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                  <text>.Ohio Lottery

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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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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
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26 Cents

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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.•

•

't

•

•
•
•

�•
Wednesday. December 12. 1990

Commentary
.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday. December 12. 1990

Starks' 22 points pushes.Knicks to 109-90 win over Heat
ByDEANSCHABNER
Vl'I Sports Writer
John Starks Is a lucky man : He likes his job, and
he may even get to keep it.
.
Star~. who was cut by San Antonio and Golden
State and did time In both the CBA and WBL ,
scored· 22. points and Ignited a first-half surge
Tuesday night that carried the New York Knlcks
to a 109-90 romp over the Miami Heat.
"! love the game of basketball," Starks said
after he scored nine points over an 8~-mlnute
stretch, helping the Knlcks turnaone-pointdeflclt
Into a 10-polnt lead.
"I just come out and play hard," he said. "Ilove
the crowd. 1 love · my teammates. I love
everything about it .'"
His enthusiasm rubbed off on the rest of the
Knlcks, who played sluggishly In their last three
games, three losses under new coach John
MacLeod;
·
"He was a big lift for us," said Gerald Wilkins.
who scored 18 points and handed out 18 assists.
It was the Knlcks' first victory under MacLeod,
but Wilkins said that was not as big an Issue as the
way the win came.
"We went out tonight saying 'Let's blow these
guys out."' he said. "It was a very big confidence
builder for us. The win was for the whole team. We
got everyone Involved so they couldn't key on one

The Daily Sentinel · TV parodies world of TV newscasters .
Ill Court Stteel

Pomeroy. Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INI'ERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
,.,~

~m~

~~

f'""T""-,1'---r'"'

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher

~ .-:~.~

.

C}IAIU.i!:NE HOEFLICII
General MaDa1:er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Ass151aal Publlsber/ Conlroller
A MEMBER of The United Press I nternat!onal. Inland Dally Press
Association and the ;\mer lean Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to edit lng and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues, not personalities.
.

Outrageous personage?
By Joe Spear
A number of readers have asked me to clarify the rules for the
Outrageous Personage of the Year Award , as they think they have
deserving nom inees In mind but aren't completely sure. It Is with
pleasure that ! ·comply:
1. Given the fact that Outrageous Personages seem to be an
inexhaustible resource, we have only the space to consider native
ones. Thus, foreign nationals are not eligible.
2. Persons from ali walks of life are acceptable nominees .
Politlcans, performers and preachers seem to be the most popular
candidates, but no -profession Is excluded.
3. The only requirement for OP nomi.-s Is that they act with
such Inanity, arrogance, absurdity or hubris that they literally
take your breath away and leave you wondering whether they are
of this planet. Use Dick Darman's duck test: If they quack like
OPs. they are OPs.
Last year's winners might be Instructive.
Ronald Reagan (OP of the Year and OP of the Decade) won after
taking $2 million from the Japanese for two short speeches. and
then claiming that he was not"cashlng In on the presidency." He
ran away with the contest on the basis of his surreal character.
Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor took second place after she slapped a
policeman, opined the officer "probably wanted to sleep with me,"
and said s he feared going to jail because of the lesbians
Incarcerated there. Such a living cartoon could not be denied the
OP honor.
And from the world of politics come these nominees, all personal
favorites:
- John Silber, the foulmouthed Democ~atic loser In the
Massachusetts gubernatorial race. He made disparaging remarks
about women, blacks, Jews and his opponent, whom he described
as an "orange -headed WASP" and a " back-stabbing son of a beach
plum" (I scrubbed up that quote a little ). People seemed lo
appreciate his candor but not his uncivil tongue.
·
- David Duke, the former Ku Klux Klansman and Louisiana
legislator who ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate and claimed
credit for creating an atmosphere that enabled President Bush to
veto a civil rights bill. A local critic described him as "the Freddy
Krueger of the Republican Party ... the horror show that will not go

· .. WASHINGTON (NEAl -one ·
televiSion network has belatedly
but publicly acknowledged !be
fundamentally ntmsy and fatuous nature of the medium's news
programming. Unfortunately,
that admission comes in the form
.of an entertainment n!!('ring.
" Television news ls)lke sausage . People who Jove It shouldn't
see It being made," says Liz
McVay , the executive producer
for news at a fictional but
strikingly re~lstlc broadcast op· eratlon whos travails are por!rayed on a biting new CBS
program called '!WJOU."
On another occasion, McVay's
boss at the station tells her: " !
llke executive ·producers who
don't think good journalism and a
good television show are the
same thing. "
The program, one of the better
new offerings of the current
season, provides a surprisingly
honest view of a television
" news" operation whose consumlng quest for higher ratings
Invariably produces not lmproved journalism but enhanced
pandering to viewers' worst

tastes.
i
curred In Central Park - the
WhUe "WIOU' Is merciless In
gang rape or a female Jogger and
Its parody of a local station's
a young couple's passionate
foibles .and failings, It carefully embrace that degenerated Into a
avoids lampooning the network- slajllng and became known as the
produced and syndicate"Preppie Murder."
·distributed national "news" proOther toplt;:s !Delude c~Ud
grams I hat have debased
molestation at a day care center.
television journalism.
· the homo-sexual proclivities of
Among them are regularly
actor Rock Hudson, the catastroscheduled "Infotainment" shows
phlc explosion aboard a spacethat rely heavily upon re· craft and the saga of a depraved
creation, re-enactment and sim·
New York man who abused both
ulatlon. In this category are
his child (who eventually died)
programs such as "A . Current
and wife.
Affair , " . "America's Most
No subject Is too lurid or
Wanted ," "Unsolved Mystertasteless for those offerings.
les," " The Reporters" and
Indeed, the journalistic sea"Rescue 911."
vengers who produce them apIn addition, the three .major
pear to revel In excess and
networks routinely otter special
exploitation.
"docu-dramas " tha.t recklessly
Similarly, ABC 's News Dlvmix facl with fiction, preventing
i.slon Initially relied upon , then
even careful viewers from com·
abandoned an .Innovation of dubprebendlng where adherence to
lous value - the presentaton of
reality gives way to reliance
news before a live studio auupon a script writer's
dlence - as a gimmick ·to
Imagination.
enhance the ratings of Its
· Among the favorite subjects of
"PrlmeTime Live."
those programs are New York's
In addition, the news divisions
most grisly crimes of recent
or all three networks have
years, Including two that ocshamelessly offered ·programs

By Robert Walters
·

that do lillie more than celebrate
celebrity. Among the most
dreadful recent entries Is NBC's
"Cutting Edge with Marla
Shriver," In which the hostess
gushes about varlo.us entertainers' purported show business
successes.
Nobody's Idea of a serious
journalist. Shriver's principal
claim to fame Is her membership
In the Kenn~y political family .
Nevertheless, she has served on
numerous occasions as the anchor of "NBC Nightly News."
But the Cable News Network
transformed Catherine Crier
from a slate court judge with no
background In journalism to a
news program anchor. SimIlarly, Diane Sawyer went directly from the While House staff
to CBS, then to ABC.
When will a truly brave televl'
slon network offer a satirical
program that deals with the
excesses and Inadequacies of the
Industry's national as well as
local news operations?

person.···

· Tllat person Is usually Patrick Ewing, whO led
the Knlcks with 29 points. grabbed 10 boards and
swatted away two shots. But Tuesday night rookie
Jerrod Mustal (11 points) , Wilkins , Starks and
, Eddie Lee Wilkins (11 points) · all shared the
scoring burden.
The Knlcks baffled the Heat for 20 consecutive
points In the second quarter, when they outscored
the Heat 29-10. Miami was held to Its lowest first
half total ever (29 points).
Miami turned the ball over 10 times and shot 21
percent from the floor .
·
"This had to be theall-time ugliest, sloppiest
game I've ever played in, " said Miami's Rony
Seikaiy, who finished with 14 points, but 12 came
In the third quarter when the game was all but
decided. "Our offense deserted us, the Kn icks got
their game going and that's all she wrote."
When Starks came off the bench at 5:03 of the
first quarter, the Knlcks were trailing 10·9. When

STeaDV
as sHe&amp;:es!

Today in history:
Today is Wednesda y, Dec. 12, the 346th day ofl990 with 19 to follow .
The moon is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The ll]Orning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include John Jay. first chief justice of the United States, In 1745;
abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison in 1805; French novelist Gustave
Flaubert in 1821; Norwegian painter Edvard Munch In 1863; actor
Edward G. Robinson in !893; singer Frank Sinatra in 1915 (age 75) ;
television gam e show host Bob Barker In 1923 (age 67 ); New York
Mayor Edwa rd Koch in 1924 (age 66); and singers Connie Francis in
)938 (age 52) and Dionne Warwick In 1941 (age 49 ).

Berry's World

LINE DRAWN IN THE SAND

grabbed 16 rebounds and blocked six shots to lead
the Tlmberwolves, who rallied !rom an 86-77
deficit In the final nine minutes and won without
scoring a field goal In the last 3: 49.
.
Bucks .99, . Bulls . 87 - At Milwaukee, Jay
Humphries scored 21 points and F)-ank Br.tckowskl added a season-high 19 to help the Bucks
take sole possession of first place In the Central
Division. The victory was Milwaukee's 11th
straight at home to start the season, breaking the
club record of 10 In a row set In 1984-85.
76ers 119, Magic 114 - At Orlando, Fla .• Rick

Mahorn highlighted his nlne-polnt fourth quarter
with a three-point play that ended· a Philadelphia
drought and led the Slxers to their fourth·straight
· win. Charles Barkley scored 28 points and Hersey
Hawkins added 27 for the 76ers, but the pair
combined for just 8 points In the final period.
Spurs 95, Pistons 86 - At Auburn Hills, Mich .•
David Robinson scored 27 points and pulled down
16 rebounds to send Detroit to Its first home loss
and Its fifth loss in Its last six games overall. Jo·e
Dumars led the Pistons, who sl)ot only 41 percent
from the field, with 19 points.

•

Colorado returns to No. I m 1990
By Maj. Amos 8 Hqople
PigskiD Genius

.Egad, friends! For the Colorado
Buffaloes, in the immortal words of
Yogi Berra. "it's deja vu all over
again."
. Last year, at the end of the regular
season, Colorado was No. 1 in the ratirigs and slated to meet Notre Dame
in the Orange Bowl. This year, the 101-1 Buffaloes are No. I and due to
meet the Irish in the OrangeBowl.
Alter a rocky start - a 31-31 tie
with Tennessee and an early 23-22 setback at the hands of Illinois - Colorado -ran off nine straight wins. It was
enough ·' to pot head . coach Bill
McCartney's gang back on top.
The potent Buffalo team is built
around two 1990 World Almanac AllAmericans: running back Eric Bieniemy and linebacker Alfred Williams.
But Colorado's hold on the No. I
spot 'is tenuous, pending the outcome
of the ,bowl games. The next six teams
-in the final Hoople college football
rankings all have No. I credentials.
Here is our Top 20 of 1990:
I. Colorado: 2. Georgia Tech (10-01): 3. Texas (10-1); 4. Notre Dame (9-2);
&amp;. Brigham Young (10-2); 6. Miami,
Florida (9-2); 7. Florida State (9-2); 8.
Penn State (9-2); 9. Washington (9-2);
10. Tennessee (8·2·2).
Also, No. 11. Houston (10-1); 12.
Florida. (9-2); 13. Michigan (8-3); 14 .
Clemson (9·2~ !&amp;. Mississippi (9-2): 16.
Louisville (9-1-1); 17. Iowa (8-3); 18.
Southern Cal (8-3-1); 19. Nebraska (92); 20. lllinois (8-3).
The only blemish on Georgia Te~h ' s
record was a 13-13 standoff with
Norlil Carolina. Tech did it with a solid defense, led by safety Ken Swilling.
A big surprise was the No. 3 finish
by tbe Texas Longhorns. They did an
about fare from 5-6 in 1989 to take the
·SWC title and become the Cotton
Bowl host. T~eir only loss was to No. 1
Colorado, 29-22.
Notre -Dame Is still in the national
title picture as it heads for the Orange
Bowl against Colorado. N.D.'s awesome 1990 schedule included seven
teams that accepted bowl bids: Michigan, Michigan State, Air Force, Miami, Tennessee. Penn State and
Southern Cal. The Irish beat them all
but Penn State, which kicked a field
goal with four seconds left to win, 2421. '
.
.
Brigham Young, No. &amp;. had QB Ty
Detmer, the Heisman winner, on the
field and .brainy coach LaVell Ed·

Domestic violence:. time to take notice
DomeStic violence is an issue
that affects us all. whether we
are rich or poor. live In a small
town , big city, or in a rural area.
Statfsllcs provide details of the
problem, but figures can only
illustrate part of the picture,
since so many incidents go
unreported. It IS estimated, according to an article In the
December 2 "Columbus Dispatch," that some 4,000 American women will die this year at
the hands of their mates .
The fact that the problem of
domestic violence Is far from
being on Iy a big city problem is
shown by a growing body of
evidence. An August repo-rt In the
" Journal of the American Medical Association" shows tha t
domestic battering Is the most
common cause or Injury to all
women . It's a much more serious
cause of injury than auto acci dents , mugglngs and rapes.
In southeastern Ohio, the problem Is magnified by the realities

By Jan Michael Long

adequate amount of money to run
of rural life. Advocates of change
local shE!lters, some $20,000 a office Is 1-800-942-8955, the
cite traditional attitudes abou t
year.
the roles of men and women ,
number for the Chllllcotbe office
I strongly agree with these Is 1·S00.824-1870, and the number
limited jobs and housing, Jack of
recommendations, and believe for the Portsmouth office Is
pub)lc transportation, party line
we cannot walt any longer to 1-100-282-4599. In addition, two
phone lines, low education levels,
address the problems of victims agencies cited In the "Dispatch"
and the lack of access to social
of domestic violence. Unless
service agencies as problems
article, My Sister's Place In
government Intervenes In an
that especially afflict rural vicAthens!, 1-!00-443-3402, · and Sertims of domestic violence. ac- active way . and more efforts are enity House In GalHa County,
made to generate pu bllclty on the 446-5554, are there to provide
cording to the " Dispatch."
problem, tbe problem will only assistance.
Fortunately, advocates for batcontinue
to fester.
tered women and children are
It would be a tragedy If society
A
recent
study by the National and the courts continue to Ignore
seeking needed .help from the
Council of Juvenile and Family the problems of battered women
state. The Ohio Women and
Court
Judges said violence and children. We cannot afford to
Children's Budget Coalition Is
against
wom!!n and children has · lose. another generatiOn, and I
proposing that $15.8 million be
resulted
In a generational cycle will do all I can In Columbus to
set aside In the state's 1992-1993
of abuse that cannot be broken push for reforms and more
budget for domestic violence
without strong Intervention by publicity to highlight the
programs and shelters. Another
the courts.
$800,000 Is being requested for
problems . .
Meanwhlle , viCtims should
"cultural.ly sensitive media and
If you need more InformatiOn
culturally sensitive local pro- · know that agencies exist to help.
about this, or any other state
gramming that prevents vio- Southeastern Ohio Lega.J Servi- Issue, don't hesitate to contact
lence ." or the $15.8 million, $7.8 ces. with offices In Athens , me, State Sen. Jan Michael Long,
Chillicothe and Portsmouth. are by writing me at the StatehOuse,
million would be used the first
year and S8 million the second · just a toll free phone call away . Columbus, Ohio 43215. or by
The phone number for the Athens calling me at (614) 466-8156.
year. The goal Is to ensure an

WASHINGTON - The People 's Republic of China may have
shipped nuclear ·warheads to
Saudi Arabia since the Iraqi
Invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2,
according to highly sensitive
intelligence reports given to
President Bush.
· The warheads would be placed
on CSS-21ntermedlate'range ballistic mlssUes that the Saudis
bought from China, equipped
with conventional warheads , In
1985. When the United States
found out about that missiles sale
three years later, both China and
Saudi Arabia promised that the
missiles would never be fitted
with nuclear warheads.
But U.S. Intelligence officials
now fear that promise may have
. been broken. Intelligence reports
note that the evidence Is not
conclusive, but It was serious

enough to·' be Included In the
President's Dally Briefing. Only
several dozen top adminiStration
officials see that document ,
which Is used to brief the
president on the most urgent
Intelligence matters. The mate-'
rial In the briefing Is classified
higher than "Top Secret."
One source told us he saw the
Information about the nuclear
warheads In the Nov. 22 briefing.
U.S. electroniC Intelligence has
detected that the CS5-2s have
been In a state of high readiness
since Aug. 3.
Prince Bandar negotiated the
original purchase of the CSS-2s
on a trip to Beijing In 1985. Tbe
Saudis were so cagey that U.S.
Intelligence did not find out about
the sale until January 1988. Saudi
King Fahd tben wrote to President Reagan saying there were

no nuclear warheads on the
CSS-2s and that Saudi Arabia was
not looking for. any.
The recent top-secret reports
on the CSS-2s, relying heavUy on
Information developed by tbe
Defense Intelligence Agency,
say there has been an lnfiux of
Chinese nuclear mlssUe technl·
clans Into Saudi Arabia since
early August. To mask the
buildup, the Chinese reportedly
take secret fiigbts to Pakistan
and then to saudi Arabia.
The U.S. Intelligence reports
maintain that If there are nuclear
'warheads In saudi Arabia, the
Chinese have Insisted on controlling them. one top-secret DIA
report says there may be as
many as 1,000 Chinese military
advisers In saudi Arabia- more
than 100 of them recent arrivals.
The CSS-2 bas a maximum

1

i

·By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Aua
range of 1,678 miles. It Is not
considered highly accurate and
would normally be used against
large targets such · as cities
tns.tead of hardened military
tarreta where the strtke would
have to be precise.
The Chinese built tbe CSS-2 for
use agallllt the Soviet Union.
other Asian countries and U.S.
bases In !be western ·Pacific
Ocean. But they aren't above
selling It, too. China Is a major
supplier of arms to the . Tlllrd
World, and the saudla are good
customers. In the last eight
yean. Saudi Arabia has been the
largest Tlllrd-World arms buyer,
followed by Iraq.
.

wards on the sidelines. Detmer ---------~;~
showed his mettle in a convincing victory over the Miami Hurricanes . .
Major- Hoople· s
Miami, No. 6, had another good
year, which earned it a Cotton Bowl
trip. The Hurricane ballyhoo department is in full cry, trying to sway the
pollsters. But there is no way they . .
should be 'rated above Notre Dame
Joe Paterno's Penn State club, No.
8, dropped its first two games - to
No. 4 Texas and No. 18 Southern Cal.
Then the Nittany Lions finished with
nine victories, including the 24-21
thriller over then-No. 1 Notre Dame.
As usuid, Penn State is strong and
well-schooled on both sides of the ball.
In our No. 9 spot is Washington. Its
nine ·victories gave Don James a 154·
73-3 record in 20 years, making him
the sixth-winningest active Cj)IICh.
One of the Huskies' defeats was administered by No. I Colorado - by
only a 20-14 count.
.
Tennessee played a rugged 12-game
schedule. The lOth-ranked Vols won
back-to-back SEC titles for the first
time since I938-1940. Now they will
meet Virginia in the Sugar Bowl. Harrumph 1

The 10-1-1 Buffaloes
will meet Notre Dame
in the Orange Bowl.

and BYU, both ol whom decisively de·
feated them.
At No. 7, Bobby Bowden's Florida
State Seminoles benefited from a soft
schedule. Only Miami, Auburn and
Florida w~re top foes. The Seminoles
lost to Miami and Auburn. But FSU is
now playing well, and its meeting
witb Penn State in the Blockbuster
Bowl should be one of the best yearend ~ames.

Shawnee State posts- 86-6~
triumph over Rio Grande
Tammy Mullins led five of her Virginia Conference schools
Shawnee State teammates In Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at Conhigh scoring Tuesday night to cord. The game will also be the
boost the Lady Be11rs io an 86-66 Redwomen' s final game prior to
win over the University of Rio the Christmas break.
Grande ,w omen's basketball · SHAWNEE STATE (86) team at Portsmouth.
Kim Danner 3-1-0-9; Amy Edler
Debbie Fredrick hit a trio of 4-0-3-11; Tracy Williams 1-0-6-8;
three-pointers and had 20 points Lisa Brandenburg 1-4·0-14; Sue
for Rio Grande. which trailed the Bowling 5-0-5-15; Tammy Mulhosts by 14 at the half. Also llns 5-2-3-19i' Jamie McGraw
helping the Rio ladles' efforts 5-0-0-10. TOTALS 24-7-17-86
was an 85 percent showing from
RIO GRANDE (86) - Marlo
the free ihrow line, where they Kistler 1-1-0,5; Jennl Couch 0-1-2sank22of26attemptstoShawnee 5; Gena NorriS 1-1-3-8; Michelle
State's 61 percent (17-28).
Crouse 0-0-2-2; Debbie Fredrick
Center Kerr! Kidwell also 3-3-5-20; K~rrl Kidwell 4-0-5-13;
supported Fredrick's efforts by Ann Barnltz 3-0-1-7; Stephanie
postlng13points. Joining Mullins Gudort· 1-0-4-6. TOTALS 13-6-2:eln the double-figure scoring were 66
Sue Bowling, Lisa Brandenburg,
Halftime score: Shawnee State
Amy Edler and Jamie McGraw. 40, Rio Grande 26
The loss placed the Red women
at 6-4 overall and was their first
defeat In District 22 competition.
They complete the early season
schedule of play with West

REACHES IN - Tbe L.A. Clippers' Danny Manning (right)
reaches In for tbe ball as Mlnnesoia center Randy Breger makes
his move In the second quarter of Tuesday night's NBA contest In
Minneapolis, which the Tlmherwolves won 101-95. (UPI)

Eastern girls top North Gallia
EAST

MEIGS-The Eastern
of
Coach
Dawn
Heideman remained undefeated in
SVAC action at 5-0 as a result of a
one-sided 52·32 triumph over tbe
Nonh Gallia Lady Pirates in girls'
varsity baskethall action.
Eastern is 5·3 overall.
Coach Heideman said, ''We're
still young, but are improving daily.
We are glad to be 5·0 in the league
at this point."
Sophomore pivot lady Stephanie
Otto led all scorers with 20 points
and thirteen rebounds with a great
overall game. Otto dominated tbe
inside game both offensively and
on the boards.
·
Junior guard Tabby Phillips used
both her fine shooting and driving
ability to notch runner-up honors of
10 points, while the rest of tbe
Eastern attaCk was very weU balanced.
Sophomore MicheUe Metzger
had six points,senior Suzanne Clay
had four, Lee Gillilan four, and two
each from Tiffany Gardner, Jennifer Roush, Ruby Burke, and
AubryWest
·
·
Robie led North Gallia with
eight points, while McCormick added six, Myers five, Damant
Twyman 4, West three, and two
each from Beth Salisbury. Dee Dee ·
Dobbins, and Meadows.
Eastern blasted to a 15-4 lead initially, but North Gallia closed tbe
gap at tbe half at 26-18. Another
big quarter in the third frame came
Cot Eastern who outscored tbe
visitoJS 14-5 to boost its lead to 4023 after the third period.
Ea~lenes

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The Eaglettes then coasted to a
52-32 margin of victory at the final
buzzer.
·
Eastern hit 22 of 52 from the
floor and 8 of 14 at the line. while
collecting 40 rebounds. Otto had 13
and Jennifer Roush live. NG hit 13
of 59 and 6 ofll at the line.
Eastern committed 23 tiunovers.
17 steals (led by PbiUips' 6 and
Clay's 4), and had 14 personal
fouls.
North Gallia had 34 tumoveJS,
12 steals, and 15 personals.
Score by quarteJS:
North Ga:nia 4 14 59 -32
Eastern 15 11 I4 12-52
Box Score:
Eastem(52)
Gardner
1-0-2, Otto 7:6-·
20,Mctzger 2-2-6, Morris 0-00,Roush I-0-2, Burke 1-0-2, Gillilan 2-0-4, Aeiker 0-0-0, Baker 00-0,Wilson 0-0-0,Ciay 2-0-4, Phil·
lips 5·0-10, West 1-0-2. totals 22-852 .
North GaUia (32)
Dobbins 1-0--2, Robie 2-4-8,
West 1·1-3, Myers 2-1-5, McConnick 3-0-6, Salisbury I-0-2,
Meadows I -0-2, and Twyman 2.0·
4. Totals 13-6-32.

The Daily Sentinel

Cal Ferrellgas

r~----~----------------1

Did Chinese ship Saudis nuclear warheads?

