quick I'll be geuing one," Miss Penner
cooking oats
said.
1/2 cup skim milk
But she didn't know that Santa,
2 egg whites, slightly beaten
also known as Tim Barnes, would
614-446·7 400
I teaspoon vanilla extract
pull out a small white box and hand
I cup seedless raisins
it to her as Richert and some
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
friends looked on.
• COST EFFECnVE • SIMPLE TO INSTALL
Sift together flour, baking soda,
Miss Penner of Arlington began
• HASSLE FREE • EASY TO OPERATE
salt and cinnamon. Stir in oats . . laughing, then crying as Richert
Combine egg whites, brown sugar, walked over and gave her a hug
• EPA EXEMPT • LOVELY TO LOOK AT
oil, milk, vanilla, .and raisins and and a kiss.
Heatiftg, lno.
Come BUY your WHITFIELD today.
add to flour mixture. Mix well.
"He always told me I'd nev er
•
Drop batter a teaspoon at a time expect it when I got it," Miss Pen-l~1 SECOND AVENUE
Your WHITFIELD dealer is offering deals you111a/llor'
onto an oiled cookie sheet. Bake 12 ner said. "No wonder you wanted
GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631 .
to 15 minutes, depending on tex- me to put on my makeup and curl
ture desired. Shorter baking time my hair. And to think I didn't want
PELLET STOVES
&amp;
FIREPLACE
INSERTS
· results in a chewy soft cookie, the to come to Hutchinson tonight." .
longer time fin a crisp one.
Malces approximately 3 dozen.

'

'

Southern

Page 5 -

1 Section, 10 Pa,ges 25 cento
A Mulllmedia Inc, Newspapet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 17, 1991

C?.!!!l~il ~2!!!!!.1.~~-."~!scuss~~~· o!rsewage ~lternates
Sentinel News Staff
Still more discussions concerning a deductive alternate for
Pomeroy's new sewage treatment
system were held when Pomeroy
Village Council met for its last regular meetin of the ear Monda
night.
g
y
y
· At th eir December 2 meeting,
council voted to approve a vacuurn-type sludge de-watering system
10 usc in the new plant. The system

villa e ~n the c~~t sa 1 to the
ty sy~te'm ins;~:o:~o~a~u~Jravt:
tern
sys
Th e ravit _1 ·e -s stem d
not meef specfric~Son/as the ~~
now written for ·the pro¥ect
ahhou h h
.1 . . J •
0
be mJifi~d ~J~tf~u~~ ::O~d
Environmental P:o:ti~~ A one c
At the December 2 meetinff.e Vil:
!age Administrator John Anderson
pointed out that the location of the

by the proJeCt engtneer as a
The gravtty iYStem is made up
"deductive alternate" to the base of interlocking square-foot plastic
btd rl! the system, after the vacu- panels, whtch form the floor of the
urn system. included in (he original system. Gravity forces the sludge
plan came mabove cost esumates;
to de-water through the holes in the
However, at Monday mght s panels, leavmg the dry sludge susmcetmg, council heard a presenta- pen~ed on a dry surface.
tion Jrom Laura Tegethoff of RusCouncilman Larry Wehrung had
sell ~·: smith Equipment Company recommended _funher investigation
of Htlltard, Ohto, regardtng an mto th~ gravity system prior to
enttrely different type of de-water- council s approval of the vacuum
ing system, ref~rred to as a "gravi- system on December 2. Wehrung

•
EnYitoRame

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New5 Staff
Jeffrey Arnold was hired as the
full -time vocal music teacher for
the Southern Local SchooiDistrict
at Monday night's meeting of the
Southern Board of Education held
at in the high school cafeteria.
Arnold has been substituting as
the district's music teacher since
the first of the school year for
Roberta Maidens who is now on
disability retirement. He also han dled th e school's marching band
during the football sdson.
AIso hired at the meeting was
Garry Smith head bus mec hanic,
effective Jan. 2. Daniel Riffle was
employed as the transportation
supervisor in conjunction with his

Holiday Favorites

as

Just In Time ... At Your Nearby Rite Aid

job as assistant mechanic. The
supervisor's position is to be taken
care of without additional compensation.
The Board accepted Nationwide
Mutual Insurance as the carrier 'for
the di strict's liability insurance.
Harcum Irrsurance Co.. of Columbus is th e agency to handle the
msurance contract. It was noted
that ~ new siate law now makes it
ilie gal for PTO or other volunteer
organizations to be a part of the liability insurance.
Membership in the Ohio School
Boards' Association Legal Assistance Fund, Consultant Services,
for a fcc of $250 was approved, as
were required bonds for several
school officials.
Scou Wolfe who presided at the

plant would pr~bably P.r!Jhtbllthe
use of thf gravtty-type. system, the
destgn o whtch requtres a large
space.
Anderson ~I so reponed on a
p~ant thathe VISited recently whtch
has JUSt mstalled ~ vacuum-type
system ltke that b~mg considered
by Pomeroy councll, and reported
~~:t~~;~~d be an effecuve system
U
Y· .
.
B ponRthedmouodn of Counc!lman
ruce ee , an the second by

Thomas Werry, counCil voted to
recess :the meeting pen,din~ further
mvest1gat10n of the gravuy-type
srstem . At the same time •. council
d1d nol .vote to rescmd thetr acuon
approvmg a less-expcns1ve vacuum-type system.
In his motion , Reed suggested
that th e plans for the ~roposcd
plant. along wah mformauon about
both de-watcnng systems, be sent
to an 1mpan1al engmccr for rev1e~
Contmued on page 3

hristmas Is ...- - -

Southern board names Arnold
full-time vocal music teacher
mee ting was named the pro-tem
presiding ·officer fur the organizational meeting which will be held
on Jan. 7, 1992 at 7:30 p.m. in .the
high school cafeteria.
After a discussion. it was decided not to put a levy on the May ballot for funds to construct a new
kindergarten through eight grade
building.
Approval to acc~p.lJLD_\I'ight
David Eisenhower grant in the
amount of $3,507.35 was given by
• the board. The money will be used
for various projects and activities
in the Southern Junior High
School.
..
1
· Attending were Wolfe. Sue
Grueser, Gary Willford, Joseph
Thoren, newly elected member,
Tommy Roseberry, Supl Bob Ord,
and Dennie Hill, treasurer.

Report' say~s rural·kids·face
crisis of poverty; poor health

Names in
the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joan
Collins says she sees few simllarities between Amanda, her role in
the play "Private Lives," and
Alexis. the character she played for
7 1/2 years on t~levision' s
"Dynasty."
"Alexis was ruthlessly ambi tious, and Amanda is frivolous and
hopelessly romantic," Miss Collins
said.
But the 58-year-old actress
~clcnowlcdges the two share one
major attribute.
"They don't tolerate any nonsense from men," she said.
"Private Lives," a 1930 play
written by Noel Coward, is touring
and arrives this week in Beverly
Hills. Jt is scheduled to open on
Broadway in February. The role has .been played by
some of the world's most accomplished actresses, including Elizabeth Taylor.
"It was very gratifying to finally get to play a role that I'd been
wanting to play for decades," she
said.

.

'

three-fourths of non-rural earnings. - ..
At the same time, the share of
rural poor families with at least one
worker has been increasing and is
higher than fpr families in nonrural areas - 65 percent for rural
families compared with 57 percent
for non-rural families in 1988, the
study said.
.
The study defined rural areas as
those outside metrppolitan regions,
exdluding Puerto Rico and the U.S.
ter•itor·ies. Met_ro areas. were
defined as cities and their suburbs
containing 50,000 to 100,000 people.
·
"
The study also said:
~ Rural pregnant .women and
children face· greater obstacles to
health care than' non-rural women
and children.
' - Rural children are shortchanged when it comes to early
childhood education services,
school reso urces and quality and
youth development services.
- Millions of rural families lack
FUNDS FOR NEEDY • Traditionally Ban'k '
United Melhodisl Cooperalive Parish. That
affordable housi ng. Somewhat
One employees make grapevine trees, take donaamount, according to the Rev. Kenneth Baker
lower rural LCPIS and home owner- . t.ions on them, and then donate the .mone.y. to
who works in the program, will purchase about
ship costs arc more than out·
some organization carrying out a spedal projecl
5,000 pounds of food to be distributed to need y
weighed by much lower rural wage
of assisting the needy at CHristmas time. This
Meigs Countians. Here Diana Lawson on behalf
rates, the study said .
year the check was for $720 and went to the
of bank employees presented the check to the
The Children's Defense Fund
lla~er. ·
A fire at a two story fmme house in Antiquity owned by John
cal led for creation of a package of
Hunnell, Pomeroy, late Monday night resulted in only minor darngove rnment se rvices for all chilage to the structure, according to John Holman , Racine fire chief.
dren that would cost from S29 bilHolman said that the Racine and Syracuse Fire Departments
lion-Lo $47 billion.
responded to the call at th e unocc upi ed house at 11:03 p.m. A
The package includes a refundneighbor called in after seeing fire at U1c house, Holman said.
able children's tax credit; immuThe fire chief said that the fire appeared to have started in three
ni zations for all chi ldren ; basic
different locations in the house. The State Fire Marshall .has been
health insurance coverage for every
called in to investigate, Holman reported.
.
uninsur ed child and . pregnaht
F1remen were on the scene about an hour. Holman said the cause
By .UM FREEMAN
undercover SECO task force invcs- ficking , a violation of Ohio
woman; and. expanding the Head
of the fire is undetermined at this lime.
OVP
News
Staff
Ligation
revealed that drugs were Revised Code 2925 .03 (A)('6)
Stan preschool program to all chilAn
undercover
investigation
and
being
sold
at the Butc,hcr residence. whic h states no person shall posdren by 1995..
a Saturday night search warrant From this, enough evidence was sess a controlled substance in an
execu tion netted approximately obtained to get a search warrant, amount equal to or exceeding.lhree
Nigerian native Ollldatun Fasheun wasc onvicted late. Monday on
S
15,000 worth of dried marijuana Saunders added.
times the bulk amount.
six theft-related charges following a week-long Jury trml m Metgs
and resulted in the arrest of a · Sheriff Dennis Salisbury , Co·
According to Saunders, traffickCounty Common Pleas Court.
.
Cheshire Township man.
Ta sk Force Coordinator Rog er 1ng is a 1hird-degrce fe\ony warFasheun, who was represented in the trial by Metgs County Pub. Dennis Carl Butcher, 39, was Brandeberry , Prosec utor Brent ranti ng an actual incarceration time
lic Defender Charles H. Knight. was convicted of two charges of •
arrested early Sunday morning and Saund ers, Assistant Prosecutor of 18 months.
thefl two c har~es of grand theft. a charge of aggrnva!ed theft and a
cha rged with trafficki ng by th e Mark Sheets, Juvenile Officer Gary
Butcher plead not guilty at his
coun't of engagtng in a pattern of corrupt activity.
Southeastern Counties of Ohio nar- Bane and se·veral deputies conduct- arraignment Monday afternoon
The charges relate to the embezzlement of more than $300,000
cotics task force, represented by the cd the raid on Butcher's house before Judge Joseph L. Cain in the :
from Lee 0. Wood and Beatrice I. Wood through the Athena Trad·
Gallia
County Sheriff's Depart - trailer.
Gallipolis Munic1pal Court. Cash .
ing Company of Athens. .
·
.
mcnt and the Gallia County ProseInside, law enforcement officers bond was set at $10,000 (no ten ·
Fasheun will be sentenced by Judge Fred W. Crow 1\.l on Jan·
cutors Office. Officers confiscated found 4.3 pounds of marijuan·a, percent) and a preliminary hearing :
uary 6, 1992, _pe~ding the completion of a pre·scntence mvesttgathe drugs while executing a searc h w.eighin g sca les , drug parapherna- has been scheduled for Dc,c . 23.
tion and a vtcum tmpact statement.
warrant of Butcher's residence on lia , evidence of cultivation and 1991, at 1I a.m.
Zuspa n Hollow Road in Cheshire more than $500 in cash, SECO
The SECO narcotics task force
The trial of Trudy Swartz of Middleport was set to get underway
Tow nship.
officials said. In addition, accord- is made up of law enforcement
Butcher resides in Gallia County ing td Saunders, Jaw enforcement officials from Gallia. Meigs, Yinin Meigs County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday morning.
.
Swartz now known as Trudy Dent, is charged with trafficking in
but lives near the Meigs County officials found a map in Butcher's Lon, Jackson, Athens, Hocking and .
, LSD, and 'was one of 41 defendants indicted on drug charges earlier
line and has a Middleport mailing residence that appeared tO·corre· Washington counties. In the period
DAYS· UNTIL
this year. She is represented by Athens Attorney Susan Gwmn.
address.
·
spend to· marijuana growing locu- covering 1989-90, the task force :
According
to
Gallia
Counly
"·tions.
. ·
·
netted more than 70 drug-related ;
CHRISTMAS
Butcher was charged with traf- , mdtcuncnts.
•
Prosecutor Brent Saunders, an
•
•
•
•

WASHINGTON (AP)
Poverty, poor health and rickety
housing are hitting rural children as
hard, or even harder, than their city
and suburban cousins, an advocacy
group fQr children said today.
The portrait o~ the I 5 million
children in rural America also
found that poverty beyond th e
boundaries of the nation' s cities
and suburbs cuts across racial lines
and touch es many working families.. .
,
"In a few respects, rural children resemble suburban children .
They are more likely to be white
and are slightly more likely to have
two -parent and worki,ng families
than city children," sai~ Marian
•· Wright Edelman. president of the
Children's D~fen se Fund, w.hich
conducted the study.
"But on other measures of fundamental well -.being they fall
behind just like urban children.
They are poorer, less healthy and
less educated,"' she said.

The study, whtch cuea a variety
of government reports, said 22.9
percent of rural children were poor,
compared with 20 percent of non·
rural children in 1990. The federal
government's poverty ievel that
year was $13,359 for a family of
four .
But because many eligibility
requirements for welfare programs
arc skewed against two-parent and
working-poor families, the rural
poor benefit less from public
income and food assistance. Transportation problems also contribute
to the situation for rural families
and children, the study said.
It said families with poor children in rural areas receive about
half the welfare benefits than nonrural families under Aid to Fanii·
lies with Dependent Children .
The study also said family
unemployment rates arc high er in
rural America than in non -rural
areas. while rural ~mings are only

..-----.Local .briefs ------.
Fire causes minor damage.

NYQUIL

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- Cher,
who has a successful new exercise
video, says hard work, not plastic
surgery. put her body-in-shape-for~ 1---those revealing outfits.
"I wish to God you could just
go get plastic surgery and have a
great body. I'd take the ~sy way
out. But I •kill my~elf for my
body," she said.
The 45 -year-old singer and
actress admitted in the Dec. 21
issue of TV Guide that she's had
plastic surgery - a breast job see
says was "botched."
"If anything, they're worse after
than before," Cher said.
The article did not say what
went wron,.
·
Cher satd she was paid $1 million for "CherFitness: A New Attitude."
· "Almost every other woman on
the tape has a better bodr and was
in better shape than me,' she said.

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; ; Rite Aid Pharmacy
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Jury trial to begin

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•

'

Fasheun convicted on charges

Rite Aid a,ccepts all
manufacturer's coupons.

SECRET

.

SECO task force seizes an
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ALKA.SELTZER

300 EAST MAIN

'I

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Vol. 42, No. 158

Copyrjghled 1991

fitw ~

--.

..

;::;._·-·.:--·'- '

.

Partly cloudy. Low tonight :· •
near 20. Wednesday, high in mid
20s.

·a1·

BUT

!lest documentary honors w.cnt
10 " American Dieam." "La Belle
Noiseuse" was the voted best for·
eign language film.
Composer Zbigniew Preisner
was honored him for his body of
work, including his scores for
"E uropa Europa," ''The Double
Life of Yeronique" and .. At Play
in the Fields of the Lord."
· Elmer Bernstein and Vincent
Price were honored with lifetime
achievement awards and the critics'
'New Generation award went to
writer-director John Singleton for
" Boyz 'N The Hood."

Pick 3: 187
Pick 4: 5023
Cards: A-H, Q-C;
4-D, A,S -

girls trip

It's Going To Cost You More to
Heat Your Home This Winter.

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Eastern

.

Los Angeles film critics
vote ~ugsy' best picture
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
movie critics closest to Hollywood
Iike "B ugsy" best.
The gangster saga starring Warren Beatty was voted best picture
by the Los Angeles Film Critics
Association on Saturday during
selections for its 1991 Achieve·
ment Awards.
"Bugsy'' also won for best
director, Barry Levinson, and best
screenplay, James Toback.
Nick Nolte was voted best actor
for hi s role as a Southern
shrimper"·s son in "Prince of
Tides." Mercedes Ruehl was chosen best actress for "The Fisher
King."
Michael Lerner was named best
supponing actor for "Barton
Fink." Jane Horrocks won as best
supporting actress for "Life is
Sweet."
Roger Deakins was voted best
cihematograph'er for "Barton.
Fink."
,
"Beauty and the Beast" was
chosen as best animated film .

Monday, Decembe'r 16, 1991

I

J,

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j,

·r•
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�Commentary

Tuesday, December 17, 1991

•

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
~- Tuesday, December 17, 1991 .

I

Congress can b'e blamed for budget woes, too

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREIITII OP 'niE IIEIGS-IIASON ARJtA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mall!lgtr

A MEMBER of The Associaled Press, Inland Daily Press Assocuwon and
lbe American Newspaper Publisher Associllion
LETil!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
wolds long All letters .,., subject 10 editing and must be signed w&gt;lb name,
addross and telephone number No unSigned letters W&gt;ll be publtsbed. Letters
should be m good taste', addrossing usues, not personalities

Fourteenth Amendment
The Thirteenth Amendment outlawed slavery, but faded to estabhsh
clearly the former slaves' new status as free citizens. The postwar
Congress, therefore, prooeeded to eslablish a consurutional basts for thetr
CIVIl and political rights.
Ratified on July 9, 1868, the Fourteenth Amendment ts eonstdered by
many constitutional scholars ro be the most tmportant amendment to the
Consutuuon after the anginal Bill of Rights of 1791. Section 1 of the
Fourteenth Amendment set aside the Supreme Court's deciston m Dred
Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S (19 How.) 393 (1857), by provtding that"[a]ll
persons born or naturalized 10 the Umted States and subJect to the JUriS·
dicuon thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherem
they reside." Section I of the Amendment further provides that no state
may make any law whtch "shall abndge the prmleges or tmmuniues of
ctttzens of the Umted States," and that no state shall "depnve any person
of ltfe, liberty, or property, wtthout due process of law; nor deny to any
person wtthin 1ts jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws "
The Fourteenth Amendment dtd not begtn to play a stgmficant role m
the protection of constitutional nghts for many years after us adofuon.
Attempts to mvoke the Amendment m the 19th century as a source o constltuttonal rights failed. The Court ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment
netther authorized Congress to enact law&amp; that prohtbtted pnvate ctUzens
from denyin~ mmoriues access to hotels, pubhc ttansportatwn, and the· '
aters (The Ctvtl Rights Cases, 109 U.S. 3 (1883) ), nor dtd 11 authonze
Congress 10 enact laws that pumshed pnvate ctuzens who paructpated 10
lynchings (Umted States v. Harrts, 106 US. 629 (1882)) , In Plessy v
Ferquson, 163 U.S. 537 (18%), over the vtgorous and eloquent dtssent of
Justice John Marshall Harlan, the Supreme Court ruled that the "equal
protection" clause did not prohtbttthe states from enacting ltm Crow laws
that requll'Cd "separate but equal" facihties for blacks and whttes. Harlan
predicted: "In my opmion. the Judgment this day rendered will, m ume,
prove to be qwte as pemtctous as the dectston made by thts tribunal m the
Dred Scott Case .... "
In the 20th century, however, the Supreme Court became mcreasmgly
·receptive to constitutional clatms based on the Fourteenth Amendment
The Supreme Coun rejected the "separate but equal" concepts endorsed m
the Plessy case when 1l ruled in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S.
483 (1954), that segregated educational factlilles were "inherently

-

WASHINGTON - ·The De;;;ocratic Congress, not surpnsmgly,
thinks the Republican admimstra·
tlon ts doing a lousy JOb of running the country It's hard to argue wtth
the concluston. Democracy ts a
messy business- some would.say
1t's no busmess at all._The_pobucs
of power and the gyrations to hold
on to that power don't lend themselves to wise management of
money.
The staff of the House Budget
Commtttee recently put the prob!em mro words m a report on JUSt
how badly the federal government
has been managed 10 the last
decade. The conclusion of that
report ts that the admmistration
needs an OffiCe of Federal Management- sort of a btg Lee lacocea m the sky telling all t!Je agencies
of government how 10 gtve the tax·
payers thetr money's worth.
According to the Budget Commmee staffers, it's "managenal
anarchy" in the Execuuve branch
There are plenty of examples to
back up that concluston, most of
them commg from II years of
Repubhcan adm10istrauons.
Who can forget the h1ghhghts
- "Operation Ill Wmd" that

exposed ihe Pentagon as a shop·
pmg mall where defense contractors could buy mforrnauon
- The Housing and Urban
Development Department sc,ndal
wtth "Stlent Sam" Pterce, !he
HUD secr~tary somnambu!atmg
through the Rea$an.y~ whtle the _
agency wasted bi~lions of doll~.
-The bumblmg of the Nauon·
al Aeronauucs and Space Admmts·
trat10n, including the $2 bilhon
Hubble Space Telescope that was
sent into space with a lens that
wouldn't focus.
- The Environmental Protecuon Agency Superfund program
wtth a percentage of tts budget
gomg to overhead that is roughly
comparable to the percentage of the
Pliilippine budget that Imelda Marcos spent o~ shoes.
- Medtcare that has trans·
formed ttSe!f tnt() a Santa Claus for
the health-care industry.
-Thefederalpotforumverstty
research grants that has been fnttered away on limousmes, flowers,
VIP condos and some of the best
parttes money can buy at the
natiOn's maJor universtues.
- The Guaranteed Student

