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Ohio

hga 16-The Daily Sentinel

IIG BEND•••.•.Your Locally Owned

LOW~PRICED SUPERMARKET

DL

D

1'/~

Wadn81day, Decambar 19. 1990

Ohio Lottery

HAPPY
HoLIDAYS~
FROM YOUR FRIENDS AT FOODLAND!

Pick-3: 253
Pick-4: 0865
Cards: J·H;
8-C; Q-D; J.S
Lotto: 7, 9,
10, 21, 22, 40
Kicker: 059629

5 days
until
Christmas

To.nlgbt .. .perlods of ra in·
... heavy at times. F rlday ... perlods of raln ... heavy at times.
Breezy and unseasonably
mUd with the high 60 to 65. ·

•
•

Vo1.41, No.17D

LOW
Hl

1 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cel'lts
A Multimedia Inc . Newspap er

Copyrighted 1990

MilK

PREMIUM CHIQUITA

BANANAS

Shevardnadze resigns
as foreign minister

Miracle
Whip
WITH THE PURCHASE OF ·
Maxwell House

WITH COUPON BELOW
•REG •ADC •ELEC. PERK MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

TENDEIBEST
800fo UAN

GOURMET
·GROUND

·at the parish, and tile food used in them comes
from churches of aU denominations, along with
purchases from . tbe Seeond Harvesi program
and tbe Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency.
400 baskets were assembled at the session. (Sen·
tinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

REME!VIBERING OTHERS . - United
Methodists rrom across tbe county, along with
pastors of other denominations joined forces at
the Meigs United Methodist Cooperative Parish
earlier this week to assemble food baskets for the
needy. The food baskets are an annual tradition

unforgiveable. "
MOSCOW (UPI) - Foreign
being a llowed to move agai nst
Presidential spokesman Vltaly the Ideals of peres troika with
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze,
Ignatenko said Shevardnadze little resistance.
architect of Mikhail Gorbachev 's
Indicated to Gorbachev after the
Shevardnadze recalled conserforeign policy that freed Eastern
speech be would stay at the vative attackS on him for "giving
Europe and ended the Cold War,
Foreign Ministry long enough to away Eastern Europe" at July's
resigned Thursday to protest
allow a smooth transition, but 1 28th Communist !;'arty Congress
conservative attacks and warn of
Shevardnadze aide and Foreign and at recent sessions of the
the danger of an "Impending
. Mints try spokesman Vltaly Chur· Supreme Soviet or standing
dictatorship."
kin said the decision to resign . parliament.
Gorbachev condemned the de.
·
was "final. "
"There was not one person
ciSion of his close ally and said he
"In
any
case,
the
political
life
besides
tile chairman who could
had not been consulted before
of
Shevardnadze
will
be
long,"
be
found
who would say this was
Shevardnadz~ ' s surprise an·
Ignatenko told reporters. "He dishonorable, tills Is not the way
nouncement at the Congress of
may occupy any other post."
to act, this Is riot the way things
People's Deputies , which voted
In Washingtonm White House
are done in a civilized govern1,540·52 to ask Shevardnadze to
press secretary Marlin Fltz· ment," Shevardnadze said .
reconsider.
water said there would be no
He said the conservative back"Sue h a step as he took, taken
Immediate from the admlnlstra· lash was continuing almost unimwithout consultation with the
peded, mentioning a publication
president, I personally con- tion comment because "It's not
entirely clear yet" what the by the right-wing Russian nationdemn," Gorbachev said. " Mo·
situation·Is In the Soviet Union, · alist movement Pamyat that
reove r, I will tell you directly
Shevardnadze said he was said "down with the clique of
that.! had reached a point In my
"deeply
hurt" by the personal Gorbachev."
pll\ns where I was ready to
"I say to you democrats, In the ·
attacks
from
critics of his foreign
· recommend comrade Shevard·
broadest
sense of the word, you
policy.
More
Importantly,
he
nadze for vice president.
ran
off,"
he
said. "The reformers
"reaction·
said,
conservative
" ... Now is perhaps the most
ary"
forces
In
the
country
were
difficult time. and to leave now Is
Continued on page 14

Drinking and·driving causes.
.needless tragedies, OHP says
.

.

.

&lt;!Uiother holiday season Is right
·" arou~;~d the ~orner and with that
comes' family gatherings, gift
exchanges and . celebrating.
Sometimes, this celebrating In·
valves drinking or carelessness
and tragedy occurs.
During the month of December
In 1989 there · were three fatal
crashes which killed four people
in Gallla County. In the state of
: Ohio, · 58 people were killed
· during the month of December.
·

Lt. · R.J. Wq.o dford, com·
help a friend by driving him or
mander of the Ga!Uii·Melgs post ..,. her home. ·Most people under the
of the $tate Highway Patrol . diiflul!nc~· of alcohol will Insist
warns of the danger of drinking
they are fine . Become ·Involved
and driving. To put a stop to tlie
and don't take no for an answer,
tragedies that can occur at this
Woodford stresses.
time of the year, troopers are
All the troopers understand no
working· with the emphasis on
one likes to be stopped for a
drunk driving and safety belt
traffic violation. However, the
violations .during the holiday
troopers' goal Is to stop the
season. .
deaths and . injuries that are
Woodford encourages people to
occurring in our community and
not be afraid to step forward and
change attitudes toward traffic
safety.

:Electrical pro,blems may be .cause
[of Bob Evans Sausage Plant fire

,.

By MELINDA POWERS
A fire that did ex tenslve
: damage to the Bob Evans Saus·
age Plant on Texas Road.Friday
was probably caused by .problems with an electrical panel, an
official said Thursday .
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire De·
partment Chief Ray Bush, with
the assistance of Bob Lawless,
fire marshal, pinpointed what he
believed was the start of the fire
In a main electrical panel on the
second floor of the plant.
'We got In there and cleaned
· up theflooranddugdown, and we
believe t~e most probable cause
was electrical, " Bush said
Thursday.
· Bush said be also believed the
fire was accidental and ·was not

set. He estimated the damage to
the plant as "$1 million plus."
The fire started on Dec. 14
around 10 p.m. and took five fire
departments eight hours to get
the blaze under control. More
than 30 local resid ents wereoutof
a job after the fire destroyed ·

several sections of the packaging
plant and more than 75 percent of
the roof area. Three fire fighters
. suffered minor Injuries while
fighting the blaze.
The plant was the only Bob
Evans facility to make smoked
sausage.

Flood warnings in Ohio
By United Press International
The National Weather Service
said Thursday a flood warning
had been Issued for the Upper
Scioto River at ProSpect.
However, flood warnings were
cancelled for the Great Miami
!l.lver at Miamitown, the Hocklng River at EnterprisE! and the
Mahonlng River at Youngstown

and Leavittsburg.
Flood warnings remained In
effect for Wills Creek in Guerrisey Count~ , the LOwer Scioto
River from Circleville to Ports·
mouth and the Hocking River In
Athens County.
At Marietta, the Ohio River
was at 36 feet Thursday morning
and cresting.