.. .

he left at 9: 07 of the second, they led 35-24.
In that time Starks had nine points, fed Ewing
for a driving slam, blocked a Kevin Edwards
layup and nailed a three-pointer.
,
"The coach expecis me to get.the team sparked
and that's what I try to do when I come off the
bench," Starks said. "I've had to work hard for
everything I've had In life. I've always played
with a lot of enthusiasm and It seems hard work
just pays off In the end."
"I like what he's doing," MacLeod said. "He
gives you everything l)e has tq the potrit where he
fires everything he has and then he reloads.'He's
. that type of player."
Elsewhere In the NBA- Tuesday night, Portland
routed Indiana 122-96, Utah pounded Golden State
135-117, Phoenix romped PliSt Sacramento 113-90,
Denver outshot Washington 128-125. Minnesota
outlasted the L.A. Clippers 101-95, Milwaukee held
off Chicago 99-87, Philadelphia edged Orlando
119-114, and San Antonio handled Detroit 95-86.
Blazers 122, Pacers 96 - At Portland, Ore. •
Kevin · Duckworth scored 21 points arid Clyde
Drexler added 20, Including 11 In the third '
quarter, helping the Trail Blazers run their record
to 19-1. The Blazers are now within four victories
of the best start In NBA history, an honor that .
bel9ngs to the 1969-70 New York Knlcks. wlio went
23-1.
·Jazz 135, Warriors 117- At Salt Lake City, Jeff
Malone scored a season-high 43 points and hit 12 of
13 field ·goal attempts In the second half, Karl
Malone scored 35 points and pulled down 13
rebounds and John Stockton scored 15 and diShed
out 21 assists. The Warriors were led by Tim
Hard·a way and Mitch Richmond comblned ,for 56
points.
Suns 113, Kings 90- At Phoenix, Kevin Johnson ·
scored 26 points and Xavier McDaniel. making his
home debut In a Suns uniform, added 20 to lead
Phoenix to Its third straight win. Wayman Tisdale
led Sacramento with 28.
Nuggets 128, Bullets 125 - At Denver. Orlando
Woolridge scored 33 points, Blair Rasmussen had
24 and grabbed 13 rebounds and Michael Adams
dished out 13 assists. leading the Nuggets to their
second straight win. Bernard King had 34 points in
the Bullets' third consecutive defeat.
Tlmberwolves 101, Clippers 95 - At Minneapolis, Minn., Felton Spencer scored 23 points,

Har.rumph!

away."
- George Bush, who doesn't seem to know which state he Is
!l·om, keeps a revolving file of positions on key Issues, and lately
has taken to slamming official Washington ("I know Americans
are fed up with much of the political debate coming out of
Washington. It's the same old Inside-the-Beltway hogwash" ) despite the fact that he has been part of the same scene as a
member of Congress. Republican Party chairman, CIA director
and vice president for the past quarter of a century.
- Ronald Reagan (yes , again), for attending dedication
ceremonies at the Richard Nixon library and declaring that much
ot the Watergate scandal was "based on nothing at all."
Sen. Jesse Helms, R·N.C., for hiS bilious nature in general and
his racist 1990 campaign In particular. He Implied he bad God's
endorsement. He accused his opponent of raising money "In gay
a nd lesbian bars in San Francisco, New York and Washington ." He
Is dlsgusllng.
Two more things lo keep in minct: The winner receives a
"Quaylle," a statuette bearing the likeness of J. Danforth Quayle
demonstrating his signature Inane grin; and the contest closes
when the ball falls on New Year's Eve.

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

In the NBA Tuesday night.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

.

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. Paga 4 The Daily Sentinel

Wed.....ctay. December 12. 1990

Wednesday. December 12; 1990

-

Boston College survives · I~te Providence rally to win 80-78
!Iced and never was taken off.
By JEFF SHAIN
"We had no Idea of that ,"
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
The Boston College Eagles Boston College' s Cory Beasley
nearly wound up with too much said. " I'm glad It didn' t affect us.
· time on their hands Tuesday We won, but If we didn't there
might have been a controversy."
night.
It nearly came to that. The
Doug Able scored 18 points and
Friars,
6-1, made a late run to
·Boston ·College held off a late
close
to
78-74 In the final minute
•Providence rally to emerge with
of
play
-when
the contest should
an 80-78 victory In a game that
las ll!d at least 57 seconds longer have. been over.
Providence's Eric Murdock,
than regulation time.
In the midst of an 11-3 Eagles · who scored 34 points, hit two free
run at the beginning of the second throws with 42 seconds left,
haU, theclockmaltunctlonedahd narrowing the margin to 78· 76.
some 57 seconds were added After BC's Gerrod Abrham hit
back on when the clock ace!· one free throw, Murdock nailed a
dently was reset while play was pair of free throws with 18. 8
In process. The time went unno-

seconds left, cutting the score to
Providence. got possession on
the sldelll!e and Murdock at79-78.
David Hinton hit one free
tempted a three-pointer as the
throw, but missed the seeond and · buzzer sounded that fell short
the ball went off aBC player and
and was ruled to be released too
the Friars took possession. A
late.
With the victory, Boston Colthree-point attempt In the final
seconds by Providence's Chris
lege matched Its entire Big East
Watts - which could have been
wln total for last season. Last
the game-winner -was stripped
year, the Eagles struggled
by BC's Howard Els)ey ,.,.s the
through a horrendous l-15league
clock showed 0: 00, but the buzzer
m.a rk.
Providence players ·Corey
"never went off.
Floyd,· Ken McDonald and Mar"At home that buzzer's supvin Saddler missed the gap1e
posed to go o!f," Boston College
while sitting out a mandatory
head coach Jim O'Brien said. "If
one-game suspension Issued by
that game would have gone on
the _NCAA for being ejected for
another minute or two ... "

fighting In Saturday 's game
against Rhode Island. The school
added two more gaines to the
penaliy.
"We're not going to use the
missing players as an excuse,"
Providence head coach Rick
Barnes said. "It's not a factor as
to why we lost."
At Fayetteville, Ark., No. 2
Arkansas beat South Alabama
101-91 In a game delayed more
than an hour because no referees
showed up to offtclate the game.
Arkansas and South Alabama
pl!lyed durtng each ofthe last two
seasons, once· with a crew of
officials froin the Southwest

/ri the NHL Tuesday night,

'

Flames edge North Stars; Rangers beat Flyers
BLOOMINGTON, Ml1111. (UPI)
- Defenseman AI MaCinnis Is
.warming up again, making the
Calgary Flames sl~zle, espe·
-clally on the road.
His goal and two assists helped
Calgary beat Minnesota 5-4 Tues·
day night when the Flames had to
hold off a late North Star rally.
. ''I went through a tough streak
.In November, but now things
have staried to click again," said
·MacinniS after Calgary extended
Its road unbeaten streak to six
games (4-0·2).
Macinnis, who had an 11-game
scoiing streak earlier In the ·
. season, has scored points In six
, .straight games. The Flames
;leading scorer with 14 goals and
·33 assists has collected 20 points
In the last 16 games.
"When we got within a goal, I
. felt we were going to tie It and
maybe even win It," said North
Star Coach Bob Gainey. "Vernon
. (Calgary goalie Mike Vernon)
·worked us over for the first two
periods, and Macinnis had a
· heckuva third period. He cleared
: a couple of good rebound chances
: away and blocked at least three
: good shots. For most of the game
everything seemed to go Cal·
#gary's way."
. Not everything.
. The Flames Paul Ranhelm
. fractured his left ankle early In
· the third period when he and
• Minnesota defenseman Craig
Dahlquist went hard Into the end
,boards. Ranhelm was taken off
by stretcher, and the 10-mlnute
:delay appeared to cool off the
:Falmes, who had built a 5-1 lead.
: "Something like that Is bOund
·to effect everyone because Paul
:ts well-liked and Is a · hard
worker, '' said Calgary Coach
Doug Re!sborough. "We'll miss
him."

"I thlilk his skate caught In a
:rut or something before we
:collided," said Dahlquls ~ "He let

SVAC standings
(Overall)
TEAM
WL
Hannan Trace ..... 4 0
Eastern :..... .. ....... 3 2
Southern .............. 3 2
Symmes Valley ... 3 2
. North Gallla ........ 2 4
Oak Hill .............. 2 4
Southwestern ... ....O 4
:Kyger Creek ........O 5

PF
320
367
351
292
449
424
209
278

PA
210
404
316
"267
519
420
282
342

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 4 o 320
Southern ......... .... . 3 1 300
Eastern ............... 3 1 266
Symmes Valley ... 3 1 230
:North Gall!a .. . . . . . . 2 2 312
:Oak Hill .. .. .. . ... .. . . 1 3 269
"J{yger Creek ..... ... 0 4 233
-5outhwes tern , ...... , 0 4 209
TOTALS ........ , ... I&amp; II %139

210
257
274
204
323
296
293
282
U39

(Reserves)
(SVAC only)
:
-TEAM
W L PF PA
Southern .. ....... ..... 4 o 200 148
Dak Hill ....... ...... . 3 1 236 214
jllorth Gallla ........ 2 2 225 195
Hannan Trace .... . 2 2 200 182
Symmes Valley ... 2 2 195 189
Eastern .. . .. . .. . . .. .. . 2 2 183 212
Kyger Creek ........ 1 3 168 209
:SOuthwestern ....... 0 4 128 186
-TOTALS .. ....... ... 18 16 1535 1535
•
•
•
Tuesday's final
·Oak Hlll87, McDermott Northw·
est 53
Friday's slate
:symmes Valley at Hannan Trace
:Eastern at North Ga!Ua
·Kyger Creek at Southern
:Southwestern at Oak Hill
Sa&amp;urday'a 1ames
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Southwestern
'Southern at Symmes Valley
:Oak Hlll.at Eastern ·

.

POINSEniAS

$299
VIDEO
l

TOUCH

Mld.opoii I

Potn~roy

out a yell before I hit him."
Referee Don Koharskl called
no penalty on the play .
"It wasn't a cheap shot or
anything like that," said Relsborough. "It was just one of those
unfortunate things that happen in
this game."
Vernon made several solid
saves and clearly outplayed
North Star goalie Jon Casey, who
appeared to have trouble seeing
the puck all night. Vernon
stopped 33 shots and Casey 17.
. "It wasn't one of my better
games," casey said;
The loss was only the second In
the last six games for Minnesota,
which In five previous games had
a 4-1·0 record and had outscored
opponents 21·9.
Bob Reichel scored the
Flames' first an~ fifth goals as
Calgary Improved Its Symthe

Division-leading record to 18:10-

4.
Reichel put the Flames ahead
1-0with a 4-on-4 goal at 6: 32ofthe
first period. Casey had trouble
handling a Joe Nleuwendyk shot,
and Reichel tapped In the
rebound.
Gary Roberts made It 2-0 at
8: 53 with his seventh tally.
Dahlquist checked · Sergei Makarov Into Casey; who had
stopped his shot. But the collision
knocked Casey out of the crease,
aild Roberts scored Into the
vacant net.
·tne North Stars made It 2-1 at
11:58 when Dave Gagner got his
14th goal on a 5-on-3 power play.
Gagner tipped Mike Modano's
shot !rain the left point past
Vernon.
Tile Flames took a 4-1lead In
the second period when Macinnis
picked up his 14th goal of the

UNLV nearly sweeps
UPI ballot for .No. l
By JEFF SHAIN
O'Neal scored 29 points, pulled
UPI Sports Writer
down 14 rebounds and blocked six
NEW YORK (UP!)- Nevada· shots against Arizona, which
Las Vegas was a near- earlier had won the Big Apple
unanltnous choice Monday for
NIT by beating East Tennessee
the No. 1 spot· In United Press State , Notre Dame and
Ioternatlonal's college basket· Arkansas.
"I'd rather go on the road and
ball ratings, while a loss by
Arizona allowed Arkansas to · play a non-conference game like
move up to No.2 and Syracuse to · this and get beat than to play
No.3.
cupcakes at home," Arizona
' The Runnln' Rebels, 2-0, came head coach Lute Olson said.
within one vote of earning the
LSU head coach Dale Brown
maximum point total in the latest said the1 victory " doesn' \ make
balloting by the UPI Board of the season and It wouldn t h~ve
Coaches. Only a first-place vote broken the season. I just wante~
for Georgetown kept UNL v from this team to go out and have fun.
a sweep.
No. 5 Georgetowl), 5·0, and No.
UNLv wound up with 41 6 UCLA, 6-0, each moved up one
first-place votes cast by the posttlon, while No. 7lndlana, 7-1,
42-member board and finiShed remained unchanged after win·
with 629 of a possible 630 points. nlng its Indiana Classic.
No. 2 Arkansas, 7-1 with a loss to
No. 8 Duke fell three places
Arizona, earned 539 poin ts and after losing 79-74 to Georgetown
No.3 Syracuse, 7-0, receive.d 476 as part of the ACC-Big East
points.
Challenge. No. 9 Ohio State, 4-0,
Arizona, ranked No. 1 two and No . 10 North Carolina, 4·1,
weeks ago, fell two places to rounded out the Top 10.
fourth following Its 92-82 loss
No. 11 Georgia moved up one
Saturday at Louisiana State. The position and Louisiana, State .
Wildcats, 7-1, wound up with 465 wound up 12th, an Improvement
points from the . Board of of five places. No. 13 Oklahoma
Coaches.
·
rematne~ unchanged and No. 14
Louisiana State's Shaquille St. Johns Jumped four spots
after running its record to 6-0.

Oak Hill downs Northwest

season on a power play at 13:17
and Thea Fleury netted his 18th
at 15:54,
·Reichel scored his second of
the game at 1:15 of the third
period on a rebound off a Doug
Gilmour shot to push the margin
to 5-1.
Only three minutes after Ranhelm was taken off the Ice,
Minnesota scored twice within 61
seconds. Mike Modano's 35-foot
blast whistled past Vernon at
7:41 and Neal Broten gothls sixth
of the season at 8: 42 when ·lie
knocked In Doug . Small's
rebound.
Gagner's second goal of the
game at 14:41, while on a power
play, cut the Flames' lead to 5-4.
Elsewhere In the NHL Tuesday
night. It was the N.Y. Rangers 6,
Los Angeles 4; Detroit 8, Buffalo
3; N.Y. Islanders 3, New Jersey
2; Chicago .4. Pittsburgh 1;
Washington 4, Philadelphia 1;
and Winnipeg 3, St. Louis 3 (OT) .
Rangers 6, Kings 4
At Inglewood, Calif., Troy
Mallette struck.for two goals and
Bernie Nicholls added two as sists against his former team
Tuesday night to power the New
York Rangers to a 6-4 victory
over the Los Angeles Kings.
The Rangers scored the first
six goals to snap a three-game
losing streak and take a threepoint lead over PhUadelphla In
the Patrtck Division.
The Klugs, winless In their last
seven matches (0-3-4), fell three
points behind first-place Calgary
in the Smythe Division.
·
Rookie Mike Richt~r held Los
Angeles scoreless until Dave
Taylor rammed In his seventh ·
goal 46 seconds Into the third

period. Then NHL"scorlng leader
Wayne Gretzky drilled In his 18th
goal!or his 54th point with 8:36 to
play for the second kings' score.
Luc Robitaille of the Kings
added his .15th goal with 6:30 left
and Gretzky came up with
another score with two seconds
left.
Mallette's second goal on a
30-foot slap shot at 4: 29 of the
second period made It 4·0 and
brought a Change In Los Angeles
goaltenders. Daniel Berthiaume
gave way to Kelly Hrudey after
surrendering four scores on 13
shots.
Hrudey did not fare much
better, yielding a power-play
goal to Mike Gartner at 12:42.
Then Brian.Mullen whizzed In an
unassisted effort from the rtght
point to put New York up 6-0.
The Rangers began their as·
sault on Berthiaume with three
unanswered goals on nine shots
In the first period.
Krls King's freakish score just
63 seconds after the opening.
faceof! set the tone. The left wing
was irylng to dump the puck In
the Los Angeles zone from just
. behind the red line when his
floater hit defenseman Larry
Robinson's stick and bounced
Into an empty net from 25 feet
out.
.
Defenseman Normand Rochefort, who missed the first 22
games of the season after knee
surgery, then fired In his first
goal of the year on a breakaway·
to make It 2·0 at 7:27.
With 4: 36 to go In the first
period, Mallet(!! fired In his first
goal on a 30-foot wriSt shot from
· the top of the right circle for the
third New York score.

The Perfect Clft for
Your Ma11 ...

Ealter• Conterea~e
AtluUc Dlvllloo
Teom
W L Pet.
Bostcn ............... .. ... 16 4.800
Philadelphia ...........14 6 .700
New Jer,.y ............ 8 11 .421
New York .. ......•..... 8 11.421
Washington ....... ...... 6 14 .300
Miami........... .......... 5 IJ .278

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W L Pel. GB
San Antoolo ...... ...... 11 5 .688
Utah ................. ...... 13 7 .650
HouJton ............ :..... 11 9. .550 2
Minnesota ... ,. ......... 7 12 .368

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy-Mason

Paclftc Dlvitlon

Portland ................. 19 1 .950
L.A. Lakers ....... .... 11 6 .647
Phoenix ........ :...... ...11 7 .611
Golden State ...........12 8 .600
L.A. Qlppers ......... 9 10 .m
seattle ................... 5 12- .294
Sacramento ,, .. ........ J 15 .167

6\!

7

7
9\!
121-1
15

Tuesdlly's finals

New York 109. Mtaml90
Phtladl!!phla119. Orlando 114
San Antmlo 95, Det rolt 86
Milwaukee 99, Ollcago 87
Minnesota 101. L.A. a!(lpel"s 95
DenYer 128, Washingt(JI 125

Utah 135, Golden State 117
Phoenix 113, Sacramento 90 ·
Portland 122, Indiana 96
Wedne~ay's games
Milwaukee at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Houston at ~hlladelphla , 7:30

p.m .

San

Ar,.t~io

at Charlotte, 7: 30

p.m .
Atlanta af Miami, 7: 30p.m.

L.A. Clippers at Cleveland, 7:30
p.m .

Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 10: 30p .m.
Indiana at Seattle. 10 p.m.
'Diu...U,'s &amp;amee
New Jersey at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
New Yorlt at Minnesota. 8 p.m.
Denver at Utah, 9:30p.m.
Orlando at Phoenix, 9: 30p.m.
Seattle at Gok:ten State, 10:30
p.m.
PorUand at Sacrament o, 10: 30
p.m .

In the MIL.
Team

Patrick Division
W LTPto.GFGA

N.Y. Rangers ...... 1811 5 411301113
Philadelphia ....... 1814 2 38119112
New Jersey ......... 1612 4 36124107
Washlngtm ..... .... 1815 0 36112-100
Pittsburgh .......... 12 16 3 27 120 121
N.Y. Islanders .... l016222 78108
Adam&amp; Division
BoS\00 ..•.. .......•... 1610 4 36 97 97
Montreal. .. .. ..... ... 1613 3 35104 99
HarUord . .... ..... .. .13134 30 88 94
Bul!alo ............... 10 13 7 27 92 99
Quebec ........... ... .. 7 19 6 20 90 137

Campbell Conference
Norri~ Division· .
Team
W LTPta.GFGA ·
Chicago .. .. ···"·····' 2110' 244111 80
St . Louls .......... .. . 17 9438102 83
Det roll ............... 14 12 4 32 116116
Minnesota ............ 917 6 24 92106
Torooto ..... ........... 7 ~4115 84138
Smythe Division
Calgary ... ........... 18 10 4 40 134 103
Los Angeles ........ 16 8 5 37121 95
Vancouver .......... 1314 3 29 95103
Winnipeg ... .......... 9 17 7 25 108119
Edmonton ........... l115 2 24 86 84
Tuesday Results

Det rolt 8, Butralo 3
N.Y. Islanders 3, New JerEy 2
Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 1

Washlngtoo 4, Philadelphia 1
Calgary 5, Minnesota 4
Winnipeg 3, St. Louis 3 lOTI
N.Y. Rangers 6, l&lt;ls Angeles 4
Wednesday's games
Boston at Hartford, 7:35p.m .
Montreal at Toronto, 7:35p.m .
Va nco uv~r at Edmontoo, 10:35
p.m.
Thursday's games
Hartfon:t at Boston, 7:35p.m.
Quebec at Detrott , 7:35p.m.
. N.Y. Islanders at Ph iladelphia,
7:35p.m.
New Jer.!£'y a t Plttsbu~~ . 7:35
p.m.
Winnipeg at Chicago, 8:35p.m.
Minnesota at St. l&lt;luis , 8: 35p.m.
Calgary at Los Angeles, 10:35

sJ!

o.m.

Tuesday's boys'
basketball scores

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Special Beglnl December3, 1990

Anthony Wayne 70, Bowling Gr~en .
67
.
Barberton 9~. St 0\oV 67
Beallsville 106, Frmtler 73
Beavercreek 61, Trotwood 60
Bedford ( Michl~. To I DevHbiss61
Bellaire 54, Buckeye Local39
Belpre 68, Nelsoovllle-York 61
Ben Logan 66, Triad 41
Ber Ctr Wsn Res 46. Usbon 45 •
Ber Hiland 116, Jewett Scio 31
Bloom CarroJI74. Uberty Union 63
"Bloomfteld 100, Grand River Acad
34
BuckO)" Trail 50, Bridgeport 43
Burtoo Berkshlrt95, Ledgemont 50
Caldwell69. Fort Frye 65
Campbell 65, Hubbard 58
Cardington 64, N Union 55
Cente·rvtlle 63, C1n Sycargore 59
Champion 58. Southlngtoo 47
Cin Bernard 79, Batavia 51
Cln Country Day 107, Amelia 73
Cin SevenHtlls70, On Landmark 50
Cin Turpin 76, On Anderson 66 .
Ctn Woa:lward 73. Cln NW 42
Col Brookhaven 95, Co l MIHitn 88
Col Centennial 60, Col Ea st 52
Col Easonoor 77 , Col Brlgp 73
Col Ham Twp 83 , Millersport 67
Col Linden 75, Col Beech croft 45
Col Mar Fran 79. Col West 66
·Col Northland 79, COl WhetstCII.e 77
Col South 66, Col Walnut Ridge 58
Col Wellington 59, Maranatha Cllr
57
Coluinb Ci-estvlew 55, Beaver Loc
47"
Copley 76. Akr Ellet 53
Coshoct m 61, W Holmes 54
Crod&lt;svllle 74, Mol'llan 73 120Tl
Cuyahqja Falls87, Kent 62
Day Carroll78, Oxfon170 lOTI
Day Cham·Jui!Ol, Kelt Falnnont
58
.
Degra!Rtverslde81, Indian Lake75
Delaware 83, Col FraftkUn Hta52
Diamond SE 70, Woalrlllle 58
Drt!ldon Trl Volley 48. !lllerldan
E Palestlne89, WarrenKonned)'85
Fatrbanks 74, Mechanictbura:.U
Fairfield 69, Prtncetm 63
Fed,.ol Ho&lt;kiD&amp; 89. Trimble 83
Felldty 56, Oerm&lt;llt NE 51
Field 9•• crestwood 58
Foret! Park 611. w..tern Hilla 6t
tOTl
Fort LOramie 90, Sidney Fairlawn
36

•a

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PH. 992·2556

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Dallas ................. ,.. 6 11 .353 5\!
Denver ................... 515 .250 8
Orlando ................. 5 16 .238 8\!

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Mtlwaukee . ........ .•...• 5 6 .714
. Detroit ...... ..............14 7 .667
Chicago ..........•.. .... 12 8 .600
Cl""lland ..............10 10 .500
Charlotte ... ....... ..... 8 11 .421
1\tlanta ...... .. .......... 7 11 .3119
Indiana .............. ..... 813 .381

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For the fourth straight game, Score by quarters
sophomore point guard Benji Oak Hill ......... ... 25 23 20 19-87
Lewis scored In double figures , ·Northwest .... ...... 9 10 17 17-53
and hsl 21 points was InstrumenOAK HILL (87) - Lewis
tal in pushing Oak Hill to an 87-53 5-2-5-21; Potter 4-1-2-13; C. Simpvictory over host McDermott son 5'0-1-11; Green 4-0-2-10; DaNorthwest Tuesday night.
vis 0·3·0-9; M. Simpson 4-0-0-8; B.
The Oaks, 2·4, jumped out to a Morgan0-04-4; Conley1-0-1-3; R.
16-polntlead at theendoftheflrst Morgan 1-0-1-3; Turner 0-1-0-3;
quarter and ballooned that m;l.r- Hale 1-0-0-2: TOTALS - 25-7-16·
gln to 29 at halftime, as three of 87
Lewis's teammates - Bill PotField goals- 32-67 (47.8%)
ter, Chris Simpson and Jeremy
Foul shots- 16-24 (66.7%)
Green- joined him In scortng In
Rebounds - 53
double figures .
Turnovers - 13
Danny Smith, who led the
NORTHWEST (53) - Smith
Mohawks with 16 points, got his 5-0-6-16; Lute 6-0-1-13; Copp 2-0-3principal offensive help from 7; Wagner 1·0-3-5; Campbell
Jeff Lute, who had 13.
2-0-0-4; Sparks 2-0·0-4; Gillette
1-0-0-2; Higby 1-0-0-2. TOTALSThe Oaks will return to SVAC
20-0-13-53
play when they host SouthwestField goals - 20-45 (44.4%)
ern on Friday . On Saturday Oak
Foul shots- 13-24 (54.2%)
Hill will travel to Tuppers Plains
Rebounds - 28
·
to face Eastern.
Turnovers - 37 ·

In the NBA."