J.,oan program that has paid for
some of the worst education money
can buy at fly-by-night trade
schools that leave students unemplayable and unable to pay thetr
debts.
,
_The granddaddy of them all,
the - savmgs and loan_ criSls,
spawned by the Reagan deregula·
uon frenzy that handed thrifts a
hcense to steal.
These alone add up to tens of
btlllOns of dollars m waste due to
miSmanagement 10 the last 10
years. The House Budget Commtt·
tee thtnks 1t has the answer in a
more centralized management systern . Committee Chauman Leon
Paneua, D..Cahf., has m'tro&lt;luced a
btll that would create silch an
Off1ce of Federal Management. It
won't work as long as Congress
conunues business as usual but
you won't find that conclust~n in
the Budget Commmee report.
Nowhere does the report
acknowledge that meddhng by
Congress on behalf of ncb and gen·
erous S&amp;L kmgpins contnb~ted
significantly to the delays 10 shut·
ung down the worst thnfts before
they racked up btllions of dollars 10
'

1KI$1$

YOUR
fE'PEii'J\L.
&amp;uP6ET,

1H\S IS
YOU!t fOEllA\.
611~eT ON LA~T

YEAl'S 8UII6ET
Al:alt.EEMEH,.,

-

•
•

!
By Jack Anderson
Atta.
and v" ale 'TJ:
t' an

bad debts.
Nowhere does the report men•.
tlon the effect of pork barrel poii,
ttcs on good money managemen'
- w)len well·meanmg ag!ln '"y_
managers allocate their money i~
the best way they posstbly can and
then some member of Congress
rearranges the pnonttes to benefit
hts or her constttuents.
Nowhere does the report sa~
that Congress shares the blame fot
hangmg on to unneeded and costly
weapons systems beCause the con,
tract belongs to someone who ftll~
congressiOnal campatgn coffers. •
The best way to save money, the
report says, ts to figure out how tq
stop waste before 11 happens m
each and every government agen ~
cy. We agree . But the btggest
obs1acle to thatts Congress nself.
THE FEELING ISN'T MUTU·
AL- Prestdent Bush's love for
j
Chma tS not rectprocated The Cen· .. , 1
tral lntelhgence Agency has gath-'
ered mformauon thattndicatcs that
the ·Chmese leadershtp does no~
trust Bush, Pnvately, they attack
htm by name and accuse htm of
bemg deceptive. They think Bush's
real purpose ts to undermme the
communtst system and spread the
seeds of capttahsm around Ch10a The old Chinese leaders see them·
selves 'liS the last bastion aga10st
capttahsm and the bearers of the
true commun1st flame. But they
contmue m stnng Bush along
because they need Amencan tech·
nology and trade.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The real
conservauve pohucal threat_to
Georg e B-ush 1s not Patrick
lluchanan or Davtd Duke. The
threat comes from Houstng and
Urban Development Secretary Jack
Kemp and others of hts tlk mstders 10 the admintstrauon who
are needhng Bush to make drastic
changes to spur the economy. Even
Dan Quayle, the prestdent's nght·
hand man, has !_Jladvertently ~ade _
- - --: Bush look bad. Quayle, Kemp and
others have thctr own tdeas about
dom csttc poltcy, and although they
express them pnvatcly to Bush, the
word leaks out They get th ~ credu
•
for propostn g bold acuon whtle
Bush appears 10 be uslccp at th e
wheel
Copynght , 1991, Umtcd Feature
Syndtcate, Inc

Ameri·ca ··s ··ts own economi·c enemy

unequal"
protection
In recent
years,
the and
equaltherefore
protectionviolated
clause the
has equal
also been
used to clause
strike down
state
laws that discriminate against women (Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71 (1971)
) and non-ctUzens (Graham v Rtchardson, 403 U.S. 365 (1971)).
'
' In the 19th century, the Supreme Court had taken the posuion that the
HONOLULU - The country ts
ongmal BtU of Rights dtd not apply to the states (Barron v. Mayor and
sttll
II months away from the presC1ty Council of Baltimore, 32 U.S. (7 Pet ) 243 (1833)). Subsequent·
tdential
election of 1992, but tl
Jy, however, on the theory that the Fourteenth Amendment due process
seems
close
to consensus on at
clause made many of the provisions in the origmal BtU of Rtghts appltca·
least
one
singularly
counter-proble to the states, the Court "nauonahzed" or "mcorporated'.' those provt·
ducuve
campatgn
issue.
As usual ,
stons and held the states accountable to the federal standard. For example,
m Gillow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652 (1925), the Court boldly asserted tl took Davtd Duke to put ll 10 Its
that the freedom of speech and of the press guaranteed by the Ftrst crudest form. When the bom-agam
Amendment "are among the fundamental personal nghts and 'hberues' btgot announced for the GOP. nomprotected by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment from 10ation, he slapped Japan m the
tmpatrment by the States." On the same basts, the Supreme Court has face. "You no bu~ our rice," he
apphed other provisions m the BtU of Rtghts ro the states as well, includ· pronounced in Pidgm English,·"we
mg the FU'St Amendment rebgton clauses and the nghts guaranteed to the no buy your cars"
Also as usual, Davtd Duke's
accused by the Fifth and stxth Amendments.
ractsm
ts stmply a cnnle exaggem'
The Fourteenth, Amendment due process clause has also given nse to a tion of a somewhat more sophtstt·
legal doctnne known as "subst.anuve due proce$s," which holds that the cated sentiment that lurks at the
concept of "due process of law" not only limits the procedures that gov· edge of mainstream politics. Havcmment may use ro depnve a person of "hfe, hberty, or property," but mg lost one devil, the Sovtet
also places substantive restrictions on the kinds of action that government Umon, which could be usefully
may take. In a senes of cases dectded between the late 1890s and the early blamed for all our woes, some
1930s, the Supreme Court frequently relied 01) the concept of substantive Amencans apparently need anoth·
due process ro invahdate Slate economic regulations, such as wage and er. For good reasons and for ba'tl ,
price laws, on the grounds that such regulauons unconsututionally mter· Japan offers a useful stand·IO for
fered wtth the "hberty of contract" of pnvate parues (Lochner v. New the "cvli empire" of old.
In a ume of economtc vitality .
York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905)). Begmnmg m the mtd 1930s, however, the
few would reach for that substltule
Court abandoned thts theory of the due process clause and began to defer In
our current ltme of economic
to the judgments of federal and state legislators who were gmppiing wtth
the enormous economic problems created by the Great Depress10n.(West troubles, 11 could prove well-mgh
Irresistible to ~ore than one prestCoast HOtel Co. v. Pamsh, 300 U.S. 379 (1937)).
dential
contenqer - from several
In recent y.ears, tlie idea that the Founeenth Amendment due process
challengers
coilsiderabl Y more
clause - as well as other provlSlons of the Fourteenth Amendment and
"respectable"
than Duke to the
the BtU of Rtghts - place substantive as well as procedural restnctions
on government action has been expressed m cases upholdtng a consutu· present mcumbent, hts balanced
tlonal "right to privacy." Thus, in Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 US. 479 restramt up to now nof wtthstand·
(1965)
and Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the ~ourt reboo .upon the mg.
•
There are seveial obJective reanghtto privacy ro invahdate state laws that, respecuvely, prohtbtted mar·
ned touples from acqumng contraceptive devices and placed broad sons for wanting to beat up on the
restncuons on a woman's abtbty to obtain an aboruon. The Constitution Japanese, of course. They openly
does not expressly set out a general "right 10 privacy," but refers to the pursue a form of economic warfare,
nght of pnvacy only mdirectly, as m the Fourth Amendment's guarantee wtth exports as their weapon and
of "[t)he right of the people ro be secure m theu persons, houses, papers, corporation between mdustry and
and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.... " Accordingly, government as their strategy, whtch
deCISIOns sucb as Gnswold and Roe continue to generate c6nsiderable has made them the wonder of the
mdustrialtzed world and the terror
constiwtional debate.
•
of
thetr competitors. For a complex
Regardless of how the ,debate over the rig~t to "riv~y .ts ulumately
set
of reasons, notallly including
resolved, however, there can be little quesuon that through JUdtctal mter·
dehberate protectiontsm, thetr mar_J::~~~~~the~~F~oi~~::n~~th/~Am:~e;n~~dment
become one
kets are demonstrably difficult for
in thehas
CoDSllWUon.
_of
_the
_mosttmpor·
__
foreign enterpriSe- to lfenetrate
Unul very recently, they were

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY
CHRISTMAS by Lam~
'
. and Miller
cur TI\R&amp;6

~ON&lt;OS"mtP5

AeooT lINCH
WIDE 61iW

~appy to tuncuon as members of an
10temauonal system to which they
patd mintmal dues and from which
they derived maxunum benefits' not least bemg Amenca's mthtary
umbrella.
In other words, they play by the
rules that were encouraged in the
days of their immediate postwar
rum. They ran a mercantiiiSI Slate
10 an officially free trade world, an
anomaly that could be JUSltfted
only so long as their mdustries
were relaUvely weak and untested.
Today, economic mfants no more,
they sally forth to do battle with
th~ir competitors from battlements
onle built to protect them from
those they now dominate.
But cha!lging Japanese practtces
will not solve Amenca's economtc
problems nor automaucally nght
the trade balance yttth Tokyo. If the
Umted States 1s to compete effecltvely with the industnal-govern·
ment complex of Japan,tt wtll have
· k
fd
10 rethm tts own ways 0 I omg
business. To paraphrase a well·
known quotation frol)l our nation's
btrth, Amenca's centers of counter·
vaihng power _ 10dustry, govern·
ment and !at?, ~ w111 e1ther learn
10 hang together or shall almost
certainly hang separately. Bhnd
Ideological consistency in support
of laissez-fane economtcs is more
than the hobgoblm of small mmds
It 1s a prescnpuon for frulure
Further, tf we cannot learn to
disctphne our appetite for quick
profits and endless consumpuon,
curtail our attachment to debt and
encourage the mpid appbcauon of
new technology to goods for the
international marketplace, all the
anti-Japanese rheroric in the world
will avail the Umted States noth·
mg . Yelling at the Japanese
because the btlls are commg due
from our long pig-out of deftctt
spendmg is as dumb as 1t 1s trrelc·
vant,
To put the m11tter another way.
our $40 btlhon tO $50 bllhon a year
trade defictt wtth Japan remains
unacceP.tably htgh , but it ts not
responstble for our economic diffi.
culties. The overall American trade
deficit has fallen steadily for sever·
al years, but the economy has
stmultaneously fallen mro a pro·
longed slowdown. Nor would a
better ftt in the U.S.·Japan trade
relationship suddenly, after a two·
decade dechne, revitahze the
prospects of the average Amertcan
worker or middle class hom~wn­
er.
To scapegoat Japan is to take up
on the economic front where we

left off on the mtlttary front 46
years ago. Unlike World War II,
the hkehhood is that there would
be no winner. The bloodlemng on 1
both stdes woufd be prodtgtous,
prectsely because 10 thts war each
blow at the enemy would btl home
as well Two sets of stattsucs help
make the pomt.
First, the Umted States and
Japan are joined at the economtc
htp Between us we account for 40
percent of the world's economy
We sell each other $140 btlltOn m
goods annually, accordmg to The
New York Ttmes We are each
other's largest overseas trading
partners. Let our economtc rela·
uons cool and the rs:st of the world
wtll begin to freeze.
Second, Japanese d1rect mvest·
ment m the Umted States stands at
about $265 btlhon and recent
Japanese drawdowns on that

Hodding Carter; Ill
mvestment have already had wor- _
rying effects on the avaiiabthty of
capttal for ex pans ton Worry would
be the least of 11 if our dtsag recments mov ed from JaW·Jaw to
fight-fight.
To beat the tom -tom s for eco·
nom1c war ts 10 co urt dt sdster
Demagog4cs may ftnd tl trr cStSttble, but runntng agamst the
"yellow pcnl" contrtbutcs \O the
problem rather than to the soluuon.
T~ere's nothtng mcvnable about
Japali's mdustrml ascenaancy, and
much that tea mwork and hardedged Amencan poltcy can do to
prevent tl. Both would be 1mpcdcd
by a nauon al deciSion to blam e
Japan for trouble§ whose solution ,
hke their on gin, bcgms at home.
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN

Letters to the editor
Pleq.sers praised
Dear Edttor
The Metgs High School VICA
orgamzation would like to thank
Pleasers for donating 500 suckers
for fhe elecuon of Regtonal VICA

officer campatgn Thts election will
be held m Columbus on Dec 12.
Thank you
VIC A~ePQrter,
Miranda Ntcholson ·

Academic year in America
Dear Edttor,
As one of the Ohio representa·
tives for the Academic Year_i n
America program of the American
Institute For Foreign SWdy Scholarship Foundation, I would like to
share wtth readers of thts newspa·
per a special gift givmg idea this
holiday season ..Perhaps a famdy_m
this community would like ro gtve
the gtft of their home town to a
young v1s1tor from abroad!
The AY A program offers
teenagers from around the world a
chance to hve and study in the
United States and so discover what
America really is. Most studenls
come foJ the full school year, but a
few choose ro spend just the second
semester here. The semester program is especially popular with
young people from Latin Amenca.
In countries like Braztl, Chile
and Argentina, January marks the
end of the school year and the
begtnning of summer. Many stu·
dents head for the beach, bUt some
or the brightest and best use this
time instead ro swdy_further in the
United States. They hope to

become fluent m Enghsh, to make
American friends and to learn firsthand about our country.
•
These boys and gtrls are careful· '
ly chosen, have studted Enghsh~-·
bnng thetr own spendmg molrey
and have full medtcal msurance.
They hope to become a "son" or
"daughter" m an ordinary Amer1·
can family. to watch football on ·
TV, get a hamburger at MeDon- ,
aid's and perhaps see thetr first'
snow. Htgh spots of the semester .
are the prom and graduatton.
If any local family would like to ,
add an international dimensiOn to
tHeir holiday givlng, they might
extend an mvitaUon to one of these
students to become part of thetr ,
family m January. I have apphca· •
uons of several students who hoJl:C
to hve 10 Ohto ne~t semester.
Please call me at 614 742-2125 or ,
the AIFS/A YA national offtce m ;
Connec1icut at 800/322 -4678 , •
before Chnstmas.
Shirley Coleman ,
34380 New Lima Rd., ~
Rutland, OH 45775-%45 ;
Telephone 614 742-2125

.....--~-. Local

The Da11y Senunei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Names drawn for Meigs County Court jury duty

briefs...

Man injured in biplane crash
WILKESVILLE (AP) - A ptlot sustamed minot mjuries after
hts home-built btplane landed m a Vinton County hayfield, the ~tate
Htghway Patrol saHI. _
.Ja.ck F liolcate, 50, of Hatuesburg, Miss., recetved mmor head;
InJurtes m the 3:15 p m. crash, Trooper Pat McDonald satd
Holcate was treated at the scene by paramedics.
·
The ptlot told troopers hts plane was having engme troub_!e. He
was auempung ro land the craft m the field when the landmg gear
htt a tree. The extent of damage to the plane could not tmmediately
be determmed.
He was en route from Hatuesburg to the Ohto University ~rt
,south of Athens.

Six-year-old girl dies'~in . fire
BELPRE -An 6-year-old grrl dted and three adults; 10cluding a
Belpre volunteer ftrefighter, were senously 10jured m a ftre that
destroyed a mobde home Sunday.
Katrma Cotfendaffer dt~ of smoke mhalation, Belpre Ftre Chtef
Wesley Walker said. Suzanne Warren, 25, and Wtlliam Ftttro Jr.,
28, suffered smoke mhalauon
Warren was in cntical condttion Monday in the Ohio Valley
Medtcal Center m Wheehng, W.Va. Futro was 10 the mtenstv.c ~are
unn in Camden-Clark Memonal Hosp1ta110 Parkersburg, W VaT
The fire was reported atll:l7 p.m. Sunday. Efforts to save Kat·
nna were foiled by smoke and flames.
Faulty wiring ts beheved to have caused the fll'e m the rented
trailer, Walker said.
Volunteer firefighter Aaron Ntchols,25, was overcome by smoke
as he helped evacuate the three. He was eventually transferred to
Camden-Clark

The names of 150 Meigs Coun; cuse; Charles Everett Krebs,
ty residents have been selected as Albany; Linda L. Ferrell, Syracuse;
potential JUrors for the January, Laura Lynn Richmond, Mtddle·
1992 term m Meigs County Court.
port, Dehlah J Mtller, Reedsvtlle,
Those names selected were. Jean L. Moore, Mtddleport, Scott
Denise Lynn Coffntan, Racme; ' Mtchael Dtllon, Pomeroy; Stella
Marsha Beth King, Pomeroy; Carl Sue Blankenship, Albany.
E Shenefield, Langsville, Mary E.
Debra Lynn
Kmmson,
Shamblin, Pomeroy; John W. Bar· Langsvtlle, Robert W. Stsson, Jr.,
cus, Mtddleport; Frank Edward Rutland, Mazte C. Hannahs ,
Dodderer, Cool~ille; Ehzabeth Ann Pomeroy; Cmtra L. Winebrenner,
Hemsley, Syracuse; Cordeha C. Racine; Mona K. Ervin, Racine;
Brown, Pomeroy, Myrta Lynne Frances Starr, Pomeroy; Barbara
Arms, Pomeroy~ ___ -~
M -Colmer, Pomeroy;-Garol~n -S.
Carl E. Quails, Pomeroy; Jane Ltttle, Pomeroy; Jack William
A. Hams, Pomeroy, Brent West Haggy, Pomeroy; Lisa Dawn Bax·
Ztrkle, Pomeroy, Jeery Lee Smnh, ter. Pomeroy.
Racme; Texanna J. Well, Pomeroy,
James Robert Travts II,
Robert Lee Rttchie, Jr., Racme; Jay Pomeroy; Norma Parker, Pomeroy,
Harlan Rtdgway, Pomeroy; Peggy Kaiherine Jean Musser, Pomeroy.
Lynn Robmson, Coolvtlle, Madgle Eleanor J. Logan, Pomeroy; Peggy
L. Smnh, Pomeroy, Barbara A.n n Ann Bole, Pomeroy; Thomas Alan
Marun, Albany.
Smtth, Albany, L Fay Westfall,
Wendell J. Barber, Racme; Cyn· Long Bottom; Marcta R Guess,
thta L Scott, Pomeroy; Debra Kay Tuppers Plams; Rob ert W
Mullen , Middleport; Jeffrey B Rtchards, Albany; Wtlliam J.
Lambert, Rutland; Burl Leon Put· Roush, Racme.
man, jr., Coolvtlle; Larry Errit Bar· .
Roger D. Couenll, Albany;
toll', Reedsvtlle; Okey Harold Caitssa Dawn Htll, Racme; Enka
Scharttger, Pomeroy; Deborah W. H 'Bonng, Reedsville; Carol Jean
Sayre, Racm e; James T Ru ssell, · Clelland, Pomeroy, James M
Racine, Gregory Paul Garretsqn, Bush, Racme; Isaac D. Jackson,
Portland.
Tu ppers Plams, Marcella Louise
Donna
Jean
Davtdson, Wtll, Pomeroy; Pamela A. Gaston,
Pomeroy; Ruth Juanita 'Pulltns, Albany, Clyde F Headley,
Ractne, Dianna L Lawson, Syra· Reetmlle, Susan L Roush , Port·

Names drawn for January
term of Meigs Grand Jury
The names of 25 Metgs Coun·
ttans have beep selected as poten·
tt al grand Jurors for the January,
1992 term.
Those names selected were:
Mtchacl Ray Elberfeld, Racme;
Wtlham T Musser, Racine; Chad
Thomas Williams, Rutland, Gregory Todd-Sheets, Pomeroy, Carolyn
K Ca II, Pomeroy; Chnstlne Sue
Htll, Symcuse; Addalou M. Lew1s,
Pomeroy; Vtrgmta V Blazewicz,
Pomeroy, Larry C. Powell,
Pomeroy, Wayne Lyons, Racme;

•

Brenda Kay Fel~man, Albany,
Randi Lee Hill, Syracuse; Marcta
B. Karr, Syracuse; Betty Ann
Loftts, Pomeroy; Clara L. Sayre,
Pomeroy; Angte Sue Spangler,
Syracuse, Ray W. Smtth, Racme;
Betty Ruth Carsey, Middleport;
John Mohler, MtddlepQ!t; Penny
Lynn Hamson, Mtddleport; Lmda
M. Moore, Syracuse, Tresste I.
Hendricks, Pomeroy; Anna Marte
Wolfe, Racme; Joanne E. Ptckens,
Racme; and Jenmfer R. Lance ,
Pomeroy

In Honor Society
Bonme Allen Smtih of 40512
Park Road, Shade, has been mduct·
cd mto Stgma Theta Tau lntema·
uonal, honor soctety of nursmg
She ts on the nursmg faculty a1
Hocking College. Mrs Smtih ts the
w1fc of Paul N Smtth, and th e
daughter of Bernard and Loretta
Allen of Albany

Dates set for p~sticide,
-recertfficafion trahiing
Dec 19, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. or
7-10 p m. 'at the Extenston Offtce.
These sessiOns will be for those
Wlro do not have a hcense at the
present time O( those who wtsh to
add new categones to thetr card, or
those who have failed the test and
wtsh to retake 11. Due to ltmtted
space, reservatiOns are needed.
Please call us at 992-6696 and let
us know which ttme you plan to
attend.
The date that exammauons wtll
be gtven ts Tuesday, Jan . 7 at I
a.m at our office. The testing wtll
also be done at the Athens County
Extension Office at4 p m. the same
day.
,
If you have any quesuons or
need further mformatton, please
call John Rtce at 992-6696.

