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Dear ADD Landers: Thank you
for printing that letter from the
woman in SarliSOta who had chemothezapy following a masteCtomy.
It was a godsend. I recently had a
radical mastectomy and learned that
I must start chemotherapy. The day
your column ran, a friend phoned to
make sure I had seen iL It gave me a
great deal of encouragement at a
time when I really needed it I hope
I will be as fortunate as the woman
who wrote. ·• ANI'! . G., PALOS
VERDES, CALIF.
DEAR CALIF.: Thanks for those
warm words. I'm keeping my
fmgers crossed for you. Not every·one was thrilled with that column.
Read on:
From Vancouver: I am furious
with lha! woman in Sarasota who
had chemotherapy after a radical
masteCtomy. She made it sound like
a day at the county fair. I had a
masteetom y I :i years ago and the
doctor ordered chemo, the whole
. load. I was exhausted and depressed,
· sick as a dog, and I couldn't lceep
food down. Maybe I shouldn't complain because rm here today, and I
wouldn't be had I not gone through
that hell. But to hear someone say,
"Those horrible stories about chemo
side effects ain't necessarily so"

burned me up.

ANN LANDERS
.. 19M,LMA• .... ,..
TlmN Syndlftlllf' •nd

( ,... ...... Syndlt'Mt'
San Diego: Those comments from
your correspondent in Sarasota who
said chemotherapy was a "breeze" feeling terrific and that's what.
needs clarifteation. There are sev- counts.
Jacksonville: I had a bilateral
eral regimens of chemo. Treaunent
lilastectomy
two years ago at M.D.
under some can go on for a year or
more, resulting in 10tal hair loss, AndersOn Hospital in Houston. (God
vomiting and loss of appetite. Thai bless those doctors. They are the
debilitating routine is essential, greatest) I was told there would be
however, when fighting cenain types debilitating side effects and there
of cancer. Afler my miiSieClOIIIy, I were. But when you're fighting for
was put on a regimen recommended your life, you lfe willing to go
by both the American Cancer through anything. Anyone who has
Society and the National Cancer questions about cancer treatment
Institule. It lasted six months; there should call 1-8()().4-CANCER, and
· was very liUle hair loss , and no if it's busv. keeP trying. This tine is
nausea or vomiting. I felt quile well provided by the National Cancer
the entire time. I hope you will Institute. Cancer is no longer a
explain to your readers that all dealh sentence. Thitnks to medical
cancers are not the same nor are all research •• mostly governmentfunded --lives are being saved every
treatment modalities.
!sand, Minn.: My husband was day.
So, dear readers, there you have
diagnosed with Hodglcin's disease in
July of 1989. He went through 12 , i~ from the best authorities of all ·chemotherapy treatments and 20 the people who have lived through
radiation procedures. He went iL And now I would like to recomthrough hell. That letter from the mend the "Look Good ... Feel
woman in Sarasota made him Better" program for women who are
. hopping mad. She made it sound as taking chemotherapy or soon will
if chemotherapy were a cinch and be. Write the C.T.F.A. Foundation,
anyone who complained was a 1100· Vermont Ave ., -N.W. ,
whiner. The side effects were a Washington, D.C. 20005, or call
nightmare, but he is alive today, 1-800-395-LOOK or your local
Anierican Cancer Society offiCe. The
free brochure on this program has
dozens of excellent suggestions on
how to improve your appearance,
Viola Young.
lift your spirits and hasten your
Second grade · Bllll!di Cod~er, return to a normal life.
all A's; Nick Bolin, Jaruce
Richards.
.
Third grade . Erin Bolin, Amta .
Holter and Joey McKinney.
Fourth grade - Patty Lawrence
and Jason Roush.
Sixth grade - Amy· Rizer, Greg
McKinney and Zach Couch.
LD. - Harry Swisher and David
Nakao.
D.H. - Lora Ward, all A's; Darlena Flowers.

Meigs honor rolls
Syracuse Elementary
The honor roll for Syracuse
Elementary has been announced ..
First grade - Nathan Martin;
Cody Wallace, all Ns: Matt Ash,
Danny Canter, Bdce Hill, Jonathan
Lewis, Stacey Mills, Chris Rope,
Mary Schultz, Jamie Smith, Cody
Wallace.
Second grade - Sarah Ash,
Joshua Larsen, all A's; Cara Ash,
Tamccka Counts, Jason Cundiff,
Jeremy
Fisher,
Ryan
Hill,
Stephanie Pullins, Edn Struble,
·Matthew Warner.
Third grade - Autumn Thomas,
all A's; Eugene Bing, Adam
Cumings, Joshua Davis, Steve
Tackett
Fourth grade - Bddget Cross,
Ashli Davis and Kim Sayre.
Fifth grade· - Evan Struble, .all
A's; Cynthia Caldwell, Jenmfer
Fdend, Billy Young.
Sixth grade - Bdan Allen, Jason
Lawrence, all A's; Jessica· County
Kevin Fields, Hillery Harris, Travis
Lisle and Amber Thomas.
Portland Elementary
The honor roll for the third six
weeks at Ponland Elementary has
been announced.
First grade - Tiffiny Carpenter,
Amanda
Huddleston,
Tyler
Johnson. Russell Krider, T~vanna
Moore, Rachel Allen, all As; Ike
Apperson, Tanya ~aker, An~ny
Barber. Chds Bums, Amy Wilson,

-

The Daily Sentinel

.By The ·Bend
Not always debilitating, _ Ann
chemotherapy is a help · Landers

.. . .

.._

Monday. December 10, 1990
Page 10

Louks
bridal
shower held

Soup of the Day - Pea Soup

Wednesday -Baked Ham
. Soup of the Day -

lro~coli

Soup

Vo1.41, No .163

Copyrighted

Thursd~v-Meat Loaf
Soup of the Day...:...han Soup &amp; Com Bread
Soup of the Day-Potato Soup

· Saturday-Chicken &amp; Noodles
Sunday-Roast Turkey &amp; Dressing

KENTUCKY FRIED ·
CHICKEN LIVERS DAILY
·

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 11, 1990

1 990

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport to help . fund development office

Friday-Ham Loaf

•

1y Restaurant
Crow's
Fam1
PH. 992-5432
POMEIOY, OHIO

and Mary Belle Duvall, Gayann
Clay, Lisa Frymyer, Jane Frymyer .1-----~~~!.!!!!~!.!f~rled!!_~Ch~l!!ck~en:__ _ _ __j
and Wilma Robinson.
~

ByBRIANJ. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The ViUage of Middleport will
support the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce's Execubve Director/Development Director for 1991
with a pledge of $2,()00 for the
calendar year.
Unanimous support for that ac·
lion came at Monday night's
regular meeting of Middleport Village Council at village hill.
The decision followed extenSive
discussion between council mem·
· bers and Lenny Eliason and Bruce
Reed, representing the chamber.
Council continued to stress its
recommendation of an office for
the director in Middleport, with
Councilman Paul. Gerard stating, "I

think maintaining the storefront in
Pomeroy is a mistake."
Gerard referred to the East Main
Street location of the chamber
office, the lack of running water in
the building and the maintenance
which needs to be perfonned on the
buildiltg.
Eliason ~ last njght that
the chamber mtends to maintain the
storefront as a visitor's center
regardless of where the director's
office is located.
The director, when appointed,
will ultimately decide the location
of his office, Reed said last night
However, Reed did mention his
desire to locate lhe director's office
at the current development office
on State Rou~e 7 at Uruon Avenue.

Though the commissioners have
indicated that this space (next to the
former unemployment office) cannot be promised to the new director, both Pomeroy and Middleport
have offered free office space for
the director, who is expected to be
at his desk by mid-January.
Middleport Council also stressed
that their one-year committment as opposed to other three-year, unconditional pledges received thus
far by the chamber - would be ter·
minated at year's end if the village
did not feellhat the director's perforrna'lCe
was
satisfactory.
Councilmembers also mentioned
their desire to see Middleport's
development office directly mvolved in the new county-wide office.

Bob Gilmore presented information to council last night about the
newly-formed Middleport Community Association, developed
recently to replace the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce, which
merged a year ago with the
Pomeroy Chamber to fonn the
county-wide chamber.
According to Association President Gilmore, the group meets once
a week, and welcomes business and
professional people as well as individuals interested in community
activities.
·
'
Dues for business people h3ve
been set at $25, while individual
memlierships are $5. The group
meets on the last Thursday of each
month in cooncil chambers at 5:30
p.m.

Don Vaughan has been elected as
vice president of the group, Dick
· Owen as secretary-treasurer and
Bdan Johnson serves as the group's
publicitY chainnan.
''This group is not meant to oppose the county-wide chamber,"
Gilmore said last night, and reported that the association is now
planning dances for both Valentine's Day and SL Patrick's Day, as
well-as assisting in the Fourth of
July celebration nex' summer and
developing plans for a catfish festival in 1991.
Council voted to replace two
doors on the firehouse last night.
Those doors will be purchased from
the Overhead Door Company of
Mid-Ohio Valley.
·

In other action, council:
- voted to raise fares for lhe
Public
Transportation
Grant
Program from 50 cents to 60 cents .
and general public fanes from a dollar to $1.20 for next year, upon the
approval of the Ohio Department of
Transportation;
· approved a list of employees
receiving Chrisanas bonuses;
- voted to join the Middleport
C9mmunity Association;
- reviewed .and approved the port
study contract in the amount of
$45,000 from Floyd Brown Associales, pending ODOT approval;
- commended the Middleport
Community Association on the
success of the Christmas parade.

•

4 Die in hot atr balloon·~ crash

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio '(UPI) - A WTVN radio, was driving to work
ager for the Bogey Inn, said she
hot air balloon drifted into a when he saw the balloon hit the' did not know who was in the
television tower and crashed tower.
balloon.
near the downtown llrea Tues"It was our balloon but I have
"It was one those nightmares
day , killing all four people you never expect to see," said
no ,other details," she said.
aboard, pollee said.
DOttie Crabtre.!, a ·secretary at
Rem my. ''I saw the green and
The balloon, owned by the white hot air baHoon with Bogey
a school near the launching area,
said she saw the balloon being
Bogey Inn restaruant and tav- Inn written on the side ofit.lt was
ern, took off from an open field In too close to the tower, and the
filled but did not see It take off.
"There's a big field near our
the south side of the city, drifted . side tile balloon hit the side of the
across CoiUJ11bus and hit the tower and dropped like a rock, at
school where those balloons take
l,OOO·foot WBNS.TV tower.
off," she said. "When I came to
least 800 to 900 feet to the
· work they almost had it filled. ''·
· ground."
John Remmy, a reporter for
Charlotte Bryant. office man-

DOCTORS WITH A HE'ART • Dr. Nick W.
Robinson, left, and Dr. Nancy P. Klme, seeood
on left, of the Meigs County Chiropractic CIIDic,
and the Obio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Pili
Sorority, conducted a program on Saturday, .
"The Dr. with a Heart," m which free chlroprK·
tk: services were offered to any per~D donating

a noD-perishable food item totalillg $10 or more.
. All ite~s collected, ap~roxlmately $800 ~rth 1
were gtven to the sorority chapter to distribute
to needy ramBles. RepreseatlnJ: the sorority are
Susan Clark, president; Jami~ Blaettnar, service
chairman; and Betsy Jones, vice president.

Racine council approves legislation
The Racine Village Council ap- have been binen by spidei-s that approved the clerk-treasurer's
proved a resolution authodzing a have crawled into their turnout financial report. The report reads as
follows:
Total
balance:
transfer of funds at their regular gear.
Council also approved the pur- $202,231.84;
general
fund,
meeting on Monday.
The transfer to the village's chase of 20 PBI hoods from · 52,418.81; street maintenance and
warer account will enable the ex- Snoufer's in Middleport. This fund' repair, 23,740.28; state highway,'
penses related to lhe waterline ing is from a $500 grant the fire 4,645.11; lire, 58,614.77; water
replacement on State Route 124 department received earlier this department, 49,493.64; water
deposits, 3,882.15; cemetery enfrom Oalc Grove Road to the east year.
Council declared the 1979 Chev- dowment, 6,800.
corporation limit would be included
in one item in the appropdation.
rolet police cruiser as excess
Super Now interest for the
Harry Bentz and Larry Wolfe property and will put it up for sale month of October totaled $827.10,
were elected to be the council's by sealed bids. Bids will be while Super Now interest for the
representatives on the Firemen's received by the clerk until 4 p.m. year through October 31 was
Dependency Board. The fire on Monday. Bids will be opened at $7,428.97. Receipts for the year to
November 31 was $194,941.29 and
ilepartment will elect two members, the January 7 meeting.
and the fifth member will be selecCouncil passed a resolution expenditures for the year to
authodzing the readvertisement for November 31 was $195,504.27.
ted from the community.
Council ·approved the fire bids for a tanker for the fire
Council adjourned until Monday,
department's request to get an ex- departmenL Th~e bids will also be January 7, 1991, subject to call for
terminator to spray the firehouse. received unti14 p.m. on January 7.
special meeting.
Several firemen, it was reported,
In other action, council members

'

Full rich Oavor,
~

ft111prlce.
•

Helen Teaford and Buelah Ward.

Iraq pardons deserters, dissidents;
hostages .wait for . outgoing flights

POINSETTIAS

$299

By LEE STOKES
United Press International
Iraq pardoned all of its dlssl·
dents and deserters · Tuesday,
Western hostages who were
ordered freed .by Saddam Hussein walled to leave, and a
published report said Mosq&gt;w

VIDEO

TOUCH
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy

Spec1al Offer

Middleport couple

...

GIVE BLOOD
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER

Mostly clear Tuesday night,
with. a low near fO . Mostly
sunny Wednesday, with highs
between 60 and 65.

•

Karr, Irene Parlcer, Kathleen Fryar,
Harriet Sinclair, Rose Ann Jenkins,

RED CROSS .BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12

A..C; J-D 5-S

Soup of the Day. - lean Soup &amp; Com Bread

~~:,ti:"8u~:"anrr"~iy~;:::

A GIFT FORM
THE HEART
.
.

Cards: K-H,

Tuesday-(Varies from Week to Week)

Amy Louks, bdde-elect of John
W. Rice, was recently honored with
a bridal shower at St. Paul's United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.
Cake, mints, chips, punch and
coffee were served.
·
Garnes were played and prizes
won by Elsie Folmer, Tara Woods,
Carol · Barnett, Robyn · Barnett,
Shelly Wood and Julie Mankin.
Olhers attending were Cheryl .
Browning, Mildred Caldwell,
Rubal Caldwell, Anna Rice,
Thelma Watkins, Mae Vineyard,
Mildred Brooks, · Hazel Barnhill,
Edna Harmon, Evelyn Spencer,
Jackie Frost, Sharon Louks, Mary
Jane Armes, Raeni Wood, 1luil
Woods, Erica Kessinger, Beverly
Willford, JoAnn Francis, Brenda
Weber, Lori Louks and Jonathan
Louks, and Betty Chevalier.
Sending gifts were Kathy R~
and family, Glen, Grace and Ke11h
Stout, Jim and Dorolhy Stout. Vicki
Woods, Randy, Edna and Jenny
Armes, Mary Vineyard, Louise and
Keith Chaffee, Eloise Manldn,
Robert and Elma Louks, Glenna
Riebel, Pam Bucldey, Joanna
Weaver, Phyllis Rice, Diane Rice,

Pomeroy UMW has meeting
Members of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Women met recently at
the home of Buelah Ward for a
Christmas dinner and gift exchange.
An offedng was coUected for
those at Sine Cera and 21 shut-in
calls were reported.
It was announced that Hope
Moore will serve as president for
the coming year.
Mrs. Moore presented a program
' on "Homeless People" and closed
with a poem by Helen Sreiner Rice.
Each member brought a toy to he
given to the Meigs · United
Methodist Cooperative Parish.
Attending were Mary Cundiff,
Mary Lisle, Ann Savage, Marcia

Pick 3: 336
Pick 4: 1605

·

Southern Junior High School .
The honor roll for the second six
weeks · at Southern Junior High
School has been announced.
Seventh grade - Paul lhle, Jennifer Lawrence, Rayan Ann Young,
all A's; Amanda Mills, Jason Bar·
nett, Robby Crow, Robin Gillespie,
C J. Harris, Ryan Hill, Roebelle
Jenkins, Craig Knigh~ Jay McKelvey, Denise Roush, · Jason
Shuler, Sammi Sisson, Nick Smith,
Angel Day, Joan Hart. Kim Smith,
Marion Snider and Sarina Winner.
Eighth grade - Mason Fisher,
Matt Morrow, Kendra Norri~ and
Courtney Roush, all A's; Willy
Childress, Bdan Anderson, Randy
Bing, Grant Circle, Scott Grace,
Kevin lhle, Andrea Moore, Shannon Morarity, · David Pickens,
Tracey Pickett, Amy Weaver and
Ryan Williams.

The support from family members, faculty and the community
can be an important asset in the
success of this organization, and
the success of the students.
·
Any inlerested person may become a memlicr by contacting the
school for an enrollment form, or
by coming to lhe meeting. The
meetings will be held at the school
once a month, with special events ..
to be held at the end of each grading periOd at the school.

14 days
until
Christmas

FROM CROW'S
Monday-Chicken &amp; Noodles

Meigs Junior High boosters
plan for Tuesday meeting
The
Meigs
Junior
High
Academic Boosters will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the junior high
cafeted a.
The newly fanned organization
has many goals and objectives
planned to benefit all the students at
the junior high . They are creating
ways to provide more encouragement for the students to achieve,
not orily academically, but also in
other areas, such as behavior and
attendance.

Ohio Lottery

wins $100,000

..

SURGEON GENERAL'S ·WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight..

C Philip MorriS lf'IC. 1990

14 mg .. ter;'I.Omu nitatineav. percigaretta by FTC method.

1:00-5:30
t

•

· According to the Marietta
ll.eglonal Offtce of the Oblo
Lottery, a couple from Meip
County were the recent wlanera
of the $180,100 Kicker Number.
The wlanlag ticket wu purchased a&amp; the Coualry Corner,
located on Route 7 Ia Kanauga.
Ownen of the atore are Ken and
Carol Farmer.
· The couple uked &amp;bat their
aame not be publlllbed.

has rejected a U.S. request for a
small Soviet military presence in
the Persian Gulf.
A Pentagon spokesman said a
Marine stationed In the gulf died
after collapsing on a pier follow·
lng a run, boosdng the number of
military personnel who have died
In connection with Operation
Desert Shield to 56.
The Washington Post reported
that U.S. Secretary of · State
. James Baker's urgings Of even a
small, symbolic Soviet military
force In the' gulf region were
rejected by Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze.
ClUng Informed Soviet sour·
ces, the Post said Baker told
Shevardnadze that such a Soviet
mUitary presence would enhance
the credibility of the threat
against Saddam.
But the sources told· the Post
that Shevardnadze replied that
~

publiC opinion In the Soviet Union
would not allOw Mikhail Gorba·
chev to make such a deployment.
A British-chartered Iraqi Air·
ways jetliner was walling to load
up with foreign hostages, Bagh·
dad Radio reported, and then fly
to London and freedom.
Hundreds of family mvmbers,
many waving American flags
and wearing yellow ribbons,
cheered as a U.S. -chartered Pan
Am 747 jumbo jet carryt11g 156
loved ones landed at Andrews Air
Force Base, Md., Monday ..
The 'airlift was the first mal or
wave of U.S. hostages to be
teleased since Saddam decided
Thursday to allow all hostages to
leave lraq.and occupied Kuwait.
The hostages had been held
against their will since Aug. 2
when Iraqi ' troops Invaded
Kuwait.

Holiday
program
SANTA AND MAX
Keith
Friend will portray "Santa" and ·
Mike B~II will portray "Max"
in the annual Carleton School
Christmas play, "Tbe Grinch
Wbo Stole Christmas," to be
presented tonight (Tuesday) at
the school in Syracuse at 6:45
p.m.

THREE LITILE MICE •
Deidra
Carleton,
Jessira
Simpltlns and Mary RankiD will
portray mice . in Tuesday's
presentation of "Tbe Grlacb
Who Stole Christmas" at Carleton School in Syracuse at 6:45
p.m.

�.. .

.....

~

..

. ..

Tuesdav~ · December 11, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
l1l Court Street

·

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE8T8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AJ:EA

Alb,

~ms ~'--"""'T""Ir"T""ES!!d·~ .

"q:JII

.

~OBERT

L. WINGETT
Publlsber

.'

«;HABLENE HOEFLICH

Geaeral Maaacer

PAT WIIITEHEAD
Aulltaat Publllbor/Coatr~ller
A MEMBER otTbe United Press International, Inland Dally Press
. Association a nd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess 111an 300
words long. All letters are subje&lt;tto editing and must be signed wllh
name, address and telephQne numbef. No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Gorbachev: Hammer
significant in
Soviet history
MOSCOW (UP!) - Mikhail Gorbachev praised Armand Hammer
for being ''associated with some of the most valuable pages In Soviet
history.
Gorbachev's ,s pokesman, Vitali Ignatenko, said that Hammer
·'met (stale founder Vladimir 1Lenin and was close to the other Soviet
leaders." Hammer died Monday In Los Angeles.
"Mr. Hammer is associated with some of the most valuable pages
in Soviet history," Ignatenko told a news conference.
" Mr. Gorbachev has expresed sincere condolences to the Hammer
family ."
Yurt Gremttsktkh, a Foreign Ministry spqkesman, said Hammer
" was a man that sought to maintain good relations even during the
cooler times."
"He was not afraid to raise his voice to the leaders of both
superpowers to .have good relations .tn all spheres," Gremilsktkh
·
said .
There was no initial commentary by the o!!!ctal Tass news agency
on the death of the philanthropist. It merely reported the death by its
correspondent in the United States.

through everything from telephone calls to personal visits.
In recent weeks, for example.
the peripatetic pr~ident has
toured the Middle East, Europe
and South America. Notwithsl!lnding the hoopla that ac~m­
palned a Thanksgiving-with-thetroops episode, much of hiS time
on those trips has been devoted to
meeting with other heads of
state.
Those sessions have produced
notable results in _ terms of
fashioning a nd s ustaining a
broad global coalition witllng to
challenge Iraqi aggression
through unified support of an
economic embargo, endorsement of strongly worded United
Nations resolutions and - In
some cases - commitment of
troops to the region.
In this' country, however, Bush
ha s not even made a serious
attempt to provide voters with a
coherent explanation of his actions - especially the abrupt
move tn early November to
almos t double the number of
troops positioned in the Middle.
East.
Indeed, the most thoughtful

Jury selection tQ begin
Jury selection is set to begin in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court on Thesday momin&amp;_ in the case of Jose Pearl Scott (also
known as Joses P. Scou) of Pomeroy.
Scot~ 33, was indicted in July on charges of lq!gll!Yated auemp!A!d
murder, a first degree felony, and aggravated burglary, an aggraviiCd
fel~ny of the first degree. Both charges also cai'ry lireamis speciJicallons.
.
·
He is_ accused of_ shootin~·
Ronald Cremeans on July 6, and
~runs UIC8l'Cerated m the
· County JaiL He is iepreSented by
Metgs County Public Defender
es KnighL

By Robert Walters

and comprehensive presentation
of the administration's ratio nale
the people."
·f or its PQlicy in the region was
In the late 1930s and early
offered not by the president but
1940s, President Franklin D.
by Yice P resident Quayle in a
Roosevelt was frustrated by
late-November speech at a New
substantial pop,;lar resistance to
Jersey college.
this country's e ntry Into World
A national debate on how to
War II even though Europe was
proceed is desperately neededbeing overrun by the Nazis.
and filling the vacuum created
. President Lyndon B. Johl\son
by the Republican-controlled ·exaggerated (and possibly fabriWhite House has been the
cated) e nemy actions against
Democratic-dominated ConNavy ships in Vietnam's Gulf of
gress. :rwo Senate committeesTonkin to secure congressional
Armed Services and Foreign
approval of a joint resolu lion that
Relations - have held hearings
gave him virtually unlimited and
and the House Armed Services
unilateral authority to expand
Committee soon will follow.
the war In that country.
Meanwhile, a paternalistic
In the current case of Iraq,
president has been unwill!ng to . time and opportunity are avanahonor the commitment in the
ble to consult · with the people.
Il!'claratton of Independence
They may choose to go to war
that says legitimate governwithout such manipulation - or
ments derive " their just powers
they may reject that alternative.
from the consent of the
What is certain is that a
governed."
full-scale, nationwide discussion
Bush would hardly be the fi rst
of the issues -involving not just
president to attempt to finesse
the White House and Congress
the country Into a major war
but also the populace - must be
without honoring President Abheld immediately. Those who
raham Lincoln's eloquent comdecl!ne to participate will have
mitment to "government of the
no.cause for complaint when the
people, by the people (and 1 for
dec is ton is made.

