<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11593" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11593?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T17:26:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42563">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6d2fb9263c0fbaeb1c56b36fdc2d8555.pdf</src>
      <authentication>85a0fa6767b47553e4eb375f2cb32ec5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36500">
                  <text>..
· Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Oilers top
Buffalo Bills
Monday night .·

1990 Local Schedules

THIS

99!-6661
971l01TH

WEEK'S
GAMES

&gt;

,

SECOND
! .Df,EPOIT, OHIO .
·, ,' "*
.
•

&gt;

,

Pick 3: 937
Pick 4: 9358
Cards: 9-H;
7-C; Q-D; 9-S

~_!~~;_---:--~~:~:::::::.~..:.J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!JL
;

SOUTHERN

LOANS ..
992-3077

&gt;

Weather

&gt;

·: IN$Tl1J.MENT .
'

Ohio LOttery

.

Vol.41 , No.1 53
Copyri hted 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 27, 1990 ·

BOYS
DEC. l-Atht111, Homt
DEC. 4-ltlprt, Away

.

GilLS
NOV. 26-Trlniblt, H11111
NOV, 29-Vinton Co. Away
DEC. 3-Milltr, Away

•

EASTERN
BOYS
NOV. 27-llyger Crttk, Away
NOV. 30-Southwtsttrn, Homt
DEC. 4-Southtrn, Homt

GilLS
NOV. 26-llyger CroH, Homt
NOV. 29-Southw•tern, Away
DEC. 3-Southorn, Away

S'

' 4• • t , :

SOUTHERN

.Bank

Nov. 27-Nonh Gollio ,; .......... Home
Nov. 30-Honnon Trace .......... Home
Doc. 4-EIItom ..................... Away
1 Doc. 7-Southwootern ............ Away
Doc. 8-P.a int Valley.'.; .. : ........ Convo
Doc. 14-Kygor Crook ............ Homo
· Doc. 11-Symmoa Volley ........ Away
Dec. 21-0ok Hili:.. ... .... ~ ....... Away
Doc. 22-Southllltem ........... Homo
Dec. 28-Athena .................... Awey
Jon. 4-Nonh GaHio ............... Away
Jen. 6-Golllpolia ................ :.. Away
Jan.11-Honnen Trace ........... Away
Jon. 18-EIItom ...... .......... .... Homo
Jan. 22-Rovonawood ............ Away
Jan. 26-Southwoatoril .......... Hom•
Feb. 1 _:Kyger Crook ............... Away
Fob. 8-Symmoa Velloy .......... Home
Fob; 12-Warron .................... Away
Fob. 16-0ak Hill ................... Home