Council
...
Continued from page I

Unns of the Metg s County
Emergency Medtc al Servtcc
responded to stx calls Monday .
three of whtch mvolved tnJunes tn
automobtlc acctdents
At 10 05 a.m . the Mtddleport
umt went to Mason, W Va to
assist in an acctdent where the driv·
cr. Nathan McN eely , was
entrapped After bem g removed
fro m the vehtcle, he was transport·
ed to Pleasant Valley Hospnal for
treatment.
At 5 24 p m. the Pomeroy squad
and fll'e department went 10 Hem·

Court news
C~se

Area death

Stocks

WORlD WAR II

),

Lottery. numbers

1

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here arc
Monday ntght's Ohto Lottery
&gt;e iCCliOil~

P1ck 3 Numbers
1·8·7
(one, etght, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
5·0·2·3
(ltve, zero. two, three)
Cards
A (ace) of Hearts
Q (queen) of Clubs
4 (four) of Dtamonds
A (ace) of Spades

Water to be off
Water wt ll be off Fnday afternoon on Bndgeman Streettn Syra·
cusc from the Rose Valley Road to '
State Route 124 The water tSbeing
shut off so that rcpatr work can be
completed.
Dance to be held
A round and square dance wtll
be held Fnday from 8 ro I I 30 p m.
at !he Tuppers Plams VFW Hall
sponsored by the VFW Post No
9053 and Ladtes Auxtiiary. The
band wtll be C.J. and the Country
Gen~cmen The pubhc ts mvtted to
attend
Syracuse program
"The Mall and th e N1ght VtSt·
tor" wtll be presented by students
at Syracuse Elementary on Thursday at 7 p m The publtc ts mvtted
to attend
Christmas program
The annual Chnstmas program
w111 be presented at Mpunt Hermon
U B Church on Sunday at 7 30
p m Everyone ts welcome

Play begins at 7
"Twas the Ntght Before Chrtsl
mas" wtll be presented by Pomeroy
Elementary School students,
lock Gro•e for a one-car acctdem kmdcrgarten through thtrd and spc·
Andrea Goerfer was transported to eta! educauon classes , at 7 p m
Veterans Memorial Hospttal. She Tuesday mgh1 at the sc hool The
was treated and released.
PTO wtll have a bake sale tn con·
At 12: 13 a.m Tuesday th e Juncuon with the program
Rae me squad and rescue untt went
Dance slated
to Mtlc Htll Road where Todd
The Belles and Bows Square
Gnndstaff was involved m a motor D&lt;1ncc Club wtll host a New Year's
vehtcle acctdent. He was O'eatcd at Eve dance from 9 to mtdntght at
the scene but not transported
the Semor Ctttzens Center. All
Other ca lls auswered by the western square dancers and all for·
EMS un1ts on Monday mcluded
mer member of the dance club arc
9 41 a.m . Monday, Rutland to 44 mvned 10 attend Bob McNab of
College Avenue for Samantha Beve rly wtll be the caller
Wnhrow who was taken to VeterDivorce granted
ans Mcmonal Hospual , 5 43 p m .
A dtvorce acuon has been grant·
Mtddleport to 40 RtvefVIew Dnve
ed
m Mctgs County Common Pleas
for Dotue Scarberry, who was
Cou
rt to Behnda K Lucas from
transported to Pleasant Valley Hos·
Davtd
M Lucas.
p1tal ; and 9 32 p.m.. Racme to
South-Central Ohio
County Road 28 for ~11l Mom s.
1 gh ~ partly cloudy The low
who 1\'aS taken to Veterans Memo· &lt;~ rouTon
nd 20. Bnsk northwest wmds
nal Hospttal
15 to 25 mph and gusty dtm tmsh·
1992 BASEBALL
tng to I0 to 20 mph by mornmg
The chance of snow ts 20 percent
CARDS AVAILABLE
Wednesday. partly sunny and cold·
NOW
cr The htgh 25 to 30.
Extended forecast:
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Thursday through Saturday:
Dt scharges, Dec. ~7 - Hel en
Fatr with a warmmg trend.
Arose, Justin Boyd, Conme Lows 10 to 20 Thursday, around
Caudtll, Haley Coon. Marsha
Ehman, Randy Gtllespte, Patrtcta th e 20s Fnday and mostly tn the
MONDAY-SATURDAY
Halflull , Betty Johnson, Wtlham 30s Saturday Htghs 25 to 35
Thursday , around 35 to 45 Fnday
11·9 P.M.
McKmney, Mrs. Kevm Steger and and
from 45to 55 Saturday. 1
son, Lots Snyder, Fre ellll! n
Wtlhams, and Gloria Wtttkamp
Btnhs. Dec 17 • Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Ftsher, a son, Pomeroy
Mr and Mrs Lawrence Goheen, a
daughter, Wellston
·

Squads re'spond to six calls

dismissed
The em! case of Kevm W Oiler
versus Norman E. Best has been
pnor to taktng any acnon to reJect dt smt ssed tn the Metgs County
Clther system. Counctl approved Common Pleas Court.
th e motiOn with Wehrung oppos· Judgment awarded
tng
.
The Metgs County Common
Eva Nicinsky
Last mght, Wchrung came out Pleas Court has awarded a JUdg·
Funeral servtces for Mrs Eva m open support. of mstalltng th e ment m the amount of $51,000 to
Ntcmsky , 81, of Chapmanvtlle, W gra vity system, Cttmg cost savmgs, Gale Osborne, and others, fro m
Va. wtll be held 2 p m Wednesday despite proJected space problem s Martan Bu1lders.
al the Evans Funeml Home, Chap· and lack of approval from the pro·
manvt ll e, wuh Rev James M. JCC! cngmeer, Burgess and Ntplc of
lcucas offtctaung
Parkersburg, W Va,
Burtal w1ll be m forest Lawn
"I've always that thts would be
Cemetery, Pecks Mtll, W. Va
a more eost-efftctent and mamte·
Am Ele Power . .
32 1/8
Fncnds may call at the funcrdl nance·frcc system," Wehrung sa td
Ashland Otl
27
home m Chapmanville between 6 last mght about the gravitY. system,
AT&amp;T
..... ... .. 38
and 9 p m Tuesday.
followmg ht s reJeCtion of the
Bank One...... .....
.. ....47 3/8
Grandsons wlll serve as pall· mouon to suspend action on etther
bearers.
Bob Evans ..........
.. .....22
system
Charming Shop....
.23 5/8
Mrs Ntcmsky, who was born
_Btds on the new plant were
Cuy Holding ...-.
16 5/8
May 2, 19 10 m Glena, Yugoslavm, opened m October, and the award
Federal Mogul.. . .......... 13 3/4
dted Sunday, Dec. 15: at Boone of btds must be made or an exten ·
GoodycarT&amp;R....
.. .47 3/4
Memorial Hospttal m Madison, W. ston sought before December 28.
Key Centunon .
14 3/4
'Va.
In other action, council
Lands' End . . .
28
· Reported that handi capped
Ltmtted Inc
.... 27 5/8
parkmg spaces were now 10 place
The Daily Sentinel
Multtmedta Inc....
.. .....23 1/4
on all three blocks m the downtown
(UBPB 213·9110)
Rax' Restaurant ....
.. ..... 7/16
busmess dtstrtct Those who park
Published every arterboon, Monday
Robbms&amp;Myers
34
m the space wtthout the necessary
thmUflh Fnclay, 1 U Court St , Ptwneroy,
Shoncy's
Inc.
...
.
.20
3/4
credentials wtll be ctted
Oh1o by the Oh1o Valley Publiehm1
Company/Multimedia Ine , Pomeroy,
Star
Bank
..
.
25
1/4
• Agreed to prepare a new lease
Ohi0\45769, Ph 992·2156 Second claa
Wendy
lnt'l
......
9
1(2
for office space occupted by the
poatage paid a~ Pomeroy, Oh10
Worthmgton Ind..
.. ..... 20
Meigs County Board of Education ,
Member: The Alioc1ated Press Inland
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
wl!h
addlllonal
language
to
be
Dally Pren A11ociat1on and the Ohio
quotes provided by Blunt, ElliS
added
Newspaper Aaaoc:Jation, National_
and Loewi of Gallipolis. -Advert1amg- Repretentatlve;-8Yanham 'l · '. C?o ntmued diSC USSIOnS O f !he
Newapaper Salea, "733 Third Avenue,
proposed movtng of the matlboxcs
New YOrk, New YOrk 10017
•
located across from the Pomeroy
POSTMASI'E~ Send admaa chansu to
Post Offtce. Those boxes will not
The D8dy Senhnel, 111 Court St.,
be moved after all, and those who
l'om&lt;!roy, OHto 46769.
park tn front of the boxes wtll be
SUB8CRJPI10N RATES
,
By Carrier or Motor Roa.te
ttcketed
One Week
.
.. ..$160
Present, m addltton to AnderOne Monlh . .
... ... . ........16.96
son,
Reed, Wehrung and Werry ,
One Year.
••• $83 20
SINGLE COPY
were
Council members Betty
PRJCE
Baromck, Bryan Shank and Btll
Dally•................. ......................... • 25 Cenll
Young, Clerk Brenda Moms and
S!tbrtmbenl not de1mng to pRy the eam•
Mayor
Rtchard Seyler.
er may remit m advance direct to 'the
Two more Japanese divisions
O•lllpoh• Da1ly Tribune on a S 6 OT 12
begin landing In Malaya
month bu111 Cred1t will be g'IVen camer
each week
strengthen the offensive aimed •
No •ubempt1on1 by ma1l pernutted m
ill Singapore, the,major Bntlsh
area• where home earner aenoice 11
Island base of! the southern tip
available.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ot
the penlnsul~. Adm. Nimitz
·
Moll Suboeripllono
Monday Admisstons: Betty
Jn~lde Gallla County
Is named new commander of
Templeton, Middleport , Paul
13•Weeks ....
. •
• ..$21.84
the
U.S. Pacific Fleet.
'
26 Week.o •
•
..
$43 16
Mttchell, Langsvtlle; and Russell
I
•
52 Week.o ..... ... • •
• .. $84.76
Chne, Racme.
• Oublde Galli• Cou.nt)'
Monday Discharges: Kathy
t3 Weok.o.. ...
$23 40
26 Week.o .
.. .... ... ..$46.60
Rhodes, Max Folmer, and Angte Source ·world Almanac Book or World War II,"
62 Week.o......
. • .. ... $88 40
Hill.
Bison Boo&lt;s Corp 1981

Hospital news ·

Ch~:~~ey L O' De ll , PomerO) ,
Deborah
Ann
Barnnger,
Recdsvtllc, Mary Eltzabeth Ktbble,
Tupper's Platn s; Howard Kntght,
Pomeroy; Matthew Kevm Burke,
Pomeroy , Vwla Hele n Youn g,
Ractne, Wtlltam Mtchael Long,
Portland , Tammy L. Qutllen . Rut·
land; Tracte Lynn Black, Pomeroy;
Arthur W Nease, Pomeroy
Susan R Dodson, Pomeroy, Joe
C Rttchte, Long Bottom , Sanctra-S
Cobb, Syracu,e. Eleanor K. McK·
elv cy, Syracu se; Wtll1am E
~Swatzel , Pomeroy; Tammy Mantn,
Ppmcroy, Dtana Chmunc Howery,

Meigs announcements

\

All Metgs County pnvate peslt·
ctde applicators whose hccnse to
purchase restricted chemtcals wtll
exptre m 1992 or 1993 are remmd·
ed of the followmg mformattOn
from John Rice, County ExtensiOn
Agent, Agriculture,
Recerttftcatlon wtll be held on
Thursday, Jan. 16, from 10 am . to
I p.m. or 7 ·I p m. at the Metgs
County ExtensiOn Office. Persons
who need to attend one of these
scsstons would be those whose cur·
rent license wtll expll'e m 1992 or
1993 If your hcense e&gt;ptres m
1993 you can walt unul next year
10 become recerufied.
Reservations are needed, due to
ltmtted space. Call the Meigs
County ExtensiOn Offtce at 992·
6696 tf you plan to come and let us
know whtch ttme you wtll be com·
mg
Pesllctde trammg for new apph·
cators wtll be held on Thursday,

Albany; Damel Apltng, ~omeroy;
land.
Ruth Ann Putman, Coolvtlle , Brenda Joyce Jones, Racmc; Ea~
Patncta Lomse Harfls, Pomeroy; R Hunt. Long Bottom; Cmdy Loij
Arlin Rad~km, Albany; Walter A Thomas, Long Bottom 1
~
Ray Ranktn Ptckens, ..l'omeroyl
Wdson , Pomeroy; John E Mtller,
Pomeroy; Mary Jane Whan, Reva Norns, Racme, Ol:vtlle R!
Pomeroy, Charles Wtiiiam Whtt· Htll , Pomeroy, Julia I l'ftcholsi
tmgton , Pom eroy; Mark Gaddts , Racme; Ester Loutse Pitur, Long
Reedsvtlle, Audrey Marte Gloyd , Bottom, Enc Jan Taylor,.Racme!
Dexter, Brenda Jean Haggy , Elmer W Hysell, Rutland;; lame~
Pomeroy, Dennis Eugene Newland, Lecnard Davts, Mwersviiie, Mebn,
da Sue Smtth, Racme, Francis Ol
Reedsvtlle
Thurman L Smtih, Mtddleport, Anderson. Mtddleport; ~ar
Charles M. Salser, Pomeroy, Eugene Stewart, Cheshtre~~~4.~~
Megan Ltsa Smnh, Long Bov
Brandy R. Sweat, Dexter. Robert
Lynn Wood, Racmc; Eltse Smith, tom , Wtllwm Theodo re Hart '
Ea~es.
Ractnc, Johnn1e H Nash, Mtddlc· Shade; Bruce P
port; George D Hobson, Pomeroy, Wtlk esvtlle , Rtcktc Lee Hollon,
Raymond Henry Land ers, Sr, Long Bottom, Mac Young,
Pomeroy; Elste Mac Cullfy. Tup· Pomeroy, V1cky Ann Abbott, Long:
pcrs Plains; Robert Enc Mtlltron , Bottom , Les ter Lee Stewart •
Rae me, Monal ce Reed. Alban y. Che sh tre; Trac tc Lynn Jordan ,
Ccha Elizabeth Colltn s, Reedsvtllc Albany; Carol Noreen Carson,
Bnan John Reed, Rcedsvtlle, Pomero y, PatrtCta Lynn Calaway1
Brenda M. Johnson, Racme, Max · Coolvtlle, Robert C Sc'itgravcs ,'
me Hope Hanmg , Albany; Ruth Pomeroy, Chery l Mane Folm;er\
Mane Nutter, ReedSVIlle; Davtd .Pomero y Dom L Hensler,·
Allen McMtllan, Racme, Thomas Racme, Jeffrey Lynn Mtller, Mtd-:
G Parker, Pomeroy, Paula J Ptck· dleport, and MarYin G Burt.:
ens, Pomeroy; Alana Rose Cleland, Pomeroy
Rutland; Rt chard Cord ell Ran ·
dolph, Racme, Larry Rex Batley,

Weather

Hospital news

HORNER HILL
CARRY-OVT

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The Dall

The . Daijy _Sentinel

Sports

-New Orleans hands
L.A. Raiders 27-0 loss

Tuesday, December 17, 1991
Page-4

"S he told me, 'You'd betier not
lose or when 'I go to school I'll be
embarrassed,"' Hebert q~oted hts
daughter as saying.
, __
Ryan can go to school with ller
head h1gh.
Hebert threw fot a career-high
320 yards, completing 28 of 39
(See SAINTS on Page 7)

By AUSTIN WILSON
AP Sports Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
Bobby Hebert didn't feel any pressure unul his nine-year-old daugh·
ter Ryan fou nd out he would be
starting for the New Orleans Srunts
again after six weeks on the side·
lines .

Wahama to begin
basketball s_eason
.vs. Hamlin toni_ght
By Frank Capehart
Sports Correspondent

.r

When veteran Wahama High School basketball coach, Lewis Hall,
sends his 1991-92 edition of the While Falcon cage squad onto the
hardwood fqr its fi~t encounter of the season Tuesday evening It will be
one of the most inexperienced groups of WHS cagers ever to begin a bas·
ketball campatga at the Bend Area school.
Wahama will open the cwrent cage season on the road at Hamlin High
School wilh an early Southweslem Athletic Conference contest with the
Bobcats with two starters back from last years 6-16 team and only four
• seniors among a . squad, of ~ 17 cage hopefuls. "We're very in·
expetleliced and the key to how our season will go depends on how quick
·· your younger kids mature and !pam to play together as a ieam," Hall said.
"These kids have worked amazingly hard during pre-season drills and its
just a ~uestion of how soon our ypunger players can get used to each other
and adjust to the syslem," Hall said.
The While Falcons lost five players to graduation which included the
Bend Area teams all-time leading scorer, John Barnitz in addition to starters Chris Zerkle and Robbie Board and leading substitutes Jimmy
Goodnite and Troy Oldaker which leaves Hall some big shoes to fill both
offensively and defensively for the coming year.
Senior guard Craig Coon and senior forward John Johnson will most
definilely form the nucleus of the 1991-92 Wahama case squad and will
have to "provide the leadership for our younger players," Hall said. Coon,
;a 5-10 backcoun star and the While Falcons' second leading scorer from a
·year ago with a 12.2 scoring average, will be staning for the third straight
:season while Johnson, at 6·0, returns as the Bend Area teams leading
:rebounder in addition to scoring 8.1 points per game offensively.
. "Other than Coon and Johnson we have virtually no varsity playing ex. perience and that will give us problems especially during the early part of
&gt;the season," added Hall. "We should be a much better team towards the
:middle of the year once we get used to playing together. II will just take
:time for us to gain some valuable playing experience against outside com·
· petition in order for us to minimize our sophomore mistakes," Hall said.
' Seniors John Zuspan and Sean Ross return as the lone Falcon cagers
with any varsity level experience whatsoever with Zuspan seeing lim1ted
playing time in just four games last year while Ross was used sparingly in
just two varsity contests. Juniors moving up from last seasons junior varsity ·team hoping to make an impact this year include 5-10 forward Carl
.King and 6-0 forward Jason Weaver l)lld 5·9 guards Danny Hudson and
RJ. Roush. Three juniors playing for ·the first time include 6-3 forward
Chuck Hayes, S-9 guard Tony Roush and 5-9 guard Tim Troy.
A prom1sing group of sophomores provide the White Falcons with some
.much needed height and are pressing the upperclassmen for varsity play·
·ing time which include: 6-3 forward Mike VanMatre, 6·0 forward Doug
:Hull 64 cenler Mike Test, 6-2 forward Jeff H1ll, 5-10 guard Tommy
: M~yes and 5•10 guard Jimmy Ingels.
"Right now Coon, Johnson and Zuspan will be the starting lineup at
guard, forward and center," Hall said. "The remaining guard position will
come from Danny Hudson, Doug Huff, Tommy Mayes of R.J. Roush
while the other forward will most likely be sophomore Mike VanMatre.
Carl King will .be our sixth man at both guard and forward as King is our
most versatile athletes we have right now wi!h his knowledge of several
different ~sitions and Sean Ross will be our fi rst substitute underneath."
· Hall w1ll be entering his 13th season at the helm of the Bend Area varsity cagers after serving two seasons as junior varsity coach at the Bend
Area school. As varsity coach Hall has guided the White Falcons to a 105.158 hardcoun record which includes four sectional titles. Hall's assislant
will once again be Frank Caphcart who will be opening his fifth campaign
as the junior varsity coach.
The 21 game 1991-92 regular season Wahama basketball winter
schedule will feature 12 contests against SWAC opponents and nine dates
against non-league foes. Hamlin, Van, Duvall, Bufllo Putnam, Vinson and
Charleston Catholic will provide the SWAC dates on the !991-92 card
with Clay County, Kyger Creek ~ Point Pleasant and Huntington St. Joe
being the nonlcague foes. The W~ite Falcons will host the annual Wahama
Christmas Tournament on Dec. 27 and 28 with county rival Hannan,
Kyger Creek and 1990 defending tournament champion Sharples compris·
i,ng the four team tourney field. The White Falcons open the 1991-92 cage
season on Tuesday night by visiting Hamlin before returning home to host
Van on Friday. Tipoff times for both nights will be 6:00 pm for the junior
varsity contest and 7:30 P,m for the varsity affair.
.

DOLPillNS BBV.'L CHAMPS- The Veterans Memorial Hospital Dophins of tbe Big Bend Youth Football League finished the
season with a perfeet 9-0 record, winning the league and the invita·
tiona! tournament. The offense averaged 32 poi~ls per game, while
the defense gave up an average of l'out points per ·game. In the front
row are (L·R) Matt Williams, Keith Cundiff, Jesse Little, Daniel

Whittekind, Clayton Ohlinger, Troy Hoback and AJ. Vaughn. In
the second row are manager Corey Vaughan, Jeremy VanMeter,
Sea.n Powell, Justin Seymour, Steve Boso, Barry Marshall, Derek
·Smtih and Ben Molden. In the third row are Waylon McKinney,
Jason Riley, Jobn Dailey and Sean O'Brien. Standing behind them
are coaches Andy Vaughan, Tiny Williams, Frank Seth and Pat
O'Brien.

·;Eastern girls post 50-3'1 victory over Southern
~

' Capehart, Danny Hudson, Carl King, John Johnson, Craig
1991 WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS-Front row, Jert to right: Coach Frank
Coon, and Coach Lew Hall. Second row, lert to ;·ight: Jeff Hill. Tim Troy, Tommy Mayes, Jimmy Ingels, Tony Rouoh, RJ. Roush, Doug Huff,
John Zuspan, Mike Test, Mike VanMatre, Chuck Hayes, Scm; R'iss, Jason Wea\·er. (Register photo by Dan Adkins.)

In Rio's win over Lake t;:rie Sunday,

Redmen tie NAIA mark in three-point shooting
Sco nn g an NAJA record 25 cd Dyke a 106-74 loss. The games
three- pointers from 49' atlcmpts. 1mproved Rio Grande's overall
th e Univers1 ty of Rio G_rand c standing to 8·3.
men's basketball team capped off a
Wilh nearly all of us playe rs
weeke nd trip m the Cleveland area scoring from the three- center
Su nday with a 141 -86 VICtory ove r Troy Donaldson being th e onl y
Lake Ene.
holdout - the Redmcn raced to an
On Saturday, the Redmcn hand· ea rl y lead and never looked back.

The h1gh sconng was led by M;llt
Powell wllh 22 pomts, fo llowed by
Brad Schuben , 19; Mark Ers lan ,
Jell Brown and Tun Chnstmn . IS
each , Kyle Sc hroer and Brcll
Corcno, 13 apiece: and Donaldso n.
12 .
The !ugh number of threes lies

the Rcdm cn w1th the NAIA record
ol 25, he ld by Wisconsin-Parkside
over Lak eland (W is.). Feb. 14,
In9. and Western Bapust (Ore.)
ol'c r South ern Ore go n, Dec . 28,
1090.
R1o Gra nd e IS also lied wllh
!Sec REDMEN on Page 5)

Marietta's Caldwell shoots for career high vs. Kenyon
By SCOTT WOLFE
Form er Racine Southern sharp-shooter Jeff Caldwell, a 5-11 jumor
guard, recently paced the Marrietta
(College) Pioneers to an 80-65 win
over Kenyon with a stellar 28-point
performance. a career high.
Caldwell scored 28 pomts in 26
mrnutes, hitting shot after shot
fro m practically every place on the
floor. The junior guard provided
the most pivolal points in the game,
when with just I :52 into the ~ccond
half he drilled three straight three·
pomters to rally Marietta from a
31-27 halftime lead to a more convincing 40-29 score.
Caldwell said about the performance, "We knew if we could get
the ball {!own the court quickly, we
co uld ge t off some qui ck shots.
That was the key."
Overall, Caldwe ll converted 911 attempts from the floor, includ·
tng 4-5 three-pointcrs;and was 6-6

Frccbcrsyser stated, "Those three
po-incopportifnities just developed
against their zone. We UJiked about
our passing at halftime, particularly
the diagonal pass from the baseline
across to where Jeff was shooting
the ball. From either side of the
floor that is going to open up
again st a l-3·1. We wanted that
pass in Jeff's hands tonight."