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With 76-63 win over Miller,

Scoreboard ...

Conference and once with officials from the Sun Belt
Conference.
Although neither head coach
was certain as to where the
mix-up originated, It appeared
each school felt officials from the
opposing conference had been
contracted to work the game.
When the problem was final Jy
diagnosed shortly before the
scheduled tipoff, the Arkansas
ath)eilc department scrambled
to get a two-man crew.
.
Johnny Gabbard of Springdale, Ark., who has officiated
junior-college games and was In
the stands, volunteered his
services.
An Arkansas assistant coach
then called Southwest Conference official Mike Fox of Rogers,
Ark. , who jumped Into his uniform and · made the half-hour
drive to Fayetteville.
Once play began an hOur late,
Lee. Mayberry and Todd Day
combined for 51 points to help
Arkansas light offan upset bid by
previously unbeaten South
Alabama.
In other games Tuesday night
featurtng Top 25 teams, No. 11
Georgia fell to Van.derbllt75-741n
overtime, No. 14 St. John's beat
Brooklyn 57-47 and No. 25 Nebraska topped Wisconsin 75-63.
· At Nashville, Tenn., Steve
Grant hit the first three-point
field goal of his career with one
second left In overtime to lift
Vanderb!Jt.over Georgia . Georgia had a flve-pohttlead with 1:09
to play In regulation, but Vander·
b!lt sent the game Into overtime
on a three-pointer a!ld two free
throws by Kevin Anglin.
At New York, freshman ShawneUe Scott, getting a start
because of the suspension of a
teammate, scored 20 points to
lead St. John's. Scott was startIng ln. place of forward Billy
Singleton, one of two players
suspended one game for !allure
to adhere to the athletic depart·
ment's academic regulations.
At Madison, Wis., Carl Hayes
S&lt;;ored 21 points to lead Nebraska •
to their fifth ·straight win and :
thir~ of the year over a Big Ten
team.The Badgers, whO lostthelr
third In a row, played without ·
second-leading scorer · Willie
Simms, held out of the game for
disciplinary reasons.

'

j

.•

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

. Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

!o'ran Fur Green 45, S Webster 42
Franklin 69, Lebanm65 lOT)
freeport Lak·eland 78, Newcomer·
stown 63
Caraway 70, RidgewOOd 60
Glen Este 61, Cin Walnut Hills 39
Green Hills 70, a n Tart 59
Greensburg Green 89, Akr Spring
40
Greenville ( Pa) 51, La keview 50
Grovepoct 57, Westland 50
Hamlltm 67, MJI!ord 63
Hamlltoo Badin 71. N College Hill
63
Hllllard 45, Reynoldsburg 43
_,.f!olland Spring 78, Perrysburg 52
J:10Uston 69, Jacksn center 42
Howland 86, ~ewtan Falls 69
Hu~sCD W Res 69, Gat Mil Gilmour
59
Jonathan Alder 76, Olentangy 72
Kldrcn Chr 83, Conottm Val 63
Kirtland 83, Newbury 51
La brae 56, Maple'N'ood 52
LemCil Mon roe 63, MJdtown Fen·
Wick 58
Uberty Chr 98, Mt Vernon Aca S8
Marton Csth 94, Col Tree Life 39
Mathews 61, Pymatuntng Val 52
Maumee 85, Millbury Lake 59
Maysvtlle 86, New Lextngtm 51
Mcdonald 89, Lon:tstown 38
Meigs 76, Hemla:k Miller 63
Mentor Chr 63, Southrklge 45
MJarnl Trace 81, WesUall 52
Middletown Cbr 74, New Miami 72
Mlng 0 67, Oak Glen IWV) 56 .
Mt Vernon .64, Ptckertngtoo. 54
N-ew Boston 82, Beaver Eastern 71
New Concqrd 78, Phllo50
New Rtcbmond 57, Bethel Tate 34
Newcasue IPa) 91, Lowepvtlle 87
Niles 77, You Chaney 48
No rdonla 58, Ravenna 44
No rwoo:l59, Harrlsm 46
Oak Hlll87, McDermott NW 53
Oh io Deal62. Northside Chr 57
Palnes Harvey 59, Geneva 51
Parma Holy Name59. ae ND.CL35
Perry 63, Fat rport 39
Rootstawn 60, G'VIlle Garfield 54
Rossford 89, Syl Southveiw 57
Russia 63, Botkins 54
Sebrtng67, Brlsto166140Ti
Shadyside 70, Barnesville 56
Sharm (Pa ) 61, You Rayen 59
Shenandoah 59, Waterford 56 .
St Clairsville 7t Bellaire John 69
Steuben CC49, Whig IWVl Llnsly34
Streetsboro 78, Windham 77
Summll Ctry Day 61, Lockland 56
Tol Em Bapt 62, Maumee Valley49
Tol Francis 94, Fremoot Ross 53'
Tol Whitmer 46, Tol Rogers 39
Tormto 69, Cadiz 67
Trentoo Edgewood 62, Miamisburg
56
Tusky Cath 60, Malvern 56
Tusk)' Valley 57, Dover 55
Uhrtchs Claymont81, Steubenvle 79
Union Local 82, Martins Ferry 68
Upper ¥Ungton 61, Westerville S
60
W BranCh 87, United Local 56
W Chester Lakota 89, Uma 76
W Muskingum 64, Warsaw River·
view 45
waterloo 53, Mogadore 48
Waynesfield Goshen 95, Rldg~mont
80
Wellston 64, Vlntm County 55
Wellsville 61, Edlsm S 53
Westerville N 59, Gahanna 58
Whitehall 71. CbiiUcothe 53
WIU&lt;&gt;Hlll 71, Lakerldge Acad 70
WIUoughh)' S 71, Gbardon 65
Wllmtngtm 74. Goshen 59
WOrthing-too 80, Grove City 55
Wsn Brown 88, Williamsburg 78
You East62, HlckOI"J' IPa) 60 lOT)
You South 81, E Llverpool71
You Ursuline 71, Poland 59
Zanes ROsecran 67, Lancas Fisher
61
Zanesville 68,•Marietta 65 (0TI

. Tuesday's girls'
cage results :
Akr Sprlng 46, Ak.r Cen Hower 42
AllenE 51. Arlington 47
Antwerp 56, Uncolnvlew 39
Archbold 47, Tinora 42
Beavercreek 58. C!.n Prlncetoo 11
Big Walnut 53. Col OeSales 40
Bryan 29, Maumee 23
Buckeye Cent 53, Colmel Crawford
40
Bucyros 55, Bellewe 41

Centerburg 68, Worthington Crh 60
Cln Aiken 52, Ctn Bacon 45
Ctn Mercy 47, Sycamore 36
Cln Mt Notre Dame17, Coleraln44
Cin Ursullne 52, C!.n NW 49
Cln Walnut Hills 54, an Taft 40
Clear Fork 43, Sparla Highland 34
Col Beecbcroh 48, Con Linden 47
Col East 16. &lt;;ol Centennial 42
Col Eastmoor 48, Col Briggs 42
Col Franklin Hts 59, Delaware 56
ISOTl.
Col Maranatha 53, Col Wellington
33
Col Mllllln 55. Col Brookhaven 52
lOT)
Col Northland 67, COl Whetstone 34
Col South 76, Co l Walnut Rldge45
Col West 57, Ccl Mar Franklin 43
Collins Wsn Res 58, Black River 55
ConvoyCrestvlew72, WayTrace22
Cuyahoga Falls 58, Kent 41
Danville 73. E Knox 13
Day Dunbar 111. Ctn Withrow 39
Deer Park 38, Finney town 35
Dixie 56, Dayton Chr 20
Edon 58, Montpelier 50
Fairfield 46, Western Hllls 29
FOrt Recovery 68, .Missi Vall26
Fremoot Joe 57, Gibsooburg 44
Gahanna 60, Wesrervnte N 44
Gallon 57, Upper Sandusky 5410Tl
Galloway Westland 47, Groveport
43
Harrtscn44, Hamiltm 38
Heath 65, Utica 32
Hilltop 68. Llberl)l Center 45
HoJgate 78, Continental 41
Kelt Falnnmt 47, Middletown 35
Lancaster 59, Dublin 30
Licking Valley 71, Johnst""'n 26
Lima 69, Lima Bath 50
Lima Temple 58, Mendon Union 35
Logan 108. U cktng Hts 37
Mar iemont 59. N Bend Taylor 39
Masoo 49, Hamiltm Ross 44
Middletown Chr 49, Miami Valley
21.
Ottawa GlandoJ163, OelphosJef!45
Ravenna 53, Nordonla 48
Reading 49, Indtab Hill J8
Reynoldsburg 611, Hilliard 37
Shelby 44. Willard 32
SllerwoOO Falrvti!YI79. Defiance 32
Springboro 40, Blanchmter 27
St Paris Graham 59, Spring NW 31
Ttpp City 45, Kelt Alter 42
Trentoo Edgewood 62, MlamlsbuJI
48 (OT)
TrOY 52, W Carrollton 37

Mejgs captures first victory of season
ROCKSPRJNGS-The
Meigs half. But Miller came roaring back
Marauders placed foqr players in to cut the Marauder advantage to
doubl.e figures to defeat the Miller 11-9 with I :46 left.on a long jumFalcons 76-63 Tuesday night at per by Shad Watkins, before Wright
and Shawn Hawley hit buckets to
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Sophomore Th:vor Harrison led give Meigs a 15-11 lead at the end
the Marauders scorinj!l9 points off of the quarter.
the bench, Jason Wnght and Mike
Wright hit a three pointer at the
Van Meter added 17 each and L. J. start off the second period to give
Mitch added 10 to lead the Meigs a 18-11 adavnrage, but the
Marauders.
·
Falcons refused to die and kept
The win was the first in the var- pace with Meigs. A Jay.up by Troy
sity coaching career of Phil Har· Merclde tied the game at 30 with
rison, Meigs raises it's record to J. 2:07 left in the half. But the Mike
2 overall and 1·1 in th~ Tri· Valley Van Meter hit a follow up shot in
the paint and Hawley hit a jumper
Conference.
, It was a team effort for the in the paint giving the Marauders a
Marauders as Wright was able to 34-30 adavntage at the half.
control the tempo for Meigs from
The third quarter was a cruboh
his point guard spot with Phil copy of the first two as the
Hovatter and Frank Blake gelling Marauders held a lead from
quality playing .time out Jront for anywhere from two to nine points.
Mei~s off the bench. In the pain! L . The biggest at the :38 second mark
J. Mitch had his usl!al steady game, of the quarter. when Harrison carne
but Van Meter and Harrison had up with a steal and a lay-up to give
.outstanding · games. Meigs jum- · Meigs a 49-42 lead. A bucket by
ped out til an early 2-0 lead on a Chip Gossman cut the lead to 49-42
jumper by Jason Wright, after Jim at the end of the period. The tum·
Hom made one of two free throws ing point came at the 1:35 point of
the · Marauders reeled off eight the quarter with Meigs holding a
points in a row to give the host a 9- 43-40 lead, Harrison came up with
1 lead at the 4:38 mark of the first

PEPPERONI
PIZZA·

.

S599::
,

MEIGS 15 19 15 27-76
MILLER II 19 12 21-63
MEIGS-Wright
4·1·6-17,
Hawley 2-0-0-4, Van Meter 7-0-317, Mitch 5-0-0-10, Fields 0-1-0-3,
Me Guire 2-0-0-4, )"larrison 8-0-319, Blake 1·0-0·2, Hovatter Q.(}.\).
O,TOTALS 29·2·12-76
.
MILLER-Watkitis 2-0-n, Paige
· 0-0-1-1, Hom 7-0-3-17, Gossman
11·0·8·30, Bartley 2-0-0-4, Merkle
1-~·2, West 1·0-0-2, TOTAI;S
.24-(}.15-63

Central State slides
p~t Redmen, 88-85
Narrowing a 12-polnt halft(m~ percent from the floor, netting 33
deficit, the University of Rio . of 68 attempts, and connected on
Grande men's basketball team 12 of 14 tries from the free throw
were unable to overcome a sUm lin~ for 85.7 percent. Central
Central State lead that gave the State netted 35 of 70 on shooting
Marauders a home court victory for 50 percel]t and was successful
over the Redmen, . 88-85, In on 16 of 22 foul shot tries for 77.7
Wilberforce, Ohio Tuesday night. percent. The Marauders also
The loss put the Redmen's · outrebounded the Redmen, 42-31 .
overall record at 7-3, while Jerry Vaughn had 13 boards for
the hosts and Keith Taylor also
Central State•s Improved to 8-5.
,
Kevin Porter's Marauders shot had seven.
Rio
Grande
travels
to
Shawnee
47.2 percent and sank eight of 11
free throw attempts In the first State Saturday at 7:30p.m . for Its
half to plant a cushion between final game prior to the Christmas
themselves and the Redmen, break. The Marauders face Urwhose shooting was 38.2 percent bana Thursday ,
CENTRAL STATE (88) - Joe
and limited to three of four tries
from the foul line. Rio Granl)e McGowan, 9-4·22; Keith Taylor,
. benefited from holding Its tur- 6-6-18; Alan Smith, 8-0-16; Marnovers to 11 for the game and by cus Gray, 0-1-1; Jerry Vaughn,
capitalizing on the 18 committed 6-2·3·21; Francois D'Ernvllle,
3-2·8: Aaron King, 1-0·.2. TOTALS
by the hosts.
Gary Harrison netted 24 points 33-Z-1&amp;-88.
for Rio Grande and Brad SchuRIO GRANDE (85) ...:. Gary
bert contributed 15 points and Harrison, 8-1-5-24; Mark Erslan,
eight rebounds to the offensive 3-3-0-15; Brad Schubert. 2-3-3-15;
effort. Mark Erslan also hit 15 Lester Smith, 1·0-2; Darius Willi·
· markers, Troy Donaldson 12 and ams, 2-0-4; Jeff Brown, 4-2-10;
Jeff Brown 10 against the .Ma· Tim Christian, 1-0-2; Troy Dorauders , who were led by Joe naldson, 5-2-12. TOT{\LS 26·1-12·
McGowan's 22-polnt, seven- 85.
.
Halftime score: Central State
rebound performance. .
Overall, Rio Grande was 48.5 44, Rio Grande 32.

Mfi'CH SHOOTS .- Meigs
Marauder L.J. Mitch · ( 23)
takes a shot an Instant be lore
MIUer's Eddie Paige (42) can
block his shot during Tuesday
night's TVC conte~l on the
· Marauders' hon,c court,
whlch·Melgs won 76-63:

with 2:16 left to cut the lead to
65-63 and Harper Williams
scored on a putback to tie the
score before Jones 's heroics.

AMHERST, Mass. (UP!) ~
Mike Jones hit an 18-foot jumper
with two seconds left Tuesday
night, glvlng Rutgers to a. 67-65
Atlantic 10 victo ry over
Massachusetts.
Jones, who played point guard
for Rutgers ln place of the Earl
Duncan, hit his shot from the
right wing to lift the Scarlet
Knights, 5· 0 overall and 3-0 In the
conference.
Keith Hughes led Rutgers with
22 points and 11 rebounds.
Sophomore Tony Barbee scored
a career-high 27 points to lead
· Massachusetts, 4-2 and 2-11n the
A-10.
.
The Minutemen nearly completed a comeback from a
13-polnt deficit. After a reverse
dunk by Barbee with 11: 06 left,
Massachusetts faile d to hit a field
goal for nearly seven minutes.
While Rutgers ran Its spread
offense, the Minutemen took
advantage or the 10-foul penalty
situation, hitting flvl! free
throws.
Jim McCoy , who scored 16
points, brought Massachusetts
within 63-58 after back· to-back
field goals with lour minutes left.
Rafer Giles hit a three-point shot

DOWNING CHILDS
. MUlLEN MUSSER

'

YOUI INDEPE.NDENT
. AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

·,

DIUYIIY

·COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd An., Gallpolis
PH. 446·1699
·
HOURS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

TOOL · ·. ~

WE'LL HELP
GENEROSITY GROW.
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INSURANCE

111 Second St., Pomeroy

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,.
REFIUGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES :

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT AV//S.
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ARANDY
fJ/

Rutgers downs UMass 67-65

"2·2228

UIGI

for 63%. The Falcons had 18
rebounds with Hom grabbing six.
In the reserve contest Miller out'
scored Meigs 27-14 in the final
period to come from behind to post
a 61-50 victory ovef the Marauders,
Lanning led Miller with 21, Rainey
added 14 and Peyton 13. For the
Marauders Shawn Hamon led the
way with 18, John Bentley ad·
dedl2.
Meigs will host Vinton County in
Tri-valley Conference action on
Friday evening.

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MAIN
STREET
PIZZA
na LOCAL
Fill LOCAL
DIUYIIY

the first of three consecutive
Marauder steals, all three resulted
in buckets to give Meigs the nine
point adavantage.
Behind the scoring off Gossman,
the Falcons were able to stay within
slriking distance, the closest the
Falcons were able to come was at
six points (63-57) at the 2:12 mark,
but a picture perfect pass from Phil
l!ovatter to Mike Van Meter in the
paint gave the Marauders a 65'57
lead and with good free throw
shooting down stretch Meigs was
able to pull away.
·
Harrison carne off the bench to
have an outstanding game scoring
19, Van Meter and Wpght added )7
and L. J. Mitch 10. Meigs grabbed
26 rebounds Jed by Van Meter with
nine and Harrison added seven.
Meigs had 12 turnovers, 16 steals
led by Mitch, Wright, and Hovatter
with three each. Meigs had 10 as·
sists with Hovatter. Hawley, Fields
and Wright getting two each. Meigs
hit31 Of 52 from the Door for 60%
and12ofl7fromthelinefor71%.
Gossman took the games scoring
honors with 30, Jim Hom added 17.
Miller was 24 of 46 from the floor
for 52% and 15 of 24 from the line

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Columbia will donate $1 for every $2 yoU give
.to the HeatShare for Citizens Fund.
Most of us take a warm home for
granted. But m11ny others face the bleak
prospect of winter with too little money, too
little heat. They may be living on fixed or
low incomes, or be out of work.
HeatShare for Citizens, administered
by The Salvation Army, is one way all of us
here in Ohio can help. Columbia Is donating
$50,000 statewide,and will match your contribution with additional money: $1 for every

$2 you give-as much as another $100,000
to match contributions.
Please join us in supporting this important program. lf you ~emize, your donation is
tax deductible and it's simple to conlribute.
You can mall the form from this ad with your
check, or use the HeatShare coupon
enclosed wilh your next Columbia Gas bill.
Every $2 you give will provide $3 to
people who need it.

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LAIGE DEWXE
PIZZA

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4 FIB 16 OZ. PIPSI'S

$999:-'
,

Enclosed is my contributiort of

0$2

0 $5

0 $10 0 $ _ _

for HeatShare for Cnizens.

ADDRESS! _ _ _ _ _ __ __

CITY-----------'

I undelltand the entire amotJnt
will go to The Salvation Armr STATE
ZIP
for distribution In Ohio, and that
PloiH make your- ptirable to
Columbia will matCh my gift, $1 for COLUMBIA
GAS HEATSHARE, and mall to:

...IY $2 dOnated .

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______....______ . _____________________ . ____ ..
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COLUMBIA GAS