' l.

~~~·~
~· i_
·en '

··

:,·. _}'?~~: 4~

, ..

915-3315
SJA11 tCIUIE 7

1UPPEIS PlAINS. 01110
.

a1u1 ·
&lt;f~
.-

--------~G
SOUTHERN

" :HARDWARE
.. , .., loil..... ,otoiiill li.ktt ,......
.

CHE51:Et,
OH.1
•
.i' •

?"

• '""''

"

HOURI:
Mon. tlwu. Fri.

· 7:3o 8.m. to 1:00 p.m.
&gt;

. . . .. . ,

•

7:30 a.m. to·. 4:oo p.m.

.

Nov.-12-Nelunvilla-York ...... Away
Nov. 19-Meiga .......... .. .... ..... Away
Nov. 28-Nonh Gelllo ............ Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3._Ealtom· ... .................. Home
Dec. 8-Southweotern ............ Homo
Dec. 1 0-Kygor Crook ............ Away
Dec. 13-Symma Volley ......... Home
Doc. 17-Watorford ............... Home
Doc·. 20-0ak Hill .................. Home
Jan. 3-North Oallio ............... Homo
Jan. 1 0-Honnan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 14-Molga ...................... Home
Jan. 18-Nolunvillo· York ....... Home
Jan. 17-Ealtern ............ , ....... Away
.
A
I
Jan. 24-Southwoltom .......... way ·
Jan. 28-Watorford ................ Away
Jan. 31-Kygor Creek ............. Homo
Feb. 4-0ek HIH ..................... Away
Fab. 7-Symmea Valley .......... Away

MEIGS

EASTERN
Nov. 20-Miller ............. .......... Away
"'ov. 23-Foderal Hocking .... ,. Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek ............ Awliy
Nov. 30.-:southw!lltitrn ......... Homo
DEC. 4-Southorri .................. Home
D.C. 7-Symmes Valley ... , ...... Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia ............ Away
Doc. 16-0ik Hill .................. Home
Doc. 18-Watorford ............... Home
Jon. 4-Kygor Creek ............... Home
Jan. 11-Southweatern .......... Away
Jon. 16\....Hannon Trace -.-......... Home
Jon. 1 8-Southom ... , ............. Away
Jan. 25-Symmes Valley ........ Home
Jon. 28-MHier ................. .. ... Home
Feb. 1-North Gollia ............... Homo
Fob. li-Foderal Hocking ......... Away
Fob. 8-0ak Hill ..................... Away
Fob. 12-Waterford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ........... Away

,

More ·colorful license plates
.ready for distribution in Ohio

S' SCHEDULES§-----MEIGS

Nov. 19-Southorn ................ ,Homo
: Nov. 26-Trimble ................... Home
Nov. 29-Vinton County ......... Away
Dec. 3-Millor ........................ Away
Dec. 8-Eastern .............. , .......Home.
Doc. 1 0-Nolacmville-York ...... Away
Dec. 13-Belpre ..................... Home
Doc. 17-Aiexond•r .............. . Home
Doc. 20-Wollaton ................. Away
Jan. 3-Fodarol Hocking ......... Homo
Jan. 7-Trimbla ....................... Away
Jan. 1 0-Vinton County ... ...... Home
Jan. 14-Southlrn ................. Away
Jan. 17-MIIIar ...................... Home
Jan. 21-Eaatern ........ .... ...... :. Away
1
Jan. 24-Nalunville-York ....... Homo
Jan. 28-Bolpra ..................... Away
Jan. 21-Aioxander ................ Away
Feb. 4-Welllton .... , ............... Honia
Feb. 7-Foderal Hocking ......... Away

water billing to be computerized
u..-

SCHEDULES~-----

Dec. 1-Athlns ...................... Home
Ooc. 4-Balpre ....................... Away
Ooc. 11-Millor ...................... Home
Doc. 14-VInton County ....... :. Home
Doc. 1.8-Aioxander .............. : Away
Dec. 21-Welllton .. : .............. Home
Dec. 28-Logan ..................... Away
Jan. 4-Trimble .. .................... Away
Jan. 8-Fodaral Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 11-Nelaonvllle·York.... : .. Away
Jan. 16-Belpra ..................... Hormi
Jan. 22-Miller ...................... Away
Jan. 26-Vinton County ......... Away
Jan. 29-Aioxander ................ Home
hb. 1-Welllton .................... Away
· Fab. 2-Athens ...................... Away
Feb. 6-Warron ...................... Home
Feb. 8-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb. 16-Nelsonville-York, ....... Home

,,,

By LEE STOKES
rotating members have report·
United Press lnternallonal
edly Indicated they will vote for a
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq war resolution.
Azlz accused the U.N. Security
Council of adopting a policy of
The Washington Post reported
dQubh\ standards, and said the Tuesday that the five permanent
government of Saddam Hussein members of the Council - the
would never succumb to pres- United States; Britain, France,
sure; Baghdad Radio said China and the Soviet Union Tuesday.
appeared to have agreed on the
Yemen's Sanaa Radio re· use of force with the only sticking
ported ·that the five permament point being whether the resoluCouncil members reached a tion set a pullout deadline of Jan.
broad agreement on a draft 1 or Jan. 15.
resolution authorizing the use of
French Foreign Minister Roforce if Iraq fails to get out of land Dumas said in a sta tement
TRIMMING THE TREE - Pomeroy VIllage Employees and
work on Monday monitns lnstaJIIDg decorations on tile village
Kuwait by Jan. 1. There was no Tuesday that he proposed Jan.15
members of the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department were at
Christmas tree, located at the municipal parking Jot. The tree was
elaboration.
.
as the las( date for a pullout,
donated by Frances Goegleln of Pomeroy:
The Washfngton Post also citing Soviet ."reticence" on
reported ail agreement had been setting New Year's Day as the
apparently reached but that the deadline.
Counc!l was trying to nan down a
Yemen, a temporary member.
deadline for a pullout from the is scheduled to assume the
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
oil-rich emirate.
Council's chairmanship Jan. 1.
Dally Sentinel Staff
'd 10
· purchase 20 more at $6 each. Tile
France, a permanent Council
$150 for part-time workers with six •ha ·u
Soviel leaders began talks in
vo ll¥e to provo e . percent on need for some son of incentive to member, has said It wants a Jan. Moscow Tuesday with visiting
Purchase of a computerized bill- months on the job.
was · mentioned
by 15 deadline. The Council is Saudi 'Foreign Minister Prince
ing sys_tem for the .water and sewer
Mayor Fred Hoffman noted that ·marching funds.' The mayor. said recycle
scheduled ·to meet Thursday to Saud al Falsal.
deparonent was approved at Mon- tlie franchise income from the cable that the village will have 10 .either Councilman Paul Gerard.
A recycling grant applied for by discuss and possibly vote ·on the
day night's meeting of Middlepon television company brought in decrease: ~e scope of the projeCt or
Faisal was in Moscow last
addiuonal money. .
.
the village earlier this year was tur- proposed resolution.
Village Council.
·
$6,o;l fQr the,ast year. Three per- findHenry
month to restore diplomatic
Lawson agam met ~uh , ned down. Manley was asked 10 get
Azlz spoke to reporters upon relations between the two states
Council approved purchase of cent of the 10ta1 income is passed
Co~il
10
request
a
lrash
hauling
together
some
figures
cin
how
much
his
return to Baghdad iate after a break of some 50 years.
the computer hardW!IJ'e from Bob onto the village for the franchise.
pennot.
No
acuon
was
taken
on
tile
is
being
kept
.out
of
landfills
.
by
·
Monday
from Moscow. - where
Fish~r ·~ ~o.mP\Iter .Communication
Radio Riyadh said ·the Soviets
The Pearl , Street ')lrojec1 qf
request.
.
·•
.
··
:
·
.
.
recyclingandsub'1!ittJoapotheviJ,
he
met
wftli
Soviet leader Mtk. were keen to hear Saudi Arabia 's
~cancepts of Middlepon ;~t a cost of widening,
resurfaCing,
ildding
. Also meellng woth Council to !age so . that information can be
hall Gorbachev and Soviet For· view before Thursday's crucial
$2,685, and the software from sidewalks, stonn sewers, curbing
discuss
curbside
recych~g
was
used
in
future
grant
applications.
eign
Minister Eduard Shevard· vote at the United Nations, which
Government Systems at $4,400.
and gutters was discussed with
Roger
Manley
of
Manley
s
Recy.
Mayor
Hoffman
noted
that
he
is
nadze
In talks In which the could trigger a mass land, air
An ordinance was given a third Mayor Hoffman noting that the
ch~g
Ctl!'ter.
Manley
curren~y
has
in
the
process
of
securing
informaSoviets
put the onus of a war In and sea strike by the U.S.-led
reading and adopted for Chrisunas proposed cost of the ·project Is
20
conf:8.i11ers
for
recyclables
on
use
lion
on
how
trash
services
and
the
gulf
on Iraq.
bonuses for village employees, $127,600. Issue II monies of by· resodents. He suggested that
multinational force against Iraq
· · th
$300 for full-time workers and ,$80,000 have been received with perhaps Council would want to recyclabl.~ arc collected on o er
The Iraqi minister was com- to liberate Kuwait from Saudi
communoues.
mentlng on the draft war resolu- territory.
lt was reported that work by . lion the United States Is pushing
In the stream of diplomacy
Roger WiUiams, Middleport recrea- the Security Council to adopt.
efforts of the gulf crisis, Soviet
lion director, is progressing on get"The continuouli resolutions leaders told the visiting Aziz
ling a soapbox derby in Meigs issued by the Security C9uncil. Monday that Baghdad mu st get
County. The application has been · including the one the Americans out of Kuwait and allow some
approved and the franchise money are seeking to adopt this week, do 3,000 Soviet nationals to leave the
must be obtained and submitied ·by not serve the cause of peace ... country or face ·'the worst. "
· May I, it was noted.
but emphasize the double stand- • "The fate of Iraq Is in the hands
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) " To me. it's worth $1.40 (in reglste~ed ' vehicles, but extra . The firemen's honorary dinner ards which the Council SUb· of its leadership, and time is
Ohio vehicle owners will be postage costs) so I don 't have to plates are needed for people was.announced for Dec, 6 at 6 p.m. scribes to," the state-owned elapsing," Soviet leader Mikhail
getting new, more colorful li- go to the deputy registrar and moving Into the state or buyi11g with Council members being in- Iraqi radio, monitored In Cairo, Gorbachev said. "If Iraq actucepse plates for 1991.
stand in line."
· their first car and as replace- vited.
quoted Aziz as saying.
·auy wants a settlement in the
The plates are red, white and
Skinner said about 12 million ments for lost tags during the
Judy Crooks and Dewey Honon
"Iraq will never succumb to entire region and Is seeking to
blue and carry the state.'s tour· sets of the. pew plates were expected four to five years the were appointed to the Volunteer pressure and wtll remain strug· avoid the wors t, it must declare
ism slogan: "Ohio- The Heart manufactured at the Lebanon plates will be in use. The expiring Firefighters Dependency Board.
gling fairly to achieve peace and right now openly and to show by
of It All."
Correctional Institution In Madl·
plates have been in use since
The need for guard railing on the · justice ln the region, with the deeds that it is leaving Kuwait."
"Ohio" .a lways has been on · son County.
1985.
curve of Parle Street near the river rights of the Palestinian people
In Amman, Jordan, one West
state license plates. "The Heart
Ohio has about 9 million
was mentioned by Crooks. Gerard foremost in Its mind.
;European diplomat told United
of It All" has been added in red
"Iraq's position on Kuwait will Press International Saddam
complimented village workers on
script. Other fetters and
the . Christmas decorations, noted remain unchanged," Aziz said.
Hussein's claim Monday that
numbers are In blue.
that the merchants were pleased
The foreign ministers of the Iraqis were.dying through lac k of
The background of the plates
·
.
with the earlier date of lfeeing the Security Council are to meet food and mediCille was a "lie."
remains white, as on. the
By Uniled Press International
High temperature records
parking meters, -and reminded Thursday at the request of the
"(Saddam) is telling a lie ...
expiring plates, which have
The National Weather· Service were expected to fall across the
members ·of .the Chnstmas parade United States, which is the there is no evidence at ail from
green lettering.
says record warrn temperatures entire state Tuesday . Highs were
on Monday mght.
.
current chairman of the U.N. Iraq to say Iraqis are dying
Leo Skinner of the Ohio Departcould continue tn some parts of predicted to range from near 70
Others attending . were Clerk- body.
through lack of food and medl·
ment of Highway Safety said 'the
Ohio through Wednesday.
in northern Ohio to the the middle
Treasurer Jon Buck and Council
The Councti has five perman- cines because of the United
Bureau of Motor Vehicles will
Monday night was warm and 70s in the south. High tempera· · :nembers James Clatworthy, Wol- ent members and 10 rotating, or Nations blockade," the diplomat
· begin mailing renewal notices
showery over the state as unsea· ture records for this date range
oam Walters, and Jack Satterfield.
temporary, members. Six of the said.
this week to vehicle owners with
sonabiy warm air continued to from 71 degrees in Cincinnati to
plates expiring In January.
spUI into the region from the Gulf 61 at Findlay. ·
As soon as owners receive the
of Mexico.
notices, they may take them to a
Early Tuesday morning
·l'uesday night wtll be breezy
deputy registrar agency or mail
temperatures were in the balmy and unusually warm with . the
them back to the state with ·60s over the majority of Ohio. best chance for showers over
payment for a new set of plates.
Showers were stili scattered over western sections of the state. The
'Til make a pitch for the
the state but rainfall totals'were mercury will fall no lower. than
mali-In service," Skinner said.
on the light side overnight.
\he upper 50s to lower 60s. ·
Wednesday will begin unseasonably warm over the entire
state. However, It will turn cooler
from· west to east during the day
as a cold front traverses the area.
Highs will be In the 60s, but
temperatures will fall through
A Pomeroy man has changed his Dave's Small Engine Repliir and the 50s over western Ohio In the
plea on a recently' filed indicunent The Comer Bar 12 days after the afternoon. Showers and thunder·
and will begin serving a two-year .theft of the truck.
storms are expected to accompa:· ·
prison sentence on those charges..
On the charge of .grand theft nyy the frent across the state.
Donald L. Edwards of Spring auto, Edwards was sentenced to
Avenue changed his plea of in- two years in prison, and was Or·
The cold front will put an end to
nocent to a plea of guilty on all dered 10 pay cpun costs.,
the unseasonably warm weather.
charges befQre Meigs County
On each of the three breaking By Thursday, temper;iturcs will
Common Pleas Judge Fred W. · and entering counts, Edwards was return to more normal levels
Crow III.
sentenced to prison terms of 18 along with a chance for Uogerlng
Edwards was indicted earlier this months, those sentences to be ser- rain or snow showers.
month on a third degree felony ved consecutively with the grand
On the Tuesday . morning
charge of grand theft auto and on theft charge.
weather map, a low pressure
three counts of breaking and enter·
Judge Crow also placed Edwards system over Wisconsin had a
ing, all felonies of the fourth de- on probalion for a period of five warm frorit e?Ctendlng east
gree.
years on the three counts of break· through Michigan Into New York
Meigs County Prosecuting At· mg and entering.
· and tben southeast to VIrgin~!!. A
tomey Steven L. Story reponed at
The indigent defendant Edwards, cold front trailed southwest from
the time of the indicanents earlier · who w• represented in the case by the lowtoanotherlowdeveloplng
this month that Edwards was
Meigs County Public Defender over the Texas Panhandle.
cused of stealing a 1990 pick-up Charles H. Knoght, was given credit
A' large high pressure system
truck from Marvin Bun of for time served in the amount of~~ oft the East Coast was pumping
THAT TIME 011 YEAR·lt'l that time fl ,_.
kettlli - .. Jllca .. - - - • • • tlley will
,Pomeroy in September of this year. days~ which had previo.usly been . warm and moist air !rom the
whea the SllvlliOa Army tlkel to the streell
nmala ulll Clarlltmu. Pldurid Is ~ (Ret.)
· According 10 . StorY-, Edwards served in the Meigs County Jail.
G\llf of MexJeo ·Into the Ohio
wltll Ill kettlel aDd bella In a drift to raise
GIIDu Rammel Ill the S.lmicll Army, left, llld
bloke into Excelsior Salt Works,
Valley and lower Great Lakes.
mooey ror aeed)- lmllvlduals ~d, ~i,llel. Tbe \ Jack Ambi'Oie, m•upr Ill ~'Sill Pomeroy. . .
1
~
~
~·

Midd~eport

· f:a~mers

1 Section. 10 Pages 25 Centl
A Multimedia lne. Newsp1per

Support grows
for U.N. war
·resolution

MEIGS

"'~

afternoon.

.

NOV. 26-North Gallia, Away
Nov. 29-H-an Tract, Away
DEC. 3-Eastern; Homt

915·3301
.
-

during the

NOV. 27 -North Gallia, ~
NOV. 30-Ha!Mn Tract, Homt
DEC. 4-Easttrn, Away

GilLS

"

__________j_JliOs

BOYS

IEII£1 FDIC .•

• &gt;

Mostly cloudy and windy
l'uesday night, with a chance
ol showers, and a low near 60.
Chance of rain Is 30 percent.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely Wedn~sday, with highs
between 65 and 70 bul with
temperatures faiUng into the

EASTERN
Nov. 19-Foderal Hocking ...... HC)mo
Nov. 26-Kygor Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-Southweltern .. ....... Away
Dec. 3-Southern ................... Away
Doc. 6-Trimble ..................... Homo
Dec. 6-Symmea Valley .......... Homo
Dec. 8-Meiga .......... , ............ Away
Doc. 10-North Gallia ............ Homo
Dec, 13-0ak. Hill .................. Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace .......... Away
Jan. 3-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Jan, 9-Trimble. .................... .. Away
Jan.1 0-Southweltorn ........... Home
Ja!l. 14-Fadoral Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southem ................. Homo
Jan. 21-Meiga ...................... Homo
Jan. 24-Symmoa Valloy. :: ..:.:;cAwoi
Jen. 31-Nonh Gallio ............. Away .
Feb. 4~Hannon Trace ............ Home
Feb . 7-0ak HIII ................ , .... Home

rn art S 0

'

1 Oh'£0
.

S

t ay warm

Edwards changes plea,
begins seroing sentence ·

ac-

I.

I

f:

. I

' .

•

•

'·

�•

Tuesday, November 27, 1990

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MAsON AREA

~lb

Bm~ ~.__....,....~~·~ .

qjV

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

,

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Allslslanl Publlsher/Conlroller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclailon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject' to editing and must be s lgned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addresslng·tssues, not personall·
ties .

·

·

Recession is here
By BOB WEBSTER
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Three-quarters of the . 51 economic
forecasters surveyed by the National Association of Business
Economists believe the U.S. economy already is slogging through a
recession, the association said Tuesday.
.
Two-thirds of the economists also said the recession is expected to
last two quarters or· less and should be mild in historical terms.
Assuming that the current economic expansion ended at 93 months,
it "liVed a long and prosperous llfe'' and fell short of the postwar
record expansion of 1961 to 1969, the report said.
The report Is the latest In a series of reports indicating that a
recession could be under way. Although the Bush Administration has
insisted the economy ls not in recession, President. Bush recently
conceded that the economy has suffered a downturn. Private
ecOnomists have not been as optimistic.
The NABE report forecast that growth in the current quarter imd
the first quarter of next year will be negative but will improve by the
.
fourth quarter of next year .
The nation's economy is expected to grow at an overall rate of 1.1
percent next year after growing by 0.7 percent this year, the report
said.
Unemployment, though, is anticipated to Increase from the steady
5.5 percent of most of this year to 6.1 percent next year.
Corporate profit~. already expected to be down by 4 percent this
year, are forecast to sUp by 1.3 percent next year.
Amid this glqomy scenario, interest rates are expected to decline
but by less than 50 basis points from current levels, the report said.
Three out of four of the association's economists said a recession
has already begun and almost all Said the downturn began during
either the current or previous quarter.
Of the 25 percent who said a recession is not already gripping the
economy, most sai.d the probability of a recession has increased since
August. Only 15 percent of the economists said a recession is not ln the
economic horizon.
The majority of economists said the economic growth should pick
up toward the end of next year while inflation cools.
Gross national product, when adjusted for Inflation, is projected to
increase by 1.1 percnt by the fourth .quarter of next year while
inflation at the consumer level slows to 4.5 per,c ent from 6.4 percent,
·
.
·
the report said. ,

Today in history
By United Press lnlernatlonal
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 27, the 33lst day of 1990 with 34 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars."
Those born on this date are under the ·sign of Sagittarius. They
include Anders Celsius, Swel!ish astronomer and Inventor of the
centigrade thermometer, in 1701; American historian Charles Beard
and Israeli statesman Chaim Welzmann, both In 1874: and rock
guitarist Jlmi Hendrix in 1942.
On this date In hiStory:
In 1901. the War Department authorized creation of the Army War·
College to instruct commissioned officers. It was built in
Leavenworth, Kan.
· .
In 1945, President Harry Truman named Gen. George Marshall his
special representative to China. ·
In 1970, a man with a knife attempted to Injure Pope Paul VI at
Manila Airport in the Philippines.
In 1984, the Treasl!ry Department proposed a sweeping overhaul of
the U.S. Tax Code.
In 1989, a two-hour general strike was held ll) Czechoslovakia,
demanding an end to Communist Party domination.
Also in 1989, University of Chicago doctors Implanted part of· a
woman's liver in · her 21-month·old daughter, In the nation's first
living donor liver transplant.
•

Berry's World

I ,~----~----~.~.--------------------~--~

WASHINGTdN - The new
commissioner of the Food and
Drug Administration David
Kessler, Is telling confidantes,
•'I'm not going to protect
crooks." .
That's not something that most
federal agency heads have to
spell out when they take the Job.
But the FDA, once known as a
tough regulatory agency, has
been branded as corruptible.
Kessler, 39, Is now the medical
director of New York's Albert
Einstein College of Medicine.
When he t 11 kes over the FDA next
month, It should ·be something
like grabbing the helm of the
Exxon Valdez after It hit the reef.
Agency morale Is !ow. The
FDA has had a stand-in leader
for more than 11 months since

Page...,.-2-The D11ily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, November 27, 1990

comml;sloner Frank Young was
forced to resign -a casualty or
the generic drug scandal that
occurred un\ler his watch In 1989.
Four former FDA chemists test·
lng generic drugs have pleaded
guilty to accepting thOusands of
dollars In illegal gratuities from
drug companies . .Last month, the
former chief of the FDA's generlc drug division, Marvin
Se!fe, was convicted of lying to
federal investigators when he
denied hl!vlng accepted meals
from generic drug executives.
The FDA's credibility Is at an
all-time low. The agency Is
catching heat for prematurely .
approving life support medical
devices. The most recent lnvestlgallon looked Into allegations
that FDA agents wereuslngthelr

TUCSON, Ariz . (UPil- Deron Johnson scored 14 points and added
six rebounds Monday. night to lead No. 1 Arizona ·to 90·51 romp over
Western Illinois.
·
Sean Rooks added 12 points, Khalld ·Reeves had 11 and Brian
Williams 10 for the Wlidcats, who won their 50th tn a row at home.
D~nng tha t streak Arizona 's average margin of victory has been 23
pomts.
. Preston Lewis led Western Illinois, 0·2, wlih 13 points. Arzlona
tmproved to 5·0.
The Wildcats made 11 straight field goals midway though the first
half to build 32-14 lead wl th 5: 41 remaining. The Leathernecks missed
six shots In the streak and converted jus !four of their first 18 shots
from the floor. •
·
The Wildcats led 45·19 at Intermission and went up63-27 !~the flrsi
7: 24 of the second half.. Arizona coasted the rest of the way.
·
UCLA 89, Virginia 74 · - At Anchorage , Alaska, Don MacLean
pumped In 20 points and pulled down eight rebounds Monday night to
lead No. 10 UCLA to an 89-74 rout of Virginia In the championship
game of the Great Alaska Shootou t.
"We came up here to win three games and that's what we did ," said
the 6-10 MacLean as be signed autographs after being named the
tournament's most outstanding player; ·
.
Darrick Martin, a 5·11 junior guard, topped UCLA lnscoringwlth 21
points including two three-pointers, leading the Bruin domlnafion of
the 18th-ranked Cavaliers.
•· .
UCLA, 3-0, built a tO-point lead midway through the first half, only

By Jac" Anderson

Inside information · about drug
approvals to play the stock
market. A source told us that the
investigation came up dry and no
report was filed.
One congressional sourcetold
us a big coricern on Capitol Hill Is
that Kessler doesn't ."get cap·
tured" by any bad elements that
linger In the FDA. The hope Is
that Kessler will be savvy enough
to do the right thing and restore
the FDA's reputation as a protec·
tor of the public.
Those who know Kessler think
he won't be easily duped. He has
privately vowed that hewon'tput
up with any more corruption. He
told one friend, "All I want Is 15
minutes of Dlngell's time."
It would be an Interesting 15
minutes. Rep. John Dlngell,

D-Mich., led the congressional
Investigation In the generic drug
scandal with the help of Richard
Kusserow, the Inspector general
for the .Health and Human
Services Department.
Sources told our associate Jim
Lynch that Kessler Is respected
by Democrats and Republicans,
but that his political godfather Is
Sen. Orrin· Hatch, R·Utah.
Kessler Is a former consultant to
the Senate Labor .and Human
Resources . Committee where
Hatch Is the senior Republican.
Kessler should not wa,lk gin·
gerly Into his new office. ~e
should let It be known that there s
a new sheriff In town with .no
tolerance for the old way of doing
. business at the FDA.

to see Virginia. 2·1, fight bac k a nd tie the co ntes t at 25-25 With 7:06
rema inin g.
But the Bruins P,ulled away again on the strength of a 9·0 run to take
a 40-29 halftim e lead, a nd th e· Cavalie rs never again mounted a
serious challenge.
Virginia forward Ke nny Turner, a 6-6 senior, was th e game 's high
scorer with 25 points, and all-Amer ica candidate Bryant Stith, a 6-5
junior guard, added 22. Turner also grabbed a game-high 10
rebounds.

1 MAUtERS

By Robert Walters
.

.

Wtnnipeg .... .. ..... .. !:ll5220 8!l 93

NFL action

monoxide, 90 percent for volatile
organic compounds, 40 to 70
percent for n ltrogen oxides and
25 percent for carbon dioxide.
Among the technology's few
liabilities are a shorter driving
·range and larger storage re·
qulrement. The two bulky tanks
Installed In autos (they occupy
much of the trunk space) and
light trucks hold the eqillv alent of
only abQut 10 gallons of gasoline.
In addition, there are fewer
than 50 public and 200 private
service stations dispensing natu·
raJ ·gas ln this country. As a
result, .CNG use Initially will be
confined to trucks and other fleet
vehicles that operate within
limited service areas.
But PG&amp;E here In California,
Amoco In Colorado and marke·
ters elsewhere' have ambitious
plans to construct new facll!tles.
Other states likely to have CNG
stations In the . coming years
Include Minnesota, Wyoming,
Utah, Arizona, New Mexico
Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana:

Ed~ootorL .... ..... . 6 13 2 H 58 64

, i\rnerlean Conlerence
East
Team
W L T Pet. PF PA
Buffa lo .' ... .......... 9 2 0 .818312177
Miami. ............... 9 2 0 .818 232122
Indianapolis ....... 5 6 0 .455176 230
N.Y. J•1 s ... ........ 4 80 .333199257
New En2land ..... 1 10 0 .090 H4 305
Central
Cincinnati ........... 6 50.545259262
Pittsburgh .......... 6 5 0 .545198181
Houston ............ 6 5 0 .545 256 216
Cleveland .
....2 9 0 .1 82 164 300
K~nsas

w...

City . ....... 7 ~ 0 .636 246172

L.A . Raiders ....... 7 4 0 .636 2Q7174

St&gt;atlle ....... .. ... .. .. 5 6 0 .455 209 2Hi

SOn 01!'80 ., ... .. .... 5 7 0 .417 234 203
Denv•r ., ....... ....... 3 8 0 .300237 280
National Conference

E.. t
Team
W LT Pel. PF Po\
N.Y. Gianls .. ..... 10 1 0 .909259141
Phllad•lphla ....... 7 4 0 .636 282 222
Washington ......... 6 5 0 .5452n2I3
Dallas ................. 5 7 0 .n 7176 242
Phoonlx ...... ........ 3 8 0 .273172 278

Central
Chicago .............. 9 2 0 .SIR 258 180
G reon Bay ..........6 5 0 .545 220 227
Minnesota ........ ... 5 GO·.455 259 222
Tampa Bay .. ... ... .4 8 0 .333 187 294
Derroll ....... ........ .4 7 0 .364 253 284
Sa n Francisco ... . 10 1 0 .909 270 179
New OriPa ns ..... .. 5 6 0 .455 198 202
L.A.. Rams .... ...... ~ 7 0 .364 247 299
Atlanta .... .' .......... 3 R 0 .273265 285

GOP goes back•to drawing board
·

.

weekend before the election, the
same analysts were trying to
cast a break-even result ·as a
Republican plus.
As It turned out, Democrats
gained a Senate seat. Key reasons: the stunning upset of
two-term Incumbent GOP Sen.
Rudy Boschwjtz of Minnesota by
newcomer Paul Wellstone, and
the .fact that Democratic Rep.
Daniel Akaka of .Hawa!l over·
came a seemingly solid lead by
Republican Rep. Pat Saiki to
hold the Senate seat of the late
DemocratIc Sen . Spark
Matsunaga.
Now the GOP must engineer a
swing of seven seats in 1992 virtually Impossible, no matter
how well Presl&lt;!ent Bush does.
-On the House side, the GOP
strategy was longer term.
. The first goal was to capture
the .redistricting machinery In
key states by .electing Republi·
can governors and gaining con·
trolofatleastonechamberofthe
state legislatures. Once more
favorable districts were estab·
llshed, the second part of the
GOP strategy was to !Ind a lot of
attractive, yol!nger and more
moderate candidates to challenge aging , Democratic
Incumbents.
Part of this strategy failed In
two districts this yeari Democratlc Reps. George Brown, '1l,ln.
California and Frank Annun!zo,.
70, In Illinois won new terms:
against hand-picked, well..

_

By Robert Wagman

financed young GOP moderates.
Going Into Campaign '90, the
GOP had two thinks working for
It long-range - the growing
propensity of younger voters to
vote Republican, and a strangle·
hOld on what Is seen as today's
key Issue - taxes.
GOP strategists repeatedly
said "we own young voters,"
pointing out that many young
people who came of voting age
during the Reagan years have
never voted for a Democratic
candidate muchasmanyofthelr
parents h~d never voted Repubii·
can through the '40s Into the '60s.
This year, however, In state
after state, young people voted
Democratic In numbers much
higher than at any time In the
past decade. In three gubernatorIa! races, young voters made the
difference - Oregon where Se·Cretary of State Barbara Roberts
upset Repul)llcan Attorney Genera! David Frohnmayer: Kansas
were state Treasurer Joan Fin·
ney surprised Republican Gov.
Mike Hayden; and Rhode Island
where GOP Gov. Edward D.
DIPrete was resoundingly defeated by Democrat Bruce
Sundlun. · •
More Important, these races
and others show that the GOP has
completely lost control of the tax
Issue. Democrats are now successfully. running all over the
country on anti-tax platforms,
whUetbeGOPis on the defensive
because of Bush's tax reversal '

Monday' s

•

this year.
Another problem Is that many
GOP governors have had to raise
taxes because Ronald Reagan
shifted so much of the cost of
government back to the states.
during his terms so he could cut
federal taxes.
The big question now Is: What
does this clear Democratic trend
mean to Bush and his re-election
chances In '92?
The GOP Is furiously trying to
downplay any linkage.
Charles Black, de facto head of
the Republican National Com·
mlttee In the absenceofthe alllng
Lee Atwater, said, "It's an
anti-Congress trend rather than
an anti-presldellt trend."
But Democratic National
Chairman Ron Brown saw the
voti! as very much a reflection on
President Bush.
"This was clearly a referen·
dum on leadership," Brown said.
"In the !Ina! Weeks of the
campaign President Bush cam·
palgoed hard for 18 major
canclldates, and 14 of them lost.