THURSDAY MORNING SCENE • This was
tbe scene on the Pomeroy parking lot Thursday
morning around 9:30 a.m. The river bas almost
completely covered the parking lots along the

river. According to a report from the National
Weather Senice In Charleston, W.Va., the river
is e.' pected .to crest early Friday morning around
46 feet. Flood stage in Pomeroy is 46 feel.

River expected to crest on Friday
The Ohio River Ill Pomeroy is Thursday the river was at 44.6 feet.
expected to crest early Friday Flood stage in Pomeroy is 46 .feet
morning near 46 feet, according to Zinn stated that although ram ts
Phil Zinn of the National Weather predicted "for this area it should not
Service in Charleston, W.Va. . have any effect on this latest
Earlier repons stated that the river forecast and that the river should
would crest around 48 or 49 feet. begin and continue to fall early
Zinn, however, stated that the river Friday morning.
According to Barry Gooden, also
will not crest quite as .. high as was
of the National Weather Service in
reported earlier.
Zinn stated that as of 6 a.m. Charleston, W.Va., the reading in

Racine, as of 6 a.m. Thursday, was
41.9 feeL Flood stage for Racine is
38 feet and Gooden stated that the
river should crest arotind I a.m.
Friday between 43 and 44 feet.
Gooden stated that in Gallipolis
the Thursday 6 a.m. reading was at
44.7 feet. Flood stage in Gallipolis
is 50 feet and Gooden staled that ·
the river should crest around 46
·
feet on Friday at I p.m.

County Co1mnission .opens bids
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

EARLY CHRISTMAS GIFT • GTE North
praenled an early Cllrfllma 11ft to the Melp
. , County lllllnaary OD WedHiclay, Ia die form ot
a cbec:k for $500. At tile Melp Coaaty Commls-

Gary Bates, local manager of GTE North; Mary
Lee, represeatlaa the lullrmary; 111d Commissioner · Mannina Rousb. The &amp;itt bas been
earmarked for lbe purchase of aew flarnlture for

, stoners• Oflke for the prueatatlon aa Weclaes-

the faciUty.

·d ay 'ftre, l·r, County Commllsloaer Rich Jooes; ·

'~

Ji l
'

of $3,551.60 was approved by the
commissioners on Wednesday.
Transfers in the amount of 525.97
.The Meigs County Commis· for the Cleric of Courts office and a
sioners opened bids for the plumb· uansfer of $30,922.92 for the DHS
ing portion of the new Department was approved as well.
of Human Services facility at their
A certification of funds from the
regular meeting on Wednesday af. Meigs County Budget Commission
temoon. '
was appt~ted to the Meigs
The apparent low bidder for the .County Emergency Medical Ser·
plumbing work was received from vices budget. in the amount of
G.W. Layton of Marietta, whose $3,050.25. It was agreed that that
base bid for the project was money would be assigned to the
$43,000. The only other bid department's contract services and
received on the project was from C · supplies accounts.
&amp; C Plumbing and Heating of
A· motion allowing County
Athens. That bid was placed in the Auditor Bill Wiclcline to make
· blanket transfers during the year
amount of $54,250.
Action on the bids was tabled end closing-out process was apand the bids were referred to the proved by the commissioners. .
architeCt handling the proj-.ct,
Commissioner Rich Jones an·
Brinn Boyd of Burgess and Niple in nounced that the Meigs Coun1y
Parkersburg, W.Va., for further Courthouse would close at noon on
review.
Monday, December 24 and Mon·
The plumbing hid had to be re· day, December 31 fi!r the holida~.
adverti sed as no bids were received However, Jones wd, the Me~gs
following the first advertisement County 'treaswu's office, the
for bids earlier this fall .
· Meigs ~ounty Auditor's O~C:C·
An intenleparunental budget the Me1gs County CommiiSIOIICill
trarisfer for the budget of the office would be open on December
Common Pleas Court in the amount · !ll so that the offices could com·
plete tbe year-end totals and
'
.
'

ant!

Lalance out the year.
.
Meigs _County Engineer Phil
Robens reponed to the commis·
sioners that no major damage has
been reported to .date to county
roads due to high water in the
county, but some settling has occurred at the site of the new Keno
Bridge.
In addition to that settling,
Robens and County Garage Super·
intendent Ted. Warner told the
commissioners that the high water
has caused another problem for the
county · that of stolen "high water"
signs.
Warner stated y~terday that of
six . signs. posted throughout the
county this week, only two were
.
recovered. ·
Tile commissioners approved a \
· request from Roberts' depanment
to advertise for new equipment for
1991. The department plans to purchase a new wheel loader, a singleaxle dumptruck and a single-axle
flatbed truck.
Also present at the meeting were
Commissioners Manning Roush
and David Koblentz, DHS Director
Michael Swisher, and secretary

Gloria Kloes.

�Thursday, December 20. 1990

u.s. use nuclear weapons in Gulf?___

Would

WASHINGTON -Theagoniz·
•·In Ame rica a bo ut when
_
$1ddam Hussein will have a
11$8ble nuclear weapon must
itrlke the Iraqi leader as jronle.
t'ls own Intelligence people have
t4ld him that there are already
tnore than 400 nuclear weapons
ln the Persian Gulf, and Saddam
.1tdn' t put them there.
: They all belong to the U.S.
Navy.
:·President Bush has not yet
given what js called "nuclear
release authority" . to his commanders in the Gulf, so they_
c;annot use nuclear weapons
Without! consulting him. If nu·
clear weapons a refired, they will
~· fired ·on the president's say-so
aod no one else's. But Bush also
has not renounced the use of
nuclear weapons if the Gulf
stlllemate turns to war. Instead,
8ush has said that the United
States will ·hit Iraq, and hit II
liard,lmplylngeverythlngAmerlea has in Its arsenal. ·
: Reasonable · military strateststs agree that theuseotmiclear

__::B:Ly~la:::.:ck:_:A:..::.n=de:::::..:.r..:.::'SO.:..:.n~and~D::::·a=le=JI;::::an=A~t~ta

weapons in the Middle East Hitler."
· already in the Gulf, and another
would be a dlsastrous d ecIs ion. It
h
From our sources we ave is on the way. Each has approx1·
wouldrobtheUnitedStatesotthe assembledapietureoftheklndof mately 100 nuclear bombs on
moral high ground In future nuclear punch Bush has sent to bOard.
arguments against nuclear pro- the region.
There are at least 84 nuclear
llferatlon to Third World coun-.
Some of our sources complain Tomahawk cruise missiles in the
tries. And one nuclear explosion that since It is standard operat- Gulf on two battleships, four
In the Persian Gulf would Intra- · lng procedure to have nuclear destroyers, six cruisers and five
duce a near-apocalyptic element weapons on aircraft carriers, attack submarines.
In a region that will always be a
those should not be counted In
Miscellaneous nuclear weatinderbox.
any debate about whether the pons and depth bombs on desWilliam Arkin, a military United States has gone too far. troyers and frigates In the Gulf
expert now with Greenpeace, Yet a number of the shlps in the bring the total to more than 400.
ari!Uesln thecurrentlssueofThe region were specificallY dis· When the aircraft carrier
NatiOI\ that If Bush expects to patched to the Persian Gulf for Ranger arrives, . II will bring
wave his nuclear capability in tills crisis and the Pentagon another 100.
(ront of Saddam's nose as a
made the decision to leave the
If that isn't overkill, the United
deterrent, "this would be a · nuclear weapons on them.
·States has about 300 more nudisaster of unimaginable proporTllree aircraft carriers are clear bombs at U.S. bases In
tlons. It Is unacceptable for the
United States to create even the
remotest possibility that nuclear
weapons will be used;"
And If the American nukes are
not there as a deterrent, '.'then we
are foolish to have them In the
area In the first place," Arkin
says, " By their mere presence,
we take grave riskS with a leader ·
the president equates with