TllludpoldforbyColumbla G«a oiOitlo
aftJCMo' ' a, and not from Pfoot«/a d

~~~~--,., P/fiZW!IIund.

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oiOhlo

P.O. Box 2588 • Golumbus OH 43272-4132

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Pomeroy.. Middleport, Ohio

Pege-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pick
It Up.

Tobacco industry revives bid to keep kids from smoking
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
tobacco Industry renewed .Its
campaign aimed at discouraging
teenagers from smoking, but
. anti-smoking forces attacked the
effort as a publicity stunt and bid
to head off tougher laws.
Brennan Dawson. vice president of The Tobacco Institute,
said Tuesday that a "multlmUilon dollar'' national advertisIng program will offer parents
educational· materials to help
dissuade their children from
smoking.
"Young people smoke primarUy because of peer pressure. We
are addressing this directly with
a major program to assist
parents in reducing that peer
pressure," Daw son told a news
conference.
·
About 50 m II lion Americans
smoke, and an estimated 390,000
Americans die each year from
lung cancer, heart disease and
other illnesses ca used by
smoking.
Six years ago, with much
fanfare, the Tobacco Institute
Instituted a similar program to
"Help Youth say 'No' " to to-

bacco. However, since that time,
smoking rates liave remained
level among U.S. teenagers, and
have even risen al)"long teenage
girls,
''RI;'duclng youth smoking cannot be accomplished by a single
action. That's why the tobacco
Industry Is tackling this problem
on marly fronts," Dawson said.
However, Fran Du Melle of the
Coalition on Smoking or Health
- wlilcli represents the Amerl·
can Cancer Society~ the American Lung Association and tile
American Heart Association called the campaign "little more
than a clever smokescreen."
" If the tobacco Industry were
really serious about discouraging tobacco use by children.' It
would stop its constant ·barrage
of advertising campaigns targeted at young people, such as
the recent and ongoing 'Camel
Smooth Character' campaign,
and Its ongoing sponsorship of
youth oriented activities such as
rock concerts and wo~t~en's tennis," Du Melle said.
In addition to educational
material ·lor parents, ttie guide-

lines announced Tuesday by the
$44 billion-a-year Industry
Include:
-Cigarette samples will not be
dlstrlbu ted In or on public
streets, sidewalks or parks,
except In pjaces that are open
only to people of legal age to buy
cigarettes. Cigarette advertising
on billboards must be at least 500
feet from any primary or secondary school or any children's
playground.
-Placement of signs and educational material In all stores
selling tobacco will provide Information a bout the age restrictions
on ·buying tobacco. The campaign's theme is " It's the Law."
-Support tor new state laws
that set a minimum age ot 18 for
cigarette sales, and that reqUire
supervision oi cigarette vending
machines located In places frequented by minors.
Action on Smoking and Health,
a legal advocacy group for
anti-smoking forces, attacked
the Industry campaign as "a
cynical attempt to head off even
stricter leglslatkin."
Nearlr two dozen cities have

passed laws banning the sale or
cigarettes through vending rna·
chines. Action on Smoking and
Health claimed the tobacco Industry Is trying to block the
spread of such laws by promoUng
cigarette sales through vending
machines In "supervised' • locations like bowling alleys and
restaurants.
"We would never tolerate the
sale of alcohoUc beverages, birth
control pills for girls or even
'dirty' magjizlnes through vend·
ing machines, and we certainly
shouldn't lor a product which Is
far more dangerous to clilldren
than all of these combined," said
John Banzhaf, execuUve director
of the anti-smoking group.
Las_t session, Congress narrowly defeated a bill that would
have limited cigarette ads to
plctureless, black-and-white
·'tombstone" format and banned
cigarette sponsorship of events
appealing to children.
Banzhaf claimed that "close
call." coupled with .recent bans
on cigarette advertising In Canada and France, was the "real
motive prompting the Industry to

eliminate me most glaring
abuses, like cigarette billboards
near schools and distribution of
cigarettes at rock concerts."
Thomas Laurta, a spokesman
for the Tobacco Institute, denied
the Industry's action Is aimed at
averting tougher restrictions on
tobacco, saying C()ngress currently lias no anti-smoking bllls
·on Its docket.
In addition, the Industry's
willingness to lobby trill states to
raise the minimum age for
cigarette sales to,18 "Is certainly
positive and concrete," Lauria
,.
said.

POMEROY- Anyone wishing
to send Mary (Fe ll11re) C()x a
belated birthday card, can mall
them to Ameri-Care Pomeroy
Nursing ana Rehabilitation Center, '36759 Rocks Spring Rd.,
Pomeroy 45769. She celebrated
her birthday on Dec. 10.

--··

unapprovea use.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
objected to Wolfe's .assessment
of Industry practices.
''You're using Isolated examples to tar an entire Industry,"
Hatch said, doubting that doctors
are "dumb" enough to fall prey
for just $100.
"Hundreds of drugs are InVolved and a maj orlty of companIes. So I don't think It's Isolated,"
Wolfe said, adding surveys have
found many doctors indeed prescribe the drugs for which they
have received lntlucements.
Kennedy said the following
tlrug companies declined to testify at the two-day hearings:
Abbott Laboratories, HoltmanLaRoche. Wyeth-Ayers! and
CIBA-GEIGY.
In testimony to be delivered
Wednesday, tile Pliarmaceuttcal
Manufacturers Association said
drug promotlon Is essential.
"If physicians are not adequately Informed about tile availability of an Important new
therapy and kept current about
Its uses, patients are poorly
served," said association President Gerald Mosslnghoff.
The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association and the AmerIcan Medical Association just
passed new ethical guidelines,
"Although there Is little evidence that physicians are Influenced by gifts, these guidelines
help ensure that treatment decisions are founded on sound
scientific judgment of patient

needs," the AMA's Daniel Johnson Jr. said.
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Ull Till C1 AltN-:11 ,--y

992-2156

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SPHIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

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DAilY

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I WIIIIIUIIIJlU

1:15 • 3:30
MUO

(~1

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Cllf'IT ~~nNOQO
t;HARUI" SHEEN

THE ROOKIE

".

WRH FLOWERS

&lt;

To - d • beautifully
·d .. lped funerol
..,...,ement, Jutl
eatlorvlltt

..ThP

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POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
Fay A. mer&amp; .. SPndt Love"

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PH. 992-6454

NOTICE!

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SOME COPIES OF THE ·
TUESDAyI DEC. 11 I EDITION OF THE
DAILY SENTINEL HAD THE WRONG
BIG LOTS PREPRINT.
THE CORRECT BIG LOTS PREPRINT FOR
THIS WEEK'S SALE IS IN
TODAY'S PAPER.
THE DAILY SENTINEL REGRETS THE
ERROR AND APOLOGIZES FOR THE
INCONVENIENCE CAUSED BIG LOTS
AND ITS CUSTOMERS.
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Viectl81dey, December 12, 1990

Youngest gets
toughest
treatment in.
jogger trial
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jurors In
the second Central Park jogger
trial delivered a heavy blow to
the ·youngest defendant accused
In the brutal gang
attack con'
vlcting the teen on all counts
including attempted murder and
rape.
The panel Tuesday also found
16-year-old Kevin Richardson's
co- defendant, !Qiarey Wise, 18,
guUty on lesser charges of
assault, sexual abuse and riot In
the April 19, 1989, crime spree
that alarmed the city and gained
the nation's attention.
Sentencing for both youths was
scheduled for Jan. 9 by Justice
Thomas Galligan. ·
Emotions ran rampant and
screams rang out when the
verdict was read In stale Supreme Court In Manhattan. Rlchards&lt;ln's mother collapsed and
the judge had to clear the
courtroom before jurors co11ld be
polled.
The families and supporters of
the defendants filed Into the
hallway, shouting and cursing
for several minutes.
Wise bowed his head when the
verdict was read. At first,
Richardson sat showing no emotion with his hands on the table In
front of him. Then tears
streamed down his face as he
· broke down and hugged his codefendant.
One of Richardson's , sisters
screamed, "Oh, my God! " She
continued to · wall, yelling
"Kevin, we ' love . you! Don't
worry about It -lt's all right. He
never hurt nobody, •• as the guilty
verdicts were announced.
Richardson's mother. who was
sitting nearby, gasped, "Oh
Lord," and tlien collapsed while
the teen's brother-In-law
screamed at Assistant District
Attprney Elizabeth Lederer:
"Bitch ;--- you're mine. You-all
hurt my mother, man!"
Later, the Rlcliardon family
released a statement blaming
their son's conviction on the
youth's attorney, Howard Diller.
The Rlchardsons tried unsuccessfully to have activist attorney C. Vernon Mason replace
Diller In late October.
',\Kevin Richardson and his
.family totally disagree with and
resent the tactics that attorney
Howard Diller has used In ..
Kevi~ defense,'; the statemen,l
said. "l\s far as the famtly Is
concerried he (Diller) has been
discharged from the case since
Oct. 24,1990." They said Mason Is
Richardson's lawyer.
In October Galllgan ruled that
Diller had to remain as counsel to
Richardson. The family requested his dismissal after the
lawyer decided not to question
the woma11 jogger.

The Daily Sentinel- Page

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Related card shower

Drug companies accused of marketing schemes
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Drug
Induce the purchase of items that
are reimbursed under Medicare ·
companies are bribing doctors
with free trips, gifts and cash to
and Medicaid, federal health
encourage them to prescribe
Insurance programs.
their product, even If the drug
The cost of marketing actlvl·
has not received appropriate ties are us11allyburled In the cost
government approval, a Senate ofadrug'sresearchanddeveloppanel was told. .
ment, Wolfe and other witnesses
The Senate Labor and Human . said, and then passed on to
Resources Committee also re- , patients In the form of higher
leased a survey showing spend- drug prices.
log by 18 drug companies on such
A former public affairs execupromotional activities as sympo- live at CIBA-GEIGY and Abbott
slums held at plush resorts, gifts Laboratories testified he finally
and reminder Items to doctors ·left the drug Industry because
liK:reased from about $40 mllllon . ''what I saw was untenable."
In the 1970s to about $165.·muuon
''Tile price of prescription
in 1988.
drugs Is ~!early determined by
"Doctors who accept lavish what the market will bear. Pain,
Industry gifts are jeopardizing suffering and desperation will
!heir objectivity and com prom Is- supiiort a high price, Indeed,"
lng the trust of their patients, " David Jones said.
sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
Wolfe cited several· examples
committee chairman, said of what he called bribery, which
Tuesday.
came to his attenUon through his
· ''The drug companies and the consumer group's doctor-bribe
doctors · whom they bribe are hotllne.
classic examples of white-coated
He said Connauglit La bora toand white-collared crime," rles offered purchasers of Its
charged Sidney Wolfe, director vaccine package a certain
of Public Citizen Health Re- number of '-'points," redeemable
search Group·.
for personal computers or televi"We have the majority of drug slon monitors.
companies Involved in criminal
Also, he questioned Sandoz's
activity of some sort," he said, use of Sandlmmune, Its brand
adding the Food and Drug name for the lnimune Admlnlstration has never prose- suppressing drug cyclosporlne,
cuted a bribery case involving ap proved to prevent organ
pharmaceuticals.
rejection.
Under federal law, drug comSandoz sent letters to doctors
panies cannot promote a product offering $100 to read an article
for an unapproved use and and answer questions about
cannot offer anything of value to using tile drug lor psoriasis, an

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Wednosdav. December 12, 1990 . :

BONELESS, skinless

Chicken
Breasts

Lb

Limit 1
Pleas~·

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31-35 Count IQF Ready To Cook

Large.Peeled &amp; Deveined

Shrimp

Lb

·Mega Vanilla

Ice ·
:::=..ncream

Greeq Giant

1:; ~n&amp;il~~~ .-·llill-=- . .
Holiday Gift Cenif1&lt;1tes now avoilable.

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Umlt 1
Please•

.

Ve etables

gully.

Slleeadlhn. 5, 19'1
Moot - . open nipu and SUIIdays
CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY

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In Our Seafood Shoppe

Wllie and Richardson, the
youngest boy accused ln the
attack, were,the second group of ·
youths togo on trial in the attack.
Each was accused of being
part_of a gang of up to 30 youths
who roamed tile moonUt park,
randomly attacking joggers and
bicyclists for the thrill of It - a
crime spree they called
"wilding."
In the one-hour rampage, the
gang attacked nine people. The
most seriously Injured was the
30-year-old Investment banker
who was' gang raped, beaten Into
a coma with a metal pipe and a
brick and lefttordead In a muddy

Save now on specially selected dress, casual
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.
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Whole Keroel or Creom Slyle Com, IS oz. &lt;aD; Freneb Style or Cut
1"-t Beano, 14.5 orz. can; Sweel l'leu, 15 orz. can.

The petite, blonde woman from
Upper St. Clair, Pa., whose name
has not been widely published
because of the nature of the
atta~k. told jurors she could not
recall a single detail of the
violence. ·
The jury weighed 13 criminal
charges against Richardson and
Wise -attempted murder, rape,
sodomy, rtot, sexuill abuse, one
count of first- degree robbery,
two counts of second-degree
robbery, two counts of firstdegree assault, and three colmts
of second-degree assault.
Jurors deliberated Into their
12th day In finding Richardson
guilty on all counts. Tile panel
spent much of Its time rehearing
testimony concerning Wise's vi-·
deotaped confession to pollee,
finally clearing him of the major
charges and finding him guUtyof
assault, sexual abuse and riot.
At the · Manhattan District
Attorney's oftlce, Lederer said
she was "pleased" with the
verdict, but refused to comment
on · the woman jogger's reaction
to the jury's decision.
Wise's attorney, Colin Moore.
said he would appeal h~ client's
verdict.

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BUY TiiREE CANS AT SALE PRICE AND RECEIVE AN ADIHTIONAL
CAN FREE Wl11l COUPON AT LEFT.

FREE 32 oz. Jar of
Miracle Whip with
purchaae of MaxweU
House Coffee And
Coupon At Left

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"He's an Innocent young man,
and he knows . .. lie will be
exonerated, " he said. '"l'bll
judge explnc!ed many dmea w~~
I attempted to ci'OIS examine. .
· Rlcbardloll, wbO wu only 14 at
the time, faceea maximum of 5 to
10 years In a juvenUe jail.

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Wedn•dav. December 12. 1990

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-S-The Deily Sentinel

Court news---..

Three were &amp;ned and five Olhers forfeited bonds in the coun of
Pomeroy Mayor Ri~ Seyler Tuesday nigbL
·
Fined were Shirley Kerns, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, disoolerly
conduct; Ruby Nakao. Racine, $63 and costs, no operator's license;
and William R. Moore, Dexter, $163 and costs, reckless opemtion.
Forfeiting bonds in the coun were George A. Bush, Gallipolis,
$52, speeding; Donald Fry, Pomeroy, S63, operating under SUSJlC!I·
sion; Trent Nash, Middleport, $375, DUI; Thresa. Lasseter, G&amp;!lipolis, $63, expired· license plates; Velda Ohlinger, Letan, W. VIi.,
$50 speeding.
.

Middleport court
J

In the Tuesday night coun of Middlepon Mayor Fred Hol'fm;m,
seven were fined and five others forfeited bonds. ·.
·
Fined were Charles R. Stewart, Cheshire, $100 and costs, driving
under suspension; Tonl M. Andrew, Middleport, $16 fine only,
speeding; Amy G. Shrivers, Middleport. $10 fine only, running a
stop sign; Phiry D. Milliron, Middlepon, $10 fine only, running a ·
stop sign; Christy K. Ward, Langsville, $15 fine only, Speeding;
Douglas G. Jenkins, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, driving under finan.
cial risk suspension; and Terry Brewer, Middlepon, $25 and costs,
disorderly conducL
.
Forfeiting bonds were R. Clay McLain, New Marshfield, $60,
running a stOp sign; Katrina A. Nonhup, 'Gallipolis, $50 Speeding;
Marlene Fuller, Cheshire, $51, speeding; Erica A. Robson, Bidwell,
. $51, speeding; Elizabeth A. Swisber, Cheshire, $53, speeding.

----Meigs EMS runs-.- - - Sheriff's report

Weather

seven c;alls were · answered
Tuesday and early Wedneday m(ltl·
ing by units of the Meip County
Emergency Medical Servtce.
The Tuesday. c;alls included one
at 12:11 p.m. by the Syracuse
squad to State . Route 124,
Extended forecast: Fair Fri- Minersville, for Ted RusseD who
had fallen off a ladder. He was
day. and a chance of rain
taken
to VeteranS Memorial Hosp·
Saturday and Sunday. Highs will
tial.
range from the upper 30s to the
At 12:57 p.m., Gmce Whaley
40s Friday, from 45 to 55
Saturday, and from 55 to 65 was taken from her Lincoln HiD
Sunday. Overnight lows will be in residence to Vetemns Memorial
the 20s Friday morning, In the 30s Hospital; at 1:30 p.m. the Mid·
early 'Saturday" and ranging dleport unit · transponed Jessica
frorn the mid 30s to the low 40s . Stoban from South Third· Ave., to
Vetemns; at 5:27 p.m. the Po.meroy
Sunday morning.
unit went to Peacock Avenue for

South Ceatral: Becoming
mostly cloudy and windy Wed·
nesday night, With a low between
40 and 45. Partly cloudy Thursday, with highs In the mid 40s.

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Gift
Givini ·
ldeasl ,

Area deaths
Virginia W. Stallworth
Virginia Winston Stallwonh,
died in New York City, N.Y. on
S\lnday. Funeral arrangements wiD
he announced later by Fisher
Funeral Home in Middlepon.

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

the International Energy Agency .
In Parts, have refused toputthelr
emergency rationing system Into
effect or to call for a draw on
government stoclts on the
grounds that the current world
oil supply, while tight, remains
sufficient to meet demand.
The oU·sharlng plan developed
by the agency may be put Into
effect if any one member sees Its
oll supplies reduced by 7 percent,
In which case the avallable oll
would be rationed according to
each country's consumption
levels.
But while there appeared to be
near unanimous agreement
among the 13- member cartel
about the need to return to the
quota system, there was less
·agreement over the need for an
emergency session to reinstitute
the 22.5 mUUoit barrel a day
production quota agreed to In
July.
''This crisis has done so much
damage to the oll Industry and
caused such Instability to the all
market that, after It Is defused,
we will have to sit down again to
remedy the results," Kuwaiti 011
Minister Rasheed Salem AlAmeerl, sporling a "Free Kuwait" button, said ·before the
opening session.
The Iraqi delegation, led by
Ramzi Salman, the head of Iraqi
oil marketing operations, sat
silently adjacent to the Kuwaitis.
Aghazadeh, the Iranian oil
n'llnlster, appeared to be stepping back from his .suggestion
Tuesday that OPEC production
be Immediately reduced by
400,000 barrels a day because or
what he said was a surplus of
heavy crude on ·the market.
"Alter the crisis everybody must
comeback to the quota," he said.
''This ·Is a very unhappy
meeting, and It could not have
come at a worse time," said an
oD Industry expert

Am Electric Power ............. 28%
Ashland on ........................ 29%
AT&amp;T ..................... .. .......... 29~
Bob Evans .... ....................... 14
Charming Shoppes ..............
A Tuesday afternoon !fBiler fire
City Holding Co ....... ,..........15~
on
State Route 124 below Pon1and
Federal Mogul.. ................... 14
is
under
investigation for possible
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 17~
arson
by
the Meigs County Sherif.
Key Centurion .................... 11~
f's
Department
and the Stale Fire
Lands' End ......................... 13%
Limited Inc ........................ 16% Marshal's Oi:ice.
The Ra:ine F~ Depabtkiil wu
Multimedia Inc . .................. 64~
Rax Restaurants................. 'Va · called to die acene at 1:44 p.m. tllld
the Ba&amp;han Fire DqJartmelit was
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. i9
Shoney's Inc ....................... 9'Vo called to 4ive IIISislallce. Due 10 the
investigallOII, no other details of the
~tar Bank ........................... 16•,4
fire
were releuecl at this lime. The
Wencjy's Int'l. ., .............: ..... 6~
uailer
wai owned by Janet Manuel.
Worthington lnd .................. 21~

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Fire investigated

FRIDAY
POMEROY
"Ole Senior
· Citizens Dance Club 'will have a .
dance Friday . at the center in
POMEROY • The Countv Con.· Pomeroy. Music will be by the
vention and LAA Convention wiD
Happy HoDow Boys from Athens.
be held Thursday at 10 a.m. in the
Those · attending should bring
ASCS Office on Hiland Road in
snacks for the snack table. The
WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy.
public is invited to attend.
RACINE • The Southern Local
'
Chapter of the National Honor
GALLIPOLIS • The Diabetes
POMEROY · The Return
Soctety will sponsor a toy drive Suppon Group wiD meet Thursday
Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters
through Friday. New or good use(! at 7 p.m. at Holzer Medical Center
of
the
American
Revolution, will
toys may be contributed. Toys may in the French 500 Room. A
meet
Friday
at
1:30
p.m. at the
be taken to Southern High School propm ·will be "Surviving the .
Grace
Epsicopal
Church.
Hostesses
during the hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Holidays" by Marie Helms. A $1
will
be
Mrs.
Dwight
Milhoan,
Mrs.
Sgt. Frank A. Martin, son of·
All toys will he given to the Meigs gift exchange is optional. Bring a
·
Michael
Elberfeld.
Mrs.
Gary
frank _and Ida. Martin, Middlepon,
County toy bank. For more infor- favorite holiday snack.
Moore, Mrs. Linda . Patterson and ts Stationed wtth Opemtion Desett
mation call Kim PhiUips, 949-2611.
Mrs. John Rose. Miles Epling, past Shield in Saudi Ambia
·
POMEROY • The Xi Garrtma national commander of · the