"In state after state he said
send me more Republican sena·
tors and send me more Republl·
can congressmen. What the
voters sent ·him were more
Democratic senators and more
Democratic congressmen. .
."I think the Democrats ·are
now well positioned for 1992 and
that George Bush personally Is In
deep trouble."

!llaflll'

Houston 27. Burfalo:.!4

•

Sunday, Dec. 2

Kansas Cily a t Ne"': England . 1

p.m.

Mi a mi at Washlngr&lt;11. 1 p.m.
Atlanta ar Tampa Bar. 1 p.m .
Philadelphia a t Buffal o, 1 p.m .
Cincinnati at PUtsburgh, 1 p.m.
LA . Ram s a! Clewland 1 p.m.
Det roll at Chl ca~o . 1 p.m.
L.A. RaldPrs at Denwr. 4 p.m .
Indianapolis at Phoenix. 4 p.m.
New Orleans at Dallas, 4 p.m .
Houston at Seattle, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Jpts at San Otego, 4 p.m.
Green Bay at Minnesota. 8 p.m .
Monday. De c. 3
N.Y. Giants at San Francisco, 9
p.m.

•'
\

'
•

•

'

·,
' .
'

\\'aJe~

Conferenct&gt;
P&amp;arlck Dl\lision
Team
W L T Pis. OF GA
N.Y. RanJ::ers .. .... 16 6537 107 67
Philadelphia .... ... 1510 I 31 92 80
New Jersey ......... 13 10 l 27 89 78
Washlng1on . ........ 13 13 0 26 86 84
P lt1sbu'!lh .......... 1110 2 24 96 86
N.Y. Is landers ..... 9-13 119 64 84

t

''

Adams Dlvbilon
Boston ........... ;.. .. 13 7 -1 ·30
Montreal ..... ....... ,1210327
Hartlord ···'···· ···· . 9 10 ~ 22
Buffalo .. .... ......... . 8 8 6 22
Quebi!C ................ 3 18 5 11

.

.

\

76 71
77 i7
63 72
7.1 i3
66119

Campbell Conferen&lt;:e

Norris Divis._
W LT PI~ GF Go\
Chlc~go .............. 17 7236 89 60
S1 . Louis ............. 15 6 2 32 81 61
De1ro11. ............... 1010323 84 90
Minnesota ....... ..... 5 15 515 66 91

r

Team

'

''
•
\

Torooto ................ 4 21 l 9 70125

\

Smy&amp;he Dlvlelon
Los Angele5 ... ..... 16 5 2 34 100 70
Calgary .. ........ .. .. 14 9 2 30 107 81
Vancouver .... ..... .1112123 75 84

'

t

!

.
I
I

'

u

Tuesday's A'ames
Philadelphia at N.Y. Is landers.
, 7: lo p.m.
Edmontoo at Pittsburgh, 7:35
ip,m .
.
Los Angeles.at Detroit . 7: 33p.m .
Toronto at St : Louis . 8: 35 p.m .
Minnesota al Vancouver. 10:35
p.m .
Wednesday's games

Quebec at Hartford , i ; 35 p.m .
Buffa!.oat Montreal. 7:35p.m .
WashlngtCl1 .a t N.Y. Ran~er s ,
i: 35 p.m.
Philadelphia at New Je-rsey. 7: 4.1
p.m .
.
Cal gar)' ar Winnipeg . 8; 35 p.m

NBA action
Easlern Cenference
Atlanth: DI\IINion
T ..m
WLPct. GB
Bos ton ................. ...... 112 .846 Philadelphia ................ 9 4 .692 2
Nf'w York .................... 6 5 .545 4
Miami. ....
,
...... -19.3087
Npw Je-rsey ...
. .... 4 9 .3087
Washington .................. 3 8 .273 i
C-entral Dl\llslon
Det rotr. ... ................ ... lO 2 .833 Mllwaukl'P ............... ·.' ... 9 .1 .75111
Cleveland .. .... ....... . ..... 7 fi .538 31 ,.~
Chicago ...... .. ........... ... 7 6 .538 31~
Charlotte ..................... 7 j .500 4
Indiana ........................ 5 i .Ui 5
Atlanla ..................... ... 4 8 .333 6
\\'estern ConferencP
Midwest Dl\lbdon
Team
" ' I. Pd . GB
San Antoolo .............. 7 3 .700Hou ston ...... ....... .. ..... 7 6 . 5 38 1~
Ut a h ................. ........ 6 t.i .500 2
Dallas ................ .. ..... !i fi .455 2¥.!
Minnesota .................. 4 S .333 4
Orlando
.
..... 3 10 .231 5\\
Denver ................. ..... 1 11 .083 7
Pacltie Dl\llslon
Portland .. ...... ......... 11 0 1.000Golden State ...... ....... 8 5 .615·4
Phoenix .. ...... ...: ... .... ~ 4 .60041f"
L.A. Lakcrs .. ............. 6 5 .545 5
L.A. Clippers ........... 6 6 .500 5 ~
Seat tie .... ... .......... ..... 4 ·5 .444 6
Sa cramento ... ... .. ..... 1 JO .091 10
Monday',; final
Bos ton 118, Miami 101

·NHL action

'I

Monday'sllnal
N.Y. Rangers5,'Butralo0

•

West

WASHINGTON (NEAl - It's
back to the drawing board fort he
Republican Party. Campaign '90
turned out to be a political
disaster, shredding carefully
laid GOP plans to cement control
of the White House, begin to
~apture Congress and ultimately
emerge as the dominate party of
the next century.
Here's a look at why the future
now looks cloudy for Republl·
cans, following the mixed results
In tile Nov. 6 general elections:
- Prior to the mid-term
voting, GOP strategy had called ·
for retaking the Senate .In 1992,
during a George Bush re-election
landslide. With Democrats hold·
lng a 55·45 Senate edge,• this
meant engineering a six-seat
swing In the '90 and '92 elections
comblned.
The Republicans planned to
target older Democratic sen ators and run popular GOP House
members against them, backed
by huge campaign funds and
staffs.
The tests of that strategy this
year were GOP Rep. Claudine
Schneider taking on Sen. Clal·
borne Pellln Rhode Island; GOP
Rep. Lynn Martin challenging
Sen. Paul Simon In Illinois; and
GOP Rep. Thomas Tauke renew·
lng an old rivalry with.Sen. Tom
Harkin In Iowa. Ail three Democratic Incumbents won handily.
In September, Republican
planners believed theGOPwol!ld
have a net gain of as many as
three Senate seats. By the

TIGHT DEFENSE Is the order of the day for Weslern Dllnois
eagers Ron Aleman (cenler) and Larry Heath (right), who
converge on Arizona frontman Sean Rooks as Rooks tries to
maneuver in the paint during Monday night's game In Tucson,
Ariz. (UPI)

DYNAMIC . DUO • Meigs Marauder wrestling coach Kevin
. Sheppard is very opti1Jiistic about the upcoming se~on. Two or the
reasons are these two returning seniors pictured, Aaron Sheets
(left) and Burt Kennedy (right). At a recent open wrestling
tournament at Dublin High Scbool where 250 wrestlers par·
licipated, Sheets placed second In the heavyweight class and Kennedy placed third ·in the 189 pound weight class. Also placing
second ror Meigs in tbe 13 to 16-year-old class was Jake Kennedy
who is not pictured.

Vehicles can ~n on ·gas, naturally

Tuesday's ~ames
O eveland ar New York, 7: 30p.m .
Philadelphia at New Jene~. 7: 30
p.m,
Golden State at Washington, 7: 30

p.m.
.
Det rolt at Atlanta , 7: 31) p.m .
Indiana at Ml1waukee. 8: JO p.m .
L.A. Clippers at Houston . 8: 30
p.m.
.
Orlando at Den~r , 9: 30p.m.
Minnesota at Sacramento. 10: 30

p.m.

PhoeniX at Portladd, 8 p.m.
.1t SHitlt&gt;. 10 p.m .
Wednetday's 1ameH
Atlanta at Bo~ton. 7:30p.m .
Indiana at Philadelphia, 7: 30
San Anlmlo

p.m .

.

Milwaukee at Charlotte, 7: 30
p.m .
New Jersey at Miami, 7: 30p.m .
Golden State ar Cleveland. 7:30

p.m .

New York at Detroit, 7:30p.m .
Washingtm at Chicago, 8:30p.m .
L.A. Clippers at Dallls, 8: 30p.m .
Houstoo at Utah, 9: 30p.m.
San Ant&lt;Jtioat L.A . Lakers, 10:30
p.m.

MacLEAN SHOOTS- UCLA forward Don MacLean ( 42) shoots
for two of his 20 points against the defense of Virginia frontman
Kenny Turner during the first half of Monday night's Great
Alaskan Shootout championship game in Anchorage, Alaska.
UCLA won 89-74 fo claim the title. (UPI)

.

. -···

. "•"

. ...,

;_ •

Lady Marauders post a
67-36 win over Trimble'
ROCKSPRINGS • The Meigs
Miuauders outscored Trimble 19-;4
in the second quaner enroute to a
67-36 win over the Lady Cats in
TVC girls action Monday night.•
. The Lady .Marauders jumped out
to a 6·0 lead only to have Trimble
cut the lead to 10-8 late in the first
quarter. But Meigs went on a 15-1
run to blow the game wide open.
The Lady Marauders continued
the onslaught in the. second period
outscoring the Lady Cats 21-15 in
the third quarter and 13-9 in the
founh period inb coasting to the
win.
Junior Tricia Baer led the
Marauders in double figures with
22, Veml Compston continued her
good play with 15 and a steady
Jennifer Taylor added 12. All nine
Marauders that played scored.
The Lady Marauders hit 27 of 60
from the tioor good enough for 45
percent; and 11 of 21 from lhe line
for 53 percenL Meigs grabbed 31
rebounds, with Baer getting 15 . .
Compston and Thylor each led.
Meigs with two assis!S.
Fouts led the Lady Cats with 12
points, while Koons added nine. No
other Trimble statistics were avail·
able.
.
In the reserve contest the Liule
Marauders of coach Kim Adkins
jiunped out to a 21-4 lead at the
half and went on to defeat Trimble
36-10. Meigs placed all II girls in
the scaling column, Yevelte Young
and Lori Kelly led the way with
nine points each.
Meigs now 2-0 on the year will
travel to Vinton County to play the
always tough Vikings this Thursday
night.
MEIGS 14 19 21 13-67
TRIMBLE 8 4 25 9- 36
MEIGS • Kelly Smith 2-0-0-4;
Tricia Baer 9·0-4·22: Jennifer
Taylor 5-0:.2-12: Vema Compston

7-0·1·15; Kim Hanning 2-0-0-4;. Missy Nelson 0-0-2-2: Kim Ewing
2-0.0-4; Amy Rouse 1-0-1-3; Mary
Cremeans 0-0-1-1, TOTALS 28-0·
11-67
'
TRIMBLE· MClelland 3-0-1.
7; Peart 2.0-0-4; Coen 1-0-0,
2,;Fouts 4-0-4-12; Downs 1·0·0·2:
Koons .&lt;l-0-1-9; TOTALS 15-0-6-36

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-&amp;1111
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon , Monday
through Friday. lll Court St , Po- ·
meroy . .Qhlo. by the Ohio Valley Publlsblng' Companyi MuU\mt&gt;dia, Inc:..
·•.
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769, Ph . 9!rl · 21~. Second class postagf' paid at PomNoy,
Ohio.
Mf"mber: Unlled PrPSs International;
""·
Inland Dally Press Association and rile
Ohio Newspaper Association . National ,
Advertising Representative, Branham ·
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017 .

PO!STMASI'ER: Seond address changes
to The Daily Sentinel, Ill Cour1 St .
Poml'f'oy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
lly Carrlfl' or Motor Route
One Week ................................... $1.40
On«.' Month ......... ,....................... $6.10 '
One Year ................ ................. 172.80
SINGLE COP\"
PRICE
Dally , ..:.. .. .. .. ........... ,..... ...... 25 Cents
Su~scrlbe&gt;rs not desiring to pay thPcar· ,

rler may remit In advanr~ direct to ·
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month ,
basis. Credit will bf' given carripr each
wePk.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier st&gt;rvtce Is
available.

Mall Subeerlptlons
.
Inside Melp County
13 Weeks ...... ... ......................... $19.24
26 Weeks .......................... ........ $37.96
52 Weeks .............. ........ : .......... . S74.36
Outside Melp County
13 Weeks .............. ......: ............ $20.80
26 Weeks ...............
. ... $40.30
52 weeks ..... .......... ................... S75.40

North Gallia, Hannan Trace
girls post cage wins Monday
North Gatlia collected its first
Wildcats 41, Oaks 33
win of the season with a 34·25
At Oak Hill, a pair of juniorsvictory over visiting Southern center Tammy Thomas and
Monday night.
guard Kim Triplett - -combined
Beth Sal!sbu ry and Susie Robie for 25 points to .push Hannan
p!loted North to victory by Trace to an eight -point decision
scoring eight points each to tie over Oak Hill.
gor game l)on6rs. M;ica Jones led
After Trace took a three-po.int
the Tornadoes with seven points,
lead at halftime, both teams
made the game's &lt;lnly three- essentially traded baskets In the
pointer and sank Racine's oniy
third quarter, but the Oaks'
successful foul shots of the night.
offense (lrled up ln the final
The Pirates, 1-2 overall, will
frame, as the Gall!ans outscored
play Thursday at Oak Hill, while
their hosts ll-6.ln that period to
the Tornadoes will travel south to
secure the victory.
take on Hannan Trace.
Oak Hill guard Me lynda GamaQuar ler totals
more led all scorers with 18
Southern ......... ... 7 0 9 9-25
points, which Included four
North Gall!a ...... 6 . 12 8 8-34
three-pointers .
North Gallla (34) - Roble
On Thursday, theWlldcats, 2·0,
2-0·4-8; Salisbury 4-0·0-8; Dab·
w!ll look to remain , unbeaten
bins 3·0·0·6: Myers 3-0-0-6; Twywhen they host Southern, whlle
man 1·0·1-3: Meadows 1·0-0-2;
Oak Hill will host North Gall!a.
McCorm!cn 0-0·1·1. Totals
Quarler totals
·
14-0-6·34
Hannan Trace 12 8 10 11'-41
Field goals- 14-53 (26.4 ~ )
. Oak Hill .. . ... ... 9 8 10 6-33
Free throws- 6-18 (33 . 3% ~
Hannan Trace (4l) -Thomas
Rebounds- 43
4·0·5·13: Triplett 3-2 -0-12:
Assists- 5
Mullens 2-0-2-6; D. Nelson 1·0·3·
Steals -14
5: Dillon 1·0·0-2; Randolph 1·0·0· ·
Turnovers - 23
2: Sanders 0·0·1·1. Totals 12-2·11-41
Southern (25)- Jones 1·1·2·7; •
Free throws- 11-26 (42.3%)
Beegle 3·0·0-6; Cross 2·0·0-4;
Oak Hill (33) - Galllamore
Ohlinger 1-0·0·2: Mills 1·0·0·2:
3-4·0·18: .·Stiltner 4-0-0-8; Fisher
. Stover 1.0·0·2; Wolfe 1·0·0·2:
1·0·1-3; . Carney 1·0·0·2: Kuhn
Totals - 10-l-Z-25
1·0·0·2. Totals - IQ-4-1·33
Free tbrows - 2-10 ( 20'!1 ) .
Free throws"..:. 1·7 (14.3%)

•

t.... ,lL

During the tournament, UCLA set a Shootout record fo r total
blocked shots with 32, Including a record 16 a gainst UC -Irvine ln the
first round . In that game. the Bruins also set a single-game scoring
record fo r the tournament with 134 points.
Rice 77, Colorado 68 - At Houston , Texas, Chase Maa g scored 19
(See COLLEGE on Page 4)

TAYLOR SCORES - Meigs Marauder Jennifer Taylor (left)
goes airborne and bypaSses Trbnble's Char Peart on this layup to
· score two of her 12 points during Monday night's TVC matchup at
Rock Springs, which the Marauders won 67-36.

. Sf.

CONCORD, Calif. (NEAl- At
natural gas In Texas, Colorado fueled buses to transport ·stu·
first glance, the gas pump
and California as well as the dents. Slm!larly, the vehicle
appears similar to those motorTexas General Land Office, a fleets owned by· the Miami
lsts routinely encounter at ser·
state agency. They contributed· International Airport, th.e Scotts:
vice stations everywhere. But a
$935,000 to help finance the dale, Ariz. municipal govern·
close Inspection reveals that the
project.
.
__men! alld various other opera·
volume of fuel sold is measured ", Now under- cdll~'i'it~at!on Is a tors are powered by CNG .
In !berms rather than gallons and · vastly expanded program under
The technology Is hardly new.
the nozzle looks like it should be which GM would begin produc- Natural gas from the Po River
on a garden hose.
tlon in 1994 of a far larger (but Valley has been used to fuel
That's because the . pump, In still undetermined) number of Italian buses. trucks and cars
front of a Pacific Gas &amp; Electric
trucks, vans and buses. To since the m!d·l930s. Today, Italy
Co. Maintenance fac!llty In this finance the engineering costs,
leads the world with 300,000ofthe
San Francisco suburb, doesn't
GM would contribute $24 million
more than 700,000 Cl'IG vehicles
dispense gasoline. Instead, it and the natural gas Industry operating In almost 40 nations.
. Other countries near the top of
supplies compressed natural gas would put up $16 mi!llori.
or CNG - a muc.h cleaner,
Some operators of truck fleets
that list Include the Soviet Union
cheaper and more plentiful fuel can't watt for those vehicles,
with 200,000, New Zealand with
- to specially retrofitted cars,
however. The United Parcel 110,000, United States with 30,000,
trucks and other vehicles.
Service Is already testing CNG
Canada with 20,000 and Argen·
But those retrofits (which cost technology on 30 of.fts distinctive
tina with 15,000.
. $2,000 to $3,500 per vehicle) may brown delivery trucks- 20 In Los
CNG has numerous attributes
not be necessary much longer.
Angeles and 10 In New York.
that make It a logical fuel for the
Slmllar conversions are to be
future. Unlike crude oll, natural
The General Motors Corp. Is
commlited to producing, during made In Dallas and Houston, If
gas Is plentiful both domestically
the 1991model year, atleastl,OOO the tests are as successful, as
and internationally . Recovera·
GMC Sierra three-quarter-ton expected, UPS says up to half of
ble reserves In this country
pickup trucks with V-8 engines Its ~atlonal fleet of more than
exceed 1 quadrillion cubic feetmodified to operate on CNG as 100,000 vehicles could be
enough to supply the nation well
their fuel.
switched from gasoline to CNG;
p·ast the middle of the next
Encouraging GM to recently
In Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas
century.
enter the field was a consortium and Indiana, some school dis·
Specifically, emissions are re·
of nine utility companies that sell tr!cts already rely upon CNG·
duced !f/ to 99 percent for carbon

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

•
Arizona, UCLA post Wins
over Western Illinois, ... Yirginia

New FDA chief must lay down law

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.·

I!

'

'..
•\

''
'\
\

''
•

;

'

Enjoy rhe flexibility and liquidity of. a CD
which is auromatically renewable and redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary

•'

The ?-Day-Premium CD
is another example of our.
Com.m irmem To Cu sromers.

..

Call or visit your nearest

Cenrral Trust office for details today.

SlO,OOO MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Maximum deposit 599.999.99. Sub!itantial pt'O:J.ity for c:-orly with dr:~.w aJ.
Interest paid to principal a.nd Comp~nded week!y. Rates eHPCtive Sept. 21, 19!10
01nd !iuDtect ru chan~e w1thou t nuu:t". Y•eld assutnt's th:J.t s rawd rarr re m:~ ins
mnsranr for a full year wirh nu wirhdrawals nf inrcr6t nr principal. ·

CENTRAL TRlST
' 992·6661
·Middleport

-,..

APNCBANK

•

. 448·0902
M•mber FDIC Gellipolla

.

.

... ......

'''•
•
'
•'
.,

�Paa•

Tu.-day, November 27, 1990
4 The Daily Sentinel

•

'

'

B.Y R ICHARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON (UP I ) - Houston's run -and -shoot
finally Jived up to its name.
•
Warren Moon threw two touc hdown passes and
Lorenzo White accounted for 214 yards total
offense and one score Monday night , leading the
Oilers to a 27-24 victory over Buffalo and ending
the Bills' e ight-game win strea k.
Teddy Garcia added two field goals for the
Oilers, 6-5, who moved Into a thl'l!t'-way tle for ftrst
place in th&lt;: AFC Central with Ci nci nnati and
PIttsburgh.
J im Kelly threw two scoring passes, Thurman
. Thomas scored once a nd Scott ·NorwOOd added a
field goal .for the Bills. 9-2.
The victory by Houston completed a weekend In
which every divis ion leader was beate n. Buffalo Is
now ·ued with Mia m i lor first place in the AFC
Eas t.
Enteril)g Monday 's gamE&gt;, the Oilers lead the
league In nE&gt;arly E&gt;Very passing category, but ha d
not had a 100-yard rusher this season a nd only
twice had managed 100 yards rushing as a team.
Wh ite. though. exploded lor a career-high 125
yards on 18 carrjes and caught live passes for 89
ya rds . It was the fi rst 100-yard rus hing day for
Houston since White gained 115 against Pi tts·
burgh last December.
" It an starts with the line," said White. "The
holes were there. I just iried to run hard, then it
was just me and the linebackers. Once I got into
the secondary , I was by myself."
White's performance was even more significant
in that he ran most of the his plays over Buffalo's
All -Pro defensive e nd Bruce Smith. ThE&gt; added
dimension of an effective running game made
Moon more potE&gt;nt. He completed 16 or 22 passes
for 300 yards and no interceptions. It was his
fourth s traight 300-yard passing game, which tiro
an AFC record.
" The way we were moving the ball tonight J
could be ·selective on passing," said Moon.
" Lorenzo knew he was going to be called tonight .
lbe way they filllls) were ltnl'd up, we knew we
had to run."
Oilers head coach Jack Pardee agrel'd .
" When they play with five guys up front and six
back, we'd bet-ter be able to run the ball, " Pardee
said. "They were moving Smith around a lot and
(tackle Don ) Maggs did a gOOd job on him."
Kelly 's two touchdown passes, both to tight
ends , gave Buffalo a 14-13 halftime lead. Houston
~lew two potential touchdown opportunities
because of penalties - one erasro a touchdown
i-un - and set tiM for two field goals.
Buffalo opened the second half with NorwOOd's
43-yard field goal for a 17-13 lead, but Houston

came back with 14 straight points.
' 'Their 'running game hurt us," said Buffalo
head coach Marv Levy. " I fear It a s much in this
offense as I do the passing game. Warren made a
co uple or big plays under dures s a nd under a
heavy rush. They had us confusl'd all nigh t."
Moon hit Drew Hill lor two 15-yard gains, then
fired a 43-yarder to Hill to the Buffalo two. White
scored on the nex t play to g1ve Houston a 20-17lead
late in the third quarter.
·
.
Houston regained possession and Moon's gutsy
two-yard sneak on fourth-and-one to the Bills 40
s parked another score. He hit White for a 28-yard
gain and on th'ird-and-goal , fired a tJu'ee-yard
scoring pass to Leonard Ha rris, giving Houston a
27-11 lead with 7: 21 left.
Kelly counterl'd with passes to Don Smith for 54
yards , setting up a two-yard scoring run by
Thomas .with 3: 29 left . The Oilers converted two
third-down plays and ran out the clock.
" We took a step forward tonight," said Kelly,
who completed 23 of 34 for 224 yards and one
interception. " We didn't·win, but we came here
a nd playl'd hard and we playro as a team, a nd
that:~ a plus ."
Houston scored on the game's opening possession. White 's 22-yard reception and three rush~ '
for 20 yards set up Moon's37-yard scoring strike to
HaywOOd Jeffries, who 11\!at defender John Hagy .
Buffalo came back with a 7S.yard, IS-play drive
·that consumed 9: 11. A pass interference penalty
on defender Richard Johnson moved the ball to
the Houston 29, and a face-mask penalty a fter a
matchup under the Astrodome, In which the
TURNS CORNER - Buffalo fWUiing back
five-yard reception by Andre Reed put the ball at
Oilers
took charge early and posted a 27·24
Thunnan
Thomas
(right)
tums
the
comer
and
the four. Smith was stopped by Bubba McDowell
.
victory.
(UPI)
outraces
Houston
defensive
buk
'Steve
Brown
In
on third -and -goal. Kelly called a play-action fak e
the
seco.nd
qiW'ter
of
Monday
nlcht's
AFC
and hit Pete Metzelaars lor the touchdown with
2: 3lleft in the first quarter.
White' s 22-yard run and a 20-yard catch by
Ernest Givins put Houston on the Bur(alo three.
White then ran for an apparent TO on
firs t-and-goal, but a holding penalty on center Jay
Re-entering season play over 10 boards. Burke also had 18 Vicki Slaton and Cheryl KortokPennlson wiped out ihf score and the Oilers had to
the
weekend, the University of points and Davis aqded 13. For rax. Slaton al so had eight boards
settle for Garcia's 25-yard field goal and 10-7lead
Rio Grarrde women's basketball Rio Grande, Barnitz solidilied
fo r the Gold en Eagles.
early In the second quarter.
team returned from the FOOd her position as the rebound
The Redwomen are to face
Buffalo recovered a Houston fumble, but Kelly
leader
·
World
Classic
at
Cumberland
with
11.
Tech
again tonight at 7 on the
gave the ball back when he overthrew Keith
College
in
Williamsburg,
Ky
..
Lady
Bears' court in MontgoMcKeller and Terry Kinnard intercepted, return·
with
a
2-3
record
following
mer
y,
W.Va.
Af;
ains
t
Ch
a
rleston
,
R
io
tng the ball26 yards to the Houston 33.
narrow
losses
to
West
Virginia
Grande
jumped
out
to
a
n
11-2
RIO
GRANDE (72) - Jenni
,~ White' s 16-yard run and 29-yard reception
Tech
and
the
Un
iversity
of
CoUch,
1-2-4; Gena Norris , 0-1-1;
advantage at the beginning and
helped move the ball to the Bills 11, but a false
Charleston.
led by three at the half, only to Michelle Crouse, 4-7-15; Debbie
start and two-yard loss on a reverse forced
The
Redwomen
fell
to
Tech
F redric k, 4-1-1-12; Kerri Kidsee
It turn a r ound on doubleHouston to again call on Garcia and be hit a
in
the
opening
round
Friday
77-72
performances
by
five
of
well, 6-3-15; Mindy Montgomery ,
ligure
36-yard field goal with 3:07 left before halftime.
In
the
and
lost
74-67
to
Charleston
the
height-blessl'd
Golden
E
agles
1-0-2;
Ajln Barnitz , 7-1-15; Kathy
Kelly rallied the Bills, completing six or eight
consolation
round
the
following
pla
ye
rs.
Stephanie
Gudorf
Jed
·
Snyder
, 3-2-8. TOTALS25-1·19·72.
passes for 67 yards, including a 12-yard TDpass to
night.
the
Rio
ladies'
scoring
with·
18
WEST
VIRGINIA TECH (77)
McKeller 40 seconds before halftime to give
With
Mic
helle
Crouse,
Kerr!
Ida
Burke,
8-2-18: Crys tal
markers.
Buffalo a 14-13 lead .
·
Kidwell and Ann Barnltz each
·Ranked ninth Jladonally by the Byers, 0-3-3; Dee Marcum. 0-2-2;
hitting 15 points, ·and Debbie NAIA, Charleston controlled the Ton! Green, 2-1-5; Stephanif
Fredrick . adding 12, the Rio shooting with a 48.5 perce nt Sinnette, 1-0-2; Ama nda Forney
ladles built an eight-point lead at showing (33-68 ) and 72.7 perce nt 10-2-22; Nancy Vance. 1-0·2
the half over Tech and were up by
(8-11 ) performance at the lou! Ca th e r i ne Da v is . 5-3-13
15th
player
to
reach
20,000points.
evolving,"
said
Boston
bead
15
with 12 minutes remaining ltne: Rio Grande netted 25 or 64 Bridget te Haney, 3-4-10. TOTAU
HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) "We're playing gOOd aggres- when the Lady Bears went on a
field goal attempts (39.1 percentl
While the watch was on for Larry coach Chris Ford. "Bui I think
30-17-77.
sive
.basketball right now ," said scoring riot , ll'd by Amanda
playing
wen
there's
a
lot
or
guys
and went 10 of 22- with Ba rnit z
Bird to score his milestone
· Halftime score: Rro Grande 41
Bird. "We're pushing the ball up Forney's 22-potnt performance.
landing six or eight attempts 20,000th point, the Boston for- right now. I think its hard for any
West VIrginia Tech 36.
the court a lot more."
Overall, the Redwomen ' s
from the lr ee throw line for 45.5
wa rd quietly accomplis hE&gt;d team to concentrate on any one
Boston, which improvl'd to 11-2 shooting improvl'd to 45.6 per- percent.
team.;·
guy
on
our
another feat Monday night.
RIO GRANDE (67) - Marl
overall, Is off to its bes t start cent (26-57 ) toTech's36.lpercent
Bird, who recorded his 5,000th
In addition to Gudorf, who also Kis tler , 1·0-2: Jenni Couch, 1-3-1
· Bird recorded his first triplesince going 17-2 to begin the
(30-83). From the roulllne, which supplied six rebounds, Kidwell 11; Kerr! Kidwell, 7-1-15; Mind
double of the season , scoring 21 career assist earlier this season,
1985-86 season. The Celtlcs own Sa.w Crouse hit seven ot nine poured in 15 points. Barnitz Montgomery , 1-1-0-5; Ann aa·
jJoJnts, grabbing 14 rebounds and now needs only 12 points to reach
attempts, Rio Grande sank 19 of netted 12 points and nine boards, nitz. 3·6·12: Stephanie Gudot
dishing o,u t 11 assists to lead the 20,000 mark in career scor- · the league's second-best' record
behind Portland, which is 11-0.
32 tries for 59.3 percent. Tech and Jenni Couch scored 11 points. 3-3-3- 18: Amy Snyder. 1-0-!
Boston tl) its seve~th straight ing. He will become only the fifth
" Whatever Larry Bird does, connected on 17of 27 attempts for Mar lo· Kistler addl'd fi ve assists Kathy Sn y~ er. 1-0-2. TOTAL
win . ·a 118:101 · victory over thE' NBA player to reach both those
they
.seem to follow ," said Miami 63 percent.
milestones
.
Kareem
·Abdul·
Miami Heat at the Hartford Civic
to the game.
18-7-10-67.
center
Rony
Setkaly
.
"
Larry
Jabbar,
Oscar
Robertson
Jerry
The
fact
that
·strong
reboundCharleston was led by Regina
Ce nter .
CHARLESTON ( 74) - Sh a'~
ing by Tech won thel'f\ the game Osborne with 16 points a nd eight nia Cunningham . 2-0-4; Chr(
''Larry seems pretty comforta- West and John Havlicek are the makes the whole group better."
The Celtics dominatl'd inside was seen in the work of Ida rebounds , Tracy Williams with Nagy, 4-4-12; Vicki Slaton, 5-0-10
ble with the way the team' s others. He will also become the
most or the evening, holding a
Bwke, Catherine Davis and
13 points, Chris Nagy with 12 Becky Va nce, 3-3-9; Regina 0 !
51-41 edge on the boards . The
Bridgette Haney , who each had
poin ts and 10 ma r kers each from borne. 8-0-16: Trac y Williaml
control or the glass by Bird and
6-1-13; Cheryl Kor tokrax, 5-0-10
center Robert .Parish triggerl'd
TOTALS 33-S-74.
Boston's reborn rastbreak, wit!!
(Continued from Page 3)
Halftime score: Rio Grande 351
Though sophomore forward
pointe r. Teammate Lisa Swis her Charleston 32.
outlet passes to guards Brian
points , inciuding 15 in the second half, and grabbed 11 rebounds
Shaw and Reggie Lewis leading
Stephanie Otto was the only chipped In with 10.
Monday, leading the Rice Owls to a 77-68 victory over the Colorado
to easy baskets.
Eastern eager to score in double
On Thursday' s calendar , the
Buffaloes.
.
·
figures
in
Monday
night
's
SVAC
~a
g les will travel to Gage to face
The ·Owls, 1-1. took advantage or cold shooting by Colorado, 1·1,
" We reboundl'd pretty consist·
opener
against
visiting
Kyger
Southwestern,
while the Bobcats
ently and gave them only one
, whiCh shot just 37 percent from the field in hot and steamy Autry
Creek
,
she
lro
an
offense
that
put
will
play
Symmes
Valley at Aid .
shot, " said Parish. "Our back.. Court. Conditions in the field house were es tima ted at 85 degrees a nd
eight
of
her
teammates
in
the
Quarter
totals
court is very athletic and very ·
95 percent humidity.
scoring column and pushed the Kyger Creek . .. 6 14 10 14~44
quick. which really benefits ou r
· Billy Law had 13 points to lead Color;~ do, while Shawn Vandiver was
Eagles to a 46-44 triumph.
Eastern .. .. ... ... 8 15 9 14-46
running game. "
one or three Buffaloes with 11 poin ts. He also had a game- high 16
The
Bobcats,
1-1
overall,
shot
Eastern (46) - Otto 7-0-0-14;
Kevin McHale and Kevin Gamrebounds.
,
·
better
than
the
Eagles
at
the
Gillilan
3.0-1-7; Metzger 2-0-3-7;
Colorado lro 29-22 wi)h 6:30 left in the firs t halfbeforetheOwls usl'd
ble each scored 20 points fo r
charity stripe, bu t "that's where Clay 2-0-0-4; Ga rdne r 2-0-0·4;
bulinan insurance pack a 14-3 run to take a 36-32 advantage at halftime. Sophomore Marvin
Boston. Shaw and Parish contribwe lost it, " said KC head coach Phillips 2.0.0-4; Roush 1-0-1-3;
age, that is. It's SERIES
Moore sparkro the rally, coming orr the bench to score 10 points.
uted 14 and Lewis added 13 to
Tom Weaver. "We also had a Burke 1-0-0-2; Baker 0-0-1-1.
ONE, a broad-cove~.
The Owls scorl'd the first e ight points or the second half to stretch
round out the Celtlcs' doublenumber
or
missed
layups,
about
Totals28-G-'-46
competitivalv·priced
plan
their lead to 44-32, and then paddl'd the lead to 52·34 with 13 minutes
figure performers .
five
of
them
In
the
first
half,"
he
Free
throws6-24
(25'
:
1
l
for
retail
stores..
offices.
Seikaly paced Miami with 21
left .
addro, pointing out where the
Kyger Creek (44) - Ra gland
churches, apartments and
Colorado hit just one of its first 10 shots in the second half, but did
points · and Kevin Edwa rds
Eagles
took
what
turnl'd
outto
be
5-1-3·16;
Swisher
5-0-0-10;
Braddrug stores. Call ua lor a pro·
sco red 14 .
score seven stra ight points to c ut Rice' s lead to 58-50 with eight
a
tenuous
advantage
and
held
it
bury
3.0-0-6;
Skidmore
3-0-0-6;
posal and quotation.
minutes left .
" Boston is a very, very gOOd
for
the
duration.
Shaver
1-0-2-4;
Gindlesberger
Maag, a junior college t.rans!er !rom Fort Collins , Colo., increasro
team right now ," said Miami
KC's Yon Ragland led all 0-0-2·2. Totals- 17-1-7-44
Coach Ron Rothstein. "We went
th e R ice lead to 11 with a basket, then hit another jumper with four
marksmen with 16 points and
Free throws- 7-19 (36.8'7. )
minutes left to move the lead bac k to 70-57.
· to the basket strong a nd I I iked a
canned the game's only threeRebounds- 31 !Ragland 8)
Brent Scott addlid 14 points and 10 rebounds for Rice while . lot of the things we did ."
The Heat , who never IE'd and
teammate Kenneth Rourke finished with 12 points.
traill'd from the game:s third
Au bun 83, Georrla Slate &amp;5 - At Auburn, Ala. , Ronnie Bat tie
basket, closed to 60-56 on Selscored 26 points and four other Auburn players scored in double
fac ing a five-game suspension
214 EAST MAIN
kaly 's free throw early in the
By MIKE TULLY
figures Monday night to lead the Tigers to an 83-65 victory over
and defenseinan Randy Moller .
Georgia State.
third quarter before Boston went
UPI Sports Writer
POMEROY
out with a shoulder dislocatlqn,
on.an 11.0 run in the ensuing 2: 44
NEW YORK ( UPI) -The New
Phillip Luckydo led Georgia State, 1-1, with 25 points and forward
992·6687
the Rangers will need depth to
Chris Collier added 14.
,
to break the contest open.
York Rangers outscored Buffalo
remain in contention for the
Lewis ignited the run- by by five goals and still lost.
Joining Battle in doUble dlg1ts for the Tigers, 2·0, were Wesley
league's
best defensive record.
natung an 18-footer from the
Jan Erlxon, the Rangers' best
Person with 17, John Caylor with 11 and Reggie Gallon and Robert
"
He's
probably
the best checkMc Kie each with 10 points.
right side and closed the spree defensive forward and a player
winger
In
the league,"
Ing
with a breakaway dunk.
who liad sh!)wn lncreasro offenGeorgia State trailed 36-31 at intermission. However, the T igers
Ranger