Turkey, which borders Iraq.
What that means to Saddam
Hussein's strategy is a question
only he can answer . But the

questionthatremainsforGeorge
Bush
Wlllweapons
he foreswear
·the
useisofthis:
nuclear
ot fire
them If push comes to shove?

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Today Is Thursday, Dec. 20, the 354th day of 1990 with 11 to follow ,
The moori is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter. ·
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include author-decorator Elsie de Wolfe (Lady Mend!) In 1865;
Industrialist Harvey Firestone In 1868; philosopher Susanne. K.
Langer in 1895; nuclear physicist Robert Van de Graaff In 1901;
actress Irene Dunne in 1904; and movie director George Roy Hill
("Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid") in 1922 (age 68).

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The Daily Sentinel

:· CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) ~ Saddam Hussein appears to~ losing the
lJ&amp;ttle to portray himself as a champion of Islam, despite the ·recent
lippolntment of a Shiite Moslem defense minister. .
:: After ordering his tankS Into Kuwait four monlhs ago, the Iraqf
leader made an appeal tor support on the basis of Islamic values and
concern for Islam's two most sacred sites, which are situated In Saudi
Arabia.
;. Reports In some Arab newspapers said the appeal was going so
blldly, the Iraqi leader last week appointed as defense minister Shiite
.,oslem Gen. Saadi Toamma Abbas. This was apparently done to
•ppease the Shiite majority of his own country as well as neighboring
Sjlllte theocracy Iran. Iraq Is ruled by a Sunol Moslem minority.
.. Islamic leaders in neighboring Arab countries and the wider
r.loslem wo~ld have failed to respond to the Iraqi leader's call for a
. Jihad, or holy war, against the West.
-Even Shiite Moslem fundamentalists In Iran, which from 1980 to
191!8 Wllrred with Iraq, have shown no Inclination to support Saddam' s
C1lUse on religious grounds, though the Iranians have condemned the
presence of non-Moslem troops In the gulf region.
,. "The secular and repressive nature of Saddam's Baathlstregime Is
proof that the Iraqi leader Is th.e last person entitled to call for a
Jihad," said a recent commentary on Cairo Radio.
Egyptian and other Arab secular Intellectuals point out that
Islamic principles have never determined Saddam' s foreign policy In
tfie past. Islamic leaders in fact perceive his attempt !o use Islam to
J13·stlfy the invasion of one Moslem Arab stale by another as a flagrant
brfacll of Islamic values.
'In s trlct Islamic terms, Saddam as a secular leader is not entitled to
call for a Jihad. Only an Allm or senior Moslem figure has the
al(thority to do so.
.And the founders of the Baath party- which Saddam subscribes to
...:;were a Christian, Michel Aflaq, and a secularist, Salah ed Din
Bitar.
'
: That Is not to say .that Saddam has not tried In the past to exploit
I~m for his own political ends. During the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, tor
Instance, Saddam defended himself against Iranian accusations of
aOieism by making well-publlcilled visits to ShUte shrines at Najaf
a9" Kerbala, using more Islamic terminology and symbolism in his
SIJ!!!!Ches and buUdlng more mosques.
:But Saddam's own lifestyle contrasts sharply with Islamic tenets,
aeeordlng to Egyptian newspapers.
:The papers say he drinks, enjoys expensive Western suits and cars,
apd, though married for 30 years, has a long-term relationship with
the former wife of the chairman of Iraqi Airways.
In addition, the Baathist regime's lack of legitimacy has pushed
Saddam Into a cult of personality and purges that have also Included
Moslem cleriCs. Saddam ordered the execution in May 1980o!leadlng ·
Ir,aql Shiite cleric Mohammed Baqlr Sadr and members of his family
for alleged Involvement In anti-government activity.
,A number of conservative Islamic . thinkers have condemned
S.ddam for filling Iraqi mosques with pasters and pictures of
himself, poln_tlng out that Islam forbids Images In mosques.
But perhaps Saddam's most spectacular failure has been his
inability to convince even his most ardent supporters of his claim to
be descended from the prophet Mohammad, the founder of Islam.
."His supporters. in Iraq are unlikely to admit It, but Saddam's claim
to:be a lineal descendant of the Prophet and of All, the fourth·Caliph,
and also that he is related to the former Hashemite royal famUy of
Iraq, is not taken very seriously," said one Cairo-based Iraqi
dissident. ·
ln addition to claiming descent from the prophet Mohammad,
Saddam has also identified himself with Iraq's pre-Islamic and pagan
rulers and Is having the ruins of Babylon rebuilt at great exJ)en,se,
with every fourth brick Inscribed with his name.
.
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:as champion of Islam

REG. S249 .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

'

:~Saddam losing battle
:~o portray himseH

I1

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. December 20. 1990

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

&lt;

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�Thursday. Oecember 20, 1990

Pomeloy-Mkklep••ot, Ohio

Page 4 The Daily Se 11iOII

'

Thursday, December 20, 1990

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-In Pro Bowl selections Wednesday,

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Jackson two-sport all-star; Taylor rirSt 10-tirne choice
NEW YORK (UPI) - Bo
Jackson became a two-sport
All-Star and Lawrence Taylor
•• • became the NFL's first 10-tlme
, Pro Bowl pick Wednesday when
• the league announced the rosters
·~ for the Feb. 2 ga me at Honolulu.
•
Jackson, a Los Angeles Raid·
' ... ers running back, will play for
• the AFC squad against New York
• Giants linebacker Taylor's NFC
•• team In the Pro Bowl. The tea ins
: were $elected by voting a monr
• the league's players and
•• coac hes.
•
Jackson, who splits time be·
4 tween the Raiders and baseball's
' Kansas City Royals , was named
• a reserve running back for the
• AFC squad. Jackson has· played
-:: In two All-Star games as an
: outfielder.
•
The amazi ng part of Jackson's
• Pro Bowl selection was that he
~ missed the firs t five games while
• with the Royals. He has only 97
-:, carries with two ga mes remain·
~ lng, buthasgained605yards fora
! 6.2 rushing average. ··
. Taylor was voted a starter at
~ outside linebacker, as he has
"' been every year since he joined
~ the Giants in 1981. Tay lor las t
• year became the seventh player
· selected for nine Pro Bowls. bu t
: none had ever been picked for 10.
~
The AFC East-leading Buffalo
~ Bills placed a . league-high eight

players on the Pro BOwl squad,
Including five starters, The Houston Oilers had six players on the