Hospital discharges, admiSsions
VETERANS MEMORIAL
MONDAY ADMISSIONS • Mildred Blankenship, . Miildlepon;
James Nelson, Pomeroy.
MONDAY DISCHARGES · Robert BuSh.

EMS responds to calls
· Units of the Meigs County Emt.l)!ency Medical Service responded
to seven calls for assistance on M~y.
At 1:38 p.m. the Rutland unit went to Mei's Mine No 2 for Denzil Kimberling who was Ialccn to Holzer Medical Cenier. ·
At4 p.m. the Pomeroy unit was caliCd to Butternut Avenue for Allen Ward who was transported to Ve~mns Memorial Hospital.
~t4: 59 p.m. the'MiddlepoJt unit responded to VllleStreet for Ann
Bruley who was talccn to Holzer. The unit was called at6:01 p.m. to
Overbrook Center for Virginia Thoren who was talccn to Veierans.
At 8:28 P·IJ!· the Middleport F'ae Department and unit responded to
an auto acculent on County Road 5 in which there were no injuries
and !II 10:42 p.m. the unit was called to Overbrook for
Sniith who was b'\lllsponed to Veterans.
.
~
!Jie final call fm: assislallce came 81 11:33 p.m. when the Pomeroy
umt went to Amencare-Pomemy for Lena Heilman who. was raken
to Veterans.

wutiani

Window broken at jewelers
The Pomeroy Police Department is investigating an incident
which occurred 81 Clark's Jewelry Store early Tuesday morning 81
2:32a.m.
·
According to the repon an unidentified male subject threw a brick
through the front window. folice were unable to apprehend the subject who fled the scene on fOOL The incident is under investigation.

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Berry's World

IIIII .., NEA. Inc;

tl £

"It's nice to find some folks who still care
about who killed Laura Palmer. "

•

Glenna Davis

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A Bidwell, OH man was cited
following a two vehicle accident
whic~ occurred early · Tuesday
mommg on SR 62. near West
Columbia, according to a spokesm~n for the Masoo County Sheriff's DepartmCnt
Joseph D. Simpkins, 28, of Bidwell: OH, was ~ned for improper
passmg and no msurance afier the
12:05 a.m. accidenL
Apparently Lisa L. Lawhorn, 18,
of Mason, was traveling north on
SR 62 when she ' encountered
Simpkins traveling soUth in the
northbOund lane. The SJJOkesrnan

·...

Diet pills more harmful ·than FDA admits
WASHINGTON - The latest
dope on diet pills Is that they may
be more dangerous than the Food
and Drug Administration has
admitted. It wouldn't be the first
time the FDA erred on the side of
recklessness. Nor would it be the
first time that dieters had been
disappointed by ihe promise of
quick and easy results.
A yet-to-be-released report
prepared for Congress by a U.S.
Public Health Service physician
says that the appetite suppressant in many over-the-co11nter
diet !&gt;tlls Is ineffective for most
people and can be a health
hazard, especially to young people obsessed with thin figures .
The report, by Dr. Paul Raford, raises the poss!btl!ty of
consumer fraud and questions
whether the ingredient- phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride,
or PPA- should be sold over the

Visualize a corporate outrage:
An American corporation announces that It will pay $7 btllton
of green American money to
Japanese shareholders, to buy a
Japanese company , . at inflated
share prices. The American
company wtll invest additional
billions, In Japan, to pay high
sums to Japanese citizens . to
write, direct, produce and act tn
Japanese movies. ·Those Japanese movies, In turn , wtll be
exhibited globally, to the greater
glory of Japan.
That Is a good deal for the
Japanese. Their shareholders
get big bucks, their creator-bees
and worker-bees get big fees and
good wages. Their well-financed
movies, In tur~. wtll be exhibited
globally, to the greater glory of
Japan.
That is a good deal for the
Japanese. Their shareholders
get big bucks, their creator-bees
and worker-bees get big fees and
good wages. Their well-financed
movies woutld make the world
think about Japan.
Many · Americans would say
it's an outrage. Unions would ;
demand that the American com-

Former hostages
return home

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
Raford's report says research
on PPA that , "if further verified
shows potential for massive
consumer fraud at best. and at
worst could explain the disturblng and increasing incidence of
medical malaffect .... "
The findings wltl fuel an
ongoing debate over the safety of
diet ptlls . Rep. Ron Wy'den,
D-Ore., has been spearheading a
congressional investigation into
the diet industry . And the Federa! Trade Commission ts invesligating claims of the companies
that peddle diet pills. An FDA
spokesman told us the agency
will review the new research.
Jessica McDonald put a face on
the problem when she recently
tes tlfied before a congressional
subcommittee about her long
battle with eating disord ers and

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a brother.

said Simpkins ·was trying to pass
one or 100re southbound vehicles.
He auemp!M IIi Stop and bai:k into
his lane, but his 1978 Ford slid to
the left Lawhorn swerved to the
right to avoid a head-oo collision.
The two vehicles ended up sideswiped.
Lawhorn and Simpkins, along

with the~ngcrs, Vicki L. Hill,
33, of · n. and Jonathan l!f.
Stone, 13, of West Columbia were
all treated and released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital, according
1Q a hospital spokesman.
The Mason and New Haven EMS
squads assisted on the accidenL

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"agents."
Of course, the dominant pOlitical culture in Hollywood often
snickers at Reaganlsms, but In
real life and real time, the
American entertainment industry, pePhaps our most Important
industry, Is a fine (not perfect)
example of a healthy capitalist
market.
That's one reason It will
survive this non-outrage. And
·P
flourish.

16-year-old indicted in slaying
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP!) -Jeffrey Wills, 16, Dresden, has
been Indicted In the· shooting death. of his father.
Wtlls Is to be arraigned Wednesday in Musktngum County
Common Pleas Court In the slaying of his father, Robert Wills,
· tn their mobile home on Aug. 26.
.
.
Wills, Indicted Monday, is being held In the Musklngum
County jail in lleu of $50,000 bond. No trial date has been set.

lishing Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 912-2156. Se- ,
cond class p01tage paid af Pomeroy, '

Ohio.
Member: Ontted PreJ• Iriternatlonal,
Inland Dally PrHJAuoclatlon aad the
Ohio Newspaper AII~XIaUoa. National
Advertlatng Repreaenta(lve, Branham
Newspaper satee, 733 Third Aveaue,

Man charged in seafoOd scam
COLl!MBUS, Ohio (UP!) - David Leung, 39, Westervitle,
was s,chectuled to appear In U.S. District Court Tuesday 0 n
charges he defrauded East Coast seafood fishermen of nearly

New York, New York 10017.

P(]flTMAlri'ER: Send · - ch.,...
lo Th&lt; Dally Sentblol, 111 Court St.,
Pl&gt;meroy, Ohio 45769.

$500,000.
The FBI agents said the money was found in two bank safety
deposit boxes registered to Leung.
Special Agent David Hanna said Leung Is accused of acting as
a seafOOd wholesaler who took shipments of seafood from
fishermen, sold the product and kept the profits.
Hanna said New· York authorities received a tip three weeks
ago that Leung had relocated to the Columbus area.

8VJI8()J:IPTJON UTili

llr Carrier or M- Bolte

j

.,

On• week ...................................suo

Ont Month ................................. $6.10
One Year ......................... ........ $72.80

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SINQLBCOPY
PaJCII
Dally ........... ................ ........ ~ Cents

Sublcrtbera not deetrtn1 to pay the ear·

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rlei' I'NlY remit In .lldvance direct to

Davidson to stay in office

No sublcrtptlonl by man permitted 1a
ara• wbere home carrier ervlce II

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - State Rep. JoAnn Davidson has
decided against seeking the position of state budget director In
the administration of Gov.-elect Georae Volnovlcb.
Davidson, R·Reynoldsburg,l&amp;ld Monday she wants to remain
in .the Oblo HoUle Of Representative~, where she has served her
northeast Franklin County diJtrlct since 1981.
..l'he first deciJion I IIMded to make was the decision to leave
the Legislature, period," Davidson said. •That had to be my·
first stumbling block.
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available.

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ne Dally senttael on a 3, 6 or 12 month

buts. Credit wlll be ~tven carrlereedl
-..k.

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, _ . llotp c:.-17
13 WHit.I ..................... ,............ Sli.:W
26 WHit.l .................................. t3'1.16
52 WHit.l ........... .................. ..... nue

-

....... Coalr

.

13 WHit.l .................................. ntUO

:II WHb .................................. $1tUII .
52 WHIII. 1............... ................. $'11.41
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"\~ .1-: .:. "'·.t" "'. '• ~ · ._~ ,

K-.1 . •-·,••'

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Am Electric Power ...... .. ., .. .28~
Ashland Oil ........ .... ........... .29\1,
AT&amp;T .. ................... ............ 29%
Bob Evans .......................... 14~
Charming Shoppes .............. 11 \&lt;l
City Holding Co... ... ............ 15\&lt;l
Federal Mogul... .................. l4
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ .. ..... 16\1,
Key Centurion ................ : ...11\4
Lands' End ........ ..... : ........... 13%
Limited Inc..... .. ... .............. 17t\'l
Multimedia Inc . ............. .. ... 64\1,
Rax Restaurants.... .......... ... %
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .......... ... .. 19
Shoney's Inc. ........ .. .... : ........ 10
Star Bank ............................ 17
Wendy's Int'l. ..........:........... 6!1
Worthington lnd .................. 21%

reversal of eight votes per
county .
"! don 't know if the mistakes
are out there or not." said
' 'We are very pleased that
Bennett, "but we're .looklng lor
certification chose Lee as the them hard. I don't know if we'll
Winner by a 1,J80.vote margin, find them all, but we'll find
and we are even happier that the enough."
recount has beguQ," said Lisa
Bennett was critical of the
Cutler, a spokeswoman for the error rate of the machines
Fisher campaign, "That means tallying punchcard ballots,
we are one step closer to Lee which yield different results on
Flslier being sworn In as state each count. " It's very frustrating
attorney general on Jan. 14."
that we can put a man on the
Barry Bennett, spokesman for moon, but we can't tally the
Pfeifer, said the official tally was results," he said . "It's
about as expected. He said the ridiculous."
Pfeifer camp is pinning Its hopes
The recount Is expected to be
on the recount, where It 'leeds a finiShed late next week. Historically, recounts have not changed
the results of statewide elections.
"I commend all the county
cold front from this system to boards of election for their hard
kentucky.BylateWednesdaythe work and diligence in counting
low pressure system will have all the ballots," said Brown. "It
moved to just north of.Ohlo. The Is because of this hard work that
eastward movement of the low makes Ohio a leader in the nation
,pressure system will cause the when it comes to fair and honeH
cold front to tum into a warm elections."
front and begin traveling north. •
Brown also noted that Ohio's
By Wednesday the new warm · voter turnout was 61 percent of
front Is likely to be over New registered voters, much higher
York state.
than the national average.

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

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7:15. 9 :30
DAILY
SAT I Ioiii MTIIU1

1: 15. 1 :30
fllrtO

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CL/UT

[A~nNo&lt;&gt;o

{1-lAJI'III -..,fEfN

JHEROOKIE

II~

Chritf~nu

·
Oreeting Edition
Mondav,
Decem&amp;er 24

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!)- Gov. Richard F. Celeste says the
State Board of Education should be "the seat of the revolution"
in reforming the state's publiC schools.
Celeste, who refused to speculate on a $1 billion budget
Increase propo~ by the boa~d. said Monday school leaders
must be Inventive in proposals to spend tax dollars.
.
State School Supterlntendent Franklin B. Walter defended the
proposed spending increase.
"We recognize there may not be money today to do that, " he
said. "RealiStically tn OhiO. If we want a quallty education,
we're talking about making a sizeable Investment."
"I don't wantto speculate on that," Celeste said of the budget
lncrease: "It's going to be up to the next governor.
"When you look at the budget, then: Is a serious question
about what kind of revenue increase there's going to be for any
services," said Celeste.

Published every afteraoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St., Po- •
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

•

Stocks

Temperatures 10-20 degrees over norm
By United Press International
Ohio will have dry weather
with a warming trend for the next
few days.
During Monday night and
Tuesday morning, most of northern Ohio had both cloudy and
clear Intervals while over the
southern coun~tes skies were
mainly cloud free.
The National Weather 'Service
said that for the most part Ohio ts
In for clear weather through
Wednesday.
Temperatures.in Ohio Tuesday
morning were generally close to
30, which was about what they
were at the same time Monday.
For the next couple of days, south
to southwest winds should help
produce warmtng.
Lows Tuesday night should be
from - the mid 30s to near 40.
Wednesday .will bring highs In
the 50s or the lower 60s.
Normally at this time of year,
high temperatures In Ohio are
within a few degrees of 40 and low
temperatures are in the 20s; so
the readings forecast through .
Wednesday will be roughly 10 to
20 degrees above average.
The Tuesday morning weather
map Showed a low . pressure
system over South Dakota and a

"·

Washington state, which has
had no shortage of rain recently ,
had occasional showers and local . 65.
Thursday throuch Saturday: A
fog Tuesday morning with lows
cha nce of rain or snow In tt.e
in the mid 30s.
northern part oft he stale and lair
The South ancl munh of the
weather In the south Thurdsay,
central third of the nation
with a chance of rain across the
enjoyed sparkling clear winter
state Friday .and Saturday.
skies and seasonal temperatures that ranged from lows 1
just below freezing in northern
Florida to the upper 20s in
Pittsburgh.
Temperatures were expected . Dally stock prices
to warm up in the next several
(As o! 10: 30 a.m.)
days as a warm front moved
Bryce and Mark Smith
through the Midwes t.
. ot Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewt

percent of the vote and. Pfeifer, a
senator from Bucyrus, got 49.98
percent. ·

Be inventive, Celeste says

(V8P81fWII)
A Dlvlllctll ol M..tlmedla. IDC.

Japanese.
What of. movies yet to be
made? Wtll Japanese owners,
perhaps subtly, perhaps unwittingly , gnaw away at the nature
of ihe American product?
Doubtful.
But could they do it unwittingly , or purposefully, even if
foolishly?

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ~
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown certified Tuesday that
Democrat Lee Fisher has officially won the five-week-old state
attorney general's election by
the narrowest percentage In Ohio
history.
But Brown announced an automatic recount will begin immediately at the 88 county bo~rds of
election.
.
Final official results gave
Fisher 1,680,271 votes to Republi. can Paul Pfeifer's 1,678;891 - a
margin of 1,380 votes out of 3.3
million cast.
Fisher, a state senator from
Shaker Heights, received 50.02

.• .....•

South Central Ohio: MostlY
clear Tuesday night, with a low
near 40. Mostly sunny Wednesday, with highs between 60 and

Fisher wins attorney general·
•
hy ·state's narrowest .margtn

Ohio Tooay:---

day."
Ulery; 33, Robert Hanby, 44,
regional manager for EBCO
Manufacturing Co., Columbus,
and Paul Brown, a self-employed
landscape architect, arrived at
Pori Columbus abOard an EBCO
corporate plane.

"

By United Preu Jateraatlonal
winds that moved at _20 to 30 mph.
Clear skies and seasonable The gusts prompted a small craft
temperatures covered much of advisory from the Merrimack
the nation Tuesday .while gusty River tn Massachusetts to Watch
winds made New Englanders Hill, R.I.
· The West had a chance for
shiver and clouds covered parts
of the West as a frontal system some much needed rain Tuesday
moved In of! the ocean.
with clouds covering Southern
An arctic air mass moved Into California and northwest Nevada
Maine during the night bringing . as a cold front that forced an
strong northwesterly winds and early landing for a space shuttle
scattered flurries in the moun- mission moved Into the area.
Forecasters said there was a 20
tains, but a high pressure system
percent chance of showers lor .
followed with clear skies.
Neatly all of New England saw Los Angeles, which has suffered
the thermometer drop into the drought conditions for the last
two years.
low 20s, with BOston reporting

'

The Daily Sentinel

The most important role the
big Hollywood studios play are as
banks and dtstrtbu tors to a large,
diverse and fracttoned film Industry. The studios no longer
typically "own" the stars, writers and directors. Those folks
are "independents," shrewdly
advised by piranhas called

·

Graveside services will be held
Wednesday 81 II a:in. at the Letart
Falls Cemetery with Rev. O'Quinn
Kelly officiating.
There wiD be no calling hours .
In lieu of flowers conUibutions
may be made to the First Presbyterian ChtD'Ch in Syracuse:

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!)
Three Columbus-area men, held
hostage or In hiding since Iraq
invaded Kuwait Aug. 2; returned
home Monday night.
"What a ChriStmas present,"
said Lisa Ulery, 33, wife of Tom
Ulery, an auto transmission
teacher who hid for three months
. in his Kuwait City apartment.
"Our prayers have been answered. I prayed every single

By George Wattenberg

Ho ho. Who invented Rambo•
Was it Tokyo- or Hollywood?
Japan-bashing movies?
Hardly a major genre, everi
before the Japanese started
paying bllllons to be allowed to
bid for American talent.
(More important: Will a
Japanese-owned studio allow its
American subsidiary to make
Amertca-l)ashlng movies, of the
sort Hollywood produces reflexIvely? Universal did "Born on ·
came nE .T." and " Jaws").
the Fourth of July." Might
Japanese owners be afraid of
But there is no applause for
what seems to be a daring such an anti-establishment movie? Might Yahoos In Congress
Yankee heist. We hear reverseoutrage. It's outrageous, we are
retaliate against their manufactold, because those Japanese will
tured exports?)
To get the picture, look at the
dilute the nature of American
movies. Those Japanese, we are
picture business . There are two
told, · are only Interested in
kinds of movies: those that have
tawdry, bottoml!ne, blockbuster,
already been made, and those
Internationally oriented,
that will be made In the future.
Schwilrzeneggeralan, Rambo- Consider each in light of ' the
nlan films . That means that ' M&amp;M deal:
indigenous American cinematic
Movies already made can't be
artists, so subtle and poignant,
changed. So the Japanese will be .
· spending lots to further promote
will suffer, the little dears.
Further, it Is said, Hollywood
the sales' of American popular
will fear to make movies critical
culture around the world. (Like
of Japan.
Universal's nice multisertes
"Back to the Futw:e. ") Thanks,
pany invest In America, creating
American jobs. Uberal .economtstic historians would declaim
that America was In decline.
Movie-makers would go ball!stic.
announcing deep pain a bout
corporate treachery .
Of course, it didn't happen that
way. It was the other way
around. A Japanese company
(Matsushita) bought an American company (MCA, which owns
Universal Studios. from whence

diets. A college junior from
Washington, D.C., and a dance
student, McDonald said she
started taking diet pitls at age 12.
She wanted to lose weight fast ,
and at one point was popping up
to 20 ptlls at a time. She never
saw a doctor or a nutritionist.
There are studies that have
been kinder to PPA. butcongressional investigators say those
studies are flawed because they
are unpublished, had no peer
review, involved small numbers
of subjects, did not follow up on
their findings and violated research protocols.
Most developed nations have
banned PPA as a diet aid, and its
critics in the United States say
that It should be used only under
doctor's supervision.

nieces, nephews and eopsins.
Besides her parents she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Cilrl Davis, in 1979, two sisiers and

Bidwell man cited in ~k

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counter.
The news means that the FDA
has some explaining to do. Last
month , the FDA had a chance to
ban PPA .from non-prescription
uses but decided not to. Several
other non-prescription diet ingredten ts were prohibited from
being sold without prescription.
but the FDA declined toputPPA
on that list, saying It needed
more time to study it. The FDA
also altowed PPA to stay In cough
and cold reipedies.
Raford's study is not so timid.
Our associate Scott Sleek obtained an advance copy of the
report. PPA, which acts as an
appetite suppressant in diet pills,
has been linked to heart damage,
strokes. seizures and other medical problems. Raford told Congress. PPA is a cousin of
methamphetamtnes , commonly
known as "speed" or "uppers. "

so;

Glenna H. WiUiams Davis,
Syracuse, died Sunday 81 the
Ravenswood Care Center in
· Ravenswood, W. Va following an
extended illness.
Born May 25, 1910 in Syracuse,
she was a daughter of the late John
and Hester Carroll Williams. She
attended the F"U'SI Presbyterian
Church of Syracuse.
She is .survived by a , sister,
Mildred Hamm, Sryacuse; sevecal

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Did America .rip off Japan?

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--Area deaths--

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NASA ·overhaul urged
Although the committee resWASHINGTON (UP!) - As
isted calls for a radical restt:ucpar t of an overhaul of the nation's
turtng of the agency, the panel
space program, NASA should
build a new unmanned rocket to concluded NASA has been " try take over many of space shuttle's ing to do too much' • with not
duties and shrink the proposed enough money or time.
"America's civil space prospace station, a White · House
gram
Is at a cro~sroads." panel
report urged.
·
chairman
Norman Augustine
The shuttle, the centerpiece of
the U.S. space program, is too said. "NASA is neither as
troubled as some would suggest
expensive and too risky for the
nor nearly as good as It will have
nation to depend on and is
unnecessary for many goals of to be to carry out the kind of
space program that we
space exploration, such as buildrecommended."
ing a space station, the report
NASA should focus on two
said.
goals - a "Mission to Planet
Instead, NASA should spend
Earth," which would Involve
several billion dollars to develop
launching a set of satellttes to
a new launch system that could
study Earth's environment, and
carry cargo into space for less
money and withou.t the risk of a "Mission from Planet Earth,"
losing human life. and · perhaps which would involve exploring
Mars, the panel said.
eventually be modified to carry
As such, the controversial
astronauts, it said Monday.
proposed space station Freedom,
The recommendations c'a me
whlch
Congress ordered NASA to
from the 12-member Advisory
redesign,
should be made less
Committee on the Future of the
and expensive and
complex
U.S. Space Program, which was
should
focus
on helping prepare
formed in July at the request of
for
long
space
flights and microthe White House to perto'rm a
gravity'
research.
comprehensive review of NASA .
The panel also suggested a
The review came amid a storm
number
of bureaucratic
of criticism of the space agency
changes,
Including
Implementsparked b~ the lmbarrasslng
Ing a new per5onnel system and
discovery that the long-awaited
$1.5 billion Hubble Space Tele- perhaps how it operates centers
around the country to avoid
scope wa s defective and fueled
by the grounding of the space counterproductive competition.
the report said.
shuttle fleet by hydrogen leaks.

