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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Pick 3: 189
Pick 4: 3840

8 days
until
Christmas

OPEN CHRISTMAS EVE

Cards: 7-H, 2-C;

7-D; 5-S
Loato: 12, 19, 21,
28, 39,49
Kicker: 4907 42

Vol.41, No.187
Copyrigh1ed 1990

SEALTEST

SEMI-BONELESS

EGG
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·SWEET &amp; CONDENSED

BOlDEN'S

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U.S.-Iraq talks on hold
WASHINGTON (UPI)- If all
had gone as planned, President
Bush and Iraqi Foreign Minister
Tariq Azlz were to meet at the
· White House Monday In an effort
to avert war.
·
But It's now doubtful the two
will ever get together and It's
growing more questionable each
day If the Persian Gulf crisis can
be resolved without bloodshed. ·
The United States and Iraq, .
despite the release last week of
all remaining hostages In Iraq
and Kuwait, can't seem to agree
on anything. Both say their
positions, backed up by hundreds
of thousands of troops, are firm.
, Baghdad restated Sunday that
Kuwait will remain part of lraq.
The United States has main·
talned that Iraq must withdraw
from the oll-rlch nation by Jan.
15.
Bush, with his schedule Monday suddenly wide open, arranged to meet with Rep. Lynn
Martin, R-lll., who he nominated
Friday to replace Elizabeth Dole
· as Ia )lor secretary. The nomina-

NONESUCH .
MINCEMEAT

MILK

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25 Cen11
A Multimedil Inc. New.,._,er

Pomeroy-Middlep.o rt, Ohio, Monday, December 17, 1990

-Christmas Is ...----;...._--___,

COOKS SUPER TRIM

•

at

UNTIL 8:00 P •
CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY

99
With Coupon

Good thru Sat., Oec. 22. 1990.

Occasloaal rain, poulbly
beavy a.t Urnes, Monday nllfbt,
witb temperatures remalnlnl
near ·50 or slowly r181D1.
Cbance of rain Is near 100
percent.

lion Is subject to · Senate
confirmation.
The president put his talk with
Aziz on bold Friday due to
Saddam Hussein's refusal · to
meet by Jan. 3 In Baghdad with
Secretary of State James Baker.
On Saturday, Iraq formally
canceled Azlz's trip to Washing- ·
ton and refused to budge on Its
position that Baker and Saddam
meet Jan. 12 - just three days
before the U.N. deadline.
" Iraq alone sets the proper
appointments for Its president to
meet foreign officials," said the
official Iraq! news agency , INA.
The statement drew a swift
response from the White House
and a stiff warning from European Community leaders meet·
lng In Rome.
''Today's public announcement Is just a reaffirmation of
the Iraqi unw!lllngness to deal
seriously with the Issue,". said
White House spokesman John,
Herrick;
French President Francois
Mltterrand said at a European

Community summit In Rome; "I
believe Iraq 's position of putting
back to a very late date ... an
exchange of views, which could
be very profitable, Is very
damaging to peace."
"If there Is no movement, we
will reach Jan. 15. (the effective
date of the U.N. resolution
authorizing the use of force to
expel Iraq! troops) and I cannot
believe that Iraq Is not seriously
considering the fate It Is
risking."
Bush, upon returning to the
White House . Sunday from a
weekend at Camp David, Md.,
waved off questions from reporters on whether the proposed
talks were dead.
Herrick said, however, he was
aware of no Immediate attempt
to reschedule or revive them.
The president spent Sunday
hosting a private Christmas
party for members or his family.
Earlier In the day, he was
lnterviewe~ by David Frost for
broadcast Jan. 2 on the fubllc
Broadcasting System.

Regional jail co~mittee formed
SOUTHON CAND'I

FRESH

ORANGE SLICES

CREAM
DROPS

CANDY

BULK

IIACH'S .

BRACH'S
CHOCOLATES

·cANDY

•SPA.LES •PEllEY
.
e&lt;HIISTMAS JBUES &amp; NUGGESTS
•GlOIIA MIX

•Peanut Clusters •Brid!!e Mix
Covered
Peanuts •Nutgooodits

•M~k lalh •Chocolate

99

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
Officers and commitrees to study
the feasibility of a multi-county
corrections center in Southeastern
Ohio, as well as the cost of construction and opellllion, have been

Michael Brame. Responsibility of
the committee will .be to make a
study for the new jail inclucting
design and cost estimates.
· Appointed to the site selection
committee were Meigs County
Commissioner David Koblcntz,
nam,ed. • . . , .. . __ . .. .. _W:®s 8Jllt Beckner. ResPQ!I,libi!i_ty
Law ·enforcement . and j ·cia! ()f thai committee will be · to esofficials, as well as county commis- tablis~ the criteril! and af!~dability
sioners, from Meigs, Jackson and for a stte for locating the J&amp;tl.
LIGHTING THE ADVENT WREAl'H - Ad·
white one symbolic of Christ, being lighted on
Vm1on Counties are involved in the
Feb. 28 has been set for the next
Christmas Eve. The usual colors of the candles
planning process.
meet,ing of the grou~ to
vent, the perind beginning four Sundays before
Christmas, is observed in many churcbes by
on advent wreaths are three in purple,.the fourtb
At a recent meeting held in Me- · c~stder the new mulu-co~nty jail
lighting five candles on a wreath. One candle is
In pink an.d the center candle in white.
Arthur, Vinton Counl)' Commis- which IS expected to be bwlt to aclighted each Sunday with the fifth candle, a
sioner Jim Beckner was named commodate 125 men and 25
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' · chairman, Jackson County Com- women.
.
missioner Bob Willis
vice
The commmees were asked to
chairman, · and Meigs ~ County ~ave details of the. design and esSheriff Jim Soulsby recording tunates of operaoonal costs by
secretary.
'
May. Mter . that a survey of the
Named to the design committee three ~oll!lues wtll. be. done · to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) budget plail to the House Finance · operating funds In the area of
were
Meigs County.Common Pleas determme ~f_the publte will support
. The Ohio General Assembly will
Committee Monday morning. education, as well as college
Court Judge Fred Crow, along with a reg10nal Jllll.
reconvene this week for a three..
House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr.,
Instructional subsidies.
Jackson
County Common Pleas
A to~ .of $3,150,000
the .
day meeting to formatly ·con- · D -Wheelersburg, said It will
The House Public Safety and Gourt Judge Willam Martin, Jack- regtonal jail was awarded m state
clude business for 1990. It will
reach the House floor Tuesday Highways Committee. Is to take
and be taken up by the Senate up amendments to the turnpike son County Municipal Coon Judge funds .from the Governor's. OffiC:C
also . mark the end of the 118th
Michael ,Esposito and Vinton of Cnmmal J uSttce Servtces m
·.
legislative session.
later In the week.
btU Tuesday morning and vote It County Common Pleas Court Judge June.
Top priority Item Is a stopgap
The budget plan was agreed out. Lawmakers have added
budget aimed at plugging a. upon by Riffe, Celeste and Senate legislative oversight to the Turnprolected $191 mfillon hole In the
President Stanley Aronoff, R· pike Commission, and Rep. Marc
state's fiscal plan by June 30, ·Cincinnati.
.
Guthrie, D-Newark, said he
1991 . .
To close the anticipated re- plans to amend the bill to feGulre
The House convenes at l l a.m.
venue gap, the mini-budget uses the commission to receive ConThe Internal Revenue Service Priddy's former residence, located
Tuesday and the Senate at 1: 30 ~ variety of sources, but no trolling Board approval of all
has announced two public auctions at 32562 Happy Hollow Road
p.m. the same day .
additional taxes. The governor bonds It Issues.
of property belonging to MidThe House Is expected to already has Implemented $76.7
dleport resident Fred t;'riddy.
Priddy's former property at that
Rep. Frederick Deering, .0approve Senate-passed legisla- mUI!on In state agency spending
According to IRS Revenue address will be auctioned on the
Monroevllle,, and several other
tion pertJetuat!ng the Ohio Turncuts and transfers.
Officer Dave Van Voorhis, a 1963 steps of the Meigs County
northwest Ohio representatives
pike Commission, expanding Its
Coverne,
a Rambler .convertible Courthouse in Pomeroy at I 0 a.m.
bonding and construction authorMuch of the additional money still want to turn the western half
and two Cadillacs, which Priddy on January 31, 1991. Priddy
Ity and continuing the tolls on the w!ll be drawn from excess state of the turnpike over to the Ohio
forfeited to the U.S. Government transferred that property to the IRS
lottery profits, Interest on the Department of Transportation . under a plea bargain a~ent on under a plea agn:ement for federal
241-mUe east- west artery.
And the Republican-controlled state's savings account, and a and make It toll free after five
federal drug charges will go on the income taX evasion.
Senate may reject some of Gov. portion of the savings account If Interchanges are completed In
auclion block 1 at 10 a.m. on
According to Van Voorhis, the
Richard Celeste's recent appoin- necessary. The bill empowers 1994.
ThUrsday. The sale will be held at terms of both auctions will be cash,
Deering complained that the
tees In· deference to Gov.-elect the next budget director to take
Independent
Turnpike CommisGeorge Volnovich, who may steps In April If the gap stU!
sion
lacked
legislative
scrutiny,
want to name some alternative exists.
Riffe and Aronoff rejected and that the expanded construcpeople.
• Lee Walker, director of the Celeste's sugges lions of reducing tion powers would merely be a
Ohio Office of Budget and Man- Medicaid payments to nursing bonanza for favored bond
' ERIE. Pa. (UPI) - The calls about 2:30a.m. about what
agement, Will outline the new homes and certain departmental lawyers.
National Earthquake Informa" some think was an earthquake.
t!on center says It has no seismic Most of the calls came from Erie
evidence of an earthquake early County's Millcreek Township
.Monday In Erie County. But a area, southwest of Erie.
spokesman says that does not
"Some people reported a loud
'
· new trial. The Ohio Supreme
"terminating the controversy mean there wasn't one.
noise, other people reported
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) and removing the uncertainty"
Pollee In the Erie area say they tremors of some sort," Erie
Court upheld that decisiOn, and a
Dale Johnston, who spent nearly
new trial was scheduled In
about his legal status.
recelvi!d dozens of telephone Pollee . Sgt. Tom Adams said.
five years on death row ·after
Ohio law requires persons who
bi!tng convicted of slaying his
Franklin County.
Last May 10, the Franklin
bel!eve they were wrongfully
~tepdaughter and' her fiance, Is
Imprisoned to gain a judgment In
County Court of Appeals ruled
trying to get his name cleared.
a common pleas court before
Johnston, formerly of Logan,
that evidence the prosecutor
going to the Court of claims, Suhr
considered crucial could not be
flied a motion In FrankUn County
By United Press lnternallonal
Weather officials In Colorado
said.
In the past, the Ohio
used
In
the
retrial
because
It
was
Common Pleas Court late last
An upper-level storm brought posted a snow advisory for the
General Assembly has awarded
obtained under duress.
week seeking a civil judgment
snow to northern Arizona and Sangre de Cristo Mountains as
damages.
that he did not commit the 1982
New Mexico and Colorado's the·storm moved east from New
The next day, Hocking County
crimes.
Sangre de Cristo Mountains Mexico, bringing the possibility
· .Robert Suhr, ·Johnston's law- Prosecutor Charles Gerken
"I have no Idea at this point"
while fog and driZZle created a of as much as 8 Inches of snow.
yer, said the judgment could dropped the charges but rehow much money Johnston will · minor nuisance In parts of the
In the Midwest, morning air
pave the way for JohnJIDn to seek aerved the rlibt to prosec:ute
ask for, Suhr said. People who
Midwest, South and Northwest.
traffic In Chicago, St. Louis and
aie ·wrongly Imprisoned are
money from the Ohio Court of JohnJ!on again If new evidence
As ·the wintry storm pushed Minneapolis was frequently deClaims for wrongful comes to light.
entitled to compensation for lost
toward eastward, light to moder· layed by rain and fog while
The lack of a second trial
Imprisonment.
Income, damages and expenses.
ate snow fell In northern Arizona Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska had
· In 1984, a three-judge panel 'JIIe&amp;JIS "Dale was deprived of the
•'It will be many thousands of
throughout Sunday night. On a nrlety of precipitation convicted Johnston of aggra- opportunity to have a common
dollars," Suhr said. "It goes
Monday It surged farther Into 'drizzle, sleet and snow.
without saying that he lost
v•ted murder In the mutilation pleas court make a finding that
New Mexico, where a winter
Northern Florida, Arkansas
slaylngs of Annette Cooper, 18, the offenses were not committed
everything as a result of the
storm warning was In effect with ·and Georgia were foggy while
and Todd Schultz, 19, both of by blm," SUhr said.
prosecution, plus several years ' snow iccumulatlons of up to 4 North carolina had light rain.
,Lopn.
,
·
Johnston's sult asks the court
of his life spent on death row.
Inches expected. Roads In the Fog also limited visibility to an
. The conviction was overlllrned
to determine that ''he was a
"I would suggest that the claim
northwestern put of New Mex- eighth .of a mUe In Weat Texas,
In 1988 by an appeals court fo.r wroagtully Imprisoned indlvid·
would be the largest claim that
Ico · were Icy and packed with where light rain also fell, and
Hocldni Coimty, which ordered a . ual"
and to rule In his
favor,
they would have," Suhr said.
'
'•
. Oregon bad drizzle and snow.
snow.

filn!l&lt;:r

House, ,Senate to reconvene

for

Pwpose of a regional jail is to
assist local jails in complying with
the state's minimum jail standards.
Meigs County's jail was built in
1856 and had minor renovalions in ,
1981. Generally it is felt that the
~ost of renovating the 19th century
Jail would exceed the cosL.of buildmg il .new facilit}o. The local jail is
considered to have an inmate
capacity of nine, although technically' it can accommodate 14. ·
Jackson County's jail was built
in 1871 and because of fire and
safety problems, only the first floor
can now be used. It has an inmate
capacity.of 14. The Vinton County
jail has been closed since 1980 and
that county uses space in jails of
other counties.
While funding for the actual·
construction of a multi-county jail;
would come primarily from state:
fund$, the cost of operaling such a ·
facility, as well as the necessity for :
transporting prisoners back and ·
forth has been a concern for county ·
officials.

Priddy property ·to be auctioned

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cashiers check or certified check.
Queslions regarding the auctions
can be directed to Van Voorhis at
593-8679.
Priddy was sentenced in Del:ember, 1989 to 72 months in prison
and five years of supervised release
on charges of federal income tax
evasion and possession with intent
to distribute illegal drugs.
Priddy is currently housed in the
federal prison in Marion, Illinois.

Tremor felt in Pennsylvania

Johnston .~es to clear his name

Snow moving east

~

--

~

......

_ ...... "!'"

•

' 'One guy was sitting on the toile t
and It almost knocked h!m off the
toilet."
Officer David Moran of the ·
Millcreek Township Police said
callers reported broken windows, dishes and pictures falling
off the walls. No Injuries we re
reported.
"We rea!ly don't know what It
was," Moran said, who noted
pollee " didn't feel a thing." But
he did say au thorilles have
determined It was not ·a thunderstorm or sonic boom.
Willis Jacobs, a geophysicist at
the Golden, Colo. , earthquake
center said nothing showed upon
.their seismograph to Indicate
such activity In the region.
"We are not able to see
anything on our seismic records," he said . "(But) that
doesn't mean that there wasn't
one. It could have just been too
small. We have no Instruments In
that area."
There was an earthquake registering 3.0 on the Richter scale
overnight In the state of Indiana.
Authorities say the quake Struck
at 12: 25 a.m. EST

�P~-Midcl1p011. Ohio

Monday, December 17. 1990

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

il!m~

qjv

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Gener~ Manager ·

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

' They should be less tllan 300
LETTERS OF OPINIONare welcome.
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wJII be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues. not persona IItle~~.