AFC team.
Tile Clllcago Bears Jed the NFC
with six selections, with the

Giants and two. tim e.Super BOwl
champion San Francisco 49ers
placing five each. Dallas. the

•

~

•'

...~

BACK OF THE YEAR- Colorado runnlnc back Eric Blenlemy,
shown In action In the BuffaiiM)S' victory over Oklahoma Stale
earlier this season, was named this year's UPI Back of the Year.
The 5·7, 195-pound senior was the second-leading rusher In the
nation, finishing 1:2; yards per game behind natloaal champion
.Gerald Hudson of Oklahoma Slate. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

,.~-

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:·.:
•

Transactions

"
...
~:

Baseball
Signed free agenl
pitcher Danny Darwin 10 4-yPar
co nt ract .
Ca1Uomla - Signed infielder
Boston -

•

•
•
•

Donnie Hil l to 1-year contracl .
Los A.n~eles AnnouncPd
pitcher F'ernando Valenzuela and
infielder Mickey Hatcher a ccepted
salary arb It ration; d esig nated
p ltch'er Darren Holmes for
assignr:nent.
Oakland - Named Rick Burleson
hitti ng instructor.
' Pittsburgh - OfferPd arbil ra -.
tilon 1o catcher·Don S lau~ht .
Sa n Dl~o -Signed p!tc her MlkC'
Dunne to 1-yr&gt;a r co ntmC't.
Seatt le - Signed fr(•(' a~L'flt
pitcher Bill Krueger to 1-)'l'ar
contract.
Texas - SignE'd shortstq:~ Jeff
Kunkel to 1-year cont ract.
Toronto - Hi red Bob Didi(&gt;J' as
minor lea~~tue catching instructor.

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of,

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Boston Co llege - Na mrd Jil'nmye Laycock football coach.
North Texas - NamPd Df'nnis
Pa rker football coach .
Football
Atla nta . . :. . Placed wide receiver
Jame-s Milling on Injured n:'serve
and slgnE:'d quartE'rback Gilbert
Renfrce off th e practic E' squad.
Miami - Placro sa fety U ffort
Hobley on in ju !"'E'd resPrve: signed
sa fety Stefon Adam~ .
New York rWLAFI - Na med
Regg ie Wll \la msg£'nf'ral manager.
Hocke)·
Named

A n ~e!PS

Pat
Hickey and Nick Fotiu ro- htoad
coaches and Hickl'y gent-raJ ma nager of New HavE'n of th E' Am erica n
HorkC'V Leaguf',
New· Jersey - SE'nt defE'nseman
Myle-s O'Connor and ldT wing
Zedlno Ciaer to Utica or th&lt;'
American H oCkE'~· L ea~u&lt;' .
St . Louis - Asstgnf:'d righT wln.e:
Steve TuTTl e 10 Peoria ! lll.l of rh e
In ter national Hockey LeaguP.
Los

Detrolt ...... .. ... .. ..... .. l5 9.62:1
2
At lanta .......... ....... . 1111 500 · 5
Cleveland ............ .. ll 14 .144 61\
Indiana .... ..... .... .. .. . 9 16 .360 fll.,S
Charlottl."' ...... ........ .. 814 .364
8

Western Co nference
Midwest Divis ion
Team
W L Pel.
SanAn1 oolo ... ... ...... l6 5 .762
Urah .......... ... .... .. .. 16 8 .667
Houst on ... .. ... ... ... .. .13 11 .5 ~2
Dallas ......... .. .. ........ 714 .333
MlnnE"Sota .. ... ..... ..... 716.304
De nver .. .... ..... ..... ... 5 18 .217
Orlando ...... .... ........ 5 20 .200
Pa cifi c Division
Portland .. .......... ..... 22 2 .917
L.A·. Lakers ........... 14 8 .636
Phoenix .................. 15 7 .682
Co lden State ........ .13JO .565

GB
1!f.i
4~

9
10
12
13

7
fl

8¥.!

L.A . Clippers ....... ... 10 14 .417 12
Seal! I~ ... ............... 8 13 .381 12¥.!
Sacram ento ...... ..... 6 15 .286 14 ¥.!
Wedneto~day's

resulhi

Bos1on 115, Philadelphia 105
Cleveland St L.A . Lakers 74
Det rolt ,105, Chi cago 84
·
Washing1oo l14, lndiana 112 lOT\
New Yo.rk 104. Ml a mi 94
New Jersey liS, L.A . CllppPrs105
San Antoo lo 144, Denver 109
Phoenix 112 , Minnes ota 96

·Tonight's

ga~es

Boston at Charlotte. 7:30p.m .
Utah at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Orlando at Ho uston. 8:30p.m.
Portlana· at Golden StatE-, 10: 30
p.m.
Seattle aT Sacramen1o.lO: JOp.m .
Frklay's J"&amp;mes
Clevela nd at New Jer!ley , 7:30
p.m.
New York at Was hlngron . 8 p.m .
Philadelphia at Miami. 7: .1 0p.m .

Atlanta at Ot&gt;troit. 8 p.m.
Char loll&lt;' at Indiana. 7:30p.m .
L.A . Lakers at Chh:a,::u. 8 p.m.
Mllwauke r at Dallas, 8:30p.m .
San Antooloat Ph~nlx. 9: 30 p.m.
Po rtland at L .A . Clippers. 10 :.10
p.m .

Bieniemy ·honored by·UPI
By JOHN HENDEL
UPI SportS Writer
Eric Blenlemy, who battled
one of the country's toughest
schedules to finish within 14
yards of the national rushing
title, was named Wednesday as
United Press International's
Back of the Year.
Blenlemy was the overwhelm·
ing choice of a panel of UPI
sports writers from across the
country. The only other player to
earn mention was Brigham
Young quarterback Ty Detmer,
the Reisman Trophy winner·who
was named UPI's Player of the
Year earlier this week.
Blenlemy will complete his
Colorado career Jan . 1 when the
top-ranked Buffaloes face No. 6
Notre Dame In the Orange Bowl.
He owns 15 school records,
including rushing y~rds In .a
season (1,6281. career rushing
yards (3,9401 and consecutive
100-yard games (8). He averaged
98.5 yards rushing over his 40
games for Colorado.
He averaged aColorado record
148.0 rushing yards a game this
season, coming within 1.27 yards
a game of national rushing
.champion Gerald Hudson of
Oklahoma State.
A.5-foot· 7, 195-pound firebrand ,
· Bienlemy Impressed coaches
with: his competitive nature. He

was a runaway selection or Big
Eight Conference coaches when
tlley were asked which player
they would most like to start a
program.
He also came within one vote of
earning unanimous acclaim as
the Big Eight Offensive Player of
the Year.
' 'All season long be's been our
bread-alid·bu tter guy," Colorado
head coach Bill McCarmey said. ·
"He's just a real gritty guy. He
competes hard every tlrne. with
or without tile ball. He's a real
special competitor, one ~that you
rarely get to coach."
Earlier this season, the Buffaloes . coach said B!eniemy Is
"such a fiery, competitive guy.
He always gets everyone excited.
He'.s the kind ol guy an o!fenslve
lineman will block for because
he's got the same temperament
that they do. He would prefer to
run Inside the tackles rather than
outside. Of course, that's a
special kid who does that.