He
has
·two
daughters,
Pamela
VINION • The Pine Grove Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Holiness Chapel, Route 235, Vin- Sorority will have a gift and orna- American Legion, wiD be the guest age four; and Joey, age seven, bOth"
speaker.
of Dayton. He ts a graduate of
ton, five miles from Route 124 ment exchange on Thursday at the
Meigs High School.
Rowlesville Road, will have revival home of Jeilny Smith. Leave upper
SATURDAY
. Cards and letters may be sent to
through Sunday at ·7;30 p.m. parking lot in Pomeroy at 5;45 p.m.
RACINE • The Racine Gun Club hun at the following address: Sgt.
nightly. Rev. and Mrs. David Light, Bring items for needy families.
wiD have a Christmas patty on Frank A. Martin, 289·76-1886,
evangelists. Public invited.
Saturday from 7 a.m. til 1 p.m. at Task Force 86, H. He. lith Sig.
POMEROY • There will be a
Bde., APO New York, N.Y. 09852.
POMEROY • The Middlepott bake sale and bazaar at the the Racme American Legion Hall.
Amateur Gardeners Club Will meet Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center on
SANTA W!LL BE AT
POMEROY . "Monsters: MysWednesday at 6:30 p.m. in Thursday from 10 a.m . to 2 p.m.
tery
or
Myth"
will
be
the
children's
Pomeroy for a catered Christmas Quilts, pillows, ·crochet and knit
FRUTH PHARMACY
party. A $5 donation to Ameritlora items, Christmas items, ceratnics movie shown Saturday at the Meigs
MlQOLEPORT. OHIO
County Public Libll[l)' in Pomeroy
wiD replace the gift excbange.
SUNDAY, DECEMIEI 14
and miscellaneous articles wiU be at2 p.m.
6 P.M. TIL 8 P.M . .
forsale.
·

Community Calendar items
appear IWO days befpre aa eveat
and the day or tbllt event. Items
must be received 1D tldvaace to
Iasure pubUcalioa 1D the caleadar.

in Pomeroy. Refreshments served
between 5:30 and 7 p.m.

In Saudi Arabia

· STUDENT OF ntE WEEK • Dol)ald Yost, left, hiS .been
selected a Student of the Week at Meigs Junior High School for
behavior and Ohio History. Pictured with him is leacber, J,R.
Keanedy. ·
.

.BRING YOUR

THURSDAY
POINT
PLEASANT
CHESTER • The Laurel Cliff WVARNG · Point Pleasant Unit
Better Health Club YiiU meet 3664 Family Suppon Group wiD
Thursday at 6:30'p.m. at the home meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the
of Elizabeth Hayes in Chester. A $3 armory day room. All members urgift exc]lange wiD be held.
ged to attend.
~

To

TUPPERS PLAINS • The VFW
Auxiliary will bave a
Christmas party for members and
family on Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
Turkey and ham will be furnished.
Others bring a covered dish.
Children bring $3 gift for exchange. A meeting wiD be held at
7:30p.m.
and

prease
Anyonef..

..

...

Wednesday, December 12. 1990

..Community calendar

Also arrested were Jasper
Bonecutter, MiddleporL on warrants from the County Coon for
failure to pay old fines and make
restitution on earlier charges, and
WendeD Barber, Reedsville, on a
CoWlty Coun bench warrant for
failure to pay a fine. All three were
scheduled to appear in · Meigs
County Court today.

CAM~RA

WE SHIP PACKAGES
VIA UPS

SALEM CENTER • Students at
Salem Center Elementary wiD
present a Christmas program on
Thursday t 7 p.m. The program wiD
be dedicated to all servicemen an&amp;
women serving in Operation Desen
Shield in Saudi Ambia. The ·public
is invited to attend. '

I .,

SEARS

788 NORTH SECOND
992·2178

MIDDLEPORT

ROCK SPRIN'GS • The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. for a potluck dinner.
Members bring non-pe(ishable
food items.
STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Dodger Vaughan, left, a sludenl ,
al Meigs Junior High School, bas been selected as Studeat or the
Week at the schOol for behavior and Pre-algebra. Pictured with
him iS teacher, Mrs. LIDda LeaL
·
·
~

........

POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Group of AA and A!Anon will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m . at the Sacred
Hean Catholic C,:hurch. Call 1-8003.33-5951 for information.

Hunnell birth is announced

Conlinued from page i

the internationaloil companies,"
the cartel's president said.
"These consumers, however,
have remained reluctant to adopt
such measures, pushing OPEC to ·
extreme levels of output, even
beyond the agreed cieling."
·He said the consuming nations
were accumulating further
stocks to guard against a possible
war in the Gulf.
···This is clearly an ill-contrived
move because, if such an escalatlon does not occur and, as we all
hope, an early, peaceful solution
Is found to the crisis, then the
world will be awash with oU and
we shall be faced with another
decade of turmoil and iniquitous
waste of finite resources in the
International oil market," Bousse na concluded.
He said if industrialized countries had instituted an oil-sharing
agreement, ''it might have already prevented oll prices from ·
fluctuating so wildly over the
past three months," including a
drop of $12 per barrel during a
10-d ay period In October.
The world's 21-largest oil consuming countfies, grouped under

,.

ehristrn&amp;S

The Daily Sentinel
·Page-9

Christmas
GiftS

•

Saturday at 6 p.m. A Christmas
VFW Chrislmas party
The VFW and Auxiliary wiD ptar will be betd at 7 p.m. Bring a
have a Christmas party for mem- covered dish. The public is invited
bers and family on Saturday at 6:30 to attend. The center in located on
p.m. Turkey and ham wiD be fur. Count~ Road 53 five miles west of
nished. Others bring a covered Coolville.
dish. Children bring· $3 gift for exRound and square dance
change.
There wiD be a round and square
dance on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
VFWiomeet
at
the Tuppers Plains VFW Build·
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
ing
featuring Specks of Bluegrass.
9053 will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the post home in Tuppers Red Carr will be the caller, Cost is
$2.50 for adults and $1 for children
Plains.
under 12.
·
·
Square dance
Soutbera Board to meet
There wiD be a square dance at
The Southern Local School Disthe Coolville Lions Club on Satur· trict will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
day from 8-11:30 p.m. with music the hi·gh school.
Hymn siag scheduled
by the Happy Hollow Boys. Cost is
$3 single and · $5 couple. Jim
Faith Gospel Chun:h in Long
Brown will be the caller.
BottOm wiD hold a local talent
hymn sing on Friday at · 7 .p.m.
Dinner scheduled
Those interested in performing
The Lotlridge Communiiy Cen· should call 378-6237 or 378-6382.
ter will host a Christmas dinner on Rev. Steve Reed invites the public.

Veterans ~emoriat Hospital
T sda Adm · ·
w11so· n
ue Y
ISStons:
Hall, Lakin, W. Va.; Jed Will,
Pomeroy.
·
Discharged: Naomi London.

in the Meigs County Jail 011 a
charge of domestic violence following an incidellt in S)'lliCuse
Tuesday, according to Meigs
County Sheriff J'ames Soulsby.

•

be submitted by the Univeistiy of
Rio Grande.
The kindetganen through 12 social studies and the kindergarten
through 12 science courses of study
were approved. ApPillpriations
were modified to adjust for sick
leave, personal leave and vacation.
The financial repon of the
treasurer was approved as was
payment of bills.

----Announcements-----

Hospz'tal· news

.

By The Bend

Mike Hindy, Syracuse, is lodged

0,
•1~1n
• ,

Meigs Board approves liason
Membership in the Ohio School
Board Assoctation was approved
and Harold Roush was appointed to
be the legislative liaison for 1991 at
Tuesday night's meeting of the
, Meigs County Board of Education.
·The organizational meeting for
1991 was set for Jan. 8 at 7 p.m. in
the board office to be foDowed by
the regular monthly mee~ng. It was
voted to suppon the Rural School
University Collaborative Project to

Jed WiD who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 7:53p.m. the
Rutland unit went to Romine Road
for Charles McGrath wbo was
taken to VetenlllS and at 9:49 p.m.
the Racine unit took Cheryl Bailes
from Elmwood TertliCe Apartmen.ts
to VeiCI'alls.
Wednesday at 2:37 a.m. the
Middlepon unit went to Cheshire
for Raben Mcintosh who was
taken to the Holzer Medical Center.

.

John R. and Violet Humiell,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their sixth child, Jennifer Sue, on
OcL 16 at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight pounds

POMEROY · Members of
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
and ten ounces' and was 20 inches Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
long.
Thursday for a Christmas party at
The couple also has four the home of Charloue Elberfeld.
Social hour at 6:30p.m. and dinner
daughters and one son.
at
7:30p.m. Bring staple goods for
Maternal
grandparents
are
Serenity
House.
Clarence and . Vtrginia Hayman,
Racine.
POMEROY · Mary Diamond,
Paternal grandparents are Edna
flame
Fellowship International
Hunnell, Racine, and the late John
Representative,
will speak at
E. Hunnell.
Grea.t grandparents are Velma Thursday's meeting of the group at
Stobart Winland, Racine, and Clfar. 7 p.m. at the senior citizens center
tes Lewis, Middleport.

Just call or visit us todar
to send the FTD" Holiday
Cheer" Bouquet.

Orthe FTD
Season's Greetings ••
Bouquet.

JENNIFER HUNNELL

Woodmen sponsor
fund drive
The Modem Woodman of
America, Camp 10900, is sponsoring a "Matching Fund Drive" for
the Torch United Methodist Church
Community Center. MWA will
match up to $2,500 of the funds
raised in this drive.
·A smorgasbord dinner wiU he of·
fered for this purpose on Saturday
at 5 p.m. at &gt;the Torch ChurchCommunity Center. The price of
the 111ea1 wiD be a donation to the
building fund -, Several door prizes
wiD be awarded.
·

Minton, Gaul
plan to wed

.

. Prescription Shop
992-6669
253

1110111 SKOND

.DDUPOIT,
OHID

The Farmers Bank is proud to be a part of the
Big Bend area. Our success comes from the
people and merchants of our area. When shop·
ping for Christmas this year think of your local
merchants first.

\

When you consider the gas, time and energy saved
at home, it just doesn't pay to shop around!

Wrap Holiday Joy In
3Beautiful
·
Packages.

BACK BY POPULAI DEMAND: We Now Have Our Texas Scratch Pads.

THERE'S No PLACE LIKE HoME!

n~ · n,~ullll'

TnrumT ·
lk&gt;uqowt

The couple plans a Dec. 19 wed-

ding.

j

T- 1\1;:!~

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul, Vincent, announce the engagement of
their son, Michael Rodney, to Barbam Lynn Minton, daughter of Leo
B. Mintoo, Gresham, Ore., and Col.
Emett and Jane Willard, Colorado .
Springs, Colo.
Miss Minton is employed as a
sales executive by WXVA radio siBlion in Charles Town, W.Va. Gaul is
a sec_urity technician for ,Westec
Secunty Systems of Lcesbwg, Va.
Both 8ltended Shepherd College in
Shepherdstown, W.Va.
The groom is the grandson of ·
Mr. and Mrs. RusseU Moore.
Pomeroy, and Mn. Barbara Sarff:'~. Chester, . and ~ late Cecil

LARGE SELECTION
OF
.
TOYS AT SUPER SAVINGS!

,.,.""""

Your Bankfo-t~···

'f.ll6ll

Tlwlk"'

llmd

lluUI/U('f

I'

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L._

•

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1

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY FLOWER SHO.P
992-6454 .
106 Buttemut Ave. .

•

FB

Farmers
Bank
MEMBER FDIC

...I

TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

Po•eroy, Ohio

.

I •..
'\

985-3385
STATE ROUTE 7

~I

'\

'•

.

•.

"

�Wednesday, December 12. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Willing .Workers have meeting.

Chester Garden Club meets

Chrisunas j)any was held
recently by the St. Paul Willing
Workers of the Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Church.
. Gifts were exchanged and names
drawn for the coming year.
Evelyn Spencer presid7d over.
the shon business meeung and
conducted the program.
Prayers were given by ~
Harmon and Joanna Weaver w1th
readings by. Mae Vineyard. Hazel
Barnhill and Glenna Sanders.
Mary Jamison joined as a new
member.
Others atrending were Pastor
Sharon Hausman,.Pat Hall. Mildred
Brooks. Mildred Caldwell, Doris
Koenig, Bulah Maxey, Mary

Holly Hill Inn. Pomeroy, was the
setting for "A Victorian So.iol\m
Into Christmas," at!ended by members of Chester and Shade Valley
Council of Floral ArtS Garden
Clubs and inviled guesls.
Members and guests were given
tours of the decorated Inn before a
catered meal was served.
Maida Mora extended the welcome and inviled guests judged t!Je
gift wrappin~s and awarded She1la
Taylor first m religious and Bette
Lou. Dean, · first in secular
categoric$. Dorothy KaiT, in charge
of the gift · exchange actiVIbes,
presenled them with miniature
poinsettias.

•• A

Vineyard. Louise Chaffee and BeUy
Chevalier.
The next meeting will be held at
the church on Jan. 8. 1991 when
the group will work on quilts and
comforterS and new program boQks
will be disl!lbuled.

Dance set
Barbara's School of Dance will
be presenting its. 3flllual C¥stmas
program, ''Christmas MagJC," ?D
·sunday at 4 p.m. at Southern Jumor
High School in Racine.
Performers range in age from
four years and up. The public is inviled to attend

Josephine Hill, presiden~ exlen·
ded holiday greetings and gave
members
hand-decoraled
ornaments further carrying out the
year's theme, "Victorian Today."
Edna Wood repa1ed that the
wrealhs from the wreath making
project had been taken to Overbrook Center and Americare.
It was noted that seven members
exnibiled at the Coun1y Christmas
Flower Show; Belle Dean, Pat Hoi•
ter, Maida Mora. Dorothy Karr,
Maye Mora. Vrrgi.nia Chadwell and
Maurita Miller. They won six blue,
seven red, eight yellow and six
white ribbons. Mrs. Dean won the
horticulture sweepstakes.

Wednesday, December 12, 1990

Pentagon refiguring ·Shield costs

· SMALL

WANT ADS

Devotions by Maye Mora, "And
It Comes ro Pass-" included scripture of the prophec:ies of ISaiah and
Micah, the fuiJillment of Jesus'
binh as recorded by Lute and a
·reading conteming a different ending !han "because there was no
room for them in the im."
The next meeting will be held
Jan. 2 at the home of Belle Lou

·

Dean.

Live nativity

.992-2156

COPYRIGHT 1990 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOO SUNOAY, DEC. 9, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, DEC. 15, 1990, IN POMEROY
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVERTIISfD mii PDILICY·- hc:h of 1t1ese advenised items is required to be readily available fcn

·

113 SIZE

California
Navel Oranges
Each

c

•

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - An Iraq will be 011t on the final flight.
almost empty U.S.-chartered
Left behind are somewhere
~lng 707 left Baghdad Tuesaround 500 people entitled to
day. evidence that the evacua- American passports, many of
llon of all American hostages In them foreign-born ch!ldren In
Kuwait ts probably complete, the families where one of the spouses
State Department said.
Is an American citizen.
· But because of the remote
In some cases, according to the
possibility that some Americans State Department, parents demay still be In hiding or had not clded that they belonged In Iraq
had .a ecess to the Voice of or Kuwait and chose to stay.
America short-wave announce·
In others, Kuwaiti or Iraq!ments about the freedom flights,
tiorn husbaijds with dual nation~no!Jter charter will be sent to
alltycouldnotgetexjtvlsasfrom
KuWait · and Baghdad on the Iraqi government and tl\elr
ThurSday .
families chose to remain behind
That' final flight may carry the with them. .
last of the American diplomats In
As the707fl!ghtleftKuwaltfor
the bele4lgured American .Em· Baghdad, no Americans were
bassy In Kuwait, Ambassador aboard, but there were three
Nathaniel Howell and four oih- unidentified Europeans who
~rs, after which the elflbassy
served as "wardens," keeping
compound will be effectively the American citizens In Kuwait
closed d9wn.
!n!ormed about events, and keepOn Molll!ay, a Boeing 747 with !ng tabs on them.
l!IP~.ans'returned to
· The plane carried a total of 15
· passengers as It left Baghdad,
Andrews Air Force Base In
according, to the St;~te Departsuburban washington after
some tour months as hostages.
merit: eight U:S. citizens, three
As t)le State Department and . European . "wardens," and four
White aouse went through the other foreign nationals.
final ac~ntlng , It appeared that
Four other Americans .were
all the ~erlcans. who wan ted to expected to . leave aboard a
leave or could leave Kuwait and
British chartered flight Tuesday

~

.

(Ofl\Lt ( IHI'I
~-

'-"''LL&lt;:u

Tropicana ._
Orange Juice

U.S. Inspected
(4 . 10 .. Ib. Avg.)

64-oz.

.· , Frozen Young
Turkey Breast
(Limit 2 With Additional Purchase)
U.S. GRADE A PERDUE

77 SHEETS PER ROLL 2-PL Y

Pick Of
The Chicken

· Viva·
Paper Towels

Pound

IN THE DELl
E
IN-STORE MADE CHEESE LOGS OR

Cheese
Balls

Kleenex

Dinner Nap~ins
45-Ct.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
An
aide ~o Sen. Alan Cranston, ·
0-Callf:, said her boss was
unaware of many of her actions
relating ·IO accused S&amp;L kingpin
Charles Keating Jr., Including a
perscinalmeetlngwlth Keating at
his Phoenix headquarters and
calls to bank regulators exam in·
lng Keating's alllng thrift.
In testiiJiony during the 16th
day of hearings by the Senate
ethics ~ eommJttee Into the conduct of.tile so-called Keating Five
s~nators on Tuesday, Carolyn
Jordan, Cranston's banking aide
since 1972, disputed allegations
t~at she .pressured regulators to
go easy on Keating's Lincoln
Savings and Loan of Irvine, Calif.
·The panel Is hearing evidence
to decide whether Sens. Cran·
ston, Dennis DeConclnl, D·Arlz.,
John . Glenn, D-Oh!o, John
McCain; R-Ar!z.. and Donald
Riegle, D·Mich., Improperly
pressured regulators to benefit
Keating, who has been Indicted
on state securities and fraud
chargli$ In California and Is the
target of a continuing federal ·
SJ:imd Jury probe. ,
·Keating made $1.3 million In
political contrlbu tions to the
lawmakers.
Jordan's described herself as
an aide who operated largely

Bath Tissue
4-Rolj

ANY PAIR

·

L'eggs
Pantyhose

.'

Full Line Sale!

30%0ff

•

••1

OPEN DAILY 9-6
SUNDAY 1-6

NONRETURNABLE BOTILE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIEl COKE,
.
DIET COKE OR

I

Coca Cola
·classic

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88

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FOUAGE IASim
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F• Jilt Ltw.. 0ne1t Grawe:
·, ...~.... , _ ... Spray•

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POINSETTIAS

. .UIARD'S ·

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One Winner Per Store.
See Store For Detailt

·.

r

II

OFF

'

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
992-5177
220 East Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

-~

· Get an e~tra $10 OFF••• $20 OFF•••up to $30 OFF on
home-appliance and elect1onics items IN·STOCK in our store•
It's simple! Come into our store, choose from
super brand names at great lo.,... prices ond
toke $10 to $30 off INSTANTLY!
.

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TODAY!

HURRY".C0UPONS GOOD
221d

Good toward
any appliance or
electronics ·
purchase of
$150 to $249

GOODTHAU
12/22/90 ONLY

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TODAY!

ISAVINGS!

., Good toward
ony appliance ar
electronics
puichase of
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GOODTHAU
12/22190 ONLY

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GOODTHRU
12122/90 ONLY

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0% f"IIIOMt Chargo on •Y lfottnt ..plla- I f lfottnt
Elactrtnks purchaltd lhrv ~- 22, I"'· Offer
applits to q11Hfltcl porchDst of $200 or .,.., .. a
S..n (r..t l'lon. Ask f01 tlttalls. No lilltlg. No
l'ay-', No flnaMt Olargo ontil MorciJ, 1" I. Offer
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SEARS CAMCORDER ••• S79999

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LADIIS

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OPEN UNTIL 8 MON.-FRI.

SEARS HQ 4 HEAD VCR..... 529999

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SitES TODDLER ·14

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ony appliance or
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purehase of
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GIRLS &amp; BOYS SHIRTS, TOPS &amp;
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HILTON HEAD S.C.

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•

Emergency medical personnel
were treating Injured people on
the platforms and !Ire fighters
used the "jaws of life" to cutin to
the Wreckage to ·reach people
Inside.
Charlotte Craven, one of the
passengers, said there was a loud
crash, then the lights went out
and people started screaming.
"It was just a mess, '' said one
train passenger Identified only as
Michelle.

Good toward

llo.f Ope• ·Fer

Large
Selection
of Clothing!

It was not Immediately clear
which train hit the other, l)ut
Initial r'i!ports Indicated · the
Stoughton train was In the station
when It was rammed. One of the
trains derailed, an official said.
. The train station was fllled
with heavy smoke and emergency workers were evacuating
commuters while they worked to
extracate those Injured from the
trains. Authorities were unable
to give Immediate comment.

CUP'N
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TODAY!

Cllrln•• s..... r

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Skim Milk

independently of Cranston · In Industry.
.many key actions rei a ting to
An S&amp;L regulator, W!lllam
mack, told the committee last
Keatln~ and Lincoln despite. In
some cases, claiming to regula· . week that a May 1988 phone call
tors her actions · reflected the from Jordan to two bank board
expressed "concern" of her boss. officials helped produce favora· Just four days after Cranston ble treatment for Lincoln, which
participated In an April 9, 1987, failed In Apr!l 1%9, costing
meeting with regulators exam- taxpayers some $2 b!lllon to bail
log Lincoln, Jordan said she flew · out.
to the Phoenix headquarters of
Under questioning from CranLincoln's parent company,
ston's
lawyer, Wllllam Taylor,
stayed three days at Keating's
Jordan
denied the call was
expense, met with Keating and
made a speech to ·company designed to seek favors . for
employees about the S&amp;L Indus- Lincoln. She. also said that and
try. She testified Cranston had no other calls to bank board officials
came without the knowledge of
knowledge of her trip.
Cranston.
She also said she made several
"I don't 'routinely ask Senator
telephone calls to officials of the
Home Loan Bank Board, then the Cranston to approve my calls,''
she said .
agency that regulated the S&amp;L

• I

•

Kroger

from Kuwait.
According · to State Department figures, 2,520 American
citizens were evacuated on u.S.
chartered flights. Another 200
Americans escaped from Iraq
and another 600 made their way
Into Saudi Arabia across the
Kuwaiti desert.
'In all the confusion, the State