forward
ilr
ian Mu Den
opened the second half with a 16-4 run for a 52·35lead at the 14:40mark
Boston continul'd to build its sive creativity this season. sufsaid
of
Ertxon.
advanatage, 'pulling to a 87-66 fered a knee injury In the first
to ice the win. Caylor had six points in the surge.
·
Utah 88, Seattle Pulflc 41- At Salt Lake City, Utah, guard Byron
edge on Shaw's basket with 3: 18 period ofNew York 's 5-0 victory
over the Sabres Monday night.
left in the third quarter.
Wilson seem! 15 pollltS Monday nlallt, anc1 t)tah held Seattle Pacific
wltl!ln
Erixon sustained a Grade B
The
Heat
never
got
to just 26 Pl'~tlt fr• !Ill&gt; flel4-ia~P ]Jj ' a the Falcons 68-41 -ia a
do;uble digits after Boston's sprain of the medial collateral
non-conleretlet' pww.
·
•
Craig Rydaleh added 13 points lor Utah, 2-0, and Josh Grant 11. The
·game-breaking run .. Boston had ligament In his right knee and is
Utes limited Seattle Pacific to justfour field goals in the second halfin
opened an 18-polnt lead midway to be sidelined for fourwee)ts, the
pulling away from a 39-26 halftime lead.
through the second quarter be- team said.
fore Miami closed to within 58-53
With defenseman Mark Hardy
at Intermission.
·
Dave Davies !lad ff1111 plllills.
· •
.
w
The Celtics relied on a· quick,
Uta h outscored Seattle Pacific 13-4in thecloslngmtnutes of the flnt
up-tempo pace from the outset,
Oflke Hour5
half to lead by 13, and the Utes were never threatened in the second
_opening a led 33-22 after one
•
quarter. Boston continul'd to
half.
•
Monday through·Friday ·
UTEP lie, Mldwelltera 5I - At El Paso, Texas, Von Bennett and
benefit from easy transition
Bob
Evans
Farms
IS
the
Johnny Melvin each came orr the be~h to score 13 points Monday
baskets and usl'd a 12·3 quarter9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
night , leading Texas·El Paso to an 80-l!O win over Midwestern State.
opening run In the second en sponsor of tonight's meeting o!
Suite
Bennett and Melvin helped the Miners open Coach Don H$sktns' . route lo their 18-potnt bulge the t.Jnlverslty or Rio Grande
Redmen
and
,
the
Shawnee
State
30th-year with with 'his 28th season-opening victory.
before the Hear came c harging
Bears at Lyne Center, beginning
PVH Medical Offtce Building
back.
: James Burkhalter led the Indians with 12 points. Midwes tern State,
at
7:
30.
Trailing 51-36, Miami closed
~n NAIA scbooL •
2·6.
(304) 67!;.7700
Admission to the game is free
the first halt with a 17-5 spurt.
UTEPbulltaa.JI
-Jeed-..IUII .. J znernStatecouldnot
Ethranls scored six and Oll!ft to anyone wbo obtains tickets
make a JeCIM' 7 - I I ttMa J. ' h Pl.
V!Ducoa . . ....,..- At f
, Pa.;art. WidltiPr4r11?ed
RIM Hded four to key the Hat's . . _ tile lleb ~VMM l'ft••-ta
in GalUpolls and Rio Grandt!.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Sprft.
six or eflht lluet 1 I t lllota MeiiJIIy night, ICOrlng 22 points and
Tickets
will
also
be
available
at
!~ding Villanova to a 92-71 victory over Drexel.
It was Boston' s first or three
• Drexel, which had trailed by as much asl8, cuttheleadto77-fi6ona
games at Its home-away -from- the door priOr to the game.
The Redmen (3-0) will be
Michael Thompson jump shot ""th 3: 59 to play. But VIllanova
home. The Ce!Ucs play three
playing
their first contest since
Valley Drive, Point Pleasonl,
Va. 25550
j'ellponded with a 13-0 nul to put the·game out of reach. Greg Woodard,
games at the Civic Center each
season.
.
who finiShed with 14 polnl.l, had five In the nin.
.
Nov, 17, while th~ Bears (3-3) l.:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--------iiiii.;.;;;;;;;;;.~
. bave not competed since Nov. 20. ~

Rio ladies lose two in toomey play

Boston cools Miami 118-101

College basketball...

Eastern edges KCHS 4644

Sabres stab N.Y. Rangers 5-0

~7

Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.
Internal Medicine

po?:t~~:~ ,;a;.s::~~~;~it·;'~ ~:~:,~t.~

Bob Evans Fanns
sponsonng game

13,

I!P:.:.O

.,d
•tn

Thebrailycl~

w,

.

'

I

•

The following 125 individuals
have been named to the Meigs
County Coun Peuit Jury Venire for
the January, c1991'term:
E.
·me Pa ) · TCharles
G
Stevens• D··
""M ;Ire u Ours
. "!e~,
Pomeroy; ur1 ne
, ,,.,,g
Bouom; Marilyn J . Deemer
Syracuse; Mildred F. Shuster:
d "'elch R I
Pomeroy.• Jeffrey .......
'"" "'
• u•
land; Sara K. Amott, Middleport;
Martha Ann Slater, Middleport;
Mary Frances Lambert, Rutland;
B
renda Kay Anderson, Racine;
Myron R. MiUer, Pomeroy; Paul
F. Dill, Pomeroy; Angela K.' Young,
Reedsville; Mart E. Smilh,
Reedsville; Richard Frederick Fick,
Jr., Long Bottom; Roxann Varney,
Long Bottom; Lisa K. Hooten,
Pomeroy; Charles E. Chancey,
Syracuse; Pauline Faye Watson,
Reedsville; Phyllis Mae Joachim
MiJddlepon;Lee F
Ra
'
101my
reeman,
cine;
Elizabeth J
Hood Po
Ida
can
• meroy;
FS. Counts,ViShade; Ora P. Bass,
yracuse; ugm1a R. Underwood,
Middleport; Ora Walkins, Mid·
dleport;
Renee Ra
Hill,
·c·a Dolly
An Shain
. Racine;
K
Patrt
.
•
n
• erne; en~eth E. Crabtree, Albany; Melinda
ean Spencer, Pomeroy;
Hal P. Boston, ·Pomeroy; Burl
Leon Putman, Jr., CoolviUe; Susan
Knight, Pomeroy; Stephen Munay
Weber, Racine; Rosemary Lyons,
Middleport; Sara E. Roush,
Syracuse; Marilyn L. Hyatt, AIbany; Philip Ray Laudennilt,
Racine; Tammy Lou Putnam,
.Reedsville; Linda D. Darnell,
Pomeroy;
Louise E. Gloeckner, Po!!leroy;
Patricia Ann McKnight, Po!!leroy;

Annie Franko, Syracuse; Dorothy
Jean Clatwonhy, l'diddleport; Haze1
EJecta Grate, Pomeroy; Michael
An_thony
ShUler, ''· _LangsVI'Ue·,
Richard E. McQonald; Pomeroy;
Hazel J. SeUers; · Portland, James
Wh ·
Pomero
urus
rte,
y; Martha
Clonch, Pomeroy;
Alice Fisher Wamsley, P!&gt;meroy;
Thomas P. Avis, Coolville; Carl
Landon Reeds ill u • .a..
•
v e; ,...,. .. Tunothy
Rathburn, Middleport; Artie L.
Reuter, Pomeroy; Janet Jo Ward,
Pomeroy; Laura J. Anderson,
Langsville; Arthur R. Duckworlh,
Middleport; Sharon A. Durham,
Pomeroy; Dorothy I . Davis, Mid·
dleport;
Robert L. Reeves, Chester;· Jo E.
Gilmore, Rutland; Rickie L.
Koenig , Tuppers Plains; Luanne
Clarissa Gillilan, Chester; Nonna
S. Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains; Martha
E. Anderson, Racine·, · Melissa
Dawn Nuuer, ReedsviUe; Jane V.
Teaford, Syracuse; Clara Kathleen
Pullins, Pomeroy; Walter R. Couch,
Pomeroy;
David Gene Lambe"
. Pomero
. y·,
,.,
Wtlliam Franklin Sorden, Long
Bottom; Charltlene , L. Hanning,
Middleport; William A. Elam,
Pomeroy; James T. Caldwell,
Racine; Robert V. Haggerty, Middlewrt; Tammy Jane Kauff, Mid·
dlewrt; Lila Lee Ridenour, Long
Bottom; Douglas Gregory Jenkins,
Pomeroy; Robert Todd Reed, AIbany;
Evelyn B. Wood, Long Bottom;
Brenda Mae Staats, Long Bottom;
Billy Ray O'Brien, Shade; Donna
S. Frank, Pomeroy; Hayman

The Daily Sentinel- Page 6

Middleport, Ohio

125 named for possible jury duty

.Oilers hand Bills 27-24 loss
•

Pomeroy

Christmas events are
lighting ~p Ohio

Alexander Damitz, Pomeroy; John
Woodrow Bailey, Pomeroy; Bar·
bara Ann Hendricks, Long Bonom;
0aVI·d.n
. ~ - "'
rerreu, pomeroy; John A .
Rankin; Tuppers Plains; Judith L.
Holiday light displays:
Lee s
By SANDRA L LATIMER
• yracuse;
Through
Dec. 30: Holiday
Unlled
Press
International
Helen Ann Williams, MidAkron ZooLights
Celebration,
Christmas
Past
becomes
the
'
dleport; John W.
Blaeunar.
logical
Pa
rk.
present
in
Ohio
t
his
week
as
Pomeroy; Clarence C . Napper,
Through Dec. 31: Cli fton Mill
Racine·, Joyce Elaine F"'e, Rut- many places show olf Chris !mas
.,
at
Clifton in Greene County;
it
was
back
then.
as
land; Mark E. Davis, Middleport;
's Chr istma s Farm, Blue
Rudd
His
toric
Roscoe
VIllage
in
Marcia B. Karr, Syracuse; Harold
Hanson, Rutland; Carolyn Sue Cui· coshocton has Chr istmas Can· Creek, Ad ams County; Wildlife
!urns, Oieshire; Jeffrey L. Diicher, dlelightlngs . Sat urday, also De.c . Christmas Lights, Columbus
Zoo. ·
Racine; Anna Grace Shuler, Sand 15. ·
Through J a n. 1: Noah's Ark
.Jiale Farm and .Village near
Racine;
Animal
Far m, J ackson.
Bath,
Summit
County,
has
a
Georgia Ruth Erwin, Pomeroy;
Through
J an . 5: Fes tiva l of
Owen Alvin Miller, Long Bonom; variety or activities and displays
Lights,
Cincinna
ti Zoo.
through
December.
Charlotte Ann WiUford, Mid·
Other
Christmas
-related
Christmas Open Houses
dlewrt; Audia Lavema Well, ·
Saturday and Sunday: Country activities:
Shade; Dorothy Alma Winebrenner,
- · 'Sta r or Bethlehem '' PlanetSyracuse; . Dorothy
Lucille liearth Christmas at the Century
Ridenour, . Thnners Plains, W'tlbur Village in Burton; Greene arium Show Saturday and SunD v
Mi~cddl
Ida Mae County Museum In Xenia ; day, also Dec. 15, 16, 29 and 30,
· .oung,
eport;
.
Clark, Pomeroy; Anna Brown, MarUn-Perry Homestead , Po- and. "Season of Light" Dec.8, 9,
Syracuse; Beckey L. Klein, · well: Zoar Village State Memor- 22, a nd 23 at · the Hoover Price
Planetarium a t the McKinley
ial in Zoar, Tuscarawas County;
Pomeroy;
MyrviUe G. Brown, Rutland; Simon Perkins Mansiot.nd John Museum in Canton .
· Saturday and Sunday: Child·
Chri Stopher c. La•Y~'
h Pomeroy;. Brown }louse In Akron.
ren's . Celebrations in Dayton; ·
Through
Dec.
9:
Glendower
Dell)ris . Shephard, Pomeroy; Gail
Chrislrnas
Tree Days a t Dawes
In
Lebanon;
State
Memorial
Byrd, Albany; Margaret Lucille
Arboretum
near Newa rk; ChristHomespun
Holidays
at
the
Wild·
SchmoU, Middleport; Pamela A.
mas
Walk,
tour of historical
wOOd
Manor
House
in
Toledo.
Douthitt, ReedsviUe; Christina
·
buildings
and
homes in Mt.
Through Dec. 16: J .R. Reeves
Renee Kaylor, ReedsviUe; Larry
Pleasant,
Jelferson
County; Ho·
Edward
Laudennilt,
Dexter; Home and Museum in Dover.
lidays
Festival
In
Dalton;
ChristThrough Dec. 22: Wolcott
Remalee A. Franckowiak, Mid·
mas
S!low
at
Kingwood
Center
in
dlepoat; Jackie Lee Westfall, House Museum Complex ,
Mansfleld; Harbour Town 1837
Maumee.
Reedsville;
Sunday: Preble County His tor- Christmas Walk in Vermilion.
. Howard
RusseU, Middleport;
Sunday: Yule Log Festival,
Flo,ence Marie Grueser, Shade; ical Center, Eaton.
·
Cox
Arboretum, · Dayton; HoD16:
Sundays
through
Dec.
Lori L. Huddleston, 'Racine; Greg
day
~o~pes
Tours at turn of t~e
Hoover
Historical'
Center,
North
Alan Huff!!lan, Racine; Karen Lee
cehtury
homes
In TrotwOOd; and
Canton;
Kelton
House
Museum
Lodwick, Pomeroy.
in selectl'd homes In Fairifield ·
in Columbus. ·
·
.
Sundays through Dec. 23: Rose County.
-O)d Home Christmas at the
Hill Museum, Bay Village.
Wood County Historical Museum
FesUva! of Trees
Through Sunday: Holiday Tree iri Bowling Green Thursday
lestlvals at Quaker Sqtu,~re ~ilton through Sunday .
Meigs County Court Judge safety violation, $50 and costs; suspended; no operator's license, In Akron; at the Allen County · - VIctoria! Perambulator MuPatrick H. O'Brien lined 31 defen- Raymond R. Goff, Langsville, $75 and costs, $50 susjlended up1111 Miaseum ln Lima; at museums in seum in Jefferson, open house
dants last week.
failure to yield, $10 and costs; obtaining Ohio license, three days Kenton; in Chagrin Falls.
every Saturday through Dec. 29,
Fined w!lfe: Pamela A. Douthitt, James S. Mens, Brookville, Pa., no in jail COl!Current with DWI charge;
showing off its early wicker doll
HoBday at tractions:
Reedsville, speeding, $21 and log book, $50 and costs; Ralph Dean Whittington, Middlepon,
-Children's Wonderland at and baby carriages.
costs; Jeffrey R. Coleman, Nitro, BuiCher, ' Middlepon, failure to. criminal trespassing, $100 and the Lucas County Recreation
-Victorian HoBday Tours at.
W.Va., no medical certificate, $50 yield, SlO and cos15; William H. co~ts. 30 days in jail, suspended, Center in Maumee through Dec. the Hower House in Akron.
and costs; Andrew Cogis, Hender· Knisely, Coolville, speeding, $26 two years probation, restraining or- 30 .
Wednesdays, Fridays and Sunson, W.Va.. speeding, $20 and and costs; Stephen Deaver, der issued; Gary Cox, . Kenova,
-Winterfest at King 's Island, days through Dec. 30. ·
costs; Nonnan E: Kekie, Panna, Coolvile, speeding, $22 and costs; W.Va. medical examiner's certifi· through Dec. 31, except Christ·
-River Museum Christmas
speeding, $2~ and costs; Traci Steven D. Dilley, Colwnbus, no log cate, $100 arid costs; Donnie A. mas Eve and Christmas Day.
Open House at the 10-room 1870
Bran1mer, Bidwell, speeding, $19 book, $50 and costs; Katherine D. Freeman, Syracuse, OWl, $300 and
-Chris tmas at the Cas tle, Victorian mansion in Wellsville
and costs; Rodney G. Bryan, Hun· Stone, Long Bottom, speed, $25 costs, 30 days· in jail, suspended 10 guided holiday tours through an Fridays through Sundays
tington, W.Va., no medical ex- and . costs; Mini fee Blevins, three, operator's license suspended 1864 Norman F rench castle. at through Dec. 9.
aminer's cel'!ificate, $50 and c~ts; Pomeroy, resisting arrest, $150 and for 60 days, no o.l., $100 and costs, Castle Piatt Mac -A-Cheek,
-Christmas In the Village in
Bruce Long, Bethesda, Ohio, safety costs, 10 days in jail suspended, three days concurrent with DWI through Jan . 1, e xcept Christmas Waynesville, with hone-drawn
violation, $50 and costs; Charles one year probation; Donald Pien:e, charge, failure to control, costs on- Eve and Chris !mas Day .
carria ge rides and walking tours, ·
Green,
Pomeroy,
aggravated Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $25, ly; Bonnie S. Davis, Pomeroy,
Saturdays and Sundays through
-'-Ohio Village-Ohio Historical
menacing, $100 and costs, five costs and restitution; Mary K. speed, $25 and costs.
Center
Hoilday Celebration a t Dec. 16.
years probation, restraining order Smith, Racine, passing bad checks, .
-Santa Claus Train rides on
Ohio Village In Columbus Wedissued; Don R. B&lt;UT, Evans, W.Va., . $25, costs and restitution; Anthony
the
Hocking Valley Railway in
ne sdays through 1 Sunday s
Western square dance
Reeves, Pomeroy, DWI, $300 and
Nelsortville,
Saturday , Sunday,
The Benes and Beaus Western through Dec. 30, except Dec. Dec. 8, 9, 15, a nd 16. Rese rva tion
costs, three days in jail, operator's
.
license suspended for 60 days;
· Square Dante Club.will sponsor an 24-26.
-A
"Years
Gone
By" Christ- required. 513·335-0382.
.· : Jerome Howard, Pomeroy, ex- open dance on DeC. 8 from 8-11 •
Holiday dining:
mas at Lawilfield in Mentor; the
Moderate damage was incurred pired operator's license, $75 and p.m. at the Senior' Citizens Center home of President Garfield,
-Ohio Village In Columbus.
to two vehicles in an accident at the costs, ·three days in jail, suspended in Pomeroy. The caller wiD be .
Reservations required: 614-297through Jan. 6.
intersection of Roures 33 and 7 upon proof of valid operator's Sonny Bess of Huntington, W.Va.
2310.
Madrigal d!Mers at the
-Ashland County Museum
license within 60 days; Ben R.
early Monday evening.
Colonel
Crawford Inn, Friday
Holiday Open House, WednesChristmas bazaar
Pomeroy Police reported that Coppick, Pomeroy, OWl; $300 and
and
Saturday;
The Doors of
The Syracuse Asbury United days, Fridays and Sundays, Christmas, Saturday; A VictoJames L. King, Herron, driving an costs, operator's license suspended
1988 Chevrolet van, uaveling west for 60 days, three days rn jail, ·Methodist Church will have a througli Dec. 22.
rian Christmas Feast, Saturday,
-Christmas at Western Re·
on Route 33, pulled left of center to firearin in motor vehicle, $100 and Christmas bazaar on Dec. 5 from 9
Dec. 8, 15, 22 and 29; Chris tma s
make a turn into a business place costs; James Woodyard, Racine, a.m. to 5 p.m. There will be · serve, Western Reserve Histori- Dinner at the Farmhouse, Dec.
cal Society Museum in Clevewhen he suuck the rear of a pickup overload, $95 and costs; Pearl E. homemade pies, cakes, cookies and
6; St. Nicholas Breakfast, Dec. 8,
land, through Dec. 30.
uuck driven by .{fson M. Yeaugef, liuiChinson, Wellston, overload, • breads, crafts, gifts and comforters.
15; Christmas Champagne
Christmas bazaars and craft
Route 7, Cheshire, who was uavel- $170 .and costs; Rick D. Miller,
Breaskfa'st, Dec. 22; Family
shows:
Smorgasbord
Letart, W.Va., passing bad checks,
ing east on Route 33.
Christemas
Breaklast,- Dec. 29;
Thursday through Sunday:
There will be a smorgasbord
Damage was to the right rear $25 and ci&gt;sts, restitution; Karen S.
New
Year's
Eve Celebration,
· side. of the Yeauger tnJck and the Hall, Pomeroy, DWI, $300, costs, dinner at the Lottridge Community Winter Fair. Ohio State Fair- Dec. 31 ..
fight middle side of the King suspended license for 60 days, ·Center on Sunday from noon to 2 grounds, Columbus.
-Christmas Dinner at Spiegel
Friday through Sunday
vehicle. King was cited for left of upon enrollment alid completion of p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $7.50
Grove,
Hayes Presidential CenRlP school, $150 of cost wiD be for children under 12. The center is through Dec. 9: Christma s at the
~enter.
·
te
r
in
Fremont,
Dec. 6-8. 419-332·
located.on Athens County Road 53, Cabin near Bainbridge;' Christ- 2081.
•
mas Arts and Crafts Show,
five miles west of Coolville.
Also on the agenda
Akron.
Saturday and Sunday: Antique
Dance.
Friday and Saturd ay: HollyiShow, Flea . Market an{! Gun
There wiU be a round and square ·es t at the Franklin County Show, Allen Counly Fairgrounds
: A Reedsville man wa s cited lor Gallla-Meigs post of the State
dance
on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. Fairgrounds In Hilliard; Old·
driving left of ce nter lollowlng an Highway Patrol, Bay had been
in Lima; Stardard F1ower Show,
at
the
Tuppers Plains VFW Build· Fashioned Christma s in Adams- InniswOOd Metro Gardens, Wesaccident on State Rou te 248 in drinking , but it was unknown a t
the time of the crash whether his ing feantring the Rocky Mountain ville at the Bob Evans Fa rm near
Meigs County Salurday .
terville; Wine and Arts Festival.
Blue Grass. Arthur Conant will be Rio Grande; Winter Arts and
driving
ability was impaired. ·
Bernard D. Bay, 43, was
SeaGate Center , Toledo.
Bay and Howard were unin- the caller. Cost is $2.50 for adults Crafts Show at the Brukner
westbound when he apparently
Sunday: Antique Shows at
jured.
Bay 's passenger, Gerald and $1 for children under 12. The Nature Center near Troy .
.drilled iett -of center a lid struck
Medina County Fairgrounds a nd
· Friday through Sunday :
an oncoming car , driven by R. Barringer, 54, of Reedsville, pujJlic is invited.
Veterans Memorial in Columbus.
Christmas On-Campus Craft
and
Howard's
passenger,
Mary
.Debra J. Howard, 34, of PomeBicycle Toun
Sale, Baldwin- Wallace College,
roy. The collision did moderate F. Price, 64, of Long Bottom,
Jan . 1: A Bi-Cycling Dandy
·
Four calls for assistanCe were Berea.
damage to Howard 's vehicle. were also unhurt.
Excuse fo r Getting Hibernated in
answered
by units of Meigs County
Saturday: Akron Art Museum;
According to a report !r om the
Emergency Medical Services on Hardin County Courthouse, KenMonday and early on Thesday.
ton; the school In Stoutsville,
At 10:08 a.m. on Monday, Fairfield County; Gambler Craft ·
Pomeroy squad went to Americare Sale at Kenyon College.
Extended forecast: A c hance
for
Bertha
Baker.
Baker
was
rain or snow showers Thursof
grandchildren and -15 great·
uansponed to Veterans Memorial
day,
with fair weather Friday
grandchildren.
and.Salurday, except for a slight
Hospital.
Funeral service will be held at 2
At 1:14 p.m., Pomeroy squad
Marriage licenses have been chance of showers late Friday
Clean B. Cadle, 95, of Leon, p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 2S at the
was
called
to
Americare
for
Audrey
granted in Meigs County Probate and early Saturday, Highs will be
:died at his home Monday, Nov. 26, Bethel Church on Leon-Baden
Glover,
who
was
IntnspOrted
to
Coun to Christopher Raymond in the 40s Thursday, ranging
1990. He retired after 34 years of Road, Leon. Burial will follow in
, service wiUl the United States Post- the Bethel Cemetery. Visiting hours Veterans Memorial Hospital. At Diddle, 20, and Gina Lt!e Me· from 45 to 55 Friday, and the 40s
ill Service, 25 years were spent will be held a1 the Crow-Hussell 3:39p.m., Pomeroy fire ,deparunent CieUan, 24; both of Racine; and to again Saturday. Overnight lows
delivering mail by horseback. He Funeral Home, Point Pleasant on arid squad went to a brush tire on Ketiard Lee Prunty, 33, and will range from 25 to 35 Thursday
Ponieroy Pike. The fire involved Rosemary Jean~. 30,·both of and Friday mornings, and bewas a farmer, clockmaker and a
Tuesday,
nov.
27
from
4
p.m.
until
two acres at the John Weeks Syracuse.
tween 35 and 40 early Saturday.
carpenter, a U.S. Anny veteran of
9
p.m.
In
lieu
of
flowers
donations
property.
Ac ross lhe region: Mostly
World W86 I, possibly Mason
may
be
fl,lade
t!&gt;
the
Mt.
Flower
On
Tuesday
a1
12:25
am.,
Midcloudy
and windy Tuesday night,
.County's last WWI veteran, and a
Emergency
Medical
Squad.
depon
squad
went
to
Overbrook
with
a
chance
or showers, and a
member of the Belllel Church.
Center for Lola Barber. Barber was
low
near
60.
Chance
of rain is 30
'· Bam February 18, 1895 in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
transported
to
Veterans
Memorial
percent.
.
Showers
and
thunder·Pigeon, he was the son of the late
MONDAY ADMISSIONS • Er·
Hospital.
storms
likely
Wednesday,
wilh
·John Zearley and Mary (Adams)
nestine WiUiams, Rutland; Benha
Cadle. He was also preceded in
Baker, Pomeroy; Audrey Glover, highs between 65 and 70but with
Iva Orr, 85, of Route 2, Racine,
temperatures falling Into the 50s
death by three brothers, Clare B. died Tuesday at the Pleasant View
Pomeroy. .
·
during
the afternoon. Chance or
Cadle, Beat B. Cadle and Orval'L. Nursing Home, Lisbon.
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
•
rain
is
60
percent.
Cadle.
Born on March 16, I905 at
The Sunday Tlmes;Sentlnel None.
·~ He is survived by his wife, BeRacine, she was the daughter of the
hilS iniUtary
planned persoanel
a Sunday feature
w
fR,~l'T)r&lt;·E-ES
Ssie C. (Hodges) Cadle, who he late Walter Norris and Fannie . aU
servlag on
in ....
II
married June 6, 1923, two sons and . Varian Norris. She was precec!ed in tbe Perslau Gulf IDII Operation
daughters-in-law, Vernon and Amy death by her husband, Calvin Orr,
Desert bas
Sbleld.
Tbea ?1st
American
Cadle of Leon and DaUas and Betty
two brothers and a sister. Several Legloa
provided
of per·
Cadle of Mason; three daughters nieces and nephews survive.
inti sons-in-law, Eloise and Rodney
Mrs. Orr was a member of the
of
FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE OR CUT YOUR OWN
.
Bums and Ruth and Edward Short, Methodist Chun:.h.
1t you bave a 100, claupter, ·
&amp;
all of Cross Lanes; · Alice and
Funeral services will be held at
Dewitte Beaver of St. Louis, Mis·
10:30 a.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Cherry lldgt:
Souri; one sister, Mrs. Dawson Funeral Home. The Rev. Roger contact Tbe Dally Sentlael, 991·
Turn lent at Darwin onto It, 611, 10 4 ...... to Mllepott ~~
!,Bomie) Hanley of Leon; two Grace will officiate and burial wiU 2155, 01 Wednesday before 5
13; turn South on Granl 101111, 1 'It ..... to powo.
Pirothcrs, Ray K. Cadle of be ill the Letan Falls Cemetery. p.m. to see If all of the nec-ry
WlfCII fOI SfGIIS,
Shrevep&lt;Xt. Louisiana and Parke A. Friends may· call at the funeral Information bu beeD received.
1
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK
Cadle of Cross Lanes; 13 home WedneSIIay from 6 to 8 p.m.

c ·

w.

_O 'Brien fines 3·1 defendants

Announcements

Pomeroy accident

!leedsville man cited in wreck

··
E.MS runs

Weather

·-' --Area deaths-Cleon B. Cadle .

Licenses granted

·Hospital news

Iva Ort

Ja nuary. Medina . (21G-239-2745 );
Mentor Freeze D.'Ride. Me ntor.
(216-257-2486); The Bean Ride,
Perrysbu rg . ( 419-~1,4510 1 .
Speela! Exhibits
· -Wassenberg Art Center , Va n
Wert: "Ohio Realist Group Exhi·
bltlon through Dec . 21.
. - Dennison Railroad Depot
Museum, Dennison: " I' ll Be
Home for Chrlslrnas" through
Jan. 31.
- Taft Museum, Ci ncinnati:
" All Seasons, Every Light ,"
through Friday .
-College of Woos ter: Ar t work
by Kay Willens or Kenyon College and Paul O'Keeffe of Kent
State Univer sity, through Dec. 9.
-CIE&gt;Veland Museum or Art:
"Yoruba : Nine Centuries of
African Art and Thought. "
through Dec. 9; ' 'Five Centuries
or Master Drawings from the
Museum Boyman s- V~ n Beuntn.
gen; Rotterdam' ' through Jan.
13.
- Ohio Historical Society, Co·
lumbu·s : " Ben Shahn in Ohio:
The Summer or 1939," through
Dec. 16.
-Allen Memorial Art Museum , Oberlin : " Emerging Artists, " through Dec. 23.
~The Dairy Barn In Athe ns:
" Miniatures" throu'gh Dec. 23.
-Toledo Museum of Art:
"American Photography, 1839·
1900: through Dec . 30; "19111
Century French Prints a nd
Drawings," through Jan. 13. ·
~Hoover Historical Center in
North Canton : "War Years at
Hoover : World Wa r II Re membered," a yearlong program. For
a schedule: 216-499- 0287.
-Cincinnati Art Museum:
Paintings ol Nibolas De Stael;
through Dec. 30;" DuBuffett
Prints from the Museum ol
Modern Art," thr ough Jan. 6.
, -His torical Center of Industry
and Labor, Youngstown: " The
Romance or Steel: Industry and
Art in the Mahonlng Valley ,''
through·Jan. 5.
-Wexne rCenterfor the Visual
Arts: . "New Works for New
Spaces: Into the '90s." through
Jan. 6.
-Contemporary Arts Ce nter ,
Cincinnati : " Please Touch ..
through Jan. 6.
'
-Cleveland Musem of Natural
His tory: "Gemfire ," through
Feb. 17.
-Western Reserve Historical
,Society In Cleveland: · : Mo~
Than Comfort: Quilts and Quilt·
ing from the Collection," through
Fe,bruary .
On the theatrical schedule
-''A Broadway Holiday
Revue " at the Comroia Dinner
Theatre In Springboro through
Dec. 31. Call 513-746-4554 for •
reservations .
- " The Wizard of Oz, " Cincinnati Playhouse in the · Park,
through Dec. 23. 513-421-3888. ·
-Murder my stery weekends
at Punderson Manor House at
Punderson State Park in Geauga
County: Dec. 7·9, Jan. 11·13, Feb.
8-10. March 1-3, March 22-24 and
, Feb. 13-15; 216-564-9144.
- " Silver Bells , " holiday
buffet and show at Towne and
Country Theatre, Norwalk, F riday through Sunday, also Dec. 7,
. 8, 9, 15, and 16. Glenn Miller
orchestra , Dec. 4 and 5. 419-6681641.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As or 10: 30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
·of Blunt, Ellis lo Loewi

Am Electric Power ... ....... ... 28\-4
Ashland Oil .............. .... ......28%
AT&amp;T .. .. ............ ....... .. .. ..... .32%
~b Evans ...... ........ ........ .. ... l3
Charming Shoppes ... ... ...... 10 %
City Holding Co . ............... .. 14 ~
Federal Mogul. ................... l3 ~
GOOdyear T&amp;R ... .. .. ... .. ...... .. 15 ~
Key Centurion ... .. .. , ..... ... .. ... 11
Lands' I;:nd ......... .. ........ .. .... l2 l{,
Limited Inc . .................... .. .14%
Multimedia Inc . .... ... .... .. .. .. .58lf,
Rax Restaurants ......... ... ..... . %
Robbins &amp; Myers ... ......... .. .. 17'4
Shoney's Inc ......... ... ........ ... 91)1,
Star Bank .............. .. .... ... .. ..14 '4
Wendy's Int 'l. ... ..... ........ .... .... 6
Worthington Ind .................. . 19

•'

Military note

----c-'MR-n!l·

;a;:~t:,•==a!u!;:'!t~
~U:..ban~,e":..:!e :::e~

=

1

~

I
I ·
I
I
i

___...,.I

BRADfORD'S.

II

CRAFTS

I
II

Located on

•

TRIM SHOP

~----------·-~~~~~------'"·-\

J

7:20. 1:20

DAtU

,.,..n

"" i Mil
1:10 I ) :20
1l11110111

un tERTIFICATU D MAIUILU

••

�•

'

The · Dail)[ Sentinel

.By The Bend
.

•.

. r=======================~==~==~=
: c-ual;r.Calendar items
POMEROY - The Salvation be presepted at the Mount Herman
: appar two
before an event Anny wiU have free clothing day U.B. Church on Sunday at 7:30
· : uc1 tile day
tlaat ~Went. Items on Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon. p.m. The church is located in the
• must lie received ill advaace to AU area residents in need of cloth- Texas Communityc{)f Pomeroy. The
iiiSUft publlcatioo in tlae caleB· ing are welcome. · ·
public is .invited.
· .
. dar.
'
RUTLAND - The Leading Creek
Movie to be shown .
Conservancy
District
will
hold
a
"Stuan
Little" will be the movie
•·
TUESDAY
special
meeting
at
its
office
on
shown
at
the
Meigs County Public
• POMEROY - The DAV Chapter
Thursday
at
6
p.m.
Library
on
Saturday
at 2 p.m. The
:No. 53 will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY
•
All
Meigs
County
public
is
invited
to
attend.
: at 124 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Girl Scout leaders will meet
··
RACINE • The Middi It· Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Trinity
Pomeroy Branch of the AA~iU Church in Pomeroy. Investiture for
. meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the new leaders and rededication for
: Racine United Methodist Church. experienced leaders will be held.
The guest speaker will be Nancy The annual Christmas party will
Yoacbam, Brenda Jones and also be held. Leaders are to bring a
Kathryn Rizer of Racine Junior S2 OrnaJ11Cnt for ex~hange. Leaders
Troop 1042. Hostesses will be· Vtr- are urged to attend. to participate in
ginia Cai$on and Helen Smith.
the ceremony.
.
POMEROY - The Ewings Chap; HARRJSONVII.lll • The Har· ter, SAR, will meet Thursday at
.rison ville Senior Citizens will hold 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs Museum.
,a potluck supper on Tuesday at Election of officers wiU be held and
· 5:30 p.m. All members urged to at- the program wiU be on ''Colonial
tencl. Bring table service.
Printing."
· Christmas cantata .
, POMEROY - The Meigs United
The CoolviUe Community Choir
;Methodist Cooperative Parish wiU
·be accepting applications for wiU perform its Christmas canlala,
:christmaS Food Baskets Tuesday "A Touch of Chrislmas," at the
United
Methodist
· :tluough Friday from 9 a.m. to noon Reedsville
;at lhe parish office. 311 Condor St, Church on Dec. 5 at 7 p.m;
\ .•Pomeroy. Call 992-7400 for more Refreshments will follow.
information.
Bazaar planned
LIAN MARISSA HOFFMAN
The
Racine
United Methodist
- POMEROY - The Ohio Ela Phi
:Chapta', Bela Sigma Phi Sorority Women wiU sponsor a bazaar in the
·wiU meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the church basement on Saturday Birth announced
:Meigs County Public Library. beginning at 9 a.m. Thete will also
Mr. and Mrs . David Hoffman
be a bake sale and lunch will be of Middleport are announcing
:Bring canned gonds and toys.
served.
the birth of their first child, a
; ' RUTLAND - The Rutland Gardaughter, Llan Marissa , born
Appreciation dinner
den Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30
Thanksgiving Day .at Holzer
The Mason County Fair annual Medical Center. She weighed se,p.m. at the home of Mrs. 1ames
Christmas and fair appreciation ven poilnds,12 ounces and was 20
·:N1cholson.
dinner wiU be held Monday at 6:30 Inches long.
: POMEROY • The Meigs Soil p.m. at .the Vocational Center in
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
:and Water Conservation Disnict . Point Plc'asant, W.Va.
and Mrs. Olston 0. Wright of Ma·
. 'Board meeting has been changed
son, W. Va. Paternal grandpaColumbia Trustees to meet
· 'qom Wednesday to Tuesday at 8
renis are Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. ·
h
Board of · Trustees . of Hoffman of Middleport. Great·
'p.m. at the Soil Conservation SerVice Office, 33101 Hiland Road, Columbia Thwnship will meet grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy. The public is invited to Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the fire slaWilliam F . Smith Sr. of Bradtion.
!ittend.
bury.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Friendly Gardeners will celebrate
)heir 30th anniversary on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rutland
t:hurch ol Ouist Judy Snowden
~iU demorlsttatc ·wreath making
and refreshments and door prizes
will be available. The public is inl&lt;ited.

.-

POMEROY - The Wildwood
.Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Kathryn
. MiUer.
Connie · HiH
wiU
&amp;monstrar.e wreath making.
;
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of Alcoholics Anonymous
8nd AI Anon wiU meet on Thursday
a1 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
Church. For more information. caU
' (800) 333-5051.

Soup supper
The Alfred United Methodist
Church will have a soup supper on
Saturday beginning at 5 p.m.
Soups, hot dogs, sloppy joes and
pie wiD be served. Donauons wiU
be accepted.
• Applic:alio.ns taken
The Salvation Anny will be
taking awlications for Christmas
food baskets and toys on Dec. 4
and 5 from I 0 a.m. to noon and 1-4
p.m. both days.
Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the
township building.
Christmas cantata
"The Touch of Christmas" candirected by Sue
wiU

Alfred UM
women meet