New York Jets and Seattle
placed none.
San Francisco's Joe Montana
and Houston's Warren Moon
were selected as the starHng
quarterbacks. Montana wll! be
joined In the NFC backfield by
Detroit's Barry Sanders and
Neal Anderson of Chicago.
Jerry Rice of the 49ers and
Atlanta 's Andre Rison are the
NFC's starting wide receivers
and Philadelphia's Keith Jack·
son Is the tight end.
The starting AFC backs are
Thurman Thomas of Buffalo and
Marlon Butts of San Diego.
Buffalo's Andre Reed and San
Diego's Anthony Miller and Cln·
clnn.ati tight end Rodney Holman
are also starters.
Guard Mark BOrtz and center
Jay Hilgenberg of Chicago wll!
start on the NFC's offensive line,
along with tackles Jim Lac hey of
Washington and Jackie Slater of
the . J,os Angele!i Rams and
Minnesota guard Randall
McDaniel.
Houston guards Bruce Mat thews and Mike Munchak were
voted starters on the AFC offen·
sive line. The tackles were
Anthony Munoz of Cincinnati and
Bruce Armstrong of New Eng·
land and Kent Hull of Buffalo was
the center.
Minnesota placed three de fen·
sive starters on the NFC team end Chris Do Ieman, safety JQey
· Browner and corne.r back .Carl
Lee - a former Marshall University standout. The other NFC
defensive starters were end
Reggie White aile tac kle Jerome
Brown of Philadelphia, outside
linebacker Charles Haley and
safety Ronnie Lott of San Francisco, Inside llnel:)ackers Mike
Singletary of Chicago and
Pepper Johnson of the Giants and
Washington cornerback Darrell
Green.

The NFC specialists were
kicker Morten Andersen of New
Orleans, punter Sean Landeta
and cover man Reyna Thompson
or the Giants and Detroit kick
returner Mel Gray.
The AFC specialists were
Kansas City kicker Nick Lowery,
punter Rohn Stark and return
man Clarence Verdin of Indianapolls and Buffalo . cover rnan
Steve Tasker.
The NFC offensive reserves
were Philadelphia quarterback
Randall Cunningham, rilnning
backs Earnest Byner of Washington and Johnny Johnson of
Phoenix, wide receivers Sterling
Sharpe of Green Ba~ and Gary
Clark of Washington, Minnesota
tight end Steve Jordan, .Detr!)lt
tackle Lomas Brown, San Francisco guard Guy Mcintyre and
Giants center Bart Oates.
The NFC defensive backups
are Chicago end Richard Dent,
Detroit tackle Jerry .Ball, New
Or.leans linebackers Pat Swilling
and · Vaughan Johnson, Tampa
Bay cornerback Wayne lladdlx
and Chicago safety Mark
Carrier.
The AFC offensive reserves
were Buffalo quarterback Jim
Kelly, running backs Jackson
and Denver's Bobby Humphrey,
Houston wide receivers Drew
Hill and Ernest Givens, Miami
tight end Ferrell Edmunds, Ml·
a mi tackle Richmond Webb,
Raiders guard Steve Wisniewski
and Raiders center Don
Mosebar.
The AFC defensive backups
were end Jeff Cross of Miami,
Houston tackle Ray Childress,
linebackers Cornelius Bennett of
Buffalo and David Little of
Pittsburgh, Kansas City cornerback Kevin Ross and Denver
safety Dennis Smith.
' Johnson , Carrier and Webb are
rookies.

US SPRINT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
NOTICE OF RATE CHANGE
Notice Is hereby given that US Sprint Communications Company limited
Partnership (US Sprint) will file tariff revisions wilh the PUblic Udlilles
Commission of 011io to change SPRINT ServiCe (MTS) per-minute usage rates,
eliminate Volume Discount, increase the Directory Assistance charge from
fifty to sixty cents. and increase the FONCARD surcharge from fifty-five to liighty
cents.
The cllange in SPRINT Service (MTS) rates and lhe Volume Discount schedule
results in an overall decrease to the average customer 'of less than one (1)
percent However. some subscribers may e•penence an increase in their
SPRINT Service (MTS) rates depending upon their total monthly usage and
the lime of day when their usege occurs. Subscribers will continue to receive
SPRINT Servtce (MTS) Volume Discounts on their interstate usage, per US
Sprint's F.C.C. Tariff No. 1. The proposed changes are scheduled to beCome
effective January 1, 1991.
.
The increase in the FONCARD surcharge from fifty-five to eighty cents is
scheduled to become effeclive February 1. 1991.
·
US Sprint thanks you for your continued patronage and r'"'ains committed
to our promise to provide the highest quality long distance
service at the best overall price.
If you have questions regarding these changes, pleaae contact Cuatomer
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In the NHL ...
Wal e&amp; Conferenc e
Patrlck Division
Team
W L T Pts. GF GA
N.Y. Ran~er s ...... 20 12 5 -151&lt;11 113
Philadelphia ...... . 19 16 .1 -11 127 122
New Jer9£'y ........ . 17 U 5 .191:1P; 120
Washinglon ......... 1 81~ 0 3fi ll9 11J
Piltshull'!h ........ .. 16 16 3 35146 132
N.Y. Islanders .... 1116 ~ 26 89 lU
/\dams Dl,..lslon
Bo s r o~ ....... .... .. .. . l R 11141115109

MontreaJ. .... .. .. .... 1 6lfi~ .16112 1H
Ha rtford ...... ...... . 14 16 4 32 97 113
Buffalo .............. . 11 1~ 7 29 102 111
QuebE'C ....
. ... R 21 7 2310 1 1 5 ~

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In the NBA...
Euirrn Conffnnce
AilanUc Dlvlslon
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W L Pl:l GB
Boston ................ .... 20 4 .833 Philadelphia ........ ... 16 8 .666 4
New York .......... .. ..11 12 ..a78 BYJ
Nf"W Jersey ... .. ....... 914 .391 1011.1
Washington .. .......... 8 15 .348 11\\
Miami.. ....... ........ ... 518 .217 14\\
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**CHICAGO ........................... 23
TAMPA BAY ...... ,............... ...... ......... ..... .... ... ........................... ... ........................ .. .. 13
IIIIi,. mode life mi.,.bla for Bucs' QB Vinny Testa-de in earlier match-up in Tampa, int•cepting him
6 timea. Chic-uo rolling to 28·8 win •.. Beers pld NFC Central lead.

