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                  <text>6-The

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,

�f

Thursday, December 13, 1990·

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A (;b.

~m~ ~.__...,-.~.:::::~.t='l

~v

'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gea~ral

ManaKer

P"'T WIIITEHE.W
"'sslstant Pabllshi!r/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclatlon and the American Newspaper Puhltshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar&lt;,welcome. They should he less than ~0
words long. AU letters are subject to edltlng and must be signed with
name, a"dress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub-

lished. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·tles .

The good, .the bad
and the ugly?
By Joseph Spear
Georgia made me celebrate, Carolina made me cry; VIrginia
made me palpitate, Dakota made me sigh. (Sorry. The name Is
Spear, not Yeats.)
That Is The Curmudgeon's bardlc assessment of the mid-term
election- there was some good; some bad and a lot of warming up,
I think, for. the big race to come. A few particulars:
-WILL YOU JUST SAY NO IN '92?
Numerous shortsighted critics have been razzing columnists
and commentators because a much-ballyhooed purge of
incurpbents did not come about.
·
Had the philistines studied our work more closely, they would
have seen that the more thoughtful among us urged it but did not
predict it. This Is because we are not fools. Of the 405 House
Incumbents who were seeking re-electlon, reported Common
Cause In early October, 382 had no viable oppositlon.
As it happened. only one of 32 Senate incumbents lost and 96
percent of House members who ran were reelected.
But surprisingly, a few powerful incumbents got the fright of
their public lives, and some saw their usual victory margins shrink
by 10 to 15 percent.
.
Voters. In California and Colorado also approved .term limits for
their legislators.
Mark The Curmudgeon's words: People are angry and a lot of
lawmakers are going to be looking for work In 1992.
- THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS NEARLY WENT OUT IN
GEORGIA:
The voters of The Peach State's 6th District came within a
thousand votes of retiring hot-headed House GOP Whip Newt
Gingrich, whose defeat would have been mourned In Cro-Magnon
country but wildly cheered In Democratic circles.
Acll.lally , the Democrats have only themselves to blame as they
gave little support to Newt's opponent (he embarrassed them by
railing against the congressional pay raise.)
Newt says he got the message that he "ought to come home and ·
pay attention" to his constituents. That's thetbnlc, Newt. Frequent
trips out of town. Long trips.
- HANGE DOWN YOUR HEAD, CAROLINA.
The most shameful political act of the decade thus far Is North
Carolina 's decision to return Republican Jesse Helms tQ the U.S.
Senate for another term. The man reeks spite.
By most accounts, he beat his black opponent In the last week of
the campaign when he began running ads about white people losing
jobs to "minorities" because of racial quotes. In other words, he
played the race card once again and North Carolinians picked It
.

u~

They had the chance to make the nation proud and they blew it.
Will North Carolina be ready when the 21st century rolls around?
-CARRY HIM BACK TO OLD VIRGINIA.
The newly enlightened voters of VIrginia's suburban 8th District
finally served an eviction notice on Republican Rep. Stan Parris,
whose major stock fn trade seemed to be the exploitation of his
constituents' prejudices against! he DIStrict of Columbia. Or did he
do himself In?
·
His opponent, James Moran, credited Stan: "I don' t think he
gave his supporrers much reason to come out. What Is there to get
excited about Stan Parris• He votes like Newt Gingrich, but he's
nowhere near as Interesting. He's as bigoted as Jesse Helms, but
nowhere near as articulate.''
· -DEAD WOOD .FROM DEADWOOD .
; South Dakota voters are sending their handsome lightweight,
Republican Sen. Larry Pressler, back to Washington. But that's all
right. Few will notice but the socialites with whom he parties. No
harm, no foul.
- EVENING THE SCORE.
Hawkish Rep. Roy Dyson, D-Md., was defeated after being
linked to shady defense consultants and being exposed . as a
hypocrite who sat out VIetnam as a conscientious objector. Though
a personable lawmaker, he got what he deserved ....
Illinois did · the nation a double disservice by returning
Democrats Gus Savage (the black lawmaker who slams whites but
claims he Isn't racist because " there ain't no black racism), and
Frank Annunzlo (the rehabilitated S&amp;L waterboywho now wears a
button that reads "Put the S&amp;L Crooks In Jail") to the House of
Representatives.

Berry's World

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Back-to-hack roundball action in store for SVAC quintets

Pomeroy-M~· Ohio
Thursday. oeeember 13, 1990

I

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
This week's SVAC's basketball schedule featured only one
weeknight game- Tuesday night's Oak Hill-McDermott Northwest
game, which the Oaks won 87-53, but has Friday and Saturday night
league action on tap, as one C1f the three teams In the conference's
thick middle has a chance to tie the front-runner for the league lead.
Symmes Valley vs. Hannan Trace- Mike Jenkins' Wildcats have ·
made believers out of the rest of the conference wlih convincing
victories over archrlval Southern and a tough North Gallla squad.
With the quickness ("all of our kids are guan)s," according to
Jenkins) necessary to run the fast break and solid outside shooting
(Trace has canned 21 three-pointers after four games) as a fall-back
weapon should the fast break be stalled or prevented, the Wlldcats
have the ability to set the tempo few teams are able to keep up with,
much less slow.
,
Terry Saunders' Symmes Valley squad, as has been noted in the
past, has the Inside muscle In senior postman Carl Robinson, but
there's more to the Vikings' arsenal, as junior guards Andy Lester
and Eric Wall, who scored In double digits (11 points each In Valley's

63-62 heartbreak loss to Raceland last Saturday), demonstrate. Even
senior forward Chad Renfroe, who has been held to single digits In
three of Valley's games .so far, Is capable of lighilng up the
scoreboard, as his 16 points against Raceland show.
The senior-laden Wildcats remember what Symmes did to them
last year (the Vikings won 58-51 on the Mercerville floor), and the only
thing from that game Trace wants to duplicate Is the 20 points Riehle
Cornell scored then~ a feat he can do with ease and regularity now.
All told, he has a consec11 live double-digit scoring ·streak of five
games, which dates back to last year' s district tournament loss to
Beaver Eastern.
If the Wildcats can get past the VIkings, Who will host Southern on
Saturday, they should be able to coast to an easy road victory
·Saturday night agalnsi a Kyger Creek squad that Is an odds-on
favorite to become one of thiS weekend's sacrificial lambs.
Eastern vs. North Galila - Lose two, win two, lose two. After
opening the season In this fashion, Is It North Gallla's time to start
winning again?
After having a week to rest from last week's three-game marathon
In which the Pirates downed Kyger Creek before dropping weekend
decisions to Hannan Trace (86-72) and Chesapeake (92-57), Ron
Twyman's crew should be ready to take on an Eastern squad that
hopes to continue the success It had In last Friday's 63-59 road victory
over-former league co-leader Symmes Valley.
The Pirates wlU need more than the scoring of ace·marksman.Chrls
. Tackett, who will put his 15-game double-digit scoring streak on the
line when he takes the floor Friday night. Fellow senior- Brian Stout,
whosf! 12·game double-digit scoring streak came to an end when
Jly JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
, · . Hannan Trace held him to nine points last Friday's game, returned to
form with an 11-poit~t effort In Saturday's Chesapeake game, but he
Home Ice has been no advantage recently for the Hartford Whalers.
Hartford again gave up an early deficit Wednesday night at the
will need to accelerate his scoring, which will take some of the heat
Hartford Civic Center and couldn't recover, dropping a 5·1 decision to
Eagle guards Tim Bissell and Jeff Durst are likely to put on Tackett
the Boston Bruins.
Senior Shane Smith will battle the Eagles' Randy Moore In the low
The Bruins jumped out to a 3-0 lead after the first perlod,lncludlng
post, and considering that Moore has averaged 14.3 points per game,
Cam Neely's goal just 25 seconds Into the game, and cruised from
while Smith has only 11 per outing, the defensive burden Is clear ly on .
there In pushing their Adams Division lead to three points over the
Smith to contain Moore and force Bissell and Durst to keep the Eagles
Montreal Canadlens.
offense outside, where both Smiths- Shane and Darin- and senior
forward Brandon Twyman will have a chance tograbsome rebounds.
" It was frustrating and really ·no contest," Hartford goaitencter
Another Eagle the Pirates will have to keep their eyes on Is senior
Peter Sidorkiewlcz said. "We can't keep giving up three goals In the
first period and expect to win."
.
forward Matt Finlaw, who canned 18 against Valley .
Neely wound up scoring two goals for the Bruins, while Craig
On Saturday, Eastern wlll return home to host Oak Hill, while North
Gallla will entertain Southwestern.
Janney added a goal and two assists. The other Boston goals were
·
scored by Bob Sweeney, on a penalty shot, and Ray Bourque.
Southwesternvs. Oak Hill - Sopl;lomore point guard Benjl Lewis's
hot hand, 6-6 center ChriS Simpson and former Highlander Bill Potter
"It was a lot of fun," Sweeney said about the penalty shot. "It
doesn't happen too often and.I just got Into a poSitive frame of mind
·
and hoped for the best."
Ed Kastelic scored (or the lone goal for the Whalers, who were
unable to solve Andy Moog. The goaltender stopped 23 shots and
Improved his career mark against Hartford to 12-6-2.
Boston head coach Mike Mllbury was pleased with his team's effort
and hopes the Bruins can link several more aggressive efforts In the
·
.
coming weeks.
"It was a good team effort and we're hoping to build from this,"
Mllbury said. "I'd like to see us put together about 10 games like the
way. we played tonight."
The game· was the first In a home-and-home series between the
Bruins and Whalers. The rematch was scheduled for 24 hours later at
the Boston Garden.
.
" All we can hope for Is that we play better and a llttlem0 re physical
on Thursday,'·' Kastelic said. " We burled ow-selves in the first period
again and we'll be out to prove ourselves tommorrow ratl)er than
laboring and thinking about this one."
·
In other NHL action Wednesday night, Toronto mauled Montreal
4-1 and Ei,lmonton outlasted Vancouver 5-4.
Maple Leafs 4, Canadlens 1 - At Toronto, Michel Petit scored a
goal and added an assist to help the Maple Leafs snap Montreal's
three-game winning streak. It was only the eighth win In 33 games for
Maple Leafs, in last place In the Norris Division.
Oilers 5, Canucks 4- At Edmonton, Alberta, Joe IV(urphy scored a
goal and added three assists to lead the Oilers. Murphy, acquired
from Detroit last year as part of the Jimmy carson.trade, produced
his biggest scoring night of the seas.on In helping Edmonton out of last
place In the Smythe Division.

Chemical arms dump is unnenring
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (NEA) - When the governors of the U.S. territories· and
possessions In the Pacific met
here recently , there was no
debate over the Defense Depart·
ment's plan to decommission
lethal chemical weapons In the
region.
Instead, they quickly approved
. - without discussion or dissent
- a resolution that reflects the
hostility throughout the Pacific
to the use of remote Johnston
Island, slightly more than 800
miles west-southwest of Hawaii,
for the disposal of chemical
munlilons.
Endorsed by the governors of
the Northern Mariana Islands,
Hawaii, Guam and American
Satnoa was a statement calling
upon the Pentagon· to J.imlt Is
decommissioning operations In
the region and to ·expedite a
search for alternative disposal
sites and techniques.
Independent countries In the
Pacific have been even more
antagonistic to Washington's
plans. Indeed, their opposition
led President Bush to Invite the

leaders of more than a dozen
small lsla.nd nations to discuss
the Issue with him when he
visited Hawaii In late October.
But that extraordinary meetIng did little tQ assuage the
region's concer11s about chemical weapons so toxic that the
Defense Department acknowledges "exposure to nerve agents
can result In convulsions and
death due to paralysiS of the
respiratory system . ,. often
within 10 minu tes of exposure."
Residents of the U,S. mainland
who Ignore that festering controversy because they assume
Johnston Island Is too distant to
be relevant to their lives are
deluding themselves: The huge
chemical weapons Incinerator
already constructed there Is a
prototype for similar facilities to
be built in eight states.
In the early 1970s, the Defense
Department began using John·
ston Island to store aging stocks
of artillery shells, bombs,
rockets, mines and other weapons wlth chemical warheads,
many of them Intended lor use In

WIN'T~ERE
AGJf(tJNCl!J)

World War I and II .
Shortly after enactment of a
1985 federal law requiring the
destruction of all the U.S. cheml·
cal weapons, the Pentagon began
construction of the Johnston
Atoll Chemical Agency Disposal
System.
During the Initial months of
trial burning, alarms that are
supposed to warn the Island's
1,200 Inhabitants (300 Army
personnel and 900 civilian contract employees) of spills, leaks
or other dangerous releases
accidentally went off six times.
Civilians are banned from
Johnston Island, but last month a
commercial airliner was damaged and stranded there In a
tropical storm while fierce winds
and rain pounded weapons
stocks. Among the passengers
forced to stay overnight were
three children for whom there
were no suitable protective gas
masks.
Inhabitants of countries
:hroughout the Pacific are concerned about accidental releases
during shlpmenJ through their
region or handlfng on Johnston

. By Robert Walters
Island as well as contamJnallon
produced by disposal of · the
residue from the Incineration
pr.ocess .
The Pacific and · ·Getman
stocks represents only 6.5 percent of the United States' Inventory of toxic chemical weapons.
Bush says there are "no plans"to
destroy the remaining 93.5 percent on Johnston Island .:. a
tentative CQinmltment at best.
If those plans do not change,
however, the deadly nerve and
blister agents will be Incinerated
at their current storage sites,
including Tooele, Utah, where
more than 42 percent of the
stockpile Is held, Smaller reserves are stored in Umatilla,
Ore.; Pueblo, Colo.; Pine Bluff,
Ark.: Newport, Ind.; Anniston,
.Ala.; Richmond, Ky.; and· Aher:
deen , Md.
Residents of the regions sut'roundlng those communities
then will have to confront the
Issues that now seem to be so
distant In the mid-Pacific.

Boston, Toronto, Edmonton
claim-NHL wins Wednesday

NO EARTIIQUAJ&lt;E

FtR

,,

~- ~~ Q1t8S£P (lt ~~M~R,M,

~

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio State running backs coach
Bobby Turner will join the staff
of new Purdue head coach Jim
Colletto as offensive coordinator
and assistant head coach, It was
reported Thursday.
·
The Columbus Dispatch said
Turner, who would not comment
on the move, would receive a pay
raise of $25,000 per · year to
$75,000.
'
Collet to, the former OSU d~fen­
slve coordinator, left last week to
·assume the Purdue head coach·
lng job.
"I ·can't blame Bobby Turner
lor taking ' the position," said
Ohio State head coach · John
Cooper. "But I toid him this

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

liberal guilt from the VIetnam
War to stand In the way,
,
The coalition' s tools are ex pen- · Retired Army Maj. Gen.
slveTVspotsandfull-pageadsln John Slnglaub, an unrecon America's. premier newspapers. structed anti-communist last
Their message Is that Americans
heard from when he was raising .
should line liP behind their
private money to fund the contra
president, and If John or Jane Q. , war.
Public doesn't know how to do
-William R. Kennedy, who as
that, they can call an 800 number
publisher of the Conservative
for a free coalition "emergency
Digest, built the circulation from
action kit."
less than 7,000 tQ 280,000 readers.
PredictablY,, the coalition
He was the golden boy of
makes a pitch for money In that
American conservatives a few
kit. But this IS nor a group that -years ago, and he had a Midas
watts for the nickels and dimes C?f
touch in the precious-metals
ordinary Americans to trickle ln.
business. Of late his shine has
The coalition Is paying ·for those
been tarniShed l;ly allegations
pricey ads with money raised by
that he defrauded conservative
a handful of men ..Who have Investors In his company, Westproved that they can come up ern Monetary Consultants. He
with cash when the cause Is right
has been sued In a California
- far right.
court by 11 of those Investors
The coalition Includes:
claiming he bilked them out of
- Conservative fund -raiser more than $1 million In the 1980s.
Richard Vlguerte, who doesn't
-Lesser lights Include former
think Bush tilts far enough to the U.S. ambassador to Bahrain,
right.
Sam Zakhem, and retired Gen.
George Patton III.

The coalition's co-chairman,
Scott Stanley Jr., told
reporter Paul Parkinson that ·the
group Is targeting "antl·war
liberals." And the coalition
doesn' t want Congress to stand In
the way of the president either.
The coalition's job, said Stanley,
Is to " defeat the liberal Democrats who think the president Is
stepping on congressional
prerogatives."
If there Is to be a ~ar, Stanley
said, "we don't want one long
replay of the Vletname War.
President Bush should have the
support of the American public."
Since the American public Is
used to being wooed by Madison
Avenue, the coalition's approach
Is smart , even If It Is unsettling to
see TV ads promoting a point of
view on a political Issue In the
absence Of an election campaign.
There Is no ballot Issue and no
candl(iate on the .line In thiS

our

Sports briefs
Boxing
A New York Iederal judge
dismissed all claims against
promoter Don King In suits flied
by Bill Cayton, the outcast
manager of heavyweight Mike
Tyson. King, Tyson's adviser, Is
accused of antitrust violations,
racketeering and Interference In
Cayton's contract with Tyson ....
Tracy Harris Patterson, the
adopted son of former heavyweight champ Floyd Patterson,
will fight Albert Rendon of San
Antonio. Texas, Dec. 21 in Las.
Vegas, Nev. Patterson of New
Paltz, N.Y., Is the WBC's No.
1-ranked super bantamweight.

campa!~n.

White .House seeks a domestic policy
WASHINGTON (NEA) George Bush Is again having
trouble with "the vision thing,"
and his apparent sOlution Is
causing high-level dissension Inside the White House and Inside
the GOP.
"The vision thing" was Bush's
off-hand response during the 1!188
presidential campaign to
charges that he did not have a
well-formulated domestic policy.
During his first two years in the
Oval Office the president has
concentrated almost entirely on
foreign affairs. The charges that
he still does not have any
comprehensive domestic agenda
surfaced again In the after-math
of the protracted budget debate
because of the White House's
refusal to set domestic budget
priorities. ·
·The criticism over lack of a
domestic program has become
so pervasive that top White
House advisers now consider It
critically Important for the State
of the Union address In January
to contain a detailed plan. This,

By Robert Wagman ,

In turn, has led to an all-out battle choose what school they want to
between presidential advisers to send their children io at state · proven unworkable, and which
capture Bush's heart and mind expense.
have absolutely no support In
- Private ownership of public
for plans they back.
·
Congress or chance to be enacted
It now appears that the presi- housing units.
Into law. He called the plan "neo
- Required job training and
dent Will embrac.e a plan being
neotsm " and ~~the new
put forward by conservatives, a work for able-bodied welfare
Newtlsm."
plan that some very high-level recipients.
That resulted In an e:l(ploslve
- The "enterprise zone" conadministration officials - to say .
response from c6nsenrattves led
nothing of Democrats - scoff at cept - massive tax breaks to
by Gingrich, who all but delure companies Into providing
as impractical and unworkable.
manded Darman's resignation.
The new domestic program jobs In the Inner cities and In
Gingrich called Darman a "teCh·
envisions a new war on poverty depressed areas.
nocrat In Dukakls mold" In what
The leading public advocate of
built around ·the Idea of "up-byIs seen as an attempt lo link
their-bootstraps" Individual the new program Is Housing and
Republican opponents of the 1\ew
achievement to be brought about Urban Development . Security · plan to the liberal wtng of the
by maximizing Individual cboice Jack r&lt;;emp. It Is also being
Democratic Party.
· and the empowerment of the embraced by new GOP national
Conservatives Hke Gingrich
poor. It sees the only role of chairman William Bennett, lead- argue that the social e:l(pertment
government as removing any Ing Capitol Hill conservative that started In the Uberal New
Institutional Impediments to Indi- Rep. Newt Gingrich, R.-Ga., and
Deal has failed utterly, and It Is
Vice President Dan Quayle.
vidual achievement.
· time to radically restructure
One very formidable opponent government. They believe that
The White House refuses to say
what apedtlc programs will be Is Budget Director Richard Dar- many of the proposals .of the
advocated, but sources indicate man. In a recent speech he early supply side years of the
that the "New Paradigm" wlll dismissed the program as no- Reagan admln!stratloD . were
tiling but the repackaging of a right but that both Reagan and
feature:
collection
of old conservative
- An educational voucher
lacked the will to
ldeaJ
that
have already been Congress
system that wut allow parents w
Implement them and giVe them
time to work,

CoDeKe

.,,"

.I

•

,,

.."

'

'
'

"

should be all Oak HUI needs to make-short work of a Southwestern •
squad that Is In the clutches of a five-game losing streak dating back
to last year's exit !rom the sectlonals by Green Local, the same team
that knocked off Southern 59-51 las t Saturday In the McDonald 's.
/Days Inn Prep Classic In Athens.
Kyger Creek vs. Southern - Speaking of Southern, has the
mystique worn off the once-mighty but still dangerous Racine
Lakers? Perhaps some of It .has, especially after what tough
defensive teams such as Hannan Trace and Green have done to them,
but "Showtime" Is all but guaranteed to make a comeback when·
Howle Caldwell's Tornadoes play host to Tom Riccardi's Bobcats
Friday night.
.
. ··
With a taller skyline than In years past and one of the league's
crown princes of marksmanship In senior guard Andy Baer, who ha$
an eight-game double-digit scoring streak that started ,with last
year's win over Eastern In the Meigs sectional tournament title
game, the Tornadoes have the means to continue the Bobcats'
drought into the weekend .

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

PF
320
367
351
292
449
424
209
278

PA
210
404
316
267
519
420
282
342

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 4 0 320 210
Southern .... .......... 3 1 300 257
Eastern ............ ... 3 1 266 274
Symmes VaHey ... 3 1 230 204
North Gallla ........ 2 2 312 323
Oak Hill .. .. .......... 1 3 269 296
Kyger Creek . .. . .. .. 0 4 233 293
Southwestern .... :... o 4 209 282
TOTALS ............ 16 16 2139 2139

(Reserves)
(SVAC only) .

·w L

TEAM

Friday's slate
Symmes Valley at Hannan Trace
Eastern at North Gallla
Kyger Creek at Southern
Southwestern at Oak Hill
Saturday's games
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
North ·Gallla at Southwestern
Southern at · Symmes Valley
Oak Hill at Eastern .

279

BloCh'S .
3·ch8moiS

Gumout

119J-:n&gt;

19oz.Sprtl'l

I~......

117480

Lml12

Athletic directors from Syra·
cuse, Pittsburgh, Boston College
and Miami met In Washington
with Big East Commissioner
Mike Tranghese regarding formation of a football league. An
announcement Is expected
Thursday, .The Philadelphia
Dally News reports Temple,
Rutgers, West Virginia and VIrginia Tech are to join the league
lor football only.
Track and field
High jumper Patrlk Sjoberg
left Sweden In October to skip
mWtary service and avoid payIng the world's highest taxes,
accord!OB to Swedlsll press reports. Sjoberg, the 1987 world
champion and former world
. 'r ecord holder, has never given a
reason why he left his home
country' for Belgium.
i

morning I think he's making a
mistake. I think he wlll have a
better chance leaving the Ohio
State staff and getting a head job
someday thah he will from
somewhere else.
"You know how I feel about
losing ~oaches to head coaching
positions," said Cooper, "But It
bothers me to lose an assistant
coach to another assistant job.
. "And I don't like a guy off my
staff to leave and then hire a guy
off my staff," he said. "!didn't
like It at Arizona State or Tulsa
and I don't here. Butlt happens."
Turner Is the third assistant
Cooper has lost in recent weeks
wlth defensive .coach Gary
Blackney named to the head
coaching job at Bowling Green
State University, and he may
lose another.
.
. Defensive ·Coordinator B'lll
Young reportedly had an Interview scheduled for Thursday for
the head coaching job at North
Texas State.

799
~18

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Published every afternoon, Monday
throuah Friday, 111 Court St .. Po· '
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

MemHr: United Preas International,
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,,

·,

I.

PF PA

Southern .............. 4 0 200 148
Oak Hill ....... ..... .. 3 1 236 214
North 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
TOT"'LS ............ 16 16 1335 1535

OSU assistant Turner named
Purdue offensive coordinator

'f
.
•

Right wing wants .Bush to be tougher
WASHINGTON -The Persian
Gulf crisis has reshuffled the
rlght-wlilg deck In America, and
conservatives can't present a
unlfled front to their conservatlve president on the deploym,ent.
Worse, their conservative p~esl dent Isn't as conservative as they
want him to be, and Ronald
Reagan shows no signs of coming
out of retirement. Dan Quayle Is
the rlght-wlngstandardbearerln
the administration, and that's
not enough .
Those who support President
Bush's heavy-handed approach
to the Persian Gulf crisis are not
taking any chances that he m.a y
shrink from his resolve. ·One
group of bedfellows has launched
a multimillion-dollar campaign
of privately funded propaganda .
The Coalition for America at ·
Risk has some old familiar
names dressed up for a new
cause. They want Saddam Husseln out of Kuwait. They think
George Bush Is the man to do it.
And they don 't want any leftover

.