Caldwell, who sat out last sea·
son, stud he returned-this year wl tli
more confid.cnce in hi s overa ll
sk1tis.
Ca ld well concluded, "When I
came back I wasn't worned abou1
my shooting. I think I impro ved
o1her pans or my game and lhut's
what I ne eded to do . As Jar as
shootin ab ih that's some

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

•

al the line.

With 12:40 left in the game
Kenyon pulled close at 45-43, but
dgai n Caldwell··came through. In
the stretch dri ve he netted three
loul shms and a 15 footer to give
the P10neers some security and
eventua ll y the win .
Mari ella head coac h George

Pomeroy Bo.wli~g
Lanes results ·
These arc the results of recent
actJon at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
Dec. 11
League - Ea rly Wednesday
Mixed
Teams- Tony's Carryout (72·
56) , Mike Sells (69-59), Banks
Co nstruction (67-61), Shammy's
Ca"ryout (64·64), Hackett's Roofing and Bootees Bowler (both 56-

Lottery

CLOUDY

-.

.... ....
,.-

,,,_,

, ..,... ~~oo,

·49ers rout
L.A Rams ·
33-10

'

a .. ...

~ ·"

72) ..

High series - Bub Stivers
(529), Dottie Will (598)
Second-highest series - Larry
Du~an (477), Pat Carson and Dcbi
Hensley (both 485)
,
High game - Bub Stivers
(188), Dottie Will (2 14)
Second-high game - Tony
Siedcnabel and Tommy Simmons
(both 184), Dottie Will (212)
Team series- Hackcn's Rooftog (1972)
Team game - Hackcn's Roofing (673)
~
__
Dec. 4
·-~,1Pi,~s eighth-graoers beat Federal Hocking• League - Early Wednesday
Federal Hocking jumped out a one of four.
Mixed
24-14 first half lead and held off a
Roush led the Lancers with 10
Teams- Tony's Carryout (70Meigs comeback to defeat the Lit· points, McFee added 13 rebounds. 50), Mike Sells and Bank s Contie Marauders 37-33 in eighth · Bush led the Little Marauders with struction (both 67-53), Shammy's
grade basketball action recentl y. II pomts and 10 rebounds. Hansen Carryout (56·64), Hackett's RoofWith the loss the Marauders fall to added nine points.
ing and Booters Bowler (both 501·1.
\.
FEDERAL HOCKING 70).
• _ Meigs jumped out to an early 6· Roush 10. McFee 6, Weekley 6,
High series - Bob Hensley
2 lead but the Lancers came back Bennett 5, Toloson 4, Maxwell 2, (581), Debi Hensley (528)
to take a 12-8 lead at the end of the N1ppcrt 4. TOTA L.S-37
Second-highest series - Larry
first quarter. The Lancers increased
MEIGS - Bush I!, Abbott 2, Dugan .(573). Pat Carson (5 17)
the lead at ' the half 24·16. But the Stanley 7, Hansen 9, Pullin s 2,
High game- Larry Dugan
Marauders would not die as Meigs Curtis 2, Mash 2. TOTALS- 33
(235) , Debi Hensley and Becky
pulled to within two points with
Kloes (both !99)
2:30 left in the game on a bucket
Second· high game- Ru ss
·
·
Abbo
B
l
M
·
ld
The
Brooklyn-Battery
Tunnel
in
c
T
by rav1s
u. u e1gs cou
New York City, which runs under·
arson an d Bo b Hens ley (both
g'et no closer then three points the neath the East River and connects 198), Pat Carson (190)
rest of the way.
'
Brooklyn and lower Manhattan, is ,. Team series,- Shammy's CarMei~s lost the game at the foul 9,117 feet In length. It is the second , ryout (2017)
line, hUting only (our of 12 free longest vehicular tunnel in ,North
Team game- Shammy's Carthrows. The Lancers cashed in on America.
ryoul(747)
._ ,L ----~--7'""--~•l.....--------------J.V.

thm is jus1 there. Some nighLs 1t's
there and some ntghts it's not."
Caldwell, son of Jim and Sally
C tld wc ll , Racine, was featured in
I he Mariella Times, The Parkers·
burg News and The Parkersburg
Scnltnel.
Caldwell previously had a 27· _
point game for MC two years ago.

.....

·~"

•'

'""

draws mixed reac ,on

- -o·llio-educators_;;from .-• .~,...a~
~:. -=~Pz~~
., ............
a ~·"· ~~ ~ ,,J ... -,......
...... (.;;....
COI.U Mi l.~ .., '" "-'' " ,.,.~ .,_.~:_::., e1 .,.~11'1 ,..

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_ _____-!-'- - - - - ----

/'

Eaglettes, who ripped .the nets for
19 second quarter points and a 321! lead.
The third quarter saw more
deliberate action and an even pace
as both clubs netted 12, then using
frequent substitutions, Eastern gave
up two more than 1t scored in the
finale (6-8), but held on for the 5037 win.
Eastern hit 20-59 from the Ooor
and 10-13 at the line, while South·
ern claimed 16 of 57 buckets and
was 5-9 at the line.

Eastern won th e battle of the
boards 38 -25 led by Gardner,
Gillilan, Roush, and Burke with
6,6, 5, and 5 respectively. Jennifer
Cross had 6 for Southern, while
Ohlinger had 7, and Moore4.
· Southern had II assists, 6 steals,
25 turnover s, and 15 fouls .
Ohlinger had 9 assists and three
stea ls. Eastern had· 14 ass1sts, 9
steals, 13 turnovers, and 14 foul s.
In th e preliminary junior high
girls game, Southern won 38-28 as
Sammi Sisson .blistered
.
. the nets for

l'

r

12 pomts, Bea L1sle added II,
Amber Thomas 8, Renee Turley 6,
and Devon three.
For Eastern Jessica Karr led
with 8, Crystal Holsinger had 6,
Nicole Nelson and Beth Bay ftvc
each, Patsy Aeiker and Laura East·
man two each.
Eastern is 1-1and Southern 2·0.
Quarter totals
Southern ............. \0 7 !2 8 =37
Eastern ............... 13 19 12 6= 50
Southern (37) - Cross 5-00=10, Ohlinger 6-0·2= 14, Moore
2-0·2=6, Codner 2-0=4, Cooper !'- 0-1=3. Totals 16·0·5=37
Eastern (50) - Metzger 5-0·
2= !2, Gardner 3-0·0=6, Phillips 40-0=8 ,Jenni fe r Rou sh 0-0-2=2,
Wilson l -0·2=4, Burke 2-0·2=6,
Gillilan 3-0-0=6, Debbie Gray 1·0·
0=2. Tara Co ngo 0-0·2=2, Amy
Redovian 1-0·0=2. Totals 20·0·
10=50

(Conti nued from Page 4)
. Wisconsm-Parkside for the most
: three-pointers made by two teams
at 29. Lake Eric had four of eight'
· 10 Sunday's game. Wi scons inParl&lt;sidc set the record over Lake·
land and agamst Spnn!f Arbor
. .(Mich.) on Feb. 27, 1989.
The Storm's Marty Stockwell
' inched Powell's output with 22
markers, while Dave Golan added
17, Brett Vana 16 and David Whit·
: ungton 13.
: The Redmen were 50 perce nt
· · overall (44-88) and posted a ncar
·. perfect mark on foul shooting, net·
. ting 27 of 30 attempts for 90 per·
· cen t. The team re corded 41
· rebounds (eight by Donaldson,
. seven from Brown) and held
· turnovers to seven.
Lake Eric was 55 perccntt from
the field (34-~2) aJld sank 14 of 19
tries from the line for 74 percent.
Sam Corabi 's club brought dwon
. 28 boards, seven contributed by .
: Stockwell , and lost the ball ! 8
.

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.. lllltnhlf 14

PASSES TO TEAMMAtE- Southern's Jennifer Cross (15);
with an Eastern player closing in from behind, passes to a tenmmatc
during Monday night's SVAC game at Tuppers Plains, which the
Eagles won 50-37.

Sports _briefs
- Football
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Bi ll
Parcells, former New York Giants
coac h and current NBC an ~ l yst,
underwe nt a non-surg1cal procedure to clear a blockage m one of
the arteries m his heart.
Parcells, 50, was listed in sUJblc
condi lion after the coronary angioplasty at The Valley Hospital in
Ridgewood, N.! ., accordmg to a
statement iss ued by Dr. Mi chael
Kessclbrenner, the attending cardi·
olog JSJ.
.
"Mr. Parcells tolerated the pro-

ccdure well and IS now listed as
stable," Kcsselbrenner said in a
statement.
Baseball
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - B1ll
Wegman, 15·7 w1th a 2.84 earn ed
run nvcrag e for th e Milwaukee
Brewers last season after missing
most of th e previous two s~ason s
with arm troubles. was named the
wi nncr of the HUich Award.
The award , presented annually
for the past 27 years, is honors a
player -who overcomes a form of
phy sical adversity to prolong or
restore his career.

--=·-

Wish all your customers and
fri.ends a very Merry l:;hristmas in
our Christmas Greeting_§dition on
December 24th .
•

11TTEIITIOII/
OPEN HOUSE 9~00 a.M. • 5:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAl, DEC. 18 • PUBLJC.INVITED

__________ ____
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• •

'THE DAILY SENTINEL

. ORMAN HALL, INC.
675-2877

I

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CAU FOR FREEEST1MAT8 C 'o m f o r tmaker~

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by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
Christmas encompasses warmth 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 ym.~· is our
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We worry about your
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. Complete statistics on the Dyke
. game were not immediately avail·
•abl e, although the Red men held a
: 44 -34lcad at the half and benefited
from h1gh scorin g by co-captains
Schubert and Erslan, who had 26
and 24 points, respecti ve ly. Don ·aldson was al so credited with 22
:points m ano ther example of bal ·
·anced scoring.
The Redmen arc back on the
road tonight at 7:3 0 when they
meet Wilmington .'
Box score:
LAKE ERIE (86) - Brett
Vana, 8-0-16; David Whittington,
· 2·3·0· 13; Jason Weybrecht, 0-2·2:
Marty Stockwell, 7-1 -5-22; Ken
·, Murray, 1-2-4; Eric Janke, 3·0·6;
. Lou Greco, 3-0-6; Dave Golan, 6.'5-17 TOTALS 34-4-14-H6.
: RIO GRANDE (141) r Mark
··Etsi:ID , 3·3-0-15; Brad Schubert, 3·
'3-4-19: Lyndell Snyder; 1·1·3·8;
·Jeff Brown, 2-3·2-15; Tim Christian, 3-1·6· 15; Troy Donaldson, 44- 12; Kyle S~hroe r , 1-3-2- 13;
Jason Curtis, 1-1· 1·6; Matt Powell,
1-6-2-22; Brett Coreno, 1-3-2- 13;
Ray Anderson, 0·1·0·3. TOTALS
19-25-27··141.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
70, Lake Erie ll4.
Rio Grande vs. Dyke - box
incomplete.
·

llACKIIILU GOLD
DlllCI' fiCMI T111UC111lll OF WIUTII

Chtlllmll
Ct11llng Edlll.n

Redmen win ...

· t1mcs

School choice pla~.
l'n......... .. .......... ,..
..........u. '"" ;.... lfoll ""'..

By SCOIT WOLFE
After a close 13-10 first period,
Southern fell prey to the host Eastern Eaglettes 19-7 in the pivotal
.second frame, where Eastern estab·
' lished a lead it did not relinquish en
route to a 50-37 SVAC girls' basketball victory Monday mght.
Eastern is now 2-2, 2-0 in th e
SVAC, while Southern is 0-4, 0-2.
Eastern's junior guard Shelly
Metzger led the Eaglettes with 12
points and 5 assists, while semor
guard Tabitha Phillips tallied 8,
post women Ruby· Burke, Tiffany
·Gardner, and Lee Gillilan each had
six , and sophomore Jaime Wilson
four. ·
Southern was led by junior
guard A111ber Ohlinger with 14
markers,7 rebounds, and nine
assists, while Jennifer Cross tossed
1n 10, Andrea Moore 6, Jessica
Codner 4, and Christie Cooper 3.
-rn th e early ·g-eri n-g- Eastern
j umped out to a 6-0 lead, but
Southern steadily worked its way
back into the game.
Southern of Coach Dave Gaul,
only seve n girls deep, showed
much 1ntens11y the first fram e,
allowmg them to get back mto the
game.
.
Meanwhile, a battle between
guards Shelly Metzger of Eastern
and A"mber Ohlinger of Southern
developed as both had outstanding
offensive and playmaking games
for their respect1ve clubs. Coach
· Dawn Heideman's Eastern club led
· 13·1 0 at the end of the first canto.
Perhaps, the difference in the
game was a tmng SHS five and
comb med increase in tempo by the '

POINT PLEASANT

·- - -----

.

--

I'

..

. , I

•

�By The Bend

The· Daily Sentinel
·

~ 1' (

·

·
ass

.tuesday, December 17, 1991
·
Page-6

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

~

Familf
Medicine
john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: Ale there any special
heal th concerns that my family
should be aware of around the holidays?
A.nswer: Many of the traditional .
items that we bring into our homes
. to spread Christmas cheer can tum
: in to health hazards if they're not
properly used. Christmas trees,
both real and artificial, as well as
lights and tinsel can all be dangerous if not treated with respect.
Fire safety should be a major
concern if you have a tree. Real
trees sho uld' be stored outside until
yo u·re ready ·to set them up. When
yo u bring your uee inside, it should
be placed in a stand that's filled
· wi th water. This will slow the rate
at which it dries out. Be sure to
check the water level daily.Aiso,
make sure that the tree is sturd y
: and will withstand being bumped
: without falling over.
: Aluminum trees are electrical
: conductors. N'ever hang lights on
• an aluminum tree - shine spot· lights on it instead. If you prefer to
use a plastic tree, se lec t one
' marked "non-!lammable."
Lights may be safely used on
plastic and· real trees, but purchase
. on ly U.L.-approved sets. Before
hang'ing the lights, plug them in for
at least 15 minutes and watch for
smoke or defective pans. Bulb s
th at don'tlight may be loose. or
burned o\Jt. Always unplug the
lights before making repairs, even ·
if it's just to tighten a bulb.
Discard light sets with cracked
or loose plugs or sockets. On those
miniature sets;it'srg·ood idea to
trim any stray wire stran ds that
· stick out between the bulbs and
: their bases, but please unplug them
; first. Use ex tension cords sparing· ly, and beware of overloading outlets with multiple plugs.

A few other safety tips - keep
tinsel away from sockets and wires
out of the water pan. Shut off the
tree lights when you go to bed or
leave home. Don 'I use candles as
tree decorations. If you have small
children in your home, don't use
orn aments that are breakable or
look like they would be good to
cat.
Question: What other hazards
should we be aware of?
Answer: At Chrislmas, many of
us bring several dangerous plants
into the home. Mistletoe, poinsettias and holly berries should all be
kept out of the reach of children.
In fact, if you have toddlers·or
infams m your house, your Chr_istmas plants and all of your other
foliage should .be kept in places
where the children can't get at
them. And two very poisonou s
plants - philodendrons and dieffenbachia -· shouldn't be kept
aroun"d at any time of the year.
If somebody in your household
does eat pan of a house plant, call
your local poison control center at
once, or take the person to an emergency room. And if you go to the
emergency room, take along a' sam ple o( the plant so that the physicians there will know what they arc
dealing with ..
Fi nall y, on Christmas Day,
resist the urge to burn wrapping
paper or evergreens in the fireplace, and anytime you light a fire,
keep an extinguisher handy.
By following these simple precautions, you and your family can
enjoy a safer holiday season.
"Famil y Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni versity College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- No
charges will bd filed agai nsl
Sy lvester Stallone for allegedl y
bashing a car driven by a photographer who snapped pictures of the
actor and a female friend outside a
:nightclub.
.
Nine people wttnessed the alter•cation on March 28, but all were
friend s or busirtess associates of
Stallone or his accuser, making it
impossible to determine what happened, t~e district attorney's office
said M6nday,
.
.Photographer Edward Woody
claimed Stallone and his bodyguard
chased him in their cars and bashed
into his vehicle.
·
, Stallone clai med Woody's car
hit his.

G1al1y Pri1t Slltp

last markdown
· Oil shoes
bef"t closing
store.

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742·3020 Evellilgs

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OPEN FRI. &amp;SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 p.M;

'

ESCAPES RAIDER- New Orleans runniDK
blil:k Dalton Hilliard (right) escape's tbe diviAI
grab or L.A. Raider defensive lineman Scott
.

Sptclalizlng in
Frantt lepoir
NfW &amp; USED PAITS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MOORS

victo rio US • • •__

~: saints

MEiGS LOCAL WINNER - Sara Craig, a sixth grade student
at Pomeroy Elementary, was the winnrr in the recycling poster··
con\est in the Meigs Local SchooLDistrict J'or the Meigs County
Liller Control Office.

Contest winners named

The Meigs County Litter Prevention and Recycling Program
conducted a recycling poster contest for all sixth grade students in
Meigs-County with a cent_ral theme
of "Recycle ... It Could Mean the
World to You."
Students winning first plac e
awards al each individual school
were:
Kellie Bailey, Chester; Jeffrey
Kimes, Riverview; Misty Lyons,
Tuppers Plains; Nancy Whaley,
Bradbury; Sara Craig, Pomeroy:
Shalmon Jenkins, Pomeroy; Trish
Searles, Rutland; Leigh Ann Can-

terbury, Salem Center; Chad
Folmer, Salisbury; Amanda Smith,
Por~and: Nikki Robinson, Racine:
Evan Str•uble;"Syracuse; Tara
Davis, Rejoicing Life. The teach
award was-won by Patty Asbeck.
Winning first place in the Eastern Local School District was Keltic. Baiky:...Eirst-place in Meigs
Local was Sara Craig. Southern
Local first place winner was Evan
Struble.
A total of 206 posters were submi tted and the winners will be display'ed at the Meigs County Litter
Control booth at the 1992 Meigs
Coumy Fair.