At The End

of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2556

HOUSTON ................... .. ........ 30 **CINCINNATI ....................... 27

Pomeroy, Ohio

In October. 011• QB Warren Moon buried Bengalo with career-high 6 TO - · completing 21 Df 33
for 389 verda, Houoton winning 48-17 ... Oilers scored on 7 s1raight po-uiono.
Playing S .D. in November. Chiefs not only broke 6-game loling 11raek vo. Chargers, buucored fil'lt TOo
In four weokl. beating S.D. 27-10 ... K.C. Bany Wood ruohed for 90 yardo. ·

NEW YORK GIANTS .............. 20 **PHOENIX ................... ......... 13

4b 1 S. Third

Cardo gave Giants""'"' Df their iives in earlier meeting in N.Y., Matt Bahr kicking 40-yard FG with no

time left. Glontl winning 20.19. , .Phoenix led 19·10 in 4th quartor.
In September, Jato played one of bell games ofleaaon, drubbing Patrlot137-13, their moot fop·
oidad win olnca 1988. . .QB Ken O'Brien compiled 19 of 29 paueo for 282 yards.

**PHILADELPHIA ................... 24 DALLAS ................................. 17
In Dall811n Octob•r. Eagl• rallied to win hair-raiser from Cowboy• 21·20. scoring TO In fln•l44
HCond•. QB R•nclall Cunningham lading Eagl11 on 13-play. 86-yard drive .
.

**PITTSBURGH .......... ............ 26 CLEVELAND .......................... 13

PAT HILL
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KANSAS CITY ...... , ........... , .... 23 **SAN DIEG0 ........................ 20

**NEW YORK JETS ................ 27 NEW ENGLAND ..................... 17

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In opening M9nd•y niter in September, S•lntoled 49ero 1 2·10 on four FGo with 1:30 left in
game ... QI Joe Montana than completed thr• PIIIHI to oet up FG, S.F . winning 1~·12 .

Ridenour

••sEATTLE ..................... .-.....•• 20 DENVER . ." ........................ :..... 14

In 111 meeting thia ....on. taamo rolled up 791 net yardo. Ill pointe. Broncoa t•klnu edvantege
of 2 BHhliWII fumble• - both leodlnu to TDa - two · mlaaed FGa 10 win In OT, 34·31 ..

S~pply

E•rller, QB Don Mejkowakl r•llled Peckere for two 4th quertar TD•. Uon• mlulnu FO In fln•l 3
oecondo (4th mlul), G. B. beating Detroit 24·21 , •• Majkowakl peued for 288 yerdo.

CHESTER, OHIO
915·3301

R•lcler•. VIII•• met In' Super Bowl XI In 11178.L. A. (O•kl•nd) winning Ita firll NFL tltl• 32-14 ...
R•ldero domlneted Mlnneoote, QB Kenny Stebl•r outduolllnu Viko'o Fron Tarkenton.

ISet.) .. GREEN BAY .............. 24 DETROIT ............................... 23
**MINNES~TI\ ....................... 16 L.A. RAIDEFiS ........................ 13

WASHINGTON ..................... :.2a **INDIANAPOLIS ................... 17 .
Co1t1 hold 111·1 eerllo IHd over Redokln•, winning 9 llt'lllght from 1110 to 1989. Weahlngton
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14. Gateway Conferenoo .............................................. 63.5
15. Otlio Valley Coni""'""' .......................................... 61.1
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6- Sau-l Coni""'""' ................,............................ 87.4
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8- Big Sky Confonnt:e ............... ..... ....... .. ................ 69.1
9- Souflland Conforenco .............................................. 68.9
10- Mici-America Conference ......................................... 66.8

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Ch!cago ............. 241 1 2 50125 93
St. Louis.... ..... 20 9 &lt;I 44 11~ 90
Oer roil.. .............. 1i 13 4 38128 124
Minnesota ........... 10 19 6 26101 116
Toroot o................ 9 25 2 20 96146

Prescription
Shop

FB F~!n~~!~a~ank

;. .,

..
..-..

Football '90!
Catch All The
Excitement! !

\

�Page 6 The Baily Sentinel

Thursday. December 20, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, December 20, 1990

.

I

lf.aff-kaff!

~na,

Syracuse in
.?\)oha Bowl Tuesday
I

By Maj. Amos 8 Hoople
Wizard of Odds

wheels came off as they lost three of
their last four. Indiana played a rugged Big Ten schedule, reaching their
· Egad, friends! The ·Blockbuster peak with a 27-27 tie against Ohio
Bowl will really be the "blockbuster" State. Auburn gets the Hoople nnd
oJ. the early ·round of bowl games in here, 24-22.
c'!)lege football. It matches Florid?.
HOLIDA.Y BOWL: Brigbam You.ag
State and Penn· State. Here's the (10-Z) vs. Te.-as A&amp;M(8-3-I). San DierUbdOWn On the December bowl go, Friday, Dec. 29, 7:30 p.m. EST,
g_al)les:
ESPN.
· ALOHA. BOWL: Arizona (1·1) vs.
First, quarterback Ty Detmer beSytacuse (6-4-2). Honolulu, Tuesday, came the first BYU star ever to win
~- 25, 3:30p.m. EST, ABC-TV.
the He1sman Trophy. Hours later, the
;-Arizona's Wildcats finished in the Hawaii Rainbows ended the Cougars'
ll)lildle of the Pac-10 standings. The national title hopes.with a stupendous
hiShlight of their season was a 30.26 59-28 upset. Texas A&amp;M, third place
Wlll over Southern Cal. Syracuse
finisher in the SWC, missed on a twoplayed a much tougher schedule, in· point conversion in its 28-27 loss to
clilding four bowl teams. So, look for league champ Texas. Look for an lipQ!l.Marvin Graves and receiver Rob set here -with the Aggies beating fa·
,
ql~~nter to lead the Orangemen_. to a vored BYU, 34-31.
2~1 victory.
.
FRT!!EDOM BOWL: Oregon (6-3) vs:
:l;IBERTY BOWL: Obio State (1-3-1)
~Air Force (6-5), Mempbis, Tenn.,
~rsday, Dec. 27, 8 p.m. EST, ESPN.