.

1ltAllllf 6lOUHD 115 UNAM TO llt1tf!

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

••

�•

.·

Thursday, December 13, 1990

Pomeroy- Midrleport, Ohio

Pllge- 4- The o.ilv Sentinel

Thursday, December 13. 1990 ·

Marauders Blake, Cogar UPI all-Ohio ·
COLUMBUS Ohio (UPI) Academ'y•s Rob Skidmore
- a cousin of North Gallla
Division IV all-stater Chris Skid·
more - a nd ·David Sllverthor n,
and Meigs Marauders Frank
Blake and Geoff Cogar were
, a mong 15 southeastern Ohio
footba ll players named to this
year 's UPI Division II all-stale
team
·
.
Skidmore, a two-way tackle,
and Silver-thor n a center / defen·
·'
slve e nd, were lns ll'umental In
helping push Bre nt Saunders'
Blue Devils to a 5-5 record a nd a
four-way tie for the SEOAL
championship. Both are seniors.
Blake, a junior defensive back,
and Cogar, a sen Ior de IensIve
end, received honora ble mention
for being among the top players
on Mike Staggs' 1990 squad
•
which finished 5·5.
Here's the 1990 United Press
1 Dl ls 'o ·II 11 Oh i
· Inte at!
.
rn ona
V I n a ·
0
football team with height, wel~hl
and school year: .
nRST TEAM
Gallla

GEOFF COGAR .

In the NBA

HartfonL ........... 13 144 30 89 99
Bullali&gt; ............... 10 13 7 21 92 99
Quebec ............ .... 7 19 6 20 90137

Eastern Conference .
Atlantic Division · · ·

Team

W L P et. GB

Bostoo ..... :....... .. ..... 17 4 .810 Ph iladelphia .... ... ... 14 7 .666 3
New Jersey .... ..... .... 8 11 .421
New York .... ...... ..... 811 .421

8
8

Si. Louis ............. 17 9 4 38102 83

Oet rolt. .. ...... .... , .. 14 12 4 32116 116
Mi nnesota ...... .. . .. . 9 11 6 24 92 106
T orcrlto ..... ........... 8 24 1 17 88 139

washingt&lt;lll .... ....... 6 14 .300 lO&gt;h
MJamL ................... 5 14 .263 11
Central Division
Mltwa ukee ..... ....... .. 15 7 .682 -

Detroit. ...... ........,.. 14 7.667

II

Chicago ...... ... .........12 8 .600
Cleveland ..............10 11.476
Atl anta ................. . 8 11 .421

2
41h
51,2

Ind iana ..... .. ............ 8 14 .364

7

Campbell Cenference
No rris JMvls ion
.
T eam
W LT Pts. GF GA
Chicago .............. 21 10 2 44111 80

Smythe Divis ion
Calgary ......... .... 18 10 4 40 134 103
Los Angeles .... ... . 16 8 5 37121 95
Van couver .... ... ... 1315 329 99108

Edm ootoo ........... 1215 2 26 91 88 ·
Winnipeg ..... .. ..... 917 7 25108119

Charlotte ....... .. ..... 8 12 .400 5\&gt;

Wednesda:y 's ,ames
Boston 5, Har tf ord 1
Tor ont o 4, Montreal 1
Edm ontoo 5, Va ncouve r 4

WeStern Conference
¥Jdwes t Divis ion

Teain

.

W L P et. GB

San AnHilio .. ...... .... l2 5. 706 -

Utah ...... ...... .. .....13 7 .650 11
Houstoo .................. 12 9 .571 2
Dal las ................... 7 II .389 5!,1

Thursda y's gwnes
· Hartford a t Boston. 7:.35 p.m .
· Que bec at Det roil , 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Is landers a t P hilad elphia,
7: 35p.m.
New J er sey a t Pit tsburgh, 7: 35
p.m.
. Wi nnipeg a t Chicago, 8: 35 p.m . ·
Minnesota at St . Loui s , 8: 35 'p.m .
Ca lgary at Los Angeles, 10: 35

Minnesota ............ .. . 7 12 .368 6
Denver .... ...... .. .... .. 5 15 .250 8lf.l

Orlando .......... ..... ... 5 16 .238

9

Pacltlc Division

Poortland .......... .. ... 19 I

.950
L.A. Lakers .......... . Jl 7 .611
Phoen ix .. , ...... .... ..... 11 7 .611
Go lden Stat£' .. ... ..... .12 fi .SOO

7

p.m.

7

7

L.A. Olppers ......... 10 10 .500 9
Seattle .... ,.............. . 6 12 .333 12

Sacra men to .... .. .... .. 3 15 .167 15
Wedlieeday's re:sults
Boston 129. 'Milwaukee 111 ,
San Antcl'lio 92, Char lot te 81
Hou stoolOfl, Philadelphia 100
L.A. Clippers 100, Clevela nd 90
Atlan ta llfl. MIAmi 93
Dallas 112. L.A. La kers 97 tOT )
Seatt le 99, Ind iana 90

Transactions

nursday•s lames
New J erEy at Atlanta, 7: 30p.m .
New York a t Minnesota . 8 p.m.
De nver at Utah. 9:30p.m .
Orlando at Phoen ix , 9: 30p.m .
Seattle at Golden State, I(): 30

p.m.
Portla nd at Sa cram en to, 10:30

p.m.

Friday's·games

P1ttsbu rgh a t Buffalo. 7: 35p.m.
N. Y. Rangers a t Vancou\lt'r,
U): 35 p.m .

•.

Friday 's ,;ames

Miam i at Phi Jadelphla. 7: 30 P·n'l ·
San Ant oo to at Cleyela n'd. 7:30
p.m .

Det ro1t at Boston. 8 p.m .
Hou ston at Was hingt on. 8 p.m .
LA Cllppl"rs at Chicago, S: 30p.m .
Dallas at Portland. 10:30 p.m .

· Baseball
Cal iforn ia Signed pitcher
Floyd Bann ister to a 1-year
contract.
Pittsbu rgh - Named John Slrtgnan o m inor-leagu~ a nd scoutin g
assls tan r.
St. Louls - Namal Dave Bialas
mli na ger a t St. Peter sbufi' of the
Fl orida State League !A \.
Sa n Diego - Traded catcher
Mark Parent t o Texas fo r thi rd
baseman Scott COolbaugh.
Seattle - Na med J im Skaa len
coonilna t or o f minor-league In·
st N c tlon: named Dan Warth en
m inOr-league p itching instruct or
and Roger Han ~n m inor-lea gue

catching

tn s t ruc ~

«.

Basketball

Cedar Rap k:ls (CBA l - Signed
center Ben Gi llery; placed forward
To ny Mar tin .in In jured reser ve.

CoUege

In the NIH-".
Wales Conrerriace
Palrtck Divialon.
Team
W LTPts. GF GA
N.Y . R angers ... ... l 8 11 5 41 130 103
Ph iladelphia .. .. ... 18 14 2 3fl119 11.2

Jer"'y ..... .... 1612 4 36124 107
Washlngt&lt;n ......... 18150 36 112 100
PlttSbU'!&lt;h .. ...... .. 12 16 327 120 121
New

N.Y. I-s lander s . .. . 10 16 2 22 78 108
Adams Division

Bostoo ............... .17 10 4 38 103 98
Monlreal. ............ 1614 3 35 105103

Appalachian State - Named
Roache! Laney a thletic di rector.
Maryland - Indefin itely sus·
pended gutird Ca r la Ho lmes fr cm
wcm en's bas ketball te a m .
No rtheeswr n -Nam ed Barry
Gallup foctba ll coach.
Trans Am erica Athl etic Conference - Announced resignat ion of
s ports lnfonn at lon direct or Steve
Argo.

Hockey
To ront o - Reach ed agreement
on 2-year contra ct wit h d e-fertse·
man Alexand er Goclynuik .

Offense
Robert Hobnes Fos tor ia 6-2

,

WRs 180, sr.; J erry Go fdon. MaPle Height~ 6-2:
17.5, sr.

TE - Luke Flckell, Qllumbu, DeSales,
OL-Jay Brooks, Bay Villa&amp;e. 6-5, 200.
sr.: GeofleVudrc:govlc,SteubenvDle,6-2,
255, sr.: 11o11 Skklmort, Gallia Aeodrmy,
;.• z~:• 1 Matt B -ett Geneva 6-2 "'5
•· Adam
- r.:As beck ,u.&amp;
'
' '' ' '
sr.;
O&gt;lumbusDesai es, 6-1,
245, sr.

6-4, 275, sr. : Doug Wack, Beloit WeJt
Branch, 6-4, 240, sr.: ~hris240Mu ~'j~,n
Columbus independence, ~4. •sr..
Vleland. Chardon, 6·0, 235. sr.: Dave
Bo)Oman. St. Marys Memorial, S.ll, 180.
sr.
QB- "hawn
Lamb, Franklin. S.O, 175,
~
sr. .

QB- Derek Kidwell, Fostoria, 6-4 , 235.
Jr.
RBs- Kevin Porco, Mantua Crestwood.

RBs - Ty Howard. COlumbu s Brtggs.
5-11, 165, Jr. : Chad Cros!lley
M. Fwa~;
Rlver View. 6·2, 185, sr.: Joe C ar
·

6--4,.220, Jr. ·

Bay VIllage, s.o, 215. sr.
. d
PK- Mlke Daniel, Daytoo Cham 1na eGeneva. 6-0, 193, sr.
Ju llenne, 5·10, 180. sr.
PK- Mike Jones, SfeubenvUle, 5-6, '150.
DefeDIE!
sr.
·
DL - · John '!'royer . .UnJont""" Lake.
Del' 6-10, 18!\ sr.: Mike Maslsak. Olmsted
DL - Daniel Wi lkerson, Dayt m DunFalls. 6·2, 195. sr·.; Tom Brelt lgam ,
bar, s.s, 300 , sr.: Todd Llette, St. t4arys Fostoria. 6·2, 210, Jr. : , Mike Short ,
Memorial, 5-11. 245, sr.; Vic Chavers, Napoleon, S.O, 185, sr.
cantC&gt;I South , 6·2, 225, sr.; John Croos,
LBs - Chad Crum. U ma Bath, S.0 95
Columbus Beechcroft, 6-1,230, sr.
sr.; Chalaco Clark, Columbus De es,
LBs-Oave Brysoo,LoralnBroakstde, S.ll, ISO.· sr.; Brian Miller, Cinci nnati
6-1, 220, sr.: isaac Oeveland. Dayton Purcell, 6.J, 195, sr.: Srott Gumey, Shelby.
Dunbar, 6·2, 215, sr.: Jolut Williams, 6-iJ:!O:.'rAn
. dl1' McGee. Steubenville 5-9
Parma HolyName , 6-0, 195, Jr .; Joe Greco,
· ·
Louls vtiJe,6-J, 205, sr.
165, s r .; Nehge1 Pickettsa
, Clevvela1n d 1~ DBs - Keith Fuller, ·New Philadelphia, Jotteph, 5·8. 158. sr.:
m a enz 5 •
S.3, 195,sr.: GabeBanks, Delawarel!ayes, WI!Stlake. S.7. \50. sr. : Charles Fant.
6-1, 175, sr.; Steve Rodriguez , Solon, s.o. GoShm. S.O,l7~ sr.
J
170, sr .; Chuck Ryba , Gratt m Mldvt ew,
P - Matt J aCObs , Amherst, 6- 2· 185• r.
S-10, 180, sr.
Baol&lt;-ol·lhe-)&lt;ar - l;lerek. Kidwell.
P - Brandon llelll, Cbiwnbus St. Fostoria.
D
Wllk
Cha rles, 6-1, 210, sr .
Uneman-of· tb~year - ante1
er·
SECOND TEAM
SC&gt;I, Dayton Dunbtlr.
otlenoe
C.octi-ol·t~e-:~&lt;•r - Skip !Jaughman,

s.o. 190, sr.: Mike warner, Watkins
Memorial. 5·11. 180. sr.: Tom Suaec.

s:.t ·

WRs- Chris Duncan, POrtnoulh·, &amp;-1,

170, or.: Eddie Slandl fer, Franklin, 5-9, .
155, sr.
TE- Br yap Draga, Am herst. 6-2, 19.5,
sr.
OL- Al fie Hill, Cincinnat i Fort~s t Par k,

St. Ma r ys Memorial.

1573 B

1982 Olds

By DENNIS ANSTINE
UPI Sports Writer
Noire Dame's worst start in 20
years has head coach Digger
Phelps searching for a way out of
their seven-game losing strea k.
The Irish, 2·7, were whipped
105·95 at home by Southern
California Wednesday night as
. Har old Miner's 35 points led the
Troj ans to their fifth win In six .
games .
The losing streak matches the
second-longest In team history
and the longest by a Phelps team.
The only longer losing streak a
Notre Dame team has suffered
was a 13-game skid in 1966.
"We've got to come back a nd
figu re ou t hpw we can play with
· this team and the style of game
we can play ," Phelps said. ''If
that means we have to play In the
60s, the n we have' to play In the
60s.
"It's obvious we can 't run for
40 minutes when, other teams
wa nt to run with us, " said
Phelps. " We just have to play a
lot smarter than we are now In
regard · to the tempo of the

game."

·

~;:,~a~a::~iy~~c~=~~:ia~i:
1~~.

came closer tha n 10 points In the
second half.
Miner scored 19 points In the
second half, countering every
Irish attempt at a rally and
pleasing USC head coach George
Raveling with his patience.
" He doesn't have to work so
ha rd on of!en·se, " Raveling said.
" He can let off and let his
teammates do the work. The
thing with Harold Is .that he has
started to understand patience,
flow and shot selection." ·
Miner was more than patient
enough for Phelps .
· "He's just .a great scorer. He's
going to be one of the greatest
scorers the ga me has seen
because he' s un.selflsh and ne's
smooth the way lie scores,"
Phelps said. " He has a great
release, a quick release. Whenever we tried to niake a run,
Miner came through with the
.points they needed at crunch
time. ''

Robert Pack, who scored 24
points, sank 9 of 11 free throws In
the final minutes to keep the
Trojans on top.
LaPhonso Ellis led the Ir ish

with 28 points while E lmer
Bennett added Tl .
In other college games Wed·
nesday night , No. 3 Syracuse
ouUasted Canlslus 92·83, No. 5
Georgtown routedSt. Leo's 75-45,
No. 9 Olilo State pounded Wright
State 90·60, No. 16 Connecticut
romped by New Hampshi re
85·32, No. 19 South Carolina
handled Furman 93-52, and
Louisville upset No. 24 DePaul
94-75.
Billy Owens scored 34 points to
lead the Orangemen, whO hit just
23 of 42 free throws . Dave
Johnson and LeRon Ellis added
16 points apiece for Syracuse.
Nixon Dyall scored 21 points and
had a game-high 13 rebounds for·
Canlslus.
· At Landover , Md ., 7-fqot·2
Dlkembe Mutombo totaled 22
points, 14 rebounds a nd six
blocked shots to lead Georgetown. Mutombo's play made up
for the loss of standout center
Alonzo Mourning, who Is nurs ing
a minor foot injury.
At Storrs, Conn., the Huskies
bo lied to il 32-0 lead and went on a
21-0 run In the second half. John

Tulsa hands Kansas
State 72-61 . loss
TULSA, Okla . (UPI) - Reggie
Shields and Alyn Thomsen
scored back-to-back alley-oop
dunks Wednesday night to spark
Tulsa to a 72-61 victory over
Kansas Sta te.
. The Golden Hurric'!Jle, 3-2, got
an 18-polnt effort from Shields
and a 10-rebound performance
out of Thomsen to knock off the
Wildcats and e nd ·a two-game
losing streak.
Tulsa held K;ansas State, 4-2, to
. 23 points below Its average,. and
outrebounded the taller Wildcats
43-34.

1644A

1986 Chevrolet

Chevette

'4496

S3,195

42

' 1661 A

19B5 Chevrolet

Caprice

'4250

. S3,284'

42

1

1987 Chevrolet
1988 GMC

6996 .

S-15
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19B8 Chevrolet
1990 Olds

GM284

GM264 A 1983 Buick
1990 Olds

GM286

$8531

SS,4SO

Z-24

'8996

sa,250

Electra

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$4,295

Calais

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GM288

1990 Chevrolet

Beretta

'8986

1622 B

1987 Chrysler

6th Ava.

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1 - COl.ORADO

peSales; Frankie Wilson, Columbus
Beec hc r oft ; Brian Wo r rell. Niles
McKinley.

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a· GEORGIA TECH
4 • WAIHINCITOII
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IS ·IICIIGAN

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15-lOWA

11·LDUISYW

... ,... ... - -- ·-·31

Cenlnlllch'grn _, ....- -............... 20

SolunlatJ,Dooa-15
lfiiEPEIIIlENCE BOWL:

Laullilnl Tach - ·-····-- ·····-· · :M

lloryllnd ····-··-····--· ·· ······· 22

Tuoocllr. lleco- ~

SytiCUM ......... - ...- ... .....,._ _

,XI

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Oltlo ~ ..- -·-·· -·······-··-·· · 35

Alr Farca ···-····-····· · ······ ···· 14

FloridiS. - --·--·--·- - 21
So&amp;ahtm'la 'I trP ...........21

Penn Stl&amp;l .....· - -- .....- ........_ ... 13
Nardo Clrotlno . . . ·· ··-·· · ·· - ·· 27

Aubin ............ _ ...........................- ... 23

lhdlono ..- · ····· -···--····-·· n
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DOWNING CHILDS
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.......,,Dice.,.,.31

BLOCICBUSTER BOWL:
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Ongoft -···-- - - ····· -···-- 211
8rtghlln 'toullg -··-····-··--·--- 30

HOLIIAY BOWL
COPPER BOWL:

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SUN BOWl:

Pomeroy, Ohio

C.llomlo ·-··..:_···--····--·· 27

GATOR BOWL:

HAUOFFAIIE BOWL:
CITRUS BOWL:

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..

992-3322
NOUH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

992-6611

.Easy carrying ltandle.

CHESlER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303

•

Bank

3 CONVENIENT LOCAtiONS
MEMBER FDIC

STREET JACKSON AVE.

773-SS14

"" 6

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Pl. Plto.sanl, W. Va.Now Haw.,, W.

67S -1121

812-2136

XL 1200
Super

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SMITHNELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Nollt Dlml -····· ···········--·- 20 •
Vlrgnla ..---··········· ···- ··· ·- 23

'I'- Ill ycu....., wll~ tho ti.ttou!loctlbtttt·potlt·wlt -11111 our 1111rvt ct1 lilt 1ep '-1Y 001tgt-. _ , nuch
dlf011a oluol o -·~~~ ct1 opinion COiploootlllftl. a.tl'n11y olloloualn too1t1og • bctlh tilt 1111111ngo ... tho Vlllout bowl
_ , . 1hll lhort • o ..,..., ol nallonot l~rahlp ~ : olltlttlloo. E• 81Honktd r ... oauld " " - nolloMI
~I l oould upMt llttml tnd tilt Gtlw1our IIIIM ronlrtd tt1tow tho !At,hor,. - l o looo. Loti rur .. ptokod
Nolol Domoto upNI Cotondo in the o..,..llolll·whlch ldd ·llld llold ._our 11111Dnot1 "'""'lon. OurUtlnlllntllhlo
p•lt lhll tho Bullllolo. to.tlld ,_ tha~ looo loll.low.olly ond • noi Dilly lrNt Natn Do1111, 1M wit rtUtlti t11o1r rtgUitr
· - Mllonol tiUo. HuatJOI, I Nolollltmo lllloUI - 1 Cal odo ogoln 1111 llttml bttla To- In iho Cotlon Boa~ tho
Hurrlcna-.llcl,.... nllionalalwii.........., ... , .... btyondtlllt
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1 fNiorltr cti!MM- ohoutd ._ achoiUt obowl port • pill ct1 t11o1r ....,ach• .,ll. lllybo t11oy dot
Our 1810 loroclllliig-. • thft!tpoilllnQ threugh 11tt lint low-"" ct1 t i l t - . 1M 1t. ptoltl.. po,.on~~ga
plclitd
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thn -1,112..,_ ontl511-.. .....
Till blggnl ourprloo- wtlh tho llnlt ......... ctllht SZIODINII conlartncoo. Latlltf GIOiglt Tach, CttnOn tnc1
Yltplla, tilt Alloollo Coo!tt Cotot..... ~ -loctlll tho tlaulltltol Coni........... P•10 Coni-to-"
Ill tho -*J lor 111D. Till SNIIwool Corti- ~ 1o llh p1too -tho Big Ton- .. to 4111. To llpNI ow
rnttllotllor llllldng:
bMOd an - " lltGUt't , _ quatltnt IWIIQI. T1llt lncWtt ilia pat plllonnonct rtf! .. Dltoch
toomltatn1Cp to bollom In • ..., •..._""" ...... 20 ..ongatl '""'" ntllon:

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Lsan **N.Y. ·Gh IANTs ...... 2o

.

11-Sout.amCollortnce ............................................. 66.7
12- Big WeoiConfertnc:e ............................................. 66.6
13 - Ylnitle CoilentnCO ........................ ..................... 64.9
!(- GlletnyConfelwttca .......................... ............ ...... 63.5
15- Olio VdtyCanlatlliCI ......................................... 61.1
16 -GIM Sotllll Cotlt!atca ........................................... 59.2
17- NorihCerllrll CottlotlltCO ..................................... 57.6
18-Colonilll.aap .................................................... 57.5
19- Sou'-ltlm AfllojcConfarettce .......................... 57.1
20- Lone Sllr Conlo(anco ............................................. 50.2

alJFFALo ........................ 14

ere n ra-olllte mete -up betw•n 1heoe two .. .played juet four timet, ellCh wlnnln 2 . . .1"ut1
potllblt Super Bowl preview, bu1 Glanlf, Dolphint, Radaklno mnd In Billa' way. g

WASHING~ON ................ 27 *•NEW ENGLAND ........... 13

Up To 5
. $1695
Quarts of Oil .
II · Includes
GM Cars Qnly.

I

Expirea 121 30/ 90

500 EAST MAIN

CROWS
Family Restaurant
992-5432

POMEROY; OHIO

TUESDAV NICHT S~ECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

ONLY$349

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY .
VALLEY J

rownt, ~ave won lett ftve meetlngewith Atltnlll, lud l«ieo 7-1 . Falcono only victory ln'71 .. .
!:•nte • lal1 two garnet 11 home, Cleveland concluding dltmel UWIOn on rood.

At The End of the Pomeroy-MaSon Bridga
992-2556
Pomeroy, Ohio

DALLAS ................. :..... 26 PHOENIX

24

Weekly Specials

In October. Cardt held Delleo to olngle FG, wtnnlng It home 20-3: •. ·. ;.·.;~~~i,; d~~~~~· i.~id CowO~;oy Aikman to ju1t '!lne completion• in 2111ttamp!o for 61 yARDS. , .Coin Flip.

PAT HILL

ROIT ............................ 20 CHICAGO ....................... 17

l lono broke 1 0-r,ama lollng ttraak VI. Beera in aitcond meeting lltt ..liOn, but Wtnt back to lOt·
~!to Chicago nOT 23-17 (Lion• mined winning FBI 2 weeki ago . . . De1rolt wlnt.

In K~NSA~ C,ITY ............. 28 HOUSTON ...................... 24 .
TDsu'&amp;k oe poun ng wit yer. Chlaft zapped Oilers 34-0. . . RBt Jim Suon. Chritt Okoye rtn for .·
* I oye becoming flrat K. C. player In 8 liMO flit to run for over 1, 000 yard•. .

*

1

M
. AMI .... .. ................... 23 SEATTLE

17

~o:fh: ltllt btlttllng to reiJitln AFC Eelt tllle they won lett In 18iis.': ·. ~~:th~:.:c;~;. ·~·~tina va.
u • next week could decide chemplonorhlp. .•Setttle won lett meellng In 1987.

MINNESOTA .................. 26 **TAMPA BAY

oi

L.A. RAIDERS .............. 24 CINCINNATI

Middleport, Ohio
992-2196
.

20 ·

399 S. Third

In nrhr meeting, Colts nipped Je1• 17-14 with FG In fi1111l two minuteo ... Colt
J~i 'George
for 249 verde. two TOo, rallying lndlanapolle from 1 4·0 deficit.. .Jet1 to11 .