Department ·was given the
· names of about 30 people by
· friends or realtlves, but It now
. appears those ~ people had
never been hostages .
Just In case, the Voice of
America Is broadcasting the
names.of the 30, asking them to
· show 'up at Kuwait's airport
Thu~day for the fln.al flight out.
Spokesman Richard Boucher
said, "We want to be sure we're
going through every means posslble to ensure that all American
citizens In Kuwait are accounted
for ."
He said, "Maintaining accu,
rate . accounting under these
circumstances has been Jmpossl·
ble. However, we believe that all
Americans who have desired
contact with an American offlclal have found ways to get In
touch."

Cranston aide denies pressuring
'
regulators; says he was unaware

WHITE

CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
English Roast

but no
The crash occurred shortly
after 8: 24 a.m. between two
commuter trains, one original·

•

·
•

----

.&lt;

'

:Many U S ·passport holders ktl!:~lesw!~~e ;:~r~~d:.remain behm·d by '·h. eir choice ~~.:~~n~~~~~~~~~~~~h:a~~er

Kroger
Cheese

DAIRY CASE"

.Bush will push to limit terms: Sununu

Commuter trains
rams another,
injuring dozens

•.except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advertised item. w.c
offer vou ybur choice of a comparable item. when avaitab.,,
reflecting the same savings or a.raincheck which Will entitle you to purchase the advertised
item at .the advertised price within 30 days . Oryly one vendor coupon will be.ac!=epted per
item purchased.

.

The announcement comes as
WASHINGTON (UPI) -White for reforms in campaign flnanc·
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pen- been called up. If the entire Shield costs.
Bus
h Is preparing his re-election
lng,
and
he
will
press
for
a
tagop accountants are scram- authorized number were .called
So far , he said, the Pentagon House chief of staff John Sununu term-limitation amendment that campaign and while there apbllng to figure the cost. of liP- and no more- their payroll has been able to avoid hitting that says President Bush will push for
Operation Desert Shield so Con- costs alone as active duty~rson· mark by transferring money a constitutional amendment to deals with the problems asso- pears to be growing sentiment
around the country to ltmlt the
ciated with perpetuating the life
gress can work on a special nel would be about $4.5 billion.
from other accounts to cover limit the terms of members of of those who are elected. to terms of elected officials. Tl:e
Congress.
·
· request for moneY.- some guess
Meanwhile, Williams reported
Desert Shield expenses.
Sununu discussed the presi- govern people- the public life of proposition Is strongly opposed
$30 billion or more - when It that Iraqi forces In the Kuwaiti
Allies have promised about
returns next year. ·
theater now number more than $6.5 billion In contributions In dent's agenda Tuesday during a those who a re elected to govern by members of Congress, IncludIng Bush's fellow Republicans .
speech at a National Press Club people."
' Pentagon spokesman Pete Wll· 500,000, upabout50,000in the pas( cash and of goods and services,
Sununu
said,
"The
reality
that
State lawmakers are not
luncheon.
llams said Tuesday the various · few weeks. More than half the the largest being Kuwait's
Incumbency
breeds
a
very
d!!!erpleased
with the Idea either.
· "Certainly there ought to be a
brancl!es of the armed services forces are In Kuwait Itself.
contrlbu tlon. ·
ent
attitude
Is
now
sensed
by
the
Most
proponents of such a
are calculating what they think a
And the number of U.S. person-' · The United Arab Emirates has change In some of the fundamenpubll~
and
I
think
if.
you
take
a
.
proposal
are seeking to limit
full year-of the operation will cost nel In the region was raised by at put up$280mllllon, lncludlng$250 tal ways .we govern ourselves,"
.
look
at
what
was
Intended
as
a
terms to 12 years, that Is,. six
and forwarding those estimates
least 10,000 since last Thursday, million In cash, against a prom· · Sununu said. "To some exten.t,
.
structure
by
t)lose
that
founded
·
terms lor members of the House
the
budget
agreement
did
a
lot
of
to the. agency 's comptroller.' But to more than 260,000. '
lse to provide $1 billion In
this
country,
you'll
see
we've
and
two terms for senators.
that,
but
I
think
It
Is
clear
to
most
he said there Is no firm guess yet ·
The forces of other allles II\ the · calendar 1990. South Korea has
moved
a
great
distance
frorrt
it."
Bush
has previously said he
of
the
politicians
In
Washington
. within the building on what the region, Including Saudi Arabia, promised about $95 million and
Sununu
's
comment
Tuesday
supports
Um!t!ng lawmakers•
that
there
Is
a
great
deal
of
figures may add to.
are now estimated at more than so far .delivered about $4 million.
was
the
fir
st
public
indication
terms,
just
as the terms of ,the
Published 4l&amp;tlmates range 220,000, putting the tptal allied
Germany has put up $272 dissatisfaction by the American that the White House plans to president and many guvernors
publiC
In
this
area.
from S30 billion to $39 billion.
force at ··at least 480,000, with mUllen In cash and $65 mJIIIon In
"And the president W!Jl COO· work to keep the Issue alive and are already limited.
.The amount that the operation . perhaps another 150,000 ·u.S. an In-kind contribution agalnsi a
VIce President Dan Quayle
·wtll cost, exclusive of any com-' · forces due to pour In before the promise to put up a total of $1.5 tlnue to press !or reforms such as even draw more attention to!tas
campaigned'
heav!ly on the ls~ue
the
president
mounts
b!s
cama line-Item veto," Sununu said,
bat costs, will to some extent be Jan. 15 deadllne for military billion.
during
t)le
midterm
elections.
paign
for
re-election.
offset by the cash and In-kind action set by the United Nations, . Japan has promised about $2 adding that Bush also "will press
contributions being made by
Williams said that when the · billion In help and has so far
several nations, Including the Pentagon seeks Its supplemental provided $376 million In cash and
$2.5 billion In cash that the exiled. spending bllf shortly after ·the $50 million In goods and services.
Kuwatl government ht~s contrlb- regular budget Is due In FebruIn Saudi Arabia , he said, that
uted. Saudi Arabia also has ary It will also seek to change a government Is providing food ,
contributed nearly $1 billion In statute passed In the closing days fuel, water and Internal transpor:
cash and goods and s.ervlces.
of the last Congress limiting the · tatlon to U.S. forces, along with
BOSTON (UPI) - A commuA major component of · the Pentagon to being able to spend areas· for base camps. ·
ter
train rammed Into another
estimate will have lobe the costs only $1 billion In the current
In Boston's Back Bay rail
one
;9f activating National Guard and fiscal year from the Defense
He said the United States
station
during rush hour Wednes;reserve units. So far nearly Cooperation Account, the potlnto "probably wlll" start asking
day
morning,
Injuring dozens of
·~22,000 of the authorized 188,000
Which allied contributions are aJUes for additional financial
passengers
some seriously.
:reservists and guardsmen have tossed to help defray Desert help In the new year.
Reports said more than 50

PPl:K
ABIJ PlKH!

The FU'SI · Soulhem Baptist
Church .in Pomeroy will have ·a live
nativity scene on Dec. 21 from 6:30
· to 8:30 p.m. on the stage in the
Pomeroy·parking loL

. The Daily Sentinal Page 11·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

n..w~~oe

,.,.......,.lOr .. ....,.

plriad.

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

290
North

Second

filii

CHitiSTMAI HOUitl
1:30 A.M. til P.M.
MONDAY THitU SATURDAY

Mldtlllport

••

,,

�:Paga

1 2-The Daily Sentinel

Crews search
-for dead in

·'Quote of the dny
'

Cecil Whaley of the Tennessee
Emergency Management
: AJency on the chain-reaction
·crash of 70 cars and trucks that
kUled at least 15 people on
fog-bound Interstate 75 In
'Calhoun.
:. "It's Without question the
worst traffic accident In the
hiB!Dry of Tennessee. lt looks Uke
. a war zone. They just hit each
. other gotng full speed. They were
bltnded by the fog. ·They never
' saw· the accident until it was too

1990

Ohio

;Classified

13

Sentinel-

The

Bu-s iness Services

BULLETIN. BOARD

'

; • The Areo's Number 1 Ma~ketplac~

: intel'State
:. disaster
CALKOI)N, Tenn. (UPI) Rescue teams using crowbars
and hammers pried open
mangled wreckage Wednesday .
'. In the search for more victims of
a 75- vehicle pUeup that kUled at
least 15 peopleand Injured 51 on a
foggy Interstate highway.
Citizens In surrounding communities lined up to donate blood
and offered clothing and lodging
tor survivors of the worst traffic
accident In Tennessee history.
A team from the National
Transportation Safety Board ar·
rived to Investigate the disaster,
which started Tuesday morning
after a bank of tog rose out of the
Hiwassee River and blinded
motorists on Interstate 75 In
southeast Tennessee.
The Rev. Richard Rabideau
was drlvlng his Olds Delta 88
from Reese, Mich., along the
· fog-shrouded roadway when he
heard "a bang and then a boom
and then another boom."
''You could hear coUislon after
coUlston," he said. "People were
screamlng. ltlasted20mlnutes."
The search for victims was
suspended at midnight Tuesday
but resumed at daybreak and
. officials said the death toU could
rise.
''The work crews were beyond
exhaustion.lastnlght," said Cecil
Whaley of the Tennessee Emer·
gency Management Agency.
"But there's still about three
vehicles that are fused together
. and they ,haven't gotten to the
bottom of It yet. There still may
be one or two dead In that
wreckage.
"They're using 'Jaws of Life'
and crowbars and hammers.
They're trying to pick It apart
rather than tear It apart," he
said. ·' 'This Is without question
the worst traffic accident In
: Tennessee history, both In terms
: or loss of life and In terms of the
number of vehicles Involved." ·
- A tractor-trailer rtg jackknifed
to start the chain-reaction colll·
slons, and most of the 74 other
• cars and trucks ran full-speed
: Into the fog bank, officials said.
• Ten trucks burst lntD flames and
: smashed vehicles stretched for
: nearly 3 mUes. ·
• "You couldn't see a thing, the
fog was so thick." said Bob
Turnbull of Hamilton, Ohio,
whose Lincoln was dented In the
. wreck. "All you knew was by
· what you kept hearing. Bang, ·
: bang, bang. Explosions and
. collisions kept ringing through
· the air."
Trucker Riley McSpadden of
· Chlcamailga, Ga., and his
· partner were heading to Dai!Dn,
: Ga., with a load of carpet yarn.
;McSpadden, 31, sleeping In the
• cab while his partner drove, said
: he was awakened by cries · for
: help.
"I j~mped out and went to the
, truck In front of us and saw that
• the guy was pinned In by the
: steering wheel," he said. ''The
: i!!Slde of the cab was already on
fire. I just told him, 'Bud, there's
no way lean help you.' And I just
. shut the door."
· • Within seconds, McSpadden
said, fire engulfed the man and
his truck.
• McSpadden said he, k~pt hear·
; IIIII crashes and ex ploslons as
·inore vehicles plowed Into the
massive wreck. He said he ran
toward an embankment to get
away from all the fire.
~·I saw a woman who looked
dead on the side of the road, and I
•· managed to pull her away from
~ the fire before It got too hot," he
said.
... · Fog from the Hiwassee River
has caused wrecks In the past on
the stretch oflnterstate, the main
route between Knoxville and
Chattanooga, and the state had
erected warning signs and r;efiectors, state Safety Department
. spokeswoman Sue Allison said.
"This Is at least the fifth
mul!l-car pileup we've had on
this s.tretch of road since the
Interstate opened In the early
' 1970s," said Calhoun Fire Chief
Gary Knight.

December 1

Wedneldey, December 12. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

'

'

·,
Cl.assified pa~es ,cot·er the
' . fo,lltJlring telephonp exchan~es ...

STORE HOURS
Monday tbru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

'., ,

G111i1 County

1

ANI Code 614
44$ - Gall ip~••

3&amp;7- cn.hitt
388-Vintoil

:~
•

298 SECOND ST.

246- R!O Grande

26:6-Guwn Di11
&amp;43 - -"~n• •

•
~:

379-W•Inot

·.'

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., DEC. 9, THRU SAT., DE~. 15, 1990

D•it

Ma1oft co .. wv

' "\••91 Coun1y
Area Cotle 614

Are~

992 - M•ddiiiPOM

Pomerov
885- Ch .. tet

143- Pon'-nd
247 :- Letar:t Falls
84i-R•c:-ne
7•2-AuU•nd

Code 304

675 - PI . Plea.. nt
458 -:- Lton
676-Apple Grove
773 - Mison

I

882 - New 11even
895 - L.ttart

!OS N. Secontl StrMI
IIIIDOlEPOIT, OHIO 4576
Office 614-992-2816
.._ 614-n2-5692

THIS l"xl''
BULLETIN BOARD
S~ACE AVAILABLE I
AT S5.DO .PER DAY. ·.

DOnH S. TU•a, .OlD
HOUIESo\.OTS•FARMS
- •COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGSI
Jt-5·90-lfn

937 - Bi.lffllo

Public Notice

I~=JP~u~b~llc~~~=

Public Notice .

Public Notice

Lota E ' - 111) to a - t -

W.), nlnety, nlno t99) toot to llld lot Ten (1 0) N - thirty1171, lncluolvo, of which tho o point on tho ooutherly line · eight degroos forty mlnuteo
ooid Eoot tN. 38 dog. 40' E.) one
horeln-doocrlbed troct lo 0 of Condor S-t.
hundred nino (1081 foot 't o e
the
following four point •l110 being corner com·
cour•• and dii!Mc ... viz; mon to Lots Ten (10) •nd point on tho line dividing loU
South ••onty·ono dogrooo Eleven 11 1); !Mnco along Ten 11 0) ond El..,on (1 1 J;
two mlnut'" woot (8. 71 . t~o Southerly line of Copdor thence by oold dlvkfing tine
dog. 02' W.), three hundred Stroot, Nonh IOVtn~·flvo elong llna of tract de10rlbed
MOM FARM CITY, INC.,
poregroph,
nv.lvo
end
olx·tontho dogreouen minutooEuiiN . In preceding
ETAL.
(312.1)
loot.
10u1h
eighteen
75
dog.
10'
E.)
of•
hundn.d
North
toundogrooo
five
Cue No. 88-CV-302
minutoo Wall (N . 14 dog.
dogi'MI liftY·oight minutes (100) filet. more or 1811, to
LEGAL NOTICE
E. (8. 18 dog. 18' E.), forty tho piece of beginning.
05' W.l lotty-flvo (45) foot
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
end no tenths, (40.0) foot: PART Ill: ·
to the ploct of beginning .
,
REAL ESTATE
Aloo Including ell trocll ond
Pon of Lot
Ton 11 0)
~
Ao Sheriff
at Meigs . South IOVOnty•f)I'IO dor••·
• County, Ohio, I hereby offer two mlnutoo Woot 1 . 71 bounded arid doacrlbed oo
swltchea.
'
02' W.), one hundred follows:
Said reel 11'1118
Wll 'pw
t lor Ale It 10:00 A.M., on deg.
ptoloed
It
OnoHundrod
Fifty
ond
no
tenths
BEGIN
NINO
ot
o
paint
on
ninety-lour
• Fridoy, Jonuory Jll, 1991,
Thouund ond 00/1 DO Dol·
: A. 0 •• on tM front 1t1p1 of 1194.0) foot, South 1hlrty· Hno of tract, doactlbed In
.•· thti Melgo County Court- olght dogtooa no minutes ptocodlng parogroph, aald Iars ,., &amp;0.000.00) .
Sale of said real eltate to
' houoo. Pomeroy, Ohio, the Welt tS. 38 dog. Oo• W.). point otoo being on lino dl·
be
for not· 1111 then twoono
hundred
(1
00)
filet.
lliding
loto
Ton
(1
0)
and
:: foltowing de~erlbed real et·
more or toaa. to point on tho Eleven (1 1) ond
diotant thiido . (2/3) tho olorouid
~· tate:
eppraiMCI value. Ceah in
, . Tholddnooofuld,...los· dividing lno bet-n Lots South founoon dog'"• ffvtl
' toto is 540 Eolt Moln Street, Ton (10) ond Etevon (11). mlnutoa Ealt (5. 14 Deg. hond on dey of 1011.
Sold oolo lo oubjoct to ap·
uld paint oliO being o 05' E.) nfnoty·nino (98) filet
1 Pomeroy, Ohio. Sold rooloa·
proval by he Common Pie••
Northeasterly
toto 11 more fully doocrlbod comer of property_conveyed from · the
by Tho Now Plttaburgh Coot comer of Lot Ton (1 0) of Court. Meigs County, Ohio.
• oo followo:
Company
toW. 8 . Flnlow ot Which tho herein doacrlbed Jomoo M. Souloby, Shariff
·
: . PARCEL 1:
Molga County. Ohio
, Tnoct 1, belngpertooiLoto dote of Moy 1 1, 192a; troct lo o pan; thence by line Approved:
thence
olong
·
10fd
dlv,..lng
through
Aid
Lot
Ton
(10),
' No. 10. 11. 12, 13, 14, 15,
I. Ce,.,n Crow. Attorney
' 18. ond 17 In Aid Vllloge, line, Nonh Founeon dogrooo South twenty-olx dogrooo lor
Plolntlll, Bonk One,
Welt
(N.
14
flvo
mlnutoo
Woot
{S.
21
live
.minuteo
~ loe~~ted blltween
Condor
At~ono. N.A.
dog. 06' W.), olght.en and dog, 01' W.jobcty end o·ovon·
' ond Mofn atroeta In tho VII· throo-tentho
(12) 12. 19.28 3tc
(18.3) loot too tonthall0.7) foot, thonco by
: loge of Pomeroy, end do·
comer
of
troct,
doacribod
hi
a
tine
curving
to
1ho
right.
, ocrlbod eo tollowa:
Public Notice
1 Boalnnlng It tho lower In· following paragroph. Nonh hovlng o radlua at three
(351)
•; teriiCtion. comer of Cherry fourteen dogreoo tlvo ml· hundNd flfty·ono
NOTICE OF
:. Stroot ond Moln StrMt; nutoo (N. 14 dog. 05' W.). foot, one hundred (100)
APPOINTMENT
,. thonoo with Moln Stroot lortv·llvo ond no tontho loot. more or looo. to o point
OF FIDUCIARY
I, 70 clog. 11' Welt (45.0) leot to 1 paint on 10ld In tho N0tthorly line of Mofn
ooid point being dllt·
OnD........,10,1990,1n1ho
' 374.7 1eot to o tum; thiii!Ct dividing line, Mid i&gt;otnt otoo
Molgo County Pro- Cour:t.
: South 75 dog. 10' Welt being o corner at other prop- ont not1h -ontv.flvo doCooe No. 28827, Doa* Bogeny conve;oct by uld Tho - - mfnuloe &amp;ot (N. 711
I 198.1 feot tO I otolco 5.9
N- Pittlbu'llh Coal Com· dog. 10' i.) nine ond alx·
8. R. 338,
Ohio,
:ft fMt IOUthWftt of corner of pony
to uld Flntaw ond the twrtho (9.8) foot from tho 41771, eppa- Acf..
,· Lot No. 1 0; 1honce north 18
Northerly corner of troct de· Soumweot comer olllld LOt mlnfoll8trlx ol 1ho of
,. dog. 08' WHI 40.4 foot to I
ocribod , In following poro- Number ton (10); thOft!HI
Donlold o. Dougloa.
•• otolco thonco nonh 31 dog. groph; 1henco along uld dl· olong tho noc1herf¥ lne of loto
of 23950 Hill IMio, Ro·
; oo·
108.&amp; teot to • vidlng tlno cine.
Melga County. Ohio
Loto
.Moln
Norlh
~
north 71
, ltoko; thence
' dog. 02' lilt 1 84 felt to • Ten (10) ondEioven (11)ond flvo dog.-..., m1nutoo Eoat 46771 .
along Hid Flnlew, north (N. 75 dog. 10' E.) thirtyRoben E. Buck,
. : ltoki; .t hence north-1 8 dog. fourteen
digroeo flve mi/ thrw end luur-tontho (33.4)
Probett Judge
, s a • - 40 felt too otoko; nutoo Welt
(N
.
14
dog.
05'
foot;
thence
by ollnothrougll
Lone
K.
NooMiniad,
Clerk
· thence north 71 dog. 02;
(12) 12, 19. 28 . 3tc
: uot312.81eotto o atokoln
. tho w• line of Ch•rv
54 Miscellaneous
B
Public 5ale
• Stroot, thence oouth 7 dog.
· · Merchandise
51' Ult 111.7- to tho
&amp; Auction
pi- of beginning, contoln•
•lng 1.89 ......
Diatatic
Candy ................
lb.
' Aleo oil tho rfvtlr tanding
,lying In front of Loto Noo.
Cinnamon. Cherry, Strawberry, Orang!! •.
. 12. 13,14, 15, 18, 171ntho
Buneracotch, Mixed Flavoring.
VII' - of Pomeroy. Molga
Counw. Ohio; aubjoat ho·
w - . to ell ~ghto thoreln
Across from Western
at, ond control thoreol by,
. 'l'hoG.-t·UU.CooiMining
" Auto in Middleport
Compony, dotod Juno 1,
Colledors Items
1920, ond recorclld In Vo·
lumo 18, Pogo 331 to 341.
Small Antiques
of the U•u Recorda . of
ladies Diamond Rings
Molgo County, Ohio .
PARCEL II:
MadiSOII Williams,
lb.
Pert of
Lota numbered
Auctionoer
E - (111. Twelve · (12),
lb.
Lie. No. 20691
Thl-. 113!. Fou.-. (1 4),
·Fifteen (15). S ' - 1111. ond
s.v.nt... (1 bound. . •nd
Fi~rs
lb.
- - • f&lt;lttowc BEGIN·
NtNG ot tho N--com•
lb.
at Lot ..... - . 1171 .
tho Soulh..ty.,. af·Condor
lb.

pe"·

••

. $149
1/4 Pork L01en ••••••••.
. .
CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
Rump Roast ••• ~.l~•• $219
LB. ·

U.S~D.A.

$ 99
Round Steak ••••.• !~ 2
THORN. APPLE VALLEY
$ 29
Boneless Ham ••.••• .2
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BOTTOM

LB.

·9(
3
Leg Quarters •.•• ~~ ••.

CHICKEN

CHICKEN

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Whole Fryers •.••i!•• S9
FlAVORITE GRADE A -

(

$

.

s-.

R-.

d"""'"""

••t

s-.

9
Cheese •••.•••..•••..• ~·~. 18

n.

·"tine
- .oflChlny
nt""'
•
-_......,
thence·
· o~angchotry

•--s.

_, dogrwollftyoono mlnutlo
Eoot tS. 07 dog. 51' E.llhlrtv
ond--(30.3) - t o
• point lloid point l!oinD ,.,.
No""- at I tnct
ctmolnlng 1.89 convwyod
A. w.
Eoteto
to tho M.rdn
~ell
C o - by doed Oc·
14, 1 920; thence olong
loid property . ond through

t1

RED EMPEROR

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Grapes •••••••••••••••••• 69&lt;
LB.

FLAVORITE

$169
2. /o Milk ••••••••••••••
0

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GALLON

Large Eggs·~····'='!"••• 19&lt;

v-

w

card of Tllanka

The Family of .
VIrgil Yarbrough
· Wllhel to extitnd
.our h61rt:felt thenkl
to all fllmily. friend
and neighbors tor
their love. prtly8!'S.
ftDwan. cardt and
food during thfllou
•• of our IOVICI orie.
The f1mlly of ·
Virgil Yarbrough

Tomato Juice .•• :~~!·. 69(
oz.. 99&lt;
Heinz Ketchup ••••••
32

Sugarless Paach Spread ............. 51.65
Sugarless Strawberry Spraad .... $1.65 ··
HOMEMADE CANDIES:
Bon Ions •••••••••••••·................... S3. 75 lb.
Buckeyes.·................................ S4.2 5
Choc. Covered Cherries .......... S3.2 5
READY MADE CANDIES:
lady
........................... s2.95
Opera tremes ........................ S3. 99
(hoc. Covered Raisin$............ S2. 95
.
Choc. Covered
Peanuts.......... 52 •95 lb.
Orange SUces ..............-. .......... s1.1 0 lb. ·
Hard Tac.~............................... s1.55 .lb.
Mellow Creme Santa ............. s1.50 lb.
Yogurt Peanuts ....................... S3.15 lb.
Yogurt Raisins ..;.................... S3.25 lb.
Corn Chex •.••.••.••••••••..•••••••••••• S2.09 lb.
Rice Chex .................... ~........... S2 .19 lb.
Candy Making Supplies &amp; Molds,
Chocolate Mercken &amp; Ambrosia,
Sticks &amp; Molds &amp; ate.

. Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514 EAST

Main .

POMEROY

~
·

· ·

-·

.:...

Real Estate General

.

BRADBURY- Clo11 In~ Small one floor plan home with 3
bedrooms. Approx. '.1 acre wnh garden area, storage buikl·
ing, and nice sitting porches. Newer carpet in some rooms,
and a newer range.
$16,500 .
POMEROY - 5 lots witll a 2 story home. Home has 4 bed·
rooms, dinin&amp; room, and a full basement. Newer gas furnace
and a bi&amp; one car garage.
ASKING $17,900

-

TIDE DETERGENT

late.,

•

136

oz. $6 79

lOX

GoM at Powol's Super Valu
Goell Die. f l'hrv Dec. 15, IHO

6

CHUNK TUNA

·~,~z·2/ Sl

Geotl at Powol's S..• Volu
Goool Die. 9 lhrv Dec. 15, 1990

. FLAYOIITE

NOODLE SOUP

FLAKE COCONUT

IO~~oz.

3f$1

14oz.

2/$1
v•

GeM At ,.....,

. . . Dec. ' .... Dec. 15, '"'
llnlltl"'

'

I

i

s.r

E , MoiroW

POMEROY,O.
. 992·2259
POMEROY - Everything
Goes. all stock &amp; equipment,
building and ground. I dou·
ble hump green house. Ask
for details.
LETART- 7 room house, 3
bedrooms, I bath, carpet
throughout. Large kitchen
and patio. Gas heal 2 car
garage. $19,900.00.
POMEROY- 2 loiS Mlh pos~bilities' Se;tic and elec.
availoble. LDts ol shade lrees.

$3,000.00.

IIIDDLEPORT- 6.~ beaut~
ful secluded country acres
close to town, 3 bedroom mobile home
Small bam.

$15,900.00.

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO '
OFFICE 992·2886/HOME 992-6892