Colorado State (6·1), Amlbeim; Calif:,
Sacomtu~TVy, ~- Z9, 8 p.m. ES
, T, Ray-

Earle Bruce's Colorado State Rams
finished in tbe No. 2 spot in the WAC,
losing only to champ BYU. Oregon, of
the Pac-10·, shocked Brigham Young
orir the service academies, Army early in the year with an easy 32-16
aDd Navy. However, the USAF is no victory. We think Oregon is going to
m4tch for Ohio State. Give it to the be shocked this time as the Rams sink
the Ducks - it's Colorado State, 30Bilcks. 31-20.
I )LL-A.MERICA.N BOWL: Nortb 20.
ttlhio State's Buckeyes just missed
g!J!ng to the Rose Bowl as the Big Ten
rePr-esentative. Air Force won the
~mander's Trophy with victories

dlrolina State (6-5) vs. Soutbern Missli.ippi (8-3), Birmingbam, Ala., Fritliy, Dec. Z8, 7:30p.m. EST, ESPN.

:southern Miss handed Louisville (9·
t..J.) its lone defeat, 2f&gt;-13. They also
Jlta! SEC powers Alabama and Aubwrn. Dick Sheridan_'s Wolfpack .will
be the Golden Eagles' ninth victim:
Make it Southern Mississippi, 24-14.

JOHN /L4NCOCK BOWL: Soutbern
California (8·3·1) vs. Miclligu State
(7-3-1), El Paso, Te&gt;ras, Monday, Dec.
31, Z:30 p.m. EST, CBS-TV.

have been waiting for- the chance to break the cycle of lose two, win
two.
&gt;
The Sues' scoring firm of Tackett &amp; Stout is an odds-on favorite to
continue Its net-burning ways, which generally Includes cranking out
40 or more points- a winning formula. Only three times has the pair
failed to do so, and each time North Gallla lost.
v 11 Pi
A 1 s
ga nst ymmes a ey, rate center Shane Smith Is unlikely to
have.the personal season-high 17 points he had against Southwestern
last Saturday, especially with the muscular Carl Robinson to contend
with In the post. But !!both Smiths- Dar.ln as well as Shane- put the
required muscle on Robinson, that will place the offensive burden on
VIking guard Andy Lester andfrontman Chad Renfroe.
To his credit, Lester, a 6-0 junior, has scored In double figures In
Valley's last three games, but Renfroe, a 6-2 senior, has connected lor
doubleflgurestwicethls season-16agalnstRacelandand13agalrist
Southwestern. With these statistics in mind, it is little wonder why
Symmes has dropped Its last four games after coming strong out of
the gate with three straight wins.
Kyrer Creek vs. Southwestern _ Somebody's disappointment is
_going to end, and somebody's trail of tears will get just a little longer.

WhO wllllt be?
b .
In this battle of the cellar-dwellers, Southwestern as more than
·just a home-court advantage, with Its beefier frontcourt of senior
center John Sites (6-1) and veteran forwards Chris Metzger and
Richard Haney (both 6-2) primed and ready to take charge against a
Kyger Creek front line featuring center Jamie Bush (G-2, sr.) and
forwards Shane Swisher (6-1, sr.) and Bryan Hall (5-10, so.) .
The backcourt should also make the difference for the Highlanders. ,
d th
h h
with Aamn McCarty, a 6-0 sophomore d!amon 1n e roug t at only
needs experience to put his physical ability to maximal use, at point
guard. McCarty will have an advantage over either Sean Denney
(5-10, sr.) or Marc VIllanueva (5-9, jr.), and he ha~ an excellent :
chance to surpass the 18 points he had In last Saturday s blowout loss ·
to North Gallla.
Southwestern has lost its last seven games, da)ing ba~k to last
year's tournament exit at the hands of Green Local, While Kyger
Creek's 20-game losing streak, if not halted soon, will begin to ~lex Its
Increased marquee value (translated: packed houses that don t want
to miss It when the streak finally ends) throughout the
Addison-Cheshire area .

In the NHL Wednesday night,

.

Graham's clutch goal .gives Chicago 3-2 win
only team in the NHL to not play
a .tie this season .
But Steve Larmer presented
the &lt;;lpportunlty this time, stealIng an errant pass in the
Washington zone. He dished off to
Graham, who moved straight In
on Beaupre and beat him with a
short wrist shot after faking a
shot with hts backhand.
The goal, Graham's lOth of the
season, came just 28 seconds
after Chicago center Jeremy
Roenick was whistled off for
boardlmz.
"1 missed on a couple good
opportunities earlier in the
game, 11nd I was fortunate
enough to get another one,"
Graham said.
"The ftrst thing you want to do
is'to kill the penalty off," he said.
"You don't want to take a chance
and give up an opportunity,
especially when you're a man
down. But, If the opportunity Is
there ... we !Ike to jump on lt."
Capitals head coach Terry
Murray, who has seen his team
lose four of Its last five outings,
was very displeased with opportunities lost.
"A stupid play. Just a stupid
giveaway," Murray said. "A
lack of Intensity is exactly what
we talked abQut this afternoon at
our team meeting. When we get

By United Press International
. A blue-collar work ethic is
paying off for Chicago Blackhawks captalll Dirk Graham.
Graham's ·short-banded goal
with 4:25 remainlrig Wednesday
night lifted his league-leading
team to a 3-2 triumph over the
Washington Capitals. The shorthanded tally was Graham's
·fourth of the season. He bad 10 In
1988-89 and three In an injuryplagued 1989-90 campaign.
"He just works so hard," said
Washington goalie Don Beaupre,
victimized f9r the game-winner
this time after a strong performance himself. "He earns It, You
want to lead by example, and
he's one of the players that does.
He's been like that as long as I've
known. him. •'
The teams played to a 2-2 draw
for two and a half periods until
Washington defenseman Bob
Rouse cut Bob McGill with a
high-stick ~th 11:18 remaining,
giving Chicago a five-minute
. power play. The Blackbawks
began to pressure Beaupre, but a
hooking penalty to the B)ackhawks' Wayne Presley put the
teams back at even strength.
For a while, It appeared as if
the Capitals might snap their
club record of 35 straight games
without a tie. They are still the

Tyson to fight
Ruddock in March
By DAVE RAFFO
,J
UPI Sports Writer
· NEW YORK (UP!) - Mike
Tyson Tuesday predicted his
March 18 fight against secondranked Razor Ruddock will be
easier than people think.
Tyson will risk his No. 1
h
eavywe1ght rating at the Mlrage in Las Vegas, Nev., in the
first bout of his new deal with
Showtlme Event Television, a
pay-per-view arm of the Showtime cable network.
The choice of Ruuddoek as an
opponent is surprising since the
12-rounder will be .a non-title
bout. As No.1 contender, former
champion Tyson Is In line to meet
the winner of the April 19
Evander Holyfield-George Fore-