::':.uecl

461 S. Third

17

fo;

INDIANAPOLIS ............... 21 **NEW YORK JETS

FORD ·
~~
CHRYSLER
~ ~
PLYMOUTH-DODGE f'~

In September match-up In Min1111eote, Bucutunned Vlkes wt1h FG 1n OT ~~·.;.,j~ '23:2(,' b~klng
Vlltre B·IJitm• wlnnlngttruk over T.B.. . RB Gary Anderson ruthad for 108 yerdo
Buco.

PAT HILL

CHRYSLER
MOTORS

Middleport, Oho

20

Raldert, playing at home
. • cllm~d e l l - 8an1J1tlaln '89 beating1hem'2i: ;: Cl~;;y ~.;c",;j~g In 4th
!':rter to avert thutout. . .L,A. • Bo Jackson ran IHm-,.aonl 92 yardt for TD.
·

• New comfort grip handle

· NEW ORLEANS ........... 21 PITTSBURGH

•

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blade
• Nickel chrome p~ted

Ridenour
Supply

'

Available at participating
NAPA AUTO PARTS stores
and NAPA AutoCare Centers.
Call H!OIH.ET·NAPA
for the store nearest you.
Sale ends December 31,1990.

CHESTEI, OHIO

915-3301

up

r grebt. wllh pooelbllltlea• . .edge to N.O.

*"PHILADELPHIA ................ , .. 30 GREEN BAY ................... 23

SAN DIEGO ..................... 24 **DENVER ...................... 17

~-ntly, Ch~gere handed Bronao~ Bth loa In I games, -ring 11 unentwered point. after
enver took 7·0 lead. 11·7 . • . I.D. • recent OT loA to 8elttlll hurt playoff hope 1 •

~on.) SAN FRANCISCO ....... 27 **L.A. RAMS

:.,-:= •11;·
-

Rams broke18'geme 41er wlnnlng-11 with 21-1 :; .;h~;,i.~: :

'

I .

'

20

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1nterceptlona, 3 fumble• ... L.A. looking for lint swHp llnoa 1180.

'·
I I

.

· ~~,.hold huHge 19-1 lead In . -·with Eagles•.•two more t•m•ln thick Of fight for playoff
- - -· • .even Nepecrtlve dlvii!Ooo IMderl lllp, t1t1n for theoe two remote.

8

' '·

17

:P•!~:•_:n laltohtwo fotuule• VI. Plt11n '14, '87, lead Hrles 11-4, . .dl~i;;~ tit~; ·~~d ~ild-card
·-• mu

786 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6491

.,

I

POMEROY, OHIO

SOFT DRINKS · FRIES . SANDWICHES

~Sun.\ ATLAN-r:A .............. 23 **CLEVELAND ................ 13

I

~-- -----------~------~
992-2174

T••m•la•1 met In · e4, Ski,.. holding 3-1 oerlaleed.. .Weahington'alfn~ggle for wild card apot
could be decided in home finale with Bllllln two w•k• . ..another Patriot tooo. ·

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698 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OH.IO

Gwynn scored 10 or his 21 points
In the game opening run .
At Columbus, Ohio, the Buckeyes failed to reach the century
mark for the first time thi s
season but had little troubie
defeating Wright State. Jim
J ackson led Ohio State with 20
points.
At Louisville, LaBradford
Smith scored 19 of his 24 points In
the second half to lead the
Cardinals to their first victory . A
19-3 Louisville run to start the
second half took the Blue Dem·
ons out of the game. James'
Brewer added 19 points and
Everlck Sullivan 15 for Louis·
ville, which had played only one
other game this season, getting
blown out by Indiana on Dec. 1.
DePaul' s David Booth led all
scorers with 25 points.
At Columbia, S.C., Barry Man·
nlng and Joe Rhett scored 19
points e ach and keyed a swarm·
lngde!e nse. The Gamecocks, 7-1,
never trailed after the opening
minute and used a 22-6 run in.the
flnalll minutes of the first hal! to
cruise to their sixth stra ight
victory .

.,...,..,

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Page . 6-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 13, 1990

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

DAN POLCYN

JOE EDWARDS

On TV this weekend,

Saturday NFL gam.es
tops _small-screen fare
By JEFF HASEN
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Mer·
Un Olsen may choose to send
himself a pick-me-up bouquet
this weekend.
While B111 Wa Ish and NBC
draw Buffalo at the New York
Giants Saturday, Olsen and CBS
are stuck with a Washington at
New England clunker at 3:30
p.m. EST.
Walsh calls the Bills-Giants
game at 12:30 p.m. EST a
potential prelude to Super Bowl
XXV.
''It's as close as you can get,"
the NBC analyst said. "This is
the first real matchup between
the very strongest teams hi both
conferences this late in the year
after everything has been shaken
out of the system. Both teams are
playing well."
Walsh gives the Bills an edge.
"Buffalo has a lot at stake in
terms of positioning them·
selves," he said. ' 'They're a kind
of a very physical team that has a
lot of confidence and arrogance.
They have to break through that.
I'm surprised that Buffalo ·is an
underdog. They're playing the
best In the NFL In recent weeks.
''They've been a surprise to all
of us In terms of g_ettlng It
together after they struggled
internally, but they're a very
talented' team with outstanding
personnel In key positions."
The former San Francisco
coach said the Giants may
benefit from their two recent
defeats after a 10·0 start.
"You don't expect to go
through without any losses,"
Walsh said. ''The bounce of the
ball sometimes can make a
difference. But you have to have
respect In regard to the
opposition."
"They know more about them·
selves. That's what these games
do- they're not only for the sake
of competition, but to learn more
and more about themselves and
what lt will take to beat the best."
The rest of the weekend sports
fare (Ail times EST):
SATURD,U
Basketball
"NBA Inside Stuff" (12: 30-1:00
p.m., NBC), weekly feature and
Interview show,
College ·(12:00-2:00 p.m.,
ESPN), Princeton at Rutgers.
College ( 1: 30-3:30 p.m.,
SPTSCHNL), Portland at Notre
Dame.
College (4:00-6:00 p.m., ABC), ·
Nevada-Las Vegas at Michigan
State or Georgia Tech at Temple.
Colleg_e (7: 30-9:30 p.m.,
ESPN), Alabama at North
Carolina.
College (9: 30-11:30 p.m .,
ESPN), Loyola Marymount at
Oklahoma.

Football
NFL (11:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. ,
ESPN),-"GameDay" preview of
day 's contests.
College (12: 00-3:30 p.m ., CBS),
coverage of Division I·AA title
game from Statesboro, Ga.
NFL (12:00-12:30 p.m., NBC),
"NFL Live" pregame show
before Bills· Giants.
NFL (3:30-4:00 p.m., CBS),
''The NFL Today" pregame
before Redsklns- Patriots.
College (8: 00-11:00 p.m .• MIZ·
LOU), coverage of Independel)ce
Bowl between Louisiana Tech
and Maryland from Shreveport,
La.
Golf
PGA Seniors Tour (2:00-4:00
p.m. , ABC), coverage of second
round of Life Champions too rnamen t from Dorado, Puerto Rico.
.
Hockey
NHL (8: 30·11: 30 p.m.,
SPTSCHNL), Chicago at St.
Louis.
Horse racing
Thoroughbreds . (6: 00-7: 00
p.m., ESPN), coverage of Bay
Meadows Handicap from San
Francisco.
Tennis
Men's (2:00-5:00 p.m., I!:SPN),
same-day coverage of semifinals
of Grand Slam Cup from Munich
Germany.
·
'
General
NBC's · "SportsWorld" (4:00·
6:00 p.m. ), taped coverage of
World Professional Flgure ·Skat·
ing Championships from Landover, Md.; Albert Achievement
. Awards. SUNDAY
·
Auto racing
"Speedway Sunday" (7: 309: 30 p.m., SPTSCHNL), studio
show focusing on auto racing
results worldwide.
Football
NFL (11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.,
. ESPN), "GameDay" preview of
day 's contests.
NFL (12:30-7:00 p.m., CBS)
"The NFL Today" pregam~
show followed by regional
coverage.
"NFL (12:30-7:00 p.m .. NBC),
NFL Live" pregame show
. followed by double-header.
NFL (8:00·11:00 p.m., ESPN),
Chicago at Detroit.
Golf
PGA Seniors Tour (2:00-4: 00
p.m ., ABC), coverage of final
round of Life Champions iourna·
ment from Dorado, Puerto Rico.
!)peclal (4:00-5:00 p.m., ABC),
profile of Arnold Palmer.
Tennis
Men's (2:00-S:OOp.m., ESPN),
same-day coverage of llnal of
Grand Slam Cup from Munich
Germany.
'
General
Special (5: 00·6: 00 p.m. , ABC)
"Athletes and·Addlctlon: It's Noi
A Game."

Gilbert, Wheaton, Krickstein
win in Grand Slam Cup play
MUNICH, Germany (UP! I Brad Gilbert, David Wheaton
and Aaron Krlcksteln led an
American charge Wednesday
and gained the quarterfinals of
the $6 million Grand Slam Cup.
Gilbert, included among the
16-man field as a replacement for
the Injured Andre Agassl, overcame sixth-seed Jonas Svensson
of Sweden, 2-6, 6·3, 6·4, Wheaton
defeated Yannlck Noah of
France, 7·6 17·2), 6-7 (5·7), 6·3,
and Krlcksteln downed Andres
Gomez of Ecuador 6·3, 6·4,
In addition Ivan Lend!, who
resides In Greenwich, Conn., was
the day's most comfortable
winner, 6-4, 6-0 over Christian
Bergstrom of Sweden.
Wheaton was able to survive
primarily because of the elfec.
tlveness of his serve·and·volley
game. There were no breaks of
serve In the opening two sets.
Noah fended off two set points
In the first set before losing the
tie-break, then drew even In the
second set tie-break. Wheaton
woa the match on his third inatch
point.
· Both Gilbert and Wheaton are
allured of earning at least
$300,000, with· the winner to

receive $2 million.
"I thought of the money only
shortly before match point,"
Gilbert said. ·
Krlcksteln progressed to the
second round with a comfortable
win over a disappointing Gomez.
The French.Open champion from
Ecuador appeared to have trou·
ble majntalning concentration.
He committed 18 unforced errors
In the first set alone.
Lendl, who broke Bergstrom's
serve In the opening game of both
sets, :won the last nine games to
take the match.
On Thursday, Michael Chang
or the United States meets Henri
Le~nte of France, and u.s.
Open champion Pete Sampras
plays Goran Ivanesevlc of Yu·
goslavla. Friday's matches pit
Gilbert against Krlcksteln and
Wheaton against Lend!.
·
The first-round losers collected
$100,000.

Tbe U.S. General of tbe Army.
wean live sliver stan fastened ~
getber In a circle and tbe coat of arms
of the United Stalel in gold-a.lored
metal with shield and crest enameled.

P - Jon Robert s. Grandview, 5-11. 175,

Miami·Hurricanes' MarYland
"n amed UPI Lineman of the Year
ByLESKJOS
UPI Sports Writer
.
MIAMI (UPI) - Last spring
was an agonizing time for Russell Maryland.
The University of Mlamldefen·
sive tackle had graduated with a

for a fifth year.
, nesday he was named Lineman
With some · urging from head of the Year by U11ited Press
coach Dennis Erickson, he de- (See MARYLAND ' on Page 7)

No• o... For
Ch rltt~nu Sea eon!

"The most Important thing is
winning," Smith said. ''The
second thing Is stopping the run.
From that, the sack record will
come. II it's meant to be, It will
happen. If not, I'll be very
disappointed."
Playing against the r'un has
become a point of pride for
Smith. And his Improvement In
that area Is largely the reason
why he feels he Is the NFL' sbest
defensive player.
Smlt1t is also quick to credit
llnemates Cornelius Bennett and
Darryl Talley , as well as the rest
of the line, the secondary and the
offense (the league's hlghestscoring·unlt) .
"My personal play," he said,
returning to familiar territory
"I've been playing delen.:C
against the run better than ever
before In my career. I take pride
In playing against the run as I
take pride against the pass.
"Over 13 games on film I
haven't seen a better defensive
player In the league. Now that
I've reacl\ed that status, I want
credit for II. I'm not being
.over-confident or cocky."

removing several starters from
the game. He was fined and the
Bills won their next eight games.
They've won tWice since losing
to Houston. The Giants won for
the first time in three games last
week, alter Taylor, a nine-time
All-Pro, turned the tide by
making 2'h sacks, 12 tackles and
causing an interception.
"He's a friend of" mine," said

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Smith, pointing out they grew up
30 minutes apart In VIrginia. "I
respect him but right now, I think
It's time to give credit to the
person who believes It."
Later, Taylor walked on the
field for practice and was told his
name came up In Smith's
conversation.
·
"That's good," Taylor said,
smiling. ''That's 'real gond."

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Not pictured are Scott Barton and Eric Heck.

•

In the NBA Wednesday night,

Celtics down Bucks 129-111

"Not R_.,ublo fi&gt;r TYIIOg..,hlcal ErrOre."

Smith, the No. 1 draft pick In
1985, has backed up his words
from the start, winning AFC
Ollfensive Rookie of the Year,
honors and a place In the past
three Pro Bowls.
·
It hasn't always made listening
to him easy. even for his team.
Alter ..Buffalo's loss to Miami In
the second week, he ripped the
coaches for "giving up" by

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OPEN OAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1·5

Buffalo's Smith makes claim to
be NFL's top defensive end
By LISA HARRIS
UPI Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(UP I) ~ Buffalo Bills end Bruce
Smith, three sacks short of an
NFL record, Saturday will be
gunning for New York quarter·
back Phil Simms' body - and
linebacker Lawrence Taylor's
reputation.
Smith, who gave an Immediate
"Noooo" when asked If he gets
enough attention, said he wants
to prove as much In front of
Taylor when the BillS face the
New York Giants at the
Meadowlands.
"Believe me, It will be a
terrible lnjustl"c e If I wasn't
recognized to that extent as the
best defensive player In the
league," Smith said Wednesday
during a telephone hook-up to
Giants Stadium. "Over the past
10 years, (Taylor's) been the
most dominant player In the
league. I just think I've taken It
up a notch."
The Giants and Bills are both
11·2, with New York already
having clinched the NFC East
and Buffalo a game ahead of
Miami In the AFC East.
"In Buffalo, we only have· one
newspaper and they're against
us," Smith said. "They'd rather
see us lose than win. I don't think
I've gotten the recognition I
deserve. I don't think It's fair but
It keeps you hungry. I take It as a
personal challenge to get better
every week."
Pity Simms. With four sacks In
· the first half against Indianapolis
last week, Smith took over the
NFL lead with 19. Mark Gastineau recorded 22 for the New
York Jets in .1986, the most in a
season since the NFL kept such
records. Smith's 19 Is fifth-best,
only 1~ behind Taylor's career·
h lgh in 1986.

........•
..•.

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

~

P - Jasa~ Sheeketskl, Shadyside, 5·11,
·
180,
sr.
sr.
Back..l·the-)oe.,. - llob Hoyi ng, St .
WRs -Scott Brunswick, St. Henry, 6-2,
SECOND TEAM
195, sr. ; Jay Overmyer. Fremont St.
Henry.
on.....
Unemaa-ol-lh~year - Je-ff HarUngs,
Joseph, 5-10, 155, sr.
Wtu- Joe Gardner. Danville, 6-5. 195,
St. Henry.
TE- Ttm Lamb. Sandusky St. Marys.
sr.: Tom Perkins. Shenandoah, 6-1. 175, sr.
Coaclt-{lf-th:e-year- Tim Boeckman. St .
6-3, 1115, ~··
TE - Kevin Nhbmp, St. Henry, 6-6,
OL- Jeff Harttngs, ~t. Henry, &amp;4, 250,
Henry. •
·
240, sr.
~
sr.; Andy Mangas, Ayersvtne, 6-3,235, sr.;
HONORAIILI! MENTION LINEMEN ·
OL -... JUGD A.rkley, Hemlock Miller,
Clint Wiley, Shadyside, 6-(l, 225, sr.:
Steve Adams, Franklin FuraaceGreeo;
HI. lUI, sr.; Nathan Collins. Tri-County
Christian Lauber, Archbold ,-5-1!, 220, sr. · North, 5-11, 195, sr.; Eric Gulnter,
Nate Arnold, Lucas ; Bruce Bornhorst,
C- Fred Koctu.•var, Kirtland , 6-1 180
New Bremen: Keith Bunker, Gallon
Mogadore. 6-1,185,sr .; DuPolc)'D,KyJer
sr.
'
'
Northm«: Jon Beaber, Gibsonburg: Dan
Creek, l-1, %4t, ...
QB- Bob Hoying, St. Henry, 6·5, 210, sr.
Capozella, Tuscarawas Catholic: Chris
C- Mark Etsma, East Knox. 6-1, 210. sr.
RBs - Craig Svendsen, Kirtland, 6-1,
Cook. Berne Union; Jemy Demorest,
QB
Roaer
.
Bl•am•.
Gloull&amp;er·
180, sr.; Gary George, Berne Union , 5·11,
EdgertCfl; Jq_e Edwards, Kyser Creek;
Trimble, 1-S, 195, or.
170, sr.; Je!! Stucke, Minster, 5-10, 180, sr.
B(ian Fox . ·Fremau St. Jo~ph; Jaalll
RBs - Dean SchlaChter , Ayersvllle,
PK- Shane Thiel, Edge-rtGI\, ~11. 180,
Guffey,
Glouster-Trmble; Jamie Harless,
5-10,175. sr. : Greg Gels, St. Henry, 6-0, i95,
Sr.
sr.; Ken Bostelman. Archbold. 6-1, 220. sr. · CaldWell; Damon Howarth, Newark Ca Defen~~e
thollc; Tony Haynes, Archbold; Jasm
PK- Brian Graham, Newark Catholic,
DL- Steve Szyrnancmskt, Fremau St ~
Huth, Mogadore; Craig Hipsher, Hardin6-0, 160, Jr,
Joseph. 6-2, 205, sr. ; ,Paul MCClelland,
Northern: Tracy Heitkamp, Minster;
Mingo, 6-2, 290, s r.; Doug Fortkamp
Defenae
.
Mark Jenkins, .T ri·County North; Travis
Minster. 6-3, 200. sr.: Rod scon, sanduskY
DL- Jetf Jeffers, Uberty center, 6-1,
Johnson, . Newark Ca tholiC; ·chad Jones,
St. Marys, 5-11,170, sr.
• ·
235, s_r.; Mike Kirkbride, Woodsfield, 6-3,
Antwerp; Frank Knuckel, East Knox;
LBs- RyanDeFriE".Ze, M'ecomb, 5-11 ,
185, sr.; Wade Jordan, Triad, 6-l, 255, sr. ;
Andy Kochevar. Kirtland; Grag Mogus,
175. Senior; Chris Cook, Berne Union, 6-l,
Corey Hug, Edon, 6-}, 180, sr.
Lorain catholic; Charles Pauley, Hardin·
185, s r.; Ed Will, Sandusky St. Marys, 5-11, ·
LBs - Jon Cfum, TUfin Calvert, S-10,
Northern; Andy Pakes, Caldwell: John
175, sr.; Curt Partee. Ayersvttte, 5-ll, 195,
180, sr.; .B~nt Johnsm , Galion Northmor-,
Raymond, Mingo; Steve· SChumacher,
sr.
.
6-0, 180, sr.; Bill Oldlges, Minster, 6-3, 200,
WoaJsfiel.d; Kolbl Shart2er, Edon: Royal
DBs - J .R . Ferry, Leetonia, 5-10, 175•
sr.: Chlid.Jones; Antwerp, 5-11, 195, sr.
.Smith, Leetonia; Matt ThOmpson, Fairsr. ; Curt Wach, Shadyside, 5-10, 160, sr.; · DBs- Sam· Rodriguez , Archbold, 5-8,
port Harbor; Brian WUIIami, Fraaklln
Brandon Felger, Falrpon Harbor, S:.ll.
170,sr.: Jeff Camp, Monroev.nte,5-10, 165,
FumaceGreeni Andy Wolfe, Sandusky St .
175, jr.: Shawn Brewer, Antwerp, 6-0, 165•
sr.; Mark Stromp, Mingo, 6-2, 180, sr.;
Ma rys; Dan Whet!iel, Gibsonburg: AarCI'I
sr.
Ryan Ludwlg,Hardln·Northeern, 5·10,170.
West, Ant~rp; Chad WelCh. Newark
Catho.Jic; A.J. Young, Fremont St. Joseph.
HONORABLE MENTION BACKS
Aaroo BabCOC"k, Archbold; Chris COle.
Tri-County North; Doug Church, Ayers:
vUJe; Steve Chaney, Caraway; 'nrn
Dond~ro, Fremau St . Joseph; Scott
Etwer, Delphos St. John's; Lane GoaJ,
Hardin-Northern; Aaron Hell, Tuscara was Catholic; ScotT ·J usti ce, Independence; Rick Jones, Gibsonburg; Scott Judy,
Nonh wood; Mik e Kinsinger, Pandora degree In psychology and was clded he had something more to
Gilboa; Chad Locrtey, East Knox: Chance
trying to decide whether to turn prove In college and came back
Lee, Ayersville: Randy Pierce, Mogapro by joining the supplemental for his fifth year. Apparently, he
dore; Ed Perkins, $henandoah; Geoff
WeberoVan Buren .
draft or return to the Hurricanes made the right move, and Wed·

FIIIBT :t'E""
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·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

KC's Polcyn, Edwards UPI all-staters
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Kyger Creek tackle Dan Polcyn
and running back/ linebacker Joe
E!lwards were among six southeastern Ohio football players
from Division V schOOls selected
for this year's UP! small-school
all-state squad.
Polcyn, who· moved to right
tackle ·for his farewell campaign
after spending the previous two
years at center, was one of the
bulldozers on the offensive line
that cleared the way for Ed·
wards, a four-year starter and
part of a Bobcat backfield that
averaged 194.6 yatds per game
and drove Mel Coen's SVAC
co-champion crew to a
conference-best 9·1 overall record. Both are seniors.
Here's the 1990 United Press
Interliatlonal Division V all-Ohio
football team, with height,
weight and school grade:

Thursday. December 13, 1990

""

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By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
The Boston Celtics are back,
and getting better fast.
For the past two .seasons, the
Celtics were mediocre - strug·
gling at home, losing on the road
and looking like a tired oid team.
Now, after just 21 games· under
first-year coach Chris Ford,
Boston is up and running and
back among the best.
011 Wednesday night at Boston
Garden, the Celtlcs humbled the
Central Divis Ion-leading Mll·
waukee Bucks '129·111, shooting
an extraordinary 65 percentfrom
the floor . Boston, now 17-4, led
from the opening minutes and
was ahead by 36 points in the
third quarter.
"In the end, we clesed the gap
and made it respectable," said
Bucks head coach Del Harris.
"The truth was, it was a
knockout."
What made the victory even
more Impressive was that Bos·
ton's worst loss of the year came
in Milwaukee, a 28-point rout on
Nov. 13.
Since then, Ford has moved
6-foot-5 shooter Kevin Gamble
into the starting lineup at small
forward and the result has been
13 wins in the last 15 games.
"He's the ·difference In our
team ·- he's a winner," . says
appreciative teammate Larry
Bird, who often works give-and·
go plays with Gamble, who,ranks ·
fourth In the NBA in ·shooting
percentage.
The Celtics have also benefited
greatly from the addition of
quick guards Brian Shaw and
Dee Brown; who give speed to the
combined 38 years experience of
big men Bird, Robert Parish and
Kevin McHale, whose respective ·
ages are 34, 37 and 32.
"Right now, the Celtlcs have a
nice mix of veterans and youth,"
said Harris. "If you're going to
make changes, It's better to
trade In Qld, short legs Instead of
old, long legs."
Bird , who admits he's not the
star he once was, occasionally

Maryland ...