Weather -

Local news briefs: Clear skies, cool temps across U.S.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. December 11. 1990

· Americans mu$t debate Gulf crisis
WASHINGTON (NEAl President Bush's elitist proclivities - notably his preference for
top-down governance over
bottom-up df!mocracy- uli!ortunately appear to be dominating
his handing of the crisis in the
Middle East.
The president has been truly
impressive In organizing opposition to Iraq's brutal subjugation
of Kuwait among fellow chiefs of
.state In nations throughout the
world. He has not, however,
appeared to care much ·about
building a similar consensus
among his constituents in this
country.
That disparity is hardly surprising considering Bush's patrician background and his longtime personal preference for
foreign over domestic policy. But·
Bush's failure to adequately
communicate with those who
elected him could lead to
disaster .
Ever ·s ince he assumed office
almost three years ago, Bush has
· demonstrated a special talentfor
establiShing bonds with the leaders of other countries. gaining
their trust and · confidence

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

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

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edi't ion on
n·ec~mber 24th. '
ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. December 11. 1990

Meigs football players
honored with team awards

L.A. Raiders beat Detroit
38-31 in comeback ·effort
ByBOBTRD'I
UPI Sports Writer
PONTIAC. Mich. (UPI) ~ The Los Angeles
Raiders are a blg·play team, but It was the little
things that carried them to victory Monday night .
Jay Schroeder threw third-quarter touchdown
passes of 10 yards to Mervyn Fernandez and three
yards to Tim Brown, rallying the Raiders to a
38-31 victory over the Detro!t Lion ~.
. "1 think we have a second-half team," Los
Angeles head coach Art Shell said after his team' s
second straight win. "We made SO!lle adj us tments and were able to rally around them.
'-'I told the team that if we play 60 minutes we'd
endure. They threw everything at us, but we held
our ground."
The triumph enabled .Los Al)geles, 9-4, to stay
tied w!th Kansas City atop the AFC West Division
and also Improved Its Monday night record to ·an
NFL-best 29-6-1.
The game also featured five former Helsman
trophy winners, Bo Jackson. Marcus Allen and
Tim Br0wn for the Raiders and Barry Sanders
a nd Andre Ware for the Lions.
"We knew It was going to be a struggle," said
Schroeder, who completed 12 of 19 passes for 195
yards and three touchdowns. ."(The Lions'
run·'n' -shool) offense Is something we only see
once or twice a year."
Schroeder gave the Raiders their first lead of
the game at 28-24 at 6:49 of the third quarter when
he connected on a 10-yard TD pass to Fernandez,
who ran a hook pattern to the right corner of the
end zone. The veteran quarterback set up the
score with two passes for 34 yards and a 12-yard
scramble on third and 11.
"When you make a third down and long, it's a
big momentum builder," Schroeder Said. "You
try and stay out of those situations. but It's
something you work on all year."
Schroeder moved the team 46 yards on its next
possession before capping the drive at 13: 09with a
three-yard TD pass to Brown, who made a
one-handed grab as he crossed the goal -l ine.
"I scored, then I think (Detroit's ) Barry
(Sanders) scored, and then Bo. (Jackson)," Allen
said.' 'I walked over to Tim Brown and said, 'Tim,
-r know you are going to score too. I think It's
Helsman night. "'
The Raiders dominated the third quarter,
holding. the ball for 11:01 and allowing the Lions
only 21 yards offense.
Detroit pulled within 35·31 at 6: 24 of the fourth
quarter on quarterback Rodney Peete's six-yard
scoring run. Sanders ~ who rushed for 176 yards
on 25 carries ~ ran six times for 47 yards on the

· The Meigs Marauoor football

drive . .
The Lions regained the ball with 6: 08 left, but
turned It over on Peete' sflimble following a fourth
down scramble near midfield.
·
"I think we played well to score 31 points
against a defense like the Raiders'," Peete said.
" We had other opportunities, but had turnovers.
You can;t turn the ball over against a good team.
Those things are frustrating.
" It's not like we're getting blown out. We just
have to find ways to win the close ones ."
Peete's fumble led to Jeff Jaeger's 37-yard field
with 1:55 left.

finished With 21 points , 10 rebounds and seven assists. "I go
through these (slumps) every
year. This whole trip I've had
opportunities . A lot of those shots
I thought were good shots."
· Brian Shaw ·scored 26 points
and Kevin McHale finlsijed with
23 for the Celtics, who outscored
· Houston 17-4 over the final five
millutes to seal the victory,
Boston's 12th In lis last 14 games.
"He' s been struggling," Boston head coach Chris Ford said of
· Bird. " But he steps up and takes
the shots that need to be taken.
The only way to get out of a
shooting slump Is to keep shoot·
lng the ball."
Ver non Maxwell led Houston
with 24 points, Akeem Olajuwon
scored 18 and Buck · Johnson
added 17 for the Rockets, who lost
their third home game of the
. season.
Houston led 79·78 entering the

final period, and was still up91-90
after a three:polnt jumper by
Maxwell with five minutes left.
The Celtlcs then ran off 15
consecutive points over the next
4:42, Including eight straight by
Bird on two thre.e·polnt jumpers
and two free throws, for a 105·91
lead.
Houston finally broke the skid
on a short jumper by Olajuwon
with 18 seconds left. Boston
outscored Houston 17-4 over the
final five mi11utes .
"We decld~d to play straight
up for a few minutes," Ford said.
"Our small lineup rebounded
well and put pressure on them .."
Houston h·e ad coach Don Cha·
ney was displeased to again see
his team fall to do the job down
·
the stretch.
"We have to learn how to
execute when It counts," he said.
"We were too Impatient."
(See NBA on Page

a:

the 1eall1 in interception wilh fOlD',
Frank had 38 tackles (16 solo, 22
awards for the past_football season. assists). The award was spolisored
The _awards were voted on by the by Fred W. Crow Jr. and I. Carson
coaching staff and the players were Crow Attorneys at Law.
awarded uophies sponsored by loJunior
quarterback
Jeremy
cal merchants.
Phalin was named the most valuThe most valuable offensive able 'offensive back. Phalin comlineman awards went 10 senior co- pleted 84 of 207 passes for a school
caplains' Burt Kennedy and Aaron record 1,515 yards. The 5-10, 185
Sheets. Burt is a 6-2, 210 pound pounder tied a record for
senior guard while Sheets is a 6-2, touchdowns in a season wilh 16.
250 pound senior tackle. The award The award was sponsored by Pat
was sponsored by Powells Super HiD Ford.
Value.
Junior tight end Shawn Hawley
'Jhe most valuable defensive was awared lhe most valuable
bact~; awards went 10 Terry _Mcreceiver award presented by Jim
Guire and Frank Blalte. McGuire a Cobb Chevrolet-Oldsmobile -Cadil5-9. 177 pound junior was second liac·GEO Inc. Hawley a 6-2, 170
on the 1eall1 with three intercep- pounder caught 36 passes for 718
tions, returning all ~ for yards, he led the 1eall1 in scoringtouchdowns. Terry had ·28 tackles wilh 10 touchdowns.
·
(14 solo, 14 85$ists) caused a·
Geoff Cogar was ilamed the most
fumble and recovered a fumble. valuable defensive lineman. Co~ar
Blalce a 5-8, 160 pound junior led a 6-2 200 pound senior defenstve
end was second on the team in

. team recently handed out it's

"I'm very disappointed because our team
played good enough to win," said Detroit head
coach Wayne Fontes. "I wfll not say.a word about .
the officiating, nothing."
The game started on a wild note with three
touchdowns being scored In the first 3: 47.
Mel Gray returned the opening kickoff 49 yards
to set up the Lions' first score. Four plays later ,
Sanders ran 35 yards for his first to .
Schroeder evened the score at 7-7' 26 seconds
later on the Raiders' first play from scrimmage
when he connected on a 68-yard TO pass to Willie
Gault, who fell as he caught the ~all, rolled twice
at the Detroit 15, · got up and ran past- Bennie
Blades and LeRoy Irvin for the score.
The Lions took a 14-7 edge using two plays, the
last on Sanders' five-yard TO run at 3: 47. Sanders
had 122 yards rushing In the first half,lncludlng65
in the first quarter. The drive started with Peete's
51-yard pass to Jeff Campliell, which placed the
ball at the Raiders' five .
·Cornerback Terry McDaniel helped Los Angeles tie It 14-14, when he Intercepted Peete's pass ·
and returned It 15-y ards to the Detroit six. Jackson
ran four yards and then Marcus Allen bu Ued ·
across the goal line for his 11th TD of the year at
8: 23. Officials originally ruled that Allen did not
score, but a replay reversed their decision.
Peete put the Lions ahead 21·14 at 12:17 on a
seven-yard pass to Campbell, who was breaking
from right to left in the back of the end zone.
The 35 points were the second-most points
scored In the first quarter ofan NFL game. Only
the 42 scored between Green Bay and Cieveiand
on Nov. 12, 1967 bettered Monday's output.
Detroit raised the margin to 24-14 at 5: 45 of the
second quarter on Eddie Murray 's 47-yard field
goal. The Lions marched the ball 50 yar(ls In 11
plays, consuming 5:32.
The Raiders responded on the ensuing posses·
sion, using three plays before Jackson rumbled 55
yards for a touchdown at 7:21.

Boston, New Jersey NBA·winners
By RICHARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
Larry Bird struggled with his
shooting during a three-ga me
trip, through Texas, but he made
the baskets that counted against
the Houston Rockets.
Bird, the ·usually reliable outside shooter for the Bas ton
Celtlcs, entered Monday night's
game In Houston having hit just 7
of 28 shots in games against
Dallas and· San Antonio. The
result was 17 points In two
contes ts , well below his average
of 19.8 points per _g ame.
He was only slightly better
against the Rockets, sinking 8 of
23 from the field. but he drilled
eight straight points, Including
two three-point jumpers, to
spark a 15-0 run In the final flve
minutes that carried the Celtics
to a 107-95 victory.
"I've had nights were I haven't
shot well," said · Bird, who

BO KNOWS YARDAGE - L.A. Raider running
backBo Jackson (34), one of five former Helsman
Trophy winners playing In Monday night's game
against the host _Detroit Uons, puts plenty of
yardage under his feel iu! he leaves defenders

With a game-high 14 points
from senior center Lisa Swisher
and 11 points from fellow front·
liner Kerl Black, Kyger Creek
picked up Its fourth straight win
by coasting to a 60-24 victory over
visiting Southern Monday night.
The Bobcats (5·1, 4-1) wasted
little time putting distance between themselves and the Tornadoes, as the 5-11 Swisher keyed
KC 's offense with eight of the
Bobcats' 16 first-quarter points.
Then Kyger's of(enslve barrage
came from all corners, as seven
Bobcats scored In the second
quarter and boosted their lead to
25 points at halftime.
The Tornadoes scored half of
their game points In the final
quarter, as Amy Mills, who led
Racine with 10 points, scored six
In that frame.
· In the junior high game, the
Bobcats edged the Tornadoes
23-20. Rachael Polcyn led KC
with 10 points, and Southern's
Andrea Moore led all scorers
with 12.
Kyger Creek will play at
Hannan Trace on Thursday.
Quarter totals
Southern .............. 6 '4 2 12-24
Kyger Creek ...... 16 19 12 13~60
Kyger Creek ( 60) ~ Swisher
7:0-0.14; Black 5·0·1·11; Ragland
2-1-2-9; Bradbury 2-0-3-7; Gin·
dlesberger 2-0·1·5; Skidmore 2·0·
1-~; Drummond 1-0·1·3; Shaver
1·0·0-2; Ward 1-0-0.2; Wolfe 1-0·02. Totals....., 24-1-9-80 .
Field goals - 25-65 (38.5%)
Foul shots ~ 9-18 (50%) •
Rebounds~ 49 (Swisher 9)
Tunovers ~ 10
Southern (24) - Mills 5·0·0.10;
Cross 1-0-2-4; Jones 1-0-2-4; Ohlinger 1·0.2-4; Cooper 0-0-2-2.
Totals ~ 8-0.8-M
Field goals _: 8-37 (21.6%)
Fouls hots - 8·18 (45%)
Rebounds ~ 22 (Jones 5)
Turnovers - 27

.

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N--io:

sophomore front-liner Cathy
Krausz, who canned 18.
The VIkings burst out to a 35-23
lead at halftime and expanded
their lead to13 points at the end of
the third quarter, but saw their
offense take a vacation In prime
time, as Mullens and Wildcat
center Tammy ·Thomas, who
scored 12, were the prime mov·
ers In Trace's drive for the
comeback.
Symmes Valley will play
Southern at Racine, and Hannari

Sentinel correspondent
The Meigs Marauders jumped
out 10 a 21-5 first quarter lead and
coasted to a 69-25 victory over
Eastern in girls basketball action
Sarurday evening at Meigs High
School. The victory for the
Marauders ended a two game
losing suealt.
Sophomores Vera Compston and
Tricia Baer paced the marauders 10
the early big lead wilh six points
each. In the second period Kelly
Smith exploded for 12 points as the
marauders increased lheir lead to
41-IOatthehalf.
The third period was more of the
same as Smith, Baer and Compston
scored six points each as Meigs
held a 61-16 leading heading into
the final eight minutes.
Smith led lhe winners in scoring
with 22 points, Baer added 14 and
Compston 12.

RED CROSS B~OODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER _12

central
x-Chlcago ......... 10 3 0 .769 290 207
Minnesota ......... 6 7 o .462 297 252
c...... Bay ........ 6 7 0 .462 2~1 270
Tampa Bay ....... 5 8 0 .3&amp;1 210 311
Det roit ..... .... .. ... 4 9 0 .308 301345
Weot
x-San Fra n ....... .l2 1 0 .923 297 199
New Orleans ..... 6 7 0 .462 235 239

L.A. Rams .... .... 5 8 0 .385 305 346
Allanra ......... ... 3 10 o .231292 332

~ndtanapolls

7

p.m.

Phoenix at Dallas, 1 p.m .
Houston at Kansas Clty,l p.m .
Green Bay at PhiladelPhia. 4

I!RVICE

.,d

.

for Sptdtl People
.
V*t Dri... Pcint PIMNn~ WV 255SO (304) &amp;1&amp;-43«1
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6
7

L.A . Clippers ........... 9 9 .500 8 %
Seattle ................. ... 5 12 .294 12
Sacramento ............ 3 14 .176 14
Monday's

~&amp;ults

Boston 107, Houston 95
New J ersey 121. Charlotte 115 ·
Tuesday's 1ames
Miami at New York. 7: 30p.m.
Philadelphia

~t

Orlando, 7:30

p.m.

San Antoolo at Detroit, 7:30 p.m .
Chlcagp at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Minnesota, ·s

p.m.

Was hlng1oo at Denver, 9:30p.m .
Goklen State at Uta h, 9:30 p.m .
Sacrammto at Phoenix. 9:30

p.m .
Indiana at Portland. 10:30 p.m .
Wednesday's games
Milwaukee at Boston . 7:30p.m .
Hou ston at Philadelphia, 7; 30

p.m.
San Antmlo at Charlotte-. 7:30

p.JT!. .

In the NHL".

EuleroC.nl.,...&lt;e
Atloallc Dtvlatoo
Team
W L Pet.
Bootm .................... 16 I .800
Philadelphia ........... 13 6 .&amp;84
New Joroey ..... ........ 8 11 .421
N.,. York ......... ... ... 7 11.389
WashiJigton ....... .. .... 6 13 .316
Miami .. ................... 5 12 .294

Hardord ....... ...... 13 134 30 88 94
Buffalo ............... 10 12 7 27 89 91
Quebec ................ 7 19 6 20 90 137
Campb~l

Conference
Norris Dlvbdon
Team
W LTPio.GFGA
Chl"'go .............. 20 10 242 107 79
SJ. Louls ............. 17 93 37 99 80
.!Jerroll ................ 13 12 4 30 1~ 113
Minnesota .. ..... ..... 9 16 6 24 88101
Toronro ................ 7 24 115 84 138
Smythe Dl~i!llon

Calgary .............. 17 10 4 38 12!1 99
Los Angeles ........ 16 75 37117 89
Vancouver .......... 13 14 3 29 95103
Edmooton ...... ..... ll15 2 24 86 84
Wlnnll!"g .. .... ....... 9 17 6 24 105115
Monday'• fiul
Quebec 3. Vancouver 2 (0T )

In the NBA.••

•

. . . . Tl.laml/y ol ptol.sslonala

San Olego 'a1 DenYPr, 4 p.m.

San FranciscO ar L.A. Rams, 9
p.m.

(304) 6715-4107 .

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

p.m.

Cincinnati at L.A. Ra iders. 4 p.m .
Chicago. at Ofotrolt, 8 p.m.
Moad"l'. Pee. n

For appointments call

6

Golden Stat£&gt; ........... 12 7 .631
Phoenix .................. 10 7 . ~8

Adams Dlvlsltlll
BosJon ... ............ :16 10 4 36 97 97
Monlreal. ............ tn 13 3 35 104. 99

S.nda)', Drc. 11
lndlanapolls ar N.Y. Jet s. 1 p.m.
Seattle at Miami, 1 p.m .
·
Minnesota at Tampa Bay. l p.m .
Atlanta at Cleve-land. 1 p.m .
Pittsburgh at New Orleans. I

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ·Monday through Friday

. Paeiftc Division
Portland ................. 18 1 .947
L.A. Lakers ............11 6 .647

Sat•rday, Dec. U
Buffaloat N.Y. Glan1S. 12: 30p.m.
Washingtoo at New England. 4

p.m.

Seeing patients

8

L.A. Raiders 38, Detroit 31

Monday's nnat

at
2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

Denver .............. ..... 4 15 .211

\\'ales Conference
Palrick Division
Team
W LTPh. GFGA
N.Y. Ran~ers ...... 17115 39 l24 99
Philadelphia ....... 18 13 2 38 11810ll
New Jersey ......... 16114 36122104
was hlngtm ..... .... 17Hi034108 99
Plltst&gt;urgh ........ 12 15 3 27119117
N.Y. Jsla nders ..... 9 16 2 20 75106

Miami 23. Philadelphia 20 tOTI

·

Ulah .. ...................... 12 7 .632
Houston .................. 11 9 .550 1~
Uallas... .................. 611 .353 5
MlnnesoJa ............... 6 12 .333 5\i
Orlando ........ ....... 5 15 .~50 7%

Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 10: 30 p.m .
Indiana at Seattle, 10 p. m .

Kansas City 31. DenVf'r 20
New Orleans 24. L.A. Rams 20

Adolescent Medicine.

San Antoolo ............ 10 5 .667

p.m.

JOTl
S£&gt;attle 20. Gr('en Bay 14
Houstoo 58. Cleveland 14
WashlngtoolO, Clltcago 9

and

Midwest Division
. . W L Pet. GB

a t Miami. 7: 30p.m.
L .A . Clippers at Cleveland. 7:30

Phoenix 24, Atlanta 13
San Francisco 20, Clnclnnat_!l7

General Pediatrics

Team

~tlanta

x.CIInched division Utle
)-&lt;lln&lt;hed pla)ollopol .

announce the opening of their
practice in
'

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

r

Dallas .......... ..... 6 7 0 .162193 255
Phoenix ............ ~ li 0 .38!1 206 308

Emy Olivare~·Orteza, M.D.

ca~
_hl · ......... &amp;lf:fllf .... .......

Product~

x-N .Y. Giants .... ll 2 0 .846 285163
washington ... ... . 8 5o .615 299 242
Philadelphia ..... 7 6 0 .5311325 27~

&amp;

......... ...., • .,ellflr. -

~-s,Mct.finsurlftct

National Conlereace
EUt
Team
W L T Pet. PF PA

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

yeu . . . • M lln'lat .....,.

In Inti Or s 11111

Kansas City ....... 9 4 0 .692 314199

L.A . Ra iders ...... 9 4 0 .667 268 225
Sealtle .... ..... ...... 7 6 0 .538 242 240
San Diego .... .... .. 6 7 0 .462 272220
Denver ........ ...... 3 10 0 .231277 334

Butralo 31,

...........,.... n..·.........