•·

Mat Putman, overall; Renee Bar· Jordan Hill, Amy Lee, Rache l
Letart Falls Elementary
ringer, Bridget Browning, Jason Chapman and Jennifer Harris, all
First grade · Travis Chil dress,
R~d. Chrissy Smith and Donnie
A' s; Brigette Barnes, Tommy Eva Kiser, Randall Mahon, Jessica
Smith, academic.
Theiss, Tiffaney Patterson, Sha ne Martin, Amanda Mill er, Ash ley ·
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Bu~er, Adam Ball, Courtney Wcst- Miller, Zachary Pickell, Stephan ie .
Sixth grade . Michelle Caldwell, crviller.
Wilson.
all A's; Billena Buchanan, Chris
Second grad e · Sheri CumSeco nd grade - Janet C(aig,
Buchanan and Jeremy Kehl, over- mings, Matt Johnson, Tyler Liulc, Robert Forester, Roberta Forester,
all; Lamar Lyons, academic.
Joe y Manuel, Rachel Marshall . Jessica McCarty, Joy Rose, Lori
Fifth grade - Stephanie !;:vans, Jason Miller, Macy Rees.
Say re, Ciystal South, la n Wise,
all A's; Greg Burke, Jessica BranThird grade • Kati Cummin s, Nichole Wolfe.
no n, Sarah Householder, Sari Put- Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans, all
Third grade - James All ey,
man, Alisha Rojas, J.T. White and A' s: Michael Ball, Clay Enslen , Nicole Blumenaucr, Holly Hann.an,
· EASTERN LOCAL WINNER • Kellie Bailey, sixth grade stu· •
Ann Wiggins, overall.
Co urtney Hill , Shaun a Manuel, Garcu Kiser, Jessica Nance, Fallon
dent
at Chester Elementary, was the.winner in the Eastern Local :
Fourth grade· Meg han Avis , Eri n Roach, Joey Sands and Jamie Roush.
School
District in the recycling poster contest sponsored by the .
Matthew Boyles, Matthew Cald· Stemple.
Fourth' grade · Jessica Alley ,
Meigs
County
Liller Control Department. ·
·
we ll , Andrew Rollins . Carrie
Fourth grade - J.B. Boso, Kyle Brawn Herman, Autumn Hi ll, Rya n
Sheets. Steven Weeks. Dezra Norri·s. ll'randon Wolfe and Lena Hill , Mandy Spaun.
Wrikeman, overall.
Yoacham, all A's; Sarah Brauer,
Fifth grade - Danie l H a ~nan.
Third g~de • Matthew Grubb, Stacey Ervin, Kim lhle, Chris Ran- Janey Hill, Jennifer Morris, Joshua
Kevin Keaton, Joshua . Kehl , dolph, Tara Rose , Dena Sayre, Whitley, Rebecca Wolfe.
Danielle Spencer and Gary Vier- Jared Smith.
He !lys in the sky and he walk~
Sweet Deidra Mac
Six th grade· Travis Ranso m,
ling, overall; Joseph Brown and
Fiflh grade · Jesse Little , all Jenn ifer Roush, Raneua Wheeler.
on the ground, he stays in the coun;
There is a Santa Claus
Wesley Shafer, academic .
A's; Joshua Ervin, Suzanne Evans,
try and he comes to town . Oh DeiSouthern Junior High
Southern Local
Philip Harris, Josie Jarrell , Jessica
Nanny, Oh Nann y, is th ere a dra, Sweet Dcidra , there is a S~nui
Seventh grade- Brian Allen,
The honor roll for the second six Theiss.
·
Claus, and if anyone asks you, yotl
' Jason Lawrence , Am'bcr Thomas, Santa Claus?
week grading period in the South·Sixth grade - Nikki Robinson , · Greg McKinney, Jessica Sayre , all
I wondered causp I aske(l, and tell them there was. You tell them
ern Local School District has been all A' s; Chad Clark, Ryan Grace, A's; Angie Carleton . Travis Lis le, mommy told me there was. Docs he th rives in the heans of all living,
announced:
Matt Hill , Ni·cole Hill , Misty Raquc l Maddox, Amy Non hup, he wear a long beard, and a big red For Santa Claus is the spirit of giv;
Racine Elementary
Hysell , Alicia Mulford. Jess ica Jennifer Scarberry, Chri s Ball, coat? Docs he have a big wooden 1ng.
•
First grade • Jennifer Walker, Roush, Danny Sayre und Stephanie Zach Couch, Hillery Harris, Jesse pipe that he smokes? Does he drive
Dedicated to little peo ple, ·bug
Stemple.
a magic sleigh , with eight reindeer? and all who remember to ·believe
May_~ard, Josh Roush, Lora Sayre,
'
Portland Elementary
Va nessa
Sh uler.
Tonya Does he fly through the sky in in Santa Claus.
First grade - Alan Moore, all Nazarcwycz, Adam Roush, Bobby December each year?
Susanne Sprouse
and get well cards 'were signed for A's; Jessica Burris, Brittany Davis,
Middleport
Oh Deidra, Oh Deidra : Oh DeiWritesel.
·
Lois Pauley, Elizabeth Webster Garri son
---&lt;-T--- ..
Davi s, Rebecc a
dra,
my
dear:-All
those
things
can
Eigh th-. grad e - Pa ul lhle,
I
FrancesYo ung , ~uby Die hl and Lawrence, Andrea Long, Donald
be
real
if
you
only
just
peer,
peer
Roche
lle
Jenkins,
Ja
y
McKelvey,
Harvey Erlewine. ·
Bush, Derek Clark , Brandon Smith. Rayan Young , Nick Sm ith, Rob into the past. And know that he
The pages, Rosalee King and
Second grade · Travan na
was, yes, my sweet child, there is a
Stella Atkins, collected the sun- Moore, Amanda Hu ddles ton,- uti Crow, Jennife r Lawrence, all A' s; Santa
Claus. He lives in the North
lonna
Manuel,
Jason
Shuler,
Jason
shine fund.
A's: J.P. Harmon , Tyler Johnson, - ·Barn ett, John_Card, Mandy -Mills, Pol~;and all around!.
Harold Rice gave the table Russell Krider, Amy WiIson.
Sammi Sisson, Robin Gill isp ie,blessing before the group entered
Third grade- Brandi Codner, all
the dining area where they were A's; Justin Burris, Nick Boli n, Jan- CJ. Harris, Cra ig Knight.
served refreshments by the refresh- ~e Richards, Maggie Smith.
ment com mittee of Pat Arnold,
The. Faith Full Gospel Church in
Fourth grade - Erin Bolin , all
Pauline Atkins, Lois Thompson A' s; Reb e-kah Colli ns, Rebeccah
Long Bouom wi ll pre.sc nt its
and Larry Well.
The Racine Uni ted Method ist Christmas program on Fnday at 7
Davi s, Joey McK inn ey, Anita
Stale Auto's already
After the refre.shn1ents were Holter.
Choir will prcsent•the cantata , "Let p.m. along wirh special singing.
secved the group enjoyed· fellow low premiums can be
Fifth grad e · Pany Lawren ce Us Go To Bethlehem" on Sunday Pastor Steve Reed in vites the pubship and the exchange of Chrislmus and Jason~Rous h .
al7:30 p.m.
reduced even more by
lic.
gifts. •
insuring bo!IJ your 1:111 _
Sixth grade ·
I Coleman .
D,H.__-j)arlcna Flowct·s~----~[1111'
anifhome with the Slate
Syracuse Elementary
Aulo Companies.
First grade ,, Mind y Chancey,
Connolly, Crystal Cottrill ,
Let us tell you just
Ida Murphy was a Sunday din- Justin
Mariam
El-Dabaja,
Jenni
fer
Ster)p,
how-much your savings
ner guest of Jeff and Peggy Bole, all A's; Jenny Larsen.
can be.
Homer Hill. ,
Second grade · Mall Ash, Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Kev in Knapp,
Michelle, Amy and Ashley and. Schultz, all A's; Brice Hill, Nath an
Martin , Aaron Ohlinger, Lindsey
~
Naomi Smith were Thursday din- Smith,
Christopher
Rupe.
ner gu_ests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Third grade · Joshua Larsen, all
Knapp. .
·
A's;
Cara Ash, Sarah Ball , Jason
PM!
Mr. and Mrs. William Dummiu Cundiff,
~Services
Jeremy
Fisher,
Jessica
and son, Baren, Gallipolis, were Janey.
·
Witt,. You Cfln Buy Oufllity Furniture
Wednesday dinner guests of Mr.
Fourth
grade
.
Eugene
Bing,
214 EAS-r MAIN
and Mr. Jeff Bole,.Horner Hill Joshua Davi s, Jonathan Smith ,
II You Do11't Mind hying A Little Less!
Road ,
.
POMEROY
Kathryn Johnson and Peggy Steve Tackeu, Autumn Th"omas.
Fifth grade - Kim Sayre, all A's:
992·6687
Bole were Thursday visitors of Mr. Bridget
Cross,
Ashli
Davis,
Jessica
and Mrs. William Dummitt aild Smith.
• STATE ROUTE 124
1 RUTL4NO, OHIO
Baren of Gallipolis.
Sixth ~rade • Eyan Struble, all
Naomi Smith was a Sunday vis- A's;
Sl•te Auto
Canssa Ash, Cynthia Calditor of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, well, Valerie Cundiff; Amber
Insurance Comp•nlea 'Langsville.
Hayes, Billy Young.

: : passes. to lead the Sainis to a 27-0
' ~ victory over the Los Angeles
Raiders, locking up a playoff berth
for New Orleans (10-5).
The Raiders (9-6) had already
clinched a wild-card spot, but the
defeat dropped them two games
behind Denver and ended chances
for the AFC West title.
The Saints still have hopes of
winning the NFC West, but those
hopes depend on 6eaiing Phoenix
Sunday and Dallas beating Atlanta.
Atlanta and the Saints are tied for
the division lead, but Atlanta holds
the tiebreaker edge by virtue of a
beuer division record.
"I've always been a Cowboys
fan,'' said guard Jim Dombrowski.
"Yeah, but we have to take care
. of our end of it," Sl!.id_ linebacker
: Sam Mills. "We can't be con: cerned about things we can't con•. trol."
Hebert has been sidelined with a
badly bruised rotator cuff for the'
past six weeks, and the Saints.lost
th'C la st four games with him
watching as Steve Walsh replaced
him . Wal sh played well, but. the
' Saints' defense, which had been

---Poet's corner---

Program scheduled

·Cantata slated .

Wolf P'en news

Rutland Furniture

Will Be Open For Your
Shopping Convenience
Monday • Saturday, 9 AM·I

ROGAN
NER

,RUTLAND FURNITURE

.1/j

.•

· No. I in the NFL, went into a and a 31-yard interception return
decline, sUI'I'endering a total of 88 . by Breu Maxie with 1:54 left in the
points over the four suaighllosses. game.
The Raiders got six ftrsr·downs
It was 10-0 in the fourth quarter
and 117 yards against the Saints.
when the Raiders blocked a punt
"The pass rush. that's what it and got the ball at the New ()rleans
was," said Milton Mack, pressed 33-yard line. Three pla ys netted
into a starting role for the second . minus-one yards, and Jeff Jaeger's
weekend after eight weeks on 53-yard field goal attempt hit the
injured reserve and the practice cross bar and bounced back onto
squad aCter lhrce cornerbacks went the field.
down in two games.
It was the closest the Raiders
"(Jay) Schroeder got hurt and came to a· score . The rest of the
Vince Evans came in , and we had time, their offense was bouled up
'the quarterback position kind of in their own territory.
rattled," Mack sai d. "That's
:' A loss like thi s makes you
impertant. .
realize that you have a long way to
· "In our minds, we're still the go," said perennial all-pro defenNo. I defense in the NFL. We just sive back Ronnie Lott.
would not be denied tonight.' '
'' l was trying 10 em phasize that
_The Saints' scores carne-on two today was a playoff game. If this is
fi eld goals by Morten Andersen, what we're going to be like in the
one in the first quarter from 37 playoffs, we'll be eliminated real
yards and one with 3:35 left in the quick," he said.
game from 42 yards ou~ a one-yard
''We did not show up to play at
plunge by Dillton Hilliard in the all tonight," said Raid ers head
third quarter, and a pair Of late coach Art Shell . " It was as if we
touchdowns within 18 seconds of threw our uniforms out on the field .
each other- a two-yard run by Gil
''We don'tlike to lose, especialFenerty a'fter a fumble recove ry ly in a game like th is. It 's just
tough."

Scoreboard

'

In the NFL ...

Norrll Dl-.-l.tiloo
Team
·. W L T Pll. GFGA
Delroi1................ 20 9 4 44 132 104

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Tu m

Eulem Dl•blon
W l. T PeL PF PA

l-Buflalo .... ..... 13 ..2 0 .867 444 301
Miami ................
N.Y. l ou ...........

8 7- o .533 323 326

"

JS 112 110

Chicago.. ............ t3 13 7
Minnesota.......... 12 J5 )
Toronlo .............. 9 J9 5

33 tll iOl

Vancouver .........
Winnipeg .. .........
Etlmooton ..........
l.oa:Ange!CI .......
Ctlgary ..............
SanJc.e .............

CenLral Dh'ialon
z-Houston ........ .. ll 4 0 .733 366 227
Cleweland-.. "'" '

Stlouis ............ 1411 7

9 I .400 28J lAJ

"''"""'"' .......... 6 9 0 .400 275 334

4 40119101
7 37 99 96
5 ' J1 113 119
7 31 109120
4 28 11! 109
3 1'1 87148

.'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
'

992-5335 or 915-3561
Across F,ram Past Office

. BULLDOZER ind '
BACKHOE WORK,
_ HOME SITES, ~
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TIUCKIIIUYAWLE .
flEE iSTIMUES

POMEIOY, OHO

992·3831

llfllGIUTOIS-StOO up
IAIIGES.:_Goo·Bt&lt;.-$125 up :

FIIIZEIS-JJ.U

111(10

PF PA
463 200
lll283
261222
257 2n

334 307
314 208

341 225
'1:2S 367"'

W L
7
7
11
11
15
15
16

PeL
.667
.667
.500
.500

GO

.286

8
8

15
l l

.286
.TI3

i .l

Ctn tn l Dl~l5ion
-qucogo .................. l8 3 .857
C le~el a nd ..:...~~.... ll

~ Monday's S&lt;ore

New Orlean• Z7, l..ol Allgelc:~ Raidcf1 0

Saturday's games
Houlton 11 New York Gianu , 12:30
p.m.
Omen Bay at Minna:ou, 4 p.m.

I
Adanll ................... ll I I

.600
500

Milwaukcc ............. ll
ln dia na ................... ll
Oetroit ...... ::.............. ll
CharlotLC ..................7

.478
.458
.440
.292

12
13
14
17

5.5
7.5

8
8.S
9
115

Ml4wt.lt Dlvltlon
W L Pd.

Allanta at Dallu, I p.m.

Tum

Cleveland at PII1Jb.wah1 l p.m.

Utah ....................... l5 9

.625 •

Sa)1 Antonio ........... 12
Houston ........ ......... 11
Dllln ......... ~ .......... 10
Dcnvtt .....................9·
Minncs0ta ............... .3

.S7 1
.550
.435
.409
.150

Detroit at Bufft!o, 1 p.m.
lndianapolilat Tampa Ba y, I p.m.
New Entltnd 11 ClndnnaU, I p.m.
New York Jeu 11 Mitmi, I p.m.
Kanan City at 1...01 Anse.Je. Raiders, 4
p.m.

9
9
13
13
17

__ _f'aclnc Dlvl1kln
L.A . LakCll ............ l5 7 .682
Golden St111 .......... 11 · 1 .650
PjXtland .. ............... 1.5 9 .62S
Phocn.il .................. l4 9 . .609
L.A.Clippen ......... l4 10 .513
ScaLUc .............. . 11 ll
.500
Stcramcnto ............7 IS .318

Monday
ChiCIJO I LS~n Francisco, 9 p.m.

!...

In the NHL...

CB
U
2
4.5

5
10

I

I

u

2

'8

MCIIIday's scores .
Ocu-oitl03, Denver 89 ..
Penland 119, MiMc:~ou I04

WALES CONFERENCE
Pahick Dirillon

Ptl. GFGA

To•lght's games

44 147 102
41 116102
36 llt116
New JUICy ........ IS Il 4 34 119 9S
N.Y. btondon .... 10 H S l.l 101 Ill
Philadelphia.. ..... 9 JS 6 24 HS 104

New Jcraoy alNew York, 7:30p.m.
801tcn aL Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Utah. at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
lndian&amp;MAU..nu , 7:30p.m.
Mlamlal Chw•l•nd, 7:30p.m.
LA. ~...aim ac Chicr.ao, &amp; p.m.
San A.nlllnio al DaUn:, 8:30 p.m. .
WaahlnJ*1 11 HOUJton.8:30 p.m.
L.A. Cllppcra a1 SeaWe. 10 p.m.
Min ntlot.a at Gold en Sutc , 10:30
p.m.

Adam Dlvlllon
Mon...t......... ,.. 22 12 2 46 116 78

BOikln ................ 1113 s 31 107 110
Hanlord ............. l213 4 28 91106
Buffalo............... 917 4 '" 22 91 113

.

,

01 TOU FlEE
1-100-84&amp;-0070
DAIWIII OliO

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

RACINE, OHIO
11/20/1

•VInyl Siding
•Repllcement
Windows
•Roofing
•lnsulatfon ,

985-4'473
667•6179

lap,lttalf

(ov•s, etc.
Prolestiatlttl

Elgravittt

614-985·3961
11~311

GROOM
' ROOM

PONDSSEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: .
Limea10ne. Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
Ucen•d and Bonded

PH . 614-9!12•5

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Bashan Building

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERT

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

factory Choke
12 Galop Sloo!Jun Only
Strictly lofonool

9-13-'91 ·dn

mo.

.CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SAlE AT BOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

Mtil51l Rlllattd. Oh.

Complete Grooming
far All Breeds
· EMILEE.MERINAR

TRE SREADY
NOV. 28 1991
fruit C.l Dalltl b:aly Grew
.,IHS..wdei.

Owner &amp; Operator

$10-'up ·
"'" 1117:00 !•·

. 614-9f2 -68l0
Pomeroy,

BUUDOIING

GUN SHOO.t.

NO .,
SUNDAY

lomocWing
Stop &amp; Comport
Fr10 Estimates

6l4-742-3U51

11-lll ... pl

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

•VINYL SIDING.
•ALUMINUM SlptNG
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

· or Its. 949-2860

•Complete

'INSULATION

1t1141t1n

614·949·2202

Jr. Gall Stls
Graplite &amp;
Metal Cubs
Cust• fillittg

•Now Homes
•Garages ·

, J&amp;L

742·2097
53t Bryan Place
Mlitdleport, Ohio

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
Investment"

Teafonl
Country Olb

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION

J / 31 / '91 tin

JAMES kEESEE
.9 92·2n2 or

SNODGUSS
UPHOlSTERY

•.

.,

:r:AillALL liliES .

lringP~k~:r We

DEER CUTTING
t- 11- - and __ _
WUPPING

KEN'S APPliANCE

'25 C1t &amp;Wrapped
'5 Extra to Sli1

915-3561

MAPLEWOOD
lAKE

99~~~~~Cf or

lcreu F... P..t
217 E.
POMIIOY,

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge fadory
(hoke Only
-

9-6-tfn

RAONI, OH.

949•2734
Owner
CLARENCE ATHERTON

C. l. Heating &amp;
·Refrigeration
We Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, Insider,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Conditioners

...,..

c....... .

11700SR 12•

Long Bottom, Ohio

.... ,, ••u
11f1411

mo.

lntcm~lional

OT

Clemson 87, Fwrn.n 8 3
Couu l Carolina 77, Llving!llone 69
Coppin St. 76, Youngstown St. 59
Gr•mbling St. 110, Ccntcnny !07 .
Memphis St. lOS, SW Lo1miana 97
Missiuippi St. 87, E: . Kentucky 68
Morchc.td St. 90, TCM.•Martin 76
N.C. Charlouc 90, N. Carolina A&amp;T

59

Midwest
Cinci.nnali 65, Mo.-Kansas Cny 61
Concordia. m.60, Chicago 54

Creighton 55, 1lradlcy 53
E. IUU!ois 70, Nol'\h cutcm 66
Mich.ig1n 86, Cent. Michigan 70
North wes tern 8!l, ldaho St. 60
Toledo 80, llowud U. 62

'

Southwest
Tcu .~· El

Puo 66, Tarletrm Sl. 511
Teus-S'an Antonio 81, E. T c~as S1.

52

Far West·

Loyola Marymoun~ 95. UC ltv me 84
S. Utah 74, Mon11na 65
Wuhin~ton St. 119. Alcorn Sl. 81
Weber St. 115, Oral Robcru KO

Transactions

Wodno!lday•s games
Milw.._ at BwLon, 7:30 p.m.
CI•. .M.•tNew.JtntJ, 7:llp.m.
Utah at Ptllldelphia,1:30 p.m.
Indiana II Miami, 7:30p.m.

Call614-992-6528 or
315-8227

GRAVE
B~TS
Homemade with

Scotch Pine.

·$20.00 epclt
Ordar Now for Your

614-949·2058
Agr"""

to Lenns wi1h hmior Oniz, catcher, on 1
minor-league contra ct
MI NN~SOTA TWINS - Named
Brad Weitzel scouting aupc r ~isor for
Florida;

National Ua~:uc
FLORIDA MARLINS - Si~ncd
· ClemcMc Nunez, pitcher, to 1 mm orlcague contract. Named Fernando Arroyo
pitching co.ach of their Gulf Coast League
team and
DoMcnitt p1Lch111g cot~ch
of Eric oft.he New YoO: ·PCM League.
SAN FRAN CISCO GIANTS Named Bill Robinson manager o£Shn.:vc·
port of 1hc Tens League.

M•rtr

Jlaskotball
Nallon al Ruk.etbllll\uoclatlon
NOh. - Suspcndild Kul Malone o!
Uuh for one gamu wllllnut pay lind fined
hi m $10.000 fo r commlttins. n.gr ant
foul in 1 game again~ l Dcuoit on Ike. 14.
Fined Dmcll Wt!ker of OcLroit SS,OOO
for leavirl g t111: bench arc. and throwing 1 ·
punch. and l.tu~ Aua~in, ~ni d _llenoit,
Mike Brown, 1 yron Corbm, Enc Mur·
dock and Deline~ Rudd of U11h and
William Bedford, Muk Agu irro, Dn d
SeUen, Lance Ol ankt , ll?h McCan n and
Chari ~:~ Thomu of Ol.:l.roll $SOO for lcav·
inglhe bench arc.a. d11ring the incidmt.
INDIANA PACE RS - Activucd
Gcorac McCloud , f!,llltd, fromJlhe injured
lis\, Placod Randy Wittman, gua rd, on Lhc
injured list

MINNESOTA TIMBER WOLVES-

Cllimed Tom Garrick, guard, orr wnven
from Lhc San AnloniD Spura.

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
_' ~Reasonable

Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949-2860
Day or Night · ·

NO SUNDAY CALLS

INDEPIJIDINT
CI.ET CUlfiEIS
and nLE FLOOI CUE
•Ruso~eble flllle~

Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
•Qual~

Time

'

•High Gloss on Tll.e
Floor Finish
. MIKE LEWIS, Ownor ·

II. 1, lutlantl, OH.
742

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAFTS

BUDFORDS
Fresh Cui Trees or
Cul Your Own.

CHERRY RIDGE,
East of Darwin on Rt.
681 on Grt1vel Road·
1~ Mi Its to Grove.

WATCH FOR SIGNS

1-

Lost Loved-Ones.

Oasebnll

""'CLEVELA~O INDIA NS -

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTAlS
Avalllbltln
·coUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Starting ot $235 per mo.
Very nlc:e 2 or 3 BA, 2
birth houte
· wlbMement and
c:llrport, ''" 911.

Long Lasting Green

Uague
CA LIFORNIA ANGELS - Signed
John Morris, outfielder. ;o 1 one-year con·

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Sunday

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE .

South

Am~rl ca n

Next week's comes

21 101 11h

Drooklyn Col. 101, Long ! sl~nd U. 74

Allantlc Division
Boston ................... Ill
New:'l.ork .............. l4
Miam i:................ .. . ll
Phibdclphia ........... l l
New Jc:.rsey .... ..... .... 6
Orlando ............... ..... 6
Wuhington .......... .... 6

atECKTHE

PH. 949-2801

East

EASTERN CONFE RENCE
Team

1111511 11'0. pd.

~·· hntts luflt
"Free E.. imotet"

Major college
basketball scores

In the NBA ...

193317

MinnCIOUI .......... 8 7 0 ,S]J 294 279
Green Biy.......... 3 12 o .200 246 306
Ta~p1 Ba) ........ 2 13 0 .133 182 362

Quebec ............... 9 I! 3

PhoenLl 111 Dcnv~:r, 9 p.m.
Golden Sllte at LA. Clippen, 10:30
p.m.

Tn. -Chananooga 64, N.C.·Grccn5·
bow 62
William Carey 102, Auburn · Mont·
gorm:ry 79

Wuhington 11 Buffalo, 7:35 p.m
. Philadc:lphi1 It N.Y. Ranaers , 7:3S
p.m.
Edmonton 11 Toronto, 7:35p.m.

4 0 .733 285 217
y-Daron ............ 1l 4 0 .733 322 281

T
0
1
4

p.m.

992.Q855

up

0~1-$19

85

Wednesday's games

Dl¥11kln

Team
W L
Wuhing,lOO........ 2210
N.Y,. Ranaers ..... 20 12
Pi'ubwah .......... t611

Was hington at San Antonio, 8 :30

Cent. Fl orida 102, fla .