Christmas cards
preserve lost art
By Sarah Overstreet
Each year as the Christmas cards roll In, many with verbose
. soliloquies about the Herculean exploits of each members of the
sending family, lam Increasingly amazed.
· These are people you can 't get so much as one line from during
the year, no 'm atter 1\ow many letters you might send .them, and
even If those letters contain the most heart-rending tales of
personal tragedy slnCI" God visited Job. They'll send you flowers
and perhaps even leave a sympathetic note on your answering
machine, but they will not send a letter.
These are folks to. whom the art of letter writing has been lost, a
casualty of the ever-Increasing 'abtllty to reach out and touch, fax
and correspond via computer. We . are no longer geared to
conversing· vta a piece of paper that Is actually sealed In an
envelope and'malled, and those who still use this outmoded means
of message transmission are doomed to walt weeks or months tor a
reply 1t one comes at' all. There Is an unspoken agreeml"nt among
VBIPs (Very Busy Important People) that 1t a letter sits In an "In"
basket over six months, the statute of ltmltatlons runs out and It
can be legally thrown Into that cutest of "out" baskets without fear
of punishment.
This doesn't meari we' re bad people. It slrnply ml"ans the amount
of ways people can contact us has Increased so dramatically we
must have quick ways to reply or we can't answer them all. It used
to be that 1f someone called when we were not available, he or she
. simply didn't make contact. Now, with answering machines,
everyone wbo wants to contact us can, leaving us with a string of
calls to answer when we get back to our homes or offices, where
there would have been none a few years ago. Instead of giving us a
three- or four-day chance to catch our breath while a letter gets
across the country to us, someone can fax us a message In thrre
minutes. We can't even get Into our cars, hit the highways and
leave It all behind: They call us on our car phones from their car
phones.
.
•
And woe be u!llo the person who has no phone and needs some
vital Information. When I was a consumer reporter In an office
where we tried to help 40 or 50 people a day on our telephone
hotllne, we'd receive letters !rom people with urgent emergencies
and no phones. The time required to write back to thl"m If WI"
needed more Information, then get to the appropriate people or
agencies and then back to .the letter writers was time we
sometimes just didn't have. I know they face that problem
everywhere they turn, because no other office has any more time
than we did.
So why ts 11, In this age of Instant Information- where dl"mands
for our attention are so numerous that each response must be
pared to the absolUte minimum of time expenditure- that we still
ftnd' time to send Christmas cards to everyone we know and soml"
we wouldn't recognize anymore 1t they were standing at our front
doors with pitchers of eggnog singing "White Christmas"?
This Christmas as I open each card I'm hoping to ttnd more than
just a signature, and especially not a commercially printed name.
Thl" message dol"sn't have to be long, just Iong·enough to give me a
little plecl" of the sender to savor a while.
·

h~story:

Today is Monday, Dec. 17, the 351st .day of 1990 with 14 to follow.
The moon is new .
The morning star ts Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include American Revolutionary War soldier ~borah Sampson, who
fought as a man under the alias Robert Shurtleff, In 1760; poet Johri
Greenfeaf Whittier In 1807; conductor Arthur Fiedler hi 1894·

Berry's World

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
Two NFL playoff spots were
f1lled Sunday, leaving eight
berths Clinched and four up for
grabs.
The Los Angeles Raiders and
Phtladelphla Eagles sealed post·
season spots with victories over
other playoff hope!jlls. That
leaves three playoff berths open
In the AFC and one In the NFC
with two weeks remaining In the
re-gular season.
The Ra1ders' 24-7 rout of
Cincinnati put them a game
ahead of Kansas City In the AFC
West, and gave them their first
playoff spot since 1985 . . The
Chiefs were crushed 27-10 by the
Houston Otlers, who received a
527-yard passing day from
Warren Moon.
At Los Angeles, Bo Jackson's
88-yard run -set up one of three
Jay Schroeder touchdown passes
to 11ft the Raiders. Jackson
finished with 117 yards on eight
carries.
"This Is my first playoff ever In
any sport and I'm looking forward to It," said Jackson, who
also plays ouUteld lor the Kansas
City Royals. "I don't know what
to expect. You'll have to ask the
older guys like Marcus (Allen)

Holistort · against on men In
Mexico. It Is a bill of particulars
against tbe state-owned Mexican
on Indus try and a warntqg to
anyone who wants to deal with
Mexico.
In 1984, the two men signed a
contract with the Commlsston,of
Contracts of the Mexican Petroleum Workers ' Union to buy ·6
million barrels of Mexican oil.
The Texans say they were led to
belll"ve that the agl"nts •for the
union also represented Petroleos
MPxlcanos, or Peml"x, the
government-owned oil
monopoly.
Black and Flanigan put up. a
$2.5 mUIIon letter of credit that
the Mexicans could draw on .If
they delivered the otl. But the on
never came . Arriba's lawsuit
says the union began demanding

money In advance beforl" Peml"x
would deliver, but Arriba
refused.
But by 1989, when Pemex sllll
had not delivered any oil, Arriba
went back to court In Houston
and · got the judgement reinstated, this time for $273 1!11111on
total. The union has not paid,
claiming the Texas court has no
jurisdiction over it.
.
Not wtlltng to roll over the play
dead, Arriba has flied the comprehensive racketeering suit
against Pemex, the union and the
.union's Commission of Contracts
claltrrlng that the thrl"'" perpetrated traud by having the union
act as an agent for Pemex to sign
deals that Pemex later disavows
any knowledge of.
An attorney for Pemex told our
.associate Dean Boyd that Pemex

Is not accountable for the actions
of ihe union or the commission,
Pemex has tiled a motion to have
the racketrertng suit dismissed.
Carlos Gil, a Mexican history
professor at the University of
Washington, told us that most
U.S. business people "don't know
the extent" o! official corruption
tn Mexico. "noraretheyawareof
what It really ml"ans for them. "
Last year we reported on
'Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortart's attempts to
eliminate rampant corruption In
the oil IndUstry and the union, but
there Isn't much. evidence of
change.
A recent headline In a Mexican
· newspaper said of the otl
workers' union, "Fraud, job
selling, company stores- everything's sttll the same."

Today.in history:
On this date in history:
In 1903, Orville and Wtlbur Wright made history's first successful
airpiane fltghi, soaring over the sand dunes near Kitty Hawk, N.C.
In 1925, Army Gen. Willtam "Billy" Mitchell, outspoken advocate
of a separate u.s. Air Force, was founa guilty of conduct prejudicial
to the good of the armed services. He was awarded the Medal of Honor
20 years after his death.
·
·
. In 1939, the Nazi warship Graf Spee was scuttled off the coast of
Uruguay as British vessels pursued it.

In 1981, American Brig. Gen . James Dozier was kidnapped In Rome
by Italy 's Red Brigades. He was freed42 days later tn a raid by Italian
·.
·
,
anti-terrorist forces.
In 1986, a Las Vegas federal jury awarded ~ntertalner Wayne
Newton $19.3 million In his defamation suit agamst NBC. A judgl"
later reduced the award to $5.3 million.· In Detroit, a federal jury
cleared automaker John DeLorean of all15 charges in his fraud and
racketeering trial.

Democrats ·will pay for 'quota' bill
Congressional Democrats
have painted themselves Into a
corner so tight that It may wind
up costing them the 1992 presidential election.
The trouble b4!gan, as so many
troubles do, with Sen. Ted
Kennpdy, who Introduced In the
last Congress what It please him
to call "the Civil Rights bill."
(After all, who could possibly be against a Civil Rights bUI?)
Several recent decisions of the
Supreme Court have held that a
plaintiff wbo alleges racial discrimination by an employer has
the burden to proving It The
controversial provision of the
Kennedy bill would tn effect
reverse' these rulings, putting the
burden on the employer to prove
·that he had not discriminated.
President Bush objected to the
bill as drafted, pointing out that
under It the only sure way an
employer could prove he hadn' t
discriminated would be hy adherIng rigidly to racial hiring quotas
- something Mr. Bush and a
great many other people oppose.
Sen. Kennedy blandly denied
that hls bill would , In effect
mandate quotas, and even added ·
some language to the text denyIng gratuitously that It had any
such purpose. But he refused to
modify the provision shtftlng the
burden of proof. Mr. Bush
thereupon vetoed the bill, and his
veto was SUJtalned In both
houses.
The Democrats have vowed to
reintroduce the bill In the nl"xt
Congress and .flgh! for It to the
bitter end. But they are beginning to sense uneasily that they
are holding tbe short end of this
particular stick, and that the
Issue, If dragged Into the 1992
presidential campaign, may do
them deadly damage. (They are
already convinced that It was
responsible for the defeat hlst
month of their , Uberal black
candidate, Harvey Gantt, by Sen.
Jesse Helms.)
Thus far, however, the congressional Democrats and their
liberal allies tn the media have
remained on their collision
course with disaster In this
regard. Democratic spokesmen
are quoted by the media as
rejecting "angrily" or "furIously" the contention that
Kennedy's measure Is a quota
bill - which merely means that
they are petrified by the charge.
They have lashed out at tlie bill's
Republican critics, charging
them with' 'racism"- probably
the ugliest accusation currently
available In the lexicon of Amerl·
can politics.
But the Republicans have kept
their cool, as they ought to. In the
words of Hous~ Republican whip
Newt Gingrich, "People ·who
want some kind of quota o~
set-aside based on your racial
background should be forced to
debate In pubUc their vision of
America."
The truth Is that the Democrats, In their tireless pursuit of
black voters, have gotten In the
bad habit of dlsre11ardtng the
legitimate Interests o! white
Americans. Their only bope now
Is to prevent anybody ttom
raising the point by denounctn11
everyone who does so as
But even this maUgnant tactic

•

Raiders, Eagles win 'to seal post-season playoff berths

_:_·B=.:y::_J:..:::
.

''racist.,, .

)

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. December 17. 1990

..................~.r-r....=•=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

Today in

In the NFL Sunday,

~2-The

U.S. must be wary of Mexico as
trade 'p artner ____ a~ck_:_A_nd_e_rs_on_a_nd_D_al_e_v;_an_A_tta
WASHINGTON- As Persian
Gulf oil becomes less attractive,
some American otl companies
are thinking about Mexico as a
friendlier supplter. But those oil
companies had better think
twice, If the experience of two
Tl"xas oil men Is any Indica tor.
Bill Flanigan and David Black
of Houston have spent the last
five years tied up In lawsuits
because they tried to buy oil !rom
Mexico for their oil company,
Arriba Ltd. The )essen learned
from the experience, according
· to Black, Is that If the United
States wants a free trade relationship with Mexico, "There's
got to be a serious housecleaning
first ."
Flanigan and Black's ordeal Is
summed up tn a rackl"teerlng
lawsuit they flied this year In

has Its llmttatloris. Most Americans, after all, are white, and
thl"ir resistance to reverse discrimination In hiring (which Is
what quotas at:nount to) Is likely
to rise tf that recession the

Democrats have bren praying
for actually arrives and tHe
unemployment statistics begin to
climb.
The Republicans, for their
part, simply cannot afford to let

Rlisher

legitimate white concerns become the exclusive province of
such genuine racists as David
Duke. Thl"y should take a firm
stand against quotas, and let thl"
Democrats sweat.

and Howie '(Long). I'm going to Seattle 24-17 Sunday to Improve
Cunningham, who completed
contribute as much as I can and
to 11-3 and rpmaln one game 13 of 27 passes for 241 yards and
do whatever I can to belp the behind the Bills In the division
ran four times tor 56 yards, threw
Raiders win·. ;,
race entering their showdown to Byars tor a 12-yard score and
Tim Brown caught two of Sunday In Buffalo.
ran 17 yards for a toucl)down.
Schroeder's scoring passes.
At Miami, Dan Marino threw
The Raiders lead the division
touchdown passes of four yards
at 10-4, with the Chiefs at 9-5. The
The Eagles held Grren Bay,
to James Pruitt and eight yards
Bengals, 7-7, dropped out of a tie
to Ferrell Edmunds to lift the · 6-8, to 158 yards In offense.
for the AFC Central lead.
Dolphins. Miami, 11-3, also Phtladelphla recorded five sacks .
At Kansas City, Mo., Moon
scored on a six-yard run by Troy and an Interception to dampen
kept the Oilers, 8-6, tied for first
Stradford arid a 32,yard field goal the Packers~ playoff hopes.
with Pittsburgh In the AFC
Another NFC East team, Dalby Pet!' Stoyanovtch. The SeaCentraL He completed 27 of 45
las,
7-7, leads the race tor the
hawks, In ·contentio n for a wildpasses for three TDs and no
final conference wild-card spot.
card spot, sltpped to 7-7.
lntercl"ptions. Moon fell27 yards
The Cowboys crushed Phoen lx
short of the NFL slngie- game
The Eagll"s' 31-0 rout of Green 41·10 at home Sunday to move a
record set.by Norm Van Brock lin
Bay at home made Philadelphia game ahead of Green Bay,
In 1951.
·
the fifth NFC playoff team, and Minnesota, New Orleans and
''When you have a 500-yard day . third from the NFC CentraL The Tampa Bay - all 6-8 - In the
against anybody, you have to be New York Giants have clinched wtld-card hunt.
proud," Moon said. "I'm very
the division .title, and WashingAt Irving, Texas, · Emmitt
proud of myself and of the people ton, 9-5, sealed a berth with a Smith gained 103 yards on 24
around me who allowed It to 25-10 victory over New El)gland carries and tied a club record
happen."
Saturday.
1
with lour touchdowns to help the
Haywood Jefflres caught nlne
At Philadelphia, quarterback Cowboys to their most lopsided
passes for 245 yards, Includlng an
Randall Cunningham threw for victory In four years. The Cardi87 -yard TD pass.
one TD and ran for another, nals, 5-9, had a three-game
" This Is. something receivers
running back Keit h Byars caught winning streak snapped.
dream about," Jefflres said. " I
a scoring pass and threw for
The Buccaneers won Richard
wish I could have done It before another, and the Eagles recorded WUIIamson's debut as Interim
the home crowd and my
their first shutout of thl" season. . head coach; crushing Minnesota
mother."
"I'm happy and proud to make 26-13 at Tampa, Fla. Vinny
The Raiders follow Buffalo and
the playoffs," Cunningham said .. Testaverde scrambled 48 yards
Miami frorri the AFC East into "I'm also happy with the
for a TD and rushed for 105 yards
the AFC playoffs. Miami edged shutout "
and the Vikings committed eight
turnovers.
At New Orleans, Gary Anderson's third field goal of the game,
a 43-yarder with 1:44 left, lifted
the Pittsburgh Steelers to a 9-6
victory over the Saints. Morten
Andersen kicked two field goals.
for New Orleans.
In other games Sunday,
Denver cUpped San Diego 20-10,
Indianapolis dumped the New
York Jets 29-21 and Cleveland
shaded Atlanta 13-10.
Chicago played at Detroit
Sunday night. The San Francisco
49ers will visit the Los Angeles
Rams tonight.
Browns 13, Falcons 10
At aeveland, Kl"vln Mack
rushed for SO yards and a TD to
help thl" Browns snap an eightgame losing streak. The Falcons,
· 3-11, lost their seventh straight

;
INTO THE CLEAR- L.A. Raider running back
• ·Do Jackaon brew·Into the clear In the second halt
j_ as he puts some of his 117 rushing yards under his

'

feet In the second half of Sunday's game againSt
the visiting Cincinnati Be'ngals, who fell 24-7 •
(UP!)

flannan Trace, North Gallia post
~ctories mSaturday encounters
'i

\ Senior forward Todd Boothe
~balked up a game-high 19 points
:· his personal season high and
~e fow-th straight game he has
.cored In double figures ·- In
lelplng push Hannan Trace to an
34-49 pounding of Kyger Creek
~turday night.
( The front -running Wtldcats,
r.;bo remain unbeaten after six

games, sent the Bobcats td their
20th consecutive defeat and their
28th straight league loss.
· Senior forward Shane Swisher,
the lone Bobcat scoring In double
figures, led KC .with 11 points.
In the reserve contl"st, Trace
won 55-30. Chad Barnes and
Bryan Brumfield powered the
Wildcats to their fourth straight
'r ....
. win with 15 points each. Paul
Covey led the Bobcats, who lost
The Daily Sentinel
their fourth straight game, with .
14.
(VSPSIU·. . )
Hannan Trace will return to
&amp;' A Dl•llloa of Multimedia, Joe.
~\
action on Thursday In the South
: Published every afternoon, Monday
Point Holiday Tournament at
thrwgh Friday, Ill Court St., PoSouth Point H.S. against· Rick
' meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubr. Hthtng Company/ Multimedia, Inc ..
Huckabay's Pointers. ·Kyger
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21S.. Se- . Creek wtU play Friday at
cond class postage paid at PorrK"roy,
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. ..,Ohio.
Score
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Member: United PrHs International.
Hannan
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112
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w.-....,.,...,........................

Field goals- 28-67 (41.8'!i)
Three-pointers- 4-12 (33 .3~1 J
Foul shots- 24-33 (72.7%)
Rebounds - 38
Assists- 22
Steals- 22
Turnovers - 23
KYGER CREEK (49)
Swisher 4-0-3-11; ltall 3-0-3-9;
Denney 4:0-0-8; Bradbury 3-0-0-6;
Bush 3-0-0-6; Slone 2'0-0-4; Villanueva 0-1-0-3; Kingery 0-0-2-2.
TOTAUi - 19-1-8-49
Field go'al s Foul shots...:. 8-21 (38.1 1ii)
Rebounds - 36
Assists- 13
Steals- 13
Turnovers- 35
N. Gallia 101, S'weslern 66
At Vinton, the scoring firm of
Tackett &amp; Stout rang up 49 of
North Gal\ia's points to propel
the Pirates to their first trip
beyond the century mark this
season.
Senior guard Brian Stout led ·
the Pirates (4-4, 4-2 ) wtth 25
points, and fellow veteran Chris
(See PIRATES on Page 4)

and 18th In a row on the road. The
·Browns, 3'-11, won for the first
time In five games under Interim
coach Jim Shofner.
Broncos 20, Chargers 10
At Denver, John Elway threw
for 248 yards and two TDs to help
the Broncos snap a six-game
losing streak. The Broncos, 4-10,
damagro the Chargers' playoff
hopes, San Diego dropped to 6-8.
Colts 2!1, Jets 21
At East Rutherford, N.J., E;ric
Dickerson rushed for 117 yards
and scored two third-quarter
TDs to rally the Colts, 6-8, who
are trying to· avoid their first
losing s~ason under head coach
Ron Meyer. The Jets fell to 4-10
despite jwo TD receptions by
rookie Rob Moore.
Uons 38, Bears 21
At Pontiac, Mich., Rodney
Peete threw a career-best four
touchdown passes, Including
three in th e second quarter, to
lead the Detroit Lions to a 38-21
upset of the Chicago Bears.
The triumph was only the
second in the last seven games

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

' '

ll• lll '!

"'~.... l

""'
'&gt; T

for the Lions, 5-9.
The Bears, 10-4, who lost
quarterback Jim Harbaugh to a
separated shoulder tn the third
quarter, .dropped their second
straight game.

wleAin't It Oreat

Hey

To Be 381
FroM '/oar B•••lu
$2.75

$2 '75

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY ' SUNDAY
BARGAI N NIGHT TUESDAY

Christmas
Creetlng Editi
Mondav,
Deeemher 24

.

HA S

The Daily Sentinai-Paga 3

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

Wish all your custo1ners and
friends a very _Merry Christ1nas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.
•

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THE 'DAILY SENTINEL

�'

,..,.