214 EAST MAIN

Weot

Plttsbu IJh 24, New England 3

~~~..... Nte
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Whln"l ...,., u I Ul d&amp;ll I poll·
cvt1 aWe: you .,. • clwuc II for
YOUf flrtt aaaldlnt. tMrelffectiua

POMEIOY, OHIO

Hous1on .......... :.. 7 6 0 .538 324 243
Cleveland .......... 2 11 0 .154 201 396

Sunday's resull!l
N.Y. Giants 23, Mlnnesota)5

.... - · · "" ....

¥,!~
992-6617

Ci!ntral
Cinclnnat 1.. ........ 7 6 0 .538 292 294
Plllsburgh .. ....... 7 6 0 .538 234 200

:

6

Wes&amp;ern Conference

East
Team
W L''l' Pet. PF Pi\
y-Buffalo ........ .,11 2 0 .846 373 207
Miami. ............. .10 3 0 .769 275184
1ndlanapo1Js ... ... 5 R0 .38!1 200 281
N.Y. Jets .... ...... 4 9 0 .30ll216 295
New England .... 1 12 0 .01'7 154 300

.

B.

Atlanta ......... , ......... 7 11 .389

American Co•ferenl!e

1:00-5:30

Alld H you . . -It'll 1111 14f.

~-

In the NIL..

SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER

. bl quelthdto biGDIM I "tdllllt
poliCy hofdM, Mtjcplng •• Is' •·

.

Scoreboard.

Han wilh seven, Suzanne Clay ad-:
ded six and Tiffany Gardner four.
Meigs played at NelsonviUe on
Monday night and will _play at·
home on Thursday night as they
host Belpre. Eastern hosted North.
· Gallia on Monday night and wiU ·
traveliO Oak HiD on Thursday.
·
MEIGS 21 20 20 8-69
EASTERN 5 5 6 9-25
MEIGS - Smith 11..().0-22, Baer ·
6-0-2-14, J. Taylor 1-0-5-7, Compston 3-0·6-12, Hanning 1-0-24,
Ewing 1-0-0-2, Nelson 0-0-1-1,
Creameans 1-0-3-5, Sisson 0-0-0-0,
C. Taylor J..().0-2, TOTALS 25..().
19-69
EASTERN - Otto 0-0-0-0,
Gardner 2-0-04, Clay 2-0-2-6,
Melzger 0-0..().0, Gillian 0-0-0-0,
PhiUips 2-0-3-7, Baker 0-0-1-1,
Wilson 1-0-1-3, Morri$ 0-0-2-2,
Aeiker 0-0-0-0, Easunan 0-0-0-0,
Roush 0..().2-2; TOTALS 7-0-12-25

·GIVE BLOOD

feullliDi ............. . , . . . _
- .. -t21.,.,.oltl, _ _._

-

Eastern was led by Leie Ann Gil- ~

A GIFT FORM THE HEART

......,_

In the flnt quarter of Molllla7 alcht'l NBA
In Routoa, whleb the Celllct woa 111'7-81. (UPI)

Fox saved the ball along the
By TOM WITHERS .
sideline to Carolina guard King
UPI Sports Writer
For now, North Carolina Is one Rice, who had fallen down. Rice
alertly passed to Hubert Davis
up on Kentucky.
The 10th-rariked Tar Heels, who hit a cutting Chilcutt, whose
who entered Monday night's . uncontested layup gave the Tar
game tied with Kentucky for as Heels their first lead since 10-8.
After another Wildcat miss,
the winnlngest teams In college
the
Tar Heels ran 37 seconds off .
basketball with 1,483. victories,
the
clock
before Rice was fouled
posted an 84·81 victory over the
Wildcats to reclaim the top spot. with one second left.
"We're obviously pleased to
But victory 1,484 didn't come
win and we are very fortunate to
easy .
The Tar Heels, 5-1, trailed win," North Carolina head coach
almost the entire game before Dean Smith said . "I told King to
taking an 82·81 lead with 59 miss the last free throw and he
seconds to go on Pete Chilcutt's knocked It ln. That's how we shot
all night -tell 'em to make It and·
dunk following a wild scramble.
Kentucky, 4-1, took an 81-77 they miss, tell them to miss and
when'John Pelphrey scored three they make lt."
"I thought Kentucky outplayed
of his game-high 24 points but
They're much better than
us.
Rick Fox burled a three-pointer
they
were last year," Smith said.
to bring North Carolina to within
"I· know It has to be a terrible,
81-ll().
disappointing loss for them."
Reggie Hanson then missed a
The.Tar Heels had little trouble
short 1umper for Kentucky and

Trace (5·1, 4-i) , whO suffered
their first loss of the season after
winning Its first five games, will
host Kyger Creek.
Quarter totals
Hannan Trace ... 11 12 13 20-56
Symmes Valley .. 13 22 14 9-58
Symmes Valley (58) -Owens
10-0-2-22; Krausz 6-0-6-18;
Schneider 3·0-3·9; Conley 2·0.0-4;
McGuire 1-0-0-2; J . Wilson 0·0-22; S. Wilson 0.0·1-1. Totals 2Z.0-14-ll8
(See HOOPS on Page 5)

By DAVE HARRIS

tackles with 78 (25 solo, 74 assists). Geoff led the 1eall1 in sacks
with seven and tackles for losses
with 11. The award was sponsered
by Farmers Bank and Savings
Company.
'
Se~;~ior Eric l:leck and Freshman
Jeff Tracy was named the winnec of
the 100 percent award. Heck was a
sparlc plug for the Mara~ders .on
both sides of the ball desptte bemg
only 54, 128 pounds. l:leck was
founh on lhe team in tacltles wilh .
42 (26 solo, 18 assists), Eric caused
two fumbles and led the team
recovering four, he also had two
sacks and four tackles for losses.
Tracy a 5-7, 155 pounder received
the award despite not playing a
single down. Jeff was a freq'!ent
visitor to the Marauder weight
room during the sumll)er, he broke
his leg iri a preseason practice but
continued to auend practice. The
award was sponsored by Middleport Ttophys.

FRANK BLAKE

GEOFF COGAR

North Carolina tops Kentucky 84-81

Marauder girls extinguish
two~game losing streak

· Jt'olm.AutDCo....,lei'llhtlel•

...
coates I

LeRoy Irvin (47) and VIctor Jones (right) In the
dust on his way to the end zone on a 55-yard
touchdown run In the second quarter of Monday
night's game In Pontiac, Mich. The Ralden came
from behind to win 38;31. ( UPI)

KCHS, Hannan Trace post wins

Symmes Valley 58
Hannan Trace 56
At Aid, Symmes Valley over-came a game-high 27 points from
Hannan Trace's Lucy Mullens
and being outscored 20-9 In the
fourth quarter to squeak by with
a two-point victory.
Junior pivot Jennifer Owens,
who led Symmes with 22 points,
got major offensive help from

STEALS BAIL - Houlton's Buck Jotm.on
(rtriiU steals the bll!lfrom Boston'a Reule Lewta

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'l'lleeda)''s 1•mea

GB
212
712
8
912
912 .

Cnlral Dlvlotoo
MUwaukee .............. U 6 .700

Detroit .................... 11 6 .700 Chicaao .............. &gt;.... 12 7 .6.!2 111
C11Miand .............. 10 10 .:100 4 ·
Charlotte ................ 8 11 .421 !
IndianA ................... 812 -4111! 6

Bulfaloal Detroit, 7:35p.m .
New Jersey at N.Y. Islanders,

7:35p.m.
•
Philadelphia at Washington, 7: 35
p.m .

Cl\lcago at PlltsbuJllh. 7:35p.m.
WIMipeg at St. Loull. 8:35p.m .
· Cal pry at Minnesota. 8: n p.m.
N.Y. Ran,ers at Los An1eles,
10:35 p.m.
WedaeMiay'a &amp;am•
Boston at HarUord, 7:35p.m.
Montreal at Torooto. 7:35p.m.
Vancouver at Edmootcn, 10: 3~

p.m.

with the Wildcats last year,
winning 121·110 In a wild shootout. But Kentucky's trapping
defense forced North . Carolina
Into 19 flrst·half turnovers and 28
percent shooting from the field .
Fox, Chilcutt and Rice paced
the Tar Heels with 14 points each
and George Lynch and Davis
added 13 apiece. Chilcutt also
grabbed 10 rebounds. ·
Kentucky led 69-59 with 8:41
left In the game before Fox
scored seven points and North
Carolina came back with a 16-9
run to cut the Wildcats' lead to
76-75 with 2:50 remaining.
"It's a very dlfClcult loss to
sustain. We're very proud of our
guys," Kentucky. head coa.c h
Rick Pit !no said. " It's a bitter pill
for us to swallow . We should have
won the bal!game.
"We thought we were No. 1_In
the country going Into the game.
Now, we don't," Elsewhere In the
UP! Top 25, No. 13 Oklahoma
downed Coppin State 98-79 and
co-No. 19 South Carolina ripped
Ci1arleston Southern 69·51.
At Norman, Okla., Brent Price
scored 27 points and Kermit

ERIC HECK
Holmes added 23 to pace the
Sooners. The Sooners Improved
to 7-1 and lmncreased their home
winning streak to 50 straight
games, the second-longest such
winning streak behind Arizona.
eggle Isaacs scored 21 of his 27
points In the flr$1 half for the
Eagles.
At Columbia, S.C., Jo Jo
English scored 23 points and .
Barry Manning added 16 to pace
the Gamecocks, 6·1. South CarolIna us£,d an 11·2 run midway
through the second hair to take a
49-37 lead and coasted. Charleston Southern, which used to be
know as Baptist, rallied to move
within five with 5:42 to go. ·but
South Carolina ended the game
with a 17-4 outburst. David Oliver
and Bernard Nelson led the
Buccaneers, 1-3, with 16 points
each .

Philadelphia, Calgary win
" Some of the goals against him
By United Press International
(Hextalll
tonight won't go in
Two of the NHL's stars returned from an absence Sunday when he's sharp," Holmgren
night . and, even though they said. "But his abllltles to handle
the puck and get It out of the
brought varying. Impact, both
defensive
zone gave us a lift."
their clubs 'e merged with a
Neely
had
been suspended for a
victory.
stick-swinging
Incident against
Goalie Ron Hextali rejoined
the
Hartford
Whalers'
Randy
Philadelphia's lineup after a
Ladouceur
on
Nov.
23.
The
lengthy ln1ury and helped the
Bruins
went
2·3
In
his
absence.
Flyers to a 5-4 victory over the
·'As the game went on I felt a
Buffalo Sabres.
lot
better." Neely said. "At the
Boston winger Cam Neely
start
of the game I was a little
returned from a five-game susanxious, a little excited. Maybe I
pension and, In ;~n even bigger
.
was trying to do a little bit too
Impact, scored the wiqnlng goal
much.
"
In the Boston Bruins' 3·2 triumph
Neely
made It 3-0 with his 12th
over the Buffalo Sabres.
goal
at
4:22
of the third . With a
"I may have a sh9rt memory ,
penalty
coming
up to Buffalo,
but this Is as tired as I've ever
Neely
converted
the
rebound of a
felt," said Hex tall, who stymied
off
the
post
through
a maze
shot
Ch!cago's comeback bid with 24
of
players
from
25
feet.
·
saves In the last two periods.
In
the
only
other
NHL
game,
"I'm not thrilled about my
Calgary downed Edmonton 3-2 .
performance, but we won. I'm
FlaRJeS 3, Oilers 2 - At
ready to go."
Edmonton,
Alberta, defenseman
Sidelined since Oct. 'J:l when he
AI
Macinnis
scored two goals and
strained a knee ligament against
goalie Mike Vernon stopped 24
the New York Islanders, Hextall
shots.
leading Calgary. Mac In·
didn't' learn of the starting
nis,
leading
scorer on the
assignment until early Sunday
Flames,
blasted
a pair of slap·
morning when the club arrived
shots
past
Oilers
goalie Bill
from Minneapolis. ·
Ran
ford
In
the
second
period.
Philadelphia head coach Paul
Holmgren sidestepped questions
about his Immediate goaltendlng
plans. Hextali, Pete Peeters and
Ken Wregget give the Flyers
what Tochett called "the best
EL PASO. Texas (UPI) ~
goaltendlng In the league," but
·oavld
'Van Dyke led five Texas·
their collective $1 .4 mUllan saEl
Paso
players In double figures
lary Is likely to put Wregget on
16
points and added 10
with
the trading block.
rt:!bounds Monday night to lift the
Miners to a 79-61 victory over
~pellman
Bradley In a non-conference
game.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) ~
Mark McCall and Henry Hall
added 13 points each for UTEP,
Sophomore defensive end Alonzo
Spellman has been suspended
4-2, a member of the Western
frpril the Ohio State f09tball team
Athletic Conference.
and will not play In the Liberty
Curtis Stuckey led the Braves,
2-3, of the Missouri Valley
Bowl Dec. 27, coach John Cooper
said Monday.
Conference, with 28 points.
. Cooper said Spellr'(lan was
suspended for disciplinary reasons but would not elaborate.
The Columbus Dispatch said
Spellman and walk-on tailback
.Troy Lopes were both suspended
for academiC reasons.
"I've just got to work hard and
get back and gel ready for the
·next season," said Spellman .
The 6-foot·6, 270.pound Spel·
lman finished the season with 52
tackles In 10 games after being
switched to defensive end from
outside linebacker at the start of the season.
Defensive coordinator Bill
Young said junior Derrl~k Foster
likely Will start agalnstAir Force
In the Liberty Bowl.
''We expect Alonzo back In the
spring ancl next fall," said
Young .

JEREMY PHALJN

NBA games ...

AARON SHEETS·

(Continued from Page 4l
Houston turned the ball over
fo ur times in the final period, and
hit just 6 of 25 !rom the field (24
percent) and three free throws.
Olajuwon was held scoreless in·
the third quarter, and _ sc·ored
nine of Houston's 16 fourthquarter points.
"That Is a championship
team ," Olajuwon said of Boston.
" This year they have a tough
team. You can't make mis takes
against a team like that because
were
of their experience.
running out offense, but we just
didn't knock the shots down."
In the only other NBA game,
New J ersey nipped Charlotte
121-115.
.
Nets 121, Hornets 115~ At East
Rutherford, N.J. , Chris Morris
scored 10 points during a crucial
New Jersey run In the fourth
quarter, leading the Nets to
victory. Reggie Theus led the
Nets with ·26 points, Sam Bowie
added 22 and J ack Haley, replac·
lng the Injured Derrick Cole ma n,
contributed 18 points and a
career-high 18 rebounds. Rex
Chapman had 24 points, Johnny
Newman 19 and Armon Gilliam
and J.R. Reid added 18 apiece for
the Hornets, who dropped their
fourth straight.

we

Girls' hoops...
(Continued from Page 4)
Hannan Trace (56)- Mullens
9-0-9-27; Thomas 6-0-0-12; Triplett 2-1-0-7; D. Nelson 2-0·1·5;
Dillon 2-0-0-4; Ours 0·0·1·1. Totals
~ 21-I-11·56
Field goals~ 22-75 (29.3%)
Foul shots ~ 11-35 (31.4'!1 )
Rebounds ~ 41 (Mullens 13)
Blocked shots ~ 1
Assists -:- 10
Sleals ~ 16
Turnovers ~ 13

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�Tuesday, December 11, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Annand Hammer
dead at 92

I

I

. LOS ANGELES (UP!) ~ Ar· ness links to communist nallons,
mand Hammer, a .brilliantly were shouted down.
successful International finan·
!_n 1976 he was fined $3,000 and
cler and weli·know'n phllanthro- . put on prohallon for making
plst who was a friend of Soviet Illegal contributions to Richard
leaderstrornLenin toGorbachev Nixon's 1972 presidential cam·
andadvlaer tolOU.S.presldents, paign. That black mark on his
died Monday night. He was 92.
reputation was removed in 1989
Hammer's death at his home when he was pardoned by Presi·
following a brief illness came dent Bush.
just one day before he was to
A dapper man with a ready
celebrate his bar mitzvah. the smile, Hammer also was known
Jewish ceremony of manhood for having one of the greatest
normally undergone in·the early personal art collections in the
teens.
world. To house the vast collec·
. FamilY spokesman Howard tion valued at between $250
Bragman said the bar mitzvah, million and $400 million,
which was planned as a fun- Hammer decided to build the $86
draiser, will go on as scheduled million Armand Hammer Mu·
Tuesday but · Instead will be a seum of Art and Cultural Center
tribute to Hammer and will . in the Westwood section of Los
·
Angeles. The plans embroiled
include his grandson.
Hammer is credited with sav· him in a dispute with stock·
lng Russian peasants from star· holders, whofelthewasspendlng
vation, Occidental Petroleum too much. company money on·
from bankruptcy, and was the charities.
first American to send aid to the
In 1971, he willed $12 million
Soviet Union following the Cher· worth..of masterpieces to the Los
nobyl nuclear disaster in.1986.
Angeles County Museum of Art
A multimillionaire with a taste and the National Gallery In
for horses, wine and fine art, was Washington.
so trusted by the Kremlin that
His bequests included Vincent
they allowed him to enter Rus· Van Gogh's "L'Hospltal de St.
sian air space In his private jet, a Paul a St. Remy," for which
rare privilege.
Hammer paid $1.2 million, and
A tireless traveler, bursting works by Raphael, Goya, Renoir
with energy even in his 90s, he and .Gauguin. 1n 1976, he paid a
was equally at home at his Los record $3.25 million for Rem·
Arigeles estate, a luxury. apart· brandt's "Juno" $nd in 1980 pajd
m~nt in New York's Greenwich $5.28 million tor the last Leo·
Vlllage and ·an opulent flat in nardo da Vinci manuscript in
MOscow given him by Leonid private hands, willing both to the
Brezhnev. Although·in generally Los Angeles museum.
The American Cancer Society
good health, on November 10,
1989, Hammer had a pacemaker honored him for his 1981 offer of a
Implanted.
$1 million prize to the scientist
1n 1973 he negotiated a 20-year who fo.und a cure for cancer.
$20 billion chemical fertilizer
He met with Soviet leaders on a
barter deal with the Soviet personal level 'perhaps never
UniOn, at the time the largest reached by heads of state, and
sillgle transaction ever between said · the United States and the
a nation and a private company. Soviet Union could and probably
Then in 1982 he masterminded would eo-exist, that both were led
the Occidental Petroleum ta· by pragmatic men with a justitia-·
keoverof Cities Service Co. for$4 ble fear of nuclear war.
billion.
Another recent project was a
But his greatest single Amert· venture to make joint programs
can business achievement was for . American, Russian and Chi·
the rescue of oCcidental Petro· nese television.
leum, which announced Monday
After . a lifetime of friendly
night that President Dr. Ray R. involvement in the economic life
Irani will succeed Hammer as of Communist nations, Hammer,
chairman and chief executive whose parents were commuofficer.
nists, prophetically told an inter·
Hammer already . considered viewer in 1982 that "socialism
himself retired In 1957 when he will be replaced in time by more
IQ9k the reins of the company, private ventures ... because
then a small wildcat oil drilling communism just doesn't work."
firm worth an estimated $34,000.
He predicted that communism
Ten years later it was worth $779 would be replaced by "a sort of
million. By 1982 It was the lOth hybrid, a mix of government
largest oil company in the world, undertakings and private
worth more than $8 billion.
enterprise."
Grateful stockholders, some of
Hammer, a doctor who never
whom became millionaires on practiced medicine, was born in
small investments thanks to New York Ciiy May 21. 1898, to
Hammer's skills. created what a Russian lmmigra.nt parents.
few dissidents complained was a
At 15 he borrowed $165 from an
"cult of personality."
older brother, boughi a used car
They held their annual meeting and got a job delivering candy.
on Hammer's birthday. Rising to Within two weeks he paid of! his
their feet in elegant hotel bal· brother ~ with interest ~ and
!rooms, they serenaded him with owned the car. He made a vow he
would be a millionaire before he
':Hippy Birthday, Dear Chair·
mab'' and presented him with
was old enough to vote, and
home·baked birthday cakes. Dis·
reached his goal by running a
stdents who tried to question his small 'chemical company owned
leadership, including his busi· by his physician father while

DEAD AT 92 ~ Armand Hammer, left, shakes hands with
President Reagan as Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev looks on in
attending Columbia (Jniversily
Medical School.
Fresh out of medical school In
1921, waitingforaninternship,he
heard Herbert Hoover, then
American relief administrator,
caillor help to aid famine victims
in the Soviet Union.·
'I' he 23-year-old Hammer
bought a complete hospital from
the government and went to
Russia. The sight of peasants
starving to death in the after·
math of the revolution convlnce.:J
him food was a greater need.
At a historic meeting in 1921
with Vladimir I. Lenin, founder
of the . Soviet state, Hammer
talked him into trading Russian
furs for American wheat which Hammer knew was a glut
on the market at home-' ending
a breakdown of trade between
the two na·tions.
Sixty years later, -the meeting
became the subject of a popular
Moscow play, :·Thus We Will
Win."
Years later, Hammer said that
Lenin "told me. frankly that
Communism wasn't working ...
We want •foreign capitalists to
come here."
·
He moved to Moscow to deveiop asbestos mines, the flrsi
foreign trade concession by Rus·
sia since the Bolsheviks over·
threw the czar.
His career as an international
trader took off. He talked Henry
Ford, reluctant to deal with
Moscowbecauseofhisopposltion

to commumsm, into giving him a
monopoly on the sale of Ford cars
and tractors to Russia.
When Soviet leaders started a
campaign to teach Russians to
read and write, they ran into a
pencil shortage. Hammer
opened a pencil factory, which he
called one or his most profitable
ventures.
After Lenin's death and the
rise of Josef Stalin, the Soviet
Union again shut its doors ·to
outsiders, including Hammer.
He went to Paris and started an
international banking firm, mak·
ing a fortune trading Soviet
notes.
When he lived in Moscow, he
had amassed a great collection of
Russian art objects. He became
an International art dealer, and
with his brothers founded an art
gallery in New York.
Tl)ey were credited with being
the first to.use department stores
to popularize paintings and sell
them on cred.tt. With his new
outlets. Hammer marketed a
large part of William Randolph
Hearst's $50 million art collec·
lion, providing the publisher with
the money to save his fabled
castle at San Simeon, Calif., from
mortgage foreclosure.
In 1977, He oversaw a merger·
establishing a $40 million art
dealership, forecasting that "a
lot of oil money generated in the
Middle East will eventually be
invested in art."

He made money in Angus Houston in 1979, the Chinese
cattle, building the largest herd leader said Hammer needed no
in the world . He invested In a introduction and asked him "to
small distillery in the war years, · come to China to help us as you
got the jump on the vodka boom have gone to Russia.''
with the help of a Russian friend,
Within three years, Hammer
and within several years owned had a $230 million contract with
the second largest distilling the Chinese .government to deenterprise in the United States . velop the largest surface coal
In .1956, with his third wife, he mine in the world.
retired to Los Angeles .
He got along easily ivlth Soviet
But Hammer grew bored with
leaders.
retirement and took over Occid·
In 1980, Hammer found himself
eptal Petroleum Corp. when its
at the Kremlin during the Soviet
stock sold 'for $3 a share. He built invasion of Afghanistan. Leonid
it to a high of $100 befor.e it
Brezhnev told him the Soviets
sagged. Under Hammer's gui·
invaded because they feared .
dance, Occidental consistently Moslem rebels, wit,h the help of
outmaneuvered such giants as
the ClA and China, would· gain
Standard Oil, Texaco and Shell in control of the mountainous state
. international deals.
bordering southern Russia, and
Hammer was a large contrlbu·
they were puzzled by the vehem·
tor to both Republican and
ence of the U.S. reaction.
Democratic parties . and a 1972
Hammer said said Brezhnev
secret contribution of $54,000 to told him the Soviets would
the Nixon campaign brought a
"definitely withdraw just as soon
federal indictment against him.
as order was established, and
He pleaded guilty March 4,
they had no intention of going on
1976, to• three misdemeanor
to the Persian Gulf and threating
counts of making illegal cam- our oil supply."
paign contributions. Confined to
In spring 1986 Hammer helped
a wheelchair in court because of arrange Soviet and U.S. approval
a serious heart ailment, he heard
for Dr. Robert Gale, the. Ameri·
himself fined $3,000 and placed
can chairman of tt.e Jnterna·
on probation for one year.
tiona! Bone Marrow Transplant
He was charged with giving the
Team, to fly to Kiev to help
$54,000 to former Montana Gov.
victims of the Chernobyi nuclear
Tim · Babeock who in turn gave
power plant disaster,
the money to friends who earmarked It for Nixon's campaign.
Babcock pleaded guilty to
hiding the identity of Hammer as
the donor and was sentenced to a
fo)Jr·inonth jail term.
Hammer and Occidentlll nego,'
tiated a $3.blllion agreement with
.,
the Russians in 1972 to develop
•
the vast oil and natural gas
•
deposits in the Soviet Union.
•
As "the man who knew Lenin,"
"
••
he had access to communist
leaders throughout the world.
t'
When he met Deng Xiaoplng in

POINSETTIAS

$299
-

Pioneer Press Dispatch, are unusual because of the political
liable for damages for reneging campaign and Cohen's apparent
on a 1982 agreement made with a effort to leak information that~