struggles with his shooting
touch; like his 15-for-51 misfiring
during a recent Texas trip. But .
he was on-target against the
Bucks, scoring 18 of his 30 points
In the first quarter - when the
ball never touched the rim.
."He came out on tire tonight,"
said Milwaukee's Alvin Robert·
son. "He gave his teammates alf
the confidence in the world and
they never looked back."
"We ju~t try to give him the
ball and get out of his way." said ·
Boston's Reggie Lewis, who
scored 18 ·points.
The Celllcs took control of the
game in the first half , when they
shot 61 percent from the floor and
committed just one turnover
while building a 6648 half!Jme
·
·
advantage.
The Bucks, who bad a four·
game winning streak snapped,
were Raced by Fran~ Brlckows·
kl's 17 points.
·
Elsewhere In the NBA Wednes day night, San Antoni9 out·
played Charlotte 92-81,, Houston '
downed Philadelphia 108-100, the
L.A. Clippers stopped Cleveland
100-90, Atlanta routed Miami
118·93, Seattle overcame Indiana
99-90 and Dallas took out the L.A.
Lakers 112-97 In overtime. ·
Spurs 92, Hornets 81
At Charlotte, N.C., David Ro·
binson scored 24 points and
grabbed 17 rebounds, leading
San Antonio to Its third straJght
win. The Spurs scored the game's
first seven points and never
trailed. The ·Hornets, loSers for
the fifth straight game, were ,
paced by Armon Gilliam's 16
points and 14 rebounds.
Rockets 108, 76ers 100
At Philadelphia, Akeem Ola·
juwon scored 29 points and
grabbed 15 rebounds as Houston
ended a 23-game losing streak at
the Specturm: The Rockets had
not won In Philadelphia since
Jan. 2, 1974. The 76ers, winners in
their previous four games, were
paced by Charles Barkley's 29
points.
.
Clippers 100, Cavaliers 90
At Richfield, Ohio, Ken Nor·

(Continued from Page 6)

International.
"You have to look at It as a
great accomplishment, as kind of
a payoff lor all the work and
everything I've put into it last
live years." Maryland said. "It's
a great l!onor."
It was his second postseason
award.LastweekinLosAngeles,
the 6-foot -2, 273-pounder from ·
Chicago won the Outland Trophy
as the nation's top lineman.
A master of moves on the
defensive line. Maryland ert·
joyed a spectacular final. He
finished with 96 tackles, 10'h
sacks and 19 quarterback
hurries.
His finest game may have
come In a 29·20 Joss to Notre
Dame In which he rolled up 20
tackles and a sack to only four
tackles lor Irish nose tackle
Chris Zorich. winner of the
Lombardi Trophy lor defensive
players.
·
''That was one of my best,"
Maryland said. ''Eyery time we
go and play In SOuth Bend·I se~m .
to do well. In the 1988 season. the
first season I started, I had a
good game. My parents were
there, along with lot of people I ·.
knew. This year I bad made up
my mind to equal or top that
performance and [ got all tholll'
tackles and made good plays."
· In his. Ias t
F our games Ia ter,

game at the Orange Bowl,
Maryland turned in another
outstanding performance In a
33·7 victory over Syracuse. He
was credited with 11 tackles and
thre.~ sacks, One of the tackles
came 20 yards down field, catch·
lng a .Syracuse player who had
broken Into · the Miami
secondary.
"I don't know than I've ever
seen a guy dominate a football
game like Russell did," Erickson
said of the Syracuse game. "It
had to be the best performance
on defense that I've ever seen.
"! believe that they just don't
come any better than Russell.
For the past two years he has
graded out as the most consistent
of all our defensive linemen."
· That is saying a lot because
last year the Hurricanes had
what many Clllled the best
defensive line ever with Cortez
Kennedy, Greg Mark, Wlllls
Peguese and Maryland.
Maryland likely will be drafted
among the top 10 players In the
NFL draft next spring.
"I think I play the run a lot
better than I rush the passer," he
said. "I'm a gap player. I try to
play my gap, and ltl can I make
plays from sideline to sideline.
W(th both the run and pass rush, I
have to Improve. You·can always
lmp~ve."
,
,v

man scored nipE\ofhls game-high
30 points In a decisive 21·2 ·run at
the start of th'e third quarter. The
Clippers won for just the second
time In eight road games. The
Cavaliers, who lost their third In
a row, were led by Brad Daugher·
ty's 21 points and 13 rebounds .
Hawks 118, Heal 93
At Miami, Dominique Wilkins
scored 28 points and collected 17
rebounds, leading .Atlanta to Its
fourth win In .live games. Kevin
Willis added 22 points for the
resurgent Hawks, who led from
midway through t!le first quar·
ter. Miami, which lost Its filth in
.a row, was paced by, Sherman
Douglas and , Glen RICe with 16
points !)ach.
· Sonlcs 95, Pacers 86
At Sf;attle, Derrick McKey and
Shawn1 Kemp .each scored 18
poirifs ·and Seattle kept Indiana's
road mark a perfect 0·11, the
league's worst away-from-home
record. The Pacers lost despite
Reggie Miller's game-high 26
points and Rlk Smit.s ' 18. The
Supersonics had been struggling
at home, having lost four of their
previous five.
M~tverlcks 112, La(fers 97 ( OT)
At Inglewood, Calif., the Mavericks scored the first 13 points in
overtime and ended a six-game
losing streak. Rodney McCray
forced the extra period with an
18-foot turnaround jumper as
time expired in regulation play.
For Dallas, Derek Harper, Ro·
lando Blackman arid James
Donaldson each scored 22 points.
The Lakers received .a gamehigh 28 points from James
Worthy .

Meigs wrestling

season opens
· The Meigs Marauder wrestling
got it's season Wider way last
Saturday by placing fourth out of
six teams· in the Miami Trace
RoWJd Robin Tournament
Individuals placing in the
tournament were Aaron Sheets first
in the heavy weight, David Swan·
son first in the 112 pound class;
Bun Kennedy second in the 189
class; PJ . Chadwell third in the 103
class; Mike Call fourth in the 130
class; Joe McElroy fourth in the
135 class; and Mike Hall fourth in
the 160 class. Meigs will take
pan in the Belpre Civilan Tournament this Friday and Saturday.
team

. '.

A shof
BLOCKS SHOT
close to the bask~ by the
Cavaliers' Brad Daugherty
(right) Is blocked by the L.A.
Clippers' Ken NonniUI In the
fourth quarter of Wednesday
night's NBA game In Los
Angeles, which the Clippers
won 100..911, ( UPI)

Meigs girls defeat

Nelsonville-York
The Meigs Marauders outscored
18·7 in the
second quarter to break open a 10.
10 game, enroute to a 63·33 victory
over the lady Bucks in girls TVC
action Monday night
Meigs placed three girls in
double figures led by sophomore
Vema Collipston with 20, Kelly
Smith, 14l!Dd Tricia Baer, 12.
Meigs didn 'tlet up in the second
half as the Marauders outscOred the
hosting' Buckeyes 18-8 in the third·
.period and 17·8 in the tinal period
to win going away.
Kim Hanning added eight points,
Jennifer Thylor seven and Kim
Ewing two, to round out the scor·
ing. · Baer led the battle of the
boards with eight reboUnds, while
Smith and Taylor added seven.
Taylor added three assists, while
Baer and Compston added two.
Compston and Taylor added two
Ne~nville-York

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FuUer led Nelsonville· York in
scoring with 14.
In the n:serve contest coach Kim
Adlcins and the Marauders rolled
over Nelsonville 57-14. Turner and
Young led the attack with 10 each,
while O'Brien added eight Meigs
will host Belpre on Thursday night

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Sports briefs

'•'

SkUng
Switzerland's Franz Helnzer
clocked the . fastest tltne at Val
Gardena, Italy, in training for
World Cup downhill races Friday
and Saturday . .. . Practice for
Friday's women's World ·.cup
downhill at Melrlngen, Switzer.
land, wascancf'ledbecauseoftoo
much snow.

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Page 8-The

Sentinel

Sellers birth

----Carsey birthday---Man.nne Carsey, daugbrer of
Ruth Ca-sey, recently celebrated
her eighth birthday with a piny at
McDonald's in Pomeroy pven by
her grandfather, Thunnan Carsef.
Games were played and pnzes
awarded to those attending.
Attending were Debbie _and
Emily Babbitt, Cathy and Missy

.

Wildwood gardeners
meeting conducted

Christmas party

Connie
Hill
demonstraled
making a pine cone wrealh at the
recent meeting of the Wtldwood
Garden Club he!~ at the home of
Kathryn Miller.
Mrs. Hill used different sizes of
white pine cones and noted that
they should be soaked in bleach ~r
ammonia water . to clean and kill
any insecrs. Then they should be air
dried or oven dried on low heat.
Using a wire frame and ftoral wire,
fasten cones all going the s;ulle
direction. She also used lotus pods
arid various nuts and sweet gum
balls which were attached with a
hot-melt glue gun. When I!Je
wreath is finished, spray wtth
polyurethane, let dry and attach a
bow for the Christmas season. She
noted that a wreath of any kind can
be created by using material of
fresh pine or holly, and dried
flowers or herbs.
The meeting opened with
devotions by Pauline Eynon reading from Matthew 25-40 followed
by a· poem, "No One Lives by
Bread Alone." Members answered
roll call by bringing a miniature !II'·
rangement no taller than four m.ches high using fresh or dry
material.
It was noted that Evelyn Hollon
received seven ribbons and Connie
Hill two blue ribbons in the
Christmas Oower show at Royal
OalcReson.
For show-and-tell Mrs. Hollon
displayed dried rose buds, wheat

and com tassell, telling the process
of drying them.
For Now is the Time, Doris.
Grueser said to oil and grease tools
and mowers before putting away
for the winter. It was also noted that
now is the time to clean up yllf!ls
and rake leaves for mulch. Members were told not to bum leaves
because this gives off a chemical.
Plowing a spading a garden or
Hower bed will help improve soil
structure and then it will be ready
in the spring.

MARIANNE CARSEY

The River Valley Herbalists met
recently at Royal Oak Reson for
their annual Harvest Dinner. The
Athens Herb Guild anended · as
guests.
Many new herb dishes were
featured and a table of Christmas
crafrs was displayed with member
telling what each contained.
..
Bobbi Karr gave a presentatton
on creating an herb dish garden in a
large shallow pot sa.ucer. It can be
trimmed during the winter .months
for use in the kitchen.
Connie Hill presented an advent
wreath using juniper and Bible
herbs. A history of Bible herbs and
what each represented was given to

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GALLIPOLIS - The Diabetes
Suppon Group will meet Thursday
It 7 p.m. at Holzer Medical C.enter
In the 'French 500- Room. A
. IDIP:8fll will be "Surviving the
ohdays" by Marie. Helms. ~ $1
ift exchange tS opbonal. Bnng a
favorite holiday snack.

~

POMEROY - The Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will have a gift and ornament exchange on Thursday at the
home or Jenny Smith. Leave upper
parking lot in Pomeroy at5:4S p.m.
Bring items for needy families.
POINT
PLEASANT
WVARNG Point Pleasant Unit
3664 Family Suppon Group will
meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the
armory day room. All members urged 10 attend.

s.e

AT PARTICIPATING

COOLVILLE - There will be a
square dance Saturday from 8 to
11;30 p.m. at the Coolville Lions
Building with music by the Happy
Hollow Boys. Cost is $3 single and
POMEROY - The Return $5 couple. Jim Brown will be the
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughlers caller.
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at I :30 p.m. at the
SUNDAY
Grace Epsicopal Church. Hostesses
REEDSVILLE • Mr. and Mrs.
will be Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, Mrs. Warren Connolly, Reedsville, will
Michael Elberfeld, Mrs. Gary host a Christmas . open house at
Moore, Mrs. Linda Patterson and their home on Sunday from noon to
Mrs. JOhn Rose. Miles Epling, past 4 p.m. in honor of their daughter
national commander of the . and son-in-law, Amy and Kevin
American Legion, will be the guest M · s p
b
Aa.
speaker.
oms, 1. eters urg,
·
CHEsTER - The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League will hold another muzzle
loader shoot on Sunday beginning
at I p.m. A 22-caliber rifte shoot
will also be featured. _

.

RACINE - Barbara's School of
Dance will present its annual dance
program, "Christmas Magic," on
Sunday at 4 p.m. at the Southern
Junior High School in Racine. The
public is invited to attend.

AND DEALERS

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
~UNDAY, DECEMBER 14
6 P.M. TIL 8 P.M.
BRING YOUR CAMERA

&amp;

Emy Olivarez-Orteza, M.D.
'

.

. announce the opening of their
- practice in

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PLEASANT.VALLEY HOSPITAL

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1

RECLINERS

Adolescent Medicine

open house

Pictures can be lraumatic? Now what
do I do with them? Thanlcing the
sender is out of the question. I am
so angry at her I can bare! y see to
type ihis letter. -- UPSET IN
LANSING, MICH.
DEAR MICHIGAN: Put the
pictures away. The relative meant
no harm. I share your sentiments
about photos or the deceased, but
obviously there are others who think
differently.

Reduc~d 20°/o TO 40°/o

and

For appointments ~1

like that? Don't they realize that such

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Christmas

ANN LANDERS

·· 1981), U. An!D'I~
Tim"' !S~ndi..ur •nd
Cr..atarw !Jyndi t'lll'

Christmas Sale!

MIDDLEPORT

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

Ann
Landers

FRUTH PHARMACY

SEARS

788 NORTH SECOND
992-21.78

tecommend my bool:le~ "Sex and
the Teen-ager." The cost is $3.65
(in Canada; $4.45), which includes
postage and handling. Send 8 check
or money order, along with a long.
business-size, self-addressed envelope to: Teens, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562.
Dear Ann Landers: I am outraged and totally baffled as to how
to handle a family problem that has
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A ·close relative passed away
recently. I was unable to attend the
funeral so I sent a beautiful arrangement of flowers, as well as a sizable
cheek .to help defray the funeral
expenses. A few days later I received
several pictures of the deceased in
the casket
Tbose close-up shots upset me
terribly. I am sure to have nightmares for months to come. What is
the matter with people who do things

SANTA WILL BE AT

· RACINE - llte Racine Baptist
Choir will pn:sent . the cantata,
"Love Tran$cmding" on Sunday at
7:30 p.m. under the direction of
Barbara Gheen and . Lillian
Hayman.

. Seeing patients
9'a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Mr. and. Mrs. Warren Connolly,
Reedsville, will be hosting a
Christmas Open house at their home
on Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. in
honor of their daughter and son-inlaw, Amy and Kevin ~. St.
Pelenburg, Fla. who will visit until
Christmas Day.

!'

'I.

CHESttR - tile annUal ·Chester
Fire Depanment will be having a
Christmas party ·for the membecs
and family of the fire departmeJ1t
and for all who volunteered at the
Chester fire booth on Sunday at
5:30 p.m. at the fire station.
Everyone bring a covered dish and
adessen.

DEAR MRS. HEROLD: That
evening was 12 years ago. I remember it well. Here's the column.
Thanks for asking.
Dear Ann Lapders: I'm a
15-Ye&amp;r-old high school sophomore
who has learned a lot from reading
your column. A while back you
printed some shocking figures about
high-school pregnancies. I think you
said that everj year more than a
miltion teen-agers have out-of-wedlock babies.
I know of a birth-control method
that is .very effective, inexpensive
and guaranteed I00 pen:ent Qf the
time. It is the word no.
One of the reasons there are so
many pregnant t.een-ag~ is because
someone has sold them the idea that
"everybody is doing it." Well,l can·
tell them that the sman ones are not
doing iL
I recently read an anicle on the
true meaning of sex. One line from
that anicle stuck in my mind, and I ·
wish every teen-ager would think
about it. Here it is: "The more
special something is, the more we
reserve it for special people, special
times and special occasioos."
It seems to me a penon's body is
just about as speeial8 thing as there
is in lh&lt;; world It should be reserved
for a special Person at a special time
. and a special place. •• HOLDING
OOT IN HOILAND, MICH.
DEAR HOLDING: I'm with you.
Another fringe benefit of saying no
is peace of mind. Every day I
receive dozens of letters from
teen-age girls who are worried sick,
asking if the do-it-yourself pregnancy kits available in drugstores
work. They often tell me the date of '
their last period and the last time
. they had sex and ask if they could
be preguant.
.. I hope the girls who write thoSe
letters will see yours and. learn
something.
Today teen-agers need information more than they need speeches
about morality. I'd like to

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SALEM CENTER- Studenrs at
Salem Center Elementary will
present a Christmas program on
Thursday at 7 p.m. The program
will be dedicated to all-servicemen
and women serving in Operation
Desen Shield in Saudi Arabia. The

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POMEROY' - Mary Diamond,
,PJ.ame Fellowship International
lepresentative, will speak at
:Thursday's meeting of the group at
.7 p.m. at the senior citizens center
lh Pomeroy. Refreshmenrs served
between 5:30 and 7 p.m.

Cut

8!, 1~~~

125·160211043

LOTI'RIDGE ' The Lottridge
Community Center will host a
Christmas dinner on Saturday at 6
p.m. followed by a Christmas play
at 7 p.m. Bring a covered dish. The
public is invited to attend.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Senior
Citizens Dance Club will have a
dance Friday at the . center in
Pomeroy. Music will be by the
Happy Hollow Boys from Athens.
Those anending should bring
snacks for the snack table. The
public is invited to attend. ·

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
CHESTER - The Laurel' Cliff · be a round and square daiiCC on ,
Better Health Club will meet Friday frOm 8 to 11 :30 p.m. at the
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the home Tuppers · Plains VFW Building.
of Elizabeth Har,es in Chester. A $3 Cost is $2.50 for adults and $1 for
gift exchange will be held. ·
children under 12. Specks of
.. TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- Bluegrass will perform. Red Carr
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 will will be the caller.
· nieet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
pclsthome.
SATURDAY
RACINE - The Racine Gun Club
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rilck will have a Christmas party on
Springs Grange will meet Thursday Saturday frcJIJI 7 a.m. to. 1 p.m. at
at 6:30 p.m. ror a pollock dinner. !he RacmeAmerican Legton Hall.
Members bring . non-perishable
'
fOOd items.
POMEROY - "Monsters: Mystery or My,th" will be the childre~·s
··· POMEROY - .The Pomeroy movie shown Saturday at the Metgs
Otoup of AA and AIAnon will meet County Public Libl1U)' in Pomeroy
·Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred at2 p.m.
Hean Catholic Church. Call 1-800. 333-5051 for information.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The VFW
and Auxiliary will have a
POMEROY - Members of Christmas party for members and
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta family on Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet. · Turkey and ham will be furnished.
Thursday for a Christmas party at Others bring a covered dish.
lhe home of Charlotte Elberfeld. Children bring $3 gift for exSocial hour at 6:30 p;m. and dinner change.
·
jll 7:30p.m. Bring staple goods for
Serenity House ..

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through Friday. New or good used
.toys nuiy be c61)uibuted: Toys may
be taken to Southern High School
during the hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
All wys will be given w the Meigs
County toy bank. For more information call Kim Phillips, 949-2611.
''
:VIN10N - The Pine Grove
_Holiness Chapel, Route 235, Yintoo. five miles from Route 124
. ROwlesville Road, will have revival
· through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
· niJhtly. Rev. and Mrs. David Light,
_evangelists. Public invited. .

public is invited to anend.

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father .
The child was questioned by
lawyers for the prosecution and·
defense. Her father was kept In a
separate room but was able to
watch the deposition on monitors. He also was in telephone
communication with his lawyers
during the deposition. In addition. another video monitor was
available for the child to see her
father while she testified.
,
Brown said the father's constitutional right to confront his
accuser was not violated. He .
added that the Jaw also does not
violate Ohio's more specific
constitutional right to a "face-to·
face" confrontation:
He said procedures followed in
the case, with video and audio
monitors and telephone communication, were required by the
state's law.

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each
A business meeting washeld and
the group expresses its sadness at
the death of Juanita Conrad's husband.
It was noted that in planning a
garden for next suiifmer, the book,
"Rower and Garden" has an anicle
on space saving. It also contains an
anicle on a Hower called
Lisianihus, which is a hardy plant
and lasts nearlr two weeks cut It is
also called prairie gentian.
·
Members and guests were
reminded to give herb related gifts
for the holidays such as jellies,
baked goods and crafts, as well as
books.

Robertson•

Meigs Uahed Methodist
Parish, on
Wednesday to be · used
lhe Christmas
food baskels whlcb the Parish prepares for tbe
needy of the area.

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Community Calendar

High court upholds law on
·children's videotape testimony
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI ) The constitutionality of a state
law allowing child sex abuse
victims to testify on videotape
has been upheld by the Ohio
Supreme Court.
Justice Herbert Brown wrote
Wednesday's high court decision
that reinstated two consecu tl\re
life sentences of a southwest Ohio
man convicted of raping his
6-year-otd daughter in 1986.
The man's conviction had been
reversed by an appeals court !or
Clermonl County on grounds that
the child's videotaped deposition
was inadmissible evidence.
The tape was made before the
trial and was played to the jury
after a psychiatrist testified the
child would suffer. serious emo. tiona! harm if forced to testify In
court In the presence of her

When gr!!el!ng the Pope, one should
address His Eminence as Your Holi-

•.,.,.,...

Mrs. Grueser also read an anicle
about houseplants and to "baby"
houseplants. Do not over water
them and turn plants so they can
receive equal amounts of light.
Mulch roses for winter and tie
climbing roses to keep the wind
from blowing them.
Dorothy Smith had the arrangement of the month. She used purple
violets and dandelions, accented
with fruit, parsely, cherry leaves
and boxwood in a cornucopia on a
wood base.
Janet Theiss showed a bee,keep
she had made using wmato twine
glued together and wrap~ around
half a plastic egg as a mold. She
noted that a bow and string may be
attached on top and Used as a
Christmas ornament.
The hostess served refreshments
to members and guests, Evelyn
Hollon and Marjorie Ring. Evelyn
Hollon won the door prize.

person.

CONN.

Most Stores Open Late ·
Nights '111 Christmas

:-River Valley Herb
group holds meeting ·

I

The Xi Gamma Mu Chapler, ·
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Annie Chapman for a Christmas
p~ and gift exchange.

.

·Dear Ana Landers: I enjoyed the
talk you gave in Darien, Conn.,
several years ago and have been
reading you ever since. I found this
old column and think you ought to
run it every few years. Your
common sense is refreshing. ..
MRS. C.L. HEROLD, DARIEN,

. Pfc. David C. Jacks Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Henderson,
Pomeroy, is stationed at Fort
Lewis, Wash.
' Jacks graduated from his training
in Fon Benning, Ga.. and has served for 16 months. He is a 1989
graduate of Meigs High School.
Cards may be sent to him at the
following address, Pfc. David C,
Jacks Jr., 286-86-7278, A Co 2-Inf.,
Fon Lewis, Washington 98433.
He is the grandson of Mrs. Margaret Henderson, Pomeroy.

Tyler Sellers, on Nov. 16 at O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
The infant. weighed seven
pounds four ounces and was 19 and
one-half inches long.
Grandparents are Brenda Wolfe,
Pomeroy; Carl Wolfe, Middleport.
Siep-gnuulparents are Mary Sue
Wolfe and Larry and Agnes Sellers,
Portland. .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Best birth control is just saying no

Jacks personal

Catina Wolfe, Pomeroy, and
Larry Sellers Jr., Portland, annoWtCe the bii1b of their 1011,JIIOOb

Lehew, Wes and Rit.B Fields, Scou
Carsey, and grandmochet, Betty
Carsey.
Sending gifts were great .
grandmother Ruth Carsey, Glenna
and Walter Grass, aunt and uncle;
Herb, Mary and Nancy Whaley and
Jay Carsey, uncle. .

Ohio

December 13, 1990

Ohio

'

)
•

Rog. S299

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FUnNITURE SHOWCASE

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OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5
FIIDAY 9 TO I
OPEN SUNDAY 1·4

GALLIPOLIS • 446-3045

�Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Thursday, December 13, 1990

Quirks in the news ____..,.;_____~--Couple to get married In goose
pit
REYNOLDSVILLE, Ill. (UP! )
- Bob Hartung is getting married in the place where he spends
most of his time in t he winter : a
goose pit. And his fiancee is not
honked off about it, either.
Hartung, an avid hunter, and
bride-to-be Mary 'Krotz plan to tie
the knot Saturday afternoon at a
southwestern Illinois farm
known for goose hunting. The
couple, a mlnls~r and the owner
of . the farm will stand In a
5-by-12-foot goose pit with the
guestS gathered around outside
the big hole.
The bride, groom and guests
plan to dress In camouflage
clothing a!!d two friends who are
champion goose callers plan to
play the "Wedding March" on
goose calls. Rain or shine, the
bride and groom will pass
through an "aisle'' made up of
goose decoys.