Monday. Decamba'17, 1990

Pomaov-Middlaport. Ohio

In the SVAC Saturday night,

.By SCO'IT WOLFE
SeDtiDel Cw •espolldeDt
OuiSCllling boSI Symmes Valley
SS-25 in the second and third
quartets, the SOuthern Tornadoes
won their second suiagbt SVAC
cootcst with a 66-48 road win over
the host Vikings Saturday night.
Southern is now 5-1 in the
league and 5-2 overall, while
, · Symmes Valley is now 3-3 in the
coofen:nce and 34 overalt
. "I lhought this was as well as
: ·. we' ve play~ together aU year lo~g.
especially m the second and third
•
• quartets," said Southern head coach
• Howie Caldwell. "We played some
of our best overall baU of the year
•' in those two periods. The lcids
played very, very well.
•
"We finally went out and ex••
tonight," Caldwell conecuted
•
tinued.
"Every
trip up and down the
•
court we changed defenses. If Iiley
•

ran a two-guard front, we would
run a 2-3 (zone). If they would run
a one·man offense, we would go 13-1 (zone). Everyone did their job
and lhe execution was !here."
c
Soulhern was led by the senior
trio of Todd Grindstaff, An~y Baer,
and Jeremy Rose. Grindstaff netted
a game-high 16 points, and Baer
notched 14, while Rose picked
up12.
·
"We played good team ball again
tonight," Caldwell said. "That's lhe
lcey to our success. "Todd
(Grindstaff) and Jeremy (Rose)
played !heir best games of the year.
Todd played a good controlled
game and Jeremy controlled lhe
paint and did a great job on the
boards."
_
SV was led by Shannon Pierce's
team-high 13 points and A'ndy Les- ·
ter's 10.
SyllJmes Valley toolc an early 13-

Scoreboard ...

'••

•

In the NFL...

In the NBA...

-·

•

Arrierlcu

•
•

Confe~e

Team
W L T l'cl. I'F I' A
Y· llullalo ... ....... 12 2 0 .8~7 390 220
y ·Miamt... .. ..... .. ll 3 0 ..786 299 201
lndlanapals.. .... 6 8 o .429 229 302
N. Y. Jets .......... 4100 .286237 324
New England .... 1 13 o.on 164 391

••

•.
.
•'

Central
Pittsburgh ........ . 8 60 .571 243206
Houstoo ......... .... 8 6 0 .57135)253
Clnclnnall .......... 7 7 0 .500 299 318
Cleveland ........ .. 311 0 .214 214 406

••
l

Weol
y·L.A. Raiders ..10 4 0 .714 292 232
Kansas City ...... 9 50 .643 324 226
Seanle .............. 7 7 o .500 259 264
San Diego ......... 6 80.4292822~

.•

Central Division
Mllwaukee ..-..... ... .... 16 7',696 -

Detrolt ........... :, ...... H 8.636
Chicago ............. .... 14 8 .636
A11anta ......... .. ..... ,.10 11 .476
Cleveland .............. 10 13 .435
Charlotte ............... 8 13 .381
Indiana . .............. .. . 9 15 .375
Wes~rn

-·

Na&amp;loaal Confereaee

~

Team
WLTI'ct.PFPA
x-N.Y. Glants .. .. ll 3 0 .786 298180
y ·Washlngtoo ... . 9 50.643 324 252
i'·Phlladelphla ... 8 6 0 ,571 356 275
Dallas ............... 7 7 0 .500 234 26~
Phoenix ... .. .. .. ... 5 9 0 . 3~7 216 349

.•
i

'•'
•

•;

Cent raJ
x ·Chleago' .,:...... 10 4 o, .714 311 245

;

Minnesota ......... n 8 o .429 310 278

'•
•
''r

Gr een Bay .. ...... 6 8 0 .429 241 301 .
Tampa Bay ....... 6 8 0 .429 236 324
Oetrolt... .. ... .. .. .. ; · 9 0 .357 339 366

west

x-San Fran ...... ..12 1 0 .923 297 199
New Or INns ..... 6 8 0 .429 241 248
L.A. Rams.. ...... 5 8 0 .385 305 346

•

Atlanta ............. 3 11 0 .214 302 34 5

••
•
•

X-&lt;!llnchaldlvlslaa title
y·dlnehtd playoff berllo

•
'

Sa&amp;urd!Q'"8 8COre5

•
•

Buffalo 17. N.Y. Giants 13
washlngtoo 25, New England 10
Suaday'J lcoret

r

,.

Indianapolis 29, N .Y . Jeu 21

•

Miami 24, Seattle 17

·

· Tampa Bay 2_6, Mtnnesora 13
Cleveland 13, Atlanta lO
Plttsbu rgh 9. New ·Orleans 6

•

Dallas 41. Phrenlx 10

•

Houston 27, Kansas City 10
Philadelphia 31. Green Bay 0

Denver 20, San Diego 10
L.A . Raiders 24, Ctndnnali 7.
Det roil 38, Chicago 21
Tonliht'l 1ame

San Frandsro at L.A. R&amp;ms, 9
p.m.

'

Satunl•y, Dec tt

Detroil at Gref"n Bay, l2:30p.m.

L.A. Raiders at Minnesota , 4 p.m.
Washlngtm at Indianapolis. 9

p.m.
SuDda.Y. Dec. 23
England at N.Y. J~ts, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Philadelphia, I p:m.
Miami at Buflalo. 1 p.m.
Clevela~d at ·PittsbUJ'Rh, 1 p.m.
L.A. Rams at Atlanta. 1 p.m .
Tampa Bay at Chiaigo, 1 p.m .
Cinc-innati at Houston, 1 p.m .
N.Y . Giants at Phoenix. 4 p.m.
Kansas City at San Diego. 4 p.m.
New Orleans at San Francisco, 4
p.m .
DenVPr at Seattle-, 8 p.m .

''
'
I

•,

Wala Coaference
Patrick Divlalon
Team
W LTI'Io.GFGA
N.Y. Rangers .... . . 19115 43135106
Philadelphia .. .... ,1915 3 41126119
New Jersey ... ...... 1613 5 37130 117
Washlngtoo .... .. ... 18 16 0 36114 103
Pittsburgh .......... 1516 3 33137 130
N.Y. Islanders.. .. lll6 3 25 87 112 .

.

Adams Dlvlllon
Bostm ................ 18105 41112101
Mo ntreal. .......... .. 1615 3 35107 107
Hartfon::J ....... ..... . 14 15 4 32 94 109
Buffalo ............... 10 15 7 27 98 108
QUebec ........ .-....... 7 216 20 94149

I

I

'
I

I

'

I

5

6
6Y.z
7%

Conference

Team
San Ant(llio .. .......... 14 5 .737 Utah ...................... J4 8 .636 I I\
Houston ..... .. .......... 13 10 .565 3
Dallas .. ..... ............ 7 13 . 3~ 711
MlnnesOia ............... 7 14 .333

8
Denver .................. 5 17 .227 10¥.!
Orlando ................ . 5 19 .208 ll lf.!
Paclftc DIYIAion
Portland .. .... :: ...... ... 21 2 .913 Phoenix .......... , .... .. 13 7 .650 6\1
L.A. Lakers .. ... ...... 13 7 .650 6\\ ·
Golden State ....... .. . 13 9 .591 7Y.!
L.A. Clippers ........ 10 12 .455 10'\ \
Seattle .. ... ............ .. 7 13 .350 121,.7
Sacramento ........... 5 15 .250 U ~

SalurdaJ'S resuh&amp;
New York 125, New Jer!!f!y 104
Atlanta 125. Washlngtoo l13
Housron 100, Charlotte 97
Boslon 114, Mlaml100
Chicago 116, CleYeland 98
'Milwaukee 98. L.A . Clippers 92
San AntmJo 90, Minnesota 74
Phoenix 142. Oenver 134
Indiana 124. Utah 116
Seat tie 106, Dallas 1~
L.A . Lakers 111, Golden St ate 109
Sacramento 117, OrJando 108
Sunday's final&amp;
Portland 126. Orlando 107
. L.A. La:kers 115,- Indlana 112
Tonlghl's Kame&amp;
Utah at New Jer!l"y, 7: 30p.m .

Arlanra at Cleveland , 7: 30p.m.
Tuesday's r~amm
L.A. Clippers at Phllad~lphla,
7:30p.m .
Utah at Charlotte. 7: 30p.m .
L.A. Lakers at New York. 8 p.m .
Orlando at. Seattle, 10 p.m.
Miami at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Mllwau~ee. 8:30p.m .

San Anton to at Houstoo. 8:30p.m .
Phoenix at Dallas, 8: 30p.m .
Minnesota at Sacra ment!;), 10:30
p.m .

N~w

•

1%
1%

Midwest Division
W L Pt.1. GB

Denver ............. 4 10 0 .286 297 344

•

Golden State· at Portland. 10:30
p.m .

had 18 for SV.
Southern . plays at Oak Hill
Friday, then hosts SoutheasternRoss on Saturday.
Score by quarters
Southern- 12+23+22+9=6/i
Symmes Valley ·13+12+13+10=48
SOUTHERN (66) - Roush 0-04-4, Baer 2-3-2-14, Kincaid 4-1-9,
Grindstaff 5-1-3-16, Bailey 3·()..1·
7, Russell 2-0-0-4, Rose 6-0-0-12.
TOTALS· 23-3-ll=fifi.
SYMMES VALLEY (48) Renfroe 1-0.1-3, Adkins 1-0·1-3,
Pierce 5-1 -0-13, Lester 5-0-0-10,
Criswell 2-1-1-8, Wall 2-0-0-4,

Norl'll Dlvlsloa
Team
· W LT l'la. GF GA
Chlcaao .............. 23 11 2 48122 91
St. Louis ............. 20 9 4 44 115 90
Oet roll ................ 1613 • 36125 123
r.ttnnesota ........... 10 19 6 26 101 116
Tormto .. ........... ... 8 25 1 17 90 143

''

••
•

.
'

••'

Smythe Dlvllton
Calgary .... .. ........ 20 10 4 44143 106
Los Angeles ........ 17 9 5 .19130102
Vancouver .... ...... 13 17 3 29 104 118
Winnipeg .. .. ........ 10 19 7 27118 130
Edmmtoo ........... 12 16 2 26 94 96

•

••
•
•

••

.

\

.

•

Salurday acorn
Oet roll 3, Philadelphia I
MlnnPsda 5, Chicago 1
New Jeney 1. Bostool
Hartford 3, Washingtoo 2
Winnipeg 4. Montreal 2
N.Y. lslanderl 7, Quebec 2
St . Louis 4, Toronto 2
Lo~

Angeles 8. Edman crt 3

S.Bd&amp;J'I lftUMI
Chicago 5, Minnesota 2

Calgary 5, Vancouver 2
St . Louts 5, Buffalo 3
PittsburJh 4, Dei rolf 1
Philadelphia 4, Winnipeg 2

•

.'

;•

TOIIlpt'l &amp;arne
WaJhtngtCil at N.Y. Rangers,

~

.,....,.• ,am.

•
'

•
'

•'•
I

•

Buffalo at Hartford, 7: 35p.m .
Toronto al N .Y . IJianders, 7:35
p.m.
Boston at New Jer.ey,7 :35 p.m.
Winnipeg at Pltbburgh, 7: 35
p.m.
.
MontrPal at Quebec, 7: 35 p.m.
Pltlladolpltla at O.troll, 7: 35p.m .
Va...-ouver at Calpry, 9: 35p_.m.
Los Aqeles at Edmmtm, 9:35

p.m .

:. .L.--------------------~

. Eastern 17, Oak Hlll68
Eastern overcame a 21-19 first
period deficit to bury thd Oak Hill
Oaks 97-68 Saturday night at
Eastern High School.
Tim BisseU led the winners with
a game-high 25 points, while senior
· Randy Moore tallied 22. Jeff Durst
hit for 16 points, while Matt Finlaw
chipped in with 15.
Bill Potter paced lhe Oaks with
22 points, followed · by Chris
Simpson's 11 and Brad Davis's 10.
Eastern head coach Larry Bunger
had his team tuned up for the Oaks
in fine style, and returned the
Eagles to the win column after
Friday night's road loss to North
GaUia.
The EagU:s are now 4-3 overall
and 4·2 in the SVAC, while Oak
Hill Is 3-5 overall and 24 in the
SVAC.
While Oak Hill gained the upper
hancl in lhe first round and Eastern
played a conservative version of its
0pheat fastbreaking game, the Oaks
edged to a 21-191ead.
That soon changed as EHS
swanned the Oaks wilh a tenacious
full-court defense to outscore lhe
visitors 28,7 in the second go·
round and thus befall lhc Oaks.
EHS leadirig 47-28 at lhe half.
Eastern was even houer in the
third round as it scorched the
scoreboard to a tune of ~0 points,
for a 77-41 score,
Anxiety set in at the EHS gym as
the Eagles cloSed in on the century
mark, only to fall short by three.
Eastern hit a scorching 2747 for
59 percent. while hitting 8·15 three
pointers, and 19-24 at the line. OH
hit 21-45, 5-11, and 11-17 at lhe
line.
Eastern had 47 rebounds to Oak
Hill's 30, led by Bissell, Durst and

Southwestern .... .. . 0 6 160 320
TOTALS .... .. ...... 24 24 2343 2348

(Ov~rall)

TEAM
WL
Hannan Trace ... :.6 0
Southern .............. 5 2
Eastern ....... .. ... .. .5 3
North Gallla .. .. ... .4 4
Symmes Valley ... 3 4
Oak Hlll .... .. .. .. .... 3 5
Southwestern ....... o. 6
Kyger Creek .. .. .. ,.0 7

PF
476
512
535
639
385
551
325
391

PA
304
428
561
656
405
567

Saturday's varsity scores
Hannan Trace 84, Kyger Creek 49
North Gallla 101, Southwestern
66
Southern 66, Symmes Valley 48
Eastern 97, Oak Hill 68

442

521

Upcoming a&amp;lracllons
Tuesday
Waterford at
(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 6 0 476 304 Eastern
Thursday - Hannan Trace vs.
Southern ........ .. .... 5 1 461 369 ·
Point at South Point
South
Norlh Gallla ........ 4 2 502 460
HoUday
Tournament, 8:45 p.rp.
Eastern .... ..... ...... 4 2 434 431
Friday
~ Thursday's H;mnan
Symmes Valley ... 3 , 3 323 342
Trace-South
Point loser to play
Oak H!ll .............. 2 4 396 443
game
vs. Thursday 's
consolation
Kyger Creek ........ 0 6 346 472
Chesapeake·COal
Grove loser at
Southwestern ....... 0 6 325 442
7
p.m.,
with
Thursday's
winners
TOTALS .. ..... ..... 24. 24 3263 3263
to play title game at 8: 45 p.m.;
also, North Gama at Symmes
(Reserves)
Valley, Southern at Oak H!ll and
.
(SVAC only)
Kyger Creek at Southwestern.
TEAM
W L PF PA
Saturday- Ross Southeastern
Sou lhern..... .. .... .. . 6 0 343 226
at Southern
Oak HI!! .. ...... .. .... 4 2 351 305
North Gallla ....... . 4 2 349 257
Hannan Trace .. .. . 4 2 326 256
Eastern .. ............ . 3 3 284 317
Symmes Valley .. . 2 4 277 343
!{yger Creek. ,... .. . 1 5 238 324

Pirates...

Tackett was right behind with 24 .
Sophomore gua r d Aa r on
McCarty led the Hi ghlanders. 0·6
overall and in the SVAC, with 18
points. and senior forward Chr is
Metzger chipped in with 17 .
In the reserve game, North
won 67·22. ·Kevin Hunt led the
Midshipmen with 16 points , while
Adam Blair' led the Highla nd ers
with six.
In Friday's datebook , North
Galli a will sail south to take on
Symmes Valley . ·while Southw·
estern w!ll host Kyger Cree k.
Score by quarters
Southwest~rn .... 14 17 14 21- 66
North Gallia ..... 26 22 19 34-101
NORTH GALLIA ( 101)- Stout
4-4·5·25; Tackett 7 ·2·4 ·~4 ; S.
Smith 5·1-4·17; D. Smith 3-2·1·13;
Staton 0-1·4·7; Twyman 2·0·0-4;

Oak HiD. 21+7+13+27-68
EASTERN (97) -Holter ().()..2-2,
Hunter 0-1-0-3, Savoy 1-1.().5, Finlaw 4-2-1-15, Bissell 8-1-6-25,
Durst 5-1-3-16. Murphy 2-0-2-6,
Adams 1..0.1-3, Moon: 6-24·22.
TOTALS -17-8-19=97.
OAK HILL (68) ·Turner 0-().J.
1 Davis 2-2-0.10, Hale 2-1-1-8,
p~uer 6-2-4-22, M. Simpsoo 3.().0.
6 Green 3..0.2-8, C. SimpSon 4-03: 11 . Lewis 1-0-0.2. TOTALS •
21·5;11=68.
··
Page 3)
Canady 1 -0-1~3; Farley 1·0-0·2;
Hager 1·0·0-2; Peck 1·0-0·2; Ra· ·
Iliff 0·0·2·2. TOTALS ~ 211-10-U101
Field goals- 35·71 (49.3%)
Three-pointers -10·25 (40%)
Foul shota- 21·27 (77.7%)
Rebounds- 42 (Darin &amp; Shane
Smith, 8 each)
Assista - 23 (Tackett &amp; Twy.
man, 5 each)
Steals- 17 (Tackett 4)
Turnovers - 13

SOUTHlVESTERN' (N)
McCarty 6·0·6·18; Metzger 7·0·3·
17; Haney,3·0-3-9; Massie 4·0-0·8;
Mershon 2·1·0-7; Sites 2·0-0·4;
Pope 1-0·0-2; Kiser 0-0-J.l. TO.
TALS- 25-1·13-66
Field goals- 26·65 (40%)
Three-pointers- 1-10
Foul shota- 13·21 (61.9%)

JOHN A•.WADE, M.D., Inc.
PL~ASANT

VALLEY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
\\WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
(304) .75-1244

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MEIGS
COUNTY
RESIDENTS
...._... ...
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Would you like to purchase a SOx 100 ft. build·
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Would you like to build a new home and pay
no real estate taxes for 15 years?
Would you like to have up to SSOOO FREE
for site improvements on your building loti

-----

If you do,· Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Specialist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6782
237 Race StrHt, Middleport Vlllogt Offkts
This •e"k:e Ia provided tllrealh th• Joiat elrorta or .... vm....
of Middleport and lite. Oo•emor'o Offtce of Appalae•l•.