source.
on second glance _ was not as
A Minnesota trial court ruled damaging as it appeared
they ~ere. guilty of breach or
The newspapers also t~lked to
contract and misrepresentation,
the person who initially unco·
and a Jury ordered them to pay vered the information and he
$700,000 in compensatory and claimed to have do~e It at
punitive damages to the source.
Cohen.' s behest.
But by a 4·2 vote, the Minnesota
The Minnesota Supreme Court
participated in the violation by Supreme Court reversed the found that a journalist-source
holding the· woman's leg down award, ruling that the newspap· pact is an "I'll-scratch-your·
while another youth raped her.
ers' actions were fully protected back·if·you'll·scratch,mine"
Wise's attorney, Colin Moore, by theFirstAmendmentguaran·
agreement where both sides
argued at trial that the second tee of freedom of the press and benefit - not a legal contract.
videotaped confession was made there was no legal agreement lo
In his appeal to the Supreme
only after Wise was intimidated breach.
Court, Cohen's lawyer wrote that
and coerced by police.
The Supreme Court's decision
the case "presents explicitly the
Earlier, the jury asked Justice · is expected next year.
· question of whether the First
Thomas GaiUgan for more re- · "There' s a good deal at stake,"
Amendment permits a media
reading of testimony concerning Jane Kirtley • executive director organization to deliberately vio·
Wise and Detective John Hartl· or the Reporters Committee for late an undisputed and unambig·
gan during the time between the Freedom of the Press, said
uous promise of confidentiality."
youth's last written confession Monday.
Courts are occasionally in·
and his two videotaped
She said the Supreme Court volved in the issue of reporters
confessions. . .
appears ready to "in my view and sources, but normally only
The statements to pollee are drastically reduce the protection when judges order journalists to
reveal the Identity of a source
the strongest evidence against that the First Amendment has
Wise.
giv~n to journalists .. . the right to
deemed important in a trial.
Each youth is charged with 13 ma e your own news judgments,
If the court were to rule that a
criminal counts, including rape which .1.s really what this case is
reporter-source . agreement is
and attempted murder for an about.
legally binding, it could uninten·
attack on the woman jogger that
Durt.ng Minnesota's 1982 gubtionaily help some journalists
left her battered and close to ernatorial race, Dan Cohen was
who face contempt of court for
death in a muddy ditch.
working for the Republican can·
refusing to reveal their sources
Moore maintains Wise Is inno- dldate lor governor when he
but probably only in civil cases'
cent and !Vas tricked Into making provided· information about past
Kirtley said.
'
incriminating statements.
legal troubles of the Democratic
"That's a very high price to
pay to get very little," said
In his first videotaped state· candidate for lieutenant
ment to police, Wise recounted governor.
Kirtley.
the vicious attack on the jogger·In
He gave the Information to a
The decision to review the ·case
graphic detail but claimed he political reporter from each
comes just weeks after the court
watched from behind a tree and newspaper after they agreed not
refused to halt a prior restraint
was not involved.
to use his name or ask where he
against Cable News Network,
In his second videotaped state· obtained the information.
barring it from airing tapes of
But the newspapers both !den· deposed Panamanian dictator
ment, Wise admitted partlclpatlng, saying he "played with her titled Cohen as the source of the Manuel Noriega.
leg" while the rape was under information they published In the
"The court does seem to be less
way. He told Asslatant District next day'.s editions. Cohen lost
reluctant to enter Into the busi·
Attorney Elizabeth Lederer, who his advertising job 81 a result.
· ness of telnng the news media
questioned him on the tape,
The newspapers contend the
what their business ought to be,"
'This Is my first rape."
circumstances in this case were
said Kirtley.

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143- Arebia Oist
· 379 - W•Inut

MIS on Co .. WV
Area Code 304

675 - PI. F'len1nt "
458-leon
676 - Appl• Grove
773-Miton

992-Middlapon
Pom•ov
905-Ch . .ter
843- Pon'-nd
247-letart F1lls
949 - Racine
?42-Autl..,d ,
167- Coalville

882-New

H•~en

896-Let•rt
937-Buftalo

' $9.00
013 .00
51 .30/ day

NO SUNDAY CALlS

Get Rataht fast

16 - Radio, TV 6 CB R•pair

21 _;_ Busin•s Opporlunitv

Real Est ate
31-,.omn tor S1le
32-MobileHomas for Sale
J3-F~rmslor

S11e
34-Businets Buildings

41-Houaes for Renl
42- Mobilt Homes for Renl

Public Notice

Iowa:

Office spoce to houoe the
Meig1 County Department
of ~umon Sorvicos JOBS
Divlolon, 700 oquoro loot
mlnlnMim toto! opoce.
Conalltlng of 1 minimum
of two offices. Acce11to to I"
lotlocllltloo for mon ond wo·
men. Said office epace 1tillll
ho.. bath hHtlng ond olr
conditioning, adequate fluo.._.,1 lighting sutllclent
lor alllco worll . Wiring lor
throo prong electrical plugs,
oloctricot outlot a opocod ••·
ery Mx feet epert.
Sold otllco spoc:e mull bo
l0011ted within a rHIOftlble
dl1t1nce from our exlltfng
tocetlont oo thotthe County

ACREs- 4 BR. 3 baths. 2 garages, renled I
BR apartment. Properly inch.&lt;les pond. IP·
pr... 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg and m!Dile
home. Areal bargain at$89,900.

Agency

JANET'S HAIR-GO-ROUND

shell not lncun un·

nectiiiiiY coot In tho lnllol·
latlon of our telephone and

Featuring Perm Specials
For Terri and Sarah
· Reg. Perms - '29.95
Spiral Perms ..:... '39.95

computer ..,...m.

Rental required for

••~

building ond ..t.ted loclll·
lin lhaukl bo broken down
lor o ano (11 ye~~r bulo. All
bida lhoukllncludo thll bid·

773-5404

der i1 to provide mtlntenence for the exterior and In·

terior of the buHclng.
Tho Boord of County

'

Commllllonera m11y require

,

Office Hours
Mohday through Friday

9 a.m. -5 p.m.
.Suite 13,
PVH Medical Office Building

•'

I tn

rlie lainift o1 pro~eu~ona!s

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE
AVAILABLE. I
·.
AT '5.00 PER DAY ·

'

'•

(304) .675·7700

IJI.I PLEASANT VALL£Y HOSPITAL

ocldldonol controct provl·
llano with the iuccooslul
bidder Including but not
llmlttd to the righ1 of the op·
tion to cancel the lease if n•·
ces11ry by giving o mini·
mum ofolxty (1101 doys writ·
ton natlce.
Tho front of the envelope
onclaslna lllo bid mull be
morllocl 0 Sooled Bid" JOBS
Dlvlolon. Bidder oholl fur·
nilh tllolr own bid lormo.
Tho l011d of County
Commtolfo-• moy ocoopt
the bid 01 ...... the
bid lor the lntondod
ond tho laold 'of
County Commlolfonoro r •
-lhe right to ~eject ony ..
ott bldo. ond/or ony po"

,.

Public Notice

Publtc Notice

NOTICI TO IIDDIIII
MI!IOS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN IIIIVICIS
JOII DIYIIION ·
In IOG...... OI with - ·
lion 307.II oflhe Ollla II•

viHd Cocle, -lod·bldo wAI
bo ro nlvod by lllo Motgo
County llooonl al Comml•
....,.. In tllolr offtco
toootocl ,In tho Caurthouoo,
" " - · Ohla untR -nan
o-m11or 21, 1110. Tho

pu-.

''*"'·

Mory E. Hobatottw. ,C lerk
Moiga County &amp;o.rd of
CommluiCN:~era

(12111.11. 2tc

llldewll N DPIRid at 1:30

P. 0. lo• 190, '-"Y• ON. •15769

11-Z0-~1••·

GUN SHOOT
RACiriE
'FIRE DEPT.

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Slrkliy Enfarcoti

9·25·'99-tln

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

11·23·111-1 mo.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
38 Years Experience

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC. . ,
•ON -SITE SER VICil / REP hilt
"CUSTOM PROGRAMMIN&lt;;
"Shi.ES
•ON .SITE CUSTOM TRAiNING

HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday
10amto6pm

We Are A Deer
Checking Station,

ol Commi1llonera in their

Pro bolo Court. Molgo Coun·
ty, Ohio. for approvtl end

oltlco lacotocl In tho Court·

houu. Second Street, Po·

tenlement:

moroy. Ohio 48788 un11112
noon on the 28th city of Do·
cember,1990ondo11:45P .
M. opened by tho Cleric of

ESTATE NO. 284118- Fl·
nolond DlllrlbutivoAccount
of Aunda Klein. Executrix of
tho Ellote of Wllllom Lellor.
Hart. Doc:eottd.
ESTATE NO. 28314- Fi·
nalond OillributivoAccount
of Oougla1 W. Litt•. Executor oftha Elltte of Mary L.
Moredlth. Doceooed.
ESTATE NO. 21273 - Fi·
nolond DlltrlbutivoAccount
of Brook a Sayre. E•ecutor of
tho E11111 of Poul S . Sayre,

•ld Board 1nd reed •loud
for the purch1M of an UP·
grade of the axlating computer 1y11tem and rental of •oftwore for theOhlaJOBS Pro·
gram.
The Molgs County Depart·

ment of Human Service•
wl1hea to 1utomete the Ohio

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER 'SERVICE
-R.oom Additions

-Gutter Worll

ing in·hou• computer 1¥'·
Item. The ln-houee tYitem
mult be upgraded with additional memory, uaer cepaclty,
termlnala/keyboerdl,
printer end communlcatlona
lor off ollt procesolng. A
toftwere
progrem which
will pracou on upocto ol
the Ohio JOBS Program is

ESTATE NO. 28880- Fl·

naland Dlltrlbutive Account
al Mory M. Uolo, Exocutrix
of the Eatate of Donald W.
Utlo, DocotMd.
ESTATE NO. 28362- Fi·

nal and Dlltributlva Account
of Abblo W. Sirttton. Ex•
cutrlx oftha Ellote of A de E.

dotlred. lnllollotlan of tho

Warner. Dece111d.

hardware and aaftware , 11

21824 of Dlono
of the p.,.
of Mobil

well to 11olnlng ond .,pport

ia atao required.
Specification• for 11ld
Brown. an Incompetent Per· . computer upgrade and aoft·
were rental mey be obtelned
lOR.

-Concrete Work
.

Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ul

Monday through Frkloy.

The Commla8ionera are
bound by Fodorol low which
prohibit• oontroallng lrom

an Mtllbllshment they or

1

family member rMV ho.. 1

flnenciel int•elt ln.

m11y file written e•ceptkJna
to Hid eccounta or to men·
era pertainlftl to the •ecu~an of tho lnlot. not loto

Tho Cammlulonou rot·
lfVI the right to ,.""' ony
ond oil bido ond/ or occopt
the bell bid lor the Intended

thon fivo doyo prior ta the
dote Mt lor heorlng.
Robert E. lucie. Judllo

pUrpoH.

1

Mory E. Hobttotlor. Clorll
Molgo County laerd of
Commlolfonoro
(12J11, 18 2ta

· Common Plua Court,

Probattl Dlvloion
Moip County. Ohio
(12J11.1tc

...

~

'

r .,,

,!

NO S~DA HAllS
4-16-86-tfn

·"'

«

.0 •
,. ~;
'

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
Drivoro ... U
Wodgeo .. *I

.,

. .,,

PotMroy, Ohio

11/14/tfn

•

Sc:aut (amp IMd
Chttl•, Ohio
II·H-10-I•o •·•

...-----.·'..
J&amp;L

SER~ICE

INSULAnON

We can r~air tind recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also I!Cid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAY' HILL FORD

:·&lt;

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

, "'

Windows
•Roofing

"\

•Insulation
JAMES KEESEE

DO'inl S.

. . 992-21~6
Middleport, Obio

992·2772

•COMMERCIAL
Wt NEED USTINGS!

t-!3-lfc

'

":·

742-2251 , .,

639 Bryan Plac• · "'
Middl•port, Ohio
·1:
11/14/th

,._ · ~

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

~

USE_, APPUAtiCES·.

HILL'S DEER

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

cuniNG

90 DAY WA'IIIIITY ,

Now Location:
161 North Socand
Mioldlopart, Ohio 45760

CUTTING.
SKINNING.
WRAPPING

•

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

949-2206

------- '.

1 1 ·6·90·1

'

CHIISTMAS DEES
FOI SALE

MICRDWAYE
OVEN REPAII

SHIUB &amp; TREE

ALL MAKES

REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

TIIM~

Bring lt. In Or Wi
_Pick Up•

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or 9,85-3561
acr- ,,.. Peat OHice
2171.

s.c..._.,

POIIIIOY, 01110

1/&amp;fi0/111

•fiREW~OD

BILL LACK
992-2269
. . .
.

..

.,

White&amp;.
Scotch Pine

II Ft. 1nd Up
Well Shured. Grown
on the .W ebM' Farm In

..

Rutllnd

Sl2. S20
lEIDY DIC. 2atl

USb RAILROAD TIES

7C2·2143

..

,.

-·'
11·26·'10'\ MO, ' -i;
··a-...

e.12·90 1111

....

_,~

Valeyo Drive, '-Mnt ~1. W. Va. 25550

.'

,,
,,

JOHN TEAFORD

. 992-6215

lionere betweln the hours
of 8:30 o.m. ond 4:30 p.m ..

'

r
Putter~ ... •
. ~ fi
GRAPHITE SHAFTS · •., '
·
INSTALLED
.~
BAGS .... ...... ... .... .... e2$ •
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES &amp; PLAQUES ~

-Interior·II Ellterior ,

PH. 94f·280.1
or Res. 949-2860

from lhe Clorll altho Boord
al Molgo County Commls·

Unteu exceptions are
filed thereto, allld accounts
wtll bo lor heorlng boloro
uld Court an the 1B1h dey
of Jonuory, 1881. 11 which
time uld accounta will be
conoklorod ond continued
lrom cloy to dty untltllnolly
diiPDIId of.
Any poroon lntoraoted

.

'\:

J

,/"
·

-Eioctrlcel &amp; Plumbing
-Rooting

~

IL

KOUNTRY KlUB- :.•

JOBS Program on Ito exist·

Oeceeled.

..

•

I 446-6000

11·21-9·1 mo.

'

Accountt and vouchers of
the following named flducitriH have been filed In the

'•

'

SPRING VAUEY PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
106 JACKSON PIKE· SUITE 1D~
GAWPOUS, OHIO 4J6J I

"Free Estimates"

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
COMPUTER SYSTEM
UPGRADE
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
Setled bids wMI bo noc:olved
by tho Molgo County Boord

'

(6141 ~....~16., 1-100-172·5967

21!t Mi. outside
Rutland on N•w
Lima Rd.

···•-ltfilt

Public Notice

'

locat.d on Soff~ School ld. off lt. 1•1

Wa Sey What Wa Do.
Wa Do What Wa Say

BISSELL • ...
SIDING CO.

...

BENNm'S MOBILE
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

61.·992-2321
213 North Second

•VINYL S !DING
•
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

614-949-2734
or
614-949-2635

Stoekl!

MOBILE HOME FURNACES
• HEAT PUMPS.
.' .
AU FURNACE PARTS

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742·2421

Factory Chalco

Services

ftJISIIBf.

11·14-U.I.

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Mow In

amrRIIt-

UPHOLSTERY

11·29·1 mo. pd.

SII IJtliies

ESTATE NO.
Filii Account
Smith, Guordlon
son ond Eotelo

For $19.95 Te.

SED SECUim PIODUCTS

Of Ml ••ltpott

742-3051

Public Notice

p .m. on December 21, 1990
and reed aloud lor tho lot·
towing building leo... Eoch
bld .to moet the condltlono
ond opoclflcotiono •• lot·

POR SALE IN RACINE

I

57 - Mt.Jtic.t lnsuumenu
!8 - Fruitl &amp; VegetBblt!ll
59- For Sale or Tr1de

83 - Eac/Na.ting
84-Eiec:tricel &amp; Aefri9••tion
85.:...General Htuling
86 - Mobile Home RepaW
87- Upholltery

49 - For Le"ate

DON•T BE EXTI
Protact your..lf with the
STUN-UM key chain sprayer
STUN·UM is the most advanced chemical
self defense weapon available -your edge
against personal crime.
·
To Order SetHI Check or ~y Ordlr

.CAIN'S

BOB SNOWDEN
Main St., Rutland

81 -· Home Improvement•
82 - Piumbing &amp; Ha111lng

•4- A.ptnment tor Rent .
45- Furnished Rooms
46 - Sig•ce for Rant
47-Wanled to Rent
48-Equ,pmenl for Rent

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Internal Medicine

White &amp;
Scotch Pine

56-Building,SuppliM

., '.

•New Homes
•Garag•s
•Complete
· R.emodeling
Stop &amp; Compan
Fr." Estimates ·

FRESH CUT DAILY

35 -- Lots 8. Acruge
36 -. Rael f:1tata W•nted

l;l§hlhl

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSYRUCDON

985-4473 .
667-6179

5 Ft. to 12Ft.
'10 and up

71 - Autos for S1le
72 - Trucks tor Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 \"VO "s
74 - Motorcvcles
75- Bo•t• &amp; Moton for Sale
76-Auto P.artt &amp; Acceuori•
77-· Auto Repair
78 - Cemp ing Equipment
79 - Cempers &amp; Motor Homes

loan

23 - Prof•11onal Services

.

CHRISTMAS
TREES

Transportation

BULLETIN BOARD_

Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.

304·112-2924
12·7·1 ....

61-Farm Equlpmeru
62-Wanted to Buy
63-Livestock
64-Hty &amp; Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fertiliter

17-Miscellaneous
18 - Wanted To Do

Sept. 4.tfn

PH. 91S·99U • 915·3929

&amp; Livestock

14- Busin•s Tra ining
15- Schoolt &amp; Instruction

F~tory

only

SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

MON .• TUES.·THURS. NIGHTS
SAT.-SUN. AFTERNOON
155 Plus Slcato Rlfttal (75'1
CHIUSIMAS PARTY
n1. ore. 21
N.Y. EYE PAIITY 7:30· 1:00

56-Pttsior SIIA

Farm

43-Farms for Rant

.

Chok•

OPD WID.·PII.·SAI.
7:30·10:00

.60
.05 / day

GUN SHOOTS
12 Gau•

SKATI·A·WAY

.42

RACINE
GUN CLUB
·1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

4-16-86-lfn

51 - Household Good~
52-Sporting Goods
53-Antiques
64 - Mitc. Merch1ndilt

1 1 - Help WJnted
1 2-Situtlion Wtnted
13- lnltmnce

10

11·3G-90·1 mo.

..

Merchandise

Serv1ces

•'

MIDDLEPOII

15
15

22 - Mo ney

Call 698·6185
For Curr•nt Pric•s

PH. 949-2801 .
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night

Over 15 Words
.
.20
.30

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING. ..' ',

Chrjltmaa Vacation

"At R1asonable Prien"

Employm
ent
--

•

lI

3

6

Rate
84.00
86.00

6 - Lonend Found
7-· Y•d Sale(p11d i11 advance!
8 - PubllcSale&amp; Auction
9-Wentld to Buy

CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

•

16

'A ciiSsifitld advertiument placed 1n The01ily SeM;tlnel jek ·
~:ept --:- cl•sified display, Busin•• Card snd legal noticeS!
win elso IPPIIIt in lhe Pl . Ple•ant RagiiNit •nd the Galli ·
polis Daily Tri~nt. rtlching over 18.000 homes.
COPV DEADLINE -

Words

1'

CALL

OPEN 8 DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY. OH . LOCATION
10 AM· B PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
Dec. 2• to Jan. 2 For

CUSTOM BUIT.
HOMES &amp; GARAGEi

01

LOAD EVRY 12 HOUIS

We Will Cloi:e At Alben

Birthday, Church,
Privata Partlu
Available

5-Heppy Ads

•Ads thl'l mutt be ptid in ldvtnce 1re

Call 992·5114

11·13· 1 mo .

-..-.i-

.,

For Current Prices

. Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns

-

1 - Card of Thtnkt
2-ln M•mgry
3-Annouctrrients
4 - GivtiWIV ·

•1 poinl line type only uMd.

RECYCLING

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCATION
7 DAYS 9 AM· 7 PM
ClOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY

992·2034

The goal of the flight . was to
study the most violent stars and
galaxies in the universe with a
$150 million battery of four
telescopes sensitive to X-rays
and ultraviolet light !rom deep
space that cannot penetrate
Earth's atmosphere.

Announ cements

"Ft.. ads - GiveiiWay end Found eds und• 16 -ordl will be

VERY NICE LARGE ~OME ON APPRO~. 3 ~

•

•

'Receive 1 .50 discount Por 1d1 JNid in edvenc:e.

Cuhf
Til-COUNTY

Chrlthntl

911 Hysell St.
Middleport, Oh•

RatM art tor con~ecullvlt runs, broken updwswill bt ch.,ged
fnr ur.h rill¥ tS
ads.

-~;;;~ido Melgt, Gellie or M..on counliM mus1 b11 pre·

peid.

"

Middleport &amp; Pomeroy

·SEARS

Days

;~:-

r.=.=o=,=.=NG==sA=L=E~~;R~ec~,;.,,~.~o;,=irr=====~==~~~~~~

Brand, 59, Gardner, 42, and
their crewmates ~ John "Mike"
Lounge, 44, Robert Parker', 53,
Jeffrey Hoffman, 46, and civilian
astronomers Ronald Parise, 39,
and Samuel Durrance, 47 planned to fly back to the
.Johnson Space Center late
Tuesday .

RA

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992,2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

this May 30, 1988 file pboto. Hammer, 92, died at his Los Angeles
home on Monday following a brief l.llness. (UPI lile photo)

d• t • •
1 1(0 ve~ IC ln JOgger case

There are substantial dlfferen·
ce1 in the youth's descriptions of
events on the flrll and second
tapes IDCI oblerwrs speculated
the dlftet- were !be major
baJIIUPI lmOJii jUI'Ors.
. Ill the first tape, Wise said he
kMW very little about the rape of
the WOIIIBJI Joaer. However, in
tbe second tape he admitted he

air, the crew ... would justiike to
1hank all the mission control
teams for just a great job when
we had hardware failures and so
forth, recovering everything so
we could keep going," Brand
radioed before leaving the shut·
tie. "We' re really' glad to be back
!~~r~~}'low that it was a team

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ The
Thecourtwiildecidewhethera
Supreme Court entered the pri· . reporter who promises anonym·
vate world of journalists and
ity .to a source can be sued if he
their news sources. agreeing to ·tails to keep that promise.
decide whether a swap of secret
The court wtll determine If
information · for a pledge of
Minnesota's two largest news·
anonymity is a legally binding
papers, the Star Tribune of ·
Minneapolis and the St. Paul
agreement.

NEW YORK (UP!) ~Jurors in
the Central Park rape and
beating trial worked in vain
through an 11th day of deIibera·
tio.U. focusing on events that
surrounded the confession of one
of the two youths charged.
, ~ng signs of fatigue and
str,ln, the panel broke Monday
nl8ht following a day of mara·
thdn deliberations.
'Ole failure to arrive at a
verdict disappointed courtroom
oblervers who hoped jurors
wolald decide the fate of Kevin
Richardson, 16, and Kharey
Wiie, 18. The youths are charged
In :the April 19, 1989, "wilding
spree" in Central Park that
culinlnated in the rape of a
. wolnan joeeer.
'l'be State Supreme Court jury,
which deliberated through the
weekend,- was expected back in
court '1'1lelclay morning.
The panel spent Monday morn·
!ng focuslnlf on testimony from
Wile. In the afternoon, jurors
viewed for the fourth time the
aecoDd of two videotaped confes·
IIODI made by Wise.

Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. ,
for processing to find out what
secrets it might contain.
"I think we've had a resound·
ing success on the mission," said
William Lenoir, NASA's associate administrator for space
flight. 'There's no question ...
we have added to tile state of our
knowledge. It's been a great
boon.''
With commander Vance Brand
and co-pUot Guy Gardner at the
controls, Columbia dropped out
of a pitch-black sky after a fiery ,
hourlong plunge back to Earth,
set tllng to a smooth touchdown
on concrete runway 22 at 9: 54
p.m. PST Monday to close out a
nine-day 141-orbit mission coverIng 3.7 mlllion miles .
La11ding at Edwards Air Force
Base originally was scheduled
for Tuesday night, but with a cold
front sweeping toward the Mo·
jave Desert, NASA managers
decided to order the astronauts
home one day early to wind up
the year's sixth and final shuttle
flight, the second by Columbia.
"Houston, before we 11:0 off the .

Classifie

Court to examine . reporter-source relationship

1\,l

EDWARDS AlR FORCE
BASE, Call1. (UPI) - The
Columbia astronauts wrapped up
a shortened but successfu 1 nine·
day astronOmy mission with a
· flawless nighttime landing, closing out 1990 with a "ri!so11nding
success," officials said Tuesday.
Despite a string of technical
glitches and a day-early landing
Monday, scientists were elati!d
with the results of Columbia's
"Astra-l" astronomy mission,
hailing it as a major milestone in
humanity'·s understanding of the
violent universe.
"Words . cannot convey our
elation," said mission scientist
Ted Gull. "We are exuberant
about the· data that this mission
has produced. The science that is
going to come out of this data is
going to be tremendou~ and we
know we're going to help re-write
textbooks ."
Technicians stood by Tuesday
to remove precious film from one
of the four telescopes in Columbia's cargo bay . The undeveloped ultraviolet film was to he
flown back to the Goddard Space

•

Business Services

Shuttle swoops to flawless landing
.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-? ••

Ohio

"I

\.

•••

l,

'·

'

�. •.

Pege-8-The Deily Sentinel

"'

~

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, ·December 11, 1990

iiliiiiiiilillilliF;.;.;;;._~=--:-=-:~---y::::::;::::::=~=r;.
~c~;;;:~~:;:;:;:-;..;;.;.;.;;;;f-=:=;::::==.
·· ·~.;
44~====rmm:;.
l..AFF·A·DAY
41 Hou111forRent
Apartment
N' ARLYLE llyl.arryWrlab~
71 A!JtoatorSalt

\r-.. -·--.. ----·•

3 Announctmtnts

Half dauble, 121Siate It, 2 or 3
IR, ~ 1271 monlhiY.
Soa.
.. l Rot NCI'od. IM441-0 •• •• au

CNdll Coni,- ....._
..,... .... 'IIMIIIMI• eanll fiiW·
~~~. 1.-o 141