DOTTIE S. TURNER,. JJROKER

20

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

AU MAlES
Bring It In Or
.Pick Up.

BISSELL .-!
SIDING CO.-:

BISSELLBUILDERS ·.
I

KErt'S APPUANCE
. SERVICE

NowH-IIo!llt
"Free Estimates"

992 -5335 ... 9,15·3561
Aa01 f,_ Post Olflco
21

PH. 949'-2801
or Res. 949-2860

~
SHRUB TREE

NO SUNDAT

CUSTOM BUILT . .
HOMES &amp; GARAGEI
"At ltasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
·
·•
.

or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SU~DAY

~~:=::::::::::~~==;
STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742-2421

2 1/1

MI. ouhide
RutlatMI an New
lina Rd.
HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday
10amto6pm
We Are A Deer
Checking Station.

11·21·9·1 mo.

CAIN'S

Of Ml••l•port
UPHOLSTERY

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
36 Yean Experleace

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

614-949-2734
or

614-949-2635
· 11·23-10.1 mo.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addition•

- Gutter Work
-Eioctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
-Concrete Work
-Roofing
- Interior • Exterior
P•intlng

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy; Ohio
.

11 / 14/ tfn

PlUMBING &amp;
Ntw Locationr
161 North Second
~loporl, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SER~ICE
Filhing Suppli•

Pho,._a
Hera

614·991-2321
t 13 North Second

PIIINE

We Soy What We Do.
We Do Whet We Say

5 Ft. to 12Ft.

'10

and up
FRESH CUT DAILY
White &amp;
Scotch Pine

BOB SNOWDEN
Main St., Rutland

GUN SHOOT

USED APPUANCES
.,0 DAY W-'IIINTY

RACINE
"FIRE DEPT.

911 Hysell St.
Mldtleport, Oh.

992-2034

1100 Remington
Slug Guns
87Q Remington
Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns
,

11-13-1 mo.

Reefele for
Ckrllfllllt Cuhl

. Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

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

Call 992·5114
Far Current Prices
OPEN I DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY, OH . LOCATION
10 AM·5 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
We Will Clooo At Alben
Dec. 24 to Jon. 2 For
Chrlltmaa Vacation

Call 698·6185
For Current Prices

11·30-90·1 m'o.

*FIREWOOD .

BILL SLACK

992-.2269 .

Chokt

12 Gauge ~~~~Only

USm RAILROAD 11ES

S!ri&lt;lly I

&amp;-12-90

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE

HILL'S DEER
CUTTING

White &amp;
Scotch Pine

CUTTING.
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

6Ft. ond Up
Well Shelted, Grown
on the .Weber Farm In

Rutland

sn. s2o
READY DEC. 2nd

949-2206

742-2143

lt-26-'90'1 nio.

11·6· 90·1 mo.

SERVICE .

We can repair cind re·
~· rod1aton · and

heater caru. We can
also ocid boil ond rad
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks,

PA1' HILL FORD

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC.
•ON -SITE SERVICE/ R EPA lit
'CUSTOM PROGRAMMINCi
"SA I.ES
'ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

.IIANGES-Gas·Eiee.-1125 up
FREEZER5-1125 up
lltCRD OVENS.....$79 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 « PIS-3561
Across ;,_ Post Office

JPI/ING VAJ.U'Y I'JIOFESSIONIIL BI.JILDINC
J06 jACKSON !'IKE · SUITE ZOJ
CAWI'OLIS, OHIO 4J6JI

11·29-1 mo. pd.

CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMO

REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

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

WASHERS.....$100 up
DRYEI5-$69 up
· IEFRIGERATORS.....$100 up

. 742-3051

MOVING SALE

&amp;
TRIM 9nd

992·2198
Middleport,

11·14·U ...

CHRISTMAS
' TREES

We

(614) 446-6000

RAPE- ROBBERY -- MURDER

'J&amp;L

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows

•Roofing
•I nsu lation

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 742-2251
639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

11 / 14/ tfn

70% OF VIOLENT CRIMES ARE COMMITTED
IN AREAS WHERE VICTIMS ARE LIKELY TO
HAVE KEY CHAINS IN HAND

DON'T BE NEXT!
Protect your•elf 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 Stnd Check or Money Ordlr
For $19.95 To:

p, 0.

SEO SECURin
Bo•

PROD_U~~

190, Pomeroy, .

DISIGID
CIITIIALLY BElTED BOllES

Announcements

oNosmoko.-"wood'""'insido"""".

3 Announcements

of-iNII.Wlltf' .br houset1clfd. 1.1118

Chrtotm.,. Solurday Doc.
8th, M 10 l .m. IO I p.m. II lhl
home ol Ga~~~ldlne Cltl8nclt E.

_...., oflutn0141101&amp;f&lt;hdiamo.. wood
-.

-Bums 14110 30-llch lorG WOO!!
.U101 JOIK- conral ducltystem
-Maybe locolod ti).UIOf..lflom ,._ ltoolse
-lloolco-

LOAD EVERY 12 HOUIIS

CALL

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
2110HUnlngWI ....... (HM, WVISI02

""-1304)511-2255

M1ln Strwl Recln~. OH •

Gold Cndft C1rd, cah ach•a
program. VJa/11..._ card gu.r.
No securitY dopolft. 1-too 441

0040, $25. leo.

Homo Docoroting, Opon Houio!'
Friday &amp; Solurdoy, Doc. 7 I 11 !'!1
a.m. .. 9 p.m. GIOrio Olllr, 31...
SR. 325 U.ngavllo, 1 1 4 - No Hunting or "-'riD clOy
or night on Roymond 9mfth
proporty. Vlolol""' will Ill
prosecuted.

4

Giveaway

10 - k old I"'PPY, pari Doboro
m~'1t_

part G!llt Dor)l. FM111o.

. 8111VJII2-2714.

'

7 pupploo IO giVMWIV to pel

Aa

ledyta

u ......, Elft?

But hlr blnl*y'l not on

Chrl•..-

h'ton o-nth Twllft.

~.....

STARICIST-OIL or WATE~

J&amp;R AUCnON
DECEMBER14
6:30

POMEROY - 4 Un~ Apart·
ment buikling in Fllmeflll'. Potential Morithly gross income
$400.00. WANT $17,500.00.

TUPPEIS PlAINS- Limbtr~tr Rldlt- Newer ranch type
home with6 bedrooms, family room, 2 kitchens, dining area,
2 car garage, and anicebigl.851crelot Huullellitedish,
screened-in porch. atrium door, 3sets ol sliding doors, and a
. front dec~ MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT TO SEE TODAY.

$61,100

.,._lllllelnhlrfarllel

BLEACH, ltEGIJI,AR, UNSCENTED

992·6910
Wo Aaopt
Food Stamps

~

APPLE, PEACH, CHERRY
oz.
Banquet Pies ••••••••
RHODES FROZEN
$ . ,. ·
49
White Bread .!!~A!~:. 1

suo

Happy~a

,6

GRADE A

HUNT'S

S3.75

Suga.t.ss kk Raspberry Spread

Turkeys ••••••••••••• ~••• 69&lt;
COLBY LONGHORN

t

SorbH

10-22 LB. AVG.

OVEN IEPAII

•

667 Coolwill!

.• IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
· • SANK ONE.
ATHENS. N.A.
Plaintiff

SLICED

•VINYL SIDING
•
•ALUMINUM StD.ING
•BLOWN IN
tNS\JlATION

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

tonv·lll-

lut dllt'1 not Ndy old

"you hiJIIIIIIIo ... - ·

No 0111 ,.uv llnowl tor
' 11119

c.-•-ldnev•

till
luttong
· - · told h•

....

RUTlAND - DtDOI St11tt - A llrge lot with 1 new sec·
ti011al that is 28x52. Really beautiful with cathedral ceilinp,
Skylight bay window 1 urden bath tub. 3 bedrooms, dining
room, and 2. baths. Tne khdlen has rroraeous 01k cabinets.

.

$46,900

TUPPEIS PlAINS - ~ Adtlltlon - I story ranch
wtth 3 bedrooms. equippllll kftchen, garden area and IJI·
prox. IIICfl of land. _ • .
· .
$12,000

TUPPERS PlAINS -llort1111
Addhion- 3 to 4 bedroom
'"nch in excellent condition
on a large I acre lot Alarge
lamily room makes living here
a joy. Electric 88. heat plus
woodburner. large storage
shed. Call for ap(!lintment.

$41,000.00.
POMEROY - New wiring.
new plumbing. new drywall,
new roo!
are already
completed in th~ 4 room
horne with 2 bedrooms. Could
have 3 to 4 room! upstair~
full basement Great lor aren·
tal. $7,000.00.

WE .ED LISTIIIIII
MAE HUPP --.. 949·2257
JWIIIUWII..:. 949-2660
JO 1111---·-- 915-4466
OffKf-·-···-· "2·2259

OUR IALEI VOLUME
HAS BEEN GOOD AND
WE STILL HAVE eUY·
lila LOOIUNO POll
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT T J
IIU. CALL CLELAND
REALTY TODAY AND
USTWITH ueUWISEII·
VICE OUII LIITINGaltl

Bl $SELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Hames
' •Garages
•Complete
· R.etwodeling
Stop &amp; CDtllpcire
FrH Ettltwatu·

985-4473
667-6179

horn., mlxtd brMd. 114=256.
834a.

7 woolc old pan kogll pup.
plln, 304-1'11-1381.
Block dog pan Chllolohuo, part
Terrier, hu
1nd epapcl.

•hell•

C.llaftar 3p.m. 114 441 IDI1.

Dog, hM to o good homo. Port ·
gorman ahaphiint, collta I pit
IHII. I -ko old. •-W421.

F-11 · A•trollon Blue - ·

apoyod. tlooglo pup. Bath good homo. 304-17W3a PI

304..154t25.
Fr11 lo good homo, 3 hllf bor·
dor . col~, -~po, 2 - . . 1
-.11'14443-l!IU
.

o - artHicol Chrlot- wfth . _ trltnmlnga, 304-1714464.
•

=

=::::..::
l~C:: .f.:nct*•.
• :
on
-.-3
121Zt1t.0.114 ltl
Robblt- - I Md.

old,

oldTV'o.--.
Allblsft81ar pl!ta.l14 -

8

lnlo '

LDit a Found

·'

�December 12, 1990

Sentinal

'-"• 14-The
Yard

7

LAH-· A·lH\ r

44

5I

Aplrtmanl

Go9ds

1or Rent

GIIUipOIII
&amp; VIcinity

~

-K'a::=

,F.....-=-·
_____....._,.. ......

Pomeroy,
MkldlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

~.

.......

......,_tale,Dtc.8
10 . . .....
Mon._
....,_
. ld
......

Aulom1ttc

!lrJet,

10'L'::;,;!t:"·
WMMr

pold,l

I

nod 10

•

........ tor

...,_ Rd. PL P I -, WV
oaM 304-475-MSO.
•

::f

·~154~

•

~=-~t~gne

a

World Today
ill) Our HOUH
6:0$ W, Be¥elly Hillbiiliel
6:3!1 (])II 1!J NBC NighUy N-1

PE66'1 JEAN! WJ.lAT
'IOU DOIN6 1-lERE?

="·~·-~"·­
lor_;.,_.~,=~~

Clnol•• lhrlng. 1 111111

1111111Manor
and

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

,

VI-

z ......

".Just your rer1ular
exp·~r1t1II.CIIIIM-IN·'7717:EOH.
now boold~ •YCIIon•, ••Ft
· 'La
8eoond Floor A
·
~... lllloranco.
ments,
Lie_
l
lell
.
},eave
tlte
K~
, _ _, !!':.""=
VIrginia, ,:~IIIUCIIy, Waat
A - 121011110. pl.. uUIItlto,
CHIIIITIIAI AUCTION. s..ndly.
new and improved miracle
~tz.~........ no ,....,
D i l l - t 11 !:GO p.m.,
Sf.llff f.O a&lt;IVf'f"ti."'l.fll1."
Nice 1 bodroom -'"*"-law
lloi-11 Commun11J lulldlnt.
"
("
uiHHiaa, nltr a IIIah .· :lei,
rlcloe.lruoU:,
oomputon,tr.lna,
camcotdera,
""
Do1111,
lampe, ~=========-r:========~ DIG plua .....--.
.........,11'" 1'1
1
. . _ rodlocontral coro, 3 pc.
NlceiJ' - - mo1o11a 11a1nai I

l!lJ Ill Andy Griffith

@ Spol'lolook
6:35 (]) Andy, OrtHith ·
7:110 (]) II ® I!J Wheal of •
Fortune Q
·CD I Dream of Jeannie
(j) ~
lnaict, Edltlot! r:;i
CZl (!) MacNeil Lehrer
NawoHour
l!lJ CD Night Coull Q
I!J Ill Current Affair Q
.OJ! MacOyver A bounty aids
Mac In saving a prettv
Bula~ian scientist. (R) Q
@
lloCentar
Moneyllne
.
Ill) Scarecrow and Mra. King

m::

mlnoro,

X-Maa

=:-:..:a.."rd ~

ISO A l l - - -217-:1151.

9

--u.
nfl.

can Marc 8141182·

5117.
- t d lo Buy: Stonollnt Tim·
. llor, _.1 or large ac-114tiiT-7111, aftor 7 p.m.
Wollltd by collector: iort)la
clolle end 01 Jail dolle, 1M011711'o, ololha and acc-rt••·
Top.,.- pald!i'30447U240.

Wo- To Buy: Jl.iilk Autoa

or

will

without

moooro.

IMfY u..ly. IM 381 13"3.

Cooll

Employment Serv1ces
Help wanted

11

36

Business
Training
How!IISoutlltutom

Rotroln
a - Collaga,
Piau Cooll Todoi• 11

s:l41 V.ll~
••17

R.,Ioi-lon ..&amp;o$.t2llla:·

Wsntl&lt;lto Buy

Lunchlo1110..1110'o . .111 domo topa
or
Aloo vlnylo, No
1NO'a or plutlc. Bolli• not

r

14

$350..GIWDIY Pracrnlng Phan1
·Onion I Ptoplo Coo II You. No Ex·
- - _ _ ,.,_ 1415·733llall2 ltlll. P·Zt31B (rolundobloj

140 ~ READ Boa&lt;S' AND

TV liCRIPTS. ALL OUT SIMPLE
"UKEIDON'T LIKE" FORM.
EASYI FUN, RELAXING AT
HOME, BEACH, VACATIONS.
GUARANTEED
PAYCHECK.
FREE. 24 HOUR RECORDING.

101-m-2115 EXT. PTEB.

---·21141.

AVON • All a._, Cooll Marilyn
Aaernbla producbl •t hom•

•m up to 1400 weekly, no u ·

-.~. MIY work. For more
lnlormallon call . 1·504-863-8194
Ext. 1727.
ATTENTION POIIEROYI
'POSTAL .JOas•

18

Wantl&lt;lto

_.,.,

lnllnt Coiro: "" " - 11 yoar
··~i
Havt
tducotlon on ohllil•ro. w..totd
wHh lnlanta. 441 e,ruco Stroot
Ext, Dooomt.... Oaillpollt .....
114-441-1104.
Magic y.,. Day Cooro Conter
reaionabllt,
1 1 dablt,
- . q,.IIIY- caro. Mon11ay thru Frldiy, 7:30 till 1:30.
For men lnfDnllltlan or to
Ngittor :104-17HI47.

=·

llcDonlol Culotom aut;;r_;t.
Coottlt and Daor.
•

Mlao Paula'o Day Coiro Coonlor.
Salt,
chlldcaN. 11-F
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. A~ 2-10.
Botore. aftor tchool. lln&gt;t&gt;-lno
WllcorM.I14 441 1224.

•-bla.

tlmblr. Top priooa
paid. IMI3tl7-il11oftor7:00p.m.

Standln~

painting 114-~2·

2328.
W..nl .amtonl: Ia cut an apple

,,.. and box 1.1nder lrH tor

wood In Maaon City, phonol14-

11112·7312.

Will do blby alttlng by hour or
day In your home. Barbara
r,~

..... 304-t'l'l-1224.

Will do baby tlttlnt In my homo
114-1112·221i.
•

$11.41 -114.10 hr. No experitnct

needed. For exam and app11cl·
Uon into., call 1·216-967-1537
ll.m.- 10p.m. 7 a..~.

AVO.N 1 All A11111 ! Shirl1y
Spaars. 304·675-1428. ,
"_O
_M_E_ TV
- PISTS, PC usors
.,..dad. 135,000
potlnllal.
Details. (1) 805·687-6000 Ext. B·
10189.

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING $16,000-$82•000 yaar.
Call 1-805-5&amp;4-1500 ut.GB 168
tor lmmMIItt• rnponM.

INTELLIGENCE

JOBS.

All

bnlnchn. US Custo~l, DEA,

F1nancial
21

Business

I NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
...comrn~ncl• that you do bual·
neu with people you knaw1 1nd
NOT to Mild monty througn the
mall until you hl\'1 lnv11tfgated

the ort.rlng.

1--------31 Homes for Sale

Tt.liUon reimburAment. Credit
Union S.rvlc.. , earing &amp; con·
~ed co-workers li super·
oriiiOfl. You can make a dltftr·
MCI In the livn ol our

Nllrlal'l'la. Apply In person or
coli 11H46-7150, 311 Buck
Rldgo Rd. E.O.E.
~or Nllf'ling

1: Rehablllla·
has lmmedlat•
~Ina tor.r-alal•,.d nun•, &amp;
L.P.N. llrtviOUI llperilrlCI in

Uon

center

linn ca111 perferred.
··
Salory Call
bated
on yaaro
of
LaRue Hill
R,fj~.O .N . IO&lt; lnr.rYiew al
I'Mo'W'i:-610&amp; or tend r•umt to
311111
Aocksorlnao
Rd.,
PoiMirow, Ohto 45781~ MlnorHie•
iinCOilrllltd lo opply. E.O.E.
long

.....,a.nc..

REPOSSESSED HOliES
3br, 1 bath, half acr. MIL 011
Block hawll Road. $500
10 porctnl APR whh appnovoa
ertdM cal 1-800-44Htt0 John

-n,

~-~~~~·~~~~.033~•~·..;:.:~~·~-:::·
ft.

53

4:-::Poot:::=~a::::::i
•• DI:::=:,.,:::a:-:::=-:
" Clltot 2
•

w-

1:00 p.m.
Br._. opiH-Iovtl,
.-y
- - 14211/Jno:, . DapooH NEWLY REMODELED wlh
roqulrtd. SM-1~222.
RENT and o 111PIIIIt to II
2br houMi kitchen w/..ovt &amp; ,..... budaoL 1 - - $138.
.rolrl~or.
•210/mo.
pluo jllua ulllltlta, ·2 '1argo" badulllftloo, dopoalt • rolarancao. 1001111 1111. plua utllllltl. ldlll
no pOlo. 231-- Flrot Avo.l14"" alngla ~~~~-. - 441'41121. .

ArotJqooo Moutola 1op ........ a
......11W11'01113.
Buy fit iloll RIYarlno Antlq..,,
1124 E. llaln
-llT.W.10:00 o.m. to 5:00
I :GO to 1 ;00 p.m.

3

-.

Q

lonol ellalro,_. .h wllfta
AMIFM I trook

pon:olaln

llereo, with etind. 114-2415 1131.

41 Houses for Rent

a

Antiques

Pou;•o" 2 b1 drooen fvlnWIId

7:05 (]) Hoppy Dayo

3 bedroom hom•, Milton Road,
C.mp COnloy, $45,000. Will tolk.
304.&amp;75-1297,

r;:.S:

St-. _...,.

55

Building
Supplies

Qullla

=lng Forto ....... h!th lo.
lnliimiiUon
oaii3JN.a71.4100 - 1711-1411.

.... - anaaood
-lon.
Sond
pholoa
-riDIIon
to
1 Patton. Atilano, Ohio 45701 or

3llr " - atttohtd pngo, on aman - - Ellloloncy oall l14/llll2.ttl7 01 - lor 1 - · 00.._1 2411.
SA 110, corpot, niWiy ...· patlllna, doDoolt •
Pllinltd, avallablo lmmadlatoty, ,......,_,114441
$3111 ..... $100 dopoolt, 514-24454 Mlscallaneous
1114.
,
Th-=ho.ft d11D1n I n - .
Merchandise
4 room houet, ltOYe 1 11n1 ,.
rtla Dd, fuH ....,
rolrlgoralor
lurnlohtd. _ .
IIGIY -.upa. 304RMionlble :wnt, ., 4 441 DPI.
:I'IW7l'l::..;:.:..:;:..:or;.;:I'IIWI1t:.:.:;:=:;::.·- - - · 101200,
35 mm SLR
Clmtnt,
liM,
zoom,
flaM, 22x
andOM
3•
Fumlohtd 4 ""'f1f ....._o on 131 45
Furnished
oon-. caroylnt ..... 304Firot Avtnuo, $1115/mo. plua $100
171-11171.
~~"· 514 4t8 1031, SM-441·
Rooms
~-==:-c-==11-:::Tan=n::I.,-:-::B,-td-:-:,2
Roomo anllable 1ar or 3 con- yoaro old. Atklng $2,800.
ttructlon
workan, 304-1112- .:.e•;.:~41J112.2233.==;;;....-....,.,--:,-Hauoo l noobllo , _ 2 bad'
-;:
Annttron~
· Woodbumor,
room, tumllllld, 1 Ohnd, no 2511.
lloomo for ....... • - 0&lt; month. Wl1urnaco, KH $150. 114-245Ha-, WY. - · - f t l l l l $120'-. Holll. tll'l.
114 U~CS"
~.::....-;-.,-:-:--:---:-Buoguncly I pink lormol - ·
Mlddlapolt. 4 bod,_ - ·
f325 mon1hly .............. 114- Slooplnt- with-... alu 7 ,.... wom, $10, litton
mk:row•!!:r
11112·7714 oftor 7:30pm.
A1oo •.rollor o - . All hook-upa. 114 448 uw5.Meal In one, S121.
Cooll
.... 2:00 ........ :1104-mlloblle homla lor ,.,. In
country IM 441 0101 or 441- 6811, llaton wv.
Clorlotmao t-o $10. Nch. Cut
your own, 1 mile from Union
0711, newly claaarlled.
46 Space for Rent
Chun:h. 304-8112·2583.
Ill. ..., . z ..........
........ ciiiJG, "" poll, Counby . llobllo Homo I'm. ~o a plaotlc oaptlc tonko,
IIMI dtpollt,
31, ol ,_...,_ Ron Evena EnttroriHI, Jack~
:J114.17W111.
~.....-all, parto, · Call aon, OH 1..00-537-41528,
Darll plno hutch S3111. Dloh42 Mobile Homes
wooloor 145. Shtrp C...,l
mlcrownt ITS, commodor. 14.
Merchandise
for Rent

oue.

a

Block, lti1ck, DfDM. winllnllll, .010. Claiocle Win,
toro,
Rio - · OH Coli 24U121.

Pels for Sale ·

o-

ond ......, : . : :
G~AII-AI
lomo
Food Daalor.
Wabb. Call 814 441 Dill.

•

I

ALLEY OOP
~!THEilE

z

~usr

•27&amp;

LITTLE BIT OF
· L.UC!&lt;.. ·-

FIGIJilEO IT WAS!

=,.....,en

NOW,WITI-i A

IT IS ...

AIIOIJT WHERE l

wooded lot Rockapringa, Ohio

614·992·5225 a"er 6pm.

D•linquent

tax

property. Repossessions. Your

area (1) 605-687·6000 El!l. GH·
4562 tor current repo 1111.

For Sale: Starttr Houae as-

sumabla load no doWn ' PlY•
mont . 614-44&amp;-ts?o. .
32

71

___

Autos for Sale

,

51 ·

Household

Goods

For
Salo:
All
hoodwood, lrM dollvory, 1143'111-211111, anytlma.

/

ASH

wat•,

tl'llllh,
.tawe,
refrlgtrator furnished, VInton
..... $1111 ' dopoOH, 114-318-

.....
-r

M'x711:._ _~ _ 1otdroom

GIIUpollo ....... Wator,
-~~~.
pOO
month. g:~.r
itt lroohoclod.
1: m.ranc.
Nqulrtd. M rowavo &amp; otarlo Included. 1141441-02Ge O&lt;l14111t2·
3014.
For rtni or nit, 1f70
mobile ,=:~
roon:a,
.

-- ........... - -

......

Rflnli.

:
1

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

Rt;,tlltrod 22 -

-

.....

... '!.M -lop. -

8:00p.m.

'

'

- plum~
'
a ot!:t::1c.
A
•
""'" 'INGt.:1r
1114-2111-1111.
.
10

- ' : Alrhpo, Dbi/11111 orulll,
o. P.~.l. o14-t112-

'

- ChoooOt, air, ~}JIJIJ mlloo,
- . $1,100; , _ Lollorw,

lllr, IM-441-452T

after2p.m.

Mullcal

1Wo 2br untumlalltd, on 188.

lniiNmanta

304.t7U101.

Ill

Uwuuatlo. 2*, 13.000. Sell or

-1114-2111-12711.

,

Ptllloa

RafaWCI

ill'!t.OI~!' Ita Oldl Dala 'il. Eualllnl
11117.

lot, 304-&amp;75-am

,

........... (

llon'l TV BarviO!'. -'"llzlng
In ZO.nlth ....
ctharoloa

...i:l-;;;..

-:f..

BARNEY
HOW COME YO'RE
NOT GOIN' TO

THAR'S A GOOD
CHANCE I'LL
BE SICK

JU6HAID?

"!'... -plottd- ......

~

arrest during an

......... and~.- :

.

•

Farms tor Sale

e

derstand what to do to make the rei&amp;·
uonshlp work. Mall $2 1o Matchmaker,
P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , DH 44101·
3428.
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jin, 11) Think
BERNICE
twice loday ' belore gel11ng yourself In·
BEDE OSOL vOIVId In &amp;joint vanture with a person
who can aHord to take losses you can't
I! H goes wr011g.
AQUARIUS (Join. 20-Feb. 11) II you are
presently Involved in something where
you feel you need oulslde acMes. II 'S
best to go to morel han just one person
tor counael . $everal heads are better
than one.
PIICII (Fell. »&gt;lerch 20) Today you
are likely lo be extremal)' Imaginative
and have very good ,Ideas, but when It
cornea time to Implement them . you
Dec.
1110 .
mljjht be alftlcled by tha "I'll do II later"
syqdrome. .
A rtae 1n 8181Ut could 118 In lhl offing for
AIUII (-.:It 21•Aprll11) Mlecalc\lla·
you In 1M .,.. tthead- There will be 1mtiona In your,dullngs with others Nrly
portent III!T'IIIII invol..cl to bring thll
In the d4Y c:n bl rectllleclto a conalder·
Qoul, IUCII 11 whet you know lnd who
able degree, Thi"'l won't be like new.
youk-.
'
.
but you won't loaWt too many dents In
IAQIYTAMIII""· ~ 111 Voa- the feniler.
ten~t~y your
TAUIIUS (April zo..Ma}' •1 llnllka yeabut IIIIa mflhl not be 1M ladoy. terday, do not ruth 10 Judgment in aval. VIIW IIIUdOIII ~· ellpedll- uatlng a critical mat1er. In order to
ly ...... IIIOIWI'il-ned· Trying to
mille an accuraii11111811Nftl you need
patCh tip 1 bnlktn - ? Thl Aatro11~ todtiY to weigh_all the altarnatlveo.
Grljlll MIICIImlllar
help YQif to un-

•l' \

1....-nn.

u.

--Ia

lar

12

36

Real Estale
Wantl&lt;l

llui1CI*-...,...,.. .......

SltuMkm
wanted

, _ In "" homo lar 2 of.
' , dlflr
- . -lli'o Prlvolo
...,_c:...,~n.

"I think this kid Wlfttl the other
kind or snow mobile lor Chrlstmul"

investigation .
Newo
,
(j) ()) 1111 Cop Rock Tension
mo1.1nts as accused killer
LaRusso takas the Sland .
Stereo . D
®l Q2J WIOU A man being
i~terviewed by Taylor is
murdered. Stereo. Q
(]]) Q) Star Trek: Tha Next
·oeneratlori
1221· ExpeditiOn Eollh
.CNN Evening Nawo
(Ill 700 Club With Pat

ID

Davia
-Yio
Barvloo, ;
11
... qroalt111111
Rd.......,.
....... ~'!""114-·

Bla 4br Dilullo Farm Homo
bulft far you, 121,111 and up:

worloln~

YOU DON'T LOOK
SICIC TO ME!!

Bapllo 7omk .""""'"" --=~ ..
Co. RDN &amp;VANS INTIR
..llclllon,~........,...., I ~

Now 1tl1 Mor'll mobllo homa I"
Mlddl-. Cooll Tom Andlroon
11411124Miaftor I:OOp.m.

~·

a
a

I '

SCHOOL TODAY,

111r"lnce ,.,.,._ wv ~
~Otllo814 4412414. :
!!ctorY or ...ble 1001 Hlng. ··'

ecMM

-h.

...
- ,........, WMkend
· Exc. niaht•
~ tc.OO an hour llluo fipa.
l&gt;ox Cia 012 clo
Cll"'lloii!"'IMao Dally Trlbuno, 821
!Nn!Aa., Go.,..., OH 41831.

Doogle decides to date a
nursing student. Stereo. Q
® @CD Jake and 1111
Fotmon Evidence arises
which may clear a.convicted
murderer's name . Stereo. Q
(!]Ill) Zoo Life
.
0]1 MOVIE: The LookaUka
(2:00) Stereo.
Naohvllle Now
Lllrry King. Livef
9:30 (l) IJ (!)) Working II Out
Stereo. Q
()) Ct Morriecl People
Problems arise after
Elizabeth gets Allen a_job at
her llw llrm . Stereo. 1;1
1221 U.S, Air Force Top Gun
CompetiUon From Panama
City. Fla. (A)
10:110 (]) G I!J Hunter Hunter is
accused of ·making a false

'

-=r•

bl~llllllar

~d· =l.~owur, M.D•

.... '· .

,•

.I
1111 CIWYitlr L1turon. Auto
lclw'IIIIIUN.Mt¥1Dn ~ ' - PI, Ji8,111, ""'"'!o looothar ConlpiiiJ Mallia. ........ Ul)!
olte. AKC. llny - . baoiillllul

-lonalo, Oalllpotle lnlor·
ol Holiday Inn Tuaaday, 14&gt;111 1180 Saville 2br al
_..,11th, 1~. m. DOc eteclr~ wnh '-rg• khchtn, CA
1Zih, la.m.-12:30p.m., Cooll 1ar underpinning, &amp;1~251-1011.
'
apr Julmeut, Wlltern lhclcal
1DI1 Llbarly Mobllo Homo on 2
...... .,. . . . 13•.
Lind. 304-ilt3ol323.
RN'a ' LPN'o wHh hoopltol ax·
parlonco for alldftlng &amp;
iwvlew In Pomeroy, login area.
No -~~~~~~~ ior NolldOp. Sand
_,.. J. BaUomy• 428 Chll· 11117 . F,.,mont 14&gt;111, 2+2
IIDIII.he III'Wit, ztult• 803, $1,111;
1112
Doplax
OH 45682.
APIIImonto, 14lll8, -lrlc
Si,lll; 1111111 Chovy Cuotomizid
Van, lo,lll. 114-446-11812.

_._, Poll-lima

WHAT~

1
•·
•
•

,,... ..lmat...

~~-

OM

IASF•NT
WATERPROOI'ING
tllotimo guarontoa. ~I .....,nota luriololotd.
call collect ,..
114-Z37-0481, 1lay or night.
-nwnl Wot-

u-111on11

oftar

Ono Zbr,

11-\A,N

Improvements

ChlmC!:f

.:.·· 2

e;~:TTER

Home

- . . .t d . - - 114 2111117.

33

'/

BETTER.