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992-2l78

SyraCUSe Christmas activities
Santa Claus will visil the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department will on Sunday.
In addition, the fin: depai buent is
inviting residents to place yellow
·ribbons on the decorated Christmas
· · trees in front of the fire station in
·. honor of overseas service men -and
- women.
For mon: infonnation, call Mary
\ Pickensatm-7181 orm-7777.
Americllll LepoD to meet
The regular meeting of the
: Racine Post 602 American Legion
will be on Thursday 8l 7:30 p.m.
Plans an: to sack candy and fruit
· for lhe nursing home. Refreshments
will follow the meeting.
. Christmas program
The Morning · Star United
Methodist Church will present its
Christmas prograin on Friday night
at 7.: 30 p.m. Public is invited.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded to 11 calls
for assistance over the weekend
and early Qn Monday morning.
On Saturday at 2:03 p.m., Racine
squad went to State Route 338 for
Della Milliron. She was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2IJ1 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to Silver Ridge for Josephine
White. woo was ~ to
Pleasant VaUey Hospital. At 11:33
p.m., Middleport squad was dispatchlld to Wl1lianl Street for
Madeline Moore, who was
transported to Holzer Medical Cen-

Graham. Graham was taken to
0 'Bieness ~orial Hospital. At

11:20 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Pomeroy Nuning and Rcbab Center. Josphine Pai100I WIS Jaken to
Veterans Memorial Holpital.
At 9:22 p.m., Middleport squad
was sent to Oxyer Road for Lilly
Oxyer. Oxyec was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
On Monday at 4:51 a.m., Racine
squad went to Smith Run Road for
Donna . Bogart. Bogart was
tmnsporied to Holzer Medical Center. Als(l at .4:51 a.m., Racine squad
was sent to Elm Street for Cora
Beegle, who was taken to &amp;lzer
Medical Center. At 8:01' a.m., Rutland squad was disparcbed to .
Union Avenue for Mary Gibscm.
She was uansported' to HQizer
Medical Center.

ter.
On !lunday at 12:41 a.m., Racine
squad was sent ·to Fifth Street for
Flora Wingrove. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital At
9:53 a.m., Rutland squad was sent
to State Route 143 for Bessie

---Area deaths--

Denver Cox
Cbrl1tmas Play
The Middleport Elementary
Denver "Dude" Cox, 71, 6864
School will perfonning their
Christmas play on Tuesday, . Hannan Trace Rd., Crown, City,
Dec:ember 18 at 7 p.m. Rllhe Meigs died Saturday Dec. 15,1990 at his
·
Junior High .School. Public is in- residence.
He was born Sept. 5, 1919 In
vited.

.Brady sees short recession
' WASHINGTON (UPI) -While depend on how quickly the gulf
avoiding the word "recession," situation Is resolved, but Brady
Treasury Secretary Nicholas said he "has never heard the
Brady acknowledged'what all the economy dlscus!Jt!d as any kind of
. government's numbers have , Incentive" to adlon among top
been showing- that the nation's administration officials.
; economy Is In a · "significant
Michael Bosk!n, c halrman of
· slowdown.".
·
Bush's cOuncil· of Economic ·
But Brady said Sunday a Advisers, Interviewed on ABC's
·. recession Is "no big deal" and "Issues and Answers," also said
this one will be short - over In It Is likely the recession will be
less than a· year.
"mild and brief."
, He did, however, call on the
He said he expects the federal
· Federal Reserve Board to .lower reserve to lower rates but shied
· !nteres t rates to spur economic away from urging such a course. .
activity and .b ring the nation "I like to conduct my business
more quickly out of the with the Fed In private;" he said.
All analysts, however, seemed
downtiml.
concerned
that the current ecoBrady made his comments on
nomic
troubles
could be aggraNBC's "Meet the Press."
· "I've been a little slow to vated by the fraglle system of the
declare 'national recession ·llat!on's b.anklng and financial
day,"' B~ady s.a ld. "But Its quite
Institutions.
Wllllam Seidman, chalnnan of
clear·- there's no point In being
unrealistic- that we're going to the Federal Deposit Insurance
have a significant economic Corporation, has esl!mated that
slowdown In the fourth quarter of the FDIC - which Insures bank
customers against lo~ - will
this year.
"I expect that that will con· lose $4 billion this .year.
On Monday, a report expected
tlnue Into the first quarter of next
year. We don't know how much,
to be made pub! tc at a House
but we expect that during 1991 It
banking rommlttee will predict ,
will turn around and we will be losses even more glum - more
than $60 bllilon In the next five
back on the growth path (of) jobs
. and Investment during that
years.
·
I" year."
But Seldmah, also appearing
on "Meet the Press," brushed the
He did say, however, "there Is
1 ample room for a fur!her reduc·
report off.
Uon"in Interest rates and said he
hoped the Federal Reserve
Board - which Is scheduled to
' meet Tuesday -would take note
of both a recession and the · Dally stock prices
budget agreement worked out
(AS of 10: 30 a.m.)
between Congress and the White
Bryce aod Mark Smith
House In the fall as reasons for an
of Blunt,. Ellis &amp; Loewi
· Interest rate reduction.
•, Brady also said the economy Is
Am Electric Power ............. 27~
: ' beginning to feellhe etfects oft he
Ashland 011 .. .... .. ................ 29%
••· ;.I Persian Gulf crisis.
.
AT&amp;T ... ................ .............. 30~
,
Bob Evans ........ .. .. ... ........... 13%
Private anlaysts have ~aid the
Charming
Shoppes ......... .. .... 11
&amp;!!Verity of the recession could
City Holding Co .................. 14~
'
7
Federal
Mogul. .... ............... 14%
:~ Weather
••'
Goodyear T&amp;R ... ................ 16~
Key Centurion .. .................. 11%
' • South Central Ohio: Occa·
Lands' End ....... .. .......... ....... l3
~ stonal· rain, possibly heavy at
Limited Inc . ... .. ...... ............16*
:~ times. Monday night, with
Multimedia Inc . ... ......... ...... 64%
il temperatures remaining near 50
Rax.Restaurants................. %
;~ or slowly rising. Chance of rain Is
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ . :...... 18~
·~ near 100 percent. Occasional rain
Shoney's
Ill c . .. .... ................ 10~
h and a chance of thunderstorms
Star
Bank
... .. .. ... .............. .... 17
Tuesday, · with highs near 60.
Wendy's
Int'l.
..................... 6*
'• Chance of rain Is near 100
Worthington
Ind
......... ......... 213,4
~j percent.
.
1\ ' Wedne~~day through Friday:· A
;} chance of rain Wednesday and a
-~ chance of snow Thursday and
tj Friday. Highs will be In the 40s
'·• Wednesday and In the 20s Thurs·
•• day and Friday. Overnihl
'
':g t O":S
k will be In the 30s early Wednes•·: day and ranging from the teens
~ to the' lower 20s Thursday and
Soup of the Dllf - Pea
:&gt; Friday mornings.

Stocks

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TUESDAY
DECEMBER 16
4T07PM

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DAILY
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"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

INCLUDES: CLEANING, OILING,
ADJUSTING, GREASING.
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992-6491

786 North
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Middleport,
Ohio

ADDRESS'-----'---------

-_:__ ___________

Cll'l------:-------~---~---___:.STATE:___________ ~------,--~-----ZlP·__~-

WAY
B
.
:" '&lt;!o&lt;-

.:.l•,

J.D.

~tory

.

news: our roads are get·
tinll safer. Fatality rate on
United States highways has
dropped !rom 15'per 100 mDilon
miles In 193!1 to 2.3 per 100 mnlion mDes In 1988. Credit goes to
better roads and safety features
such as seat belts.

...

Traction Up: store six or eight
:. three-tab roofing shingles In
your ll'unk. They're Ideal to
; push under problem wheels to
provide traction ·when a car Is
stuck In Ice, 'snow, or even mud.
•••
car, It' s
With a tuel·lnjectlon
upec:lally Important
to get
, quaUtY gaaoUne: "Dirty" gas
can clog the tiDy orifices that
apray gasoline Into the cyltnder.

•••

NIW·Uted Cart Do II Younelf: Toot·
1 ten111c ..., (or Ja..modol
Uleri) car atllmlllt Mel,. Moton.

'*""'-

. SIII'III·NILSON ·
MOIOIS, I..C.

.
ttt·l174
SIO lftt .... PIIIIINJ, OIL

f

I'

Gallla County, son of the late
James Earl and Almlre Layllj! _
Cox.
He was a retired fanner.
He Is survived by his wife,
Mary Fellure Cox of 8864 Hannan
Trace Rd., Crown City, whom he
married July, 1945.
He Is also ·survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Burl (Doris)
Birchfield of Rt 1., Crown City;
two brothers, Carl' 'Billy" Cox of
Grand Rapids, Ohio and Ranford
"Pete" Cox of Crown City; three
sisters, Mrs. Gladys Wolford of
Crown City, Mrs. VIolet Sowards
of Gallipolis and Mrs. Irene
kitchen of Coiltmbus; and four
grandchlldren.
He was preceded In death by
two brothers, Unvllle and Jim.
Funeral services will be con·
dueled 2 p.m. Tuesday at Dickey
Chapel with Rev. Alford Holley.
Burial will be In Dickey Chapel
Church Cemetery.
Friends may call at Willis
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 p.m.
.
today.
The body w!ll be taken to the
church one hour prior to services
on Tuesday.

Cecelia Jenkins
Cecelia Jenkins, 96, of Rio
Grande, died Sunday, Dec. 16,
1990 In Holzer Medical Center.
She was born Oct. 24, 1894 In
Gallla County; daughter of the
late Evan D. and SarahA.Owens
Richards.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Stephen F. Jenkins
on May 28, 1972; a daughter,
Margaret Elsholz; seven brothers and one .sister.
She Is Sl!rvlved by one daughter, Mrs. DonL. (Lorena) Farrar
of Wilmington, Del.; grandson,
Stephen Farrar-of Atlanta, Ga.,
and David FarrarofWllmlngton,
Del.;
and four great·
grandchildren.
Mrs. Jenkins was a member of
the Calvary Baptist Church In
Rio Grande; the Cardltf Club In
Oak Hill; and a charter member
of the Morning Star Chapter OES
444 In Thunnan, and the Rio
Garden Club.
Funeral services will be con·
dueled 11 a.m. Wednesday at the
Calvary Baptist Church In Rio
Grande, with Rev. Paul White
officiating. Burial will be In
Calvary Cemetery.
The body . will be taken to the
church one hour prior to
services. .
. Friends may call at lhe McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home, VInton,
Tuesday from 5 to 8 p.m. OES
service, 8 p.m. by Morning Star
Chapter 444.

Tuesday-(Va~ies

Hospital

Moderate damage was incurred
to the car of Travi9 O'Brien,
Mason, W. Va., while it was parked
on the Fanner's Bank lot Saturday
afternoon.
Pomeroy Police reported lhat
whe., O'Brien returned to his
parked car about 3 p.m., he found
the left back door damaged. The
accident remains under investigation as a hit-skip incidenL

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Wayne Davi9, Pomeroy, and
Dorothy R09h, f&gt;:tiddleport.
SAnJRDAY DISCHARGES None.
SUNDAY ADMISSiONS
None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

'

.

Armual Christmas dinner party
of the Rutland Garden Oub wil be
held Monday (tonight) at 6 p.m. at
Crow's Family Restaurant in
Pomeroy. Following the dinner the
group will gc&gt; to the home of Mrs.
Vernon Weber of Rutland for a·gift
exchange and business meeting.
On the average, a California sea
lion lives 12 yean.

netCl!

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Blake 2..0-04, Robinson 1-0-1-3.
TOTALS 19·2-4-411

----SVAC standings----

Campbell Conference

I

.

Eutern Coaference
Atlantic Dlvillon
,
Team
W L Pet. GB Boston ................... . 19 4 .826 Philadelphia .......... 15 7 .682 3\\
New York .............. 10 11 .476 8
Ne\1.' Jersey ...... .. .. ... 8 13 .381 10
Washington ............ 715.318 Il l\
·Miami. ........ .. .......... ~ 16 .238 13

12 lead in lhe first period, but
Southern awakened and outscored
lhe hosts 23-12 in the second canto
to lead 35-25 at the half. ·
The Tornadoes did not lose focus
in ·the third frame and continued to
stifte lhe VIking aaaclcs wilh a 2213 offset in lhe score during thlll
segment of lhe game.
SHS cooled Qff somewhat in the
finale, but bel&lt;! on for the 66-48
win.
SH$ hit 23 of 55 from \he field,
hit 3: 12 three pointers, and was 1120 at the line. SV was 1944, 2-14,
and 4-17 at lhe line.
Soulhem won the battle of lhe
boards. ·44-38, led by Rose's 12
rebounds. Carl Robinson, who led
SV with ten had to leave the game
mid-way lhrough the third period
wilh a sprained anlcle. Allhough
Robinson still controlled his end of
the boards, the SHS defense held
the Vildng paint man to just lhree
points.
SHS had 12 steals (Baer 4), l2
turnovers, seven assists · and 18
fouls. SV had seven steals, 13 turnovers and 18 fQuls.
Southern won the reserve game ·
by a 83-38 score af~r having 45
points at the half. Mike Evans had
19 to lead the winners, while Pierce

Murphy with nine each: EHS had
eight steals (five by Bissell), five
assists, six blocks, andteal13fou{9· tur
Oak Hill had five s s,
•
novers, and 17 fouls.
Easiem won the reserve g:lll\e
6148 .behmd 'Rod Ne~somes
game-high14 pomts. Devm Hale
had 17to lead lhe Oaks. .
Eastern hosts Waterford ma n.d~league bou_t Tuesday, then ts 1 e
until January 4, 1991 for a 1ong
Christmas break.
Score by quarters
(Continued from

Pon'aov-Midclaport. Ohio

Announcements EMS responds to 11 calls

Southem beats Symmes Valley; Eastem downs 0~...~
'

~· .Monday. December 17, 199o

POIIHY. OliO
, ...... CltlchM

.

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
POMEROY
306 EAST MAIN STREET'

..

PHONE: 992-2586

..

\

•

�The Daily Sentinel.

"

By The Bend

Mondlv. December 17. 1110 ·

.Mother proposes troop sing-along.

Monday. December 17, 1990

- ~--~~~======~======~~------•
•r~
I

•

i

l1
I

•

;

....

HILL'S DEER ,
CDmNG ·
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

t -~.

FOURTH FIFI1I AND ~H GRA~ES ! ·• Repmeating fourth, ftftb ud Sixth grades m the
I Salisbury Elementary School's Christmas
program to be held Moaclay night are front, Tim

i

Peavley, Melissa Wbaley, Adam Jeakins, Vincent
Broderick. Back row, Lacy Banks, Tricia Davis,
Carrie Glaze, Betsy Houdashelt, Adam White,
Jonathan Dickens. (Absent was Chelsie Dodson).

l~alisbury Elemen~ gi~~..!!~~~~
Salisbury Elementary · S~hool
!&lt;'ill present a Chris!Jilas m~cal.
"A Weslerll Ho Ho Ho Down' On
Monday at 7 p.m. The concert takes
' place in die old west, where a town
: 1s preparing ~ .big celebrati~ fl?r
'-shnta's first VISil A young child 1s
r very worried that Santa won't be
, able to find his w~y to lhe town be• :«Use it is so ISOlated. Another
i c~ of concern is the arrival of
1 "lllC bad guys, v:ho auempt to dis' rupl the celebratiOn.
Characters for the play are: Narmlo~. Betsy ,Houdasheit and Carrie
Glaze; Shenff, Chelste Dodson;
1 'Santa, Adam White; .Nuisance,
l JQilatban Dickens; c:at:ne Glaze,
l Tefe~ Gtrl (All stxth grade
1 students).

t

1

1 ••.••

Bad Guys (third ~rs): Joey
Patterson, Shawn Wh1te, Clinton
. Hom and Ryan Ronq~llo.
Good . quys (dlird ~ers):
James Billingsley, Jeff Michael,
Ryan Jeffers, Bobby PenneD, and
Mau Milhoan,
.G~l Dancers (fi~t graders):
N~ . Black, Bobbte Burson,
Melissa Hemsley, As~ey Hoschar,
Addie Hubbard, Marisa Mowery,
Mi!KIY O'Dell, Heather R1ffle, and
Alii~ Story. . .
, .
' Pioneer Grrls (thinl graders):
Beverly_B~~ne. Leeann D1.U. Tara
Gray, MarJone Halar, Tiffany ~der, Morgan Matlhews, ~m
Peavley, Anna Story and. Marissa
Whaley.
·
.
Rockers (fourth, fifth and s1xlh
graders): Mehssa Ramsburg, Lacy

.· .