NEW OFFICERS "- Student senate officers at Southeastern
Business College are,' !root from left, Michael Flowers, Bill
Duncan; standing, Robin Wamsley, Joy Thompson, Susan Glenn
and Richard Reltmlre.

SBC selects officers

~

'

: PHOTOS NEEDED • Sceaes like Ibis were once common
:tbrouebotat Melp County. Eacb village had a livery stable, blacksmltla, 1111d businesses to meet tbe needs or tbe customers. Instead or
car dealers tlaere were buagy dealers. Tbey needed .bamess wheels
~nd other necessities to operate their vellicle: Photos or 'by-go~
lirestylea lllld ol basineues tbat one~ ftourisbed in the county are
Deeded by tile Melp County Pioneer and HistoriCIII Society. Also
.Deeded are plantograplla o1 scenic places around tbe county· creeks
:brldaes, .p lll'ks IDd reereatloaal areas, bHSIDesses, aad a~y otbe;
1Jidtu'es. tlallt llelp teD Melp Couaty's history, Photos may be
broulbl to t1ae muse11111 for copying oo Wedaesday from l-4 p.m.
IDd 1-!lp.m.

Friendly Circle finalize plans

The Alfred ·Church held its
Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 18.
Eloise Archer and Doris Dillinger
prepared the turkeys. Pastor Sharon
liaiisman asked the blessing. Outof-town guests were Dorothy and .• •FlRST BUCK .• Jennifer Mora, age 12, daughter or Denise and
Wilbur Warner, Tuppers Plains;
R1chard Mora, Pom!roy, kiUed ber first buck on Monday morning.
Alma and Hobart Swartz; WilTbe deer, an ll-po10t buck, was kiUed on properly owned by
liamstown, W.Va.; Norma and
Harold Brown.
'
.
Gerald Swanz, Reno.
Thanksgiving weekend guests of
Marguerite and Delben Steams
and Christmas meeting. New
were Donna and Howard Stoler
Gunsboot
Centerville, Va.
·'
The Long BottOm Forked Run officers will be installed. ·
Sarah CaldweU spent Thanksgiv- Sportsinan Club wiU have a gun
Club to celebrate anniversary
ing at the home of Janice and Steve shoot every Sunday at noon.
Weber, £agle Ridge.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
wiU celebrate its 30th anniversary
M~etlag ch1111ged
Nellie Parker had Thanksgiving
dinner at the home of Cora and . The Meigs Soil and Water Con- on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Samuel Michael, Stivers ville. Other servation Disnict Board meeting Rutland Church of Christ. .
Judy Snowden will demonstrate
guests were Nancy and Lawrence has been changed from Wednesdar.
Blosser, Linle Hocking. In the af- .to Thesday at 8 p.m. at the Soil wreath making. Refreshments and
ternoon Mrs. Parker visited Irene Conservauoo Semce Office, 33101 door prizes wiU be available. The
Parker, Syracuse. Other guests .Hiland Road, Pomeroy. The public public is invited .
were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kay is invited to attend.
Parker, Agoura, Calif; Bobby
SARto meet
Women's fellowship to meet
The Ewings Chapter, .Sons of the
Parker and friend, Mau, Crown
The Women's Fellowship of the American Revolution, will meet
Po~t. Ind.; Nancy Campbell,
Meigs
County Churches of Christ Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the Meigs
Racme; and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
wiU
meet
at the Pomeroy Church of Museum. Officers wiU be elected
Parlcer, Marietta.
and the
wiU be ''Colonial
Nina Robinson and Clara Follrod Christ on ThUI'Sday at 7:30p.m.
This is a combined Thanksgiving Printing. '
.
spent Thanksgiving wilh Sheni and
Larry Shears, Marietta. Other
guests were 'Norma and Gerald
Swartz, Reno; Alma and Hoban
Swartz, Williamstown, W.Va.
'lbanksaiving . dinner guests .of
Mr. and Mia. Joe Poole and Will
Andy att4 Ann Smedes, Thppen Plain&amp;.
Pam and Richard Yost. Aaron
and Sarah, had Thanks 'vin dinDAN SMITH • AUCTIONEER .
with Mr. and Mrs.
~obin·

Announcements

: PlanJ for Christmas projects .and brewery, the Labor Day parades
the Chrillmas dinner party at the and the new high school which is
'-1 of Rev. llld Mrs. Roland now city hall were recaued: Also
WI' ' "P ftnued at the disglssed wl!ll · the beginning of
No: tltt me li:C of ·Friendly . radio in Pomeroy by Glenn Chase
~~
when on Lincoln Hin. Comments by
voo,
members added to the review.
11•1 na of tile ill were given. A
Devotions, "The Grateful Heiut,"
dtlllk·,W lioln Midrey Werner included "A Prayer for Jllovember"
...., and a card lipled for by Ralph Waldo Emerson, scripiW'e
I!Jizat.r.b
Fiek, Sidney. A from Psalms and the dedication of
fl:~t: ~~Y~ Mary
the annual Thank Offering coins.
E. Chapman and Mwy V.
7r_.m.
Kau!z received the offering an the
l'luJiriDI ollaintlan, Maye Mc:!ra, special Thank Offering coins.
a JII08IIIII . ~g Unison prayer closed the meeting.
"-'f's
Selqu'O"'tennial,
Evelyn Gilmore and Dorothy
.,...._ ~ R ' t~ Oll .,tbe WQOdard served a dessert course to
. BlfiJ 19110 r r
a; • h c... 16 members. The Thanksgivin1 SOD.
Rulh . and Lloyd Brooks spent
..al. !Ill 0,. ...._ aad die · motif illcluded a turkey arrangc'Tharlksiiving
wilh his mother,
ldtaol a
I c
r lteld *-· meat ~ cookie Dowers given u
Mildrecf
Brooks,
Tuppers Plainl.
iiJe 111111 6t::aGily. .-e qnarry, favors B!ld calendar$ for 1~I .

O.U:iided

s-

ner

..

....

r,rogram

. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

pttd.
•fleceN• I to diseount for ads peid in adrnnce
"Free eds · Oivea•ny and Found tds under 1!i ""'"'d• will b"'
run 3 d-..111 no ct.•ge.
"Prlc'! ol ~d for til c..,ltal leu.,, 45 drn1hle prief! ol td cost

"1 potnl hne type only uMd
"Stntinel It not r•spontible tor errors after first dJV tChtdc
fOf errors firs I dav td runs In paptrl . Call bf'fOII! 2 ·00 rt m

dlft after publicetion to mllke coneetion
"Adt .th81 mutt be paid in tdvence 1rt
Ctrd Dl olh..,.kl

t.n Memoriem

cc)py DEADLINE -

.__

"

.., _;

·· -·..

----

~"

-~

"•·,

'

.

10
Monthly

.30

.42 .

· .eo

013.00
11 .30 ' di.Y

- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY

~EEJ3E'iyo~~P~:PE~

·• 2'.00 P.M .. MOIIIDAY

THUR,SOAY PAPER

-

-

Stop &amp; C0111pare
Free Estlm.ates

985-4473
667·61

949-2206

PHONE

.0! / dly

Cla.,si.fic&lt;l(mJ!C.H:nrcr th(•
follmdnf{ tt•lepfHmP excftanp:es ...
G•m• C~untv

Meit• County

Mason Co , WV

Are• Cod• 114

Aru Code 814

Aret Code 304

4 41 - Qaltipolis
317- Ch•hire

992 - Middleport
Pomttoy
91! · Chester
143 - POn .. nd

171 - Pt. Pl ....nt
458-Ltton
571 - Apple Crftve
773 - Mason
882 ~ Ntw Heven

311-Vkteon

241-Rio Grende

211-ou,.. Dis:
.43-At~bl•Oist

379 - Welnat

247-lllllr1 Ftlls
94t ·· Fhcimt
742 - · Aulland
617 Coolviltt,

89&amp;--Letart

937-luff-'o

COIIII~fl Grooming
for ·All lreads

STEWAn'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742-2421

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL ,. .'
SIDING CO.

EMILEE MERINAR

· llew " - ll!lft
"Fr" Eetlmates"·

Ow111r &amp; o;.rator

614-992-6120

PH. 949'-2S01
or IlL U9-2860

Pomaroy, Ohio
10·1 1 mo.

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE .
NOTICE OF
EXPLANATION
FLOOD PLAIN
DEVELOPMENT
The Mllgo County CommiNion••· Milo• County,
Ohio. inl.,.d to un-o 1
Community Oovllopment
Block Grant project to ropolr
Vltllge of Middleport Slnl·
tory Stwer Lagoon ayotom.
Thl1lmprovoment would on-

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
OHIO UNIVERSITY
EMPLOYEES CREDIT
UNION, INC.,

In Memory Of
STEVIE RAY
McGRATH
It's been two
year~ aince you
went awey;
But the love and
memories of you
are In our heans
to stay.
Loved end Miued
Fa mil

All Sizes

'

IN MEMORY OF
MARK A.
LAUDER MILT
Gone but not tob'llot·
ton.
For In Ol!r·.,._.. .
you'll ol-y• bo;
The ourty headed lit·
tis boy
Who touched our
hscrtl with prldo
and IOVI;
Anti now prey
thllt aomedey we'll
111 mMI up ebovo.
Stdly milled by
Motflao, brottlere.

.....,.., nleool,

•

•'

I

11-21,9·1••·

110 SUNIIA'f

Oet

. ' COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

YOUNG'S .

Ra1idential and
Commercial
RfWIIING AND
TIOUilE SHOOnNG
C.r~ lltctridaM
FrM Etlmates

PLAINTIFF
-VS.PAUL AIKMAN, ET Al

.BULLEJI'N BOARD.
BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

In purau..,ce of •n Order

w•

nspll- end
children •nd frilnda

8

1:00 P.M.

V. C. YOUNG II
. 99!·U15
P-roy, Ohio

992-5009

S!Gutter

~Helmet '

NEVER CLEAN YOUI·
GonERS AGAIN .,
GUARANTEED! .
FREE ESTIMATES
IO.t I ...

Cholio only

1\/14/tfn

BISSELL-·
BUILDERS

SHOOTS STAIT
SEPT 16, 1990

Bopt. 4,tfn

CHRISTMAS TIEES
FOI SALE

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGE'
"At ltasonoltlt Priets"

SER~ICE

radiators. We also
rapcir GOHanlu.

out

PA't HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Obio ·

1•13-lfc

BIRTHDAY,

Any Animals or Related Items.

CORISSA!

CONSIGNMENTS WILL BE TAKEN
IICHAID WOllMAN
PH.- 691·361.
.
ALUNY, OliO

PUBLIC

~lJCTION

THURSDAY, NOV. 29
6:30 P.M.
CHRISTMAS MERCHANDISE
New Fumiture, Toy1 end Tools.
Plu1 Lota More.

PLUS OUR REGUW CONSIGNMENT
·PH. 691·3614

'RICHAIO'WOigAN
AWNYr OliO

.

L-....;.~-;,;,;;;~.;.;;;;,;;,..._ ___,

or Ros. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY '-ALu

GUNS &amp; AMMO
981 Hysell St.
Middleport, Oh.

992-203.
11 00 Remington
Slug Gun•
870 Remington
Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Gun1
11 ·13-1 mo.

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED&amp; ·
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
614-949-2734
or

SHRUB &amp; TREE

TRIM. and .
REMOVAL
•uGHT HAULING

BILL SLACK
992-2269

COAL

UNLIMITED
4 TON MIN. liMIT

$50.00 ........
Lump or Stoker
286-2689
111-24 I

110.

US£D RAILROAD TIES

J&amp;l'
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•I nsu lation
992-2772 742-2251
639 Bryan Piece
Middleport, Ohio ·

GUN SHOOT

UPHOLSTERY

RACINE

614-992-2321

11·14-UJI.

FIRE DEPT.
lashan Building

'~ ~­

HOUSeiloLOTI•FARMI
•COMMERCIAL
'1VE NEED USTINGS I

IO-t0-'90·t

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
S.O us Far Your
Sporti1111 Nlllls
Buy. Sell or Trade ·
Gun•
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5
742-2421
36496 SMml 1111 ...

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTRUCTION.
992·6648 or .
698-6864 '

tO·t2·'80·t mo.

MICROWAVE .
OVEN REPAIJ '
Ali MAKES
Bring It .In Or

Wi

. Pick Up.

EVERY ·

KEN'S APPUANCE

6:30P.M.

992-5~3-;·~·~~~-3561

SAT. NIGHT
Factory Choke
12 Gtlug1 Sltotg- Only
StrirHy Enforced
25-'

Tuiiiir:uRc;LrY

614·985·4180

11/14/tfn

CAIN'
S
Of Ml ••laport
21 J North Slcontl
We Say What We Do.
We Do Whet We Sey

INlUIOR •
FREE ESTIMATES
1oke the pain .Ut
painting. Let tnt do .
it for yau:
Very Reasonable
have References

B- 12-90

JAMES KEESEE

Hand Tufting
Cuetom Drupes
88 YefU'8 Experience

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1

•fiREWOOD

Auoss F10111 Pciot Office
217 E. Sec. '-..Oy
POMEIOY,

YC.HAiiNS IN HAND ·
DON'T BE NEXT!
Protect yourself with the
STUN-UM kay chain sprayer
·
STU N-U M is tha moat advanced chemical
self defense wee pan available - your edge
agein1t partonol crime. .
To Order Sind Check or Money Order
l'or S19.95 To:
SEO SICIIIft PIODI
'· 0 .... 1ft, ......"Yr

ll·S·IG·tft:

FRIDAY, NOV. 30-6:30 P.M.
CAGED ANIMAL SALE

PH. 949·2101

.

We can repair tind re·
core radiators anil
heoter caret. We can
also I!Cid boil and rod

PUBLIC AUCTION ..
HAPPY

CARPENTU ·

11 Gaup Factory

205 II. S.tntl 51rMt
_,.,LEPOIT, 0110 4576
Office 614-992-2116
llollbi 614-992-5692

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

MOVING SALE

. 992-54)09

SUNDAYS

ICiftll . . . . . . -

Look who haa car
keya now.

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

GUN SHOOTS

White 8:.
Scotch Pine

DEFENDANT
CASE NO. 18-CV,3ZD

of

RACINE
GUN CLUB

--·bound-

:

21ft MI. eutsldo
lptland 011 New
Umald.
HOURS: Monday
thTu Saturday
10 am to 6 pm
We Are A Deer
·checking Station,

2 ·00 PM TUIESDAY

2 .00 P.M . WEONlSOAY
2 00 P'M THURSDAY
- · 2·00 P.M FRIDAY

Banks
Construdion

runs . broken updaytwMI be c;h•tild

A-'••r•

fnr tlflh

1--------- 1--------:o----

POINSEnJA BASKETS ·

.... .

15
15
15

1B Wordo
.20

. ......oclllillll

-•a•

POINSEn'IAS

.

se.oo
u.oo

.

&amp; Ft. ond Up
Bele In the lbove entitled ·
Well
Sheorecl. Grown
ootlan, I
offer for ute of
on the Weber Ferm In
public
1uction,
et
front
door
.
eble conti~ued operation of
Rutland
thio l!lhorwl• olfldent ..w. of courthou• . in Porneroy,
Ohio
on
the
4th
dl'f
of
Jonege dloprinl l'fltem. ·The ulry, 1880, at 10:00
512. 520
Lagoon 8yl10m It locotod In a'olocl! A.M., tho following
IEADY DK, 2nd
the 100·yllr flood pllln.
· Tho propolld project connot deocrlbed -1 ..,.,.,
742·21.3
PARCEL NO. 1: The fol·
be Underteken In MY other
THIS l"xl"_
11-26-'90'1 mo.
towing
root
_..
ollulle
In
w•'l or loe~~tlon. There 11 no
tho
Townlhtp
of
Solem,
proctlcll ellerno11vo to thlo County of Melp ond Stole
BULLETIN BOARD
project. Follure to reteoH
of
Ohio,
being
In
Boatlon
grant fund would continue
SPACE AVAILABLE I
to allow the •ew•.....,.l'tem No. 23. Town No. 8, Rona•
USED APPLIANCES
I
to doterlor1te. It 11 the No. 11 of the Ohio Com90 DAY WdaAIIJT
AT
ss.OO
PER
DAY
·
pony'• Purch••.- bounded
County'• Judgement lhll ond
WASHEI$-$100 up
deoarlbe'd
11 follow1:
continued vilblllty of ill oonDll'EI$-$69 up
·
Beginning at the north
ltory
woote dlopoul comer
RURIGERATOR$-$100 u'p •
of
tendo
of
lAC
W.
l'fltlm autwelghto conoldRANGB-C.t·Eitc.-$125 up
Public Notlco
Public Notice
er•tlon of Executive Ordws · Miller 11 will com• of Iter
FREIZER$-$125
up .
Grona• Lot. uld comer btl·11888 end 11990.
MICRO OVEN$-$79 op
lng
on
north
olcbe
of
Dexter
In
I
northwOII
dlretlflll
IIOng
A more .detoilod•delcrlp- Creek; thence oouth 44 IOdl to ll,.e bet-n " 8.
Pond 1nd I. W. Miller: thence center of1lld r011d 1bout 31
tlon ofthl1 projlct II ovalle- degree
KEN'S APPUANCE
we:at
13 rod• thence north 17 rod• to 1he n&lt;lrth· rol1110 Clnter of bridgo over
ble for citizen - - et tho oauth &amp;1 ctegr01 Nit 37
SERVICE .
Will comer of A. 8 . Bond'• Raaky Croobl; thenae elong'
Mllga County Courthouoe.
28ecrelotto S. W. co mar of will benk of Aid Rocky·
Menning F. Routh,
992-5335 or tiS-3561
Aid I.Otlon; thence north CIMI! 1 9'1i rod• 10 1 SycoProoldlnt,
Acroso P..- Post Office
111 cll&gt;g- weot 24 rod11nd moro ,_ 10" In dl1meter;
Meigo County Boerd
.POIIIIOY;;1IIIO .
thence
north
10
1
loculi
poll
10 Unk1 to th1 pllco of be·
of Commloolanero 5
Happy Ads
· ·• 10/30/'19 tin
Courthouae, Pomeroy _ _....,:..:..,:;_,;...,;,._ _ ginning, conteinlng 2 ocreo. In the north line of Froctton
23.
I'll
rode:
thence
Not
moroOtllll.
Ohio 45789
(11)27,1tc
Allo the (olbowlng rill ••· about !1 rodllo ploce of btltot01lluoted lftS ...mTown- ginning, contllnlng 13 ••·
ohlp, Melg1 COUnty, StiUI of 111, mo,. or 11111. the llllovo
BUILDING &amp;
Ohio, being In Section No. being the uotern port of •
Public Notice
troct
oobd
by
Samuel
D.
Ly23. Town 8. Ranp11. Ohio
REMODELING
m., end Mlttlll Lymon to E.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Compony'o
Commercial &amp;
E.. Nel.,n, IXCOPI I lriCt of
MERGER AND
Relidontlal
edBeginning
""' -11 • •ot-ln
the t 'AI ..,,., mo,. 01 ilu, 10 ld
, DISSOLUTION OF
toW,
F.
Thompoan
by
E.
E.
•Roofing
rood. which 11 welt 17
· PARTNERSHIP
cheinl 'lind 27 llnko ond Nefaon •nd wife.
Not lei 11 hereby glv.,. thet
•Siding
Deed Refe~nce: Volume
north 20 cllolnl end 8911nlul
Holzer Sherehabdera Cepllel
•Windows
hom the 8. E. comer ofuld 211. Pig• 233, Mila•
Portnerebllp, on Ohio generol
Isn't • Werth Doing llit!llt
IICtlon: thence oouth 4 Couf!IY D,.cl Record1.
Plrtnerohlp (tho "PortnorLllot Ret.,.,ce: Volume
cholno end 11 llnko; thence
ohlp"), by vim&lt;o of a ruol·
BANKS . .
oouth aa dear• .. ., 1 212, P1g1 111, Mllgo
utlon of tho Plrtnlll, IDNid
ch1lno 1nd 50 llnko to e County DNd R-dl.
10 merge with 1nd Into
CONSTRUCDON
Sold Preml111 epproiNd
ltone; thence north 51
Jockoan Plk1 AuodltH
It
•11.000.00
end
Clnn01
btl
deg- Will 7 cfiiiAI lAd &amp;9
Umllod Plrtnorlhlp, 1n Ohio
llnk1 10 tile ~ of begin- IOid tor 1111 then IWO·thlrdo
limilod portnlrlhlp. 1nd
Look who hal to
ning, contolnlng 1.31ocre•. of lhel omaunt.
upon 1uch mBrger to dlawait 3 more years
ALL SHERIFF BALES OPmore or lea.
oohre end ~omplotety wlnd
ERATE UNDER THE DOCHe...;lp;_,W._a_n_tld
DNd Refo-: Volume TRINE
for car keys. ·
-....!!.P .11• offltre, ond th1t th1
OF
CAVEAT
EMP_11
_
_
_ __
218,
Pip
233,
Mll111
~nerebllp flied 1 CMcllllHAPPY
TOR.
ALL
PROSPECTIVE
County DNd Recordo.
tlo~ of Gener1L Plrtnenhlp
BIRTHDAY,
PAR EL NO. 2: The follow- ~URCHABEAS ARE URGCertlfbo~
In the Melg1
Ing -1-ellultod In the ED TO CHECK FOR ANY
County Recorder'.a Office
CHANDAI
T-ebllp of Salem, County LIENS KEPT ON FILE IN
o~ November 1, t 190. S.,d
o
ve
Mom
&amp;
Dad
L.
THE
of Mlli11 end S - of Ohio: THE OPFICE OF
ony inquirlos to Gregory A.
Beginnlng 01 the northelat MEIGS COUNTY RECORDHlcl!mon, • Eoq., 15 Ee11
corner of Froatlon 23. Town EA. ·
I tote Street.. Suite 2100,
TEA Ml OF ·BALE: 10"'
B. R.,p 11 of Ohio ComColumbul, Ohio 4321&amp;.
a111h
or a.rtl._. check on
pony'o
Purchooe;
thence
111127, He
rlly of Ale, belonae UPOII cll&gt;lOuth lblout 41 rodl 10 the blvery
of DNd.
·
center at 100d: th- along
J1me1 M. Soullby, Sheriff
center of Hid rued In • -•- o..,
E. Hunter,
terly direction 34 rado to •
Attorney
for Plllntlff
110n1 8 lnchelln dlometer In
(Ill
2.0.
27:
(121 4, 3ic
In
Memory
cantor
of
Old
Rood:
thence
2

•OPEN DAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1·5

h"

14,00

15
15

3
6

Ov~r

Rat•

Words

1

•Gar....
oComploto

WPENIEI SERVICE

· Now o~.. For
Chrltfllllt Seue•l

SYRACUSE, OH •.
992-5776

RATES
Days

···"-·

CUTTING,
SKINNING.
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.;
. RACINE

-Room Addlttono
-Gutter Work
-Electrical • Plumbing
-concrete Work
-Roofing
'
- lnterlo• • Exterior
Pointing
!FREE ESTIMATES)

r---~----------~·

Sponsored by Syracult Vol. Fire Dept.\

MONDAY PAPER

SUNDAV PAPER

Granges to meet
I
The Slar Grange and Slar Junia~
Grange will meet Saturday at 7:3di
p.m. at the Grange Hall located o
County Road I near Salem Center.
The subordinate, youth, youn
adult and junior baking contests
will be held.
1
All members are urged to attend.,
Pthotluck .refreshments will follow;
e meeung.
1

TOYS - GIFTS - FOOD

161 Nlrtl:
Ohio 45760

DAY BEFORE PUBliCA TIC"!

FA1DA'&amp;: PAPER

'I

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

·

oohs Dltly lflbune. reaching OV.I 11.000 homes

Pomeroy group of Alcoholics
Anonymous and AI Anon will meet
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Church. For more information, caU I (800) 333-5051.
:

DEC. 1, 1990 - 7:00 P.M.
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION

Happy Ads
Yerd .Sales

•A clanified •do.leniaernflrit pl1.c ed '" Th,J D1ily SenUntlte• ·
c:ept -; cl••ified di1pl..,. , Butinen Card 1nd legll notictsl
wit~ lito. IPP~Ir In the Pt Pl'e•ant Fleglater 1nd th11. Gill•

Meeting set

1' Colon -

.

, outtidt Meiqs , Gallia rir Mason countift in 111 r be p• ~ ·

Holiday program S4:heduled
Are you looking for inexpensive
creative ideas for the holidays? Are
you stumped for a gift for the person who has everything? Are you
planning a party and looking for
some new ideas for nutritious, different, quick and easy foods? If the
answer is . yes to any of these
questions, plan to attend the Meigs
County Coo~tive · E?ttension
Service's holiday happening on
Dec. 7:
.
The program will be held at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center from 10 a.m. to noon. Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs-Jackson Home
Economics and 4-H Agen~ and Be~
clcy Culbertson, Gallia County
Home Economics Agent will
present the program.
Activities include two craft
projects, demonstration of six
rcc:pes and sampling, gift ideas and
handouts. Cost of the program is $4
and preregistration by Dec. 6 is req,uested. Class size is limited. To
register, call the Meigs County Ex-.
tension Office at 992-6696.

HOI.L Y TREE$
FOLIAGE IASIETS
LIVE &amp; CUT TREES
For The lovld One's Grave:
llanbts, Vosn and Sprays

tx

--- - . .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY .thru FRIO~ 8 A.M. to .5 P.M.

A Thanilsgivi:ig .meal preceded
the November. meeting ·of ·the
Alfred United Methodist Women.
Pastor Sharon Hausman opeiled
wilh prayer . and Nellie Parker
presided. There were 19 sick caUs
reported.
Aorence Spencer read a letter
from Ruth Marshall ·about the
California
meeting.
Pastor
Hausman explained the West Ohio
Clergywomen project of bringing
Liatu Kane, Nigeria, Africa, to
America for ministry .t@ning in
1991. The group voted to give next
month's collection to this project. ·
· Parker gave a shon repon on the
needs of the world's children from
Response magazine, ·
;
Mrs. Robinson had the prayc;r
calendar and chose Dwaine Morga
in · evangelism and
church
development at Columbia, Mo.
Plans were made : for the
Christmas party on Dec. I 9. Nina
Robinson and Martha Elliott are ijl
charge of decorating. Aorence
Spencer is in charge of gifts to
shut-ins.
The group voted to arrange a
visil to Sine-Cera next spring. Mrs.
Robinsofl led the World Thank Offering program, "Freely You
Received, Freely Give;" witb aU
taking part. Others present t&gt;esides
those mentioned were Martha
Poole, Sara Caldwell and Charlotte
Van Meter.

Square dance·
'
There wiU lie a square dance at
the Coolville Lions Building on
Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
music by the Happy Hollow Boys.
Cost is $3 single and $5 couple.
Jim Brown will be the caUer.

Alfred news ·

._s.......... .

·sALES &amp; SEI.ICE

Area events

The Evangeline Missionary
Group of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ met recently at the home of
Eileen Bowers.
'
· Elaine Kelly preside(! at the
meeting in which the opening
prayer was given by Gertrude
Andrews. The roU call was
answered by teliii:g "the best
Thanksgiving yoo ever had."
Betty Spencer had devotions and
read a Thanksgiving poem. The •
group sang the doxology and
officers reports were given.
Cards were sent to sick and sliutins.
It was decided to go caroling on
Dec. 17.
.
Elai~e Kelly had the mission
study and prayer.
Refreshments were served by Pat
Thoma.
Others attending were Charldine
Alkire, Debbie Alkire, Linda
Laudermil~ Sherri Might, Janet
Venoy, Jill Roessler, Eva Dessauer ·
. and Pauline Kennedy.

..
"'I ..,..,

•sSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON

HILL'S DEER
.cuniNG

PUIMIING &amp; HEA1..GI

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Student Senate officers were microcomputer and data prorecently Selected at Southeast- cessing; and Laura Smith, Cheern Business Co liege, Elected for shire, accounting. Their advisor
a second term as president v.:as Is Toni Holstein, job placement
Robin Wamsley of Bidwell. An and public relations officer.
The group promotes business
executive secretarial major, ~he
education
In the community;
Is the daughter of John and Joan
boosts
and
maintains student
Wamsley and has a son, Josh. ·
by
participation
In activimorale
Named vice president was Joy
Thompson of Gallipolis. A busl · ties and is a llason between the·
ness administration major, she student body and the school staff
was recently . student of the and administration.
The group is planning to enter a
quarter and has a son, Aaron.
In the Galllpoilis Christmas
float
Secretary for the group wlll be
parade,
sponsoring Strike Force
Susan Glenn of Bidwell. A
to
benefit
the Muscular Dysstudent In the medical office
trophy
Association
and will col·
secretarial program, she has a
Thy run plans underway
lect
canned
goods
for
a Ct:rlstdaughter Natalie.
The
Meigs County Bikers are
Elected reporter was Richard mas basket for the needy, In
again
preparing
for their annual toy
Reltmlre of Middleport. A bus!· addition to making donations to run. cans for monelaty ·donations
·
ness administration major, he. Toys for Tots,
and boxes for toys have been
They
are
conducting
a jewelry
lives with hls parents In
placed in area business. Toys may
Middleport.
'
, sale to fund the annual Christmas o be dropped at HudnaU's Plumbing,
Southeast·
party
and
are
selling
Named . to the l!dvlsory com1'leaser's and Five Points Express.
mittee were Michael Flowers,. ern Business College sweat·
Monday All money collected will
New Haven, business admlnls· shirts. Funds from past projects
go
to needy families in • the
tratlon; Bill Duncan, Gallipolis, were used recently to purchase a
Syraquse
area and .aU toys will go
new computer and camera.
the children.

Pomeroy group
recently meets J

Business Services

Classifie

Tuesday, November 27. 1990
Page-6

Sentinel Calendar

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Ohio

Real Estate General

DEER HUNTERS
PARADISEI

PRor:o1!~~~~~,:ALE
APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE
POND, GAS WELL AND
FREE GAS.

LOCAID IN SmON TOWNSHIP
OPP DOICAS lOAD.

No• I•
Stookll

FAIMIIS BANI

MOBILE HOME FURNACES ~ HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS
aNMm'S MOBILE
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

992-2136

,.,_....;...,,..;-....;.--""""!"---...J

CALL

I

\'· " ----..;..:~...:...::...:.;::;...._ _~

ucatlll on s.ttanl SciiMIId. aH at. 141
46U) U6-t41 ... 1-100-171-St"

'

�27, 1990 .•:

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

35

LAFF-A-DAY

Loti .. Aci'Ngl

The Daily Sa ttinei-Piga 9

BORN LOSER

44

,..,.._,_u __

llo!'ll!lt • •

lie

~:a~..
,, ........., ....

I

-==-..

=

oa on

.,

I

wv. -77W411.

2bt houoo, rtfrlgiNtor,

~a..ll:

Toll. conInto.
Wrtt•:

~~

ow..,

4'

1-

. .....

-

- · ......, ......

llllhor

-·

f)

I_:_..:..~-:-- t:::.,;-~

-

~'Ul/

ma.

·

Ono

cor

=.. .

now

GUITAR

LEIIIONS-UmHad
~for lndlvtduol glllllr
I
far bealnne,. or
......,. gullonoto. c.n 1or tn- ·
tonn.tlori; 111 ttl 1cn or 11444143112,oonwnience.
s •-•no .,_ruator
-,..,your
JoiiWornotoy.
.

pill

motorlllln
tho·- lnd
141711, Sl. Rt. 1!0 ot Ponlf, ol-.. ,.......,.._
1210/mo. 114-44Ntlt, -

--·--·
NIL

Merchandise

2 b1dl ocwn mobile home, Rlclne

Wanted to Do

L01T tomOio lhorl h1lrod
..... II" tall, weighing 2ll fbi,
- n o ...
llilthoi . eo~~ ...
_ . . , . _ , . . , .... _non

a

-REWlRD.
Rldao ._Ill.
.,.....,_
Coli Tiber
Jolwl
~ :114 HI 31101 or lloJd

,.11. .
Laot: IIHtl, ton ond whho
.......
_,_..,ttl TUM Rood

stow. .......

~pot,

Yard Sale

7

ALL- -111111 lo Pold In
DIADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho cley ....... tho ld lo to Nn.
....., ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
- · ......., ldMion • 2:00

Advo-.

_._,.

---ton
B

Public Sale
Cornpony
auctlona,
n·

es:_.,~-=

11

Wlll'llld to Buy

...,..._..._nooll«
"' .... - I n -

-

... -

Counly.

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

lllnllll rtghlo to go

,...~u,,

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

...,.,. ...

cu,...,.ly
ooeolitlng
..,.
plk:lllori• for full or ~~~~·lime
&lt;lentil hY9flnl pooHion. lluot
Ill llclnHcl to priCIIcO In tho
otllo ol Ohio. R • - moy Ill
Nnt: ell 041, c/o Ollllpolla
DillY Tn-., 825 Thlnl Avo,
Ollllpollo, OH 415131.
Drtvoro, PNfor 11 1nd ovor. 114441-2122, 114-N2.aMS, """'
7p.m.

lmrnodlll• oponlnp mlloblo
for full-limo RN lhlft . _ ......
c-po~Hivo w - . dl-111
wllh
..,..._
llollblo
ochodullng ovolllblo. Conloal
tho llroetO&lt;
ol • - ·

ply

Cllh.

PIIDM: Itt ttl 1441 If no
--g · onctt'U
.

........ Ponlle; ~7.

,...,.,_, tM/11112·7532.

homo, Ioiii oloc. I
mi. , _ ,_, In 211, 12211
montlt. 11+311 1141.

E':.\""'0::
po!lunlty E""""'•·

~-:--~~;

.•

- onvto
$2lll lal·l month
ttOOiiitiiOOft,
block
"""' onfco ond ot0&lt;1, no
pOlo, 104·773-1418.
'

lntortor. 1nd ,xtonor pointing,
NIIDnlblo rofoo, 304.a75-~. . Cloon 121!0 wlh oxpondo, 2
IR1 woahorfdryor hooko~~p,
.........
_ updatld, ...,. lot,
wllor ~!d. cltP. lo 111. roq'od.
114 441-4411.
llollllo-lorront. Fur-

*'"'·

nllhodporw1111
-1210
mconth
....a" - "
ond uUIMIA. ._2-llml.

lllol Pollll'l Illy Coro Contw.
S.tl,
chllclciN. M-f
I ..,,, • 5::11 p.m. Agoo 2 ·10.
loforo, IIIW ochool. Drop-lnl
WAicame. 11_:4-4414224.

•rtont•"•·

Nloo 12110, Ioiii -_. wio. olr.
...................1.

Will "" ... ..,...... In my horne,
ony lhll, biiDN or 1ftor ochool.
Green Sellool. 114 441 31 h.

Frnancral

21

Bualneu
Opponunhy

To~ Al&gt;l&gt;llcollono II
Domino'a PIUo, 'Oalllpolla. 114-

wMh poopto you k - , and
NOT to oond money tllrouan tho
moll until you havo lnVIIITgllad
tho oflwrtnl.

.

=-="'

1 IR lpl. In Rio Orondo, till
114 381- .. 114-

.................. you "" - -

2br, furnlot.cl Apll Ill ~~~~--­
.......
A-....
DIId, ·Oalllpotlo.
· - · 6141118
441-3141

ANI' ririelble ~altter In lilY VENDING ROUTE: Slrong, oolld
home on T..n. Run Rd. Plrfllmo. lrrogullt houro. 114-251- cuh - - · · High tronlc, tooil - -1-.atM
· For .....
..
1324.
quflljnont.
..- .-

-Ill' · ..,....
port limo, lor bnl,..,

Sond - : P.O. -~~~. Rio
Orondo, OH 45llll.

:.= ........... --1101

f · C.. Marc 1141112-

8Hidng diPirtdable ~ 10
- · tillnil a ....- a.-r
JIIckMn, Ohio. fMeiiWI22.

-

.. luy: -

Shift -ill - .
Nlllblo,IUI- chll6 0111.l'llf.4UI ollor 4:00 Pll.

I

•

lllt

...

...... '"""

!'!!..-111.. -......
...
7 .......

-

- ==

- E TYPISTI,

PC Ell. 1u:'lontlll.

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

Dolollo. ,,,

4812.

......... Lldy to .... for 2 ......

eoo6JIIr-R•apantlto fll:. atoZ

. . CWip ~Ill 41131.

11

"-WIIntld

Mollohan Furnltur' &amp;

':".itt

.-e7.
.111M
drill -

. - ·. - · -

30W7W233.

22 Money to Loan

LOAijiiY IIAIL
Up to N,goo In 72 llouro. Wo
... hotp ""' (Ill • "'!notlft

.._..a, 11a11. 1..-241·w

·Enno E";n.':'•
•

Mn, 01-f 140().1

Couch ttOO. Auto ........ t75..
loolhor

Joc~ll

sa; Eloolrlc

ch:;..~:•• 150. -

Rl. 7 No~. ll4-445-11144.

County Appllonoo, lno. -

Qu Rengt Tappan, Awa:ado

ond . .-

....
"' uo. 1Wo ..... llbl•

=
.
.
:
Wrl

$75; Olo Rona- 30 Inch. WltHo,
SM; E!octrk: llo~Yoii\Ho 20
Inch SM6,f~1C1rlo
T!IP_ a
Bottom
Hnnl
at2li
O.E. -hor tll; Kon...Woohor S~i. Ko.....,.
Lilla Now, wnho ti!OcJ.,.,Witlri
Wuhor Horvool
· SO;
Wlllrlpool D~ $11; Konmoro
~·r $t5; ~·~ """' FIOIIIr
f:o:ig'::/fr"
Rtfrtge,.tor, Whkt $150i Ha,..
Gold Rolrigol:!ltor tt71;
Z.nHh Conooto T.V. ttao;
Skoggo Apptlano•, U - Rlwr
Rd.lf4.441.7311.

...:.'":!

For -

Rolllg., onowor mo-

.- - . blcqraund
good - · · noo:· cat!
- - - • oda or oftor 5:00
p.m. a I d ro. ._78111.

-..; ,.,.._ -n•• - ·
Will - h control boloo.
~:-~- ....,Nod.

I

.

~

tent

*'"
-

wllh
lnd

••,. -

"=1"'.:~:.:

fOJlTY NIGHT$ .. Bf CAfEfuL NOT

. . . Cltovy

-~ Ford
lroctor wMh
hog, - n o mochlno,

.10. 4

lft!d, · ~~ ·- - ·

roka.bi!Or,--d-.

'

.

--~
v,~&gt;

I 0
l,
• I.
'

"1,

•

tt,llll. OWnor will -

:lllt•

· 114-

\

...,-

...u.• v... ITDI

-

»...
.•.
~

....

2 .............

..·1',.

troo,
1c1r....
mlllo,
P....
-:
-.
· -115,500.
· ' olhor

..,...
: ~.

.....
·-,.
..'·
v.., ..... -.... ts,4,., a.a.a. '.'

· - - · Illy: 114-4414711

-- -·--

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I
1111 Chowr Convo- Von, lOll .

a lm..,•••·

tnlaiiOI'W

luy,

83

!flY 1or aoto. -

• •

,.,....... aa.

No

,.
,

,..
..
,,"

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

..

1172 17 I. Sl••ft Ttl-Hull

-.125
NP,Ivl~..,;.=~o;
·
.....
.
Cllllf4.all."llnow
.,..,
~oPansa.

l

I1

~! ~~ '

.- .
..

~.

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

.••

'·'·
'•

.,.•'

Home
lmprovainents

81

,,

IIASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING

,--•~o~•e­
... l.oDal fi... W I fumlehtd.

,,.. .... , . Clll ...... ,..
114-217-G111, cley "' nlflltl.
R...... B - n l Wit-

-· -

"•
'

111 \1110

""""~

......... rooftna,·

I

POlloi IAllie;•
- · 4il0.
REMQOE
INGI
1
WI'MtiiL11WIII-1111.

-

,.. .,
.:';1

,.

North Thlnl .._ . llld~.
Ohio.
2 - - lwnlohad .....
, . . . , _ ond . . _ . roqulrod,

.

·.

Buslneu
Buildings

a

® Scarecrow and Mro. King
1:;1
11:30(2)0 11J1 Tonight Sltow
Stereo.
(]) Walking Tall
&lt;!) Adam Sinltit'o Monar

pumr.: Rlllad ..,.
:~now .n '.boll $275.

53

Antiques

~,........;.;;,;,;;~.;..;......,..--

Anllquo-Top-.11+

World

(J)II NlgldllneR

-... ........ -,,.!tnlllo.
- Cloiodo.
Win, _ ""' - . OH Colt .,._

245-1121.

ASTRO-GRAPH

..

Lots a. Aci'Nge

::.•,,:·l:~l:..:fl

'.

EXAMINATIN'
TABLE

0.. Oun, Wlnah 1 . Model

~~ ~ 4

.....•.
" (V'!'
W t!A .

· -~-.
"I

alwaYI _, to notlce a-- stortel about

llln JIXpotUre whltll'm under a

skyll!tlt.~·

Tenzin Gyatso. holder of the
Nobel Peace Prize. beComes
the t 4111 Dailal Lama ol Tibet
at Crook and Ch-

~-yllna

POR IALI In Olllpollo

.

•

m (!)Ocean.of Wlldom

11:00 Cil D Cil (J) D I!Dl 1121e
IIJI Naw1
.
(]) Nfilht Court 1:;1
.(!) NeWIWitcll
(t)IID Ar1en1D Hofl Q
I!J Mllml VIce Stereo. .
Chuteh SINal Station

1:,00; Ill -

.. _ . . , - . lltinl - ·

.

DOC It l FEEL ·
YOU NEED A GOOD
PLUNB DROWSY CHECKUP, SNUFFY··
ALL TH' TIME!! "l;~CLIMB UP ON TH'

t

__
--· -

· ~·

. XIII
10:30