N.Y. lslt.nders 11 Htl'lfOid, 7:35' p.m.
Stn lote I t Pi.tllbwgh, 7:35 p.m.
Quebac at Wuhi.ngton, 7:35p.m.
WinnipeaatCalgary, 9:3S p.m.
Minn&amp;G~aat'LOII Angeles, 10:35 p.m.
Dell'Oit at Vancouver, 10:3S p.m. ,

Setttle........ ........ 6 9 0 .400 2.53 252

· Western Dlvillon
y-Atlanu ............ 10 5 0 .6fJ7
y-Ncw Orleans ... 10 5 0 .667
Si n Francisco .... 9, 6 o..600
L.A":Ram• .....:... - ' 12~-o--:200
s-clinched divilion.
y-dirtched pia yoff berth.

11
10
IS
12
15
24

Chlr\oue ~~ Dc~toit. 7:30p.m.

Tonight's games ·

San Dieao .......... 4 1l 0 .U7 260 325

y-Chict~o .......... ll

18
15
13
12
12
7

MO'n tn:al( St. Louis 2
N.Y. Rangers4, SanJ01c 3, OT

Wulern Divlllon
x·Dawer ............ ll 4 0 .733 287 221
y-Kwu City .... 9 6 o .600 295 I ll
y·L.A. Raiden ... 9 6 0 .600 277270

c~ nlral

23 t-4111

Monday's scores

ClndnnatJ ...-.. 2 lJ I .133 234 4ZB

Eutem Dlvlllon
Tta!D .
W L T PeL
lli·Wuhinaton .... 14 I 0 .933
y -O~Iu ............. 10 S 0 .667
Philadclphit ....... 9 6 0 .600
N. Y. Gian1.1........ 7 8 0 .467
Phoenix.............. 4 II 0 .267

Tl 99 101

.Smythe Oivh;lon

7 8 0 .467 29 t 273
New FnaJand ..... 6 9 0 .4t:9 204 276
lnd.ianapolii ....... I 14 0 .067 140364

•

992-7013
or 992,5553

&lt;C_on_tin_ued_f_ro_m_Pa.;_ge_5l_ _ _ _ __

•

'

Davis (70) during Monday night's game in New
Orleans, which the Saints won 27·0. (AP)

·EXCAVATING

WASHIIS-SIOO up
DIYIS-$69 up

10/30!19

~tam

SOUTHER'N LOCAL WINNER· Evan Struijie, sixth grader at
· Syracuse Elementary, was the first place winn~r in the Sout~ern
Local School District with his poster for the Meigs County Lttter
Control's recycling pos.ter contest.
•

.JISEUJL!ftiAfLICES . . 11---'--1.
to Dl Y WIIUILIR

12-2-11-1 - ·

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

· Harrisonville OES meets

Na-charges-fi1'etl

PICK·A·PIIR

8:30 am-4:00 pm

'

The Harrisonv ille Order of the
Eastern Sta r held its December
}'fleeting with Pat Ajnold, '!'Ortliy
matron , and Larry Well, worthy
patron, in charge. ·
All of the new officers, with the
cxce11tion 9f the ll)a rshall , were
present and in their offices.
The worthy matron commented
on the auendance an d how it was
appreciated.
. The secretary read a lcuer from
the depu ty grand matron listing the
· many changes in the order and also
: a reminder of the responsibility in
: continuing with the care of the
' environment.
~ A report of the sick was given

· ~yERR
Displayecl at 1\e
HOURS:

:Eastern, Southern Local announce honor ralls
Eastern Local
The honor roll for the second six
: week grading period in the Eastern
·Local School District ·has been
: announced:
Chester Elementary
Sixth grade - Kelli Bailey, Stefani Bearhs and Renae Pooler, all
· A's; Brandon Buckley.
; Fifth grade - Dustin Huffman ,
:Valerie Karr, Melody Lawrence,
·Jennifer Starcher and Aaron Will,
' overall ; Jessica Marcum and Jason
·Mora, academic.
Fourth grade · Molly Heines, all
:'A-'s; Joshua Broderic~. Chris
: Kr?wsczyn and Joshua Will, overall; Scott Needs and Jessica Pore,
academic.
,Third grade· Juli Bailey, Joshua
. Clark, Cinda Clifford, Wcs Crow,
lfiffany Hollon and Chad' Nelson,
overall; John Cooke, academ ic.
:
Ri verview Elementary
· Fifth grade - Christa Circle,
overall.
... Fourth grade · Cassie Rose,
overa ll.
Third grade - Amber Baker,
.Brandon Browning, AmberChurch,
Jeffre Circle, Nathan Marcinko and

Business Services

11·25 t mo. pd.

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
Homegrown ,
beltutiifull, sheared.
Wlilteand
5 Ft. and up
Good selection ol

large trees,
614-742·2143 or1112&amp;

HILL'S DEER

Choose anti Cut
Your Tree or We'll

CUTTING,
. SKiN~ING,
.WRAPPING

Pomtroy, Ohla

614-992-5702

12·2·91·1 mo.

coniNG
BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

949·2206
11114111 1 mo.

ID'I
Pllln'IIO
lnWior Pllndng,

F-E1Um1t..

30 \'eelt HptrlanC..

E"'~/W/Spallsli

11N1 mo. pd.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomlfoy, Ohio

•fi~EWOOD

·

.Ill SLACK
- · ·992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

11-14-'90

FOISALE

CH
, TREES
REASONABLEHA.RLEY HAlliNG'S
RESIDENCE·
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
11-18, t mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
..
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES -·
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Grovel and Coal
Uceneod ond BondH

PH. 614-992-5591

12-5-tln

Newly Re-done

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

Processing

collect at
1-614-667-6474

.,, I lJ

cai{Ed Battin

t;;~~":sTtMATES)

Gtlltt'CII Word

,....=. .,
-1nd dependllblt.

=~':::"~.e. ••.~..

GIFTS lor HOME or OFFICE

Temporory
Secretarial Jobs
ln.vldllalized

Four lllltra of
recommendetlon. HonMt

SHRUB &amp; TREE
CARPENTER SERVIICE I
.TRIM .and
- Room Additions
REMOVAL
- Gutter woril
-- Concme
el'"''''lfl IIWrlr
ond Plumbing
HAULIN
-1- 1-l...!'!.I.I.I:IU

992·6215

742·2979

RIGGS
TREE FARM
-em It-For You.
.39507 Rocksprings Rd.
"' c.w er u.s. u1

YOUNG'S

Tlt.WS

Each ditferonll cclet:tor value.
Native oak. ~ne. cheny, popar
0&lt; walnut Available
Foo C•rusrMAS I Altv.Ocy!SJOH

(6141256·6710

(614)446-1410 or 446-8400

has nice homesites
available for up to
BD' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75
mo.

fir

Cal
614-992·5528 or
. 385-8227

12·11·1 mo.

...__,_- .

.

�•,

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

31

room, lull baHmtnt, ctnlral air,
aero•• ·from Hotpllal , . al'top·
ping area; wHI aonaldtr tradt for
farm of'.lcreage In Gallla County
Ohio, Somrvlne Really, 304-6753030 or 875-3431.

CRUISE

5 Days, 4 Nights, Ovtr Bought

Travel

PackagH,

Rtc:aulon

Prlcts, Must Sail!' $199/Couple,
Plus Port/Servlc •

44

Homes lor Sale

Ch.,pl. 404·

KIT 'N' CARLYLf:® by Larry Wright

Apanment
, lor

c.,.
Cod otylo, 3 bedroom, 1
112 baths, folmal dining &amp; llvlflg

Announcements
BAH~MA

ber

Pomeroy-Middleport,, Ohio

Sentinel

Autos lor Sate

school books or modern paper·

=,e;:
, v;,o-=a"'r.te
"''--:Loo
= lfod=-=
s1:::o-=
,10=o

bacKs, 1·614-593·8915.

Browning 8Wttl 16. $175
446·735r
.

On 1213191 My Ctr Was Broken
Down On i:u.2 Ashton WV, I Was
Wa lking On Rt.2 And Someone

paymt~l.

cyCiaa.

Re lused They Took My Pur se
Ar 1d My Only Money. Would

Rou, 304-

Meet Area Slngltl By Cholet

1W6 Govtner hou11 lralltr,

Not Chance. Write: Slnglll, P.O.
Box 1043, Gallipolis, Ohl o 45631.

To Good Homa, 1 Mala Black
Kitten. 614-441·0S31 Atter6p.m.

6

Lost

&amp; Found

LOST, Blue Tick Btagla1 lost
around the Moose, colfar reads
Robert N. F1rl1y, 304·675·7242,
Raward.
LOST-Camp Conley, large dog,
black wl!an, namt Jaka, Plaasa
Call 304·675·6955 attar Spm
LOST-lg mala dog white
wtbrown spot t, name Sam, Big
Bend area, SR124 &amp; 338 $10
11tward, 614-247·4035
Losl : at Krogers In Alhtns, gray
billfold, pleasa return wJth no
questions askad, 614·992·6906
Losl : on eashan , Ad., flaclne,
n~tar Tackentllll, mala Slamase
cal, has only one eya, nama Is
Toby, please call614·949-2784

7

14ll85, all total tltctrlc,
304-671-2457. .

a n~lmilre yootleltel 10 santa came
bact&lt; Chrls1mas Eve lor Insufficient postage?"

"You had

home, 304..fi75·71111.
3 l'lalt Bordar Colllt halt
Elkhound puppies, 12 wkt old,
been wormed, 304·1575·647Q.
3 pc bedroom sultt lnc:ll.ldlng
springs &amp; mallrns, 304·67!6724 .
Ki11ens: 4 tamale, t male.
Woenod &amp; liltar 1rainad. 614·446·
2153 any time.

72

1179 Cltlrmont 14x70, 3 bad·
rooms, 1 bath 1 wtundarp~~nnlng
and
porch,movt,
~ $8,500.
hut,
ctntralfront
air, must
304-882·2341.
1981 Nashua motMtt homa,
11 Help Wanted
14X64, 2 BR, 1 bath, naw
rtlrlgtrator, nawly rtcarp1t1d,
washarldryt~J_ 8x16 front poi'ch.
AVON I All Artn I Stllrlay Park Lane ~,;ourt. 614·446.S732
afttr s. $9999.
Spears, 304-675·1429.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I:GII (J) il Ill llle 8
' ONewo

Child c:are lor 8 mon. old In my
homt beginning Jan. 6th, non·
smoker, r~t. rtq. 614·992~542
Cltrk/Bookkttptr tor local
buslnesa, must mttt public:
well, txparlenc. naedtd. Send
ruume Box C-11, cart Point
Public Sale
6
Ptauant Register, 200 Main St,
Pt. Pit, WV 2.55!50.
&amp; Auction
DRIVERS WANTED
Rick Pearson Au"c:tlon Company,
Wkly. Will T111ln. Orlvt
full tlma auctlon..r, completa $400-$650
Co.
Car.
1·800·521·7750.
auction Mrvlce. Lictnsed Ohio,
West Vlrgl nla, 304·n3·5785.
Easy Woril E.ccalient Pay! As·
semble Products AI Home. Call
Toll Frae, 1·800-467·5566, Ext
9 Wanted to Buy
Wanted to buy, Standing 1lmbtr,
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-992·
5449,
Top Prices Ptld: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sllvar Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coln Shop,
l5l Sacond Avtnua, Gallipolis.

Employment Services

313.

Exctllant pay tor typing names
&amp; addrtsstl from home. No
quOias. Call 1·900-896·1 866
1$0.99 mln116yrs.+) or write :
PASSE-5'17L, 161 S. Lincotnway,
N. Aurora, 1160542. ·
FEDERAL ' GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING, 116,000 • 172BOOOIYr, 1·
805·564·6500 Ext. G 968 For
lmmedlata Ra spon11.

11

Pomeroy,
Middleport

$35D.OOJ0ay Proc:e11lng Phone
Orders I People Call You. Noh·
ptrltnc:a Nec:11sary. 1-80&lt;1·255·
0242.

Help Wan,t ed

AVON · All areas, Call Marilyn
Waavar 304•882·2645.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Pay,
Btnellts,
Transp&lt;lftallon,
407·292.,.'M7,
Ext. 571. 9a .m.·10p.m. Toll
Rtfunded.

,_

,an'I'IJI, opal"

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUIIV'S and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE, &amp; DOUBlEWIDE HOMfS

To · $45o.,_.k,

now

~Iring

hou11ktaptl'l, cooks, lfrvtrt,
malntananct, 1·800.882-2970
LABORERS
Now Hitifi!J To $18-HR, Paid
Wtekly. 1-800-521·6313.
PHOTO TRIMMERS : Wishing to
start lmmedial,ly. No axp.
necessary. Earn up to $110 par
day, trimming photc.-grapha. 1·
800·336-8005,

.·
"
::
,

Dear Sweetneort-, -Merry Christmas,

ro

IS IT APPROPRIATE
CALL
'SOMEONE •' SWEETHEAR'T"" ON
A CHRISTMAS CARD?

Raaldent manager, malntenanca
"coupta for apartment comptax
In Gallipolis. Full-lima wl1h
apartment &amp; utilltlll Included.
Sand resumt lo: Box 1320
Waynasvllla, NC 21788.

MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

35

608 EAST MAIN

Good Firewood For Salt 1 Will

Deliver, 614-25e-8202.

51

. le.':.'/!1 Tin, K·l «;op

Trucks for Sale

tlr_nbar,' $25,000.

: I[JC._I_u

Rentals
PICKENS FURNITURE
41 Houses lor Rent
N•wiUaM
Housthold tumlshlng. 112 mi.
2b"r Conage In Town, Rtltrtn· Jerricho Rd. Pt. Plaa.. nl, WV,
cas Rtquired. $250/mo. 6J4·245· ctii304·675·145D,
9375.
RENT20WN
2br Homt, Naar Gallipolis A.nd
614-446-3158
Gallipolis City Schools . 614-446Vl'rt Fumhure
1617.
Sola &amp; Chair, $11.10 WMk;
3·BR on Ll nco In
Hg Is., Reclintr, $5.47 W•k, Swivel
Pomeroy. 6t4·992·7fi89 attar Rocker, $3.63 WHk.Bunk Bid
5:00pm
Complete $8.41 WHk, 4 Drtw.r
Chtlt, $3.26 Wttk; POittr BtdGalllpollt Ferry, 2 story, 5 bed· room Suitt, 7 pc., $'18JS7 WHk,
room, dining room, 1 bath homa lneludll a.dding.Country Pint
with small &amp;loraga bldg. Nur Dlnatlt With Benc:h • 4 Chairs,
school. $250. month plus $10.98 WHk.OPEN : Mondsy
utllltlet, rtltrtnctl and depot it Thru Saturday, 9a.m. .to &amp;p.m.,
raqulrad, outside pets only, Sunday 12 Noon lUI 5p.m. 4
sarlous lnqulras only, 304·675- Mllea Oft Ro1,1ta 7 On Routa 141,
785~.
In Centenary.

~r~•yl, ~~, 9: 1y1 d~~'f"rp~t'~.,~~Pkl

I
Night
Package. Call
,
Hours A Day, 7 Days A WHk.
Pop-Up Camper, Also Merlin
PIUI, "Phone Sytttm. 614·388·
8905.
Rats Or Mice? In Your Hou11?
Buy ENFORCER, Kllla rats &amp;
mlct · in · Only 1 fMding,
GUA~ANTEEDI Avallabla al'
BaUA] True Vatut Slor~ .11 Wut
Main St~Mt, Clltster, ut11

ll~p·~"~':'·~14:·~388~-9~94~6~,:.:':~~~ 1614-256-6867.
~~~~~~-

Handmade Solid Chtrry Gun
Ci blni( HOICI_I 11, $350. 614-446·
n2o.

55

-

Transportation

iii' I Orum o1JHnnle
~
(1).

:71;:;-...;A:iut~O..;S:::I::o::r::Sa--;;l:::e::::::

81
Home
,,,
1948 Willy's 3-pa.n jHp, axe.
Improvements
, ',
cond, $1700, 132 Butttrnul ----~B~AS::E~M~E~NT~---Pomeroy, OH, 614-912·2529
WATERPROOFING
1971 Ford F-100 truck, runs Unconditional lifetime guaran·
good, 814·949-2886 ...., 5pm
. Local relarancas furnis hed.
and w11kendl"
estlmafes. Call collect 1· •·
day.· or night.
Basement Wlterproo-- ,

9Q92

9KJ651

+KI091 2

+873

tal

+K1072

sOUTH.

~~lrilllltl! Tonight

1

· ,-irlld..:WIIh Clllldton

WIIMio1F-Q

.eFamlf1Feud
• le • l1lr stereo,
D Cal1g1 leHetbll Tulsa-

', II Atabamii·Birmlngham (L)

BCroaeft,.
7:36 (I) SaniG!d 6 Son
I'H l'ly,

~~~-~

R-:

snow. Stereo.· C
liD. MOYIE: 11M Bid_,
Wlriilow (R) (2:00) .

11J M-, IIIIa Wrole Q

.• -for tho_,.
Slillle and the Bop, Clint
Black, K.T, Oalln1 Paul

Overstreet and Reatleas

Heart celebrate Christmas ,
(0:30) Stereo.

&amp;Primo-•
1111 Rill nn nn, K·t Cop
Stereo,

r;1

I:OS (J) MOYIE: Urban Cowboy
(PG) (2:451
1:30 (I) (J) • Homo
l~nr nm competes
with his next-door nelghbor
in lrl[f/
- min the house.
Stereo, ,

• C
SI!Mt Stlllon
8 CNN Special Report

MY MOM CAME HOMe
F~ THESLJP~T

Y66TERCI&lt;'.Y.•.

.-.... !

Wlil-1 A 616; t.QA.D OF~00:01.. '1, "T'IJRNIPS,

WOllam Konnody Trill
10:30)
1111 Wl1ntll 10 Survtval Q
@:00 (J). IIJJn tho HMt ollho
Nlghl An Infant's lite Ia
threatened by s robbery
suspect Stereo, C
(I) ill• AoaaariM
,
Roseanne playa Sante at e

SPINACI-t .&lt;IND ZUCO·H 1\.1 I •

MY , DAOM~~NorlHINC:;I
IM:lR.6e 'THAN AI-.! ' 1MPUL5E
!JUYSRON A HEAI..1H KICK .

,....-,. )

r;l

.---J,.....-..._/

~"ftf,9.:..M,~,Qroo,
Ill 112). MOVIE: T...,.,

ond Hooch' Cll TUitdl~

.

'

Mavla (PGI (2:00) Sl8r10,

11J MOVIE: Miracle an 34

'

StrHI (2:00) []

aGil Lany
Nalhvllle """ Stereo,
King Uvol

1111 , _,Dowling Myototloo

Stereo, r;1
1:30 (I) (J) • poach Haydon's
team Is given the chance to
play In a bowl game, (P1 2 of'
21 Stereo, C
o !lick vriiie ap.cra1 The
Game of Lila
10!00 (J) • lfJ Law l 0...
Graevey-ia murdefed after -"testilylnQJt a triat '(R)

BARNEY
OAOBURN COW
CROSSIN'.!!

Stereo. ·191

Block, brick, ·sewer pipes, win·
dowa, llntals, lie. Claude Win·
tt111 1 Rio Gtandt, OH Call 61~
245-5121, •

•.a

The brain --'the key to success

• AQ9 6

+AQ6
Vulnerable: Both
Deater: Soulh

By Pbillip Alder

In the rinal a~alysis, either your ce~

Soulli

West

Nortb

Easl

2 NT,
4•

Pass
Pass

3.
Pas.c;

Pa"
Pass

rebral pathways produce the · right
thoughts or lbey don't In the auction,
1t isn't so difficult to lind the best bid,
Opening lead: • 2
Just consider each possible action as
you 01scend ihe bidding ladder, stat!· '----------~-'
ing with a pass and, if legal, a double
or redouble, In the card-play, if you
are following suil. consider all the
cards you have available, If you are on which you wm in the dummy, East dis· :
cards two hearts, How do you '
_
,'
evaluate as many possibilities as ~ntinu_e? . -~
you can,
There
are
IW9
guaranteed
plays:
North 's three-heart transfer bid is
standard practice lhese days, permit· leading a diamond to your queen,
ling the lead to come round to the running lhe diamond jack, If the fi· :
slrong hand, With his excellent fit for nesse loses, West is endplayerl, forced
to lead a minor suit to your advantage.
spades, South jumped to game,
If
the finesse wins , you can establish a
Cover the East-West cards in the di·
club
trick on which to discard dumagram, Against your four-spade con·
tract, West leads the heart two. You my 's diamond loser,
At the lime, the declarer finesoect
j,cap&lt;u:re ,E;ast's king wilh the ace and,
the
diamond' queen, but then he had'
wishing to broach another sujt,
whal
we polilely call a blind spot: he
exit with your last heart. The defend·
conliriuerl
wilh the ace and another di·
ers play a third round, You ruff and
amond.
Now
he bad to lose two minorthen play lhe 'a ce and another spade,
suit
tricks:
one
down.
On the second,round. West goes in with

or :

wanders from home
and Ia found lrozen In the

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

l!l Newa

@ ltl1, .......... IN IE

the kin~ and exits with his last s11ade,

ACROSS

41 Wool tiber
«Moll
IIRiitM
48AIInanglt
48 Gerago
conltnla
49 Hlmolayen

1 Anolnl
6 Fldgoly (It)
t 1 Tea IYPI
13 Sadallve
t4 Leoo dlotont
t5 Synthttlc
Iabrie '
16 Slove
17 - IIIII
t9 Malntolned
20 Mlnnooola
capRol
12 Wdl.l
23 Nolghbor of
lid,
24 Comodlon
Sparh
27 Sawod
border of
29 UnMIItd •
31 Turns
35 Fathers
36 Rhdorln
c:hurch
37 Slicker

l!l [!] l1 L.'.l r.nJ tJ ... l'J l!:l IJ
[!JlJLJD~!ll!l UiJ[!][J
IJLJ[j:.:J[!](][!] IJfJI!Il!I[J
[j[jl:J L:Jlj(!] [!][J[j
IJUL:JU (!]01!1 l1L:JfJw
~uu .:.JI.!IUL!DL:J
Li1UUL:Jl3LJ
(!]fJIJ[j£J
I.!J[J[;JljLJ
[JL:JIJ[;J[j[.
Ul!UUUU [!][J[l
IJL!JLiiiJ L:Jl!JIJ I!ILJl!lw
~LiiU I!IL:JL:J LlfJL:J
D~UEJ[j l!lUfJLJUlit£J
[][JIJ[]LJ I!IULJBlUJi]

G':!