=-

:W.T'-.
4

--

---~ --~ - - ·---:'"'

- ---1 ~11--

_,.,.,._,

4 ktllml·, wtll ba ,.q to go In a

,

•tum-.
mobllo - 1 child, no
-..,
WV.

c-h • choir, no1 ,..lchlna
olol.... ol Apt. I , l""k Rldgo
Apl.
to •

needy

lontlly, - - o r 304-TnAOI.

.

G'-Jo: 2 groy langhoir ldt·

I

..... 3 rnonlhll old. 1 1~a::'l
~~tol,IOpd- . 1

6

¥

~"";!_~-:zi-'l!!
-·-u_ ·-,. ---

c..

--.........

1

i

NEWLY

REIIDOELID

-

pluo Ullllfloo, 2 "'orgo" bldo
roomo tiM. pl.. • - fdNI

for ......

Pl-. -

llolollo "" .... In
cqunlrt 114 441~508 ar -

,... ~. &amp;14-441-0334.

-

18 wanted to Do
noor

a,..n School. m.~rtct,

114-441-11241.

HOUDAY SPECIALS • lnlorlor
Extortor Pointing, 10 yooro

ond

e1p«lel cad, hive rettrtnoee.
Vtly Choopl Odd Jobl. :104-171-

.....,. Block, 11ft ond whfto
a-It, molo, Cllllft !"'. T0110

21Wari71-P21.

ROlli...._ A8wud,IM.W _,.,
LOST• Rod Tick

lloglo y_, Doy Coro Conlor

c-. hound In

dopoucloblo,
llcollll, C(U!IIny ahlld coro, Moocloy thN F~doy, 7:30 till 11::10.
Far moro lnlonnotlon or 10
roglottr :1tJ4.475.1147.
Milo Poulo'o Dor Cono Contor.
S.te, affordeble, ohlldcart. M-F
I o.m. • 1::10 p.m. Agoo 2 ·10.

.,.. oro-.,_ Forti,-

..-.oblo,

11!1 on onngo nylon aollor &amp;
=-"b;.Q]Iar, $10 NWIInl,
Lool:
DocL ptl't _Chlhuatua,

-~ collar.
mlz,
~ Nanmblr ~ 111C!o
Vlolnlly· Moor .-nil
114 44t· . ,.. aM44eioM.

7

.

Yard Sale

2IR,

beautiful

unfum.,
rlv•
vflw, water
fum:l no city tuea.

71-

•

•~

441--4..

.

USED COM!( BOOKS

'

1111uo1 11111oo. ft'o ru~ _ , ,
.
.
·~ •

Ani---

!'!.~;a~ .bod

.56

Pets tor Sale

eooo, ;;;,~~~;~~~
:I========:
111
14417-0IU.

54 MfacelJineolil
roglllollon

plok .... ' ., '

'"' ctoow
•rua~o,_J
.........
h....... --····-'
..J
llimo ~
•:30.
•~ •' ,'·
tflll Clot- plckjop 350, 3 . - ~
1110011. .UO. 4
2 ,I•

-good,

1ftlr

olio

1177

D!ldiiO

Truefl -

1_,, Itt ~~~gino, _

pool

tabiMIIop P :krh, .....,
--. 1o , ,.. old 1100 .,.,
f1nto, 114-1'12-·
. "'

1

Applo 1

--. -

~

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

9

a

Lunch IOXH

-Ito

1H0'•1f!O't ...... clomo · or !JUO-kL Aloo vlnylo. No
IIIlO I ot plallc.
nol
!!!!!!""""· Coli .... 81411117.