Serv1ces

Qalllpollo

••n

a

Fo.ttr'a Uoble
P.rk. 114448-180Zor441-1110.
·
I
Nnt,
araa,

Farry, alttlng on nice half acr1

Ballty.
RN'o Pllnlow, LPN'o $21/hour. 1975 Bay View 12x80, Oat, full)'
•..tanemnte In c.ntral &amp; luml•hed, good cond. First
Soutloom Ohio. ICU, otop down, $5000 t1kn tt, c1n be
at
mod • 111111 • nurolnt homao, Shtato Rd. Dol!lor 1114·1112·2883.

OLD

HMOM'ff _,

oo-.m~~~,ChlnoM ..........

1974 ShuHz 14x70, 304-675-7m
or 67! ~1133.

AIJ

AJI&amp;fT

. CA'TtHOF

14x70 mobtlt home, exc cond

Road,

Llk£

FI'5H $101&lt;!-r' lD ME.

ASk AaVT OVR

Mobile Homes

Pl)'mal

SOUAJDS

' /

Fl.-

for Sale
oil

There Really l1 a
Sonta Cleuo Questions about
reindeer, fat men lilting Into
chimneys. and Santa's
dlllerenl names are '
answered in lhis special to
change the minds ol all
doupters. (1 :00) .
@CD 48 Houra Dan Rather
- searches for small-town
.America in Texas. Stereo. Q
0]1 Murder, She Wroll
!2!1 Juot For· Liougho With
Harry Ancloroon Comedians
Harry Anderson. Dennis
Blair, JaH Foxworthy and
others perform. (1 :00)
PrimeNewa
(Ill MOVIE: Lllot Troln Home ·
(2:00)
8:05 (J) MOVIE: Bleil All the
Dear C~lldren (2:00)
8:30~G Doogie Howur, M.D.
Doogie becOmes a media ,
star when h&amp; agrees to
appear on.TV. (A) Q
9:00 (]) G I!J D•r John John ·s
job .is jeopardized after he
becomes .involved with a
movie star. Stereo. D
CZl (!) Woapona of the Spirit
The human spirit triumphs
over evil, as a French village
hides 5,000 Jaws during

Transportation

11112-10311.
2 BA mobllo ._In Polltr, you
pay utiiHiaa l dop. l14-388-811~
2 BA, unfum., belutltul rl.,.,.
Vlow, water fumjlo':.,city lUll.

· Extro nlca

GOVERNMENT HOMES 1rom $1
rtpair).

llobllo Homo 1111r·
tloiiY lumlohtd. MlddiOpott.
114.ttZ.ao31.
2 bedroom moblla . _ .,.,...
IIIII)' lurnlalltd, Mlddlapolt 814-

2br

3 bedroams l'louet, land contract, 304·675-5104.

(U

z lotdroom

gIll

1

814-388-1011, 814 318 1441.

3 bedroom house, one acrt

7:30 (]) II (IIJ 1!J Jeop~rdyl Q
1D Night Coul'l Q .
(j) 1!21 Ill Ent-inmenl
Tonight Stereo. Q
~ G Mama'• Family
l!lJ 18 Tllree'o Company
@ Collage aaaketblll
Croaalfre
7:35 (]) The JeHaraono
8:00 (2)11 I!J Unoolved
Mptarlaa Stereo. Q
(!) College BaaketbaH
(j) College Baoketbctll
CZl (JJ Scientific Amarielln
Frontiers A way to eliminate
brain tumo~s using existing
technol~ is explored.
Stereo . t;1
(JJ 1111 The Wonder Yaon
Kevin rediscovers Christmas ·
after he spots Cutlip playing
Santa. Stereo. Q
® Billy Qroham Elatem
Europe CruNdll Billy
Graham looks at the benefits
of a hfe with Christ. Stereo.

:.=::..- ~caa.,

~- "'~·,of;'=
Ed"'.w;.-

. . . . -ruo11oa-

4p.m. 114 Ut4&amp;1l

Opportunity

NOW HIRING STATE AP·
PROVED NURSING ASSIS.
TANTS

RAISES FIRST YEAR

townbiPOiiinarloold'-

30W75-377V.

Real Estate

·

-

Wantl&lt;l
W.nttd To L.NM Wllh Option - h TNnl 8IIMI, ll!k!cftopoll,
To ~ With Aolrof: In Ohkl. 2 bo*-• tumlohtd tpl,
Oallla bC.Unt•, ~-H Aftar p.m. r o - and ...__. - !l•~t~tt~l!:!l~ll!!•~··.:.·-_ _ _.:._~I* IINIII ...,... ·~ '
One lotd.- ...... far - ·
mOnth. I:Jot)oal Nqutrod.
114112 221llftlr 1 p.m.
Rentals

12180 · 2bf', In Everg,...,,
Chlldron tcCIIIItd, Call aftor

otc' Now Hiring, Coon (11 805-687·
6000 Ext K-10188.

Sctnic Hlllt Nul'ling Canter
provldn uc•ll•nt bln1flts &amp;
growth
opportunHits.THREE

mile ~•.,
. ~·

Do

HOUDAY SPECIALS • l'"orlor
and Euarlcw Pointing, 10 yuro
experlentrd, hPe rtfti,..ncea.
vorr Cllta'l Odd Jobo. :104-175ZlOI cwl1!1-eii2S.

wa•- '

Real Estate

8

PRI NT NUMBERED

8

UNSCR AMBlE FORI
ANSWER
•

lETTERS

'*'

GEIIINI (MIJ z1:...une 20) Don't let
your ego get In the way today and cause
you to pretend you know how to do
something you don't. Others will take
. you allac:e value and may assigp you a
task you can't handle.
CANCER(Ju,.2bluly22)Today·sacllvilles mi.g ht oHar you a pleasurable reprleve lrom your ordinary routines. Be
careful, however, when having a good
time you don't forget what " Is coating.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Condlllona are
r81her unusual today in that you'll handie diHicull assignments easily but
might goof up euy' assignments you
usuafty manage In stride.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sipl. 221 You're llkllly
to be In a gregarious mood today and
enjoy lengthy conversations with oth·
ers. Be on ·guard. - · you don't
say anythl"' you won't want repealed.
UIRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) MaJor ICCOtn•
pllilllmarlto ... ach-le today, prov - you keep your eJCI)ICia110nl with·
ln.reuonable bounds. 1he U n o optlmlom and l4lll-delullon II very thin.
ICQRIIIO COoL IJ4.IIoto, 21) Lady Luck
might be looking the other way when
you try to get her attention today. In order to be IIIC~uoful, you're going to
• hi.. to rely upon YQifr own ,_rcelulnaN and ~ance.

'

a

Robertlon

It

, ,•

I I I I I I I I I ..•

SCI 4 "LITS ANSWIIS

a

cat11

plelurw,

,

11m I!J Ill CBS Newa Q

RlckPaa--Company

- - . wale- . Lalt ol

~ Abbott and ,Cootollo

•

(j) ~ 1111 ABC Newt Q
CZ) Wild Americo
(!) 3·2· 1 Contact t;l

olRhlr'IIM
Apolt- In ......iloll. From

.-

Q

OJ! Carloon ~xpiaoa
rlJ NBA Todoty

•

2 llr, 11:11
• fiJI,• .... .,.. ....

.

. ...

m

Couoto,
..
Chair, Gill, TWin ~
':;.
1
I llu llorlnao. I
Rtcllnlr!l

' ,....,_ alftcttrlcy ·~~~~-:

lotdo, orofto, old canning
M WI lido :lnl St- It
Ill. 1M l.alo - . roatdonco,
Reclne,OH

8

6:110 (2)11 l1l ~.. !It «21.
I!J Newo
. ID ChWieo In C~.!f" Q
3·2·1 conta"{vb

.... ho!d lumtohl... 112 ....

_,....

I

EVENING

PICKENS PURNITURE

.

I

........

.....,....

-.. ... - . DI•DUHI: 2:00 p.m.

IIIIi cloy .,._ IIIIi td lo to run.
~....,. 2:GO p.m.
.......... ......., dlon • 2:00

_

Woril

ft., jaoti
1110.
Ill
..-- .·
t1.: tU 1• .... 114 IIIIIDL

ALLV_ _ _ Ie_kl

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

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

Houuholcl

'1 - 11

..

Casino- Nudge- Usurp - Dugout- ONE of OURS
·
Man complaining to pizza parlo1 owner : "The p ie was
cold and the crust was soggy ." Owner: "Yes, that

sounds like ONE of OURS!". - - · _ __· - - - - - - ;. :

BRIDGE
When a contract lookS easy to make.
you show your ezpertlse by figuring
out what could happen to cause you to
fail, and then protect against it. When
you are doing this, scimetimes it. is ·
right to go to great lengths, perhaps
even sacrificing an overtrick, to guard
against a particular unlikely distribution.
·
Today's declarer blithely won
East's king of diamonds with his ace
and played ace 'of clubs and another
club. .With a normal club distribution
he would have an easy 10 trickS. Un·
fortunately West showed out on the
second round. When declarer gave up
a club trick to East, a diamond back
gave the defenders four more diamond
tricks lor down one.
What was declarer's counter to this
unfortunate lie of the cards? Rather
than lead the ace of clubs, declarer
should lead a low club toward the K·Q
at trick two. When West plays the
jack, declarer can let him hold the
trick'. West cannot attack declarer's J.
9 of diamonds. Whatever he returns,
declarer can then take live club tricks,
the A·K of spades and two red aces for

NORTH
li·IZ·M
+AK
.10 8 3
+54
+KQ9873

WEST

EAST

• Q 9 52
• J 94
Q 10 7 6 2
J

+10 8
.KQ72
t K 83
+10654

+
+

SOUTH
+J7643

•Au

t AJ9
+A2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

I.

Nort~

Soullo

Well

3NT

Pass 1•
Pass 2 •
All pass
Opening lead :

-·
••

Eu1

Pass
Pass

&lt; '

+6

1.....-.:....-------__J
club toward dummy costs nothing. J(,
West follows small, declarer will rise '
with an honor and come back to the
ace, bringing in the entire suit if it di· ,:
vides 3-2. Declarer will lose a trick he '
could have made if West puts up the •
a sure nine tricks.
Of course this layout is quite rare. club jack from jack doubleton of:-"
But it is clear that first playing a low tripleton.
•:·

...
..'

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Form ;
mold
6 Riverbed
makeup
10Shows
lright
11 Office
clerk. at
times
12 Lendl and
Nagy
13 Ultraviolet
liherer
14 Yanks'
toes
15 Conductor
Andre
160ne ~
million
17 Envision
18 Termina·
lion.
19 Colonial
pamphle-

Sisters"

·.

sister
41 Rational
42 Fender
scars
DOWN
1 Phantom
2 Needy
one
3 Mobile
home

Yesterday's Answer

4

Harry .

Wr"es .
· 5 Road
curve
6 T -shirt tag
datum
7"-a
Parade"

15 Architect
I.M .
17 Toil site
20 Card
symbol ·

'scene
aclots
29 Takes H
easy
30 Hilo hello

21 PHching

31 La Scala
site

stat

BRed
Square

28 C10wd

24 Yielded
35 Road
25 Penny
crew
inscription
market
27 Slable
36 Aching
particle .
38 Topper

VIP
9 Tendency
11 Tom.
Dick, or

leer

...,

22 Follow
23 Jason's

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ship
26

Food
poisoning

29LA.

....-

footballer
32 West of
Hollywood

..

33 Irritate
34 Draw lorth
36 Religious
faction
· 37Wise
man
38 Antisocial

'.

sort
39 Macduff,
, lor one
40 "Thrall

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Cartwright&amp; take .in a blind
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10:30
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Blair, Jeff Foxworthy and
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hints. Each day I he code letters are different.

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COMPANY IS A RUSTIC. UNCREDITABLE TALENT.
- JEREMY COI.liER

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1:1:30 (J) 8

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12,1990

s,ntinel

Ohio Lottery

BIG BEND • • • Your Locally Owned

L~w-Priced Supermarket

Pick 3: 329
Pick 4: 6777
Cards: 7-H,
2-C; 6-0;7-S
Lotto: 7, 8, 31,
37,40,53
Kicker: 085766

12 days
until
Christmas

HOLIDAY
·. POINSETTIAS

•

•

99

Vo1.41. No.165.
Copyrightod 1990

POODI.AlVD
SPECIAL COUPON

AND UP!
EACH

Pomeroy_'Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Dec~mber 13_
, 1990

s

GRANULATED

Puresweet :Sugar

GOLDEN DELIGHT

('

t

. • ,_

~

.

Maxwell House·
INSTANT COFFEE

COOK'S SUPER TRIM

69

LB.

GOOD ON. SEMI-SWEET. l174l
. CHOCOLATE
._

VAliD
1219190 •
12115190

Nestle Toll
House

,\

FOODLAND

fOOD LAND

Cottage Ch,ees~

lns11nl Co~

49
}fooauiiD

y,-,

MoxweUHo-

Pork Chops

14-16 LB.
AVERAGE

regular basis, but the meeting
yesterday was to ensure that the accounting procedures for this
U.S. Army COrps of Engineeers project, which is deemed unusual,
representatives discussed the finan- would comply with both the state
cial aspeciS of an erosion-conuol and federal government guidelines.
project at the Middleport Lagoon
John Stamm, a field-representawith the Meigs County Commis- live from the Ohio Department of
sioners and Villa!!e representatives Development (which distributes
when the comiDlssioners met in CDBG monies for the Federal
regular session on Wednesday.
Govennent) was on hand for the
Allan Elberfeld, Jim Lewis and discussion, and explained that the
Tim Myers, all of the corps, discus- department's nonnal "15-day rule",
sed financial and accounting proce- stating that all money must be disduces of the project, which is being bursed by the county within 15
paid in part, by the village, the days, could be "extended" if the
county (Community Development need arises due to the nature of the
Block Grant Funds), the State project
(Emminent Threat Grant), and the
ProjecL construction is ancorps itself.
ticipaled 10 begin in mid-January,
Total project cost is estimated by and Elberfeld expects construction
the COlpS to be $711,000. The corps to be completed within five to six
will be paying $500,000 (including months.
$30,000 in studies), the village
In other action on Wednesday,
$12,000, tbe state $199,000 and the Meigs County Engineer Philip
counly $30,000.
Roberts indicated that the· county
Though the county handles was taking advantage of warm
financial details for such projeciS, December weather by patching and
namely CDBG projects, on a benning on county roads.

\.

Striking Red Cross workers
picket Meigs blood drive

GOod On A
12 Oz. Jar or

ASSORTED

·Semi-Boneless Ham

•

By BIUAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stall'

BLOODMOBILE
- Members or
the Huntington, W.Va.
the American
Red Cross were in Pomeroy on Wednesday
where they peacefully pk:keted the American

FOODI.DD VALUABLE
IIAiflJPACTURER'S COUPON

4-10 LB.
AVERAGE

_&amp;_•"

·.r"~;:;;,t:r,_

Despite the fact that slriking
American Red Cross worke11&gt; picketed the bloodmobile visiting
Meigs County Wednesday, 46
people reponed to donate blood.
A total of 41 units were received
during the visit to the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Fifteen
of those units were given in appreciation for blood received by
relatives or friends.
First lime donors were Aladine J.
Baker, Kimberly A. Shamblin,
Judith A. Holter, and Brenda L.
Holter. Janet K. Peavley and Barbara F. Beegle were two gallon
donors. Frederick ThOmas, a three •
glillo'rl' ,ddnot, and" Gerald E.
Rought, a seven gallon donor. . .
Dr. James Witherall and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the doctors
in charge with Beulah Ward and
Lenora Leifbeil donating nursing
services. RSVP workers were

Dorothy Long, Rose Sisson, Wanda
J. Fetty, Mary Nea,se, Marion
Ebersbacb, Helen Bodimer, Jean
Nease, Mary Buick; . Florence
Richards, Willian) and Joyce
Hoback, Evelyn Gilmore, Lula
Hampton, Jessie Curtis, Velma Rue,
and Gerald Wildennuth.
The canteen was served by Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta S1gma
Phi Sorority.
Donating blood during the visit
were the following residents from
their respective communities: ·
Pomeroy: Brenda S. Cunningham,--Wi.IJUml _Wr-R.,;IIIford, Bryan
S. Shank,. Howara P. L,Qgan, David
M. Iqng,_Water R. Couch,' Aladine
Baker, Wilma Mansfield, PatncJa J.
Barton, Janet K. Peavley, Gary E.
Snouffer, Gerald E. Rdught,
Raymond F. Jewell, Janice H.
DaVIS, Vrrgll K. Wmdon, Carolyn

A: Charles, Jodi L. Brown Martin,
Tracy L. Odell, Glona K. Kloes,
and Paul F. Marr.
Racine; Deborah J:... Jones,
Frederick R: ~hompson, William
Hoback, Vmgma M. Bland, Barbara F. Beegle.
. Middleporc Maurisha Nelson,
Dorothy C. McCloud, Charles P.
Gerard, Steven R. Martin, Jean A.
Durst, and Jalnes R. Dailey.
Mason, W. Va.; Kim Shamblin
and Brian E. Johnson.
Long Bottom: Debbie Finlaw,
Paula J. Wood, Brenda Holter,
Judith A, Holter, Susan Pigott, Ivan
Wood. ··: .
· . •. Ru~d: • Marta · H:&lt; Blllc\wood,
Tamara J. Nelson. .
Syraucse;
Dav1d
Lawson,
Delores Wllillock. ·
- Langsville: Karen S. Clark, Tam
S. Clark, Alva B. Clark.

The. commissioners took care of
several end of the year budget
uansfers yesterday. In the county ·
engineer's office, $50,847.07 in interdepartmental transfers were approved for the end of the year, most
of the money going frtim various
accounts into the deparunent's
"biwmunious materials" account.
A transfer of $2,898 in the sheriff's deparunent budget and $3,500
in the MRDD budget were also ap·
proved.
'!Wo members from Meigs
County were appointed to the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services at Wednesday's
meeting. The nominations of
Patricia Arnold and Jon Jacobs
were approved by the commissioners. ·
Besides Roberts, presel!t at the
meeung wen: Comm1sstoners
Manning Roush, David Koblentz,
Richard Jones, Clerk Mary
Hobstetter, Wid County Highway
Garage Superintendent Ted Warner.

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

Pie bakers can make holiday easier
Just in time for Chrisunas!
-The Bakers, Clarlc and Bonnie,
have gone into the pie baking business at their home at 668 South
Third Si., Middlepcjn, and are now
taking orders for the holiday

·

season:

-24 oz.

CTM.

Zesta Saltines

· 2 SectiOns. 16 ' Pag~s 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newsp.-p8f

Erosion control at Middleport
-discussed by county.commission

Blood S~rvtces
, )j'!:S~te Regi01\

TURKEY
.BREAST

LB.

Mostly clear Thursday
night, with a low between 20
and 2~. Mostly sunny Friday,
with highs between 40 and 45.

~.· · .
~---,.

1

Santitas
Chips

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Onion
Patch Di

09

The pasior of · the Middlepon
Uniled Pentecostal Church and his
wife are specializing in pumpkin
and fruit pies, particularly apple
and cherry.
·
While the couple will be featur·ing homemade pies for the next
several weeks, they look forward to
expanding their line of baked goods
at some furure date.
For several years Mrs. Baker
operaled Tiny Tech and a day care
center at the church· which her husband has pastored for the past 10
years. She discontinued her participation in that operation 10
devote more time to her church
work and Jwo sons, first and third
graders in the Middlepon schools.
Needing some addttional income
without having IP sacrifice time
with her family was what prompted
Mrs. Baker to open up her baking
business. Orders may be placed by
calling 992-3~00 .

Diet Rite
RC Cola
24 PACKS
•.'·'.

.

_or
(OIN

'

99

MRDD given $1,000 by bank
A gift of $1,000 received from
the Farmc;rs Bank and Savings
Company of Pomeroy is the first of

. HOMEMADE PillS, ANYONE ·Apple or cherty, which will it
be? Here Bonnie Baker and her husband, the Rev. Clark Baker,
who assists in the baking business, display two or the pies they
baked earlier in the day. ·

Summations today in trial

,_ C:'risce

99

Presentation of evidence con·
eluded on Wednesday in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun trial
of Jose Pearl Scott (aka Joses P.
Scott), who ·was indicted on 1wo
felony couniS in July.
Scott, 33, is represenled by
Meigs County Public Defender
Charles Knight. He faces one count
each of aggravated attempled murder, a firs! degree felony, and aggmvaled burglary, an aggravated
felony of the first degree. Followi!18 His indicunent, Scott entered
pleas to both charges of n&lt;?t guilty
!lfld not guilty by reason of 1nsan1ty.

approximately 500 cans- or rood . has been
gathered. Items will be collected until Dec. 21
when it wiD be delivered ror distribution.

FOOD COLLECTED • Tbe Spi!Dish Club at
Meip Higb School has been ·COllecting DOD·
perishable food Items for the needy in Meigs
County since Thanksxivi•lf· To date, a t.otal or

The indicllllent against Scott fol- believed Scott 10 have been sane at
lowed the July 6 shooting of the time of the incident.
Ronald Cremeans at his home in
David Hall, a ballistics expen
Middlepon.
from the Ohio Bureau of Crirrunal
A waler outage in the Meigs Investigation and Identification, tesCounty Counhouse forced the dis- tified Wednesday that the gun taken
missal of jurors early on Wednes- from Scott following the incident
day afternoon, and also pushed the was the gun used to sl)oot the bullet .
closing arguments portiOn of the exll11Cted from Cremeans' body
trial to Thursday morning.
several days ago.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
Character wimesses on behalf of
Assistant Prosecutor Linda R. War- the defendant were his !Win
ner testified on behalf of the state brother, Jim; his sister-in-law,
early Wednesday, as did Dr. Mike Cathy Scott; Ron Davis; the defen·
Adams, a psychologist at Woodland dant's brother-in-law; and John
Centers who . testified that he ·Ambrose, a fonner employ~.

what is hoped to be many gifts
from businesses Wid professional
organizations 10 help the Meigs
County Bomd of Mental Retarda·
lion get a special election underway
in February.
Meigs Counly voters rejecled a
1.5 mill continuing levy in November on behalf of the program, Wid
since that time, the board has WI·
nounced that it will cease
operations across the ·board next
September.
Additionally, the Meigs County
Commissioners last month gave the
board authorization IP place the
levy on the ballot in a special election on February 5.
·
According to Pomeroy Attorney
Frank W. Poner, who has begun
encouraging his colleagues and
other business people in the county
to suppon the program, the board
·of elections has estimared the cost
of the special election at ap·
proximately $5,500.
After printing election posters
and the like, Porter says, the cost of
the election rises to an estimaled
$10,000 - and this money must be
raised from private sources, not
from the program's collers.
"Il's time for this community to
lake a hand in passing this

desperately needed levy for the
program's very existence," Poner
said on Wednesday. ''Thar's why
it's wonderful to see a bank do
more than just give lip service."
Porter who has also given financial supj,on to the · cause, is not
affiliated officially with the MRDD
board.

"Anyone who questions the
value of the services offered at
(Carleton School and Meigs lndusaies) should visit the program,"
Porter said. "If we have a problem
with the way school systems are
financed, we shouldn't make the
children pay the penalty."

~ni'IONMADE-

A
amount or
bas been
made to the Meigs MRDD Levy Campaign by the
Bank
and Savings c;:ompany. The MRDD board is preparing to place a
1.5 miD levy on a special ele~tion ballot in February. Ted Reed, lert,
made tbe presentation to the committee through Pomeroy Attorney
Frank W. Porter at the bank on Wednesday.

·Bush gives fann credits .to Soviets; date for summit set in February
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Pres!dent Bush, declaring the Soviet
Union is facing '"tough times,"
announced Wednesday an assist·
ance package that will provide
· up to $1 billion In agriculture
export credits to ease Moscow's
food shortage.
Bush also announced Wednesday that he wlll,meet with Soviet

President Mikhail Gorbachev In Eduard Shevardnadze and SeMoscow Feb. 11-13 to sign a . cretary of State James Baker at
Strategic Arms Redu~tlon his side. ·
Treaty, known as START, which ' To exteild the creditS, he said
will drastically reduce the super- he would waive until July 1991,
power arsenals of long range pending further review, the 1974
missiles. ·
Jackson-Vanlk Act that bars
The president made the an- preferential credit guarantees to
nouncement In the Rose Garden the Soviet Union as long as
with ·· Soviet Foreign Minister · Mo~ow malnlains . restrictive

emigration policies on the Soviet
Jews and other mfnorltles.
Halling the growing "special
relationship" between the United
States and the _Kremlin, Bush
·also · proposed Ihal the World
Bank and the International
Monetary Fund provide the Sovlets access to their economic
and fln.ancl~l expertise.

In addition, the president said told reporters:
he has decided to establish a
'"You should!!' I consider any of
public- private medical assist- the steps taken today to be payoff
ance task force to help Moscow or a payback for the cooperation
deal with Its " acute, Immediate . that we've seen on the gulf crisis.
shortages of pharmaceutical and We see that cooperation across a
basic medical supplies.
broad range of Issues .... None of
Asked whether the aid package the measures announced today
is a payoff to the Soviets, Baker are In any sense a payback. _

•

•
. 1

I

•

'

I,

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