~~~

1 1118.

.

614-992-2156
304-67 5-1333 .......................
...... ...........,...,
.....
-.-...s.:-41
614-446·2342 . . .--·:eo
.
--·lou --

RobariiOn
·tO:OS C5l Claoh of the Champion•

.

_,
,...•
.._,
. ,.
"I&lt;
......... ,,
.
'l1
.

'

.

a CNN Evening NIWI

® 700 Club W111t Pat

••
•'•

Ita 4br Dokoll Form Homo,
buln lor you, SZUM ond up.

· The
Classifieds
.
.
.

Oortaratlon

••,,

I ·"'::N":too::p•:'d:·:~::::::::~L~~~L==::::::;;;;::J 58 Petl for Sale

35

career. Stereo. C
® 18 Star Tm: Thl Noll

.,.

1 wah bolrclng otablo, I"
lo!lflng ... rutoflc homo,
will """ iiNI -root, 304-a'l!lo
17H.

You'll Come Up Aces With

VENTI L,ATION.'

&lt;aROUP"'!

I'

_....,1

34

NAME OF THE:

'CP.065

Baekelblll

I 0:00 C2Jit 11J1 Llw • Order
Investigating a child 's death
turns up a cra~-addiCied
mother. Stereo. 1:;1
(!I NIWI
(l). (J) 11 lhlrtyaornethlng
Melissa is torn between
ramify responsibility and her

'

Contplllo llollllo -

Trolh •

..... a-2111.
.
111111 0111. IIIII 121180 Ttollor. Cloo .......... ipll. lor .....
llovo Nitta. ond unclorplnnlng
lnali.ilod. S3100. Coli allor 7p.tri. - mconlh. Dotio!o"
roqlllrod.
p.m.
l14tl2 5131.
Cloobodo-nlum-opl,lh

..

WHAT!!:&gt; THE

•••

fGr All rw ront.14170 Trollof.
l)i&amp;C - · OH.I14412·3'752.
.ECtAL FKtory to you1ft1, 2
• 3 blclroom14x70 modele at
.... - - b l o ••
tl2,1100 clollooo.d and 111 up.
Coii1-.'121-4GU lor dolollo.

--.nn.

.gColl~ge

•' I '

Scrvrces

Transporlatron

Autoa for Sale

7:30 Cillt !Ill IIJI Jotoponlyll:;l
(]) Night Court Q
(l) 1121• Entertainment
Tonight Stereo . 1:;1
(J) G Mama'a FtmUy
(tll• Three'o Cornpony
@.Collegi BetkelbiU
acrollllre
7:35 C5l Tho Jalfersono
· 8:00 (II 0 IIJI Madock Matlock
.defends a judge's biker son
who is accused ol murder.
Stereo. C
.
(]) MOVII!:: Strlpal (Ri (2:00)
(l) (J) II Who'l the - 7
Tony travels to !tal~ to COIIICI
an inheritance. Stereo. 1:;1
(!) (f) Nova ·The hidden
world ol direct marketing is
examined. Stereo. C
f!D) \121 • Reocue: f11
Stereo. C
®• MOVIE: Revenge of
the Nlfdl (R) (2 :00)
I!J Murdtor, She Wroto Q
at Church St.- Statton
a PrimaNIWI
® MOVIE: Three Ring
C!ICUI (2:00)
6:05 C5l MOVIE: How the Well
Wao Won (PI 3 of 3) (2:00)
8:30 (l) (J)'II Head o1 lite Ctau
Ale• persuades Billy and
Bernadette to take dancing
lessons . Stereo . 1:;1
9 John MocNatly' l
Chrlatmao Irish tenor John
MacNally performs Classic
holiday tunes. (0:30)
1:00 (])It I!JIIn the HHI ol the
Nlgltl A man accused of
m~rdering his wile Is helped
by S~et Stereo. Q ·
(l) (I) II RoaHnne Dan
confesses to RoseaMe lhat
hi lias been dreaming of
another woman. Stereo. 1:;1
(!) (f) Frondlne Q .
f!D) \121. MOVIE: 'The
Strtlngar W111tln' CBS
Tueiiiiii~Movte (2 :00)
·
Stereo .
I!J MOVI : Wanted: Diad or
IJIVI (AI (2:00)
·
® Naahvllla Now
Llrry King Uvel
9:30 (l) (J) 11 Coach Hayden is
worried thll luther may ·
bacoma a neighbOr. Stereo.

a

' ·. ''

•

a n-"'·

11451118

10 NEED CCMMUIJITY
'S£1&lt;1.1 ((£

1.

. '

U 1'111 r llult ...L OWner le
being lhiDMII owen... fM.
4 p.m., .............
11111 biiDNI p.m.

1

..... In tho 1'11111. 114-

lH&amp;:Y SHOJLD &amp;. MAD£

.,

1112,111~3l

:0-."
~

_..., lllby eotvoo,
111 • 1524 '
... PolniPioiolor,..._
ond - . 2418 , . _
An. Point Ptr r • .._ WV. ICM-

''

)oollon, ~ tt,lllll. 114-441-

gllillng, -n lrikoj big 2 1111r
Old onollll bit
.::,;

trot ng.

,..,.

'

Font F-1511 4•4, 1 opel, v.a,
d11111111111, bod - · AC, IUol fne

~=~~~=~:-::.::~
5 old . . . , _ AQHA
~

. . ,.:.;"1

»&gt;,.,._

LivestOCk

old_,
_,Colo.

,

.

- - 1110,. N, ..........
cruloo, IIIIIWI1"!!o.. !!.!!_00, PW,
PL, $1,1110.

'

ecPPPid

~--

.

111-IIIL

bld10001
Pome~or, and

.•

AII/PM

Whlll lfiiiiiiiN ' - lor tuN
truolt, ........... -

'

,.

'.t•

'

.,..~

AC.• D15
with 11114
lloa. -·
12.110·
lnl'f
INCitar, P,iio; 240 lnt1 tri!Ctor, !;« Solo: ,... Cltovy 112 ton

71

/T.

::,.

Pll.

-

ovtFwA"re~

.'

.....
- . . - · - · 22,1011
mlloo.IIWII-1124.

:.-·
awnor wtn n -.-•14t'"

TO

'.:·::

114 4•ms

AccaiiDI'IeS

...........
•.-11-4441 •"• 5:00
p.m.
pold. I

!. 1LL IE fACt: IN FO/lTY l&gt;AYJ . ANP

bid,
"""'· " $2200.
11+442·1025.
.
1155 Font llongor'- 4 cf10 __1 · , ;;

78

lollohorio. - . . . . . .......