Family
Medicine
"CIUROPRACTORS
AND
OSTEOPAtHS , BOTH USE
'MANUAL MEDlCINE"'
QUESTION - What is the difference between the k:ind of
manipulation done .by a chiropractor and that is performed by an osteopath?
ANSWER - Yo\11' question is a
common one that most doctors,
both chiropractors and osleOpaths,
avoicl answering. While in the rest
of this column, I'll stick with the
"professional nicknames" you used
. in your question (chiropractor and
osteopath), let me state for the
record that the degrees these practitioners receive are doctors of ·.
chiropractic , or D.C., and doC.tor of
osteopa· thy, or D .0 .
Politics and emotions often get
in the way of an objective answer
to your seemingly simple question.
Even the words used to describe
tljeir " manual medicine" techniques
are differenl Since you said
,'-'manipulation" I know that you
; •have been to an osleOpath, because
• a chiropractor doesn't mariipulate _
'.:. he or she performs an "adjustmenL " On physical examination
each identifies the same muscle and
&lt;,joim abnormality, but ·describes it
\'With different terms: ~chiropractor
:identifies a subluxation and performs an adjQstment; an os1e0path ·
•cjiagnoses an osteOpathic lesion and
,jltrfonns manipulation. However,
,Jhe treatment methods are actually
'
· ilar
' ~o~ery sun ·
·
•: Osteopathic doctors are fully
~ licensed physicians who can
•
'be edi ·
d te ts
prescn m cauon, or cr s '
.and do all the things you can think
; of when you think of a doctor. The
• umponance of the muscles and
,.bones (together known as the
; ·musculoskelelal system'') are
Jientral to the osteopathic medical
! ~hool curricQium, and all students
'.l-earn manipulation as pan of the
training necessary for graduation.
Another type of physician - an a!·lopath, or M.D. " is usually not
pained 10 . perform . manual
; medicine. Wb 11e the cwncu!Qm m
• idiopathic medical schools is
1'geRerally equivalent to that of osteopathic schools. M.D. trammg
does not include as much study of
·lhc _ musculoskeletal . syste{ll.
\Despite the fact that man•pulauon
)!. not routl.!lely taught in any of
·~ir schools, some allopaths do
·learn manipulation either in electlv·e courses, residency training or
jrom osteopathic or chiropractic

Thursday, December 13, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Chiropractors are licensed to
practice their an in all SO states.
The scope of their practice differs a
bit from state to stale, but no stale,
but no state grants them the right to
perform si!Igery ·or prescribe
medications. In all stales the
chiropractor may practice with
"chiropractic adjustment" and use
X-rays to evaluate the spine. In
some states, the use of either physical therapy modalities is also allowed.
QUESTION - So whom should
I see to have my neck manipulated
or adjusted?
ANSWER - The choice is yours
"lt certainty is a different and
- all chiropractors, all osteopaths;
unusual way for soineone to get
and a few allopaths - are U'ai'ned
married," said II Uno is Conservaand licensed to perform this type
,. of tion Director Mark Frech, a
treaunenL There are some diuerfriend who huntS with t he groom.
ences between these groups in the
"But for someone like Bob
way problem like your neck pain
Har tung, it's obviously an ideal
is evaluated and treated; in fact,
place to get married."
there are differences between inHartung, 34, a boilermaker
dividual practitioners within a
who lives in Carlyle in Southern
group - regardless of their degree.
IllinoiS, spends about 60 days of
Because the D.O. or M.D. who
does manipulation· is responsible
for your total health car, a comprehertsive evaluation is usually
considered necessary to be sure that
.
manipQiation is the best trcaunent
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) for your condition. The.scope of the Scrooge, the miserly humbug.
chiropractor 's practice rights leads ging cha racter from ."A Chris tto a different perspective on your mas Carol," finally got his day in
problem of neck pain. He or she court Wednesday but arguments
will conduct a thorough evaluauon that he's been sorely misunder·
of tlie musculoskeletal aspects of stood for 142 yea rs fell on deaf
the problem and adminisler ap- ears.
11 · ed
propriale treatrnenL A we -tram
Appearing und er the name
chiropractor, -however, may also Willy Nilly Frothingham,
refer a patient to an M.D. or D.O.
,'or a full medical workup if this Scrooge told the San Francisco
Court of Historical Review that
''
seems necessary.
author Charles Dickens unfa ir ly
There are a variety of manipula- maligned him, distorted the
tive styles or techniques. Some facts and forced him to hide his
produce a noise like "popping" identity. Indeed, he argued,
your knuckles, in other methods . Dickens ' inaccurate portrayal
there is no noise produced at all. in the 1848 novel stirred up such
These are different "Tools of the public ire, he was forced to 'flee
trade" just as my mechanic has the country.
more than one wrench in his tool
Scrooge, portra yed by actor E.
hox. The doctor Y9U see - regard- Wyman Spalding, pJ'!!sen ted his
less of his or her degree • will .use case to the 65th session of the
the manipulative method which court, which regularly debates
best suits his or her skill and your suc h issues as whether Santa
condition.
Cla us exists.
Dressed in top hat, tails, red
''Family Medicine" is a weekly scarf, and cane, the ruddy faced
column. To submit questions, S~rooge rejected the popular
\11Tite to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio association of his . name with
University College of Osteopathic stinginess, greed, and cruelty.
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
" Dickens twisted · the whole
Athens, Ohio 45701. ·
thing around", he said, "I adore
children. Not three day s past, I
picked up a candy cane and gave
·~olleagues.
itlo a child . I have lived this long
; · .Chiropractic colleges, like osThe Rock Springs Better Health to set the record straight"
~pathic colleges, give srudents a
Club will have a Chrisunas dinner
Assisted by attor ney Frank
peat _ deal of training in the on Tuesday at noon at the Rock Winston, Scrooge contended th'at
[diagnosis and ueatment of mus- Springs Uniled Methodist Church. h e ~was "alway s loved by Bob
'fU)oskeletal abnormalities. V,:hile There will also be a gift exchange.
Cratchett", that he was an
chiropractic students are not.tramed
to handle the full range of medical
Ponwrm·
~roblems a family physician faces,
they are usually well equipped to
diagJ;Jose and treat musculoskeletal
Hoan.:
disorders.
II am to Mid. Sun -Thul5.
1J'rer graduation, D.O.'s, like
I I am ro I am Fn. 6.t Sat.
M:D. •s, must taice at least one year
or additional training before they
can be licensed in most states. Most
graduates take at least three years
of additional uaining, and some
take considerably more. Additional
instruction in manipulation is the
major component in an osteopathic
principals residency as well as part
PAIII 01
of · the training in many D.O.
OIIGINAl
residencies in physical . medicine
m11
and rehabilitation, and orthopedics.
Chiropractic licensure docs not require postdoctoral education, al.. 1990 Oo"'m~o · , Pnu In c o.,, dr '-•• c:.,..., .... ,._ .. •20 DO O•l;..•ry • ••• H'""ed ro .........
uh Or,.....,g Vtolod 11 part•cop!WionQ 10.0.110 111 ontr 511• ra • addfloo-1 wh.,l . p ltc 1 ble PART
tho~gh ·many graduates do take adTIME ANC CAREER O PPORTUNITIES NOW A\IAILABLE •
ditional specialty training.

a

the 70-day goose hunting season
living in a trailer at the Lyerla
Lake Farms in Reynoldsville,
where the wedding will be held.
Hartung and Frech both hold
goose hunting leases at the farm
near the Missouri border.
Hartung has hunted '1,11 his life
and taught Krotz, 31, how to shoot
geese two years ago. They have
dated for three years and he said
they have never had a fight. The
wedding · plans were even
amiable.
"It started out more or less as a
joke," Hartung said Wednesday.
''Her and me and my dad were all
hunting together. We were talking about getting married. The
old man said , 'Let's get married
in this goose pit. "'
Getting a minister was also not
a problem.
"I found one. He says he's
married them in hills, caves, so
he'll marry some&lt;ine in a goose
pit," Hartung said.

man who robbed her of $100 at a
Citibank cash machine had been
using the secQnd machine In the
kiosk just minutes before he
pulled a gun on her and demanded her money.
Receipts from the second machine led police to the home of
Earl Egan', 23, Chicago, Skokie
Pollee Officer Michael Ruth sa,ld.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

' •: : '.;

- - - Sinatra starts -Diamond Jubilee year with birthday concert---

"As he fled, -he said, 'Thank
you and have a nice night,"' Ruth
said.
"He told pollee he committed
the robbery because he needed
money for child support and for
other family problems."
Ruth said Egan used his ATM
card to check on his account
balance before the robbery.

12 .75

.

NEW YORK I UP! ) - Francis
Albert Sinatra celebrated his
75th birthday Wednesday . by
doing what he does best singing on stage, alone in the
spotlight. ·
01' Blue Eyes' sold-out Diamond Jubilee Concert at the
Meadowlands' Byrne Arena,
East Rutherford , N.J., was only
a few m lies from Hoboken, where
h~ was born Dec. 12, 1915.
SI!J!IIra, accustomed to doing it
his way, planned the performance down to the minutest
detail and rehearsed lt with a
warm-up concert at the arena
Tuesday.
·Some 20,800 fans paid from $35
to $50 each lor Wednesday
concert seats In the expectation
of hearing the most popular
American singer of the century
(unless you are a Bing. Crosby
fan) give his familiar renditions
of "My Way," "New York New
York, " "Strangers in the Night,"
"Summer Wind," "Mack the
Knife" a nd many others
favorites .
The nation will share in Slna-,

12 .75

BARGAlN KATINE'tS SATURDAY I SUNOA~

BARGAIN NIGHT T\JESMY

I

ATM card leads to alleged
rob her's arrest
SKOKIE, lll. iUPI)- A polite
robber-'s penchant for using his
ATM card enabled suburban
Chicago police to trace him to his
home and workpla.ce and nab
him for relieving a woman of

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

mmRSTilllll: mrv
IAUJgME II!IIQ

SIGES!Ailflj[ (PO·il!O•
TODAY 9:10

tra's birthday party Sunday
when CBS-TV will air a two-hour
(7 to 9 p.m. EST) musical salute
to him and his career featuring
Harry Connick Jr., the 23-yearold New Orleans singer who is
mentioned as Sinatra's successor, Gene .Kelly, Tony Bennett,
Ella Fitzgerald, and Paul
Newman.
•
Columbia, Capitol and Reprise
Records are marking the yeartong celebration with. selective
· compilations of his work, which
encompasses· an era that began
with 78s and continues the beat
with CDs. Included are 228 of
Sinatra's 1, 700 recordings, which
would take four days to play ln
t heir entirety.
For those who want to wish
Sinatra a happy birthday personally, there Is a Sinatra Hotllne,
1-900-420-CHIVAS, to receive
greetings throughout the Diamond Jubilee Year at $2 a call,
the money going to c harlty: Jill
St. John, .a leading lady in several
Sinatra movies, was the first
well- wisher.
Sinatra will be celebrating

duced and that Is not
throughout 1991 with one of his
negotiable."
most ambitious world tours,
Composer Sammy Cahn, who
including Europe, South Amerwrote four Oscar·wlnnlng songs
ica, Japan and Australia and
for Sinatra, said ln the whole
several cities In America.
history of show business, " no
It would be a grueling schedule
man has ever held the attention
for someone half Sinatra's age
of the world for siK decades as
but he appears In better health
this man has."
and voice than he did a few years
"It's beyond belief that Sinatra
ago. The hoarseness that plagued
at 75 Is at thts moment as popular
him ln the 1980s is gone.
The pencll•thln, gaunt-faced as aQy singer who ever lived,"
Cahn said. " He's a llorn showtenor who first made bobbyman. Even his recording dates
soxers faint In an appearance at
are like performances."
the Paramount Theater In 'New
Sinatra broke into show bus!-.·
York In 1942 ls now plump faced
ness
by winning the "Major
and even his ex pertly tailored tux
.
Bowes
Amateur Hour" on radio
cannot hide middle-age spread.
His hair Is silvery white and his In 1934 by singing "Night and
movements more deliberate Day" and was sent on a Bowes
than In his " Anchors Away" tour . The first bandleader to sign
him, at $75 a week, was Harry
dancing days.
But he still has no competition James snd he made his first
from singers of any age as a recording with James, "From
stylish interpreter of ballads. the Bottom ot My Heart' ' in 1939 .
His Paramount a ppearance in
Jonathan Schwartz, the music
expert of Reprise Records and 1942 made him a star with
radiO station WNEW in New records on the Top 10 untll1949
York, calts him "simply the when his career went into a
greatest single interpretative s lump. The role oi Maggio In the
artist America has ever pro- film "From Here to Eternity"

won him an Oscar and got him
roiling again. By 1954 he was
named by Downbeat as the
nation's most popular male
vocalists.
Then came more movies, thousands of cl ub dates and concerts,
Rat · Pack antics and much
publicized feuds and fisticuffs,
lour wives and three divorces, a
kidnaped · son, the limelight of
F'resident ·Kennedy's Camelot
years, friendship with Rona ld
Reagan , and the mellow later
years with fourth wife, ·Barbara
Marx.

Frank and his wife, Barbara,
live a fairly quiet life ina Waldorf
Towers aerie high above New
.York, New York, as be!itting a
multi- millionaire.
When he isn't working, Sinatra
makes occasional sorties to favorite restaurants with a few
cronies who take pleasure in
deferring to the Chairman ol the
Board.
After all, Sinatra is the "the
Mercedes·:aenz of Men." No tess
a connoisseur than Marlene
Dietrich said so.

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Such emotional appeals failed
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oto, who accused the crotchety
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and not understanding the true
spirit of Christmas.
"Sure, he ~pen ted fora couple
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she declared. "But afterwards,
he went back to his stingy ways."

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992 .. 2124

NEW
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304-675-2303

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614-446-6620

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992-6491 ..

�•

Page-12-The Daily

Sa

1tinel

Thursday. December 13, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 13. 1990

Iraq civil defense exercises set on deadline
By LEE STOKFS'
Ualled Press Inter.Wioaa.l
Iraq Wednesday ordered spe: eta! civil defense exercises to ·
begin the day Its troops must be
out of Kuwait, and Saddam
Hussein met with the president of
Algeria, who Is mounting a
mediatiOn effort to end the
. Persian Gulf crisis peacefully.
Meanwhile, a U.S .-chartered

Jetllner waited to leave Baghdad
Kuwait, Cair o Radio reported.
Most U.S. hostages have been
with the last remaining foreign
hostages , and Soviet Foreign
evacuated but several hundred
Minis ter Eduard Shevardnadze
s tayed behind for family and
flew to Turkey for consultations
other reasons .
expected to focus on the gulf
State-owned Iraqi television
said the clvtl defense exercises
stalemate.
would begin 'Jan. 15, the · U.N.
The U.S.-chartered plane may
leave Baghdad ·as early as . deadline for the Iraqi president
Thursday with the last Amer ican
to withdraw his forces from
hostages still left in Iraq and . Kuwait or face a possible mU-

November retail sales down
WASHiNGTON (UPI) - Retail sales fell an estimated 0.1
percent in November to $151.6
billion after gaining a revised 0.2
percent the month before, the
Commerce Department reported
· Thursday.
.
·. The sales decline was the first
: In five months , the governme nt
· s aid , Excluding au to mobile
sales, November's overall retail
sales would have gained 0.2
percent.
November 's sales were 3.4
percent above year-earlier sales
and sales between September
:and November were 3.6 percent
:greater than during the same
-period last year, the government
·said.

Sales of durable goods, those tlmates show · sales decreased
big-ticket items designed to last slightly at general merchandise
three or mQre years, fell 1.4 stores durtng · November from
percent In November.
October, but gained at apparel
stores
and restaurants.
Non-durable goods sales inCar
dealers reported slightly
creased 0.5 percent from October
lower
sales during the past
and 6.1 percentfrom year-earlier
month
as
did sellers of builldlng
levels. Higher food and gasoline
materials.
Sales at car dealer·
prices accounted for the
ships
slid
1.4
percent last month
Increase. ·
Grocery sales increased 5.4 from the month before but were
percent tn November from year· 0.1 percent higher than yearearlier levels while sales at earlier sales levels.
The sluggishness ill the nagasoline stations soared 21.6
percent during the same period. tion's constructllon industry conGasoline stallons reported tinued to hammer sellers of
sales of $11.9 billion in No- building supplies, where sales
vember, up from $11 .8 billion the were down 2.6 percent in November and 5.2 percent from
month before.
The government 's advance es- year-earlier levels.

~Europ·ean summit launches steps

·toward a common currency, policy
: ROME (UP!) - The 12 Euro-pean Community leaders begin a
two-day summit Friday to
launch historic steps toward a
common currency and joint
foreign policy for post-Cold War
Europe.
- The summit, marking the
ilebut of new British Prime
1\1inlster John Major,-cuimlnates
with the Inauguration on Satur"day of twin constitutional conventions, on economic and monetary union (EMU) and political
union.
Heads of state arrived Thursday evening for a pre-summit ·
performance of Puccini ' s
''Tosca" featuring superstar le·
nor Luciano Pavarotti. Formal
summit business begins on Fri·
day morning.
EC leaders are expected to
approve emergency food ald to
the Soviet Union, and also wlll
discuss the Persian Gulf criSis,
South Africa and the stalled
world trade talks, which collapsed in Brussels last week over
the EC's program of massive
, farm subsidies.
· The constitutional conven: lions, known as " lntergovern-'
mental conferences,." are scheduled to end late next year with
, profound changes to the EC's
: founding charter, the 1957Treaty
· of Rome, including landmark
: moves toward forging a federal
' Europe out of historically war' ring nation-states.
"Our feeling is that Rome, with
• these two conferences, will be an
: Important turn in the life of the
: Community," said Prime Minister Giullo Andreotti, the current
•Ji:C president, a leading advocate
:of ci·eating a "United States of
Europe" with a single currency
and a common foreign policy .
The EC 's halting and inconslst·ent response to the gulf crisis,
:with only Britain and France
:sending ground troops, showe d to
:many the need for a unified voice

in foreign affairs.
Last week, French President
Francois Mltterrand and Ger·
man Chancellor Helmut Kohl
said in a joint letter that EC
political union "should Include
an authentic policy of common
security which could lead In the
long run to a common defense."
France withdrew from NA.TO's Integrated common defense
apparatus in 1966, and has since
Insisted on strict independence in
defense policy. One EC diplomat
said France's joining in the letter
was a
"remarka.b·Je
development."
Details of monetary union and
political union wlll be worked out
In .tough negotiations over the
next year , with many differences
still to be resolved and precise
wording to be agreed upon.
A common defense, for exam·
pie, could create problems for
staunchly neutral Ireland, an EC
member, as well as for other
neutral countries seeking EC
membership such as Austria an(l
Sweden.
Some EC governments are
reluctant to undermine NATO.
There are also doubts about a
quick move to a single currency,
from Britain as well as other
quarters including Germany's
powerful Bundesban.k .
Ali eyes are on Major, who will
set the tone for Britain's contribution to the debate over Europe's future. His predecessor,
Margaret Thatcher, fell from
power last month over her
strid.ent opposition to further EC
integration.
At the last EC summit, Oct.
27-28 in Rome, Thatcher said
other Community leader s were
living in "cloud-cuckoo land "
when they outvoted her 11-1to set
1994 as the starting point ior a
central European bank, with a
single currency to follow in
several years.

Aides to Major, who also
opposes a single currency, say
the substance of his stand will be
the same, but the style will ~
different. Thatcher's unyielding
style toward the EC was so
grating that other leaders simply
stopped listening to her message.
''This one will not be an 11-l
summit," sald .a top British
diplomat in Brussels.
Major, who was Britain's chancellor of the Exchequer, or
treasury·, before taking over the
prime minlstership, has proposed a parallel 13th EC cur·
rency -the " hard E!;U" (European Currency Unit) - that
would compete alongside national currencies.
Approval of $1 blllion In emergency food aid to the Soviet Union
Is likely, but balance-of-payment .
assistance likely will be delayed
pending a report from the International Moneta,ry Fund.
The most divisive issue at the
summit might be the 107-nalion
talks .under the General Agreementon Tariffs and Trade, which
adjourned In disarray Dec. 7 over
a bitter dispute between the EC
and the United States over
Europen farm subsidies.
Some EC governments, tnclud·
lng Britain and the Netherlands,
feel the summit must make a
positive statement showing some
degree of future flexibllity In the
GATT talks . "We would look
pretty foolish if we just said that
GATT Is very Important," one
Brussels diplomat said.
But in a pre-summit news
conference, the president of the
EC Executive Commission,
Jaques j)elors, said U.S. expectations of steep cuts In EC farm
supports were unrealistic.
" The attitude .o f the United
States aimed at treating the
Community as plague-stricken
and to set all countries against
us ," Delors said.

nieetlngs late Wednesday with
the Iraqi president in his effort to
resolve the crisis peacefully.
Further talks were expected
Thursday.
Benjedld Is known for his
successful mediation efforts, In·
eluding the release of U.S.
hostages In Iran In 1980 and the
release ,of the hOstages aboard a
Kuwaiti plane hijacked by ShUte
Moslem fundamentalists in 1988.
· Shevardnadze flew to Ankara,
Turkey, for meetings with President Turgut Ozal after three days
of talkS in the United States.
Turkey, ·a non-Arab Moslem
nation, Is the only member of
NATO to border both Iraq and the·
Soviet UniOn. Shevardnadze' s
talks were expected to focus on
the Gulf crisis.
After the Bush-ShevardnadZe
meeting Wednesday In Washington, Baker rejected suggestions
that $1 blllion In U.S . agriculture
expprt credits to ease the Soviet
food shortage came In exchange
for Moscow's support during the
Persian Guff crisis.
"You shouldn' t consider any of
the steps taken today to be payoff
or a payback for the-cooperation

ltar:V colifrontation with the U.
S. -led multinational force arrar.ed against him .
The broadcast said the exercises were designed to " prepare
the Iraqi people for war and train
them in how to cope with
chemical weapons , explosions,
air raids, ftres and the evacuation of cities."
It showed Iraqis how to use gas
mas ks . in case of polson gas
attack, although the !!Qulpment
has not yet been distributed. The
television warned Iraqis to be
prepared' for any eventuality,
Including bombing raids and
even a nuclear strike.
The broadcast, monitored in
Amman, Jordan, was seen as a
further display of resolve by
Saddam, who - a day earlier
replaced his aging defense minister, Gen. Abdul Jabar Shanshal,
with the younger Gen. Saadl
Toamma Abbas , a hero of the
eight-year Iran-Iraq war.
Algerian President Cbadli Ben·
Jedld, one of the few Arab leaders
stU! on speakiqg terms with both
Sadoam and the Saudi Arabian
leadership, held the first round of

work near the Kuwait border .
" It's going to be a family
Christmas after all."
The two Cheetums plan to
share hoUday dinner at a special
rest-and· relaxation center the
Army has set up within Saudi
Arabia to give soldiers a break
from desert. duty, meal rations
and other hardships of military
life.
At the regimental headquar·
ters, a blow-up reindeer has
appeared on top of one , of the
tents.
The Christmas celebration Is
great morale booster and soldiers have already started receiv ing gifts, stockings and small
pias tic Christmas trees donated
by private citizens back home.
Many of the wrapped presents
are addressed to "Any Soldier"
so that everybody can be
Included.
"It means so much to these
boys to know that the people back
home are thinking of them," said

a

By United Press International
• A whiter storm pounded the
Rocky Mountains with snow and
freezing rain that covered road' ways with tee Thursday, while
cloudy, cold weather cove red
much of the nation a nd gales hit
.the New England coast.
Tempera tures dropped In the
.Midwest, East and Southwest
,lifter days of unseasonably warm
.weather as ftanta l systems
swept across the Roc kies and the
:&gt;outh.
·. Fog was a problem tn several
southern state s . Vb-lblllty

that we' ve seen on the gulf
crisis, " the secretar y of state
said. " We see that cooperation
across a broad range of Issues."
The question irri~ted Shevardnadze, who pointedly noted
that the United States and the
Soviet Union were on the road to
improved relations months before the gulf crisis.
The United States, meanwhile,
accused Iraq of stalling on an:
agreement for direct U.S. ·Iraql
talks on the stalemate. A State
Department spokeswoman In
Washington said late Wednesday
that Iraq had so far failed to
propose a date for a visit to
Baghdad by Secretary of State
James Baker..
·
The United States rejected
Iraq 's first offer nf a meeting
between Saddam and Baker on
Jan. 12, saying It was too close to
the Jan. 15 deadline for Iraq to
get out of Kuwait, which It
invaded AUg. · 2 and soon
·annexed.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Azlz also is expected to hold a
similar meeting with Bush In
Washington, but a date for that
·
also has not been set.

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

sold for the midweek drawing
that listed the six winning
numbers - 7, 8, 31, 37, 40 and 53.
However, 65 players picked
five of the numbers to win SS,OOO
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In Memoriam

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Classified paf!es .corer the
follatcing felephonP exchanges ...
Gallia CDun'Cy

Me igs Councy

A rei Code 614

Atu Code 614

446-GIIIipolls
367-Ch•hire

992- Middleoort
Pomeroy
985- Chester
843- Portt.nd

388-Yinton

245-Aio Gr~nde
266-Guvan Oist.
643-Arsbia Dist

379 - W.Inut

Meson Co., WV
Area Code 304

675-PI . Pleasant
458-Laon
576 - Apple Grove
773 - M .. on .