53
55 Sign up
57 VtnUI
IWH!holrt
58 Actor Ke~ 59 Slow (mu,,l
80 MoryMoora

DOWN
t Flral-&lt;ole
12 Wdl.j
2 Wordo of
dtn,! tl
3 GUllO
4llocllol of
knowledge
5 Chomlcol
1ufflx
6 nmber Ires

40 Allan wom-

en's quarters

1:1rottot

7 Nolch
8 Foond
conltlnor
wiiVhl of
9 lllno layer

tOIIarblaSirolunctmovla
12 Ftll

&amp;

Carttr'l Plumbing
.......-\, Fourth and Pine
Galli polis, Oklo
614 -446-3688

84_ Electrical &amp;
WE WANT YOUR LISTING..., YES; TODAY!
CALL RIGHT NOWI DON'T DELAY

WE HAVE BUYER&amp; WANTING
MORL.MORE....MOREI YOU MAY HAVE WHAT
THEY'RE LOOKING FORI

Refrigeration
:'
,..,.,...;.;,:....::.:...:....:....;__
~

Real Estate
Complotiy F - 8011H
HOU111 tiiO/mo. Plw UIIOOt1

31 Home&amp; for Sale

And Oo-, IM.ol4lo03311, Cali
8efof97p.m.

HENRY E. CLELAND .... ,..•,.... ,.,. ..................... ,.II2 ..1tl
TRACY BAINAGEA....•,..................,..... , .,,,,, ..Nt-24at
JEAN TAU88ELL. ................... ,.• ,......... ,..... ,....NNMO

3 BR brlcll horne: would like to
trtdl for I I'IOUM In tM C:il)' of
tqual VIIUe. 014-441-0414.

EHenclancy lilt In Pl. Ptelunt,
nk:t neighborhood, Hud accep1od, 1·30·-17H042 '

JO ttiLL.........""''............................................... ~II

DOUble wldt, ont acrt property,

Fuml1htd 3 R00m1 • Bath,
Clun, No P.t11 • Referance •
Oopool1 Aoqolioa, 114-4411o151g.

OFFICE..................... , ........................................ H2·2211

Rttldentlal or commercial ;
wiring, naw sarvlct or repairs. ·· ·
Mallar Ueant ad alactncian. ''~
Ridenour Eltctrlcal, 304·675· , .oJ.
1786.
\,.

Gllllpollt Fer.ry, for Information
304-675-7217. rar tor 1111.

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

-· '

'

.

,___,

~,

..'

13 Ancient
thotlor
18 Flol(lf.l
21 ota.lallon
22 Illite:

iiiiCIIIMtl

25=

24

Nu~~tb."

lladfld
38 Otltd

38 Slioo

,-..,.

31 Aclruo
Cltlra
41 Ollhe 11011
'•2 Study

a.-racy

~

Convonallon Willi the
Soc,._,
at Educllan

Plumbing
Heating

lloun!llnHf'alkl

45 Corroopond
47 Flal·
,
boHomod
boll

The state of education In this
country Is examined and tha .
Bush administration 's
strategy Is analyzed by tour
former Secretenes of
Educatlo=:i

50 Cllh diiWII

·-g

, 51 Two wardlol

under·

52F-

IID•HuBCNN

tnlorllfnor

-:::.P=I-.f:~~=lli: lloctdomla,
- -Grandt
w

- v..r' ln' RtviiW (1 :00)
1D 700 Clull With Pal

loCI•

Roberllon

"'10:3111at cioorr ottci CIIIIH

~ the LlrMia
Steroids
tO!IO!Il MOVIE: Sam WlllllctJ
' IPG)I2:00)

0

, ,:oo (J) •

Ill Cll• a a•
IIJ Newt

~==r;l
8
e ArMnlo Hall

Stereo, •

I=':S-,.

IIIIHie ond the IIOYS, Clint
Blaclc, K.T, Oolln, l&gt;a~
OvonlrHIInd Restleu ,
Hurt Olftllnlte Christmas,
(0:30) Stereo.
lpartt Tanlalr1
D loucllctu•nStareo. I;J

e

tk~:tl=~
llle Ntlhllno

,,

c

'

.

~- ~pole, _:

ariH while
Charlie performs an
orgency dell•sry, Stereo,

62

••'

30 Roc:ontttnl.) '
32 wwtlar11
•

Coi11~11catlona

Struggle tor

•

rotr:U•lr•ll;lf:U~

2et':=.1
28 After Noo.

,

!

CA. .

The World Almanacrcrossword Puzzle

I)) • Homohont

(I)

lorthe year ahead by mailing $) ,25 plus maintain peace In your household to..
a long, sell-addressed, stamped enve- day, yoo might be templed to make
lope to Astro-Graph , c/o this .newspa- promises you have no intentions of tuiper, P,O, Box 91 4'28, CleVeland, OH HIIIng. Unfortunately, what you say wilt
BERNICE
4410.1·3428, Be sure to stata,y ourzodl· be taken seriously by others, ,
CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 221 You' re a
BEDE OSOL ac sign.
CAPRICORN (~. 22-.lan. 19) Gener- good salesman today, but you must
oelty le a virtue. buty oucou1ao verao 11 avolnl~lllnJr-or promotlng-.omethlng
today by Impulsively favoring the wrong that you don't know works becaute
I
pi!&gt;Pio. ,It ,rghg ~ol ~, untllla1er thai
,yau'l~- 'ioAJf &gt;NIWir'mioguldact'
state of
AQUARIUI (.lan. 20-Feb. 11) Your , lor the present and
worse enemy today could be 1 beloved, resources co.uld entice you to act impul·
weiHntenlloned friend Who mighl try 10 ei'IOiy ,and e&lt;travagantly today, Poor
got you Into aomethlng where tho true ludgmant will eventually have to be
raclllled,
value Ia grOIIIy exaggerated,
PIICEI (Feb. - . , 20) Be ex- VIIIQO (Alii, 23-Bepl. 22) Occatlonel·
tremety careful regarding whom you go ly, we can pull off a bluff and our b&lt;avaIa lor advice today, especially In legal do will get us through a ticklish sllua·
Dac.11, , ..,
mailers, Be certain the IndiVidual you're tlon. Howe~~t~r, you better have the acn
In your hand today befor,e you rliH lhe
conoulllng
11 an experl ,
You mlghl become Involved with a clov·
ante.
AIIEI
(Mareii21·Aprll1t)
Oo
not
sacer partner In an ambllloua undertakln~
In tho year ahoed, II could wort&lt; ou1 ad- rlltce the quality of your efforts today In UB11A ( ...... :la-Ocl. :II) VotJ might be
vant-lly, provldod both of yoo are order to be o&gt;epedlllous, lnatoad of uv· a little too )ndllferent and 011y-golng lor
lng ai.Pa, you could creilte additional your own good loday, However, those
aiming at tho 11m11 target
you'll be dealing with will nol be ol the
IAGITTAIIIUI ( -. ZH)oc, 21) You worlc.
urne frame of mind,
TAUIIUt
(April-.,
201
II
you
want
might be more ,bpllmlstlc than roallotlc
to
toke
a
gamble
an
aomothlng
today,
ICOIIPIO
(oat, - · 22) Try to retoday about ., objocllve yoo hope to
, Don"1 be negative but, by lhe h'o belt not to encourage frlenda to go 11rict your apandlng today to baalc: 01·
...,. lalcon, don't permit ~~ think· along wl1h you, MIICIIculollqna are Ilk• 1011tlala. Ditclpllno will be required to
1ng to clOud your ludgrnont SI(IIHarlua, ly and ~lmont could roault If lhlnga oubdlie your extravag'"! whims,
Whether you'll succeed or not Ia too
treot youraelf to 1 birthday gift, Send lor QOWfDng, ,
SagiHarlua' Aolro-Graph predlctlonl GIIMHI (MIJ 21-.lune, 201 In order to CIOIIIO call,

I "