-

,..,

:00 p.oo,

. . ._, no-.

io•"'= •,rs·

11110 Doloon 2·10. 2 - · AIIIFM
oulollo playw. Groll miNgo. $3141 0.1.0. tM/IIIIe
7175.

Cltovy 112 tan PU, 1011
rnator, CIUlDmallo. ' \WY aoocl
OINIIdllan. 11,100. aiW 1:10,

171f.4014.

KltCMn Fuml.t.cl, 238 Fll'lt
Avanuo, t2101mo. pi,. tdiiHioO,
-~I
~1121.

N""' '

.. .

I' .,
,• I

~oonil,p,OOO. ..-

SoiiLtHI-..

. . . ..... , ...... . . ~42.

11M. Cot1114-1112-7711t EOH.
' - - looond Floor AoonOMnt,

Mlddlapart. ~.

·~·I '
"1,

:uo _.,,

-r
~~llf good

qhlnu........, ......,.,...... .......... ·1:1111'1:00-yo,

FumiiMd AI*IIMnt, nell 10

....

., .

1171 Font 1'-100. Runo good.
tMIO.tM:151-152ll• •

I

2bt, houoo ldgo o1 town, lnllido Llbrory, jlorlolng, oonlrll - .
city limb Din .111 ICFI lal, -~~ ... roqullad, ouH1blo for
I -.114-441 0331.
7T:Z ~aaphere, 134,000.
3 ollorlp.m.
I
Fum- Apt. a br, 1131
. ._
~.
good
I bedroom houll, , one .:re . . - . Ollliliiilto, $175, Wltor ..._
,.lei,
114
ttt+hfafler
7p.m.
corid.
-ooubli
rtrwe
tubl:,
J04.
tal. Roolloprtnp, Ohio.
114 liZ IZ21after lpm.
FumElllcloncy. . tl50 175-7221.
UIIIH!oo Pold, tlhoro r.\oth, 107
· PICKENS RIRNITURE
Second Ave, 114 441 4.411 after
7p.m.
. Hoi. uholdNow/Uood
tumla~. 112 mi.
CICWERNIIENT HOIIEI !tom tt
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. - · WV,
(U npolrl. Dollnq11M11 tu Fum- Elllclonoy, All 1111111• ooii30W75-14!0.
pold. Shoro bllh. SilO/mO. tnt
=m-~Y~ s.cand Avenue, 114 4tt 1041.
4M2 lor ........ -1111.
Oroclouo IIYing. I lnd 2 bodroom aparlrrte~M at Vlllaal
llonor
ond
Rlwrolao
Al&gt;ln-• In II~ From

In -41~=ellelrlc,
.1M 4....._ All

.,..

Farm Equipment

.

0

~-

t40, ~.~k-utl $25. Aftoo' 5 Jim'•
Welt -~"';~4:.~,"'
O.IH
i t14 281 14tt
p.m. I .
7124.

-.1141148-.

1171 - ·
CA, ..,_
dorplnnlng,
bUlK141170
In diotiWUhor,
mira
........... I I - bull llodom 2 •
1Pirtrnlnl8 In

-.·.. ,.

1m - .

urvo $41.
-.Clllf11411112-2471.
- - lnd
IIIICkad

- · ..... -

tm Hotly Porte. tlld5, good
oond, :IOI.alll41!0"' 115-2U7.

.-:ll,

.~t::
. ,.'

Farm Supplrcs
&amp; Lrvestock
~

ecNell Lehrer
New-r
(tJI ell Nlgltt Court 1:;1
1121111 Current Affair Q
I!J MacOyvtor 1:;1 ·
@ SportaCenter
a Monoyllno
® Scarectow and Mra. King
1:;1
7:05 C5l Happy Dayo

.' ·i"'·"··

Coli~ . . - - $50. Pl. IN · Ford . troetqr oom=ly
Pit. High lchool Jo- llbull- OfwM•
$25. llonNu tto. Lo~ ....,. mowlr. 304 112 Jell 8fler S:OO

now

Re&lt;JI Estate

31 Homea for Sale

'*

Coot, _bu..., .......
-!1011
~ol ptullo Npllc llnko,
~on
.J ick-

m (!)

.

...........

CltoloWH • - . tiS. - "· You
CIUI or dft. loa now CUI IIIII. I
112 mlloti rwl: lllllolono Rold,

e.,... ..

.~,::S:~

----··--·· - ·--- .........
........ ._
_.....,...No

•.,.

, •'.,1..

Evonlngo.

Fruita a.
VegetabiU

58

~ •:,re~~n=~·=~~n Q

,.

Dunrootn Fr\11 flim luot oil Sr
.Pllno
. Ill
4 Toyota Whollo, 14";
ull ol Alblnf. Wo -.pi
Rudolph
WU~Itur
(Worm tllntpl. V1r10ty ol opptol
mopto) llo
s
- • • oheMI •nd bunlr, ml•ea1
Staw, gDDII o
kin,,
.......
•
-ahum.
11112.
N
dolly,
._...... ,,. lhop . . ., rnerd,

. - ttoo. 1111. 304uoocl oppllo-, T.V. olio. a- 1711-2102.
1 Ill, $30 a-; 2 IR, .....
o.m. 10 1 p.m. llon.oSII. 814- FLew ad for ...._
~
2 , _ I bllh,_ tt71. AI1 1
627 )rd. Avo. .Qol. YOUCherl IOCfllllltd. C.N after
lllllllloo lnoludocl. DopooM ,.. -168!,._
1:00 p.nL1WMS4117.
qulrod. Colt LolayaUI IIIII 814- lpolll, Ul1
441-7733 Oft 441~
.
Ga• R1np. Whh•, 38 Inch S11i RIUWOOd. 10C* hlrclwood.

-ly-....monagarlmalnlono:crn I
unn IIIIIIIY FIIHA
. Froo
I'Onl. 5,...,_.11M
~. 1:005:00.

oomputer

·-··

.

CARPET'
FURNITURE

for Rent

INOTlCEI

. •••..

11177 Cltovy -OJ Holt P.U., ¥-1, ' ,\ I'
oulo, ...,.:.-, f1,200. 1 - .• r
1211,
Dor:
IM-44W7111,

"1llold-· .1111 PIANO SEA·
VICE (Prv. 22:1). lUI Wont
:1141112-2125.

1holt -um bl,. owpot I
pocldlng. - 3 old olooka, I -nlroloo,

uo.-

II'OWI'I ' Swivel roCker ·r.cuner,
$30. 11~41-1023.

Apanment

44

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

~040.