·---Beat 0f
.-. h e Bend

. ..
·
.
H oe'lich
.;:--~--·--}....,'

·-·--

·' · ·
··
-· · · ·•
~~-.o-----.know it's the Christmas .season
se all of a sudden I'm living
more gentle America.
Jaop1e • are extending .good
IJid evayone is a bit more
I knew that President Bush
sed that we were to have a

;,1~'1: :':~~t 're,.'W.!!

t! \r was really going to happen.
~Y

B~
Bob

overwhelming - and would you
believe dlat Mr. and Mrs. Bragg do
all of this work absolutely Cree? So thanks to Morgan and Vickie
Bragg and their students for an excellent evening of entertainment.
Caleb the group the first chance
you get- you'lllike!_
·
Southern High School senior,
Lori Crow, knows what she will be
doing come next fall. .
.
Lori is one of 350 S(:DIOrs admitted to the college of business ill
Ohio University. I'm told there
were 2500 applications - far too
many 10 be accepted. Lori is the
daughter of Roben &lt;:;row of
Syracuse and the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roben Crow, also of
Syracuse.

ford. Becky Johnson, Tricia Davis,
Melissa Whaley, Robyn Hunt,
Heidi Legar, Lisa Jones, Abby Witson Melinda Clark, and Crystal .
S~

~s (second grade girls): April
Blankenship Sarah Clifford, Amy
Frecker S~di Gilkey, Sherry
Haye • Abby · Hubbard. Grace
Kitch~ Lisa Mudd Michelle
Riflle ai,d Heather Wb~y.
Fariners (second grade boys):
Carson Midlr.iff, Billy Soulsby,
Jacob Wilson and Budd Sinith.
·Parts of a train (first grad~ boys):
Zaclcary Glaze Richie D1D, Anthony Doerfer Donald Eakins, CJ.
Este , Levi· Gillene, Zackary
Justio Hoschar, Marc Smtth,
08
Matth~w Snyder, Andy White, John
WitheteU, Aaron Bo"(erstoek, and
Jason Murdock.
He •5 Coming to Town Dancers:
Adam Jenkins, Joe Diles, Penny
Jones, Lacy Dickens, Rachel Bush,
Tanya om, Amanda . Ralph,
Michael Blessing and Mike Witfong.
.
. ha I
Stagecoach anl;l, drive!S: Mic e
Salser and Chris Self.
·
Tnlditional
Songs:
Myca
Haynes, Robyn, Hunt, Sabrina
Smith Holly Milhoan, Sarah
G~r. Tara Michael, Pen~y
Jones, Josh Leach and Lll;triC
Blankenship, Vincent Brodenck.
Ryan Ramsburg, J.T. Humphreys
and Kim Wells.
Band students: Tim Peavley,
Mike Wilfong, Josh Witherell,
Robyn Hunt, Adam White, Jenny
Clifford, Betsy Houdashelt, Chelsie
Dondson and Carrie Glaze,

Back, Jeff Michael, Joey Patterson, Tiffany
Harder, Amy Frecker and Heather Whaley.

Nor o~.. F.or
Chrlttmll Seaton!
OPEN DAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1-5

MAIN
STREET
PIZZA
.
FlEE .LOCAL
flEE LOCAL
992-2228

DEUVERY

POINSETTIAS ·

7 Colors - All Sizes

DEUVERY

POINSETTIA BASKETS
HOLL V. TREES
FOLIAGE BASKETS
LIVE &amp; CUT TREES

LARGE DJLUXE
PIZZA

lARGE

PEPPERONI
PIZZA
$599!:.~
ONlY

4 FlEE 16 OZ. PEPSI'S

$999 :::'
r:.IJ
.,AT-Ill

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

WE'VE D£LJVEIED LONGER THAN ANYONE HSE IN MEIGS COUNTY ,
OPEN 7 DAYS A W££1 AT 4:00 P.M.
.

SYRACUSE, OH.

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONlY lOCALlY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

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

.

.

DOWNING .CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

a

plid.

~:..

for errors lint d.- ad run• tn paper) . Callb.tOTa 2 :00p.m
dllf an• pubtiCt~~n to m•ecorrection.
•Ads thll: mu11 be pild in advenceere
Card Of Tlltnks
Happ'( Ada

."

lt

of being ji:&gt;Uy, 1 auended the
. ' Christmas party of die Ohio
Publishing Co. held
ursday night in Point Pleasanl
A real highlight of the evening
' ·
lljlpllll•ace bY a lively
ol Wlhama Hi&amp;h School
who mate up a panfl:llllime
lndl'm not really sure that
islhe riJht ram.
Allll'/ ~. It - the first time I
.een the poop perform and
me, they're great. The
people perform like srag_e
u they ao lhrough lhe~r
mll8icll numbers. They have
tt::·~ COIIUIIIe changes and ex~
p1011110 fit the tone of each

cl•lifild displey, lutin•• Cerd _..d 11111 not~ )
wiH also. app~ in the P1 : !'l. .ant "lfit:ter .nd th• Galh·

c.,t

Jllllber. 11e trailled, I'm IOid. bY
-a.y ad Vickie BntU who lie
Jllllllbln c:i lhe fal:uhy II
•

J1i811 SchooL The BJ11&amp;8S

y

Pia

all lhe numbers,
rL 111e moveme~~•. w01t
.... IXIIIUIIIing, propl Mil
...._ The 1¥(llk involved must be .

an

polis Dally Tr.bunt. reKtting
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER .
TU£SDAY PAP!R
WEDNESDAY ~AP!A
THURSDAY 'AI'ER
FRIOA'(·PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

•'

.

-

AtuCoOI304

441-Gtllipoh•
317-Ch•hire

912 ... Middi.IIM1

611 - Pt. ,...,nt
&amp;58-Loon

21t-GuYtn Oitt.

Pom••v

911 - Ch•....
843-110111end

247-Lotlrl Filii
f4V-R•cine
742-llllutl~

·

571-Apple Grove
773 - M ..an
112-N.w Hl'ilen

617-Coolvito

O·et ·Reeaftt Fltt

BULLETIN
··-·-- BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:38 P.M. I)AY BEFOBE
PUBLICATION

'S No PlACE LID HOME!

8 - Pubfic lela &amp; A"ctlon

1-W.,.Otltoluv

c.
11-~trm

.

Bank

. ... I

-

...

..

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MEMBER FDIC

.. .

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II VI :I ill l
lqutpmtnl

62-Wanteq to •ur
63-liVQIOCk '

Tr dll'·ll•lll ,tl rort
,, - Autos for ....
for lele
73-Vtnt 6 4 'fO ' t
72-Tru~:kt

31 -~om• ltr ....

lvildin91

76-Auto P~tu a Acc•tori•
77-· Auto Repair
78-Carnping Equipment
79-Cemp•• • Motor Hom•

leliobtlfy Ele!MIIIIIY -

.

3

llhonM

..........

··-........... ........

llleDiolzll af ...lbii!CIR•

OIWIIcn, ....N'Ptnt to anti Ill

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b II I *utM with the .,.,.,..,
..,, af II IIW 11DUD ol

......

c:- 1110·
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Olllo.
·
- Ptrlt.

.....•.utlllllie lltCI
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121

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. The following ... ID beN-

.......,

..nled .. •aulftwdune
whlohlhelnllollodoy-11
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1. 4 llnel aiUIJJIIIRI . .

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flam Mey 1 lhroutih leP-

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Ohio
al ,....,...
~~ariO.

lt I I t
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Dl&lt;tl I ft af I'IItb
tt . . .Ro C. au

._t.all•z.1111111,...

OH.
..DIM:~"·'"•
,... J J'J,ITl Shirl:
II,

THIS l"xl"
BUU£TIN IOMD .
; SPACE AVAILABLE 1
AT •s.oo PER DAX · .

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

.......,
••••••
2.1nt-

... bHt

......1

lkw...
112)10. f7, 24, 11, ...

. 3 ........ ' .......
4. Conletenootell...,......,
I.Phoneoelll!eld-

•

Pl.949·1111
., .... 949·1160
WI NIID USTII'MOSI

•s•u

SHOOTS
5ml

. 1•

. YOUNG'S

IC()UNTRY ICLU[;

r

CAifENTEI SEIIVKE

-Room Adtlllo"•
-Gut!• WOrk

-1--'•Piumlllnl
-C-Worll
-Roofing
-lnt- a Ettt-

Drlvero ... •1

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

W1d111 •. • 1

GIIAPHITE IHA"SINITAUED
IAOI ....... ... ........... I

Ptlnllng

IFREE EST)MATESJ

..•.,., ...

CHRISTMAS

TROPHIES a PlAOU,Efl,

Y. C. YOUM II
ft2..J11
I

l

iROWNING;
CHRIITMAif':
ORAPHITI

JOliN TEAFOID ...
kMI

c.., told

c...... 11·21-to-1
~-'
..

11/14/. .

IIOY ..ISAII

1. Dllliltctlwrlngtne
•. " - · ftw .... _ lllllt
•. Hoklllrie ,..... , ••
10.LMIM1....., _

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121
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12:DD•'....,._enn...

AH ....... II:UIII~·· ....
lllnlntl llhll- to be......,
"TIL·

..

.......... , ... Office
117 I. Sec. p I ey
, JICIIIIIOY, OliO

1. Une-Hpto

ct.y, , . . _ •• 1.811 .

PubUc Notice

I

,._ (IN) SlW211

3

411hor1H

NOTICE TO IIDOI!RI
Deputnwnt of

....__......-.WI'_

........ 12=

..:::"C:nt• Ele:nenl8ry- ·

n. Ohio

·.VICKER'S WOOD HEATIIG

BISSELL ~ ·
SIMIG CO•..

43 - P:armt
farfllent
44Apertment
ter Rent
41-Furnr.IIM lltooms

Pubnc Nota

.

tOM E\lfRY 12 HOUI&amp;f. 1·
CALL
,,,

INSULATION

Rulllnd E' ....---•"'181-y -

,............
. _ 1-..._ .

-·-10.1110lool .... tho ....
...._11111conrn· t •
"·'

.•BLOWN IN

42-MobileHOmft for Atnt

""""olo h-

-u...., _ _ ....,.... ·:

•VINYL

41 -HOuHI for A tnt

An

-

•"

••free ...It ......

""""""
Plto-

41 - EQuitunent for Atnt

"

•ALUMINUM IIDINQ

Pot1101 oy Elomon181Y - I

41-For ~-•

....

"2-5315 • \IS-3561

Middleport E'-terv - 3 ·

41-l•ec:• tor lllltnl
47-Wafttlf t!) flltnt

...._

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYKE

Public Notice

JIS- lot• &amp; Atfeege
31- R..I ht111 Wen1ed

..•,

Pick Up.

lt·21-1H

•

..... .

SIIIUI .&amp; 11&amp;

'CHRISTMAS

. . .Al
•LIGHT HAULING

1Pt.•11Jit.

·irmc,

TREEI

•1o ....

FRUH CUf DAII~1'

.........

• 985-3385
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

.·

·.

71-loett • Mo••• lo• Sate

32-Moltitt HemM for Stl.e
ll-llermt for lela

...
" ._....,_
____
.....
••••
---·--··--.-·

ALLUm ·
lrlllg It In Or Wit

or
614-949-2635

7&amp;-MotOtcvct•

34-B~o~sin•s

......,....e.nl,

"

446-6000

11-1 ..1.1&amp;

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE .
614-949-2734

14-HIV a Grtin
15-S.'ad &amp; Fartii.ltr

. 21- lulln•t Oppor1unity
22-Mon• to Loen
23-Prot.etoft.....eFYIHI

We Do What We Sey

...

,_

MICROWAVE .
OVEN IIPAIR

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED

FiHI'i \il[;.iilflS

'1flt\,l''f''

sum

GAI.IIOI.IJ, OHIO 4J4JI

,,

.,

I·

12 Go.
o.ty
StrirHy~=
I

f '11111 :"1'' "'111

..

.,

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

Ill-fruita. v-.··~·
59-For Sail or Trade ,

SI'IIN(i. I'AWIY ~-NJIL IUIWING
14N JACKSON PIKE·
lOJ .

farCIIITanfPrlos

,...... cw.. ·

•

Hand Tufting
Cu1torn Dra~~n

Chll-v-eo..

6:30 , ... .

57-Musi~allntti'Ufl'lertll

•ON-SITE SERVICE/REPAIR "
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMING . ..,
.
"SALES
.:r·
•ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING _,

Cedi 691·6115 .

SAT. NIGHT

154-Mitc. Mtrchlftdilt
11-luildine luppli•
16-Pttl for Slit

Ads
1-Lost snd ,yOund
7-·Y•d Stlt ID•d in advance)

O.C.L. COMPUI'EJ SOW170NS, IN_C.

Of Ml•••tert
UPHOLmiY

GUN SltOOT

' IZ-Iportlni Goodl
n-Antiquol
•

5-Happy

985-4..73.
667·6179

OPEN I DAYI A WEEK
ALBANY. OH. LOCATIO
10 AM-8 PM
CLOIED SUNDAY
We Will Clo• AI
Dec. 24 to Jon. 2 ,.,

51 -Houslthold Goodt

2 - ln Mamory
3-Annouctmtnts
4-Qi¥eawly
,

lstlnla-..·

614-992-6820

Ml'r , ltarllll '.l'
1-C•d of Th1nk1

Fr~

Call 992·51.14
,., Cwnnt Prices

EVElY ,

•::••:;,
·--------

D1111 lliWt

-.

Farmers

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

COLE'S
MOBILE
HOMES
Rt. 50 East, Athens
Phone 592·1972
'

II

.

POMI!IIDY LOCATION
7 DAYI 8 AM-7-PM
CLOSED CHfiiiTM~
. DAY ONLY

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

Re.-tatatDr IHIJIIPIIII

YourBa~fot~···

tOrte'llt blOCil. 1"1 \'tf1IS. . IH KttU
Cloof tnd !)at~ 111 1.

'-'

fnr

8Gar....

TII·COII!I f
IICYCLIItG
Of'IN IVIIIY DAY AT

1111 DIPr.

.01/ doy

. (6141 ....M16 et 1. . .-871·H67

e~,,

Ueltl

A•••r• for&lt;Contlf.,lllre runs. IN'oken u~diVSWitiHch .....

"""

Fs.

113.00
11.30/ dly

lion of lhe INtel_.. 11

\' tJI={,o'.)Y

&gt;

1&amp;
11-

Monlhly

~0
.4e 2
. 0

n .oo

111

6

·1o

Public Notice

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

FOUNDATION INCL.UOES: Norm111
t~CIWII•ng , c;rawt sD«:e 111lth f~Jcourte

rt-H-'10'1 ...