247-Letart Fells

882-New Haven

9&amp;9- R•cine
7•2- Rutl•nd
667 - Coolville

895 - Letlrl
937-Buffalo •

G·ef· -·Reaql.la
• R. f •. af
~

·

-i.

HILL'S DEER
CUniNG CUTTING.
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
IASHEN RD.,
RACINE

51 - HouMhald Oooda
52 - SporUng Ooodl

3 - Annoueamerns
4- Givuwev· ·

53 - Antlqutl
54 ~ Misc .

5 - Heppy Ad1
6 - Lost ll'!d Found
_ 7-Vard S1lt jpaid in advaneel

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Mtrc:hll'ldiH

56-Building Suppli•
56- Pets for Saht
57~Mutic- lnttrumantt
58 - Ftulu &amp; v,gMabl•
59 - For Sale or Trade

949-2206 .

Farm SlllllliiP. '

Sr.rv1ce s
13- lnsurtnee

-!loom Addition•
-Guttor-Etoctrlclli • Plumbing
-Cancmo Worll
-Roofing
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Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATESI

Tron sportalion

21 - Busln•• Opportunity
22-Mon~ to loa~
23-Ptof•tion•l S•rvic..

V. C. YOUNG II

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72- Trutjc.s for Sale

992·6215

,_,.,,Ohio

73- VIni 6 4 WD 's
7.4 -Motorcvcl•
76 - Bo.ltl &amp; Motors tor Sale

Real Estate
31 - l'tom• for Sal~
32 - MobiltHom" for S11e
33-Farms for Sale

·

76-Auto Ptrtl&amp; Ac:c•tori•
77,- -Auto Repair
78-Cimplng Equipment

l;i§Uidll
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - F.,ms tor Rent
44 - Apattmtnt for Rent

81 -- Hom•lmprovemenu
82-Piumbing • Huting

•s-Furnished Rooms

83-Excwatini,

47-Wanted tp Rent
48 - Equjpm"ent tor Rent

85-Gen•a• Ha~ling
86-Mobile Home Ae,.ir

84- Eieet:rieal

Public Notice

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

the Bo•rd of Eduatlon

Df

tho Mo1go LOCIII School District, Molgo County, Ohio,
dMir" to roc- IMIIII
bldo for tho following:
40 Ono·fold c.tetorllr tobrectMtguler

Rotland •

ah1pe,

HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday .
10amto6pm
We Are A Deer
Cheekln~ Station.
11-21-1-1 ...

LEGAL NOTICE '
Natk:e Ia hor•v given that
th• tlolrd of Educ.tlan of
tho IMigo Locol School Dl..
trict, Meigo County, Ohio.
witt offer. for uto by -lod
bldo for eight (81 school
buut ond two (2) trucks. It
th• TrNouror' 1 Office. 320
hot Moln St,..t, Pomeroy,
Ohio, an J•nuory 4, 1891.
•t 12:00 noon. Bldo wll bo
oubmltted to Soard of EduCMion •t their noltt regu .. r
meeting for tholr conoldoro-

ee.,.._.

P"•-g• -

Action by the industry also was
urged by representatives of
various family and healt)l
groups.
Dr. Francis Palumbo of the
American Academy of Pedlal·
rlcs said, "Anyone who watches
TV can attest that violence ts
rampant, that it is commonly
used to resolve conflict and that
violent acts are cari'ted out by
both heroes and villains."

: a tew pennies spent here
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90 DAY WdttANTY

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9-25-'99·11•

I0/ 301'89tfn

CHRISTMAS
TREES

SHRUB &amp; TREE
DIM. c;llld
REMOVAL

"LIGHT HAULING

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•Vinyl Siding
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Windows
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. •Insulation

JAMES IEESIE
992-2772 742-2251
639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
1 1 / 14/ tlft

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION
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Stop &amp; Cem pare

Fr.H Estimates

985-4473 ..
667-6179

5 Ft. to 12Ft.

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GUN SHOOTS

lOB SNOWDEN
Main St., Rutland

USED RAILROAD nES

INSULAnON

RACINE
GUN CLUB

FRESH CUT DAILY
White &amp;
Scotch Pine

•fiR~WOOD

J&amp;l

742-3051

11-29·1 mo. pd.

1-12-90 lfn

. 1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
12 Gauge Facterj
Choke only

· SHOOTS StART
SEPT 16, 1990

Sept. 4,tfn

--- ' -

A
PI.UMIING &amp; HEAnNG

BISSELL-.BU.LDERS

New Location:
· 161 North St&lt;ond
Middloport, Ohio 45760

CUSTOM lUIT.
HOMES &amp; GARAGEt

•

"At a..~le Prices"
~

..

.... 949·2160
Day « Night

NO

SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-86-lfll

Pay Your Phone
and ~able Sills Here

11 Oil Remington

\ IUSINISS PHONE

. .

~SIOIN(I PHONE

..

. (6 t41 992-6550

•

011.

Middleport,

.

.

911 Hysell St.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

W• C., F•hlng Suppli•

P~.
. 949-2101

MOVING SALE.
CAIPENTEI
GUNS &amp; AMMO

-

(614) 992-7.754

. '

.

l/28/tln

992-2034
Slug Guns
B70 Ramington
Slug Guns
· Ithaca Slug Guns
11 · 13·1 mo.

olde
"liDclooriV
FOR CAFETERIA
merlced
on tho out· .
CHAIR I".
&amp;oollll bldo wit bo ,..
colved and -~~~ In tho

=u:::·s.=: r, -~~~~~

::,..~~d~:",!,"=tt~:~

rwaullor mMttng for
conoldnllon. .
Thollolrd ofllluoootlanln·
neJd

=n:..:'J:~'!':,!o,;.~
.......... butr "•ootho
rtollt to.njoct eny Md ell, or
Plftl of "" 11nd o11 llldo.
ly ..... of 1M 1 - of

::..a::Ogi..,.:'';zo ~
Meln a-. P. o . Boa 272,
Po-.JOhio,
411711.
- F..,, T.-u,.,

(1211. 13, 20, 2'7, 4tc

PH. 94f-2101
or let. 949-2160
110 SUNDAY CAUS
4-1&amp;-t&amp;-tln

Mow In
Stoekll
MOillE HOME . FURNACtS
. , ; • HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS
.

BENNm'S MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOLING

614·992·2111
2U llorth S.C..d

We Say What We DP.
We ·Do What We Soy
11·1•u.a

MICIDWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

or chock with paoltlvo ldon·
tlflcetlon.
S.ld IIOIIrd ,._,... tho
right to w•lvo lnfol'ftllllltloo,
to occopt or oejoct ony and

Ill IUUS
Iring It In Or We
_ Pick Up.

•II. or p1rt1 of any •nd all

blrlo.

Jan• Fry, Tre~~eu,..
MelgoLocot School Dlotrlct
320 Eolt M•ln Stroot
.P.O. Boa 272
Pomeroy, OH. 41788
(114) 992-11850
j12i 8, 13, 20, 27 4tc

B

KEN'S APPUANCE
. SEIVKE
992-5335 or 9.85-3561
acr... F10111 Pest Offlct
117 L S.C. ' - • Y

I'OIIIIOY, OliO
·
li&amp;/'!IQ/Hn

Public Sela

J&amp;.R AUCnON

DECEMBER 14

6: 30

Acron from Western
Auto in Midtl~t
....Collectors ltlnts
Small •~·
""rlqutS

ladies Diamant! Rings
""-""
Willi
-••·

205 N. S.OIIII Str•t

IIDOLIPOIT, 0110 45711
Office 1114·992·2116
Holtll 614-992-5692
1IOt1ll S. II. . . IIOID
HOUIEioi.OTBoFARMI
oCOMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGSI

ll-5·90-Ho

Audlanltr

lie. Ne. 20691

(ountr

Hockill!l Valier
1
Nllsan-., Olio- ft . . eH US_33 on 511191

Quality Inn
.....

West

SUNDAY I DEC. 16, 1990

SHOW l1ME 9130 a.m.•3:30 p.m.
AUCTION 4100 p.m.
AJ diiiiR $1.50

ter alldletl tllbtt tUI HeN

KEN SWANGO, Auctioneer

011 44175

RAPE - ROBBERY - MURDER
70" OF VIOLENT CRIMES ARE COMMITTED
IN AREAS WHERE VICTIMS ARE LIKELY TO
HAVE KEY CHAINS1N HAND
DON'T BE NEXTI
Protect yourself with the
STUN-UM kay chain apra¥t~r
STUN-UM is the most advanced chemical ·
self. defense weapo!l available- your edge
agamat parsonal crtme.
To Ortlet Send Check or Mon&amp;y 0fder
For $19.95 To:

SEO SECURITY PRODUCTS

P. 0. lox 190, Penseroy, OH. 45769

11·20·90-1 ••.

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC:

&amp;AuctiOn

.

·'

lo111tetl on Safford Schoel ld. off lt. 141
161 446-94U or 1-11111-171·5967

Public Notice

COLLECTOR FARM TOY and
MODEL TRAIN SHOW &amp; AUCTION

5I 19 W,

"Free Eltimat•' •

Hand Tufting
Cuetom Drape•
36 Yean Experience

Hogs &amp; Heppors 4-H (lult of Athens
Pl'ftlntl

5551.

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
.... . _ ....t

Of Mlllllleport
UPHOLSTiRY

;==~~====:J~=======~

(-'t-nll fw

•VINYL SID INO
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

CAIN'S

......_...

2o

••

u-•tL

Reftiglfllion

12 '0" lang by 30" wid• by
29" height. No edge bind·
lng - onemlll fromo (oteto
cotaro av.H•bleJ. Lomlneto
Top (lltoto coloro ovllitablo).
Price Quoto 11 to Include
FOR SALE IN RACINE
ohlpplng
to one (1) location. tlan.
VERY NICE'LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3 ~
An Haled onvlliopoa
ACRES- 4 BR, 3 balhs. 2 garages, rented I
The vehlcln are ae fol~
contllnlng bldo •re to be Iowa:
BR aparlment. Property inclt&gt;Jes pond. ap...... eel cl•rly on the ~·· 1. 1972 lntomMion•lbuo ·
prox. 4,800 sq. ft. larm bid&amp; and mobile
lido "BID FOR CAFETERIA
home. Areal bargain at $89.900.
TABLES".
#1311120H341047
CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.
...tod bldo will bo re- 2.1173 lnhwn~l buoceived and openlll In tho
llp-gor ·T-ouror'o Offlco 1112:00
#13812CHA20103
Noon on J•nuory 4. 1191. 3. 1974111t0rMtlaMI buo·
lido wMI bo oubmltt.l ll to tho
B011rd of Education •t tholr
1113872DHA11102
neJd regu!llr mMtlng -f'!' 4. 1971 lnt...,ltlolllll buo.
conakter•llon.
II piiiMftfiO'·
Th• b.. rd of education In·
THIS l"xl"
#13172EHA337411
tend• to 1ccept the lowell fj. 1977 lnt...,ltlOIIIII bUI ·
re-nolblo bid for th• ..fo·
BUllETIN BOARD
11
terll tlbtoo, but ,._,.. tho
. #008220HI211Bil1
light
to
rojoct
•nil
ond
on,
or
8. 19771nt...,lllolllll bus.
SPACE AVAILABLE ~~
porto of any •nd •II bldo.
lllpiiiMftgW·
By order of tho Bo•rd of
IID0822GHI211184
AT '5.00 PER DAY ·
Eduootlon, Molgo lo..t
bus·
:School Dlotrlct, 320 Eut 7. 19771nt...,etloMI
15pu-gor
M•ln Stroot, P. 0. Box 272,
IID08220HI28432
Pomeroy, Ohio, 457119.
8. 1977 tnt.....tlalllll bus·
Jane Fry. Tr111urer
. 85pii1Mftgor ·'
(12)8, 13, 20, 27, 4tc
IID0822GHI28148
9. 11111 Ford Truck.
PubliC Notice
F802A · #F80ALII88311
10. 19711 Dodge SW.,tMno
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTicE
Plclcup, D1o •
PubliC Notice
Notlcolo horebyglvonthtt
#D1481111131032
tho Boord of Eduootlan of
All IHied onvolopeo con·
LEGAL NOTICE
council m-lng.
' SNtod bldo wilt bo reCouncil riiiiii'VOI th• right th• ,._..oLaoollchooiOI• t•lnlngbldoorotobom~~rklll
ceived by tho Roclno Vltlogo to •ccopt or reject •ny and trk:t, Molgo Cciunty, Ohio, ci-ty on tho outlldtl "BID
d•olreo to rocolve s01lod FOR VEHICLe".
Ctork until 4:00 o'ctacil P. •II bldo.
.
M., Mondoy, J•nu~ . 7
for tho following:
Addition lntormetlan on
M•rk an envlli- BIDS bldo
310 ltMiklng Cholro. thou vohlciM mey bo Ob·
1991 , for 1 1980 fire·tonko; FOR TANKER APPARATUS
17W' height, one (11 talnlll •t tho Meig• L...l
ipp11r1tu1 or ch..olo only.
or IIDS ·FOR CHAlliS.
Copy of th• opeclllc•tlano
Jeno G. IMglo, Clerk p-.. maldod patypropytono Buo Oar-. Rutlllnd, Dhla
ohell, •nomoi fromo tmto (1114) 742·2890.
ore •voll•bto from thto VllVlllllg• of colors
ovolloblo).
Torma of solo wll bo c11h
llogo Ctorll or from the Fire
R•cino, Oh. 41771
Chlof.
Prl.. Quoto ·lo to· lncludo
814-948-2191
ohtpplng to ano (111ocotlon. 8
;aida to bo apenod at 7;00 (12) 6, 13, 20, 3tc
All oMiod onveiapoo
Public Sele
o clack P.M. •t tho rogulor
&amp; Auction
containing bldo ore to bo

o/o
OFF

11/14/tfn

7U·2421
2t!J MI. ouhlda

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlcolohorobyglvonthot

lea,

·

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

31 - Aelll Estate W1nted

--~................................~·~9-. Fo•••L•····~~
.
....Ii....8.7-.U~pho~I•·*~Y~~. . . . . ..

BULLETIN BOARD.

13

-79-Campeu • Motor Homn

34-Busin•• Suit dings
35 - lots I. Acr ..ge

41-Housnfor Rent

.,

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

CARPEN1D SERVICE

6, - F•rm Eq~.t;pment
82 - Wantad to Buy
63-LivestQCt(
64 - Hay &amp; Grtin
66-S.td &amp;. Ftrtililar

14 - lusin•• Training
15 - Schools 6 lnstr~~etion
16 - Aidio. TV &amp; CB Repair
17 -Misc;ellaneou 1
IS-Wanted To Do

USED APPLIANCES

YOUNG'S

/&lt;, l1 VI:~I IJI: k

1 1 - Help Wanted
12 - SitY&amp;Iion Want~

BROWNING
(""
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
Orlvoro ... $8
Wldgoo .. as
r
Putt•ro ... $3
GRAPHITE SHAFTS
INSTALLED
8AGS ..................... t26
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES &amp; PLAQUES
. JOHN TEAFORD
Scout (omp load
Chostor, Ohio
11-29-90·1 mo.

GUN SHOOT

11·1·10-1 mo.

f mpluyment

46 - Spec:e for Rent

..

ll·ZS·10'1 ••·

Mer c ll.tlldl s e

9 '- Wentld to Buy

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER

15

1- Card of Thanks
2 - ln Memory

in

COPY DEADLINE -

15

AIIIII Ili nce111 en ts

• A classified dvertiMment pla c ed in The Dlily Sentintljex ·
. c~t -:- cl•lified displ~y, Busin•• Cerd and legal notices)
will
IPP•.,
the Pt. PleMant ~egi11er 1 and the Galli·
pDiis Daily Tribune, re1ching over 18.000 homet

•••o

READY DEC. 2ntl

J
fl

614-949-2635
11-ll-10-1 ••.

S12. SJO

742-2143

8 - Public 5•18 &amp; Au ction

Yard Sales

or

White&amp; ·
Scotch Pine _
II Ft. 1nd Up
Well Sh-ed, Grpwn
on die .Webw F1rm In
Rutland

A at .. are tor can .. eutN-1 runs. broken up day 1 will be ch•g«&lt;
fnr eat:h d.w •• Mparete ads

•Rec~e

the elder Cheetum, whose father
still lives In Carroll County, Ky . •
Kentucky Christmas Is not far
from the minds of other soldiers
scattered acr.oss the vast, dry
Saudi Arabian landscape.
"I miss being with my_family,
sure, but I've got a job to do and I
volunteered for this," said Pfc.
Shawn Grady, 23, of Louisville,
Ky . Grady sent a special video·
tape to his wife and four young
children.
.
"We can ali sit around and stew
in self pity, butlt isn't going to
help,' ' said Capt. Jeff Schriner, .
28, of Middletown, Ky., who ··
planned holiday activities for his :
squadron of 900 ·servicemen ·.
stuck in the desert.
Even Cheetum, who Is One of
the few who wili be able to
embrace a family member for
the holiday regrets he won't be '
able to hug his wife and other
children.
"It's going to be. a different
kind of Christmas this year," he
said.

15
16

6
10

SUNDAY

614-992-6120
Pomitrev. Ohio

Ov,r 15 Wardo
.20
. 84 .00
.30
111.00
.42
$9.00
.10
813.00 .
.05 / d•y
$1 .30/ doy

15

Daily

KOUNTRY KlUB

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

614-949-2734

Rote

Words

1

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED

ow- &amp; Operator

RA
Days

Grooming

CHRISTMAS TilES
FOI SALE

3

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

No wiimer in Super Lotto

' The studies show that "re·
pealed exposure to violence on
television not only makes children more likely to commit violent
' acts, but desensitizes them to the
tlffects of violence In the real
world," Simon and Rep. Dan
Glickman, D-Kan., co-sponsor qf
the biD, said Wednesday In· a
Jetter to broadcast olflclals.

In Wyoming as skies cleared and
temperatures reached the low
30s.
.
Scattered showers and snow
above 2,000 feet hit northern
California while a storm system
that threatened the southern half
of the state with heavy rain
weakened and posed Utile threat.
A gale warning was In effect
for the coast of Rhode Island
where southwest winds topped 20
mph and we~e expected to reach
30 mph pushing waves up to 4
feets and cuttina;vtslbllity.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace.

slon industry how to write
guidelines, and there is no
penalty If nothing results from
Joint discussions."

Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,128,889 and the prize payout
total was $1,013,617.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, one ticket had the winning
combination - 085766 - making
it worth $100,000.
In the addition to the one ticket
that listed the numbers In exact
order, seven bad th~ first five
numbers, which pays $5,000; 41
had the first lour, which pays
$1,000; 499 had the first three,
which pays $100; and 5,373 had
the first two, which pays $10.
Kicker ticket aales totaled
$589,818 and the total prize
payout was $279,630.

dr opped to zero at the airport In
Charleston, S.C., and scattered
dense fog was reported in Kentucky, Texas and the Florida
panhandle , where a frontal system moved across the state.
To the west, snow was becomIng heavier through the morning
In northeastern Colorado and lto
2 Inches had accumulated in
Boulder and Lafayette. An fldvisory for freezing dr lzzle was In
effect In the Pikes P eak region
where the low temperature was
in the mid 20s.
Light snow began tallf1rlng off

The

Business Services

Classifie

LOVE THIS

TV industry urged _to curb violence
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Some television executives
have expressed opposition to any
· television Industry has been
government move to Influence
:urged to take advantage of a
program content, but Simon and
:newly enacted antitrust exempGlickman said they were hOpeful
tion to draft voluntary guidelines
for reducing the amount o( _. the industry will respond to the
opportunity.
violence depleted In television
"My belief is that the Industry
programs.
"The. evidence i.s overwhelm- will get together and I hope can
ing that . TV vtolnce adds to · establish some standards . ... We
can have healthier television
violence In our society, and there
fare in this country," Simon said
has to be a way iodeal with that,"
at a news coliference.
said Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill. , a
Glickman stressed that the
sponsor of the bill recen Uy signed
guidelines are voluntary. "This
into law by President Bush.
law respects First Amendment
The law grants a limited
freedoms
and Is not coercive:
three-year exemption from antiCongress
Is
not telling' the televttrust laws that will permit
representatives from networks,
studios and other segments of the .
Industry to get together and
!levelop guidelines for when, how
and how much much violence
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio's
should be depleted on televisiOn.
$5
million Super Lotto jackpot
The act Is an outgrowth of
went unclaimed in Wednesday
several studies reported over
night's drawing, and lottery
recent year$ indicating that
added Sl million to the
officials
violence on television has an
pot for Saturday's game.
unhealthy effect on children and
· A lottery spokesman said
even some adults.
Thursday there were no tickets

:winter weather
across the nation
,

Father, son plan desert Christmas
WlTH U.S. TROOPS, Northern
Saudi Arabia (UP!) -ArmySgt.
Maj. Steven Cheetum re ·
members :christmas gatherings
back home in the )lUis of northern
Kentucky as ' joyful ·occasions
ftlled with caroling, gifts and
feelings of togetherness.
This holiday season, Cheetum,
49, Is patrolling the sand dunes of
Saudi Arabia and any thoughts of
a white Christmas melt away In
the 90· degree afternoon heat.
But one thing he will not miss
entirely Is close contact with
family.
The 29-year Army veteran will
spend Dec. 25 with his· son,
Michael, 23, who also happens to
be somewhere Inside the desert
kingdom participating in Opera·
lion Desert Shield.
" I'm going to be with my son
this Christmas and that means
more to me than anything," said
Cheetum, the most senior enlisted man In the 3rd Armored
Cavalry Regiment, . lsi Squad·
ron, performing reconnaissance

Pomeroy- Middleport,· Ohio

e~rlet••1

e..~r

Til-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

DPEN EV!RY DAV AT
POMEROY LOCAnON
7 DAVIt AM·7 PM
CLOIED CHRIITMAI
DAY ONLY

Coli fti·S114
For C•rent Prices

•ON -SITE SERVlCE/ it EPAll\
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMIN(;
•sA\.Es
•ON -SITE CUSTOM TRAINING
SI'RING VAUEY I'ROFESSIONIIL BUILDING
J(){, }II CKSON PIKE - SUITE JOJ
GIIWPOLIS. OHIO 06JI

(614 ) 446 -6000

DISIGIII FOR
ClrrrRALLY Bllfti'BOIIII
&gt;llotmeil&lt;l,-orwoodlruhlr'lldt-.
_...., oi!&lt;lmlupl&gt;16'klchdilmallrwood
....-:
·-HIIb w111r lor hoUMhold ...
.au.. up .. 30-klch ""wood

·--"'-

.u.. ,...--~­

&lt;Mijbl- IO.IIIOitollnlm lho-

r,

LOAD EVfiY 12 HOI/I/$

.,.--.--wCAll

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
....,. (JIM) 5'M255

�~·

14-The Dtily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

42 .Mabll Hamil
tor Rem

-

Giveaway

5522.

...,_ . . . . _C!tl'_

--

glfla.- · blogul, """ polnlod
-

z '4eiY ct.lle

Fa.-... ...._ HotM P1irtL 114-

-.'IIOiort•••

f.terchandiS('

6:00 (%). (I)

gj
I

\'

\'

I

.

L ,.... .., .... . ...... _

.,. _ , . . . _

$Ill. Au:llnert $225 to

t371.

t10IIIIIKI up1o MM. -

1lbil

W'4 ....... $215 IO Sllll. t145 up lo 1371. Hulc ... MOO I

For , . . '14171 3

I

=-~~on::..:s.~

-~~ ollllnoll,
-S30
iiOI.,.Ion
of llo*auhn,
lllll ·up 1o HLID dlyo 01m1 . .
- h w1t11 -oood crocll S mi.
out lull•• Rd. Dpon I A.M.Io
1 P.M. Mon, ttoou Sot. can .,.,

141 am.

·

8ft. hide 1 blcll couctt, brown
plaid. OOod lhapoo. llakM
- . olzo · bod, $50. 114-315-

IN'-·

FOUND- Clllldl
on
CountY Rood 4, • mill from Du·
ter, 814-'llt2·2553.
LOST Doc. I, toma1o 111...,
SMphlrd, blk snd tan, 2 Yf'l old,
lAall
1121.

aroo, REWARD,

304

451

pot-. --

Bobyoltler Modod
$71

In rtrt

homo

lhlft.
MUll b1 nlilbll ond . . _ .
dlbll,8-20.

115D7.