LAYNE'S RIRNITURE
Solu ond chalro prlcocl """'
Pl5 to $815. Tobloo $!0 ond up
to tt211. HkiH-bldo 13110. to
1515. RICIInoro $225 10 $375.
Lompo $28 IO $f25,. DlneltN
1\01 ond up to $4t5. Wood loblo
w.a chaiN $2M to $7115. ·Duka
tl45 up to $375. HlllchH $4011 a
up, bunk bldo comploto with
~~~~~~- fa~! 1nd up to PIS.
baby tl10 I I I I I - or
bol ........ lull"' twin $71, flrm
111. lnd pa. a........ $27!1 a
up, King $350. 4 choll
Ill. Gun Coblnoto I, I, a 10
gun. loby - - .,. a
145. lid ....... 821, II• as a ktng tnme
ootoctlon ol loodroom oullol,
IMial aabinM8, hlildboerdll pO
1nd up to 155.110 dorl Amo A
wlh IPPIOtad cll&lt;ll3 mi.
out lulovlllo Rd. O!oan I A.ll. to
I P.M. Mon, lhr\1 Sot. Col II+

7:00 CilO !Ill IIJI WIIHI of
Fortune Q

lq} '·

Dul-o-TUno Juot _,
..........., of yauiYaio noodlho

54 Mlacellai'IIOUI
Merchandise

Gooda

44M322.

INTELUQENQE
.1018.
All
Ul Cuiii:CNM, DEA,
lie. Hlrtna. Col (II~
1000 Ext K-1llfllt.
-

Houaehold

3 IR -

PlniC- Coro Contlfl 1111

btwM:....

a. Auction

now • a· ld •

=~"'';!..In~=
plng: auiOvlll• Rd. IM-441·~.

Exclllonl lncomo~ worlll
AoNmlllo llmplo
UCIO II
homo.
-·
Ext 5214.
24
houro.

· Galllpolla
8oVIclnhy

,..

Shl~or

51

6:35 C5l Andy Qrlll111t

~ .

I

2bt
lor nnt, 0111 ollw 12
noon,""'""
1....._1200.

Ctr1lllod child DON In my homo.
Pro jctlvlt.... llbnltY
tripe. llo. Exporte.- •nil

1flll whlto Rood Contmondor,
cley cob. lllny
piM:
II4/IIWH4 oftori:OO p.m.
-

·

(tJI 18 Andy Or111111t
@ SporlaLook

,.,.

.

•

47 wanted to Rent

42 · Mobile Homes
for Rent

AVON I AI ANII I
Spolro, 30W'I!I-1GI.

(l) (J) 0 ABC Nawo Q
(!)WHdA-1:;1
· f!D) \121e CIIS NeWo Q

••

.

~-

9uslneu

18

~ AbbDII and CoataiiO

,.
••
,.I

.

•

.a

IF '!'OU1RE A REAL
SANTA CLAUS, Wl-lERE ARE
'fOUR REIND.EER?

. -~'·

Ono bldroom houoo, :114.a75-

. -~
-.nlnd - - ·

14

1

wttti cooking.

. •'
. '

3-2·•

--

·

e

(f) Math Llomlng 011'
(tll(8 ALF C
I!J Cartoon Exprea1
@N.B AToday
World Today
®OurHouto
6:05 C5l levlriy Hlllbllllaa
6:30 Cillt G)) NBC Nightly News

..,.•'
Upotolo'o duplolj,~ ..,fum'ocl
mrlg, II&lt;W!o
loclllon,
:.241;;;'
__
_ _ __
nllr::.·_..,....
- . ""'·
Dip.

'

• u

e

•",.

Colt ••• 2:00 p.m.. :104-77:1IUt,MaeonWV.

.;&amp; 11! 211 5121.
111 11111 s "'"- o~I-....,--...-----"T----------1

I AII

. ._

6:00 CilO &lt;ll I))
all GJ
IIJI1]) Chat1ea In Chi[ Q
m
ConlltCI

••••

~---..J

-· ·-·""--

SlnP':f. room.

licking himself in front of
company. , ·

- · IOWli'IIG.. 1 t _ , . o1o1., 1

...... -

t»t'mo.

·-"The·-only.... -trick
·- he knows is

r .......... -.....

..

0

Room• avellteble tor 2. or 3 can2511.
piUI olrucllon

::

-

""!' to fO&lt;m lour tlmplo _ ..

'·
..:-

Furnished
Rooms

W/110¥0 lo

QAY

~

EVENING

IIIIHIToo,
IFilii
-~··
.. motidt.
no poto. 2U-Roor
Avo. 114- -for'""' . lllanltla ot $120/mo. lllllll Holll.
11~tlt0.
'
~-

,... . . .

t

I

45

2 bid,_ - I n Now""-·

..

""~

Dopoall

'=~=' S(C~4.llA-4~6*s·
ftr
a.·••••

____..;......;;

or:·:mb~...:.

••..

'*'Y ::'"='"'="',..:::..::
•114-44:::::::;:e-m8.:::,_ _

=~:...-aaz:

=· . . --Cl ....

lr

••

- · _...,. E~.
·
"" 1 ................
-·
· - porldng,
...,_. I

41 HOUMI for Rent

v

•'

N500 0 .1.0 .
11141tP-1'141 .. tMiiiMIII ·~
IIII:OOp.m.
...... 11,11011 -

fletiiJIS

Television

your Astro-Graph predictions for the
-----~- year ahead by mailing $1 .25 to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland , OH 44101·3428. Be
S\11'8 to state your zodiac sign.
. BERNICE
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) FortuBEDEOSOL nately, you mOlY haveladf luck looking
out lor you today In areas - • you'll
have rathor pronounced lhortcomlngs.
Her endow.,.,.ts should keep you on
_ _..;;;_ _,.__ _ _ the plus side of the column.
AQUARIUS (~811. 20-Fob. 11) You'll
substantially reduce the elfectlve~ess
o1 your plana II you try to Implement
them piecemellftoday. In order to succeed, unllprm eHort is a muat.
PIICES (l'ell. 20 lllroh 20) Financial
upecls are lrendln(l In your Javor today
aild II you apply you!'MII pr_,y, prolNoY.21,1110
llabte1118Uits are pooolble. Don't walla
lady Luck will be trying very hardin the any oppOrtuttltlel.
veer ahead to help you bring lmproYI- A,.S (llllnltl :t1-Aprt111) Something
menta Into your llle style. However, you . fortuitous might develop lor you today.
won't hive a completely lfee ride, there ' but It's bell not to diiCUSS It wllh othra muclt you must do tor yourHII.
en~ . A r......,ul onlooker may try to
IACIITTAIIIU8 (NI¥. IS Dec 11) A ft. lnllrlil&lt;e.
nanct81 opporlunit)' rnlg111 di\IIOP lor . TAUIIUI (April 20 Mly 10) Your ltel·
you •• tlils tlml thll wll otw you • •. . might bl wounded today when you
chance to add 10 your urntngl. You team ot ICIIMIItlng another laid behind
may~ thlato holp piiCIIII your ,pre. your back. YouCllndlaarm thle penon's
"""' extravegant
Slglltartut, lnNky Olllnllve by telpDnellng with
lrut yOIIrMII to a birthday gilt. 8end frw klndneu.

..-gee.

1

.

-··

'·

.

··-

~

.

GEMINI (llor ~1-.IUne :.1111 &lt;.;ondlllons
are a trlfto uncerlal~ today and Ju.st
when you feel you're out on the limb
alone. someone may do something nice
lor you lhll will revive your lalth In the
human race.
CANCER (June 11-Jutr 22) Although
frustrating conditions and self-doubts
may nibble at you todaf, you'll handle a
large I88U8 that Is personally Important
to you remarkably . ellacllvllly. Keep
your eye on the prize.
LEO (JuiJ·2S-Aug. 22) People performIng apeclal ,taaka or tiUIOnments lor you
todly must bl given encouragement aa
well as _..,., lnllructlona. An ab- o f either could cauH problema.
• VIIIGO (Aug. 2Jelepl. 22) II' I not llklly
you'll do too mttC/1 eboul an tldvantaIJOOUI development o - you todiY.
bleau.. you might get lnvoMd prematuralywllh an..-ttw 8lly.
careful.
U8RA (...... 2S-Oct. IS) H you're no. gollellng an IIQI801o..,t wllh another todaf. blcattaln you hove d tM filets at
your dlapooal and, )uatto bl aale, dou·
ble cheek thOH 8lready In your
Inventory.
.
• ICOIII'IO (Oct. 114-No¥. 211 Utually you

&lt;!lll Nf9ht Court
\121• America onlght

at Joltn Mac:Nalt)''a

·
Chrlatmao Irish tenor John
MacNally partorms classic
holiday tunea. (0:30)

=
a

SportiCenter
Sport• Tonight

1I
3

I
II I

1. I 1 I

7 •~

•

lmpo~llbla'

CU~NIIIht

IIJ Thl lqualt&amp;ar
atNalhvllll Now

tD LJglrlar llda of Spotts

I
I I 0

19•

•

'

""If'

FORI
.

~.

.'

"' '

~

·'I&gt;

.. '
......

In ...

1 1 1·. 1• I' I' I' r I
I I I I I I I I· I
3

2

r ~'

~- ·~·I

Comp.... tlw chucltlo quotM
by lllhng
m..... _ .
you dovolop , _ """ No. 3 ltelow•

•

oft PRINT NUMB1RED 11
Q
LETTERS .
·
oft UNSCRAMBLE
V ANSWER

''

·-------· There!"

TIEN[C .

...'.,

.

..••

'•·

.~

•·

SCJAMUTS AHIWal
,.. "
Mosaic- Noisy- t~ate- Detain- AT ONCE . . ·
My n~ighbar, who has 5 kids, returned from the sh!le··
store and sighed, "New shoes hurt the most when you,
have to buy them all AT ONCE.!"

....,..

~-.,.

·~·

.•.

..

.-----------~ - ~

NOKI'II ·

-..
. ...

ll·l'l·lt

'

.JH

""...

• 10186%
+Q

~

...
..:.".

+A911

JAMES
JACOJri

...

•••

EAST

WEST

.Q 106
.J73

...

+AKU

tJ54

...·-.'.

~-· '1-

tA987&amp;Z

+QJI3

. "'' -"'·

+10 52

~ · ·~
~ ~~

soum

. . .'
·""

Uf3
•AKQ54
t K 10 3

Same card,
different story

,. "'!•.U

........,.

+Kt
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

By James Jacoby

A competitive bidding auction can
help tbe defense draw logical infer·
ences. That is what happened in today's deal, played at the World Mixl:d
Pairs.Cbampionsl!ip in September.
At several tables South overeaUed
with one no'trump and in most cases
still wound up as declarer In a partscore heart contract (North using a
· · special transfer bid). Invariably West
led a diamond; East shifted to the king
of spade!i and, seeing West's eneouraging 10-spot, continued with ace and another spade. Now West was on lead
with the third roUDd ol spades and bad
to give up the lead 10 declarer, who
quickly~drJ1W trumps and claimed nine
tricks.
But today's auction helped East detennine the winning defense. East
won the ace of diamonds and cashed
the king of.spades. But the 10 of spades
told a different story to East after his
bidding. If West had started with a

S.O

3.

1•

'

Well

Nardo

Eut

Pus
Pus

Pus
2•

It
2•

..
'---'---------1 ....•...
Allpua

.

Opening lead: t 4

~. ~.

.

,,.~, K .

'''

~·· ·

. ._ ,?&lt;..,

-

·-'•

.,1;~

doubleton spade, surely the 10 of - •
spades would have been bll oPenla&amp; · '.','::
lead. So East underled bll ice ol :--::spades to West's queen; Welt played .. .-·
back his third spade to East, .and a :c~
.fourth round of spades pro~ the {
settiDg trick for West with the jack of --·hearts. Nifty.
": ~:
JomsJM:O!Jy)- •J_, .. . , _ . . _
"
"JII&lt;'J6y .. c.nu;.,..·(...,;ttMrntUI6to,_, :.!!;
t/w ~-~ OlnJd JMJflbr) .,. IKIW IIPI.IJIIM af .,,..~,
- . -.BotJu"' poohl"'rl
' &lt;'f•
® _ _.....,. .. , .., 1 1 ....

br,..,...-.

• ••• ) &lt;'\ •

. ,,;r,.

...,.,
- ..

CROSSWORD

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

d

ACROSS
2 Fuss
1 OriantaJ
3 Seaman
temple
4 Salem
7 Deal out
setting
11. WoiShlps
5 Moore's
120fthe
"10~
mouth
costar .
13 "Auld
6 The
Lang
Charles'
Syna"
dog
author
7 Rich
15 Bike parts
dessert
111 Frenzied
8 Go awry
18 Spot
t Do leather
21 Study
work
carefully
1D City
22 Become
trains
furious
14 AKC
24 Tag
concern
players
15 Misba25 ·-·s Little
have
kia•
17 Bittiards
~ Corrida
shot
cheat
111 Like a
27 Common
peacock
exercise
28 Eats in
I hi
evening
30 Disrobe
31 Young
fellows
32 Trite
34 Comic
born on
Jan. 20,

"""

' 'l,t'V,
.J

•""loll

- --~ ·

. . ii'

..-..~·

/

.... ..,..

.

:"r' ''"C"

.... .

., '
;; •
,,~

' .~

barks
21 Try the
tea
22 Soak up
23- Moines
25 Labor
camp
281sraet's
national
language
29 Greet the
general
31 Record

company
33 Beatty
and
,
Buntline:
34 Motorist&amp;
need
35 Pig out
36 Refinery
need
37 Actress,
-Dawn
Chong
38 Wee b~e
38 Foxy

-'

•7' '" "

·. '
"' "·''
~ "" '

... . .........
..."'"
..""
~ ~ ···~"v..
-~_..,
\

r~

... !, "'

. . ...

--....
.....:~\·

- ::z;
.. ,

1898 .

· ... ·~

40 Swiss
river
41 Fine point
42 Meat-and·
potato

........,

.,

-~,.

1• • : -

•I

..,

..

••

dish
43 Bashful's
friand

DOWN
1 Golf goal

DAJLYCRYP'I'OQUO'I'ES-Here'tbowlawiJir;lt:

11127

....•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

P.l.
Talk Show

IIJID ' . 1111011:

Signinblg

~:;~;:::;=;;:;::.:.,
•

..

• • •. I.'

• ~~~e·p~~es,t~ ~~nn~~

6

5

Miium,

®D

I

.EGERM

11:35 (l) C-1:;1
1111

I

1~

12:aa (J) D Into lha Nlgltt Stereo. ·

One leUer stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two 0'*• etc. Single letters,
apoatrophel, lhe length and lonnat!oo ollhe words 1re all
hints. Each day lhe code letters are different.

,,-.,
..

·~

8-..Nighl

Olonanu

CIM'TOQlJO'IE

12:GI &lt;ll Nlghlllne 1:;1
12:30 (]) D GJ Late Nlgltt W111t

a.

ll-27

Dmcl Llftllnllen
()) MOVII: Attacll Force Z

RC

HU

FLCBW

tRI (2:00)

MO

RC

FCMOCE

Shootout from llrl1tot. Tenn.

NMRS ·

&lt;!). llannr Hll
D IHIIA II8Dini1HRA

RSU

CX

. QMLRBU

KCBLOUAX

DERMWCRU.-

(T)

12::11111 MOVfi: Rftltl to 111117
(2:00)

have rather good poJuera or conQJtutrallon, but today your mind might not bl
on· your work. Try to get a competent
helpmate to . . . . • beck-up.

N0 RF D

Ill Love Connactlon

rf .

.

l

t:oo I)) • ., ... Gtly
~MOVIE: Tho~

HUEGDZME

XLDEYAME

Ye II ...·~ ~ Caul ~- PRIDE AND

·sELF-

OPINION KINDLES THE FLAMING SWORD WHICH
WAVES US OFF FROM PARADISE. - WALTER

scon

Clo900 t&gt;y .... F - s -. .,.,

·'

�Pllge-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 27. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Family Medicine

Former S&amp;L regulator
fires ope~ing salvo

Oh.io University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

an

adult
"ARE YOU EVER TOO OLD other hand, screening
population
for
this
same
illness
FOR A PHYSICAL?"
QUESTION • I am writing 10 would offer little benefit; therefore
inquire about the upper-level it is not done. With most tests,
gwdelines foe medical tests. We though, age is only one of a number
have all ~ that it is good 10 of factors that need to be con·
have a pap test, mammograms, sidered. It is often difficult to
cholesterol tests, etc. periodically. decide when a specific test is apIs there an upper-age limit after propriate in a given case and offer·
which these tests are no longer use· ing advice on such matters is one of
the things for wnich you pay your
ful?
.
physician.
ANSWER • Our society · is
QUESTION
; Now that I am
slowly changing its awareness from ·
age
85,
my
,doctor
no l_onger wis~es
one that only "paid . aaauion 10
to
give
me
these
rouune
screerung
health matters when an illness is
tests.
Is
this
reasonable?
playing a greater role. Routine
ANSWER • You mentioned that
physical examinations and screenyou
are concerned about whether
ing tests are part of a wellness
you
need
a pap test, mammogram
program directed at early detection
and
cholesterol
test. Is your general
and prevention of illness is playing
health
good?
Are
you active physi·
a greater role, Routine physical ex·
cally
and
mentally?
If the answer is
aminations and screening tests are
yes,
and
I
sugpect
that it is, then
part of a wellness program directed
at early detection and prevention of screening tests such as these would
illness. The rclative benefit of a be beneficial. If, on the other hand,
given test changes with age, life your health is relatively poor from
habi.ts, exposure 10 chemicals and heart disease or other problems, it
many other things. That is, in part, may not be as effective to do
why it is difficult~ 10 publish a routine screening tests, Rather; tests
simple schedule of screening tests that . help evaluate your specific
and have that list be truly ap- health problems would be a wiser
plicable 10 a wide number of in· choice.
The lilcelihood of developing
dividuals.
breast
cancer increases as you get
Let me give you an example.
so the American Cancer
older,
Babies are routinely screened for
Society
and I certainly think that
an illness called phenylketonuria,
you
should
have mammography
because immediate diagnosis and
yearly.
The
pap
test is designed to
treatment wiD make a significant
difference in their lives. On the detect cancer of the cervix, the

Familr
Medicine
john C. Wolf, 0.0.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
lower ponion of the uterus. The
lilcelihood of devel9Jlin$ carlcer of
the cervix decreases slightly wilh
advanced age, but cancer of the
body of the uterus • the upper portion • is a potential problem. A test
similar 10 the "Pap" test can be
done to check for uterine cancer by
your family doctor or gynecologist.
I recommend that you have this
done yearly.
Cholesterol testing is an interest·
ing matter. Elevated blood levels
increase the risk of developing
serious heart and circulatory conditions. . The researCh evaluating
this has all been done on middle·
aged men because they have a high
risk of developing this type of
problem. It is nO! lcnown if the
levels of cholesterol that are dan·
gerous for middle-aged men are a
risk for women in their 80's. You
have already proven your genetic
fitness and efforts at good health by
surviving to your current age. It is
unlilcely that b_'e8tment of a mild

cholesterol elevation with anything
more than diet would be sensible.
All the medications used to lower
cholesterol have side effects bad
enough that their benefits FOR
YOU is less than their potential

risks.
So, it seems that the problem you
have is primarily one of a difference in viewpoint with your
physician. You are interested in
health care directred at preventing
illness and maintaining your health
at its optimal level. Your physician
appears to prefer to deal with acute
health care problems instead of
prevention. Talk with your docrot
about this. If you cannOt reach an
understanding, I would recommend
you seelc out another physician
whose goals for your health care
· coincide with your own.
"Family Medicine" is a weeldy
column. To submit questions. write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of OsteOpathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701 .

Cavazos: Colleges must cut expenses .to
keep tuition affordable for all students
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Edu·
cation Secretary Lauro Cavazos
says colleges and universities
must cut costs so they can reduce
tuition, but he also noted the
public has a " misconception"
that higher education · is
unaffordabl.e.
Cavazos released three re!iQrts
Monday· on the costs of higher
education. including a handho"ok
called "Tough Choices" to help
colleges examine priorities and
devise spending controls.
College tuition has risen much
faster than the rate of· Inflation.
Between 1975 and 1987,
inflation-adjusted tuition grew 28
percent at public colleges and 44
percent at private colleges, the
department said. In the fall of
1990, average college tuitions
rose about 8 percent at most
institutions.
Wl)lle .student financial aid
grew faster than inflation during
the 1980s, it did not keep pace
with tuition Increases. the de·
partment said. ·
"It is now time for indivld~al
colleges and universities to ask
hard questions, set ·strict llmlts
and start making tough choices,"
said Cavazos, who was president
of Texas Tecch University from
1980·1988.
.
He said these choices could
mean dropping .an entire depart·
ment, foregoing recrujtment of
hlgh-prieed researchers oreliml·
nating athletics.
" It has to decide what kind of
institution it wants to be,"
Cavazos said. "When there Is a
university close by that offers
duplication. why don't Wu let
someone else do it? " he said.
But a spokeswoman for the
American Association of Colle·

giate Registrars and Admission
Officers, said colleges have been
reticent about lowering tuition.
"They're pricing themselves.
out of the market. The concept of
cutting tuition has not gotten
through to higher education.
Universities are going to have to
make some changes," said Doris
Johnson.
Reasons fer tuition Increases
are many, the Education Depart·
ment said, including faculty
salaries, reduced gover~ent or
endowment subsidies, costs of
computers .in instruction and
administration, and expensive
laboratory equipment.
But as Cavazos urged colleges
to control costs. he also con·
tended higher education Is stlll
affordable - you just have to
look for it. He said that while the
average · tuition at · Independent
fouq•ear Institutions Is $9,400
per academic year, It Is just
$1,800 at public· supported
collegess.
Cavazos blamed publicity
about the most expensive schools
for misleading people . about
college costs .
"Unfortunately, such mlscon·
ceptions inay discourage stu·
dents and families who are trying
to prepare for college. They may
think that the situation Is hope·
· less. that they will not be able to
afford a college education, Cava·
zos said.
"The reality is that wlth a little
planning, virtually every family
- including those in the low· and
middle-income range - can
afford college." Cavazos said.
adding, though, he· has seen· no
reduced enrollment resulting
from these "misconceptions."
. . A spokesman for the American

People in .the news-·----.
HELMSLEYS' NEW CAUSE: Tax cheater Leona Helmsley,
trying to ·shed . the "queen of mean' ' nickname. Is getting
Involved In the fight against Alzheimer's disease. Helms ley and
her hotel magnate husband , Harry, 81, donated $300,000 to
sponsor the Helms ley Alzheimer's Alert Program to help track
down Alzheimer's victims who get lost. " I am trying to reach
out to people everywhere and urge them to combat Alzheimer's
through their dollars, " said Leona, who Is ap(leallng her tax
fraud conviction. "Each and every contribution, no matter how
small, wlll bring us one step closer to the cure, which some
researchers suggest may be on the doorstep. I am aware that
Alzheimer's has touched many fam!Ues who keep It a secret
because they feel that a stigma is attached to it. However,
everyone should understand that Alzheimer's does not rub off
on anyone. Perhaps If more people stepped forward and talked
openly about Alzlrelmer's, the day for a cure might arrive
sooner." Harry Helms ley was originally charged In the tax case
but said he could not help In his defen§e because he suffered
moderately severe dementia that causes long· and short-term
memory loss.
LOVE 1 FOR SALE: Mary Lou Retton is marketing her
romantic life. The former Olympic gymnastics star recently
appeared at three discount department stores In Dallas to
promote "the official Mary Lou Retton engagement ring." The
stores otfe'r replicas of the diamond solitaire Retton received
from her fiance, fanner University of Texas quarterback
Shannon Kelly. The couple wlll wed next spring.
A BRUSH WITH CELEBRITY: Celebrity artworks go on the
auction block Tuesday night at a New York art gallery and the
proceeds will benefit the American Cancer Society. The event
wlll be in memory of actress Jill Ireland, who died of breast
cancer. and some of her works will be for sale, along with those
by her husband, Charles Bronson. The auction also will Include
pieces by Henry Fonda, Jame1 Dean, Allred mtchock, Dennis
Hopper, Bllly Dee WI Warns and a portrait by Marilyn Monroe .
MILLI VANU.LI LAW: There's more MIJU VanUII backlash
from Massachusetts. Two state legislators have ·proposed ·
legislation that would alert concert·goers when their Idols are
llp-synchlng or using recorded music. ''If you pay real money
tor a concert you ought to get real live music In return," said
Rep. Kevin Poirier, who co-sponsored the bill with WIWam
Vernon. "Hopefully, the MUll Vanllll bill will keep other
pretenders from mouthing It In Massachusetts." Similar
legislation has been proposed In other states, Including
Calitornla, New York and New Jersey.

'

Council on Education. which
represents public and private
colleges and universities, said
Institutions are already looking
for ways to cut costs.
"Most of what's In the report is
based on things already happen·
ing. That's not to say, though,
that moro:&gt; should not be done,"
said spokesman David Merko·
wltz, citing a recent decision by
Washington University in St.
Louis to eliminate .Jts dental and
sociology departments.
·He also said it is "quite
possible" that If schools reduce
Investments in computer or lab
equipment, it could lead to
Inferior education.

Some private universities have
started novel recruitment programs to encourage enrollment.
For example, at Union College
In Schenectady, N.Y., students
can have their loans canceled at
a rate of 20 percent for each year
after graduation they engage In
public service · jobs, such as
public schOol teaching or work In
the Peace Corps. Union's 1990·
1991 tuition Is $14, 420.
At B;ird College In Annandaleon-Hudson, N.Y., students who
graduate In the top 10 of their
publlc high school class can
attend Bard for the same cost as
their local state school.

Judge concerned with
image of Noriega trial
MIAMI (UP!) - The govern,
ment has been ordered to deter·
mine how much of deposed
Panamanian dictator Manuel
Noriega's frozen assets may
have come from Jllegal means so
some funds can be released for
his defense against drug
charges.
U.S. Dls.trict Judge William
Hoeveler Mondaoy also set a
closed hearing for Wednesday to
determine whether the so-c;tlled
CNN tapes can be aired by the
cable network.
~oeveler gave· prosecutors un·
til the end of the week to make a
determlnatlon on what funds the
general may have access to for
his defense. The judge said he
would set a hear! ng on the issue If
the governrnen_t did not act by
then.
"I am deeply concerned about
the Image that this case seems to
be acquiring ... that this defend·
ant Is not going to get a fair
trial," he said. "I am bound and
determined that this defendant Is
going to get a fair trial."
Noriega's deterlse lawyers say
they have not been paid and have
received very little money tor his
defense since January because
the U.S. goverliment requested
that at least $27 million of the
general's assets held In foreign
bank accounts be frozen on the
premise ,t he money is drug
tainted.
They had asked that they at
least be given court:appolnled
status so the government would
be responsible ' for their .fees.
They wanted special consldera·
tion so they could get more than
the maximum of $75 an hour the
government can pay for some·
one's defense.
Hoeveler ruled Monday that
$75 was the most the government
could pay, but he ordered the
government to look Into the
alternative remedy · of having
prosecutors determine If any ·of
the general's own money could
be released for his defense.
Several months ago lhe gO·
vernment agreed to help Noriega
find money for his defense and
Hoeveler's order Monday meant
prosecutors had not kept their
promise, lead defense attorney
Frank Rubino said .
"My opinion Is that Judge
lfoeveler thinks the government
can do more than It has do !II! to
release the full!ls ... so he's going
to put the tat to the fire."
The&gt;Judgealso seta hearing for
Wednesday on whether Cable
News Network can broadcast
tapes of telephone conversations
Noriega hail from his Jail cell
with members of his defense

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Meet-.
lngs the ~-called Keatlne Five
senators held with bank regula·
tors In 1987 capped a campaign of
" private threats and public vlllfl·
cation" aimed at gutting federal
oversight of the thrift Industry,
the nation's former chief savings
and loan regulator told a Senate
panel.
In his opening statement to the
ethics comnllttee Monday, Ed·
win Gray, the former chairman
of the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, said accused S&amp; L kingpin
Charles Keating Jr. enlisted
"paid apologists" to combat
federal regulators to thwart
measures to rope In a thrift
Industry golll! wild In the 1980s.
Gray's statement came at the
end of the fifth day of hearings
Into whether the five senators Dennis DeConclni, D·Ariz. , Alan
Cr3!1ston, D, Calif. , John Glenn,
D·Ohlo, John McCain, R·Ariz . ."
· and Donald Riegle, D· Mich .. Improperly pressured bank regulators to benefit Keating, who
now faces rackeeterlng charges
In California.
Earller, Laurie Sedlmayr, De·
Conclnl's aide spec)alizlng In
banking and financial issues, told
the committee she strongly
warned her bo~s against attend.
lng a 1987 meeting with Gray that
has become a central part of
lnfluence·peddllng allegations.
Gray Is a key figure In the case
against the five senators.
Without aides present, Cran·
ston, DeConclnl, Glenn and
McCain attended ·a one-hour
meeting on AprU 2, 1987, In
DeConclni's office.
Gray has accused the senators
of offering the government a'deal
on behalf of Keating that would
have Included dropping an loves·
ligation Into Keating's
California-based Lincoln Sav·
lngs and Loan In exchange for
certain concesslo.ns from the
.t hrift.
.
Gray, In his statement, shied
away from speclflc ailegatlons
against the five. senators, who .
received a total of $1.3 mllllon In
·contribu lions from Keating. He
Is slated to be ques do ned by the
committee's special counsel, Ro·
bert Bennett, ;md lawyers re·
presenting the five senators
Tuesday.
Lincoln's 1989 failure Is ex·
peeled to cost (he taxpayers
abOut $2 billion and stands as the
largest collapse In the nation's
savings and loan scandal.

team.
CNN complied with a court
order and turned over copies of
the tapes to Hoeveler Nov. 20.
Hoeveler asked U.S. Magistrate
William Turnoff to listen to the
recordings and advise whether
broadcasting them would violate
Noriega's right to a fair trla1.
He temporarily barred CNN
from broadcasting the tapes
pending the review, and the U.S.
Supreme Court upheld the order.
But CNN played a portion of
the tapes after Hoe~eler's order,
and Noriega's lawyers asked the
judge to hold the network In
contempt of court. ·The Judge
took that request under advise·
ment pending resolution of the
Issue.
Hoeveler did not listen to the
tapes himself because he feared .
he would be forced to remove
himself from the trial if he heard
recorded conversations pertain·
lng to defense strategy.
Noriega Is ·charged with pro·
vldlng a · drug-trafficking and
money laundering sanctuary for
South American drug smugglers.
His trial Is scheduled to begin In
Jan. 29, but is expected to be
postpOned. If convicted, Noriega
would face a maximum of 145
yearsJn prison and $1.1 mllllon In
fines.
. "We all hope to.c ome to trialone day," H:oeveler said at the
end of Monday's hearing.

llarrz'sonville new.s
Mrs. Stella Atkilis and Miss
Ruby Diehl were Thursday diooer
guests of Mr. and MIS. Paul.Kloes,
Syracuse.
.
Charles Al)cire, Helen f.i.ckens,.
Racine, · J,ena· Hewitt and Ray
Alkire, Columbus, were ~nt
gu~ ofMr. and MIS. Bob Allcin:.
Th1lrsll_ay dinner guests of Mr.
and MIS. Bob Mahr were Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Foley and family
· Syracuse, Mr. and MIS. BiD Foley, '
Kippie
and .Cryslal
South,
· · Pomeroy. Mr. and MIS. Gary Foley
Jr. and family, Apple Grove, W.Va.;
Chad Gaus, Rutllnd, Sandra Foley ·
and family, Milwaukee, Wise.;
Frances Foley, and Bill and Debbie
Foley and 1011, Colwnbus. Music
for the day was provided by Bill
"rOiey.
1
Mrs. 'Ilunra Lyons and sons,
SoudJ Caroline, were Saturday dinner guests of her grandmother, Lola
Clarlt.
'Ibantsgiving dinner guesiJ of
Mr. and MIS. Sam SticnmeniZ were
Mr. and MIS. Ed DiU and family,
Jeny Bcrevik, Penny Pridemore

aM David Sticnmentz. Odlen visit·
ing were Mr. and MIS: Gil)' PIJii.
lips and sons, Athens.

.

1"

Referring to the key meeting
and Olll! seven days later' that the
senators held .with other bank
regulators, Gray told the com·
mlttee: "Thesemeetingscappect
years of private threats and
public vilification designed not
just to change particular decl·
slons by the bank •hoard but to
render us unable to carry out our
central responslbl}ltles to protect
the 'financial system and the
taxpayers from loss."
Gray said ihe · urgency of the:
Implosion of the thrift Industry'
demanded "a more sober treat··
men!" by the five senators,
although he said the alleged
political pressure tactics "did
not Intimidate me or my
regulators." .
''We have heard a lot in these
hearJilgs about the responslblllty
of senators to represent constitu·
ent Interests,'.' Gray Said lh .
reference to ·claims by all five
senators· that any actions taken·
regarding Keating were legit!·
mate forms of as sis lance to an
Important constlt)lent and·
businessman.
"But 1 have always assumed
that we also send out senators to
Washington because we think
they will hilve the sense to know
when narrow constituent demands must take a back seat to
the safetyotthelrconstituents as
a whole,'' Gray added.
,
None of the five senators was
present when Gray spoke.
Gray also said Keating orchestrated an ImpreSsion that Gray
had a
"vendetta" against
Keating as a tool to fight any
bank hoard regulations In the
future.
•
DeConclnl's aide Sedlmayr
said she believed attending the
meellng wllh Gray would be "a
poUtlcal mistake," polnllng to
the current hearings as belated
evidence.
"I told him I dldn' llhlnk It was
a good Idea .a'nd later would be
misinterpreted by the press,"
Sedlmayr testified. "He (DeCon·
clnl 1thanked me for my sugges·
~on, but sa!d he was going to go
· ahead anyway."
·
But she stressed she had no
problems with the "propriety" of
such a meeting, although she
said she feared Gray would
"misinterpret" Its meaning.
Last week, a McCain aide also
said she also unsuccessfully tried
to dlsuade her bOss from attend·
lng one of the meetings.

,,1, ,

Bowler of Week photograph
leads to fugitive's
arrest
.
.

SAGINAW, Mich. (UPI) - A
woman wanted since March on
drug ·•and money laundering
charges was arrested while ho·
wllng after helng Identified ·In a
"Bowler of the Week' ' news·
paper , photograph, authorities ·
said Monday.
Amanda Guild, 30, of Saginaw,
was Indicted with five other
people In Jackson. Tenn., o"ri
chilrges of conspiracy, posses·
sian with Intent to distribute
marijuana and cocaine, money
laundering, obstruction and
perjury.
The U.S. Marshals Service was
asked by the Internal Revenue
Service to help arrest people in
the Tennessee Indictments
known to live in Michigan.
The others were arrested ear·
lier but Guild's whereabouts
remained unknown · until the

howling ·picture appeared In the
Saginaw News, providing the
league name and location of
where she howled.
At the time of · her arrest
Sunday afternoon, G.ulld was In
the fourth frame of her first
game In the ·s unday Afternoon
Women 's Leauge at Americana
Lanes In Buena Vista Township,
the Marshals Service said.
She was arrested without Jncl•
dent, authorities said.

Ohio Lottery
Southern beats
North GaUia
Page 4

Vol.41 . No. 154
\ Copyrighted 1990

GNP ·up .1.7%, durables gain
WASHINGTON .( UPI) - The ment reports.
an Increase in demand for
nation' s total output of goods and
Economists .e xpected a 1.9 · commercial aircraft, as the
services increased a revised 1.7 percent gain In the real GNP tor world's airlines placed more
percent in the third quarter while July. August and September orders to replace their older and
orders for durable goods jumped · following a 1.8 percent adv;tnce less fuel efficient jet fleets.
3.6 percent In Octobe;, the in the previous quarter, and no . But "since reaching a high in
Commerce Department said change from September to Oc· December 1988 of $132.1 billion.
Wednesday .
Iober for durable goods (total) orders have been unsta·
The latest gross national pro- expenalve Items from aircraft to ble, fluctuating around a
duct rise of $18 billion was household appliances manufac- monthly average of $125.9 bll·
we')ker than a preliminary est!·
lured to last three or more years. lion," the government said.
mate released last month, and
The data were adjusted for
The October total was about
the surge In durable goods orders seasonal factors.
$129.45 billion.
·
~ the best since May - offset a
The approximately $4.5 bllllon
Not counting transportation
drop otl.6 percent In September, increase .In October dprable equipment, durable goods orders
according. to a pair ofgovern· goods was attributed mainly to were down. 0.4 percent in Oc·

tober. Excluding defense .hard·
ware, orders were up 4.5 percent
last month.
Exports - Including aircraft,
chemicals and and. scientific
equipment- have been a bright
spot for the durable goods and
GNP data lor most of the year.
For example, exports of goods
and services advanced 4.3 per·
cent over the previous quarter In
the latest GNP report.
A final real GNP estimate wlll
be released by the Commerce ·· ·
Department In December.

Middleport receives final
funding for river bank repair
Village of Middleport complete the
project funding. · . .
Sentloel news staff
According to Middleport Mayor .
Final funding for the $741,000
Fred
Hoffmall, the U.S. Corps of
U~ S. Corps of En~ineers project of
Engineers
has set a tentative date of
repairing the senou$ Ohlo .River
Jan.
I
for
starting
on the project
·
bank erosion problems near the
The
erosion
of
the
river
bank:
has
Middleport sewage lagoons was
threatened a breakdown in the
announced Wednesday morning. ·
State Rep. Mary Abel, (D· walls of the lagoon which could
Athens) and Sen. Jan Michael Long possibly cause sewage seepage into
(D-Circlevi!le) reported that the vii· the Ohio River.
"Without these . repairs, t!Je
!age has been awarded a $199,300
grant from
the Community sewage seeping in the river could
Development Block · Grant Im· pose a very serious threat", comminent·Threat Fund for the prOject. mented Rep. Abel in .annoWK:ing
That amount completes funding for the new funding:. "We ,are hiii!PY to
the 'tfilndt' provil(e{l tl)at will .
the project. '
. .
.
·eliminate
that hazard o e -and ·for
Earlier the Meigs Cqll!lty .com·
missioners had awarded $30,000 in . all."
'
"These funds represent a cQm·
.Community Development Block
Grant monies for the project and mitment from the State of Ohio to
those two amounts added to the assist our local governments with
$500,000 from the Corps; River their infrastructure need," Sen.
Bank Fund and $12,000 from the Long ,Said.

By CH,4.RLENE HOEFLICH

-see"

MRDD completes 4-year goal
With its acquisition of a new 54passenger International school bus.
the Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and . Developmental
Disability has completed its four·
. year goal of conversion to a fleet of
all diesel-driven buses for its
program.
According, to a news release
from lhe MRDD board, the
$42,393 needed to purchase the
vehicle will be reimbursed to the
board through funds from the Ohio
Department of Education.
The new International replaces
the gasoline-model International
bus tjult i1as been in service in the
county-wide program since 1977.
That vehicle has traveled more than
246,()()(). miles.

The · new bus, accooiing to the
board, has been modified for
wheelchaii- passengers. increasing
route capacity 10 thirty, in addition
to providing four wheelchair accomodati()l)s.
.
·
The conversion to an all-diese(
fleet, according to the news release,
will allow the board .to realize an
average savings in fuel costs of up
to 10 percent.
The board expects to place the
c;~ld vehicle on the auction block,
for sale to ·the highest bidder, at its
regular meeting in December.
Money froni the sale of the old bus
will · be ckiducted from the IOta!
reimbursement by the Ohio
DepartmCWi of Education.

I

\.

" ..... ·~

HOLIDAY RAIL FAIR • MeiFS County memben of the
· Railroad Club or Southeastern Oh10 will be partlclpadng In the
lOth Annual Holiday Rail Fair to be staeed Dec. 8 and 9 from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Athens City Recreatloo Center, 733 ~
State Street, Athens. Here tbe members display a new cara•valthemed, four-root module created this year which will be hooked

into their 32-foot by 10-foot layout for the exhibit. All of tbe
iayouts at the Sliow which bas no admission charge will be
operating. There wUI be refreshments and door prizes available
on both days. Participating Meigs Countians from the len are
Mathew Justice, Brian Justice, N"athal! Robinett~. Gerald Shus·
ter, "David Robinette, and Charles Legar.

Board approves substitutes, ..salaries, policy
Two persons were added 10 the comprehensive business education,
substitute reachers list for the 1990- seventh through 12th.
91 school year at a brief meeting of 1 Anne Gouron was accepted as a
the Meigs Local Board of Educa- foreign exchange student at Meigs
lion Tuesday night
High School for the second semes·
They were Jodi Harrison, cer- , ter.
.
tified to teach first through eighth,
The board approved salary mand Sandra Holcomb certified for creases for the secretary to the su·
'
perintendent, the assistant tJ!' the
treasurer, and two administrative
secretaries for the second semester. ·
These were given 10 bring their·
salaries in line with the salary in·
qreases of non-certified personnel
awarded in the fall.

The board approved estimated . that the envelopes be returned . .On
expenses for the North Central As· the recommendation of Treasurer
sociation Evaluation 10 be held at Jane Fry, the board voted to
uansf~r $16,981 out of the old
Meigs High School Dec. 24.
Approval was also given for the Chapter I fund into a carryover
installation of Telecommunication Chapter I program to be used for
Long Distance Service in the teachers' salaries.
An executive session to discuss
Central Office after Supt. James
Carpenter reported on savings personnel problems was held folbeing experienced by bcith Athens lowing the open session. Attending
and Federal Hocking Districts with were Supt Carpenter, Treasurer
Fry, and board members, Bob Barthat system.
It was voted to distribute ton, president, Jeff Werry, Robert
paychecks in se8led window en- Snowden, larry ,R.upe.
velopes without the requirement

Food inflation to dip in 1991
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Food
prices will rise between 2 percent
and 5 percent In 1991, a return to
more moderate levels of price
lnfla tion after two years of
Increases In the range of 6
. percent, according to a govern·
ment forecast.
The Agriculture Department ·
estimate, released Tuesday; sug·
gested that food prices might
return to the stable levels of the
mld·1980s when annual increases
rose roughly 2 percent or 3
percent.
Food prices zoomed 5.8 percent
In 1989 and are expected to jump
about 6 percent this year due In
part to higher prices for fruit and
vegetables stemming from last
winter's freeze In the South. Milk
and meat prices also ran at high
levels for months.

Emy Olivarez~Orteza,
M.D.
.
-·
announce the opening of their
· practi~in

General Pediatrics
- ~~

Adolescent Medicine
at ·
2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Seeing patients

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday tbtough Friday

V..., ~. Poinii'IMIIrlt, YN 215560 (304) ~~

2 SecUons. 16 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newll)aper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, November 28, 1990

&amp;

1kJ PUASANJ' VALLEY HOSPITAL
• . , Tire faml' ol.proltmlotialt .

Moslly cloady Wednes6ay
nicht, with a low In the mid
308. Chance of rain is 20
percent. Parlly .cloudy Thurs·
day , With highs in the mid 40s.
Chance of preclpltallo.n Is 20
percent.

•

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

For appoinbnents call
(304) 675-4107

Pick 3: 958
Pick 4: 5987
Cards: 9-H;
J.C; 5-D; 7-S

CREA11VE FOR ClllUn'MAS • '1'1181
oae over llx toot 11111, oaen
tllree ad four feet tall,
crealed by
employees or Buk Oae ror tlleir spedal project
or rememberllll tlloee Ia rortvute. Sllftt aac·
don bklll oo tbe trees 011 dllplay II the
·Pomeroy B....,m ut' beiDa taktJI ucl wllatever
amouat .II railed wiD be pm1 to the Mllp
gnpevllle trftl,

were

'.County United Metllodla! Coopendve P•lsb for

"For 1991, a food price rise of 2
!lercent to 5 perceot Is In
prospect," said James Donald,
chairman of the department's
World A&amp;rlcultural Ou tiook
Board.
·
.
"Projected record meat supplies, higher dalty product output
and the ll!lellbood ofblaercltrus
crop&amp; thil seuon
moderate
food price r~s." he said. . ·
DoJtald added that proJections

""II

,

•

.

•

1"1

percent to 10 percent.
for lower inflation would hold
Estimates Show ed that
down any Increases In marketing
farmers
will produce a record
costs.
64.25 billion pounds of beef, pork,
Higher oil prices that followed
veal. mutton and poultry meat iri
Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait could
play a . role In determining the 1991. That is a 3 percent Increase
over this year and represents
size of food price lncrel!ses.
226.6 pounds of meat for every
Higher energy costs would
affect virtually every phase of American,
· Milk output is projected to rise
· the food system. from the ex·
·
between
1 percent and 2 percent
pense associated with growing
year 's 148 billion
from
this
crops to the cost ·pf shipping,
pounds
although
prices are ex·
packaging. processing and
peeled
to
soften
.
selling.
The citrus crop, slashed by a .
Major price hikes this year
were In fresh fruits, expected to devastating Christmas weekend
freeze last year. Is projected at
rise 14 percent to 17 percent;
13.5 million tons this season, up26
pork, up 10 percent to 14 percent;
processed fruits , up 10 to 13 percent. The new harvest is
percent and dairy products, up 8 under way .

Lottery profits plan opposed ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The chairman of the Ohio House
Ways and Means Committee said
opposition Is growing to a prOP'
osal by Gov. ~chard Celeste to
use $79.71n exc'ess lottery profits
to balance the state budget.
Celeste wants to switch the
money, earmarked for schools,
to the stale's general fund for use
· In non·schoql purposes.
"I think I would have a
problem with doing that." salq

•

t

\

Rep. Dean Conley, 0-Columbus.
"The Issue of excess Jottery
profits Is one the Legislature will
give some scrutiny. It will be
looked at fairly critically." .
· The money Is normally dlstrib·
uted statewide at the end of the
year on a per·pupll basis. The
dlsti'Jbudon is over and a hove the
state's i'egu~r aid to schools and
Is used lor capital purchases ·
such as computers and
textboolai.
·
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="303">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9576">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36502">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36501">
              <text>November 27, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="828">
      <name>cadle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="987">
      <name>norris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3246">
      <name>orr</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