),.._,

~

~~~JE ... $22,500

742·2143

•lloa.of .... _ wllfllhe
.,.__,

When you consider the g(ls, time and energy saved ·
at home, it just doesn't pay to. shop around!

LIST PRICE . s26,900

RIIDY IIC. 2nd

.20

14~

•c ••,,...
· St•p
·~··••
I c._,.,.

614·HI·JJII
JU
lerth
We
Sey
What~-··
We Do.

,_.....,_ Ohla

•

'

ti. WfMI SdiMI ... eft It,

• Yean EX(N!rlellee

$12 • '20

Owllll' &amp; Ojlll'ater

•••-Let~rt

937-eulfiiO

--------------:--i

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

HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: Upgrlde Ca&lt;Ptt &amp; Pod throughout. upgrldelront
&amp; rtar ooors. vinyl tidirtg wUh 108m core lhNU'ung, 1C" ahvtters . Clth~ral ceiling living
room , ctinin; room .nd muter bedroom. reaidenti•l trim pac~t.~gt , tiled entry WI)', upgri!Ce
rwtnger.lor and much mucn m'ore!

. ·Rutll!nd

2 :00P.M . P.. IDAY

A,.aCD41tl14

379-Walnat

:

8Ft. Mid Up

Ovtr 1II wor•

14.00
18.00

- 2 •00 , ,M. TMU~SDAY

M•Dft Co .. WV

143-A,.bie Dist.

Rote

11
16

2 :00 ll.lllt. TUIIOAY
2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY

Meip County

241-Ria Gr11nde

Wordl

1
3

•an11. I COOLIIG .

Lt.11d

CAIN'S

Well ShMred, Grown
on the .w .- ferm In

·

...........

c•ISTIIAS TilES
FOI SAU
' White •
Scotch Pine

AU RltNAC~ PAm

··SSELLIIBII
CONSTIUCftON

11·11·1-1 ...

EMILEE MEIINAI

. :._ 2•00 , .M. MONOAY

Gallll Co\nMy
'
A,. 1 co~t614

3••-vtnton

.'

\

'

.

RATES
Ooya

11/14/1ftl

110• F·~S • HEAT PURl'S

•ntti'SMO•u

Mldcllaport, Ohio

1Damtolpm ,
We Are A Deer
Cheelr.ln1 Stallon.

Ctt...ltl Graatnia1
Feru ...•

DAY ft'ORE NIUCATION
~ 11 : 00 A.M. SATURDAY

foiiDtdn({ relephonr&gt; exchan~es...

~·oa.
_

thru Sati!rdr,

THE
GROOM
lOOM

owr 11.000 hoM...

Classified paf{es .con&gt;r rhr:

-

r

~

· ' f "'-

..."

'•

•A clusH'iecl edvar1iMmWit plaa.t in The Daity lentint:I.IIJII •

I

I, Wowll'm
imprell!ed.
·ns die season to be jolly and as

Y•d Ill•

In Memorilfft

.;;

·.· ~

be~···

•S.m:in.t is not Ntponsibtt f~r error11ll:1r first d.,. !Check

t ~.;.c'l ~ ·.·

• .,,..,,I Q;(}:,)\'

Mnon coumiei, "'"'11
.

•Recafl,ta a .ao dlsceunt tor 1dt peld in adllance :
.
•free ads- Oi..-,...•y end Found tch under 15 wonts w1ll ba
run 3 dl';'s M no c·h •ge.'
·
•PriiDI or ad for iiH a••• l•t•r• is .double prictJ of ed ~ost.
•7 point lint type·only uted.
.
..

•t.

"SPECIAL GOOD THRU DECEMBER ONLY"

·.J

p;j,::;;~-:M~o~;..~.~G..IIia or

!

Buy Now And Get Foundation Free!

HOURS: Mon•y .

Graham said she at first
·wanted tQ remain anonymous as
the model for the farmer's
spinster daughter, but after the
"sour mUk" letter she wrote the
same newspaper to IdentifY
herself and any resentment
vanished.
The state of Iowa now embraces Wood, who died of cancer lo
1942, as a favorite son. · The
ortglnal painting Is part of the
coUectlon of the Art Institute of ·
Chicago.
Graham had written a book
about · her brot11er and htm
painting, which Is set for publiCation next year.

110111

••smsa

21/J &amp; Nlldl

mllk."

St11kll

992-277.2 742-2251
131 Bryan Plaoe

REWA11 1S
GUNS I SIPPLIIS
741-1421

• The
Area's Number 1· Marketplace
.
TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-215.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY A.M. t• 5 P.M•
I A.M. until NOON SATUIDAY

•Roofing
•I neulation

11 -1-10-1 mo.

that woman's face would sour

II•• I• -

•VInyl Siding

Wlnclow8

949-2206

•
Class·i 18

For The loved One's Grave:
Blankets, ·Vases and Sprays

vfs

though - seems like I c~
mnember that most always m
December we do live in an America
that's a little more gentle - could it
f~ a power just a tad higher
•· ~Bush is responsible?
it 11 too bad that the spirit
't exist year-round. Mean!IJ!Ie.
'IS a nation we seem 10 be gomg
lwidl a hell-bent for election ap111 Second St., Pomeroy
h towards war. It's refreshing
least to me - that people are
YOUR INDEPENDENT
~ng die sensibilily of such
There's rapping and. wrapping AGENTS SERVING
tion. You do remember, of right now your empha'!ls had better
MEIGS COUNTY
~ die information that we
he on the latter, 'Do keep smiling.
twere handed for years to die effect
SINCE 1868
lhe Russians were going 10
119. Suddenly, the threat .we
""" med about crumbled and
· " "Rilssian people now must have
~ic belp to eal As it turned
IJUt we were told, our intelligence
l!j:ryic:c didn 'I exactly have the
lanbeat of what was happening.
~er. that didn't keep us from '
r- ,
I
:
! :
misinfonned for a long lime.
i.
,
.
._
••
JI9Pe history isn't repealing itself
; •·
j
:..'•
l
j:loW. I hope we are not being misin.
·:--·.
..
~ ( ..--1 1; ·•
~· ··· ·
lonned. I want the facts - not
~
· popapnda- Mam. 1 know you
' .• I
~~ me in hope and prayer_ that our
~ ' I ,'
t.
dflieials are doing everything ~­
ilible to 1ry to settle the Pers1an
tlulf problem peaceably. . .

;"And

REPRESENTiNG PRIMARY CLASSES •
Representing students in the Salisbury Elementary-School Christmas pi'Ogl'!lm are, front, ~ar­
son Midkiff, Zack Glaze, and Heather R1ffte.

DeilY S 1 ttinii-PIIga 7

J&amp;L
IISUU110N
•R•plecenitnt

IASHEN RD.,
IACINE

Model for 'American Gothic,' dies
MENW PARK, Calif. (UPI)
.· Tbe aomber couple pictured In
· - N&amp;&amp; WQOd Graham, who poled
front of an Iowa fai'm cottace ln.
as a ipblster farm dau1hter for
"AmeriCan Gothic" - an Iowa
ller brother Grant Wood' 1 clastic
doctor Poabt&amp;' as farmer holdlna
pal11tlng, "American Gothic,"
a pitchfork and Graham as his
has died, a spokeswoman said:
dour daughter - hai 1alned
Shewu9li
classic statU.. But the painting at
Grabam had devoted her !Ue to
first stirred up controversy
keepini' a history of the 1930 amon1 Midwesterners, who
painting and protectlne It against
tltought they were being.
varlo.ua plagarlsms, Including ridiculed.
parodies by Playboy and Hustler
"Grant got threatening mesmagazines.
. sages over the telephone and
A widow, she died Friday at a
tbey wrote letters to newspapLa Havre Convalescent Home In
ers," Graham told the San Jose
Menlo Park, Calif., south ·of San
Mercury News In an lntervl,ew
· Francisco, where she had lived
two years aco.
since 19115, a nursing home
"Oae of tbem said It oug.bt to
. official said,
hang hi a cheese factory pecause

The

·'B usiness. Services:

CHICAGO (UPI) -AnneBick· astronomer at the Adler Pianeta"'Host aenaltlvlty' 11 the term
ett Schiller hu found a noV.! way . rlum that the mooa would be (the -military) Is Using," said
to boost the morale of U.S. troop1 visible from CallfQrnta eut to Schiller, addtna that she wu told
stationed In Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia on Cbrlltmas Day. the ;Words cannot be •IIlii on
hope~ mllllona of people will Jola
~ - "Tbe~~~kldlallknowthe
ber In •IDalnl at the moon.
"Even · U there are clouds words and one major said to me,
Schlller's Idea II 'Projec:t Moon- hiding the moon, the moon II still 'So what's to atop them from
beam: everyoae •lnlln&amp; the there, I'm boptng God II cooper· singing the words?' "
same five Cbrlatmu caroll at atlng with thla," the mother of
Tbe five aonp to be recorded
the same time Christmas Day (3 four said Sunday.
. are "Oh Come All Ye Faithful,"
p.m. EST) w)!Jle starlag at the
A local radio station has "Joy to the World," "Silent
moon, which will be visible at the ~ to record the carola ~ Ni&amp;ht," "We Wish You a Merry
same. 11101111tnt In Saudi Arabia SUJIIbypeoplelncludlngfamUies Cbrtstmas" and ~ 'Let there be
(11 p,m, S!ludl tbne) .
·
of troopa In the PersiAn GuH '
Peace on Earth,"
St:hllll1r, 44,. whose oldest aon, Blld make the tapes available to
"i know 'fuD well · they can't
Brl811, Is a Marine stationed In other statlona,
hear us singing, But lf200 mUUon
Saudi Arabia, Is the founder of
''I think It's 101n&amp; to happen. I people are stnatne. t'-,t knowlOperation Over There, a project have 3,0110 radio stations that are edge for them has got to be a
to ·make sure letters and pack- going to do thla, " SchUler said.
tremendous morale boost,"
ages from home aet to the troops.
Armed Forces Radio Network Schiller said, "'I'lle whole counTbe Idea for the ling-along will air a "hummed version" of . try Is for them no matter where
came when she found outtroman the five sonp.
you stand on the war,"

Page-6

L

Pomllov-Middlaport, Ohio

912-2219
. . .~

·•

I

''II

i -· .

, .•.
I

.....

,,

'

�•

'

.

-~~

,.

'

;

LAFF·A·DAY

41 l:loWI8 fOr ......

Monday.

Monday, December 17. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

December

17, 1990

71 AuiOI for Slit

44

t---........ -

1117 !'1Ymo!Uih - . aood
ta,200; 1111 l'old LTD,

1211.

Ford

-

M

OL,

--1-.--.
.......... . . . .
__
. . . , - , PS, PI, :UW. oolla, AC, 14,11110 -114411,
I'ND, IU Milito

loltOIIOn. -

t21G'IM . . . . ._..-...,

-

-

:":l·

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yon! loloo 111101 1o Pold In
Adwanco. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
dor bo- tho ld It to run.

t n&lt;ltr Monday
odllon • 2:00 p.m.
ldHion • 2:00
l!llclav.~

I""'·Soturdor.

=

::.\~..':· '::tl:"' ':~

":.r::l:::UO:::l.;:'po-7.
...,._ mouo tho •llononco. ,roocuroo monogoinont · on&lt;l
Uooll II d Oh!!,_ ~.ucky, lllllllty
AgrlcuH ...
. YJiglnlo, 304-Tn-01ll0.
bo I pound, upooloo ... ln londlnt olid Boc'olor'o DogNO whh
W8nted tO Buy
• ....... In "'I - . . . . , 1111- o r -ntlng lo prolonld.
'
Lunoh lox•
....., wll bo tiiO'o-1lml'o topo with
-on&lt;l
otlqUbi~ICka. AM vlnylli. No ~r.- Send....,.. to:
_ . . or· piHIIo. lottloo no1
P.O. lox 2404,
ob ouoory. Coli ..... 11141112- Clorkollurt, WV 2Q02. EEO,

-mont.

f

•

IIIF.

.

Wonted to buy: Junk coro wHh

01 without

~

a .,., met·

oi.I14-37HWontod To luy: Junk Autoo
with or wfthout mototo. Coli
LIITy Uvtty. IM 3U 1303.

St:'l'lf 0480.
11

Slooolna _ , . wMh cooking.
Alootrollor opOce. All _..,,..
Coli oftor
p.m., 304-ns51St, l i t - wv.

2:oo

46

R-

Mitt Poulo'o Doy Co,. Cantor.
lolo, offordoble, chlldcoro. M·F
I •.m ... 5:30 p.m. Ap• 2 ·10.
BoloN, onor ochOGI. Orop-lno

Mabllo

room.,

Stondlng Umbor. Top llricoo
pold. 114131'JI.7811oftor 7:o0p.m.

31·
Mobllo Horne tor Rent: 14xl0,
2br, 114 4411354;814 441 tat

Woll- • pointing 114-1112·
2328.
Witt bolryolt WMkdoyo In my
homo, noor lloclno Looko, ho"

~,.~loo~•~n~o.~I04~1~1~M~2t~l~.r.a~

!oung Cltrlotlon~de liock I lo!th •• ~ ·' ',-•Un.,_y du~ng tho
=~ helP with ....

llobllo homoo lor oolo or "'!!

114-112-11171.

I

Rio Orondo, -

bodr- unM.
Large pnl, lltorap buldlng, no
~'=~ lllid depooit,

44

Apartmem
forR1m

1 IR, $300/mo.; 2 BR, $400/mo.i

~~~~~..r..t!rh,o.~":li ~

qulrod. Coli LofllyOtto oil 1144411-'7'7.13 or 441-4222.
1 , _ officlon•• •=.:mont,
fumlohocl, DriYIIO
h, Ill
utiiHioo polo( Rio Orondo. 114311-1141.
1br oportment wHh opplloncoo.
Nlco. Wiler pold. Coif Sauthom
Hille Aool &amp;toto, Inc. 114--4181524orl-.

sa,

North o1 .._...,.

•~·lo,
'Jit71. porlo,' - \ Coli

114-wa-3121.

Oulfto

pro aood ooo idlt....,,
pholoo ani -~= to
1 P.non.~ Ohio
•
0111
_ . , . or et4JII2.
2411.
54 Mlecellaneo
.

-

ua

--

Mtrchancll18

........oo1f

10' Mtonlto dlo':i.t::"plole -

- · .......... muol
nol POllan OVllloblo. 304HH 1:00 Pll oftor 10:00

Merchandise

51

Household
Good a

21

T.V., uc.

11

-lp.lll.
._, TV, .._.,~
oololnot. mo.
or 10.-

*•lm
Recti,_ taa8 to 1171- 1441.
Lompo m to $121. ~~~-·
$1Qion&lt;l up to $415. Waoclt..:::"un."~
w.e oholrw 1211 to 1711. Dooko
1141 up to t271. Hutchoo 1400 • Cal1hpct
.W.
1
...
up, bodo cornploto wlh rHtglnt...- . $110. .,..
"'""'""" l2t8 ond . . to tall.
boby bodo It II Milt,._ ot
Color tv I _ , . ployor. IMbox ~
. . full
or lw!n
Ill,
lin&lt;IIU.
QuoonI

'':all:"'

~p,

King 1310, 4 d . - chool
""· Oun Cotolnllt I, I, I 10
II""- ...
Boby ,moltrI
141.
. _ 125 131
Quoon
Sin f31 a kln&lt;1 fnmo iio. Qaocl
oolootlon oi'\odr- MINto,
-•1 coblnolo,
PO
on&lt;l Ill to 118.110 doyo •
- h With op""'vocl CNdt. 3 mi.
out luiOYIIIo Rd. Colen I A.ll.ta
5 P.M. Mon, lhru Sot. Col1114-

hood-

441~

·='••

PUREIREED IlBERlAN HUSKY

I"'"'""'

a PUPPIES.
1 -lo;
8111!11 I ....... 4 OGioro,
=~"".""' nloo. tl28 01011,

1314.
~ ma.. l.hleo Apeo,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1200.
Sotoo on&lt;l eholrw , . - , _ 110" Bony Prol
S311 to ' " '· Tobloo SIO on&lt;l up 1111 ~op to tfll. Hide 1 IU ~I tiiO 10

me.

boogie.. - . - - · .
O..gonwyn&lt;l CatterY ,.,.n,
S i t - ond .HIOIOioytn ldlt11t 44111tt 1ft• 7 p.m.
Floh Tank, - - Ave.
JDW7S.2013,
full lint 1'loplool
tolldo,
- -·n&lt;l•
.
_ _ ,.,..• 1 -... 1
molo,l04o17W111, I ,_10 pm.

Ita art:'*l'lln.
-:,.non
-water
-

~

:,.; :.=,
...-m.

T-.

~~l _,..._

Jooll
·-lo, I - . oldLwf,. hal rod,
lholo
0100. 114-441o

foriiolo Shih
Jku,
~......
Cleh,

1. - - .
R 1' I ld Scliilrrtl Doa with

Hlrnoloyono,
no
oMcka.
·-

.....,., Coli

oftor 7 '""' 3D4-111400t.

Cit~-·
Cltlnelolllo

Tho -

Young; -

:;:.~:'4Tl:=z.•oo

Olfll
with
oMh.

12

i

,
'

11711 Ford 1001 .................. ,
· • OJII-. 12,100 mlloo,
lollrotlrwl-2212.
1111 Ford 1'-110 outo., ....._,
11M Ford F-110, 4.'!,. ~-opel., AC.

or-

:='." lololtlte lyol..,. 114~· 1 .....,.. oopllo to'*"'
""" . _ . lnlofDriKr, , _
-, 011 1 ~

bod ~"r~tNOO.
......
1112.

...., oftor •

oD SportaCenter

01481 - l o
Qultlirwla-. Exa. aond.t·AOO.
Coll-loftor I p.m.

FRills &amp;

veil~blea

AiiMt

11M Ford R"-= liLT. IJC, V.e
............. 11411121244.

1HI ........r( 4 "YY· I ODd.,.
11100. •~•r4431 or 441-?ell.'
tiM Ro.,..r, 4 oyl, a:

=:""~~-

-

Or.Oo
' l't!O

~ooO

73 va._&amp;4WD'I

Mickey
Mouse and the whole Disney
gang are back tor a new
animated verolon ot lhe
classic Dickens· talo and
other short Christmas
· vijjnettes. ( 1:OOI,C
(!) MOVIE: A C lril Called
J - • IP1. 1 01 21 (2:001
(D Gi'Ht PerlomilnCII
Qlanchlne's ballets, Sere~ade
and Western Symphony. are
prssentad.
(I) Ill MacGyver MacGyver
helps a woman lrying to save
har tathar from bla~kmail .
.stereo. C
(!I cttriot'mAI a1 Popo
Conductor John Williams and
the Boston Pops OrChestra
toast the holiday eeaaon with
a lineup ot special guests.
including soprano Sarbara
Hendricks. (1 :001 Stereo.
all tEll Ill Evenhig lltlde
· Wood tries to show his
family the true meenlng ot
Christmas. Stareo. C
lllllll MOVIE: lrlgh(Ughto,
Big City CR) (2:00)
II) MOVIE: Murdor, She
Wrote (1 :00)
13 Ook Ridge 8oya'
Chriotmoo 1'he counlry music
group performs on the river
showboat General Jackson.

1114 Ford
· uc.
- oond,
·~ .aiAo.
. •
whb,
1 CMMr,
lllr, 081Mttt1 txtr8 IHI'I]L 11M

ALLEY OOP

MotQrcycles

Hondll TAX 200, fcKw wl tin
drtvw drtvon. 11,410. 1m1
C1loovy pick up 1110. 104-11S~·

75 Boatl &amp; Motors
lor Sale
1172 17 ft. lltorcroft TrloHvll

lool• 121 HP,

e.
- _.,.........

- -· VOrtoity ..._
..... buttor, irilxod
nuto,
or ~m.

Evl"""'!~

*ltr. ~~..;~,.":.."'
76

Auto Parts &amp;

(0:30)

•..

oD NFL Monday Night
Motch· Up
8Pr1miHeWI
lllla..utY·ond tho ... ., Q
8:05 (IJ MOVIE: Miracle on 34th
Sto"t (2:00)
8:30 Ill) tEll til Major DaCI Casey's
Christmas gilt Is accidentally
given to a needy child . •
Stereo. C
13 Chriot'mao, the Cowboy
WI'/ Alders in the Sky
celebrates with songa,
dances and ropo tricks .

AcCBUDrlel

r ,Hill Supplil'S
.1 l IVP'&gt;IOCi\

Farm Equipment

10115 ill' Trootor, ll!otp llliiiO;
115 liP 111-,
utt,
w/Duol ltYdlalltlce, $4,110; for.
IJD wiluoh Hog, lt,115.
OWnor Will . • ,.....
11112.
2010 JO Tro- with pio!r eu~

c.-

":fa;: 1010
i2.11!!i
1010 •u 010101,
""

thrwtot,_ _ ,

wHh JD - · ~l 2010 JD
wHft,..._,
JD -114-IM
· 1$.8-.
wiH
1"32 0wnor'

011

--

AND A 5/&lt;EPTIC
SAYS A BOTTL-E
15 ~1-F-eMP'!Y...