+AJ63

~~~:~~~~~~L~---~lead,
In art.

•,

~ :~~::~~ -:=_~1-~~~H ~~~:;.

+10

o JtoiNtrdyl c

I!) Now H Cln ~ 'roil

'
'

448·7278

EAST

WI!ST
+K82

7:0&amp; (I) Adcllmo Family

,,

Braubhman 47, 000 mlln. $2",900
1987, 1188 NitNn Sentra 614·

PHILLIP
ALDER

=~

~

'.

+J5

TonlgM

1111 The Wlllolll

7::111 t2le

-

11-1~11

NORTH
+Qi751
.P!073 '
• J 53

BRIDGE

liJ MOVI : The Clwll1mla
TiM (0) (1 :00)

',

Services

19aS ltdl CUIIIIII Supreme

c.-.

~,

L.·1 I l I I·

FAST FOOD restaurant"

e.,:. .

'•
1987 Ford Conversion V~n, a~o, ~

1970 Scally Camping Trailer,
Sltaps 4, $500. Call Ahtr 5p .m.
304-m-9154.

UNSCRAMelE 410VE lEITfRS
TO GET ANSWER :

·

Loafer-Famed-Pat1y-R_osary-FASTFOOD
Husband to wife upon leaving movie house: "The plot
must have been scril'ltecLon a ,napkln over lunch at a

' (l)ln~a:::•Edmon

·~~~,.~~~·~"'~'~r,~l~9,:4o:o~,1~-"'
-•~o~o,

,,

•

tHESE SQy4R!S

SCIAM-UTJ ANIWIIS

7:GOIJie 0 WhHI of FOitUftt

'&gt;

...
fOr Rent
Mc;~llohan Carpets. 6M-446·'N44.
SWAIN
2 bdr'm moblta homa for rant,
Rats Or Mk:t? In Your Houu?
approx. 3 mila~ from Pomaroy &amp; AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Buy ENFORCER, Kills rats &amp;
·Middlaport, to1al atactric, 614· Olive St., Gallipoli1. Naw &amp; Ustd mica In only 1 tHdlng,
tumltura, htatars, Wntam • I~!!:~~·'.N1:EE,9II Avaltable at:
985_. 233
Situation
Work boot&amp;. 614-446·3'159.
Lumber, 634
2 badroom furni s hsd mobile
OH
Wanted
home, Rt.~ 2 Apple Grova, $250.
VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
Home &amp; otflct cleaning, mo. $100. damaga deposit . 304· LIVING ROOM: Sofa ..•· Chair,
Pomtroy &amp; Mlddltf)Oft 1r111, rtf 675·2029.
$199.00;
Recliner, $149.00;
It nHdad, 814·742·2284
2 badroom mobil a homa, Htn· Swlv•l Rocker, $99.00; CoHtt &amp;
darson, Hud, ref and deposit re- End Tablas, $89.00 Sat.DINING
qul111d, c:all attar 5.00 PM, 304· ROOM : Tabla With 4 Padded
Business
675·19n.
Chllrs, $'14D.OO; Country Pint
•
Training
Dinette With Bench And 3 Seasoned ·Ash Oak And Hick·
2·bdrm trailer In Raclna area, Chalrs, $299.00; Matching 2 oty Flrtwood, $55 Pick-Up Load
Rttrain
Now!I!Southtlalfwn caii614·9B5·4233
Door Hitch, $349; Or $589.00 Delivtrtd And Stacked, Don
Busi ness Collage, Spring Valley 2br Otpotil And Relerances AI· Set; Oak Table, 42x62 With 6 Wough,
614-448·g648,
Pfala. Call Today, 614~446-4367f!
,.
Bow
Back
Chairs;
Rtglatttllll!ion 190·05-:12748.
tar 2p.m. 614-446·0527.
S629.00 1 B~OROOM: Po&amp;tar B~· S.ga Gonlola with ovor $1,000,
Complaltly furnished moo'"' ·l room Suite (5 pc.), $349.00; 4· in aoflwal'l 1110 .othtr tllrll.
Wanted to Do
homa , washar &amp; dryar, air
Drawer Chtst, $44.95; ~unk Grtat ,Chrlllmu prntnt, $300.
304-n3-5958.
Bad, $229; Complate Full Ma~t 304-o?S~ 4 31.
·
Will" Babysh In My Homa. Rod·
Set, $105.00 Sll; 7 pc. Cedar This wHk only Irregular )tans
nay Area. Rtltrtnc:u Avallabta. For Rant Or Salt On Land Con· Bedroom Sulte 1 $8i9.00.0PEN :
Call614·245·5887. ·
tract: 3br MobUI Homa, 14x?O, Monday Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to S5.00 or 31$10.00, '"-peggy, 132
TOial
Eitc1rlc1 On 3 Aerts Land , &amp;p.m., Stlnday 12 Noon Till Butlemut P~;~maroy, OH
Furntlurt Stripping Rttlniahad 8 Mllat
From Galllpolll On Rt. 5p.m., 4 Milas Ott Routt 7 On VCR'a, good condition, In
And Rtpalr, Quality Worit 1 FrN 218. 1514·3811·9146.
Routt 141 In Centenary.
stereo. Cal1614-448·2713.
Ell11matni:!CH75-552i,
Taking Appllcatlona For A 14x70, 52 S
rtl
G
dS
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS ,
Oeorgtt Ponablt Sawmill, don't 3br, T'otal 1Eioc1rlc Trallor, Avail·
po ng 00
•
Ron Allison, 1210 Stcond
tlaul your loga to the mill just ablt Otctmbar 15th. large Yard For Sala Or Trada : Horton Hun· Avanua,
Galilpotla, Ohio, 614·
utt 304·675·1957. ,
And Garden. 8 Milas From Gal· tar Crou Bow With Extrail Calf 446-4336. . " . .

PRINI NUMBERED !f!TUS IN

'

1111 Nel'f Zollo Smroo, 1:;1
. . . (I) Andy Clrl1lllh

1987 Ford Convtrslon Yan,
clean, Mt opllons

dual, AC, PW, PL, cruJse, t1ll, •.,
blue $3,500. 1-1100.964·3673, "•
61 Farm Equipment
Ripley, WV.
;.
2030 JD dltstl tractor S5995; 1989 F-150 XLT, 4x4, AC, cruisa, ',
424 lnl'l dla1et with bush hog1 tilt, nlc:e !ruck, one owner, '.
gradtr blada, $3650; 3400 Fora 57,000 miles, $9,995. 1-800·964· , .
wllh toaMr $5950. Owner Will 3673.
J/'
Flnanet. 614·286-4.522.
:;:;.::..~~------- r
AC 185 Troe1or, Sharp, 15,~5o; 74
Motorcycles
'::
Lat• Modal 5040 AC With Myd.
raulic Loader, $5,995; 9N Ford 1983 Harley David1on FLT, good :·
With Bush Hog, $1,995; Owner c:ond, 614.(198·6743 ask lor Steve
Will Finance. 614·286-6522.
1986 Honda 70, 4 wheeler, looks :
Jlm't Farm Equipmanl SR. 35, like naw, $850. 304-675·2457.
Wut Gatur,ollt, 61444&amp;-Bm; 1it87 Suzuki lntrudflr,
'
1,400 cc, ''·
Wlda 11ltet on naw &amp; u111d farm very tnt, v~ beautiful,
.
traclora &amp; lmplamtnts. Buy, milts, $3,500. ~04-882·3741. 2,500
.
tall, tradt, 8:00-5 :00 wukdays,
S1t. till Noon.
76 Auto Pans &amp;
Wanted: U11d tarn1 equipmtnl,
, Accessories
anything you want to sell. 614·
25&amp;-1308, 614·256·6040 Aller Budgll Transmissions, Used &amp; '
&amp;p.m.
rtbulll, starting at S9ll, Auto
Pans. 614·245-56n, 614·379·
63
LlVE!StOCk
2263,
"":':":::""7."-':--:-~:-;:--;:1988 Big Chastnut Galdlng Son Naw gas tan ks, body pirtl, one j
Of Billy Silty Bayou ; 4 Horse ton truck wh .. ls, radlatort, ·
Tralltr, 15"' Big . Show Saddles. ltOOf' mats etc. D &amp; R Auto, t:
614·286·6522.
Rlplay, wiJ. 304·372-3933 or 1· ~
800·273-8585,
314 Tenn. Walker wlcoll, saddla,
304-875·3512,
'
Sioux Valve Grinder, 3 Vaars ·
Otd, Like New; Sioux Seat Out· ~
tit, Guide Tools, Almost 5K In·
64 Hay &amp; Grain
vasted. Oilers Or Trad" Con·
Oround &amp;hell com, $120/lon, 12 sidared, 614·446·2306,
percent FHd, $130/lon hay
,•
rollo1 125, Morgan Farm, At 35, 79
Campers &amp;
304-v37-201e,
Molor Homes
•'

•

DUpetooo

- (}
+

'

~~..-_........

Pets lor Sale

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

..

.'

R

1981 F·150 XLT, auto, AC, V-8,,
crulse un, tapper, 66,000 miles," .
blue/t1lver, $1,900. 1-600·964· • ;,
; ,,
I
Chocolate Labrador Puppies, 4 3673.
W11k1, Wormad And Shpls,
1982
Ford
F~~OO,
6
Crllndar,
4
AKC Reglsterad, - Beautiful
Gooa Condition, 614· '·
CamJ)af"!l9n&amp;! S275. 614-446·8111. Sptad,
388-~614.
l·.
Oragonwynd Cattery Persian, 1liS4 Chav C-10, good truck,
Slamna and Himalayan kittens. must stll, $2,500 . 1-800-964·
61C·446·3644 ~tlar 7 p.m.
3613, Rlplay, WV.
·
Ftmala Ragistared Rail Tarrier 1986
I
Puppy, Vaccinated; And War.
mt~, $35. 614-44&amp;-1354.
Fish T1nk, 2413 Jackson Ava.
Point Pleasant, 304-675·2063,
hill llna Tropical "flshl birds,
sm1IJ animals and suppJ es.
I ,~~~~;,::::;..~~:
Had ltd ~ach fac:t lovt birds: 1989-Ford F-250 Supercab XLT ·'
twtal, lov'aablt1 extre mely af· Lariat, diasal angina, only .:
tacllonalt $50; oaby parakeets, 33 ,000 milts, ·s uptr sharp, '•
rtctnlly weaned $10; Lutlno $11,800. 1-800-964·3613 , Rlplty, .
Purl, Cinnamon Pearl Pled WY.
~:
Cotkatlal brttding pail'1. 614·
'•
388·9151.
1989 Olds Cutlaas International,
Poodle Puppies, AKC Tiny Toy full option car, low miles, 1,
$8,995. 1·800-964·3673, Ripley, ,.
And T·Cup; Also Mlnlalure WV,
Schnauure Sal! And Pepper,
Coolville, 614-667·3404.
1990 Ford F-1SO XLT, auto, AC, l•'
27,000
miles, cloan truc k, '1
Rtgisteretlbtrtl·cclored C.ockar S9,995. 1·800·964·3673.
Sptnlev-.· pups,
mlnatura
Schnauzer,
registered
Himalayan, Persian, Siamest
kittens, no c heeKs, 614·992·2607

Solid Oak hobby horus, Grnl
Chrlstmaa gifts for 111tla ones.
145, Only 61oh, e14·311'7512,
ORLANDO FLORIDA
A MAGICAL VACATION PACK·
AGE FOR THE FAMILY

10 IC:rtl, Rt. 7, 1000 ft. frontage,
Eureka. $35,000; 12 acres Alii
Tc;p,- city utllltlts, $50,000; 45

!

'

1:01 (J) llevwty llltlllea
1::111 (J). 0 NIC.
IJ)&amp;MI:k..... ~

,.
1
,,

Musical
Instruments

Lots &amp; Acreage

MObile Homes

. 1 I I I .

D-Todlr

j.

127 Acrai, 8 Room Housa, 2
Large Barns, On RI.21B, Gal·
llpolll. Tobacco Batt. 614·256·
1954, 814·256·6755.
Maaon County, Leon, 66 ac:ras 1 3
btdroom homt, barn, 2 pones,
city watar, 304-458·1918 or 458·
1755.

42

992-1259 /

Merchandise

J·

I

8 WOIId Todet

&gt;'

56

v2 A s E E

•I

; 1121. Cll NMia "
• Andy Ollf1llli ...

Farms lor Sale

:~~~~~~~~~~~
_eC!~I,
~omt
~
304-675-5104,

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

BENNETT'S

33

·

.

.
~r:a;;;m~IOn~~---...../2-i?F~I~ .1
,....

•

Bank rapoa, 2·3 bdrms, must
1111 immedlattly, llllla or money
down, call 1~800-466-1671, ask
for Brtndt
Graat s.ltcllon 0t Repossll·
sad Doubla Wldts • $1,000 Down
And Singlt Wldtt • $500 Down
With Apj:)f"oved Crtdlt. Call Mid
Ohio Finance At 614·n2·1220.
NO PAYMENTS UNTIL APRIL A1
Elsta Homa Center! When Pur·
chasing A New Or USed Mobile
Home With Approvad Crtdlt.
Call 1·1100-589·5710,
Short Tlmt On Job? Past Credit
History A Problem? Many
· Eapossttlld Moblta Homas To
Ctwa.e From . Small ~Down
Paymant. Call1-800-589·!5711.

D.~ ~

~quo,. One Trsmreo.

Inside Sala·Syracuse, btl~re
you get to pool, 9-4pm, sign In
yard , c:oats 10·12, Illite girl coal,
lots of 111. size clothts, Dingo
Boots , lola ot Christmas Html .

Hotel

All Yard Sa las MUst Be Paid In
Advanca. O.adllnt: 1:00pm the
day btfort tha act Is to run,
Sunday ed ition· 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.
Sa turday. ~ -·
.

~.800.

EVIN!lQ

1-----------"T"----------1

Yard Sale

&amp; Xlclnlty

3 Honda motor- .·~
'
•

~75-3512.

Escort LX, cruiHJ lilt, air,
cua, sup.r clean, bnght Nd,
$7,900. 1-80D-984-367J. .
For salt or 'trade, 1177 Olda CutIna Supreme, 350 tng, lott of
txtraa, rulit grql, 814·912-85119

M TUE.• PIC. 17 8

(I) VIdeo Power

61~ ~
L~:

~991

They AI least Return Papers to

2 baautilul gray tlgtr atrlppad
cats, house brokan, needs good

~

1990 Topaz lotded, lakt over'•.

S!Qpped To Otfar Ml A.Aidt, I

Giveaway

~-H'

1988 Pontiac Forml:llt, V.a auto,- ~•

c..

.(

HI..,1AAT ~
~Mf;,

T-Topt, very ·low MIIH1 11f.r..CISI, ~
$7
Klploy, ,,
''
1195, 1·800·984·3173,
w~
.

by : J.H. Grttn.
h lor otn.r
boo~s. old pamplttt, ltlltrt. No

4

HS~TO

15,995, 1·800·1644 673, '
' !
:18:;8:,:8::00
;,;_,d::go:_;S:,.ho
:,IOby',:-·'::z:, -:Tc-~o-"pct, ; .
AC, ioadod, ~,sao, 1-BOG-984· •
3873, Rlploy, Wv,
_ 4

I

Television
Vie~ing ·. .·

~ t"''~,
W11W' ~

•.

'

394-8233, M-F.

Barber~

•

1987 Mercury Gr1nd MarqUia, ,'i
11.110, AC, crultt, till, loadld, ,;

GraciOUI , llvlrtg. 1 •nd 2 blc:J.
room apanrnentt 11 VIIIIQI
Manqr
and.
Rlvtrtidt
Apanmenls In Middleport. From
$116, Call eM·II92·17117. liOit

·'

Ohio

71 .
-.,...-----'".,,

1 Wui otter t2DO tor good 1844
copy of Tha ·Gambler'• Mirror

Ma Please?
576·4024.

17, 1991

·-·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.,_.,.,... ~~liiP"'IOf
....
MNW . . G'llltallhM .101 11 wllr IMioul ....... fiiMt IWid p!Winl.
Elllltlltttar In tht 01PMr -.oator lltOf!W. TMIYJ C~M.· V..,.. fit.

' I A

IJ F A

,D T X

J

J p

JPHZAXZAN,

MJPMADN
FAV 'C

TLX

E

TO
TPA

JPTXIAV

TOXAP.'

'M I L V M I Z D' D ,

IZPNXTP

,

PREVIOUS SOLUnON: "Whot _w:l' hOpe lVIII lo do with eue. we muat
loom flrl1 to do wl1h dlllgonco," - Samulf Jollnoon, ,
C&gt;. 19t1 b'l' NfA.InCl.

'
I

17

�•
Tuesday, December 17, 1991

'T~as

The Night Befqre Christmas' tp
be performed;.cast members named

Cards: 2-H, 3-C,
. 8-D, 3-S

PageS

Pomeroy~Middleport,

)lr
'I

,,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Feder- by consumers and corporate Amer·
al Reserve Chairman Alan ica : ·He said that the fledgfing
Greenspan said today the U.S. recovery tllat began in the sprjng
recovery has faltered, but he cau· .JosL steam during the summer as
tioned Congress against rushing to both busineSI&gt;IlS and consumers,
enact quick fiXes that would inflate worried about the future, decided to
· the budget deficit.
· use their incomes to reduce old
. In his most pessimiStic com - debts rather than spendirfg the
ments lo date, Greenspan said tllal money on cars and other investa huge overhang of consumer and men~ .
business debt and a financially
"The bottom line of this brief
strained banlcing system were hin- · account is that the national balance
derin~ efforts to get out of the
sheet has been severely strcLched,"
recessron.
Greenspan said. "These events do
"The upturn in bu,siness activity not necessarily mean that a prothat began earlier this year clearly , longed period of economic weakhas faltered," Greenspan said in ness is inevitable, but they do mean
-testimony before the House Ways that poliCff!lakers musL consider
and Means Committee.
these unusual forces when shaping
"It is apparent that the economy their response to tile current snua·
is struggling and that there have . tion."
been some strong force_s working , Sincnhe recession began in
against moderate cyclical revival,'' July 1990, the Fed has moved 14
he said.
• •·
times to cut short-term inLerest
Greenspan blamed the econo- · rates and many economists believe
my's present problems on the huge with the economy doing so poorly
buildup of debt in the 1980s bo.th that more rate cuts are imminent.
- However, in his prepared

flt

~.

j'

.

TIN SOLDIERS • Danny Buffington and
Donald Call, pictured here, along with Kris
.Jenkins and Kris VanMeter, will portray Tin

Soldiers in Tuesday's presentation ol' "Twas the '
Night Before Christmas" at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary at 7 p.m.
' .

.

\I
~&gt;;•

The following students have
made the A honor roll for the second six weeks: ('Indicates straighl
A's)
. First grade: 'Dcan qq Bryan ,
•Jerem)' Ev ans, 'Scottie Fran s.
•Chelsea·Gooch, •s tephcn Henry
• John Polcyn, 'Christiana .Taylor
'Rachael Walker, Zach Brumfield
William Burleson, Ryan Carter.
Malcolm Gwinn, Lyndsay HOrton,
- Kevin Queen, Kelsey Salisbury,
Maria Wagner; Troy Wood.
Second grade: • Am it Agrav.:al,
'Dawn Chamberlain, 'Dcidm Hall,
'Chad ·Dailey, ' Michael Jenk s,
•Virginia Miller, Hannah Beaver,
Lauren Browning, Ashley Brum field, Adam Holcomb , Rach el
Tucker, Jessica Barker.
Third grade: Brad Bowman,
•Tommy Dayton, Kent Halc.y,
Erica Mass ie, *Charity McQueen.
\.. Nicholas Mulholand, Andrea Sims,
· Amanda Wil cox, ' Nathan
Williams. · ·
Fourth grade : April Ag ustin ,
MerediTh Clark, ' Travis Frasher,
•Courtney Gooch, • Laura Pollard,

Jo nathan Taylor, Erin Walker ,
'Christen Zirille.
Fifth grade: Rebecca Birchfield ,
Dani Jenks, Natalie Pyles,
' Stephen Roberts , Daniel Sizemore, Jess ica Walker , Andrew
Williams.
Sixtil grade: •vandana Agrawal,
Suzanne Clark, Daniel Hall, Steven
Rice, 'Lisa Vollbom.
·
Seventh grade: •Melissa Brown,
Joy Chaksupa , Rachel Hamrick,
Micah Lanier, Nathan Smith , Benjamin Taylor, Leisa Walters.
Eighth grade: Aaron Holley ,
Amy Pollard.
·
Ninth grade: Emily As bcck.
Jenn y Hager, Robin Rice.
Tenth grade: ' Jodie Hager ,
Anna Hamrick, Adam Meek. Am y
Wood, Elizabeth Woote n.
Eleventh grade: • Sandra
Adams, Christy Mock, 'Meredith
Pollard,' Brian Rice.
Twclvcth grade: •Beth Blevins,
Pam Holley, Jenny Hughes, Darin
Peck, (:;indy Sh eets . ~ _
Th e followrn g students have
made the B Honor Roll for the second six weeks:

how

thought a business srmulauon game
would help," sa id James R. Frederickson , ass istant professor of
accounting.
The game's Community Chest
and Chance cards were altered to
reflect real business conditions.
The students were divided into
groups of four or five, with each
student forming a corporation and
issuing stock. Each player rolls the
dice 40 times. Every transaction is

accounting works in the real world .
" In trying to m a ~ : :! fun , I

dent submits income, balance sheet

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) The world of acco unting can be fun
and gam es, even when !here's
unrest on Baltic Avenue, tornadoes
on Indiana Avenue or brimming
trash dumps on New York Avenue.
About I ,400 students in
· accounting clas.~es at Indiana UniversiLy arc, playing Monopoly this
semester - for a grade.
Prnfe&lt;sors picked the board
::n u~ ~ f'lf (1

. game lo show
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recorded and

a fte r•.•/ ~.!' ~ ~~ ,. h ~ ·~~ ­

PREPARING FOR THE SCHOOL PROGRAM - The students at Pomert,y Elementary
will present their annual Christmas program
tonight (Tuesday) at 7 p.m. at the school. The
. play, "Twas The Night llefore Christmas," will
l'ealure students in kindergarten through third
grade. Pictured, in no particular order, in th•

c

living room scene, are Jessica lllaeu_nar, l~en
Carroll, .Joel Clelland, Jaynee Dans, llrran
Klein, R.T. Roush, Brandy Thomas, Aja Blackwell, Brittan¥ Power~, Shannon Price, Josh .
Simpson, Nicole Davrs, Crystal Lemley and
. Corey Woods.

First grade: Joshua Evans, J.P.
Fetters•. Heath Mass ie, Jeremy
Slayton, G.E. Woodward.
Second gmde: Molly John son ,
Ehzabeth Rice.
·
Third grade: Donnavan Ashworth, Seth Easton, Jason Holdren,
Joey Johnson.
Fourth grade: Amanda Brown
Mike Fraricis..
· .· '
Fifth grade: Gabrielle lllack woo~, Lisa Bowman, Emily Null.
Smh grade : Donovan Davis
Leah Hall, Deanna Martin, Bo Pol :
lard, T9ny Staley.
. · ..
Seventh grade: Ginger Franklin,
Matl Holley.
' Eighth grade: Ruebel Cochran,
Nathan Lusher, Gabe McQueen,
Jill Mock , Shawn Ri ce, Anesa
VanMatre.
Ninth gra de : Abigai I Henry ,
Kristin Torres.
Tenth grade: Jeremiah Brown,
Andy Brumfield, Amy Carn es ;
Sarah Miller, Noah Smith.
Eleventh grade: Nilrki- Saun ders.
Twclveth grade: Hollie Bartel,
James Black.

and cash now statements.
To promote teamwoik. each
group must analyze the game and
determine who wins.
Grades won't be based on
whether a student's company made
money, Frederickson promised.
"The grade 1s dependent on how
reasonable.their argument is. ''
That's a relief to Stover, whose
company is S650 in the hole:
" I think it's maybe not as easy
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Parents should be selective, read labels, and
watch for toys with small parts that may break
orr and.be swaUowed. Here Melissa Wise or Middleport and ber 11-montb-old son, Nicholas

Parents should keep safety in
mind when buying toys for kids

THURSOAY
MI DDLEPORT - The Middleport Child Conservation League
wi ll hold its annual Christmas party
on Thutsday at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Helen Blackston . Gifts
&lt;md rood for needy .families should
be brought thai evening. Secret sisters will be revealed.

Accounting is fun and games at IU

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CAUTION WITH SMALL TOYS - When
selecting toys 'remember thai small children .like
to put things in
mouth. Little loys Pr toys .
with
and small

SYRACUSE - The Thrra
Wednesday Club will meet at the
municipal building in Syracuse on
Wednesday at noon. From there the
group will go !O Mason ResulUrant
to cat at 12:30 p.m. A pany will be
held !mer at tile home of Mary Kay
Yost. There will be a gift exchange.

Ohio Valley Christian announces honor roll

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·remarks, Greenspan gave no hlnt
about what the Fed's next move
might be on interest rates.
. Greenspan did say that lower
mterest rates can help. in the process .of working down high debt
levels by reducing interest payments that must be paid by borrowers. But-he warned that credit easing could only be pursued in a context of guarding against a rise in
inflation.
·
·
·
Greenspan was testify_ing at tile
end of a series of hearings held by
the Ways and Means Commiuee on
responses Congress should mal&lt;e
QIJ _
spending and taxes to help a
srcJt; economy. · .
-·
He gave a limited endorsement
,to tax cuts to help individuals and
corporations reduce !heir debt burdens, but he· said that Congress
would be wrong to grant any package of tax cuts that worsened the
federal budget deficit, already forecast to hit a record $362 billion this
year.

·Community calendar

RACINE - The Racine American Legion will meet Thursday m
7:30 p.m. at the post home.

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Christmas Is ...

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at 7 p.m. Pictured; in no particular order, are
Ashley Thomas, Andrea Krawsczyn, Melissa
Houser, Adam Shanks, Katie Jeffers and Emily
Stivers.

POMEROY - Ohio TOPS Club
No . 570 will have its Chri stmas
TUESDAY
party on Tuesday with weigh-in al
RUTLAND - The Rutland . S p.m. and mcetiQg at 6 p.m. All
Friendly Gardeners will judge all members urged to aucnd.
homes in the village of Rutland mi
CHESTER - Shade Ri ver Lodge
Christmas decoration on Tuesday.
Winners will be chosen in both No. 453 will hold a special meeting
religious and non-religious cate- on Tuesday a1 7:30 p.m. There will
gories. All homes within village be work in the E. A. degree.
limits will be considered by Lhe Refreshments will be served.
judges.
RACINE - The Racine Rurilans
POMEROY - The Ameri can wi ll meet Tuesday at ?p.m. at Siar
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39, MiII Park. Dinner will be served.
Pom eroy, will meet Tuesday at the
WEDNESDAY

-

Cautions Congress against quick fix

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post home. Dinner will be at 7 p.m.
followed by meeting at 8 p.m. All
members are urged to auend thi s
final meeting of 1991. .

•·

2 SeCUona, 14 Paget 25 cen11
AMulllmedla Inc. New•IN'Pif

Ohio, Wednesday, December 18, 1991

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.p'

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event ·
and the day of that event. Items
must be received welt in ad vance
to assure publication itt the cal·
endar.

"--

Greenspan Says U.S. recovery ·has falter~d
~~

THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS- Children anxiously awaltlhe arrival of Santa Claus
on Ihe night before Christmas. This scene can be
seen ·in Pomeroy Elementary's presentation of
"Twas the Night Before Christmas" on Tuesday

Pick3: 840
Pick 4: 2845
Cold tonl&amp;ht. Tbursdlly,
sunny. High near 30.

Vot. 42, No. 1S9
Copyrlghled 1991

garten teacher, Susie Abbott, are Carrie Abbotl,
Heather Hysell, Christopher Neece, Brandon
Ramsburg, Michelle Runyon and Shannon
Soulsby.

Ohio,Lottery

·Miller
Clefeats
L
Marauders

"Twas The Nigtu_Before Christ- Blaeunar, ·Bcn Carroll, Joel Clcl Tin soldiers will by played by,
mas" will be pr~Mnted tonight land, Jaynoo Davis, Brian Klein, Danny Buffington, Do.nald Call: ·
(Tuesday) at 7 p:m. at Pomeroy R.T. Roush and Bmndy Thomas.
Kris Jenkins and Kris VanMeter. ' '
Elementary.
_
Sugar plum fairies· will include _ Narrdtors are Ben S.ee, Michelle~
Music will be provided by Mrs. Katie Jeffers and Emily Sti vcrs. Drcnncr, Sara Moon. Jonatllan WiiMary Stewan. .
..
and mice will be played by Brittany · son, Sarah Houser, Ashley' Han- ~·
Michael Stacy will portray ' Powers, Shannon Price ~nd Aj a nails, Breyden Haptonstaii,- Chris :
Santa and Nicole Davis will por- Blackwell.
Ward, Kelly Canan, Stephanie Bur- •
tray Mrs. Santa.
Crystal Lem)ey will perform as dcttc, Andy Davis, Tiffany Qualls, ·
Elves include Cairie Abbott, the cat and Corey Woods as the Andrea Burdette, Straud Liulc :.
Heather Hysell, Christopher Neece, dog. Children will include Ashley Substitute narrators arc Ashley ,
·Brandon Ramsburg, Michelle Run ~ ~Thomas.and Andrea.Krawsczyn.- · - J homas an&lt;I-Andrea-J{rawsczyo~ ;~.
yon and Shannon Soulsby.
Melissa Houser, will be th e
The public is invited to attend ,
Portraying gifts will be Jessica mother and Adam Sha!ik tile father. the performance.
. ,
.

ELVES- These students at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary will perform as Santa's elves during .the
annual Christmas play, "Twas the Nrght Belore
Christmas" on Tuesday at 7 p.m. Pictured with
Debbie B~ennan, school principal, and kinder- .

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Christmas is a Lime of wonder
and excitement for everyone - but
most of .all for children.
Making it a safe and happy time
is important and with that in mind,
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing
director for the Meigs County
Health Depanment, cautions anyone giving toys as gifts to keep
safety in mind while shopping.
. While toy safely is a year-round
concern. Torres says iL should especially be a ooncem during the holidays since over half of all .retailtoy
sales occur before Christmas.
"Careful selection and proper
supervision of children .at play are
HELPING THE NEEDY • Seventeen volun,
' ing those or other faiths, as. well. Pictured with
the best ways to protect children
leers assisted with pre~aring Christmas food
the finishecl product are Mary Starcher,. Rev.
from toy-related injuries," said
baskets at the Meigs Umted Methodist CooperaKen Baker, Rev. Keith Rader, Maybelle Ihle,
Torres, who urges parents to be
tive Parish on Monday. 200 Meigs County ramiRev. Roger Grace, Peggy Crane, Rev. Sharon
selective and read tile labels when
lies will receive the makings of a holiday meal
'·Hausman, Rev. Eu.nhlfe Kee, Belly Dean, Liz
making their purchases. Choosing
through the work-or the parish and its donors
Ayres-Thoren, Raymond Furbee, Toby Curtis,
toys right for the child'sage, abiliand volunteers, made up mostly of United
li.J, Spencer, Leona Machir, Thor Carsey, and
~Y, and maturity are important, she
Methodists rrom all over the county, but includllelly Weyersmiller.
-·
said.
She advises parents and others
buying- toys to check for small parts
that may break off or be ,swal low cd, to be aware of shaped
pieces or toxic materials, and to
GM will shut plants '" Arllng- 3,800 hourly workers.
DETROIT (1\P) - General
look
for durable construction.· -Lon,
Texas,
and
Moraine,
Ohio,
the
·.
GM's
North
American
opera-,
·
Motors Corp. IYiUcJose two plants
"New,
unfamiliar or inappropriFree
Press
reported,
citing
·
tions
are
losing
about
$15
million
a
·Deuolt
employing 6,400 hourly workers in
ate
toys
are a major cause of
sources
iL
did
not
identify.
Each
day
$5
billion
to
$6
billion
a
Texas and Ohio aild lay off up 10
Continued
on page 3 · ·
15,000 white-collar employees next •plant employs 3,200 hourly work- year - and pressure has been
building to cut costs and reduce
year to offset record losses, a news- ers.
The automaker also plans to factory capacity.
paper reported today.
GM Chairman Robert Stempel
Union contracts ensure tllaL the close a plant in Oshawa, Ontario,
after
1994
,
The
Detroit
News
planned
a satellite broadcast to
blue-collar workers will keep getreported
today.
That
plant
emplOy$
employees
today and a news conting nearly all theit pay .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
ference to announce the cuts, end- $202 million increase in electric
ing weeks of speculation.
rates sought by Columbus Southern
Company spokesman John F. .Power would be slashed if rccomMueller refused to comment early mendations of-consumer represen-today.
.
tativesinthecaseareadopted.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
The Ohio Department of Health has approved a continuation
William
Spratley on Tuesday cited
grant of more tllan $62,000 10 the Holzer Black Lung Clinic's profrom seven expert wittestimony
gram, according to -an announcement made today by State Rep.
nesses
in
asking
tile Public Utilities
Mary Abel (0-Athens).
Commission
of
Ohio to limit the
Abel said tllat the funding will be used to provide treatment,
utility's rate boost to $85 million.
rehabilitation, and educational services to coal miners who suffer
But if the PUCO adopted the
from black lung disease.
·
combi01:d rei:ommendations from
"This program is vital in providing much needed care to minel'1!
Spratley's office, the city of
in SoutheasLem Ohio," Abel said. "We will continue to make such
Columbus,
and Industrial Energy
' programs a priority." ·
Consumers
in
the case, tile increase
Abel said tllat individuals with questions concerning black lung
would
amount
to $34 million. .
medical benefits or treatment could contact tile Ohio Depanment of
Columbus Southern is one of
Healih or the Holzer Clinic.
.
thre'e utilities seekinl! rate increases
to offseL costs of budding the Zimmer Power Plant along the Ohio.
A Tacoma, Wash., ll)an was injured when his tractor-trailer rig
River near Cincinnati.
overturned on U.S. 33 near Darwin Tuesday afternoon.
Other owners . of Zimmer, a
According 10 a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
coal-burning
plant originally
Highway Patrol, Dallas C. Hanners, 57, was driving eastbound on
DAYS
UNTIL
int.
e
nded
to
be
fueled by nuclehr
U.S. 33, whCn his uactor/flat·bCd trailer rig, carrying' general' cargo,
CHRISTMAS
power,
are
Cincinnati
Gas &amp; ElecContinued on page 3
tric and Dayton Power and Light

GM to .clos·e two U. S. plants

WHAT A GREAT CA,R!- Five year old Randy Hudson, son or
Kevin and Kimberly Hudson, Rutland, was really impressed with
this bright yellow battery powered car as he looked over all the •
Christmas toys at Dig Wheel Tuesda-y-anernoon. When selecting·
toys it's important to consider the child's age, abilities and maturi ty. A small child in a car like this requires adult supervision to be
sure he stays safely out or the way of motor vehicles.

Sharp cuts sought in rate hike

--Local briefs-----,
Continuation 1Jfgrant approved

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Man injured when $emi overturns

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Spratley critici1.ed the utility for for Columbus Southern.• ·said the
exercising its option under state decision. to put the rate boost into
law to put the average 28 perc em effcct Jan. 3 was not an attempt LO
rate boost into effect Jan. 3 before innuence negotiations .
"The primary reason tllat...we~ve ~-,
the PUCO issues a decision.
"Som e beli eve this is an taken advantage of tile law is that
attempt to force these fanies to set- this is tile first time that the statuto·
tic this case. Some o us settled a ry time period has expired in which
similar case with Dayton. We had public h~ngs haven't evcn .taken
long negotiations that failed with place," Holliday said.
Cincinnati Gas and Electric," he
State law allows a utility to put
said.
a rate increase into effect if the
"Cincinnati Gas and Electric at PUCO f~lls LO rule within 275
this hour is not threatening its cus- days. In the event the PUCO grants
tamers to put an automatic increase less tllan the amount sought, a utili-'
(in effect). It's sitting in tile same ty is required to apply a credit to
position time-wise as Columbus • customer bills for the difference
.
Southern,' ' Spratley said.
plus interest.
SpraUey's office will file its recExpert testimony before the
ommendations today on tile $204.8 PUCO begins Jan . 6, with conmillion rate request from the sumers scheduled to appear at hearCincinnati util'ity. A negotiated set- ings Jan. 16 in Columbus and Feb.
tlement among parties iq the Day- 4 in Athens.
·
ton case reduced the utility rate
(:olumbus Southern Power, a
boost from '$186 million to $57 subsidiary of American Eleetric
million.
Power, has 473,000 customers in
Thomas Holliday, a spokesman 25 of the Stale's 88 counties.

.

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