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All
blanahOI. US Cuolomo, DEA,
Wonlod 1o IMIY: Junk .... wtt~ lie.
Hiring. Coli (11 _ , _
or lfithaUt moi:on a ecrep met· 0000
Ex1. K·t018t.
II. 114-J7Hl121.
NOW HIRING STATE AP.
W.nlod To Buy: Junk Autoo PROVED
NURSING ASS/So
TANTI
wfth
wllhaul
-· Coli
LMIJ.
114 IM
Jl!il.
lArry ..

Help Wanted
AVON • An orNI, Coli Morllyn

WIIYif -·2145.
Aono1o&lt; mollcholn II occopUng
far I plolnclati.-

-ICe-

oiM - Y O pooR/On_ II 1 loaol loCOIIon. Tho paoftlon con
bl onner full or j&gt;orttlmo wtth
llolllblo houri. Btnolfto lnalmljor medical, !lr. IMU,.nce,

- etaitn~­
PlSfc-:::;

7:3&amp;CSJ Tlia.JeHeraona

•

*• _.,.

- 011-..

/f';$Uf').f\&amp;e

••

,,

'
I

•

-=

qulr.d. Call Lafayette Mill IM·
441·7733 or 441-4222.

31 Homes tor Sate
3 bodooom homo IIIIIQO A,ood,
~~~· $4S,OOO. Will IIIII.

1 room •Hiclenc:y 1pt1rtmentl

~-

2 oportmonlo -

a

lllet, 304-675-5104.
HOliES kom $1
onco In tho llYN o1 our GOVERNMENT
(U ropolrl. Dollnquenl lox
poroonluck
or property. Ae,.....lona. Yo1.1r
call I ·4:/111¥
hiO,In 311
orN (1) 805-II'T.eGOO Elll. GH·
Aldgo .Rd. E.O.E.
451121or cuoront ropo 1111.
Toklng -lca11ono ot
Domlno'o PrZ211, llolllpollo. 614· 32 Moblle.Homes
141 4040'
tor Sale
P01111101 NUIII!~t I Rohobllfto·
tlon Contor hilo lmmodloto 1975 Boy Vlow '121160, Got, tully
aponlna for roglot- nuroo, I tu.,-. good cond. Fl,..

CWMd oo-warura &amp; .upervlaora. You Cln mike I dltfer-

'"-n::·

YOGIIIan, noftoblo donlll IliOn,
ovoll.lblo 401-K rollriiMIII IliOn, LP.N. llrevloue eJp.I'IMw::tl In
and moN. T~ INIY IMUI wrftt
~ - lllrm
e~~re
l*'fwrwd.
1o: Big WIIHI: LP. llonoaor, Btrioffto.
Sollly booolf on ,_.
Lounl
!lquoro
Corilor,
ol uporloooco. Coli uAuo Hill
.Bur-. OH 44212.
R,~2 ••0.0.N. far lnteovlow ot
I'MIINZ-1101 or ..Ht r...,me to
ATTENTION GALLIPOLIS I
'POSTAL JOBS'
31718
Rd.,
ttUt • ft4.1101hr. No orport.- Pomet or, Ohio 4ml. Mlnorftl•
........ For enm end lltPIIc:a- -..god lo opply. E.O.E.
lion lnlolmlllan, ... t-21$-ltllREPOSSESSED HOliES
1117 lt.m.-tOp.m. 7 doyo.
3br, 1 bolh, holt .... MIL on
Block howk .Rood. 11100-.,
tO porcont APR wllh IPOFOYOd
IIPiflonco crldtt cal 1-I00-44a.et10 John
exam end .IPPIIca- Bailey.
llon .Info., coli 1·2111-987-1537
RN'o $30/hour, LPN'e $21/hour.
aa.m. ·1Dp.m. 7 dap.

-orl...

A•lgnemnll In Clntrel &amp;
Southern Ohio. tCU, •P dc:Mn,

-i.

$II

-hj

I bath, rlftrence I ._curtty

depooH, no poll, &amp;14-141-0444.

2br 1partment, flrat floor, bed-room • living room cii"J)Itec:l,
IIOVI a rol~gorotor fumlohod,

wllor 6 t...h turnlohod. 814441-3140.
-me a ·-h.
3 fum ····d
~
·-·
cloon, no polo. Roforonco 6
d-H ooqulood. 814ol411-1519.
35 Woot Apl. 2br, 1 loolh, prlvolo
tncloud pt.Ho; clou to grocery

'Z::
pn.,_• Comer Rand &amp; Perch,
Konou- '0hlo.l14-44f.lii7J.
o11 cook atove, Jt:1 cond,
$50 Lhtlll utili ..
...0
' 371
·
y
•• ' ~
1.,.75-4=
,..._·==--==:=-GOOD USED APPLIANCES
~~:h~~~~'• F =
1,

~

Ntw/Uied

Jerricho Ad. Pt. PINIInt, WV,

Mr70

=~~':4 2 bMrooma.

blth,

•••d. can

304-1711-2421.

be ..ft an lat.

Ntw 181 1"r78 mobile home In

Mlddl.loM. Coli Tom Andoroon

11~-3341der 5:00p.m.

33 Farms for Sale
Bla 4br Dakot. Farm Home,

bulft lor you, $25,11115 ond up.
114-88e-73tt. .

..c:l

o10.-

fDI' JrrlmM1811 I Ip ~ Nl,

Rentals

~

Nlnt- ' - -

aerub

ft. . . Uf . . . . . . .

n1

ce,

REHT2 .0WN

a

t-=tora

-~- 'Bur,.
"""

·lmplemeuta.

.

lao~-..... good,

~~

t
f460i-.~
' ''·'

alza
·

door, 1-1' mandoor, . . . ., 11
oolaro,_ f7:U -od. -

lint

~-

ltlon. Evening: 114-

' ~

~-

s

-

-

,,__..,

turii:K ::;.4::J"' - . WV. :1114-

"

I

A!Jto Pans &amp;
G~ . . ., aldl ~ unt I
· a..
rle
C h - . Polnl Pl.., 2ottl Willi to w1111or 110-100 • - or i;i.jjj;i1,...~ce;•;ao;r;;s~;;;j'
Joclloon Ave, Polnl
»H7HOM.

colvoo, ool lloraono Form, At.

- n l.

•

PllfiJ,~·

.

76

\

:
•

a.-;• "I1

1u1111a1: TrlnMI&amp;eelana. Ulld
rilldll, -Ina II IH; 114-24$., -_.

1
:

. 114-44f.:lt58
~ Pelco Woodgroup. $1•1.111 por
wook. L.ShopOcl Bunk - ·
Boddlng ond Chlol o1 Drolnclucloil, tl3.14. ,... -11.
SWivol Rock.-, $4.44 por -k.
llocllnor $7.71 por WNII. Dlnollo
wHh 4 Choloo, $7.50 ~r wNk. 4
Pootor Brooo Bod. $12.20 per
wook. 4 Drowor C- o1
Dnworo, $3.50 por - · Rl. 141,
Fumllhlld Apartm.nt, n.d to 4
IIIIH 011 At. 7 In Contonory.
Ubrary, parkl~, central Mat, HOURS: Mondor thru Sllurdoy,
Nfrlrence req~o~INd, auhlble ror e..m.4p.m.; Sundor; 12 t - n. 114..ol4&amp;«138.
5p.m.
SWAIN
Fum- ~pl., 2 br, 1138
Golllpollo, tl711, -er AUCTION &amp; FURNrTURE. 12
JM!Id, 81• ue 4418 after 7p.m.
Olivo St., Golllpollo. -~ U .
holt.,., Wlll.-n l
Fumlohod offlc:loi!OJ: $171, lumHuro,
uiiiKioo pold, 1120 Fou~h, Ool· Work_._ t - 5 8 .
llpotl~. 114-441-4ottl oftor 7 pm.
Teppom Goo AIIIII".uood only I
Oroaloioo Hvlng. 1 ond 2 bod· monlhoo, ooklng 113110 oomplolo
room 1pertment8 II Vllllge Ulw.
bod, llko $100. 114-4441Minor
ond
RIYorolilo
Aportmonlo In lllddl.lpart. From
tlllf. Coli 114-tt2.'T781. EOH.
52 Spon Ing GoodI

lnl -11.
51
So=- • ...eL• oo.,
'· - •orr
n.-, fiO.w Plcloap Lood,
Don't u-plng. 114-446·
TrWIItr - - lloo now aon-

1.1Pol - 4411111.
Dollor.
-.Col111

Lorgo loaond Floor Apo~monl, Ml Ooronif, Col. :10.01 - ·
KIICloln Fum-. 231 Fl,_. $350;
Romln!IIOf! IIOcfOI f1
Ann ..., t210/mo. pl111 utllltlea, -1-oulo 12 go. $210, 114-3711-

1171 ........ Cornol ttl - ' - . =loo . ole. REIIOOEL' •
,_~ ·
-- ..·1 -onrn Eotl-. ·.:.
m..,..
,__,
114-1111-1111.
. .. •

21uH Ill I la•w F I I 1
ntolo,1-llolhboilllohton.

1171 ......_ Cornol :Ill_._, Ron'o TV - -

·

Solo ond Choir, $1.tl,. -k.

s.-.

diDoelt- I ,.,.,.. ~~ no p.la,
lt+4le-IIIH.

t bodroom oporlment, 1ulllllloo, ..... • llllh pold,
1240 pluo cfo!IOOit, Ill Ill 8181.
•mi·•-~ mobl
N-lrtu
le~,1
milo
blloW ,_, - I n a
rtv• CA hut DiPOift Alt.
lt4

4tt 033e. '

'. '

ma.

_53-:--:-::A_n~U~q:.;u.;ea.;..~~
-:Anllquo llooblo top ....,. a
llmpo,

-1.

Buy or 1111. Rlv.-lno Ani~

1124 E. M1ln ltrett, ·Pomeroy.

Hourt: M.T.W.10:00 Lm. to e:oo

h'-

k

~Hi:'~

Chrlot

64

pplfea

:'0::: =. oto. ~=·

.

. ' • c_,'
- ·~~~~

100ib. ...... - - . 1 1.00por
tOO lb. Alfolfo Hoy. llorgon'o - - - - - - - - - • ~
F11111, IlL Ill, I onl-12 _,,
'
...,...., lotu..,. - • · 81
Home
'"' ~
..... far SoiL - - 111
Improvements
_,
.,..
r
RoUnd loloo -In lho Flold. I
:1411 1111
-IIENT
'
WATERPROOFING
:
Hoy, ondarw• mlz, U-ltlonol llfollnoo ....,..,.
,
oquoro 1oo1oo, 304 ta :11117.
1oo. I - ' ootwonaoo "'"'-·
,

.,..

;:;: -

--nt

p,.. ... lmat-. Cell collect 1·

1110, Rio - . C1H Con 114~

2110.

-

•

ensemble numbers.

7-

=:;,~a. -- ~:'..:,:OHc:'..~'J..··,ol
1
WV ~ \

lt4/111Wt:lll.

1171 Cornoni,

:o::.= -

l fl. -

.

lfttlo
IIWIM72I, 114

onrt2 fontolll, 2 1171 a_, _ , _, 112

·- ---=-_.
loogloo,

AKC

U.. ·

BARNEY

oppllo- -Oro.

I

Norlh Thfod St-, Mlddl_,t, P:'!':~..l!UndoY. 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Ohio. I btdioom turn.l lhad 1pt, l.........,.212t.
fom'llllon· ~u.
roloronco ond dopaoft Nqulrod,
Qulfto
:1104.el2-2111.
pro condftlon. /11/(C · · - lponlol
johalao
oni Ohio
1~.
.
One bedroom apia. lot Nnt. Sond
1 P.ttoil,
At._.,
or
$221 month. DoPaoli roqulrod. aoll IM/11112-1117 or 1141111• IIII(C nglllwod ttooglo- 1
114-tt24218 oftor I p.m.
molo, 1 110 -h. 1 112
2411
t--------..,~;:.;;.;;·;__
old -~~ _ . . dot·

-=to -·

-

.....,.._,

I

1tla Chrwol• I , on eor-- 82
1-. AuCo ,..,.. PI, PI, tin,
"""""
~n~ortorL
- lOp. , _- 1 0 ooL
C 1110
oo

PI
bl
. um ng &amp;
Hilling

-..-. ...........
1- . . . . .

Corlor'oPI !M1na
-•ndPlilt
ond
Golllpolfo,

27,001 - - ..... ~

.

--!210.

- · olr, 40.1100 .,....
- . fi,IIJO;

~Ina
Ohio

~

18) CNN Evening Newt

1111 700 Club With Pat

•

R--

•

ASTRO-GRAPH

. ·~
. "'··

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Eltctrlcal &amp;
Refrlgtf'ltlon

A 11-tW . •
~:f1 rr :
!'frlnl,
orRkllnour
UC lntlll- IIIDI'Iolln.
lloolrloa~ IOW75-t711.

Graph predicllons IO&lt; the year ahead by
mailing $1 .25 10 Astro-Graph, Clo lhiS
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to slale you1
zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.J.... 11) Whether lhe group is large or small 'your leadership qualltlef will come 10 lhe tore in
your Involvements wilh olheroloday. All
will look yaur way for guidance when lhe
une~epectad

occur&amp;.
AQUARIUS (.1111. 20-Feb. 11) Your best

t)

chances IO&lt; suc:cesa today will be lnler·
IWfned with persons lo whom you have
· been helpful In the pasl. These grateful
reclplenla will try to aid you however

Mlahltortt caII,

Til

or

ar-.olloalood..,...,on

ClWIFIED
614-992-2156
304-675-1333
:614-446-234.2

'

Dec.12, 1110

&amp;R 1111, ....... _ ,
po/ntod, -~- ko-otolr,
t371 pluo ttoo dopooft, 114-24&amp;:
11114.
.

-A-

Pumlohod 4 ,_, 11ou01 on ne

r·

ltii/IIIO.pluo tiOO

114 441 eo~:~, tt~

"Till we get more snow, we're only eettlng
tift tiCkets to tall people."

,.
'

r,.T
(\ ' : '"lu•

The vear ahead could be a red leiter
one lor you where your financial Inter·
oala are concarnld. Thera are Indica·
llono you may derive profllo In leul ••·
peeled wayo.
IAQrnARIUS (Nov. 211 0.0 21) In
your commarclll aHIIrl lodey II could
prove blneiiC:Iel K you give equal ere......, to both your lnlttncll and your
Collecllvely. tt;oy're ·a dynamic
Saglllorl,., !real youl'llll IO a
blrtlhdaJ( ~ glft . Send fO&lt; your Asfro-

accurately.
QIMINI (Mer 21.J- 2G) Your greal·
est ...., today Is your ablllly to C81!1ta~
1ze on shilling condlllons. The trends
are moving In your f8¥or, so be alert to
act wllen you spal encouraging llgnals.
CANCER (June 21-.luiJ 22) Alliances
you ntabllolt atlhlsllme have exCellent
chances of achieving your c:ollecflve objectives. In tact, ·you could be luckier
lhlln
usual
In
partnership

can.

"

Uglita

a

LIO (.tu!J 21-A... 22) Today you mlghl
be lble 10 kill l'i&lt;o liirdt with one atone
owing lo the link• b e - . two mat·

C11101&lt; and Cllooe

10:50 (IJ MOVIE: Tlia Ml- ol
tile .... (2:00)

. 1t:ooroa

w ())•

@(!) Nlgllt Cowl

.

SCUM IDS ANSWUS

18) ,._,line

1111 .,.._,. end II,.. King

1;1

11;30 C2lG iiJI Tonight Sllow
Stereo.
(!) lllller
(!) Adem Smlth'a MMe,
' Wotld

ACROSS
1Mr. rsTV
group
6 Slashes
away
11 Trunk
12 Cone·
shaped
13 Ham
sandwich
ingredient
15 Common
Market,
lor short
16 Pull
17 Actress
Woods
18 City near
San
Francisc o
20 Keats
· work
21 Employ

llpolla Tonlgfll

11:35 Ill Cltelrl Q
12:00 !llatnto till Night Stereo.

·emP.L
a
i1J

Tllk lhow

• • c ... Night
II)

The l!qual1er

eJa 1

• 62
4Q85 .

+AJ962

eA

• 10 98 5

SOUTH
+6 4
eKI0532
&amp;K7 43

+H

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Weal Ncr~
Dbl.
2
All piSS

+

Eoot
Pass

Opening lead: • Q

That was 10 tricks far declarer, and a
well-played hand.
What would have happened if North
had overcalled with two n.o-trump?
Probably South would have passed,
and North-South would have missed
their four·beart game.

42 Fix a
clock
43 Staggers
DOWN
1 Cpnfused
2 Shower
need
3 Writer
Jong
4 Beast of
bUiden
S"The
Hostess
with lhe

14 Ctyptog·
raphy
subject
•
19 Nalur a list
· 6 Inverted e
John
7 Boot pari 22 Put on lhe
8 Like old
wall
school 23 Succeeds
houses
24 Bk&gt;w up,
9 Got sn1atl
as a
10 Visla
plioto
sight
25 Bank

wotkers
26 Smoker' s
rleed
28 "Gee!"
30 Diamond
sida
31 FUiiling
32 Old ro1d
33 Charges
38 Born
39 Sug iuy
suffix

22H- 23 "Undetstand?"
26like some
pudding
27 Rare bitd
28 Fizz
ingredient
29 Building
wing
30 less claar
34 ·Actor
Mineo
35 Volcano
oulput
36 Vitamin
ami.
37 Broaklasl
favorite
40 Concur
41 Lauder of
cosmelics

12111

DAILY CRYPTOQU&lt;rfES- Here's how toi work it : ·
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

One letter slands for another. In this samplr A is IL~et.l
for'lhe three I.'s, X for (he two D's, etc. Singlr letters ;
apostrophes, the length and fom~ation of the worlls are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

A.J

8

EAST

WEST
+QJ10853
.Q9

by THOMAS JOSEPH

•

ll!'t* llollcMY mulllc. (0:30)
0 aportiCI-

e AQJ
+K 10 3

CROSSWORD

())II;.~': 8

Tonight

I'

.A64

YCJUTSAHM

Anlertoe
I
IOilJ Van lhtlkn llnp
Ctwl..1181 RIOIIJ V1n Shelion

U-11-H

+K 97 2

North's double led to an optimistic
game contract when South made an
overbid of four hearts. I think that
North, rather than making a takeout
double, should simply have overcalled
West's. weak two-spade bid witb two
no-trump. That shows the v~lues for a
one-no-trump opening, and sometimes
a little more. The disadvantase of dou·
bling is that North bas no clear-cut decision when partner responds with a
suit at the three-level.
But tbe bidding belped South in the
play. The queen ol spades opening lead
could hardly be from A-Q·J , so declar·
er played tow from dummy. East had
to play the ace. Back·came a diamond
to dummy's queen. West might hold
the ace of clubs, but declarer was not
sure. So declarer cashed ace and king
of bearts, led to dummy's diamond ace
and overtook dummy's diamond jack
with his king. He ruffed his last dia·
mend In dummy and played lhe king of
spades. East discarded a low club. J)e.
clarer persisted with another spade
from dummy as East Jet go another
club. South ruffed and got off lead with
a low trump. East bad to win the jack
and lead away from the ace of clubs.

t;l

121 Churclt StrMt StatiOn

NORTH

BRIDGE

illl 1121a

liD ............. Hell t;l
IIJ Mttmt VIce

"· ••

Unsure - Glint- Wafer - Flight- UNFAIR
After several weeks of terrible weather the forecaster
• announced, "Fair WBather today. but tomorrow will be
grossly UNFAIR!"

(!)N-etch

arrangements.

lera of Importance lo you al present
Eacfl can bl ullllactorlly Hnat-.
PIICIS (Feb. 2HIIrcll 20) Don't ill· VIIGO (Aug. n-ltpt. 12) lt't to your
nore any unique ldeu that permeate ldvanfaga to.keep your social plano aa
your lhough!s lodoy regarding ways lo llexlble u polllblltoday. There are Inupdate something you've written 011 u dications something fun "'IY UMXpact•
ob.-. Your lngenully hoo Ito Idly pop up In which you'll wanl lo
partiCIPate.
.
oppllcaflono.
AIIIIS (*"'1121·Apr(t 11) Be atttnt!Ye LIIIIA (lept. a-oat. II) Your financial
and prepared todoy, .. -~~ apacta . . very encouraging todoy 1111d
canslderate aoiOCiateo mey make It there 11 a ttrona PfOb~ you might
poeolblo lor you IO IICCOinplllh oome- bllllll to Clpltlllze on oometlllng 0111lhlng 111111 up until now you've been un- .,. ~owrlooktd or Ignored.
ICOIIPIO (0111. :1M Nav. II) Your IIQIIe
able to llch~ unaided.
'
TAURUS (Apr(t • Matr :10) Don't get mind gtvw you an ldgt ovw your conrattled todoy H you . . requl...cl to tllft1IIOIW lea todly, blcll1141 you'll bl
;;;eke some on·tM-apol dec:lalons. able to Ullmllale and p r - tniOrma·
You're qu!CI&lt; wlt11d. your judgment Is lion to your adllantage quicker than
kaen and you'll evllulle develapmento lhey will.
lhey

tlAIII.

10:30 IIl Food for Tltougllt A trip
along the food chain to count
cosla Instead of caloriee Is
• presented. (0:30)
C!l Henulikeh: ut ,....,. ae

•

1111~4~··~-~·:..__ _ ___;,'

64

ColleQI

a

FAITHFUL
OL' DOG II

-~
c-:=m

, _ , ti,OOO.

--I:OOp.m.
..,
- I prm,..,,
Lolobro -fully
·

Beoltotblllf
10:00 ill • Q1.Law a Order
Stereo. l;l
(J) Newt
Cll CIJ tfllrtysomatfllng
Elliol becomes envious of
Mlchllel.afler he is nominated
·fo1 an award. Stereo. D
I!JIID Star T,.k: Tile Nitlll

Ca.

.....1Uflf'.auo.

1171 -

'.

call

g

OL' BULLET FOt.LERS
SNUFFY EVER'WHAR
HE GOES· · THAT'S
WHAT I CAt.t. A

·- --~Ohio---.~ ~

work,

Btplta Tonk Pullllllng ItO~Golllo ~·
RON EVANS EH1ERP11ISES.-...- ,,
lon .loalloon, OH ~121.
I! 1
~~u~y; .- e'lft onalno. """'., Dtwlo · -.v.c
Sorvlco, ' ,fr
12200. 14/'Jitf-1421
On~ CNall Rd. Pll'tat lup111
plloo, pickup, ..... cloliYory. 114- ! ~
1171 Dodat Df~, ...... ,,. 0214,
. I\
-CUolomllilf
trono.
1171
D!MIII"
' 'I
·00041 oltopo
Tramm lullclon:
· .··~.

puptlloo,

---ahf.Ono•
APM. ,..=····
ing· ...,lti ~
0C::
IIII(C

tl,t7~

QD NaohvHie Now
18) Lerry King Llvel
9:30 Cll CIJ a Coach Hayden
altends a charity ball that
Chrlsllne co-hosiS. Slereo.

11-11

•--'•1:3:;. ~.,
::::..z--

woo-.
old. oChrlolntol _.,.,. 1100 tlmo.

I~

Seen Hamilton, Brian Orser,
Debi Thomas, Rosalyn
Sumns1s and Kitty and Pelar
Carruthers perform solo and

'

T
1
1

n;;;r- ·--..--

8 Diacover
Card Stare on
Championship skalars

•
I

fo Sal
56 p
c-=--eta-:-~r~-=·~~
- - - - - - - - - - · C..ploto llobllo Homo oo1 upo- ·
(j,_ ond .........
~
71 A!Jtos fOr Sale
•alec:triell,
.........roofing,
pi.:::~;Jr na.
~.a
-..r'!_,. ...
0 - All

'TONaue.

I'

J

.

STEPPeD ON MY

'THE Fl-OOR •••

olltl~ far ~. cloy or nlghl. _ - :
•1114
ttl - . Dollvory \101~ Rogoro
Wot- I
Ill 1!112ftng.
I
llolr&lt;ononao, now- •
old ropolrol Coil llftch I~

LM1fO -

-

AND KENNY HANSEN

TI-\AT WAS ME. 'I
WA6 l-YING ON

-\'l: ---=:-,.===--- ·

Building

Su

M77, 114-171-22B

GIDilnd~ """"11.10 per

WHITE'S METAL DETEC'IORI
Rori Allioo!!.. 1210 Avo,
Golllpollo, "" 114 141 4331.

55

Hay &amp; Grain

WHAT IS li WllH lHAT raHS
SVFti&lt;IOR Pil11~ ?

,. ··.,,~

••• ....., 114432- .
75 Boats &amp; Motors
Sow -no ·buy 2 aol1 ftH.
1e
- .. Equip,.,. •• ~1112t.
tor a
1m 11 11. St. .ron Tri-Hull
63
Uvaatock
flool, 121 HP, Evlnruclo Enalno., •
.:_;;~=-:::::~::-::::::-=:::;:: oomlop, now ..-olory.__,
ioo
Point Phil for your .~ 11 ~ __.. 2411 Joclloon Coli hl--l:ltloftor t:OO p.m. ., '

1:00 ill D iiJI Mallock Matlock
dal1111ds a boxer accuHd of
murdering a journalist.
(J) MOVIE: Lake Pflcld
Sarenade (2:00)
(I) C1J 11 Wflo' o !lie Bon?
Samantha announces her
plans to many a cowboy.
. Slareo. t;1
11) (!) NDYII Pilots are
ltalned In the high
technology ollighler jets. 1;1
1111 Bll" Graham Eaotem
Europe C - • Billy
Graham likes his ministry to
the Sovlel Union and eastern
Europe. Stereo. 1;1
·
l!llll MOVIE: ,...., Mator1:
Tile Ctu alllie MurdeNcl
·Madam (2:00)
112) • Roacue: 1111 A special
pollee unft responds to the
needs of ballered women.
Stereo. 1;1 ·
11)1 Murder, !Ilia Wrote t;l
Ctturch . _ , StatiOn
Prime® MOVIE: Cla"""'e (2:00)
8:05 (IJ MOVIE: Tile Bells of SL
Mary'a (2:45)
8:30 Cll C1J II.Head of Ilia Cfstl
stereo, t:;!
Q!llllclcy Van Shelton Sings
· Chrlatmu '11cky Van Shefton
sings holiday music. (0:30) ·
9:00 C2lD @ In llie Heal ol !lie
Night Gillespie lrlea 10 stop a
bounty hunter before he kills
a man. Stereo. 1;1
Cll CIJ II RoMenne
Rosanna's family waits lor
the results of Iter pregnancy
lest. (R) Slareo. t;1
IIl (!) Frontline
illl 1121., Grammy Legendt
AmoOjj the Grammy-wlnning
musicoans honored lhis year
are Johnny Cash, Aretha
Franklin, Billy·Joel and ·
Quincy Jones. (2:00) Slareo.

a
a

'toll, trodo. I :ON:OO -.loyo, - Horilfio 7110, Mlgno far'ooW:lA
Sol. till-.
114-4*-Mihltor ep..,.·
, ,
1!
llochflwrr
llloroao
SPL: HondaCOl~ tow wJ:wellr, e1~.....:1'-. .'";,.
M'l45'11''· 1·18'Kf1' lllcllng

bluo

111~ 30W'71-111L

.....___-1 ""'
JJL114*1114t

41 Houses for Rent

w...

'

ldaroo &amp; ohopplng conlor, wotor, HouHhold tumlehlna. 112 mi. Roglolor Ia win hot
coli :104-171·MIO.

undooplnnlng, 114-2~1H011.
t187 1411711 Cloylon, 2 bod, 2

--

40,000 ITU, nolurol-o.
un¥Wlled .._.., lkl M.
fii.Aiumlnunt 1 11. 1-r
110 l14-24l'42tZ.
.
. . .-

»f.e7H211.

110 w/Buoh Hog, ....,.

WIH-f1WIII. 1171 Monel Ocldutng GL 1000 ~· ~-"'
HCIIIInt oondtUon SISO. 114-&gt; t ._ ~
1122.
oMW111 ortt4 4413021.
,..; ...~
Jlm'o Fonl!~l-nl, SR. :11, 1111 KZ 710, 2 Into 1 hlldlr~~- •
Galli
t
114-4-'...nTi

ola WOIOr bod wflh
hoot• tl711, Uood olarm - .
~ oond., 140, 31xll0". 114W.ohoro, doyoro, rofotgoirotoro,
m
.
rongH. Sluoggo ApOIIo,_o,
Upper RIYor Rd. B•ldo Slono RooondHionod -~~~ ... Doyoro.
Croll Motel. Colllt4-441H3INI.
Guoronlood JMOflill4 lor
oil mokoo, nlodolli. Tho -ltlr
PICKENS FURNITURE
DIY• S~ 111 Ul 2144.

uwer, trelh pfOvlded, $215/mo.

1880 S.vllte 2br 111
ttectrlc whh large khchen, CA,

C

114 2M 1121.

lumlohod, Doyor'o 171 oliah; Gu Ronao'o =-lo,~.:::. .,!~~

51H4H348.

-.1

IT! ACREAl DEAl

Wlther'a

UOOO tak11lt, cen t. ,..,. ..
SIINII Rd. Dolder 114-~2-2113.

mod • lllfll • nursing
corroctlonolo, GoiHpotlo lnlor· 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
lobyolftor noodod In my homo 11 Holldoy Inn Tlooodoy,
$71 por - . oltornoon ohllt. .,_,.bor tllh t......,.m. Doc LDIS FOR SALE In Golllpollo
bl roll.lblo ornl c~opon. 12th, la.m.·12:~.m., Cal for
~= .'::,.:.~~~le~
oppolnlnoont, Woot.-n
2122.
H0M1 TYPISTS, PC uura Soovlcoi'IW~.
- · $35,000 potontlol. HOME TYPISTS, PC _,. Route 2 Alhton, 1 •en lata 3
l)olollo. (t) 105-6174000 bt. B· noodod. U5,000 polonflol. mllol oouth Oolllpollo Locko,
tOIH.
Dol olio. (t) 805-117-11100 Ext. 1- public w11er, no rettrlctlona,
.
..,.. wllh ~- ftonlogo, 304INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All 4512.
511-2331.
/odnCI.-. US Cuolomo, DEA,
12
Situation
Hlrlna. Coli (t) 105-617·
36 Real Estate
1000 Ext. K·tOilV.
Wanted
Wanted
.- • r r - aompulor Hnoroontln111Jhomofar2ola · - - ._lonao. Ful~ dooly - . Dodrlll'o W.r&lt;od To ..... With Opllon
- · Coli 11H411-34ft oftll' 5 -eo
To Bur.. Houoo Willi Acorogo In
... •~a.
' p.m.
0.111.1 COIInly. Con Aftor 5p.m.
Busl......
114 448 •••
EXCELLENT WAGU far oporo 14
.....
iiblj • . . . , . . . . .
Training
W.nlod: RNI Eoloto To Bur,
horne. No lli:I«&lt;IIICI needed.
. omo111-. I -•nt lolo wllhln
Coft 1-504-&amp;li•T778 Ell. 1214. ::::::-::::-:---:::~~~=~
-118outhooolom liMo CRy of Golllpoilo ond Golllo
0pon 24 hoUro, InclUding Sun- Rolroln •
Buolnooo
Collogo
Iorino·.,..., ~= Hood - . wotor &amp;
cloy.
Ploa. Coli Todlir.'~
onll.lblo. Gu protor.
~RAL GOVERNMENT IS Roglotorollon -~•.
rolllo. lluol bl zonod rooldonllol. Colllltnn Wy. OBERER
HIRING fti,~~OOO yoor.
oon1_... eo. ,_ m.at37.
Colt 1-.MWIIOO ~111.08 ... 17 Mlacellaneoua

-··-20.

IlCht

an• unfurnlthld, eech 4 room•
3 btdroorne hOl.lee, iand .eon-

T.V.

uaed •ppllancM,
Hie. ODin
I 1.m. to I r;m· llon ...Sat. , ......
••• 1&amp;- I
3rd. ... ft.O
..,_. .... ,
" · -.11 11
,;pol.....,..;,•OH:--::--:-:---,.,-:--:-=

lumlohod, jVIvalo bolh, ol ·
uiiiHIH pold. Rio GrondL 614- F""' F- Rofrlgorillor'o, tl21

388-H4t.

-un-.THAEE
RAISES FIRST YEAR
Tuition rolnobu,..ont. Crodn
U,Oion Btrvlcoo1 coring I con·

··f:i
:f t

t400/

-Hilt Nlni!'t-

puowlln aoellenl ......

11

M~di~'b.l

-lor:•a-

wanted to Buy

Employment Services

If-·--·
t.....

!11

a-rUno
® Medellne t;1
7:05 ill Happr Deya
7,30 ill • 1111 iiJI Jeoparlfyll;l
(J) Nlgh1 Court t;1
(1) 1121 ., E...,._lnmont
.Tonlgh1 Stereo. t;1
(I) G Mema's F'liini!J
I!JIID Tluft's Comfllinr
0 College Belketbllll
Crouflre
Qb Madeline'• Chrltlm8s
Allar Pans Is hit by a huge
snowstO&lt;m, Madeline, her
lriends and Miss Clav~l can't
get home f9r Christmas.
(Animated) (0:26)

F:.':DO•'!o.l_

1':'1;.r.:,";

'*

by lilllng In tile miDing -.u
L-....L.-L-..L.....JL-..&amp;.....1 you dmlo!&gt; lrom tiOp No. 3 bolow.
.

SportaCerrler

1

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yonl Soloo IIUOI Ill Pold In
AdYincL DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dly bllonl tho od lo lo Nft.
Sundof odftlon • 2:00 p..,.
Frldo,...:=-r odftlon • 2:00
p.m.
I'

pizza

"Yes, that
T U0 0 UG
~---of ··- !"
1--wl,-:-=:,rl;.,;:;.17...;.;1;..,lr-1 Q Comploro lho chucklo quoM!f

=

,

1
Corilpuler, fll/nlor, a
.,_
lolo
ol
gomoo, •
Fill 10p gWior ItO. 1304-171.
46 Space tor Rent
oonworo, 1110, - - . 114- :1131.
t171 Ford F·tl01 oulo., 1110.. · ,•
Fumlolood molollo holM for ront.
~71111.
-Ford
opd., ACt • o
2 b•*oom, to4-I'JI..651~ efter Country Moblll H01111 Park,
Qui.O.Tun. 1111noe t-1 cion, bid linK
wt~ 1n.
-"-.f. ..
1:00 Pll.
Rauto 33, Norlh of Pomooay. C h - trooo $10. iooto. CUI IP!!Ik woll of raul You nood tho p.m. ~~
.
11112.'
~
Mabile koi Roro: 141110, . ~'";:;:• porto, ooloo. Coli ""'' ""'"' 1 mile flam Union ·-blo" Jill PIANO SER· till ":.~t ~1:/1 cyl. llhci!l' '~
2br, 114 Ul 1314, lt4-441-e2~
•
- · JOIII2 :110.
VICE' (Pov. 22:1). · 1111 Wonl bod,
ftlon. 12200. , ,
wale
arne.~~~-·
.,., - · Dlop-lno Mabile homo for ,..,., lumlohod
c:onao.lo &amp; plootfc . . . . IOnkl, - . z a.
-1025.
·~.)
llondlna llmbor. Top orlcoo with WID. $250 mo-:'. dtpoelt
Ron EWIIM Ent8n!MI1, .lack~ SIIIMt.Ca:na=ll Plano larpln. 1113 . '-':~ ,_., 4WD, PSIPI, ~ ..-1
pold,l141311'711lt oltol7:00p.m. I ulllftloo. IMIIIH·iofil.- •
CIH t-.a?.tla
W.lhd: Rooponolblo porly 10 Atiii ~GOO. 11UII 8111, 114- · • ·;.
nice low ·~r••wnt• on 1 _ eecn
W.llpopor 1 polntlna 114-lll2· -llo homo tullY tumlohod, 51
Household
Dolllllllldlflor 121 plnl), 2 ~ iplnol-•.oio
. eon bl
·
·
•
2321.
wu!!!!, ~-. AIC, 2 bodroomo,
Goods·
........, lolo - · .,...,
- • -IIY. Col Mr. Wllftolll: 1- Ford XLT. AIC, v.. , 1
304·m-o058.
~ lolloo,IMIMM"'"'•~•:: 1111041743:Miolll. 101.
· onglno. 111100. I14/IIM244.
• 'j·
Ono
2br,
ono
S~r. 8t4ol411-0127
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
.
12
HOOd.,
11111.-J
,_,...,,
-bum
DMIB
Aaouollc till Ford Rontl"r, 4 oyl, I
· Fmancial
ofter 2p.m.
Soloo ond cholro prlood 114-:Ms.ti7t ofter 1 P."'
Qullorwlaooo. lac. oond., $3110. 1110011,_ !4.J!ID.. oftor 5:00 coli
•'
"t5
T'•
......
•
~
Coll-loflorl
p.m.
:lbWRio 0111nd1, two bedroom unit. H
to • .--. .,...• . - •n~ up Fhaw d ,_.
Sale:
AI
_.. otoro- bulldl- no Ia tta. Hklw-10 ~-~
• ~ doiH
--Ford F-110, 414 ELT uotol.
;
ll
rM~'r
~,;:.nceaw;nd depo.u, sus. Recllnera $225 to ts71. .,.reM aa 4 "_
. . ,. .,...... 58 ' Fruits &amp;
Buslnesa
L.ollded, ..,. N,GOD. 1Ml1112*
3714171
614-44e-1430.
..mpo 121 10 $121. Dfnolloo
'
• onwtlnlo.
1221.
..... 11
Vagetablaa
Opponunlty
IIDt ond up 10 1415. Woad'"* F l - : 1:11 o lood, doiiYIINd
Smoll llolllll homo lor-· Up- w4 cllolro $2111 10 81'11. Dooloo
Dunnwln FnoM Form tuol off lr 73 Vena &amp; 4 WD's
INOTICEI
1145 up to h71. Hulcftoo 1400 a
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHijQ CO. , . R- Raod,IM-4411-3760. ·
up, buM bodo oanoplolo wllh For A -.A-W., bod, o ....... of A/bony.
drlw, ....
l
Vor!Oiy ol •111!1••, 1171 ...... 4 lhotyou
,....ko=do - ond· Unlurnlohod Mobllo · Homo. mottron $2111 ond up to . - . goo al"'ulollng - · ~
good,
tl,300.
:1114-1711-3221.
I
nno Wllh
pooplo
to ovorythlng downtown. boby bldo 1110 llott...... or ~.~ ~ooiW/Id mo~ ,
...
loll ·
.....
nUI8,
- .. , .....ottiullor,
~hum.
NOT lo oonc1 monor 11or
lho CioN
0111
lclool for t pooson or couple. bo1 oprlngo full or IWfn I'll, ftrm ~ - ·
""'
M
dolly, 1171 11oo1go p__, - ; :n8
mol UniH yau hove I od 514-446--31118,
614-256·1003 S88, and pe. Queen Mta t2J1 &amp;
I dll I II ra, blbf bid, TuoodQ.aunillly
IUiotMtlc, PS, PB, t2,fOG. 114- · ... ~
....,-lloniiQ.114 1• nw.
1111 ollortng,
boloro Dp.m.
Kina $3110. 4 d,_ ond monr ...,. - . o1
37NI57.
- . ·'
u
. Gun Coblnolo I, 8, &amp; 10 132
11J4 Butt.mut
Rd. ·
••ndl ng · Raule,, Loc • 1 lor ~ 1• utllltiH tum, 2 bedroom, on the
p
1171
Joop
CJ.T,
loonl
top,
114: o,
CHEAP: IIUOI Nil quickly t-1101). ~vor $10 por woolt, $300 por gun. Boby m i l t - $:11 • -••or·
311 1122.
,..
rearm Suppl1rs
2112-1100.
manlh. 614-!1414528.
$41. Bod homoo ,121, - . For
AliontA Woodbumor,
SIH $35 &amp; Icing!'-- NO. Good ..,.MI 114 ttf 4- .
1110 Dodae 11 pZMihfllr Yin, ..., :
&amp; Livestock
VENDING ROUTE: Slrong, oolld
-ion o1 loodroont ouftoL ••-.
gocoo1 oonilnlan, no noor, h,toO •· •
cooh buolnooo. High 1111ftc, loApan
melol ·aoblnllo, - - $1111
Ku-, 2100
or BIOI~.
. , J:) \
aol _,lono, For ..lo. Now • 44
mant
ond up 10 le5.110 doyo 10 .U, 11.7
liorllniY;
:;;ttao='-::·a;e=--;;CJ:;:I;--=-::ow=;wr=, ·~.~:~ ~
qulpmonl.t-100-:IM·VEND.
for· Rent
coohwfthoPJII'OvodciOIILSml. 1110.
H•-"''
12dt,
aut Bullville Rd. ODon t A.ll. to ftboogiMo, fully - . roodr 61 Fann Equipment
$2,1100. 1 QMC :114 ton Sltrro .. - · •
I P.ll. /IIQn, lhN Sot. Col 114- far wolor, mony Ollllll, 11,11011.
1 BR, 300/mo.; 2 BR ,
mo.; 441-0322.
..,......7HL
IIF TrMior, llllorp 11.1110; 404, 1 or~ 11,1100. :1111 ns 311'1. •
Real Estate
111 IIF Df-. Ctoono Pull,
2 room•
&amp;
both,
$171.
All
7
- ---:---:---:-=-,:--:
'
utllltlea lhCiudld. o.pa.ll re- Cowny Appliance rnO. Good Kw aM ......, 20,000 ITU, _ , Hvdrolllloo, $4,3110.;. FOI'- 74
Motorcyc;les
•

1111.

io

Man complaining

5

e

,: .:

~

URUS

1

bot· , .• ~
,
, I

t171 ~ 'lnlcll. ti.IIOO, t171
or Clio- CUllom Von,
!!,_11_!10. 1-7130., lt4-*-

Musical
fnatfUmlnte

I I

I
1
2

3

7:00 ill D ilL iiJI Wheel !II
Fortune t;1
1D I D-m of Jeannie
(1) ())
tntlde Edition t;1
i1l (!) acNell Lehntr
NIWIHour
1!J1 Night Court t;1
iiJie Current Allelr t;1
11)1 Mec:G,.er Framed as an
assassin, Mac is pursuad by
killers and pollee allkd. t;1

-:.. -t

-lor

be-

@ SporlsLoatc
8:35 ill AndJ GriHith '

•• ·'~

·
dump

TRX$1,1110.~417.

Marchandlte

fit.

-

tile

1i Nl DI \ I~I .
P
I
~
I,..----::-~--:.,•Owner:
I I 1 I ! ~~~::~~·
w~
sou~ta

(1) ()) D ABC News t;1
(l)WIIdAmlriea .
l!l3·2·1 ContiCI t;1
1111 1121 e CBS N-t t;l
l!llll Andy Grtftlth .

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72 Trucks for Sale
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The Deily Sentinai- Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

BORN LOSER

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IDEALIST: ONE WHO,
ON NOTICING THAT A ROSE SMELLS BETIER
THA.~ A CABBAGE, CONCLUDES niAT IT IS ALSO
MORE NOURISHING. - H.L. MENQ(EN
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The . Daily Sentin.el

By The Bend

13 days
until
Christmas

· Tuesday. December 11 . 1990
Page-10

'

·Dear office worker
Dear Ana LanderS: Your column
haS provided an open forum for the
public for many ycais. I hope you
will print this letter for those of us
who are fed up with the office slob. ·
Here are some clues.
If you don't bring your lunch, rd
appreciate it if you didn't watch me