Serv1ces

AND A I'E651MIST IS 5i. IPJ:

SOY.EBODY WILL DRINK IT
eeF0Re HE DO~.

(0:301

oD NFL Mon&lt;loy Night

81.

Magazine
8:00 (1) G iiJ !o10VIE: 'A Morn
tor Chrtstmao' NBC Monclloy
Night 11 tho Movlel (2:00)
Stereo. C
(I) (I) If ABC Mander Nlgllt
Foolbrln Q ,
&lt;D I!) Amerlcon Experience

IR. 18,

, 114-tte ant:

MWiuoodla111i

,_... • lmjltonionto. luy,
.-11. trtlde, 1:0041:00 wnhdDJ-,
lot.ttll-.

llo.-v

11'•48'x11',

Sttilllle

i

81'1.:

1·1l'xf1' olldllll
........ 1-41' - - · - ol13

FYI gang is toiced to buy
last-minute Christmas gilts.
Stereo. Q
II) Prime Tlme Wrettllng
Ill Nathvlle oD Bodybuilding IFBB North
American Championships
from Las Vegas (T)
a Larry King u.e1
1111 leauty enclllil leest Q

HERE'S YORE BOTTLE, TATER!!
TH' SQUEAIY WHEIL
GITS TH' GREASE!!

=·u:=~lnlrt
--buy~­
1112'1.

. .,. •• % .....

iiJ Ill Murphy Brown The

8:30 a11

1121111 Detlgnlng w_.,

Bernice gall a chance 1o

rrear on telavlaiOn. Storto.
10:110 Cll Newt

.

AD

rn your

house that can

tUT71

Plumbing&amp;
Helling

into

,:=,=..

Rentals

Cart.... - ·

41

Houau for Rem

I

I•

BERNICE
. BEDE OSOL

GDRII! 1M1, Oltlo

11t ... - ·

00111-, . -'Y

.......,.... 1421hno., Dlpoell
NQUirtd• .,. 411 ~-

rJ

'\

a lad100111 ...... aood
~aall.~•
.W 1touet ..., ctty

lohaa11

-l111,114-t41--

Hillt-. • -II..

:o·::
•• •iif"'· •• .r

::. !17 :~
..

A.Dl'.llm5E rr
~

'

.

.

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

&lt;D (I) llorderilna Medicine
. WaiW Cronkite compares
the Meafth core systems ot
the United States and
Canada. (1 :00) ••
all 1121D Trtalt ol Rolle
O'NIIR Rosie's taltW in
Chrllitlnes it renewed
because of - mon she
represents. Stereo. Q
[)) D SW Trail: The Next

I or 1

Dec.18,1. .
The Y.,ar ahead cOuld be a lucrative one
lor you - r e your monstary aHalro ere
concerned. Tllerl are lndlcallona you
l11lfll get lrMIIved In - • 1 prolltablo

...,.,.__

"Know whit I miii!T108t lboUt Childhood?
Making everyone•• C/lriatmu gltta In

arte 1nd crlfta.ct-."

.

a--.

IAQITTANUI ( ......
11) You
llioutd be lillie to do Wlllor you1'11111 todiiY orHIJellally, but tho resulll !lfOII't be
due to luck alOne. H you oer-ate •
· prolll, h'll be 1Jaca101 you'l liM your
lblllties .to gel What you W. .l . KMW
w1tere to look lor romance and you'll

,,

tind it. The Astro·Graph Matchmaker Judgment I.e good.
instantly reveals which signs are roman- GEIIINI(IIai' 21.June 2D) The rewards
tically petlect for you. Mall $2 to Match- trom two endeavoro In Which you're
maker, c/o this newap-, P.O. Box pr-..tly Involved will be predicated
91428, Cleveland. OH 4o4101-3428.
upon the contribution you mill&lt;e. It beCAPRICORN (O.C. 22.J8n, 11) Instead hooves you to do your very best.
of walling lor things to happen today, CANCER l,lwM 11....., 22) Condltlono
take active measuree to heed them In In - 8 1 are rather tavorable lor you
the dlrecllon you deolra. Once you gain · today, but your greatest benltlta are
a little momentum. you ohould be able likely to come trom a partneroltlp arlo roll over your opposition.
rangement In Which your cohort Ia mora
AQUAIIIUI(.Ien. 20-Feb. 11) Don't sut- active than you ..
ter in sllonce today II you're atymiW by LEO I.IUiy D-Aug. 22) Sorneooe with
something you ~ ·t handle alone. you whom you are rather cozy socially might
have several lrlends who'll do all thoy . be In a polltlon to pull a taw strings lor
can to maka .thlnga eUler lor you.
you tod8y regarding a metter that could
PI8CIIIl'elo· 211-lloroh Ill) It you lind be meaningful to you In a mstortol woy.
yourMII Involved With negative people VIRGO IAtlg. G-llpl.ll) GNIIIr protoday, don't 1e1 them put limitations on gr- rn an Important lnvaheroM;t Clan
your thinking. Whal you can tmllllon, be made at tltllltme H you ~lie
you canac:complloh,'evenlt thoy can't. yourptOCIICI.... In waya that
Alllllllilerciii1-Aprll11) You might · tl1em moN llfecllve. Start lmptOvlllg
be e trifle alow In getting your Important metho!la tod8y.
·
plena tormulaled to your ootlafactlon ueRA I..,._II-Oct. D) You COUld be
today, but once you deC:Iclo upon a cjulteluclcy today In being able to flnolcouroe ot action. the raeultllhould be IH tit- m1ner. you -1111. Mnglng.
'!'!er...-.
.
Eactlla Ollignlbllcelo you llniiiCiaiiY.
TAUIIUI (April....., Ill) Today you ICOIIIIIO (OIL I t Nil. II) 'Much of
might ftnd youroelt In on ..,usual pool· Importance Clan be ~lohed todly
lion
wfll be Me I lllry tor you to If you Ull yow lmiQinaiiOn llld lnltianoake a critical daclllon lor someone live. Doit't walt on CllltWt, even In part·
who len't pr8!18nt. Fortun411ely, your nenltJp lrriiiQIIMIIta.

R..,_,

10:05 (IJ MOVIE: Grinly Adorno:
Once Upon 1 Sllny Night
(1 :30)
.
10:30 Ill

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Dealer: South
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of play. SOrry - there's not enoup:
room today to explore all the poliibill-~
ties. But in seYmll of the play ~Cettari­
os, it would be Impossible for West to·
keep both the ace of diamonds and Uti .
Q-x-x-i&lt; of hearts.
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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

K T X P

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AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

EVCWKTW

ID YICIIIIII. 8oc Chllllnge,

.,

EAST

. WEST

by THOMAS JOSEPH .
39 Served
ACROS!&gt;.
perfeclly
1 Sing a Ia ·
40 Car race
Ella. ·
41 Beatty
5 Of lhe
and
icecaps
Bunlline
10 Solitary
DOWN '
11 Found
cute as a · 1 Snow
gliders
button
2 Desire
13 At any
Yaslarday's -Answer
3lend time
"menace·
fiber
(listen)
14 Spin
4 Turtle
16 Window
27 Marx
15 Letter
ledge
movie,
5 Equivaopener
lence in
21 Subway
e.g.
17 Storage
driver
29 Judge's
value
. chest
6 Bouquets 22 or the
- prop
18 Connoeluniverse 30 Segmenl
7 Parking
ing
. 23 Franklin's . 31· Eyed
place
· channels
First Lady 32 Mrs.
8 Speedy
19 Hostelry
24
Indian
Lincoln's
horse
20 Tissue
bean tree
family
9 Following
layor
25 Coarse
36 lubricale
21 Hawaiian 12 Cartoon
island
22 Direclor
De Millo
25James
Earl or
John Paul
26 "The
Good
Earth"
heroine
27 Director's
cry
28 Colleclion
29 Deteriorate (sl.)
33 Calf's cry
34 Mapmaker
Vespucci
35 Smitten
37 Pinochle
, , score
38 Mimicked
12117
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's hpw 18 work it:

IIJiilllmiVIoe
• 01111 llldDe lop'
.
Cftliltl I I fhl country mulic
III'IIIIP Pl11om4 on tho r i ohowbOat General Jackson.

.,

.AKJ

CROSSWORD

Genanrtion

1111 700 Club With Pat

...

,•

ll-t~tl

NORTH

indicates that the slam bidder has a
void someplace.' For that reason West
might have guessed that hil ace of dia·
motlds wO!I)d not live. StiU he doubled.
'l'hat gave·French player Patrick Susseltbe opportunity to score a coup in
the World Open Pairs in September.
After rutting the opening lead in
dummy and playing one bigh trump,
declarer Susael cori'I!Ctly analyzed
that West was short in clubs and wu
~$ Ia the majors. So declarer cubed
dummy's heart ace and then played on
bigb spades from diiiDmy. When the
last hi&amp;h spade was led, East shed a diamond. (U be bad ruffed, South would
have overrutfed, played a club to dummy's jack, ruffed tbe lut low spade
and drawn the remaininl trump.I Deela.r er now discarded the cood king of
bearts, ruffed the low remaining
spade and cashed ·the K-Q of diamonds. A club to the jack left the lead
In dummy With declarer holding Q-9 of
clubs over East's.I0-7.
Witliout the diamond ace lead, a
careful declarer mlgbt stUI make the
grand slam. ·Knowilt&amp; from the weak
two-diamond cue-bid that West held
length in both majors, South Would
have a cltance to hit upon the rigbt line

oD Gulnneoo RICOrdo World
;=VIIIIngNewo

,, ,,~

.AKQH
.AJ1054

A sudden leap to a lll'Bnd slam often

Cltria- Carol

1110
CJ8. 314
...
·
ta,IOO.- , ... OIIC
tonllorro
. . . • crl, a,AOO. 304 • 3.,.,

-

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e:oo Cll e tEll Mloker'•

1t7l ..... 4 drtvo, """'
....... $1,100.~

ANSW1!1S

By Jameti Jaceby

(!) Nlaht Court Q
(I) IIJMama'o Family
[)) D Tluee'o Company
1121111 Entemln"*'t Tonight
Stareo. Q
oD Moklf'week llloialralecl
8Cro1111nt
7:35 (IJ The JaHIISOII8

8:00 ...:

llunnwln ,ru~ '""" )1101 oftlr
Ill Mol ol A!bo!IY. Wo ooeopl

F.,..=:..._,._
w.e

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BlUDOE

8Moneyllna

- n loeoiiY- Col Mr. Whlo II: 1·
-41345 ext. 101.

M

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Compleie the chuckle qiiOIId
by filling In tho milling -d•
· you dovolop tram ..., No. 3 below.

, SCRAM IITS

1111 Scarecrow and Mro. King
7:05 (IJ Happy Daya
7:30 Cll D all Q Jtoplrdyl Q

Solnll Coni all PIIIIW hrgajn.
Wontod: Rooponolblo porty to
mako tow -~~n-on
.,.,...._..~,,
can be

Jtm..

7

Hiatus - Auke- Quart - Kingly .:. AIRLINES
.
"The theory I like ,best," commented the astronomer,
"is that the rings around the planets are composed of
luggage lost by the AIRLINES!"
. . .• _ ..

treasure. C

Clifty .10, 4 oytlndor
Be!!d.
olr - ·, D,OOD ·
roilo, flbor!llll
tmlloo.IIWII-1a4.
•
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FortunaQ
(!) I Dream ot Junnla
(I) Colliga leolrstbioN
(D (I) MacNeii/Lihrtr

II) Mac:Gyver A lady
archaeologist enllata Mac to
search lor legendary

For Solo: 11 Conlury, lloby
Onnd Plono, oxcollont -~
tlon, oltor, 114448 1147.

81

PR INT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

t--,IF.--;1...,.1':-;..1.:::..·T"l-l

(I) D lnolclo Edition

1111 - · .......... F-110 ..... '
""""' lhoit bod, oono)j. •
tloii.ltiOO. 1~41·1021.

74

lnetrumams

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llll18 Night Cout1 Q
tEIID Cwreni AHalr Q

-.IM-oMHm.

MusiCal

11414Ext.2.

Abboft

New1Hour

4tlllll.
Caluu _adaaa 14 Contpul• with

- . ~r prtntor.
$411.
(104)
1441.

. .8..

@ NBC NlflhUy Newo

Met Coe1lllo
~~lei·~ Q

Trucka for Salt

wtMniY, 11,415 or $181.40 por

wioohbilrn

an. .

8:30 (1) D

I
I

OVerheard In elevator at
department store: "I keep
~:::-::::;:·:;:·;:::::·~~·~~~~-~ney faster than ·!'

7:00(1)8 all II)) WIIHI 01

,.....

4 ~u~·~:l'~;·iOiiiibo;by~bod;;i,
hollor~

WllAT .HAPPENED
TO ALL TJ.IE
FALL COLORS?

I

ORPOT
Is I'. I I

t-"'-T~,..;...,.;.-,....-l

·a

.

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1:35 (IJ ~ndy Griffith

~::.;·r..:.'::'~
........... -1tttoll'or4p.m.
I - ,,.,, 1':',:0 2 115118

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Q

llli4D Andy Orlttlth
oD 8portaLoolo:

M&lt;C REO. IUOLI, -lo, 5
montM old, oiOIIinl to Rln,
1100, or boel O!f!r, .• Olhor

p-•·

,, I8 E1~.UIMII

all 1121• CIS Newo Q

RED COLORED

BEAUTIFUL

I. tiPf01T r I

(I) 3-2. 1 ~ct

Pets for Sale
· ·
.

Buy or ooll. - n o Antlq-,

1124 E. .._In Streot, P-::a;
Houlll: II.T.W. 10:00 "·'"· to 1: .
PJ!12 .!UnciiY 1:00 to I:OO .p.m.

Pll104.41fo1111.
Troller lal loir ront, IOX120, :::.:::.:: eolloftor 5:00 Pll;

honio 14x70, 3 bod·

welearne. 814-MI-8224.

Bullness

-·
-·

For rent Ml70 3 bedroom
moblio h -. fully corpotod,
nlco nolghborhaocl, 114-1192·
1151.

Muon, 1200. monlh
~utliHioo, on lorgo lot, 304-

lor I challonglng
01reer In 1ddlctton NDDYttY
tlold. FociiHy lo JCAHO ...
orOdHed.
FuiHimo
pooltlon
F.nanc1al
tYIIIoblo In oduH womon'o
W.ntod To luy: UOod mobile 1-monl lociiHy. .ContOCI t..
1"1'
Plcluorlna
II
HooHh
-ooNI-.ot71. ·
R-ory ..,.-__._~~.o. Boo 21
724, Ath001, DH 4o1V1,' 11+114Frnployment Serv1ces 3511 wHh llllor ol lnloroll.
OpportunHy
E.O.E.
INOTICEI
LPN- Plrt-41rne call Aaveeuweucl OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Coro
CoSCM-2T3-51tS,
oolc
·raca hiWnda thlt ~ do buiJ.o
11 Helpwantad
far Phylllo or Juno, Apply In whh poop1o you know1 on&lt;l
t-. Chrlolmoo bllto. Soli Avon.
NOT to oenct monty 1"'-h tho
, _ gift olg...... Coli Koy
moll ·untl you lllvo ln-lgllod
lloko 1 dllloronoo In • 1141112-7110.
perun't
lh: Ia arne 1 tho ol1ortng.
ihoN-'Ic toot• .... ...-. "Sho,. In Our ProtHL" WIIOr
. PEOPLE can dM-411 att, Uk tor Home Vending M8chl-. Menufactur~~r
Notional 11 Yoor Old Firm Wfth
~ Routt f.or Solo .. Aoooll
I S.CUI"' locltl0n1
~-A-I&lt;-, 2ti-718LPN -

Space for Rem

CounlrV lloblle H - Pork,

ottlcer/Branch M1nag.r. SUOo

CMOful can&lt;lldote will bo
le
rooponalblo lar londlng on&lt;l
PubliC Sa
8
loon
urvlclng
ocllvH'!,O,
dovoloplng now buoln- ..;a
&amp; Auction.
±-.:-::-=~====~ ·molntolnln&amp; o quoiHr ian

1157.

Room..
Roome ovalloblo tar 2 or 3 c..,..
llructlon work- - .
2511
'
A-lar ront- woolc or monlh.
II $120-. Oolllo Hotol.

oomblo Produclo 11 homo. Coli
fo&lt; lnlormoilon. 50W41-1003
Ext 313.
Flnanc111 IR8111uUon wHh office
In Point PIOIOIIII hot lmrnodlllo
opening
for
•
LAin

..