INCmCEI

01410 VALlEY PUII.JII.m CO.

:-=-r:ondll. .......1,.... __ lhe
----,=i~

HOllE TYPISTS,
Modod.
0111111. (1)

10181.

n:a a:uclllthlit~do.......,
Ell. .. NOTIOIIild-

PC

County Applilnco Inc. Ooocl
. - IPJIIIancao, tMon.'v
. ""!•·o-,._
I o.on. lo I p.m.
.-at.•14•cllpoell:-.
both, no
·
•
y
pita, 1111• 0411.
441-111!,. 121 3rd. A,.. 0.~

2 sp rhlerD one fuca.Wwd,
CH1II unfurnl:lhecl, uch 4 roonw

Opportunity

lheola .. .,

2llr opoll-. -

- . bod-

• h!nl .......od.
-•niltcllrllortllmilllod,

Willi I

441-11MG.

3 lumlohod • bolh,
-..,
no
pola.
·
- I
. . . - NqUirod.IM-445-1111.

Real EstJtc

- h;

150 - i . UDrlahl F,..zor SIS;
Ollbllt DWiohir'o UMd Af"
plloMe'o, Comor Rand I Pooolo,
K.anluga.Ohlo.l~lii?S.

54 Mlscellaneoua ·

56

Merchandise

wlh 4 Cllillro,l7.10 .... - · 4

-.. -

BOd, 112.211 poor

-.4-~ol

- .Ill.

Doawora, 113.50,.,
141,
4Oft 111. 7 In cantonoory.
HOURS: Monc!or lhru Sootll'dly,
ILm.olp.m.; Sui'ar, t2 Nooft.
llp.on.

SWAIN
AUCTION I RJRNITUAE. 12
Ollwe 81., Oolllpolil. - . UMd
lumHUI'tl, hell.,., Wlllom I

-o.
TWoolo

814-441-3151.

IOI1,011 1-..37.tl28.
lall: . All
iiiiiVIIj, 8M-

131 • lood, dllmorool

VU - - . . . - . 11.. .

ta~

I druan, blby-.bld.

IM-441-1Z41.

Anllq,. Maobll lop
l&amp;npo,-3.

olandl •

Buy or 0111. Aiv.IM Anllq,.o,
1124 E. Moln 81-, Poonoioay.
Moun: M.T.W. 10;00 o.on.lo 1:00
p.m.z!uno~or 1:00 to I:DO p.m.

Employment Serv1ces

14

RentJis

Bualneu
Training

HelpW8ntld

-r=:

3
1
1
'1
....
···•d.
.', o=K
........ 1144••m

A - • AI ..,.., Call Marilyn
WIIYII'-·2145.

!lobr!IMII..

Sc-

...111111o,

holjlltol, 111 ••• 1241.

... ...,...

__

.....
OonrltNcdon
-10 li!tlh
-·
-I • • .....
_
lnlinoioolloon
011130M71-4100orf75.MWI.

-r
Dlllolcl,

-

.... I •-•• IIIII - ·

=~···.

-·

Und

ping. •11._...

===-·

Ellcloncv.
.........

-lor 1 -

304-I'IS-

- .......-. Dor em Coni•.
S.tl, &amp;tfDrd b' , ehJtdnre. M-F

Unfwnlltled 2 t f

I LIL • 1,_ p.no. Agn 2·10.

-1224.
· Dnlp-lnoo
eu I .:w.IIIII'
t11 111

GUll

por

'IIOITALJ018'
Plano 1
ane In 11w ~
t1t41 • f14.-. No .......... $5.00 ·112 hour. lolonflo Rood,

apt1

-h.or

Vsm1rcy, 'MI ...._.. Tower.
Houal• 1ar tt.

...-,,en.

:::::::r:.

304.e71-1371.

lion ~-lon.... ~
=~~~~~
EQull
'lmll.m.-10p.m, 7U,..
SoiRIDM tO CUI M apple l .box
104-475.......... _ I n - 2br - . ldl- WIIIOVI I
ATT£NTION POIIEROYI
0IIrigoniOr,
1250/oJtO,
pluo
"M.;.ll;.;;..
.
cay.-2-7352.
'IIOITAL JOBS•
Fumlahld
t1t41 • t14.10 lor. No ........

- ........

. . llonbll. Top pllol. 114f.IP.7111 ollor 7:00p.m.

:-..:.=.~'"'::.'=: '45

••• •ar .

lion lnlo., 0111-~~
1::n-fMI3! Wall- &amp; poinllng IM-1112- S hood,_ houM for ....,. In
.

...... -1Dp.on. 1 dolyo.

2321. .

A- I:IIIW'IS-14211.
An - · I Sllloloy .
........

Will . . . lor

'"'
-y
'
"
"
-··
- " ' ClllkiOoo. lor 3 •• yr.

old In ""

·-··

llolorlr ,.._

.
,_ ·--5:00p.m.

oftor

I

I:;:;:~RoOI~~m~s~~i

;
o

j

28ft.

10:30)

•
1d~
1m .....,. 4 ..~. nont ·•
good, SUOO. 304-t7NZII.
;

ID SportoCentar ·
a.._,u...
Scarecrow and Mra. King

8

1880 ....., ~ .. ..,. - . ~ ·
12,500. 1111
:11141on Silrra · •
404, 1 cy1, N,SOD. 304 Ill 38111. •

74
1m

-

•
Motorcyc'
Hand Goldwin• OL 1000 i
--·~·

acau.nt oondH~~I!IO. 114:.. ~

44t4111 orti1448-3D:II

MaO,$" ·

ALLEY OOP

'115t

llnl

~

When Alvin gives away his

harmonica, 11a mus1 come up
wilh another one belore the
ne•t concert. (Mimaled)

I E)C.PECTED! WHAT'D
YOU BRING US FOR

,,

10:30)
1D s.c.... of S(IHCI

DINNER?

~·

.

Ill!.Crossfire
7:35 !Il The JelflriOrie
8:00 (%) D 101 C011by Sh!IW
Stereo. c
·
(!) MOVII:: eta.. of '44 (PG)
(2:00)
1D (I) II Falllar Dowling
Myat-. Father Dowling
and Sister Steve search tor a
depanment store Santa.
Stereo. C
CD Raca lo Save the PUnat
(!) Hometlme C
·
~ 112) Ill Top tope Stereo.

··~.'

Stonge

56

Pats for Sale

!;'.,..:,
h':r.Jm!: wl&lt;o,
wonrwcl gooat
gift, 140 814'11112·

pupplll,
.

-·
,......

. ·sponlol
AI&lt;C ~Mk•

.

iili Gl The Slmpeons Bert

recruits the smartest kid in
class to help him pass an
exam. (R) Stereo. Q ·
II! Mr. Megoo'a Chriatmae
Carol Mr. Magoo'a attitude
changes when he's vlllited by
the Ghosls ol Chrlsnnas
Pasl. present and FuiUre.

,.

0
I
AecetiiOI'Iel
•
350 motor and tran~ml.-lon, \

r&gt;toolco at 13

-Clod. 1144324Jitl.

::;:1f14.17W188~.c::-;;c..:::.·==-.=::-;;

Hay&amp; Grain

Services

11-13

Round Balli In lha ·FIIId. 814-

'

245-8518

1.119
~'!.r.t.u~L~
...
1 • ••
·-.
lbll. t14-44fl..*2.

BASEMENT

a

J

a

114-211-1111.

/

iili
• Babet The Babes are
laced with prejudica when
lhily )oin a health club. (R)
Slerao. g
a Oak Ridge lloyo'
Chrlalmlo The counlry music
•group performs on the river
showbOat General Jacl&lt;son.

IUT, l tiDT TD

.,.,

SIT II

RanouR,

fllpllc Toonk Pu ....... lto..!Jollil
Co. EVANS IN111APoa8E8,
..........; OH 1-.aS1'41121.

:
_.
I

....VIle
S.W:I, ''
Qu~ CNik Rd. PI"-. . . . ~loup, oncl doll..,.,. OM0.vf8

lor:

·

Tromm Bullillow:
-llamoo,
--ling,

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

o, Z-21, bolaltl rod,

caJtor'o Plumbing

•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

onciHiiiiiiiV
-•nciPirw

Ollllpotlo Dlllo

_ llf.i;-..·
,
__
,l'i•••••• ·
•
-........
•

I

Electrlcll &amp;
Refrlgll'ltlon

'.,

9

'I:Jur .

CJIIoithd_,
-...., u~

Dec. 14, 1tiO .
~ Who wu once lmpoflanl 1o
you awhile baclc could owll• your life
again In thl ~ ....... Thll pnon
might hlw I powilti\A, 1-'tUative ln-

!Mnol on ,_, .,_ of rour Hie.

IAanTAIIIUI (NIIV. D Dec

tl)
You'renotaplto(Ntlonntoowelluncler
today, 10 don't mlkl tllingl
·loughlr an youl'8lll thlil tt.y illrMcly
.... Thl penon moat ... , 10 goof ""
your -'Ill II you. Gil I jUmp an life
by uncferltancllng "" lnflueno8l which

•·

e

are governing you In lhe rear ahead. who usually iooks to you to ball him/her
Send tor your Aootro-Graph predlcllons oul of tight .spots might come to you
today by mailing $1.25 lo Aslro-Graph, wllh a compHca1ed problem again loc/o t h i s - -· P.O. Box 91428, • day.Youknowwllatcanresullllyouget
C-and, OH 44101·3428. Be 111re 10 too Involved.
slate your zodiac sign.
CAIICER (Junl 21-.lulf 22) Be ••·
CAPRIC OliN (Dec. 22-.IM. 11) A friend tremely carehol today you do not rleld to
of yours Who Is preHntly at odds wllh peer pr-.re and do or partlclpale In
anolher lrland of youra mighl lry to something lhal dcetl nol IIN8 your
draw you lnlo lhelr dllllgreement today. ball lnlareolo. There's a chlnce you
II you respond to the bah, you'll ba can ba manlpulaled.
sorry.
LEO (JIIIJ 21-Aug. 22) 11 you are able to
AQUARIUI (Jell. 20-Fib. 11) You have evaluate developmanls through the
the motlvotlon and drive todar , _ . ayea of your competftlon today, you
(j) Nawl
llry IO achieve your objecll-. It )'Oil
should ba IUCCIIIIul. Wllh llmhed vi(j) (I) ._Primetlme u ..
fall to attain dellrecl resuhl, It might be lion you mar 1oM wllat you've ali'Mdy
Stereo. Q
·
d.. to your ,...,•• u a tectlclan.
acquired.
ID Oeatkillion Mourt Pater
PIICEI (M. 20 ...raiiiDI You might VIRGO (Aug. 21-lepl. 22) An emotional
Sellare' exciting
ftndyourM!Ionacollloloncourwtoday reeponoe, ouch ae giving ~ae a
modem-drasa etaglngs ol
with a ~ dllrnillrlcally oppoooc1 to P'- ot your mind out of anger, will only
t11ree Mozart operas are
your vlewl on 1 VOiallle lllue. Try lo make a bad lltuatlon worae. Let your
Introduced. (1 :00)
give 1'"- Individual epace In lhe cooler judgmenlbke c:onwnliiKIIn frul..
(!)Under Fire
paaelng , _,
tratlng clrcymll-.
1111 1D. Knota Landing
Alllll (llerGII 21·Aprll tl) a. finicky LIIIIIA (lepl. a.oot. :111)-rceelot
· Claucla laama Grell lnd
lbolot your lllllllctlon today H yoll're
a joint venluN mull be manlgld .-y
Paige may marry; Greg
ulldtrgoeaaurgery. Stereo.
c:antemplltlng I purc:fl-. trial II 1Up- lkllllully at IIIII time " ' - both par1leo
poeect lo laattor a vwy long time. You are CCII-'*'· lmprudenoe on behalf
lllr YOlk: The Nelli
may pay more than you lllaukl and and of 1111111' party could cllplete thl
Gal..eon
liP with a lemon Myou•,. .not CINIUI.
.odiiMII. ,
1B CNN 1-'na tlaWa.
:rAIIIUI (April • . . , ID) If you lalle ICOIU 10 (Ool. 14 NIIV, 21) You are
0 700 Club Wlih Pat
an unylllding 11011t1on on a tOUChy- lllety to belldremely rnllllllt today H
Roll1t11 on
toda!r. you can eopeclthe ...,.type of anyone tt111 you what to e1o and - t o
PGIItn from your mall. He/the II n01 do h, ~ IIIII may be euct1y liow you l 10:05 !Il MOYIE: 11'1 a 'Wa1 ~ 111101
llllety to glw In before you do.
tf811t 1110c1atee or oompanlon~.
Life (2:45)
arsm 11111r 21...._ IDI s ·

a

'•

0 Cloeera Stereo. Q

1D (I) Gabriel's Flra Bird
uses lhe talonts of a con
woman 10 1rap an embezzler.
(R) Stereo. 1;1
ID (JJ Myateryl A popular
actor is the victim of a•series
of practical jol&lt;es.
IIJ) • Marilyn: !lonlelhillll'•
Got to Give The final weeks
ol Marilyn Monroe's career
and life ara chronicled,
Including never-before-seen
footage of her laat movie .
(1 :00) Sterao. I;J
II! MOVIE: AgMs of God
(PG13) (2:00)
a Naahvllle Now
1D Top R111k Boxing
La"' King Uvel
9:30(%)• 0 Grind Janice's
mother makes an
unexpected vlait with her
ex-con boyfriend. Stereo. 1;1
llJ) 112) Ill Doctor, Doctor
Mllce decides to give up
madlc:ine. Stereo. 1;1
10:00 (%) • i1J1 L.A. Law McKenzie
propose• to defend Rosallng
Shays aner she Is arrested .
Slerao.l;l

~

In Zenltll • • Mf'Vidna mollll

111 4413111

••

TAICE·
DUTS?

att:.r brandll. tto... carr., 118D \
-~Ohio
. . . , - I'MMI-1451.
._w.. WY ','

82

42

BDDACIDUS
PEACH
CDBBLERtl

(0:30)
9:00 (%) D

ENN'I

•

aoll Torontdo 12300,
....... 41111010.

'

MY

I HATE TO EAT AN'
RUN, LOWEEZ.Y--

Ron'o TV SIMco, opocllllzl.. •

.

a.eoo. 114 4tMI11.IIIII..

rr .:

OF THIS.

BARNEY

roofinG, NmOdell~;
Piilloil I illckl ole. R£MoiiEL.
INOf Refelencn. Eltl ..... n.

41,000 - - 0110. ooiool, illluxo,

1117 C

E!IOX. curAT THE

TRANSMITTER. ..

I'M NDrOI.II&lt;£:
I WANT TO
HE;AR11-'E. !&lt;EST

.. ,

...... .--1431.
ano1H ...trol.

_1.., lilo plumbl..

Ill ctrlca11

1Nil ........,. lloorqull For !loll
or - l o r Mlllllliolng ol oqull
4olr A -

A MOt.JeE GOr
INltJ THE. CABLE

»

--::
Coonpillo M- Homo 011 upo

.-.tiMI2-IZIL

1ea

weARE

U_,..lllonal Hllllmo guonn- ,

2120.

Autos for Sale ' .

a

•

IN, Local ,.,...IICM fumlshtd. I
F,.. oootlmat... can colllct 1- ~
814-237-8411, dly ... nlghl •• •
~ 8
:ant W8tlf'PFOO! ....

Homolloolnl
, ...114-37JI.
"
old
-''"1 ...
call-MHch

71

ID putslill the
Aut()graph Game
PrlmeNewo
1111 MOVIE: Zarro, the
Log.nd lleglno (2:00)
8:05 (I) MOVII!: Chrlatmao Coil!
. Mine Miracle (2:00) · ..
8;30 (%). 101 Dlffetent World
Ron lries to decide on a
career to pursue. Stereo. I;!
(!) This Old Houu C
•
llJ) 112) Ill Tho Flash 'Flash
enlists the help of a crime
~hter from lha pasl. Stereo.

1

......

Trans po rtat 10 n

una.

EXPI:f2tENCINe
. TECHNICAL .
PIFFICUI-TIES.

1
1

WA'TERPROCIFINO

a Amarlcan Mualc Sflop

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

OOGUnol,
-~~~~
100
lb. m1o
clftfo~
- . $5.50
ss.oo Pili'
por - - - - - - - - - - -·· ''
100 lb. Allalla Hay. Morgon'• 81
Home
{
12
1
35
l'.:'"oclooy.S.bildoy,
R1. ' 304-ISJ.201L
""" noon,
Improvement&amp;
r
Hay lor SOIL CloVtr .. 11-loy.

10:55)

r
i
•
I

,..r .

:.l'"'

AI&lt;C P-ronloon IM'PPI'o malo,
no ~s:l:'"ploil olrool,

Aut Part &amp;

76

SPL:

1·18'X11' -na

Budaiil - -· ~ , . .,
11bUIII, -Ina at .10; IM-245LIVGstock
11177, I~
· ~
63
ond Ra- ptrll, ~ I . 4 :
fllo Palnl Pluo lor lOUr -~~ S1G
d~... _
_ , ...
onol lOck noalo, 2415 .Joclooon Avo, Polnl P - . WY, 304- 1:00 pon.
075-4014.
_ , Aluminum, Ponlllo, ~·
Triino-Am,
18"XI" UC. conol Hkl• 1
Wont to wlnlw 110-100 • - or
cal..., call Mol'tllnl Faron, R1. - . t1,1 N - · Allolng iiia.,
f14.441.1311o
'
'
35, Pllnr. 304-N7'2011.
· ·

64

Supplies

In

'

e

/Z-1$

C) 1MCIDy NEA, t,..

125 ... lvlnnoolo Entllile, •
oomplolo lop, now u-lory. •

~aoo...-.... ...

•

.

,

YOU'RE BACK SOONER'N

IM---.

614-992--2156
304-675-1333
614-446-2342

Tl-jAvES:
•,

Hlon. E.... ng: 114- , ,

uem,.

Soow cllolno buy Z all 1 lrH.
Slillro Equl-1, ~JIIZ1.

,...,. eta, wrls: Retrc::lent, At
1 la2SA,'-,WY:asm.

Al»'D77SE
. .

-

..

1171 Ki 710, 2 Into 1 hMdlr, ~

.;,CII;;;I:.;IM-;;,:.;288o;;;;.•1;;.;;311:.;1:;;11o;;;r..;,:t;,OOOO;
;; op.;;,;;.m.
;,.:;
,'

· 1-3' moncloQr,

Jototoa

vou
yo.ur
howe that...ciUI tui"TT in.tCJ

'

7:05 !Il Happy Days
7:30 tll D 0 0 ~rdyii;J
. (!) NIGht Court 1;1
(i) l!rit-IM1enl Tonight
Slereo. 1;1
CIJ Mama•• Family
lllJ lD Three'• Company
t!J A Chipmunk Chrta-

•

•-

'

loao1QOII a lon........,.o.. Buy,
Mil, lradl, I :D0-5:00 woolodlyo,

..........r. .s:

lhllr homo, hoi or poo~ limo, 2G

.........

cub and a lox are
accidentally locked Into a
train car carrying Christmas
1rees 10 the city. (Animated)

1880 CA·121A, 114-4....1122',:
........ llp.on.
•
Hondll~ four whHier, • • ••~:

0... will Jll'mp $50, AKC IOI(IIIIo ·2 - · 2
130,- - - - o t o L D n o 1 s
c...... wlatla'l.a.:- 3111. LMIIth ......... ~
1171 llodgo Comol 311 ........
C h - 1 - 110. Olch. CUI AKC ._UIIful molo jol block IIIIo, ou~a~L S5DO ...,...
1111111,1
.......
your -~~ 1 ,._ Union llny IOJ ~. 12 wkl
Churdt. M1 112 ZSIS.
. _ Chre.tmae gill,
75·
1171 llodgo Comol 311 111111110,
1114.
oulo, ounil - . S5DO ...,...

,........

AND ERNEST

roar~· ().~..
clollln, 11,100. 31M 112 3571.
,. ,
.
1.. CR-IOOR· 1114 CR-Mi •.r..

$200,

or-

Rully:

188'7 Y11111hri W.nlor 310, MW ·'
:12x11xl VIper 11,.., new hnt • 1

201D ,II) with plotw, cU~
lmoloo;,_ corn pfanl!!. uli~
1Q20 .., DloiiOI, 84,Sov; 101 .ou
wHh JD - · 13,250• 2010 .10
wllh JD lotdlr, P,IH. OwMr
will fino-. GM-21U522.

llooclllrwry

' -·
. . . - 304-4151-11112.
T~ Mill,

wllh

von. 1325.

8
Button• 111d
Chrl-1 y,.. Train A bear

·,

utra•tollltltM 44al311.

304.f811-S171 ... :ou4111

3441.
A.I-YS -

I

111&amp; HOoiolo TRX, . ZSOA, 'laur i
wh ··~ •n. aondl. 1oo manr . ~ •

8522.

31'x45'x11',

10" - · ... . . .. 304.e71- a....... and Supply Sllop'Pool
4004.
o.......tna. A l l - Alllylla.
50" Sony ~lon TV, 1111111~ 11nw Pol Food o.lor. Julo
lui ooli-IDP diu cobl~ tlUO. - . Colll14 441 0211.
-

tm
~
· van. 350 1011-lc,
PIS, PIB; tkal a aoocl worfl

Europe CNIIdee Billy
Graham looks at the benefits
of a lite with Chrlli. Slereo.

•

,

1'14-44&amp;-MIIItterlp.m.

SOl. 1111 Noon.

-·-hod
=--~·
---Clinic --r.,_
===---

HDLIIMT IPECIAUI • I IIIII Ellorlat Pllnllng, 10 ,_.
~-Cid, t\lv. ... liiCII,

:

f

-.,-

73 Yanl &amp; 4 WD'I

I

I

HOPNOC
1-...;1,.;....;;.,1.;-5.,;I~~~~~-1 0

ComploiO lllo chucklt quOIOd
_,L..
__.J,l-.J.I....J.I....J.--J
·
by !;lUng In tile mlllln~ -d•
L
you develop from IIOp No. 3 below.

SCIAM LITS ANswiu
Graven - Forty - Outdo -Innate- FORGOTIEN
"Just remember,son," advised the dad, "flattery won't .
be believed , criticism won't be liked, ignorance won't be ·
forgiven, but encouragement will not be FORGOTTEN!"

8.

\

BRIDGE

·

i1J Ill Billy Oow....., 'Eeotem

75 Boats &amp; Motors
J
Stump rwwoval, rllnl work, Jlm'o ....., EquiT.hSR. 35,
for Sail ·
i
11-11117;
St11ontd 1111, oek, hickory Will OoiiiOOIII,
=~:::-=-"'==~=-:-.:"'
11.-, 180.00 Plok.up Lood, Wldo -lon .-a .-Joron 1i7'2 17 ft . StaN:raft Trf.Hull /

!..-lui
choice 1225, ,.,... ~~t:~~=:::c
--~
:._ t.m~le tuu lllulf•d beagle
WOodbumll' ......

•

1188 Handa '1011, Magno for Nil.

w/Dual HvclraYIIal1 14,310; ,_..

-lvtr.

rongo. UMd loltchen

illJ lD Night Court C

l
·, ...
f,

12,000 mlloo, damoaod, t~
til, t1.1DD. 304..'154073 allor !

1

F8rm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Roglll• lo win lrH luotcov guoon 3CI WIBowh Hog, t1,105.
glwtn _ , Sotll'dly unlll Owner Will FIIWICI. IM-28&amp;-

boallter,

1HO QMC, 12,8110. 'U aula,

One co-worker to anotner :
"The , trouble with getting to ·
L...J.L......J.-.L.-.L
. ...1. e work on time Is that it makes .
....-- - - - - - - , the day .. ----!" · •

e

1

~; rvn1 good,

A-Miorwd Wuho.., Dl)'oro.. 61 Fann Equlpmim
Ouaoontoal ,.....p4 _.,loO lor
1085 IIF Troclor, Sharp $5150;
an
moiiOI, · n. Wuhoo 1&amp;5 MF DIIMI, c..... Putt,
Dry• Sttoppe. IU 441 2144.

Block, ~ ~~~- wlnolowo, Jlnllla, lla. Clouolo WlnPM 304-4SI-1511.
lerl, Rio Grandi, OH C.ll 1141173 ~ hill ton 4x4 S710, 12 :;245::ft:::=.1.;;__ _ _ _ __

4Z' goa
-..

y.tM IM 12M

A_,ow.

drltil,
lonlr. llovl.. mull 1111
. lnllaliltlon ,onllabll. 3041911-3171 till 5:00 PM oftw 10:1141

C"'g: :,.~;:~~.=::::

TilE MAGAZIIJt... .

1111 Ford Rangor, 4 c,t, I
84,150. allor 5:00 ... •

opooc~,

Plllno S.rpln. 1:00PM.