eat mine and hint for a tasr.e of this

and lhat.
Since you like chewing gum,
candy and snaclcs, it would be nice
if you brought your own and stayed
out of my desk drawers.
·
If you have a headache or any
olher physical problem, please buy
your own medication and stop
mooching.
·
Quit making a pig of yourself
when someone brings a gift of food
to lhe offiCe. Last week you behaved
as if you had never seen a cake in

. C0111111imity Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and lbe day or tl!at event. Items
m.ust be· recelvtd In advance to
Insure publication In the c:aleudar.

4NN UNDERS ·
. "1989~ ......,_ ~n..-1,.

Timrs Syndit'tllf' and
Crnlan SyiNIIr• ..

area.
Don't impose on your office
colleagues by bringing dozens of
pictures of your children. family,
wedding, etc. We aren't all that
interested,
Bring your own sweater if lhe of·
fice isn~ warm enough or the air
conditioning is too high, and please
don't take mine home if I lend it
to you.
Don~ hang on the phone for hours
talking to your husband, wife, kids,
mother, sister or best friend. While
· you are running your mouth, your
co-workers are doing your work and
we resent iL
If you have a terrible cold or the
flu or feel "rotten," do aD or us a
favor and Slay home. Nobody wants
what you've gOL
Thanks for printing lhis. I feel
beuer already. •• FED UP IN ANY
· CITY. USA
DEAR FED; rm glad yo" un·
loaded iillhis space. And now, readers, if you
wondering whclher
the writer is someone in your office,
il probably is.
Dear Ann Landers: 'Neglected
Molher-in-Law" really got to me.
Did it ever occur to her that there
are good reasons why she is "neglected"? In the 25 years that we've
been married, my molher-in-law has

are

never once complimentixl her son
(my husband) on his
his family 6r his many achievements in
community service. The woman
constantly asks questions that are

wen,

none of her business. During the fJrst

10 minutes of a visit, she lays a guilt
trip on us for liOl calling and visit·
ing more. Sbe makes us wantiO hea!l
for the door.
.
Recently, for lhe fust tUne, we had
to borrow money from her for an
emelliCIICY. Sbe insisledthatwesign
JIIIIIC'S, put up col1alml, CIC. That
really hun JOY husband. He is
the most reliable, conscientious
penon I know and haS never failed
to keep his word or honor a com·
mitmenL
I had to write thiS letter, Ann, even
if it doesn~ get printed. Yau serve
as a sounding board for so m31)y
people who need to be heard. I have
benefited petsonally from w~ you
have written doZens or~. Than1cs
for everything. •• OAKLAND,

CALIF.

.

DEAR OAK: Thousands of
daughters·in-law wiU bless you for
writing. Thanks for adding balance
to the picture.
Gem of the Day: Middle age is
when you rmally know your way
around but you don't feel like going.

Lawson wedding shower held
KEIUANNE OLIVER .

Oliver birthday·
Kerianne
Nicole
Oliver
celebrated her first birthday
recently at the home of her
grandparents, Jim and Wanda
Oliver, ML Alto. and Bill and Jean
Yoho, New Haven, W.Va.
A pany was held and cake served
with her maternal grandparents.
Attending were her pare!lts, Earl
and Vicki Oliver, grandparents. Bill
and Jean Yoho,.great grandparents.
Don and Erma Yoho, Mike,
Tammy, Justin and Jesse Buzzard,
Donny and Lettie Swyers and
Pbyliss Stewart.
.
She also enjoyed a cake with her
paternal grandparents. At~ding
lhere were Chris OHver. Debbie
Van Meter, Pete Oliver, Lynn Arlhur. Sending gifts were Terri
Oliver.
Kerianne makes her home with
her parents in Virginia Beach. Va.

Eastern Local
.honor rolls
The honor roll for the second six
weeks at Eastern Local has been
announced.
CHESTER ELEMENTARY
Sixth gmde · Meredilh Crow,
Maria Frecker, all A's; Eric Dillard,
Leslie Parker, Lisa Stelhem, honor
roll.
Fifth grade · .Keme Bailey,
Brandon .Buckley, Renae Poo\er;aU
.A:s; Stephanie Bearhs, h(_lllor roll;
April F6reman, academic honor
roll.
,
Fourth gmde • Beau Bailey,
· Jeremy Cas10, Dustin Huffman,
Melody Lawrence, Jessica Mar·
cum Elisha McCoy, Jason Mora,
Aunin Will, honor roll; Angi Wolfe,
academic honor roll.
Third gmde - Joshua Will, aU
.A:s; Jennif\lf Barnes, Joshua
Broderick, Sarah Frank. Jessica
Grueser, Molly Heines, Christopher
Krawsczyn, Aliza McCoy, Scott
Needs, Jessica Pore, Alison Rose
and Cassandra Studer, hOnor roll;
Leah Well, academic honor roU.
RIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY
Sixth grade · David Baker, ~­
tie Holter, honor roll: Amanda Mil·
hoan academic honor roll.
• Fo'urth gmde • Christa Circle,
Stephanie Evans, Juli Hayman,
honor · roll;
Mike Sobieski,
academic honor roll.
Leigh Ann Bigley, Roxanne
Green, Derek Holsin$er, Chris!r
Riley, Andrew Rollms, Cass1e
Rose honor roll; Jason Barber,
Wendy Smilh, academic honor roll.
TUPPERS PLAIN ELEMEN·
TARY
Sixth ~ • BiUy Ftancis, Traci
Heines. Erin SexiOD, honor roll.
Fifth grade • ~belle ~dwell!
Jeremy Kehl. aD As; VICki Adams,
Billena Buchanan, Joanna Gumpf,
Joey Wedcs, honor roll.
Fourth grade - Jessica Brannon,
Jennifer Cline, Sarah Householder,
Alisha Rojas, J.T. White, Ann Wiggins, honor roll.
niird grade - Meghan Avis, Mat·
thew · Caldwell, Jeremy Gi11ilan,
J..cah Sanders, Steven Weeks,
Amanda Wheeler; honor roll; Mat·
thew Boyles, Amanda ' Upton,
academic honor roll.
(

A wedding shower and brldal
reception were held. recently at
OverbroOk Center in . honor of
Roben and Tracy (Manley) Lawson.
Garnes were played with prizes
going to Dottie Scruberry, Bonnie
Roush, Judy Lee, Etta Wise and
Mamie Swauger.
Door prize was won by Regina
Kimes.
Refreshments of a lhree·tier
wedding cake, nuts. mints, and
punch were served to those already
named and to Sharon and Dorolhy
Older, Maxine Michael, Leona
Eblin, Crystal Dexter and Timmy,
Healher Wise, Joann Wise, Pam
Humphrey, Diane Smith, Alice
Tripp, Joann Smith, Freda Allen,

Gheen personal

Amy Might, Betty Chevalier, Anna
Wiles and Margaret Wyatt.
Sending gifts were Brenda Jeffers, Garcia Adams, Joy Clarlc,
Lucy Gilmore, Diane Milliron.
Helen White, Peggy Clifton, Fran·
ces Davidson, Shirley Dunlap,
Janet Hartley, Cindy Smith, Betty
Manley, Janet Sigman, Nancy
Hubbard, Janet Davidson, J ue
Compson, Tina Persinger and Mar·
gie Taylor.
·
.
. .
The couple was uruted 10 marriage on NOI(. 10 in Vienna. W.Va.
by Rev. Herbert Johnson and they
reside in Williamstown, W.Va. He
is employed with Chef's Pantry and
she is employed with FarJ!I Fresh.

emplo:yees

09684.

Now You Know

TUESDAY

RACINE • The ·Southern Local
Chapter of the National Honor
Soc1ety will sponsor a toy drive

The annual Christmas dinner
for Amerlcap Alloy employees
and Foote Mineral retirees will
be bel.;! on Dec. 15, at USWA 5171
Union Hall In Hartford, W.Va.
Dinner w111 be 11: 30a.m.'to6p.m.
All retirees and employees are
Invited to attend.

The first federal Income tax
was enacted In 1862 to help raise
money for the union's Civil War
effort~ People earning from $600
to $10,000 annually were taxed at
a rate of 3 percent.

Movie to be shown
"Monsters: Mystery or Myth"
will be the children's movie shown
at the Meigs County Public Library
on Saturday at 2 p.m.

Fund-raiser winner
· Fred Werry, Pomeroy, was the
winner of lhe Remington 870 Express shotgun used recently as a
fundraiser at Middleport Elementary.

Chester D of A holds meeting
Several matters were discussed
at lhe recent meeting of the Chester
Council No. 323, Daughters of
· America.
It was noted lhat Faye Hoselton
is home from lhe hosp1tal and Bea
Moyer is doing better.
A Chrisanas party will be held
~ednesday Crow 's Restaurant at
6:30p.m. for the Pllst Councilor's.
A $3 gift exchange will be beld.
The lodge Christmas pa1y will
be held Dec. 18 at 6:30 p.m. There
will be a $3 gift exchange. A pot·
luck dinner will be held before the
meeting.
Dawna Grueser is a member of
the council and she will graduate as
a registered nurse soan..

.

Trophies were awarded to Chris
Gilkey, Joshua Lynch and Amanda

Neece.

Vol .41. No.164
Copyrighted 1990

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
POMEROY • The Red Cross Group of AA and AIAnon will meet
through Friday. New or good used
toys may be contributed. Toys may Bloodmobile will be at the Thursday at 7 p.m. 81 the Sacred
be taken 10 Soulhern High School Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center on · Heart Catholic Church. Call 1-800·
during the hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday from I-5 p.m. The can- 333-5051 for information .
All toys will be given 10 the Meigs teen wiU furnished and served by
POMEROY - . Members of
County toy bank. For more infor- the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter. Bela Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
mation call Kim Phillips, 949· 2611. Sigma Phi Sorority.
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Thursday
for a Christmas party at
POMEROY
Representative
MIDDLEPORT , Meigs County
the
home
of Charlotte Elberfeld.
Chamber of Commerce meets at from Congressmail Clarence E. Social hour at 6:30 p.m. and dinner
noon at Overbrook Center. The Miller's office at courthouse in at 7:30p.m. Bring staple goods for
Meigs High School Choir will Pomeroy from II a.m. until I p.m.
RU11.AND -The Leading Creek Serenity House.
make presentation.
Conservancy Disttict will hold its
POMEROY - Mary Diamond,
VINTON - The Pine Grove regular meeting on Wednesday al 9 Aame Fellowship International
Holiness Chapel, Route 235. Vin- a.m. at the office.
Representative, will speak at
ton five miles from Route 124
Thursday's
meeting of the group at
Ro~lesville Road, will have.revival
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
through Sunday at 7:3.0 .p.m. .. dleport Literary Club will meet 7 p.m. at the senior citizens center
nightly. Rev. and Mrs. Dav1d Light, Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Mid- in Pomeroy. Refreshments served
evangelists. Public invited.
dlepon Library for the presentation between 5:30 and 7 p.m.
of two pictures ·to honor Nan
POMEROY - The County ConPOMEROY ·· The Ohio Eta Phi Moore and VivianWaddeU. At 1:30
vention
and LAA Convention will
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority p.m. the group will meet at the
at 10 a.m. in the
be
held
Thursday
will meet Tuesday at the home of home of Betsy Horky for the
ASCS
Office
on
Hiland Road in
Charlene Hoellich for a Christmas regular
meeting. A . spedal
Pomeroy.
party.
Christmas program IS bemg
prepared by Jeannette Thomas.
GALLIPOLIS · The Diabetes
CHESTER
The Chester
Support
Group will meet Thursday
Township Trustees will meet
POMEROY • The Middlepon
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the town Amateur Gardeners Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Holzer Medical Center
hall
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in in lhe French 500 Room. A
·
Pomeroy for a catered Christmas prograni will be "Surviving the
HARRISONVILLE - The Har· pany. A $5 donation to Ameriftora Holidays" by Marie Helms. A $1
gift exchange is optional. Bring a
risonville Senior Citizens will hold 'will replace the gift exchange.
favorite holiday snack.
a Chrisanas potl,uck dinner on
Tuesday at noon at the toWnhouse.
POMEROY - The Meigs County
POMEROY ·. The Xi Gamma
A gift exchange will be held and all · Board of Elections will hold a
Epsilon
Chapler, Beta Sigma Phi
members are urged to attend.
recount for the Attorney General
Sorority
will have a gift and oma·
race between Fisher and Pfeifer on
menl
exchange
on Thursday at the
. MIDDLEPORT - The Meis.s WednesdaY at 9 a.m.
home of Jenny Smith. Leave upper
County Chamber of Commerce w1U
meet Tuesday at noon at Overbrook
POMEROY · A representative parking lot in Pomeroy at 5:45 p.m.
Center in Middleport. The Meigs · from Congressman Clarence Mil· Bring items for needy falililies .
High School Chou will present a ler's office will conduct an open
POMEROY - There will be a
brief Chrisanas program for the door session at tlte coun house on
bake sale and bazaar !II the
chamber. All members are urged to Wednesday from II a.m. 10 I p.m.
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center on
'THURSDAY
attend.
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
RACINE . - The Racine Lodge
CHESTER - The Laurel CHff Quilts, pillows, a:o&lt;:bet and ~it
No. 461 F &amp; AM will meet Better Health Club will meet items, Chris&amp;mas Items, ceram1cs .
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for install~· Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the home and miscellaneowi articles will be
ticin of officers. Refreshments wtll of Elizabeth Hayes in Chester. A $3 for sale.
follow and all Masons are invited gift exchange will be held.
·
SANTA WILL BE AT
to attend.
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The: VFW
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs and Auxiliary will have a
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Junior High Academic Boosters' Christmas party for members and
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the family on Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
6 P.M. TIL 8 P.M.
Meigs Junior High Cafeteria. All Turkey and ham wiU be furnished.
BRING YOUR CAMERA
interested persons are urged to at· Others bring a co..;ered dish.

By United Press Jnternatloual

"Sharing the Hope of Christmas"
was the title of the program presented by Mrs. Kalhryn Mora and Mrs.
Denise Mora at the recent meeting
of lhe Chester United Methodist
Women.
. The purpose of the program was
· to reflect on the faith of Jesus'
parents as lhey brought a child of
hope into a daunting world.
The scripture read was Luke 2: I·
7, and Matthew 2:1-15.
The poup sang the hymn "What
Child IS This" wilh Mrs. Betty
Dean as pianist.
The group closed wilh the hymn
"0 Come, 0 Come Emmanuel."
Also "Silent Night" and prayer.
There were 14 members present
and four guests. Guests were Mrs.
Mary Jo Barringer, Mrs. Martha
Lee. Paul Karr and George Wolf.
The group exchanged gifts and
wrapped robes made for shut·ins
and sick people which were
·delivered.

•

of Sister Gwendolyn F. Carpenter, Children bring . $3 j!ift for ex·
Worthy Grand Matron and Brother change. A mec;tmg wJ!I be held at
Howwd Etuott, Worthy Grand ·7:30p.m.
Patron will be held Tuesday at 7:30 .
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
p.m. at the Masonic Hall in Mason,
Springs
Grange will meet Thursday
W.Va. A reception honoring Oscar
at
6:30
p.m. for a potluck dinner.
Casto, Grand Representative; and a
Members
bring non-perishable
covered dish dinner will follow the
food
items.
meeting.

By LEE STOKES
United Press luternatloual
Iraqi President Saddam Hus·
seln replaced his defense minis '
ter with a hard·llner Wednesday
in an apparent show of resolve
before the upcoming U.S.·Iraql .
talks aimed al seeking a peaceful
solution . to the Persian Gulf
crisis.
State·owned Baghdad Radio
said Saddam, supreme com·
mander of Iraq's armed forces ,
promoted Ge n. Saa dl Toamma
Abbas to replace Ll. Gen . Abdul

~d.

SYRACUSE. The annual Car-

leton School Christmas play, Dr.
Seuss, ''The ·· Grinch Who Stole
Christmas," will be held Tuesday at
6:45p.m. in me schoot.aiJd!torium
in Syracuse. Doors will open at
6:30 p.ni. A shonARC Meigs meeting and refreshmel)ts will be served
foUowing the performance.

Dance to be held
The Pomeroy ' Senior Citizens
DariCe Club will have a dance
Friday at lhe center. Music will be
by the Happy Hollow Boys from
Athens. Tliiise attending bring a
snack for the snack table. The
public is invited.

~~;r:~~pe~rl~orming

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THURSDAY, DECEMB~R 13
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
CALL 614-446-1744 or 1-800-634-S26S
Call Toll Frill Number 1-800-634-5265 for illlftlldiatt appaintment.
THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST
Anyone who hootroublt hNring Of u!'derlionding convenatlon lolnvltod
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have taken that secret with them. Ingwersen .
It doesn't make sense."
The National Transportation
The dead were Identified as · Safety Board, which Is lnvesti·
ptiot Erik Ingwersen, 31, Colum·
gating the accident, said It was
bus; Scott, Meeker,26, Worthing·
the worst since the NTSB began
ton; Doug Shirey, 27, Ctrclev11Ie;
keeping balloon accident records
and Katherine Nemes , 20,
In 1982.
Columbus .
Witnesses said the balloon
Ingwersen, who had flown
seemed to have trouble gaining
balloons In the Swiss Alps, Shirey
altitude, nearly striking the Riffe
and Meeker were all experienced
Center, a 36·story state office
balloon pilots.
building, In the downtown area.
The balloon was owned by the ·
"He kept lighting his burner, so
Bogey Inn, a popular tavern and
It was obvious he .was trying to
restaurant, but was operated by
gain altitude, said Jim Rohden·
burg who working In a downtown
office building. "It looked like he
finally got up enough altitude,
but he got up Into the wind and the
wind carried him Into the tower."
When the balloon hit the tip of
· au antenna atop the tower, the
covering nylon fabric ripped
causing air to rush from the
balloon and send the passenger
basket to the wound.
John Rollins, an employee with
the Franklin County Engineering
Department and an eyewitness,
said he was about 400 yards from
· the tower when the crash
occurred.
"Righi after It hit and they
started to descend, one person
was still looking out over the
basket as It was dropping. He
was leaning out over the side all
the way down."
.
Three crew members were
found Inside. Shirey was found
next to the gondola .
''It was probably sudden death
from the trauma of the Impact,"
said Patrick Fardal, deputy
.,
~
Franklin County coroner.
Greg Feith, an Investigator
,. ,
· with the NTSB, said the balloon
will be taken to a hangar at Port
Columbus for a more complete ,
Investigation.
Several famUy members ar·
rived at the scene shortly after
the crash.
EFFORTS APPRI!CJATED • Hilward R. PIDIIeU. Commuder
Meeker. an Ohio State Untver·
of the Amerlc:an LqloD Feftey Bennett Poll No. l:ZS In Midsjly
marketing student often flew
dleport, receudy received 'llnll'il from Carl E. AIIeuWortb, RrV·
with
Ingwersen and also spent
ing In Operation Desert Sldeld, that lbe ltellll prepared by tbe
time
flying balloons In
Legion bad !Jeen received aDd were IJ'elldy appndated. To show
Switzerland .
his appredadou, Allenawortll sent a~ a captaiD'I eap to PinNemes, an aer()nautical engl·
nell and a picture llllbe llblp 011 w
be II lltllttoned to tile
neertng student at Ohl~ State
LeaJou, Here, Pinel dlspll)l tbe cap and photoplljlll. Tile
University, was Meeker's cousin
Feeney Beuett Poll llad prepared paebaa wltb rookies and
and had been dating Shlre.y .
pel'!lDnalltems for servlee~J!ealn Sandi Arabia.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The cause of the crash of a hOtair
balloon that killed three expe·
tienced balloon pilots and a
passenger may never hi! known,
lhe Ohio Highway Patrol said.
The balloon drllted across
Columbus and hit a one· thousand
foot tower at WBNS·TVTuesday,
sending the four occupants hur·
tUng to their deaths.
' 'Why It was down that low In
this areas Is the big question,"
said Lt. Randy Thatcher of the
Highway Patrol. ''They may

will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by

,

.

$.1.50/D.S. Page

son~

a" variety -or Popular
and
seasonal carQis. Tbt cbolr sings under the direelion of Ter15a Davis, Choir Director at Meigs
High School.

Cause of fatal hot•air balloon·
crash may not ·be .discovered

~----------------------~---------· -'~
nr
992·36U

with 'hard-liner'

Jabar Shanshal as defense miniS- ltary means business," said one . fourth seplor Iraqi official to lose
ter . Shanshal was demoted to his . Arab envoy In Cairo .who re·
his post since Iraq Invaded
previous post ofmtntster of state quested anonymity. "The move
Kuwait on Aug. 2.
for mllttary affairs , the broad·
Is also significant because It
Meanwhile, the State Depart·
cast said.
comes before Iraq· U.S. talks on
ment said the evacuallon of
Arab diplomats In the Middle the gulf." ·
A.rnerlcans from Iraq and occu·
East said Toamma, who was
President Bush Is sending
pled Kuwait appears to be
serving as general Inspector of Secretary of State James Baker
complete, and as many as 500
the armed forces, had backed to Baghdad to pursue a peaceful
Americans have chosen to reSaddam from the beginning of solution to the Persian Gulf
main In the two countries.
the 4·monlh·old standoff.
crisis, and Saddam Is sending his
A U.S.-chartered Boeing 707
"Replacing Shanshal with a
foreign minister, Tariq Azlz, to
with 15 foreigners and no Amerl·
hard·llner and war hero like Washington for slmlfar
cans left Baghdad . Tuesday,
Toamma Is Saddam's way of consultations.
evidence that the evacuation of
telling the Americans his mil·
Shanshal, In his .70s, was the · all American hostages Is proba·

CHRISTMAS CAROLERS
Youth", an all-audition sbow choir from Meigs
High School entertained at tbe Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday l!ftemoou,

$7$ ~alae
COUPON
$7$ ~IIUI
FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS

MASON - The Grand Visitation

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

bly complete, lhe State Depart·
ment said.
Left behind are about 500
people entitled to U.S. passports,
many of them foreign-born child·
ren In families where one of the
spouses Is an American citizen.
In some cases, according to the
State Department , parents decided that they belonged l;. Iraq
or Kuwait and chose to stay.
In others, Kuwaiti or Iraq i·
born husbands with dual citizen· ·
shlpcouldnotgetexltvlsasfrom
the Iraqi government. and lhelr

.families chose to remain behind
with them.
..
Another charter will be sent to ·
Kuwait and Baghdad on Thurs-.
day because of the posslb111ty
thai some Americans may stUI
be In hiding or had not had access
to the Voice of America shortwave announcements about the
freedom flights.
That final fUght may carry !he
last of the U.S. diplomats In the
beleagured American Embassy
In Kuwait, Ambassador Natha· ·
nlel Howell and four others.

Director search.narrowing,
Chamber of Commerce.told

p-------------~-------------------,

POMEROY - The River Valley
Herbalists will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the hQnie of Bobbi Karr for
a Christmas party. Members bring a
WI1IPDed ornament and one dozen
cookies for exchange.

2 Sootlono. 16 Pogos

Pomeroy.:..Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 12,1990

·Saddam shakes up mill

FRUTH PHARMACY

Holiday dinner
planned for

Word has been received from
Stungan, Germany of lhe departure
of Sgt. James A. Gheen to Saudi
Arabia.
.
SgL Gheen is lhe son of Frank
a¢ Donna Gheen, Middlepon, and
the husband of LuciUe Milstead,
Gallipolis. Mrs. Gheen, and children
will remain in Germany until his
return.
His address is Sgt. James A.
Gheen, 297-6().945, B. Co. 7/159
Avn. Regt., APO, New York, N.Y.

Chester UMW meet

Becom inr mostly eloudy
and windy Wednesday night,
with a low between 40 and 45.
Partly cloudy Thursday, with
blghs In tbe mid o!Os .

Sentinel Calendar

Ann
Landers

your life.
Please don\ have YOI!t relatives
who want a ride home meet yo~ in
the office. Their presence is disruptive. They don't belong in your work

Pick 3: 619
Pick 4: 3997
Cards: 7-H,
S.C; 5-0;4-S

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
The field of ajlplicants has been
narrowed for the position of the
new Executive Director-Developmem Director of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, and the
placement of thai director within
tlte chamber is proceeding on
schedule.
Outgoing Chamber President
Bruce Reed presented chalilber
members with a search committee
update when the chamber met iii
regular session on Tuesday at
. Overbrook Center.
The chamber's director search
committee . consisiting of Lenny
Eliason, 'Ibm Reed, Bruce Reed
and Ron McDade • has been at
worlc trying to fill the new position
for most of the year, and only two
applicants now remain for the consideration of the chamber's bOard
of directors.
The board of directors will meet
on Monday to consider the two
candidar.es. and Reed said, hopefully choose one to fill the positicin.
llle positicn, wlridr will J111Y 111
estimated $32,000, is expected to
be filled by January 1, with the
director to be at worlc by midJanuary.
New c.hamber officers for 1991
were introduced Tuesday, with the
presidency for next year being
filled by Dr. Nick Robinson of
Middlepon, the vice presidency by
Charles KitChen of Middleport, and
the •secretary·treasurer remaining
Dick Owen of Middleport.
Robinson and the other new
officers will commence lheir duties
in January at lhe next regular meeting.
Mark Murphy of Overbrook
Center was oresented a plaque from

the cham~r in apprecilition of
Overbrook Center's regular hosting
of the chamber meetings.
New members at lhe meeting
were introduced as Bob Gilmore,
representing lhe newly-formed
Middleport Community Associa.:
tion, and . Bill Stuckey, Qf Royal

The chamber was entenained at
yesterday 's meeting by "Electric
Youlh", an audition·only show
choir from Meigs High School. The
choir, under the direction of Thresa
Davis, peformed several season
songs for the chamber.

'

IN APPRECATION • Overbrook Center in Middleport was
presented with a plaque at Tuesday's regular meeting or the .
Meigs County Chamber or Commen:e for its frequent.hosting or
tbe ·chamber's meetiup. In addition to rt!jularly hosting lhe
meetiugs, the facility also provides a complimentary lunch for
chamber membel'!l. Here, outgoing Chamber President Bruce
Reed, left, presented Overbrook Center's Administrator, Mark
Murphy, w1th the award.
·

Hostages tell vastly
CLEVELAND (UP!) -James
· Pennington tells a story of eating
bad food and reading books to
pass time. Jeff SaniSlo talks
about hiding In backs of cars and
apartments.
Pennington and Anlslo, both
from Parma·, returned home
Tuesday night at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport. tellIng different stories about their
last few months In Iraq .
Penn~gton, 62, reported he
spent the last four months at a
petrochemical plant near aagh·
dad . He said he read about 40
novels, listened to news broad·
casts and was not afraid of being
k11led.

03JcReson.

differe~t

Santslo, 34 , said he was
smuggled Into a hospital by
Kuwaiti residents to be treated
for a kidney problem. The
Browntng·Ferrts International
employee said he was treated by
doctors In a stairwell to avoid
notice bv the Iraqis.
Sanislo declined to discuss his
last few months when he arrived
In Cleveland, but earlier In
Washington, D.C., he told the Los
Angeles Ttmes about the people
he believes are heroes.
" We were moved In the trunks
of cars, or In the back . seats
coveted up with blankets," Sa·
nlslo said. "We owe our lives to ·
the (KuwaitiS ) who helped us .

stories

They are the real heroes In all.of
this."
·Pennington reported a differ. ·
ent style of life.
''Treatment wasn't bad, physically," said Pennington, who
worked for the Kuwaiti minister
of defense for six years.
Pennington said ' !the food was
so bad at first. We finally comted
them Into letting us do our own
cooking."
Now he said hewas justlooklng
forward to Christmas at home.
"It's my first Christmas In the
states In six years," Pennington
said. ' 'i'm really looking forward
to it."

OPEC says it will return to quotas
after Gulf crisis resolution reached .
VIENNA (UPI) _OPEC Pres· speaking with reporters before
ldenl Sadek Boussena said Wed· the meeting, echoed Boussena's
rks but they appeared
'
nes day th a t eac h membe rot th e rema
oil cartel will be ex cted to unwilling to Immediately cut
·1
reduction by 400 000 barrels a
pe
return to the 22.5 ·m1111on barre· P ·
. d. Tu. d
b
a-day production quota once the day, as suggeste
es ay . Y
. Gulf 1 1 Is
1 d
Iralltan 011 Minister Ghotamreza
PersIan
. cr s s
reso ve •
.
·
call1ng the move would be Aghazadeh.
o-ussena said the Organlza·
essential f oro n P rlces tablutY·
""' of Petroleum Exporting
tton
Adress1ng th e open 1ng sessIon
·
lbl
of the organization's year-end Countries had acted respons Y
meetln Boussena also blamed by deciding In August to suspend
·
g,
1
1
t
the 22 5 million barrel·a·day
the dramatic ncrease
n pe
ro- production
·
r1n
th
1
t
f
quota set at Its July
Ieum Prices d u g e as our
.
months on consuming nations, meeting.
"Member countries with spare
who he said had refused to draw
on their stocks· to stab1llze the capacity could, therefore, raise
market.
their levels of output without ,
several OPEC delegates, . fearing that they w.e re contrav·

entng the terms of our July 1990
agreement, lerms which, In any
case, are to be returned to once
th
11 1
tdred to b
e ~: $ s s cons e
e
over, Boussena said.
Boussena placed·the blame for
.
· t
the price Instability tha has
dominated the lnt.!rnatlonal on
,
marllets since Iraq Invaded
K uwa ItAug. 2 on th e consum
· 1n g
countries
·
''W
·
ed
h
e appeal to t ese consu- .
mers .to Implement their on.
s h ar1ng agreemen 1, whic h waa
set up specifically to meet such
.
th
'
sltuat1ons a slze tehcurrent one, as
111
1
we 11 as u
e present arge
accumulation of stocks owned by
Continued on page 8

,-

*COMPOSITION SEPARATE PRICE
.

•
1.•

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•

•
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•

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