·c:uuo .........
1U10 traMrnlllktn,

·-

~~~·§F~u~m~l~s~~~~[~"~~A~m~lq~~~-~~~
Ya.rct Sala

,,....

lhlrpft eo,
..-wlhlwdlnt.tor,
low milL c.ll14 U41 If..
torlpjL

ho&lt;IM
PortiiiiJ f u - , • 1n tho
1 , _ . a both.
114 ... 1
1144'71-211t0.

7

·rn

Onnd P1t1J. -mi., AC1

Olda

M

all

(!) Chorleo In
(D 3-2-1 Contact
Square One
Q
llll. ALF
. II) Cortoon !!xpr.oo
oD Motoworld
World Today
1111 Our Houoo
8:05 (IJ leverty Hllblllleo

~.ttz,ol00.114-441'

I bod_, far ,.., In
S y - 1111.ftl'711t oftor
5:00 ......

Clorlo.-pllonlot : llutll - ..
lYP!ng and communicltlon
olilllo. Computer kii0Wi4iclgo
would bo holpful. Send rooumo
and Ntw.nc• to P.O. lox 115,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711.
E10y Work! E-10111 Poyl &amp;.

(I) (().
@ ... WI

-.~-

....

IAMI

=·
Crfc

' 8:00 (1).

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....

EVENING

Clunoro, Ill. ..... T"•• till a
PW, o.r locka.

I r o l l - no polo. CA, I olr,
l~oOII'I. t14 Ut ~12.

1821.

... ~.

rNI.

448-4ae.

2llr - .

MON., DEC. 17

1_,.._....,.,.,._

2
l r - . ~~~~---a
Nttgonolor,
pluo
.,no
•lpolo.-.,
......tzso-.
a,.,..
....
.,
Flrwt Avo. 114-

The Daily Sentinel- Page 9

Television
Viewing

COI'MIIIon, 1 epeed, ....,.rtve,

,_

.

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

OAJI.

AW

i

v

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J L G .1

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ECVWVTJ

FI.CAWJBGW . - K .. G .

BK WJ
J I.

OKCCI'

AW

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MGJJAWJG
y..._• .,.. C..,.let)•otes POVERTY OFTEN
DEPRIVES A MAN OF All SPIRIT AND VIRTUE. ~
BENJAMIN FRANKUN

'

~

-•

'I

•••
~

••
.
.........••
'I
~

�Ponwov-Midcleport. Ohio

THIS

1990 Local Schedules

7 days

Pick-3: 970
Pick-4: 4470
Cards: A-H;

until
Christmas

WEEK'S
GAMES
SOUTHERN

Ohio Lottery

2-C; Q-D; and A..S

ltain ending Tuesday nlcht,
with a low between 35 and 40.
Chance of preclpllatlon Is 88
percent. Partly cloudy Wed·
nesaay. with highs between ~5
and 50 .

•

•

BOYS

'

Dec. 21-0ak Hll, Away
Dec. 22 -SOuthtntern, Hame
Dec. 21:_AtheM, Away

Vol.41. No . 188 ·
Copyrighted 1990

Dec. 20-.0ak "iH, Ha1111

BOYS

Dec: 11-AIIllander, Away
Dec. 21-Wellston, Home
Dec. 21-logan. Away

GIRLS ·

allles on separate continents
Monday, President Bush aild
Secretary of State James Baker
said the forces arrayedagalnst
Iraq remained strong and
unified.
"What we want to do ls to
Impress upon Iraq -the consequences of aggression and for
Iraq to leave every square inch of

Pomeroy council
OKs garbage service

·Dec. 17 -AIIliGnder, Ho1111
Dec. 20-We.. ton, Away

E.ASTERN

the Middleport Fire Department
In a related vein, Pomeroy Vii·
Jage Council member Bryan Shank
Pomeroy Village Council ap· submitted a proposed tist of by·
proved a funds transfer, new gar- laws for use within the fire depart·
bage service, and several purchases ment for council's review. The by.
at the council's regular meeting on laws, Shank explained, are a
Monday evening at Village Hall.
product of contributions from
By request of Pomeroy Village several fire department members on
Clerk Brenda Morris, the . council the operation of the department.
Council tabled action on the
approved a Y\l31'·end transfer of
$30,000 from the village's general proposal pending review.
fund to the street fund.
Council member Bruce ~eed
Ac!ion on a proposed zoning or- presented ·a. proposal of a commit·,
dinance for the Village of Pomeroy tee of interested council members
was tabled pending review of the who would meet on a quarterly
lengthy document by council mem' . basis with members of Middleport
bers. .
·
Village Council. Reed stated that he
Morris intrOduced a proposal for felt that differences between the
the installation or a trash dumpster I';"O &amp;f?.~PS had, in the pas~ been
and trash service through Manley's all'ed 10 the newspaper, and
stated that he wo~ld like to see the
Trash Hauling at Village Hall.
· Morris expla\~Jed that, at the t';"O ~es working to$ether and
.present time, village personnel .are . discusstng any problems m,person.
~ ~ to. the landfill in West
Increasing problem9'" With adult
Columbia, W.Va., costing the viJ. disturb!)IICe at teen dances at
!age in salaries,: gasoline and time · Locomotion &gt;yere discussed by
spent.
council last mght. Mayor Seyler
Mayor Richard Seyler also reported that two adults (one in his
brought to light that village mid-30's) had beep cited in
vehicles have become stuck at the Mayor's Court for an incident at
landfill on several occasions.
the dance last weekend.
Numerous calls, according 10
Council approved the proposal,
at a cost of $40 per month (based Councilman Tom Werry, are made
on two pick-ups per month), begin· to the Pomeroy Police Deparunent
ning in January. Council anticipates during each dance regarding adults
the new ·service for the village 10 driving around the building, located
afford a considerable savings from on Mechanic Street, and causing
taking the trash to the landfill via security problems there.
village trucks.
In other business Monday night,
Upon the request of Pomeroy CouncUman Shank also pointed out
Police Chief Gerald Rought, that several political campaign
council approved the purchase or . signs remain posted within the vii·
160 pcitice departmertt patches for lage limits, and stated that this was
potice umforms and Jackets, at a 10 vmlatJon of buth a village or·
.cost of $344. In a letter to council, dinancc and the bond agreement
Rought explained that purchasing that each candidate must sign
the patches in such a large quantity before posting campaign signs in
will save the village money, as Pomeroy.
Morris thanked. McPonald's,
p;uches purchased individually cost
$4 each, anjl those · purchased in Plcasers, Kroger, Kelly Snider, Pat
quantity are priced at $2.15 each.
Thoma, Jane Walton and Susan
An air compressor purchase was Sandy for their donations of both .
also approved by the village. The items and time at the village hall
compressor, which wiD allow the Christmas party, which was held on
fjre deparunent to fill its air ianks, Sunday, and described as a "big
was purchased second hand from success".
By BRIAN J , REED
Sentinel News Starr

·aoYs
Dec. 11-Waterford, Ha1111

GIRLS
Die. 2D-Hannan Trace, Awoy

-----BOYS'
SO.UTHERN

SCHEDULES~----MEIGS

Dec. 1-Athens ...................... Joiome
Dec. 4-Belpre .. ·.............. ....... Away
Dec.11-Mlller ................. , .... Home ·
Dec . 14-Vinton County ......... Home
Dec:. 18-AieXAinder .~ ............. Away
Dec. 2~ ~wellston ................. Home
Dec. 28-Logan ..................... Away·
Jan. 4'-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 8-Faderal Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 11-Nelaonville· York ..... .. Away
Jan. 16-8elpre .... ................. Home
Jan. 22-MIIIar ....................... Away
Jan. 25-Vinton County ... : ..... Away
Jan. 29-Aiexander ..... .. ......... Home
Feb. 1-Wellston .................... Away
Feb. 2-Athens ..................... ,Away
Feb. &amp;-Warren ...................... Home
Fab. 8-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb: 16-Nelsonville·York ....... Home

------tGIRLS'
SOUTHERN

.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, December 18, 1990 ·

By GAYLE YOUNG
United Press International
U.S. · officials, fearing Iraq
might Stage a partial pullout of
Kuwait in an effort to shatter the
international coalition opposing
the Invasion', reiterated the
stance that only complete with·
drawal was acceptable.
Speaking to different group s of

MEIGS

Nov. 12-NeiiOnville-York ...... Away
N~. 19-Meigl ..................... Away
Nov. 26""'North Gallla ............ Away
Nov. 29-Hannen Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-EBitl!m ..................... Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern ....... ..... Home
Dec. 1 0-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Dec. 13-$ymms Valley .... ... .. Home
Dec. 17_:W•terford ............... Home
Dec. 20-0ek Hill .. ; ............... Home
Jen. 3:._Nonh Gallla ............... Home
J1n. 10-Hannan Trace .... ...... Home
Ja!l. 14-Melga ....................:.Home
Jan. 16-NeiiOnville·YOf'k....... Home,
Jan, 17-Eastem.................... Away
Jan. 24-Southweetern .......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ................ Away
Jan. 31-Kyger Creek ............. Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hill ....... .............. Awey
Feb . 7-Symmea Valley .......... Aw1y

at

A Multimedia

In~ .

25 Cents

New!M'aper

Baker, Bush demand full Iraqi withdrawal ·

GIRLS

NoV. 27-North Gellia "'""""'Home
Nov. 30-Hannen Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Ealtem .................... : Away
Dec. 7-Southwastern ............ Away
Dec. 8-Paint Valley .............. Convo
Dec: 14-Kyger Creek .... : ....... Home
Dec. 1&amp;~Symme• Valley .. ...... Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill .................. ,AWIY
Dec. 22-Southelstern ...... ..... Horilll
D~. 28-Athenl .................... Away
Jan. 4-North Gallie' ............... Away
Jan. 5-Galllpoll• ............ ....... Away
Jen.11-Haman Trace ........... Away
J1n. 18-Eastem ............. ... .... Home
Jan. 22-Ravenswood ............ Away
J1n. 26-Southweetern .......... Home
. Fab. 1-Kyger CnJ&amp;k ............... Away
Feb. 8-Symmaa Valley .......... Home .
Feb. 12-Warren ......... ........... Away
Feb. 1·6-0ak Hiii .......... ,........ Home

•

EASTERN

Nov. 20~.Miller ...... : ............... Away
Nov. 23-Fadaral Hocking ...... Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek ............ Away
l',!ov. 30-Southwestam ......... Home
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec. 7-Symmes Valley.......... Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia ............ Away
Qec. 16-0ak Hill .................. Home
Dec. 18-Wetlirford ... .. .... ,..... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ............... Home
Jan. 11-Southwestern .......... Away
Jan. 16-Hannan Trace ........... Home
Jan. 18-Southern ..................Away
Jan. 26-Symmes Valley ........ Home
Jan. 26-M iller ...................... Home
Feb. ·1-North Gallia .... : ........ .. Home
Feb. 6-Fiideral Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8- 0ak Hill ......... ............ Away
Feb. 12-Waterford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ........... Away

SCHEDULES~·--------MEIGS

Nov. 19-Southern ................ Home
Nov. 26-Trimble ................... Home
Nov. 29-Vlnton County ........ . Away
Dec. 3-M iller .............·........ : .. Away
Dec. 8-Eastern ..................... Home
Dec. 1 0- Nelsonville· York .. .... Away ,
Dec. 13-Belpra ..................... Home
Dec. 17-Aiexander ............... Homa
Dec. 20-Wellston ................. Away
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 10-Vinton County ......... Home
Jan. 14-Southern ....... .......... Away
Jan. 17- Milllir ...................... Home
Jan. 21-Eastern ...... ........... : .. Away
Jan. 24-NeiiOnville· York ....... Home
Jan. 28-Belpre ..................... Away
Jan. 21-Aiexander ................ Away
Feb. 4-Welllton ..................... Home
Feb. 7-Fadtir~l Hocking ......... Away

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Federai .Hocking ...... Honie
Nov. 26-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-,-Southwestern ........ , Away
·Dec. 3-Southern ...., .............. Away
Dec. 6,-Trimble ..................... Home
Dec. 6-Symmes Valley .. ,........ Home
Dec. 8-Meigs .............. : ........ Away ·
Dec. 10-North Gallia ... : ........ Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............Away
Jan. 3-Kygar Creek ............... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan.1 0-Southwastern ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southem ................. Home
Jan. 21-Meigs ...................... Home
J1n. 24-Symmea Valley ........ Away
Jan. 31-North Gallia.............. Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .... . ~ ...... Home
Feb. 7-0ak Hill ..................... Home ·

0, Mil lEN THE • Tlie Basta• ......,.
idoull Clab or Melli HIP Sdoolspauooed a
adUn tree lor tk Me... ~lllllltY ebllilrea eiiJ'OI.
led Ill tie H. . Start PJ'OII'IIIII· Wldl tbe llelp ol
··the faculty and lltlldellt ~ a total oliOS pain
, or mittens were doDited. shown .h2re, left to
, right, are frout
'I

. f

(

~

row,

Kuwait," Bush told reporters
following a meethig In Washing· .
ton with 28 members of the
coalition.
"I would think at some point he
(Saddam) would realize this
force being arrayed against him
would be devastating," Bush
said. • 'The United Nations said
that he should get out or all
available means will be used
against him."
BakertoldNATOforeignmln·
lsters In Brussels Monday thai
Iraq may withdraw partially .
from Kuwait around the Jan. 15
U.N. deadllne, but said the
alliance should stand firm
·

against partial solutions to the
Persian Gulf crisis .
"Just as I believe he chose to
release hostages for this purpose, I think he may take a
dramatic step on or around Jan.
15. He could withdraw partially,"
Baker said, according to excerpts of his closed- door testim·
ony released by u.s. offiCials.
The NATO foreign ministers
Issued a strongly worded state·
ment reiterating there can be
"no partial solutions" to the gulf
crisis.
·
Baker said he Is still willing to
go to Baghdad to meet face-to·
facewlthSaddam,buthesa!qthe

Iraqi president Is still Intent on Baker and Saddam will still take
trying to undercut the "collective place, despite a dispute .over
will of the international commun· dates.
tty to use force. "
, While Baker delivered his
·Bush said Turkish President warning, Baghdad·based Pales·
Turgut Ozal told him Sunday that tin ian terrorist Abut Abbas
Saddam was misinterpreting the threatened to attack U.S. and
debate on the United States over Western in terests world-wide If
U.S. policy in the gulf.
the multinational force confront"He thinks it means our ing Itaq tried to liberate Kuwait.
country is divided and we cannot
The official Ira qi news agency
go forward with the U.N. resolu- INA said Mohammad Abbas,
llons a ndhelsjust aswrongas he · better kn~wn as Abu Abbas,
can be," Bush told reporters.
secretary-general of the Palest!·.
Bush also said he hoped talks In nian Libera tion Front, · told the
Washington between himself and ·Baghdad Al-Jumhoriya news·
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq paper that American facilities
Aziz and in Baghdad between around the world had been
targeted.

Rains could
become snow

,_

By United .Press International
The National Weather Service
says the rain will end over Ohio
Tuesday night, butthe ral n may
become mixed with snow in the
north before it does.
.
Temperatures will fall into the
30s and the nor thwest corner
may even see some readings In
the upper 20s. .
Rain dominated the weather
scene overnight . A quarter to a
half an inch fell across the north
while three .quarters to an inch
and a half fell elsew here.
Temperatures were well above
normal as warm southerly winds
brought 50-degree readings into
Continued on page 5

IDGH WATER· This compact car was swim·
ming on Thesday morning at Hiland Road near
Pomeroy. High water forced the closing of roads

throughout the county, and halted clasSes in the
Meigs Local Schools. .(Sentinel Photo by David
Harris)

Midwest floods, Northwest windy
By United Press International
Two nasty cold fronts rocketed
across the nation Tuesday, the
first prompting flood warnings
and brtnglng heavy rain to the
Midwest and Northeast and the
second rating Into the Pac!lic
Northwe~ t carrying winds gust·
ing to 60 mph . .
By far the largest of the two
fronts stretched from Louisiana
to New England, ·and brought
showers and thunderstorms with
flashes of Ughtntng to northern
Louisiana while rain spread to
Texas, Oklahoma and
Arkanasas.
The brunt of the front hit
further north. where a flash flood
watch was · in effect for all of

Kentucky as light rain fell on Boston.
already saturated ground and
Across the continent, a cold
forecasters warned of flooding in front moved in off the Pacific
the coal fields in the southeast.
,carrying winds that were clocked
The leading edge of the front
near 60 mph, prompting warn moved rapidly through other
Ings in Washington, Oregon and
Midwest states, Including Ohio;
Idaho.
Indiana and · Michigan, where
High winds knocked tree limbs
light snow mixed with freezing
into power lines in Walla Walla,
dr!.zzle was falling throughout
Wash., causing several fires and
northwest Upper Michigan.
blew dust across Interstate·84 in ·
Further east, flood watches In
southern Idaho, cutting visibll·
effect for western Pennsylvania
ity. Wind also picked up in the
and the northern West VIrginia
Rockies, where high wind warn·
panhandle as up to 3 Inches of
ings were In effect.
rain fell in an hour, causing small
Clear skies covered much of
streams to rise out ofthelr banks.
the Great Plains where temperaIn New England, the front
tures were mild, but showers
caused freezing rain In the hills of from the. large cold front moved
northwest Connectlcu t a nd up to Into the deep South.

· A BEAR·Y MERRY CHRISTMAS .. A
Christmas hear, clouted by Suseu Baker of tbe
Ohio Rl.er Beer Compauy, was recendy used to
rlllse ruudll for die purchue or mittens for Head
Start children IDd to purchase preseuts for
. students at Ca~etou School hy Meigs High
School business students. Kim Burton; center,

l·r, Jeann~_ MeDouald,

~

.:4

Southern will
join coalition
The Southern Local Board of
Education voted to join the Coalition · of Rural and Appalachia
Schools at its meeting Tuesday
night at Southern High School.
The coalition has been organiZed
to work for equal funding for all
schools in Ohio. It was no1ed that
equal fu nding ,legislation will particularly benefit schools such as
Southern where the per pupil sub·
sidy is approximately $600 per year
less than the state average.
.
House Bill 140 .which relates to
student selection of schools and
districts as well as the opportunity
to attend college before completing
high school was disc ussed and tlje
Board approved a plan to get into a
computer program plan. Jodi A.
Harrison was employed as a substitute teacher. Cafeteria food was
discussed and it was -decided that
the price on meat sandwiches will
be increased from 80 cents to $1
beginning in January.
Continued on' page 5

was lhe reclpleut or lhe bear, and is shown bere
as she received the bear from Spring Reed, far •
left, the President of the Business Professionals
of America Club. Also pictured is Sue McGuire,
the BPA Club advisor. The dub consists or
students enroUed ill the vocational business
programs at the school

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