Fruits &amp;

Roll . - b l l nlro nlco oota
1183 lacond

.... 1140 aoool

a
=

with
""" • loW
10 111
bUdgll. 1 t135.
uiiiOn, 2 ....... bod. .,... ..... ul..ll&amp;ldlal

41 Housaa tor.Rant

S lor Clorlo-1 bll!o. 3111 Avion.
,,.. 01111 wlh ~~~gn-up. Coli Kar
IWID•NO.
.

............ 11111._

~MI.CDrliDII

l chair. file 11

1 Pol1on, Ath.,.'rOhlo 45101 or
oall 114111112.al5 or 11411112· Utod Nllrol 0.1 P11D eon....
lion --.11100 IM-1112-2584.
2411.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
54 Mlscallaneous
Ron 'AIIioo!!~,1210 SOoond Avo,
Oolllpalo, IJI11,..._-4331.
Mercha~l" .
Building
10' uloltfto IIIIo. complllo 55

Warood To Buy: UMd moblll
- . ..111-71.

YEAH. I REAUX LIK£

NewaHour

Jill PIANO SEA.· 304..- . - .

Ylt;E (Prv. 22:1). 1111 Wood

1171, Ulod
llorm ·
aoocl·-.d.,
$40, 38x80".
8M.{4U27J.

-ion.
Sind pltol01 ani! -~DIIon to

-

"o-bll"

elze ftter bed wtth

Queen

Duiftl

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opool&lt; wtll o( youl You '*!f11w

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-

C1J • ABC News 1;1
CD Wild Amarlca
.
(!) 3-2·1 Contact 1;1
1111 1D • CIS Nril 1;1
lllJ lD Andy OriHith ·
ID Sportalook
1111 Madeline 1;1
6;35 !Il Andy Griffith
7:00 tll D 1111 0 Wheel of
Fonunel;l
.
(!)I Dream of Jeannie
(i) (I)
Inside Edition
CD (JJ MacNoll Lellrer

F-150., olllo., ••"" '
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(i)

Flat lop guiiOr 880. ~-'IS- $5800. IM-'314-4435 or 441-1131:
3533.

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53

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1-.,1-TI-,.1~~.~·.,1~.-1

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lncludn 5
~~ aftor 7:00 PM 3114-

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111111I1Ut0 12 Ql. $250, 114-37921211.

11

Instruments

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power

.. - - · cal. 30.01 Spring,

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1188 Ford ~T. AJC, Y..

t.\lslcal

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oxholll1 fan, mopll lollll, .3C141112·2325.
loltchon WI elwiN, IIIII

0.. Ralltll .-only I CNiltiUIS. Palm PIUI, 2C15
- . ....... S3DO ....,.... Jeaban Ave, Polnl Pt..unt.
;:.. lib 11100. 114-446- . 31J4.t75.4014.
S.• ...... lplem, light guri,

52 Sporting Goods

,

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COII304.f'll-1450.
Nlnloondo ' - ' _ . blue
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114-441-3151
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1 Peace Waod.aup. $14.G1 per Columbl!lr_ OH ID Orlanda, FL food 110-. Yooloily o l a amlllh ..... and butW, iftlud
- . L.ShapOd Bunk - . A•n,..,.., 114-44'1..ct10S.
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loddl.. oncl Chill of 0.0...
Inch-, t13.14 Pll' -11. Plllllo d . - ...oo oach. 114- Tuollllr:::"Y ... dolly,
SWivel Rockw, $4.44 per -11.
P :! w $7.71 per wwk. Dinette

t

THE'r' DIDN'T

GOTO WASTE ..

p.m. 114-44&amp;-1512.
·
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81...,_ Kill..- • won&amp;l!llll I lit·
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IN THE STORE. AND
SHE S~OWED ME THE
NEW PAIR OF GLOVES
51-tE'D JUST BOUGHT!

:!: Ford
11 .,..,'·s~~x~~·':l.ir*a"":

Pets for Sail

APPLIANCES ond many """" " - • - at
nlod: R11ponolbll poriJ to
GDDD
1134
But1omut Rd. maklloW onoillh!J.!!"J"""'" on
35 Will Apl. ar, 1 bolh, prlnle w.-. doyoro, olio !polO... . 132
Poonoroy.
tplrwt....,.olo /iir:V' can 111
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PIQ(ENS RJANITURE
tllllfVilll, fully lotdod, rMCiy Oullar w/- Exo. oonol., s:zao.
No.-lood ·
for wat~ !!'""' n1-, $5,500. caniM-IIZ-3141oftw 1 p.m.

Yard Sale

GODNIT

1;1

aW-Today
1111 Madeline's Chrl1tm11
AHar Paris is hit by a h~ga
snowstorm. Madeline, her
lrlends and Miss Claval can't
get home tor Christmas.
IAnlmated) 10:26) 1;1
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3 Announcements

Pomaoy.:...Middlaport. Ohio

Thursday, December 13. 1990

Pomeloy· Middlaport, Ohio

NORTH

· ot.u.tt

+Q4 2

'ft094
The mark of an expert declarer is
.A02
his taking precautions against unusual
+A ;4
distributional breaks whelll!ver possible. Lynn Deas demonstrated this ex- WESI'
EAST
pertise in her play of four hearts. All +10 8 7
+K;3
far as the bidding was concerned, · 'f . .•
'fKQJ 7
.876
Deas held a minimum hand, which • Q 9 ;
+Q 7 3
blossomed when partner supporte&lt; +K J 10 9 8 6 2
hearts. Jumping to game is good prac·
SOUTH
lice when your major suit bas been
+A:J96
'supported and you hold a void in a
'fAB8532
aide-suit. In any event it can be difli·
I KJ 10
cult to discover wbether partner's values are useful, so why give the defend·
Vulnerable: East-West
ers any information?
Dealer: South
Declarer sbed a diamond on the ace
ol clubs and immediately led a spade Soallt
Wool Norl~ Etal
back to her jack, cashed the spade ace l'f
Pass 2'f
Pass
All pass
and played a third spade. East won the 4 'f
king and returned a club, ruffed by deOpening lead: • J
clarer. It now looks automatic to play
tbe heart ace and a heart, but Lylln
Deas played a low heart out of her '------------1
hand instead. Nolh!ng would matter il ace of diamonds, ruffed a diamonot
hearts spilt ~2 or ~1. but the disas· small as East followed, and then
trous • 4-0 split could ·be protected played her last spade, ruffing with
asainst.
dummy's nine of hearts. East took the
East won the heart jack and played queen, but bad to lead away from the
still another club. Declarer ruffed K-7 of hearts into declarer's A-8. For
again. She next cashed the king and declarer, well done.

••••

CROSSWORD
.bY THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 D~.'s

•.

group

1 Resort
isle
6 Inclination
11 Love
aHair
,12 Vietnam·
ese city
13 Danny's
daughter
14 Conductor
· Previn
15 Laasa
signer
17 Bat WODd
191nvite
20 Chid\'s
mom
23 Nonethe·
less
25 Intel
26 Rille
range
target
features
28 Suit to29 Feel
remDrse
30 Nodder's
answer
31 Cole cry

3 Liner
windows
4 Occupy
the
throne
5 Tool·
making
period

.,

V11terday'1 Answer
one's
authDr
· owner
33 la Scala
gratitude 20 Goller's
7 Talk
laat
lady
· madly
21 Happen ~ 34 Pitcher
8 Football
ing
Hershisar
player
22 Lairs
35 Tub
9 And not
24 Diminu·
36 - de
1 0 Gam a
live sufliM
France
piece
25 Beat
37 News
16 Smoker's
walker
hour
need
27 Gangland 39 Sandra
17 Cornered . · guns
or Ruby
18 "'n the
31 lnlamous 40 "A
Beach'
molal
mousel"
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32"-My

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Party"
33 OhiD city
35 Drop
in on
38Wear
down
41 Electrilied
42 "Watk
Away - ·
43 LBJ home
44Giossy

))OWN
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spinner
.
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DAIL Y CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II: 12113

AXYDLBAAXR

lsLONGFEl.I.OW
One leller slan&lt;b for anothe•·. In this sample A is usL'&lt;l
for the three L's, X for the iwo O's, etC. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letlers are different.
CRYPTQQUOTIE

12·13
TD J

HMXZKGZK

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W M S GJ

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Y......,'e ~...., IF WE WANT OUR
OBSCENITY LAWS DOlED UP, WE HAD BETIER
FIRST TIDY UP OUR LIFE. - ROGER KUJ.Y

,,

IMR .

\·

�Thursday, December 13, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:.-ga 16-The Daily Sautit•.al

Ohio Lottery

Club honors two
members by placingpaintings in library
TWo attactive prints have been
• hung in the newly renovated Middleport Branch of the Meigs
County Public Library by the Middleport Literary Club in honor of its
two oldest members, Viverine Middleton
Waddell
and
Nan
Washington Moore, · both nonegenarians.
Mrs. Waddell, 95 on Sept. 6, has
been a member of the club for 63
years. An avid birdwatcher, the
Club selected a print with birds to
hang in the main library room in
Mrs. Waddell's honor.

II days
until
Christmas

Selected to honor Mrs. Moore,
90 years old on ()ct. 31, was a print
with children and animals to hang
in the Children's Room. It is espe·
cially appropriate since Mrs. Moore
was a school teacher in the Middleport sehools for many years, She ·
has been a member of the club
since 1963.
Several members of the club
gathered at the library for the hanging of the prints Wednesday afternoon preceding a regular meeting
at the home of Betsy Horky.
·

at
Vol.41, No.166
Copyrighted 1990

,.;--Christmas Is ... - - - - - - - - . ,

The New Haven · United
Methodist Church Chancel Choir
will present its annual .Christmas
cantata, "Never Too Old For
Christmas," on Sunday at 7:30p.m.
at the church located on Fifth Street
in New Haven, W.Va. The public is
invited to attend.

ADULT SECTION • Vivenne Middleton Waddell stands beside
the print donated by tbe Middleport Literary Club to bang in the
main Ubrary room at tbe Middleport facility.

Sheriff's report
An auto fire and a deer accident

were investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff on Wednesday
evening.
According to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Roger C. Smith, Jr., of
Pomeroy Pike was northbound 011
State Route 7 near Chester at 10:30
p.m. last night when he struck and
killed a deer that ran into the path
of his vehicle.
Moderate damage was listed to
the front of the vehicle.
The Sheriff assisted the Racine
Fire Department when a 1981
Chevrolet Cit;llion owned by
Tammy Harris of Old PortJan·d
Road caught fire.
It was reported that the vehicle
was parked at the residnece at the
time of the fire.
Deputies took a theft report from
Terry Napper, of Red Hill Road
near Langsville. It was reported to
the department that an AM/FM
tadio was talcen ~m their vebicle.

CIULDREN'S ROOM PRINT • Children and animals have always been a part of the life of Nan Washington Moore, longtime
Middleport school teacher. Those things are featured in a ·print
bung in her honor in the Children's Room at the Middleport
Library Wednesday afternoon.

k
/ f"

Anderson's

A CHRISTMAS PROGRAM • Christmas for
many would not be complete without a church
Christmas program. Pictured here are members
of tbe Middleport Cburcb of Christ wbo wiD
present their program on Sunday at 7 p.m. under tbe direction of Maryln Wilcox and Christi

'

BERKLINE
RECLINERS

I::..J

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

I3ER&lt;I.Jf\E.

-----

FREE L
DELI~ER~~

111'"

S2 49.00 ....................... SALE ·S199
S289.00 .......................SALE S231
S339.00 .......................SALE S271
S399.00 .......................SALE S319

•
~~-----------------------------

-· Beautiful Furniture Doesn't
Have to ·Be Expensive...

REG. 389
SALE

$319

REG. S319

REG. S389

Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS Chester Knight, Pomeroy and
Nevada Ball, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES ·
Ellen Young.

I

"This was a brutal crime and I
believe the jury reached a just verdict baSed on overwhelming
evidence of guilt," Prosecutor
Steven L. 'Story said following the
verdict. " I also believe that tlt,e sentence was appr.ppriate in view of
the previous mental history of the
defendant It's also appropriate
considerin~ the serious injury of
the victim. '
Scott was represented by Meigs
County Public Defender Charles H.
Knight, who was unavailable to offer comment on !be result of the
trial.

Lynch. Pictured are
·.
Josh Lynch,
Aaron Hockman, Carrie Hartson, Mikey Wil·
rong, Stephanie Pickens, Jodi lble, Erin Hartson,
Delana Eichinger, Cassie Vaughan, Jacob
PoweU, Chris Pickens, Kevin and Jason Harris,
Carolyn McDaniel and Des Jeffers.

The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Develop·
.· menllil· Bisabilities-wa8· recognized
recently as. a finalist in the Search
for· Excellence Awards in Community-Based .
, Employability
Development from the J.M.
Foundation during a ceremony held
in Washington, D.C.
From large cities and rural communities across the nation, top
winners represent the highest
achieving vocational programs
serving. people with disabilities,
explained Jeremiah Milbank, Jr.,
president of the J.M. Foundation.
Interest in the Search for Excel-

lence competition continues to
build. each year, )Wibank continued. "It is our hq~e that other
programs will replicate these high
achieve~s as a means of providing
the best possible services to dis- ,
ab)ed people. The lives of some 43
million· Americans with disabilities
- America's largest minority could be vastly improved if all·
rehabilitation facilities performed
as well as those we are saluting in
Washington." .
,
As a model for ihe nation in an
era of cost-consciousness, the
Search for Excellence ·Program has

captured . the
attention
of
policymakers, optmon · leaders,
grantlnakers and , program· · administrators . nationwid, Milbank
said;. "The Program has pioneered
t!te. use of verifiable program
achtevements and . meas~ble
benefits to people wtth dtsabthues
in the selection of America's finest
vocational programs." An impo~­
tant feature of the Search awards ts
that every apphcant from across the
country receives an "excellence
report" comparing their program to
other apphcants in the same
category.

a

treated to party hosted by the Southern Obio
Coal Company, Union Locals 1857 and 1886,
and donations from local businesses and vendors. This is the firth year tbat the $15,000 party
has been given.

CHRISTMAS PARTY • Santa Claus,portrayed by Max Whitlatch, was busy
Thursday afternoon at tbe Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Mine No. 2. Needy children
from Meigs, Gallia and Athens county were

$319

REG. S179
SALE

SALE

$143

$259

REG. S369
SAlE

$289

Hospital news

Funeral services for Virginia
Winston Stallworth of New Yorlc
City." N. Y., a native of Mei~s
County. who died on Sunday wtll
oot be held until after Chrisanas,
friends here report. The delay was
necessitattd 10 allow time for Mrs.
Sllllworth 's daughter to return to
the country. The services will be
announced by Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport.

ed".

Sheriff, deputies, family are sued
for 'malicious prosecution,' arrest
SALE

Funeral service later

the same · time, while the two
firearms sentences must be "stack-

Meigs MRIDD recognized

WALLAWAY RECLINERS, ROCK-0-LOUNGERS
and SWIVEL ROCKERS
Beautiful fabrics and Berkline~s Limited
Lifetime W~Jrranty.

The salary for the new Executive
Director/Development Director of
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce is not $32,000 as prin·
ted in the Daily Sentinel on Wednesday.
Instead, $32,000 was the total
goal of the chamber in funding the
position, including fringe benefits
and the like.

The Terry Brewer of Middleport
who was fined in the court of Middleport Mayor . Fred Hoffman
Tuesday on a charge of disorderly '
conduct is not the Terry Bre'Yer
who resides on Vine Street.
·r

during this week's jury trial was
meant to prove or disprove the insanity plea.
Following the verdict, Common
Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow III
sentenced Scott to the maximum
penalty allowed by law, that of I 0
to 25. years in prison on the attempted murder charge, and an additional sentence of three Y\lBTS for
the firearm specification listed in
the indicanent against ScotL
On the charge of burglary, Crow
sentenced the defendant to a sentence of five to 25 years in prison,
and again added three additional
years for the firearm specification.
The sentences on the two charges
are to be served concurrently, or at

Christmas Sa.,ingsl

ClarifiCation

Not the same person

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Meigs .man convicted
of ·attempted murder
Jose Pearl Scott (aka Joses P.
Scott), 33, of Pomeroy, was convicted by a Meigs County Common·.
Pleas Coun jury' on two felony
counts following fo~ hours of
deliberation.
Scott was found guilty on a
charge of attempted murder, an aggra~ated first degree felony, and attempted burglary, also . an .ag •
gravated f~lony of the first degree.
· He was indicted by the Meigs
County grand jury following a
shooting incident in Middleport
wherein Ronald Cremeans was shot
in the back at his home.
Scott later pled not guilty and not
guilty by reason of insanity, and
milCh of the testimony offered

••

Hymn sing
Faith Gospel Church in Long
Bottom will hold a local talent
hymn sing on Friday at 7 . p.m.
Those interested in performing
should contact 378-6237 or 3786382.
.

1 SeC1ion, 10 Pages

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio. Friday. December 14, 1990

Cantata set

Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
I 0 calls for assistance on Wednesday and early Thursday. ·
At 10:58 a.m. on Wednesday,
Rutland squad went to Sanford
Davis Road for Diane Canterbury.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At I :33 p.m.,
Middleport squad went to Overbrook Center for Nevada Ball. Ball
&gt;Vas transported to Veterans.
At 147 p.m., Racine squad went
to Third Street for Carl Wilson, Jr.,
Wilson was treated but not
. transported. At2:31 p.m., Syracuse
. squad went to College Avepue for
Sterling Neville. Neville was
transported to Holzer Medical Center. At 5:46 p.m., Racine fire
department went to Old Portland
Road for an auto fire . At7:13 p.m ..
Racine squad was called to DeWitts
Run Road for Carla Krautter, who
was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
At 7:42 p.m., Syracuse squad went
to· Kingsbury Road for Robert
Ramsburg. Ramsburg was taken to
'Holzer Medical Center. · At 10:29
p.m., Scipio Fire Deparpnenl went .
to Myers Road for a brush fire.
On Tbursday morning at 3:24
· a.m .. Rutland squad went to Meigs
Mine 31 for Paul Honnake. Hon'naker was transported to Holzer
Medical Center. At -4:10a.m., Middleport squad was taken to North
Front Street for Genevieve Demos. key. Demoskey was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Rain developing Friday
night, ~tb a low near 40.
Chance of rain Is 90 percent.
Rain likely Saturday, with
highs near 50. Chance of rain
Is 7~ percenl.

•

•

-Local news briefs
EMS runs

Pick 3: 591
Pick 4: 2408 .
Cards: 2-H,
6-C; 8-D;Q..S

REG. S349

REG. S289

REG. S79.99

SALE$299

SALE

$49

SALE

DON'T FORGET WE OFFER "FREE DELIVERY"
STORE HOURS
Monday 9:30-1:00
Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00 ..

Ande,1on'1

FURNITURE, APPUANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING .

992-3671

DOWNTOWN POMEROY OHIO

$229

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A lawsuit alleging personal injury, invasion of propercy and emotional distress has been filed by a
Middleport man against his fot:mer.
father-in-law, Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby, both personally
anti in his capacity as Sheriii.
Thomas Richardson, Middleport,
also names the Meigs County Comissioners,
in
their
official ·
capacities; sheriff's deputies Jimmer Soulsby, Rick Ron and Jeff
Miller, all individually and in official capacities; Clara Sue Soulsby:
and
Cindy
Lynn
Soulsby,
Richardson 's former wife, and the
ceremony held in Washington, D.C. Pictured,
RECOGNIZED AS FINALIST - The Meigs
daughter of Sheriff Soulsby and
are
Todd King; Adult Service Director for the
'County Board of Mental Retardation and
Clara Sue Soulsby.
Meigs County Board of MRIDD, Cathie Wood,
Tl)e charges in the complaint,
,Developmental Disabilities was recognized
Community Employ!Dent Coordinator, and Lee
filed by Athens Attorney Susan
recently as a finalist in the Search for ~xcellence
Wedemeyer, Dlreetor. ·
Awards in Community-Based Employability
Gwinn, ~legedly stern from an incident in January, 1990, wherein
Development from the J.M. Foundation durine a
Sheriff Soulsby sent three deputies
to Richardson's Middleport home
to retrieve furniture that had been
awarded to Soulsby's daughter in
A 'contract with Whittle Com- the school year.
accepted from the highest bidders, her divorce from Richardson .the
munications regarding installation
A contract with Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Krider, William Downie month before.
and inclusion of Channel One John Foreman, Sr., to transport and David Moore, and modifi· According to the complaint,
progiamming in Eastern 1-{igh and their son to Veterans Memorial cations to the Eastern High Scbool Richardson's residence on Page
the Junior High Schools was ap- Hospital retroactive to Npv. 20 was and the Tuppers Plains Elementary Street in Middleport was entered on
.proved by the Eastern 'Local Board approved as was Linda Shultz's re- ·Funds were approved by the board. January 4 by deputies Ron, Soulsby
of Education at a· meeting Wednes- quest for tuition reimbursement for
December 18 at 6 p.m was set as and MiUer "without a search warclasses 10 be taken beginning the date for a special meeting 10 rant or a court order". In the
day night.
The board employed Jodi Har- Januiary, 1991 as stipulated in the approve fleet insuranr~ for the process of obraining this furniture,
rison and Angie Young as substitute master · agreement with teachers. 1991. The organizational meeting the deputies ~egedly physically
teachers and Nancy Morrissey as The board adopted an amendment for the new )'eaT was set for 6:30 assaulted Richardson.
''The actions of defendant Sheriff'
the junior class advisor on a sup- to the staff ·conft ict of interest p.m. in the htgh school cafeteria to
plementary contract for the policy regarding political activity.
be immediately following
the James Soulsby were all done under.
remainder of the 1990-91 school
Participation of the Eastern Lo- regular January meeting o the . . his authority as the Sheriff of
year. The resignation of Nancy cal SchQOis. in the grant funded board. Attending Wednesday's Meigs County, Ohio." the comI:arkins as junior cla5s advisor was summer school program at Meigs meeting were Ray Karr, president, plaint says, and "constituted an il·ai:cepted. Also employed was High SchQOI during the mQnth of and members, Bill Hannum, I. 0. legal seizure of property, an unlaw· · McCoy, and Jim Smith, along with ful entering of the residence of the
Sherry Jones as a substitute ~us­ June was approved.
Bids
used
school
buses
were
,todian and cook for the balance of
Supi. Richard D. Smith.
plaintiff, a deprivation of the liberty

Eastern board OKs Channel One

bl

oo

J

•

•

Richardson was allegedly denied
of the plaintiff to be free of restraint
his
right to file the charges against
and an assault on the person of the
the
Soulsbys "because of the posiplaintiff."
.
tion
that the defendant, James
The complaint goes on to allege
Soulsby
held · Meigs County
that he was physically injured on
January 28 when he went 10 the Sheriff."
Additionally, Richardson accuses
Soulsby residence to exercise
visitation with the· minor son of James, Clara Sue and Cindy
SoUlsby of filing false criminal
Richardson ~d Cindy Soulsby.
AI that time, Richardson alleges, charges against Richardson stem"the defendants James Soulsby, ming from the January 28 incidenL
Though Richardson was later acClara Sue Soulsby and Cindy Lynn
Soulsby proceeded to physically quitted of those charges by a Meigs
strike and assault the plaintiff on County Common Pleas juty,
various parts of his body causing Richardson's recently-filed com.
him physical harm," after refusmg plaint states that the actions of the
Soulsbys · "constitute malicious
him visitation with the child.
Richardson's complaint states prosec ution and false arrest."
Without naming a dollar amount,
that after the January 28 incident,
he went to the Meigs County Richardson's complaint requests
and
. punitive
Sheriff's Department for the pur- compensatory
pose of filing assault charges damages from the parties involved,
against James. Clara Sue and Cmdy and demands a jury trial of the matter.
Soulsby.

Church tour planned
.for Sunday afternoon
Plans have been completed for
Middleport's first annual village .
church to~ on Sunday.
.
Theme of the event sponsored by
the Middleport Arts Council is "A
Christmas Celebration."
The participating choJtChes are
Heath United Methodist at the corner of South Third and Main; the
VictOry Baptist Church. Rutland
and North Second; the Middleport
First Baptist, South Sixth Avenue;
First Presbyterian, Seventh Street;
Middleport Church
of the
Nazarene, Pearl Street; and the

'\

Middleport Church of ChriSt, Main
StreeL
The churches will ·be open from
1 to 4 p.m. Visitors may visit any of
the churches at any time during the
designated hours. All will have
lighted Christmas displays, some
will have live or recorded instrumenuil and vocal music, while
others will be serving refreshments.
Emphasis of the tour, according
to the Arts Council, is .to encourage
residents to enjoy the beauty and
warmth of village churches during
the Christmas season. There ·is no
charge. ·

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