This is another matchup of excellent teams. Both played rugged schedules. Against common . opponents:
Southern Cal's Trojans defeated Syracuse, 34-16, and lost to Notre Dame,
;BLOCKBUSTER BOWL: Florida 10-6; Michigan State tied Syracuse, · man title fight.
Tyson co old have fought a
State (9-2) vs. Penn Stilte(I·Z), Miflmi, 23-23, and lost to N.D., 20.19 _In a close
lightly regarded foe or he could
/tiday, Dec. 28, 8 p.m. EST, Raycom- one, we're calling it for USC, 38-33.
COPPER BOWL: Wyoming(9-3) vs. have waited for his champlon~
:Here are two evenly-matched Ca/iforais (6-4-1). Tucson, Ariz., Mon· ship shot. But he said Ruddock Is
te(ins with super coaches. In 25 years day, Dec. 31, !i p.m. EST, TBS.
not much of a risk.
a( Penn State, Joe Paterno is 229-59·
California may be the ~st 6-4-1
"He's a .good fighter," Tyson
3. His bowl record is a gaudy 13-6-1. team in the country. Two of its four said at a news conference. ''I saw
Bobby Bowden of FSU has 204 wins in defeats were to highly-regarded him have some impressive perhis.career, second only to Paterno as teams: Washington and Miami. The formances . But the fight's not
!lie-biggest winner among active Divi- Golden Bears also tied Southern Cal. going to be as hard as everyone
sion I-A coaches. In friendly Florida, Wyoming's Cowboys are going to thinks It Is. I feel extremely
we-look lor the Seminoles to prevail: have a hard time keeping the Bears
fid t bo t · in ..
FJoridaState, 34-27.
.
out of the end zone. Give it to Califor- con en a u wmn g.
Holyfield, who won the title
-PEACH BOWL: Auburn (7'3-1) vs. nia, 31-22.
T4diana (6·4·1), Atlanta, Saturday,
Loyal followers of the Hoople Fore·
Dt!t. 29, 12:30.p.m. ES7', ABC-TV.
cast will be pleased to know their faPat Dye's Auburn Tigers had vorite forecaster had another great
s~ed near the top of the ratings with year. Our record: 514-177-16 for a very, ·
sill Wins and a tie with Tennessee in very satisfying .744 average. Hart~r first seven starts. Then the
rumph!
'

an opportunity late in the game
- same thing against the New
York Rangers - when we got a
power play and intensity drops
offlikethls. There'snoexcusefor
that kind of play whatsoever."
Chicago has won four of its last
five games and now has 50 points
with three games left until the
halfway point.
•'It's nice to get to that plateau ,
but we set our goals a lot higher,"
Graham said.
_
Soviet Oimitri Khristich made
his NHL debut for Washington,
two days after being called up
from Baltimore. Khristlch,
signed away from the Soviet club
Sokol Kiev on Dec. 11, had two
good scoring chances in the
opening period but failed to cash

ln.
"
Elsewhere, Montreal and Quebec tied 1-1 and Toronto topped
the N.Y. Rangers 4-1.
Canadlens I, Nontlques 1
At Montreal, Shayne Corson ·
scored late In the third period to
lift Montreal to a 1-1 tie. JoeSaklc
scored midway through the second period for Quebec, collecting his 22nd goal of the season.
Maple Leafs 4, Rangers 1
At New York, Aaron Broten
scored twice to lead the last- ·
place Maple Leafs to a 4-1 victory
over the New York Rangers. The
loss snapped a three-game winning streak for the lackluster
Rangers, who were taunted
throughout the game by their
irate fans .

.c

SVAC standings
(Overall)
TEAM
W L
Hannan Trace ..... 6 0
·Eastern ............... 6 3
Southerri ... ........... 5 2
North Gallia ....... .4 4
Symmes Valley ... 3 4
Oall Hill ..............3 5
Southwestern ....... 0 6
Kyger Creek ........ 0 7

PF
476
610
512
639
385

PA
304
623
428
656

405

551 567
325 442
391 521

Oak Hill .............. 4 2 351
North Gallia .... .... 4 2 349
Hannan Trace ..... 4 2 326
Eastern ............... 3 3 284
Symmes Valley ... 2 4 277
Kyger Creek ........ 1 5 238
Southwestern ....... o 6 180
TOTALS ............. 24 ~ 2348

305
257

256317
343 .
324 .
320
2348_•

Tonight's flnW
Hannan Trace vs. South Point
at South Point Holiday Tournament, 8:45 p.m.
Friday's action
Thursday's Hannan Tra~e­
South Point loser to play consolation game vs. Thursday's
Chesapeake-Coal Grove loser at
7 p.m., with Thursday's winners
to play title game at 8:45 p.m.;
also, North Gallla at Symmes
Valley, Southern at Oak-Hill and Kyger Creek at' Southwestern.
Saturday's game
Ross Southeastern at Southern

Federal Reserve Board has
"Byspringlthlnkthoseeffects
strengthened Its prescription of will accumulate,". said Lyle
easier credit to cure what ails the Gramley, chief economlstfor the
U.S. economy, lowering two key Mortgage Bankers Association
Interest rates In two days, but the of America. "My feeling is It's
patient Isn't going to respond going to be over somP.tlme by the
overnight.
mlddleofnextyear."
The economists cautloried that
Somewhat more cautious was
. recovery !rom what just about Dana Johnson, market analysis
everyonebutFedChalrmanAlan cbletlortheFirstNatlonalBank
Greenspan and the White House of · Chicago's capital markets
Is calling a recession depends on group.
· ,
.
whether there Is war, peace or
"You're not likely to have any
stalemate In the Persian GuU. · sense of ImproVing stability In
GuU uncertainties aside,
the economy until spring at the
though, economists surveyed earliest," he said. "At this point,
generally !!greed that a con- we'd like to see the rate of
tlnued lowering of the U.S. descent slow, and we haven't
Interest rate structure will spark even seen that yet. "
or promote a renaissance of
The economists said the Fed's
· American economic expansion much-hailed 0.5 percentage point
by mld-1991.
discount rate cut Tuesday was
Typically, economic rec:Overy largely a band-holding gesture,
Is led by housing, after construe- ·and that Wednesday's lowering
lion and sales
_. . are prompted by of ~he key Fed funds rate will be
lower lending rates, and C011$U· repeated In early 1991.
mer spending·.
"Unless there's a remarkable
But wltb many u.s. regions change for the better, this easing
.sitting on a glut of housing and process Is going to continue,"
. office space, an(! con9umers Johnson said.
overloaded with personal debt,
The Fed;s cut In Its funds rate,
tbe recovery this time Is more a ·bellwether Interest rate
llkelytobeproducedbyexports, charged on loans between rewith Industry gearing up and serve system banks, brought 11

percent-1.25percentagepotnts
below where it stood a year ago.
The last Fed funds easing took
place just 12 days before, on Dec.
7, meaning the central bank is
speeding the pace of credit·
loosening, if not Increasing the
size of the 'increments by which It
has been easing.
The Fed furujs rate reduction
came less than 24 hours after a
morale- boosting R!!serve Board
announcement that It was lower!ng the official discount rate to6.5
percent from 7 percent - the
first such cut In four years.
Most U.S. banks haven't yet
responded to the Fed moves by
cutting their prime lending rates·
to which many consumer loans
are flxed. But analysts see this as
inevitable the more the central
bank pursues the "Big Easy."

uS
0

o

0

i}

interest rates aren't !he only reducing consumers' monthly
requirement for turning the payments on mortgages -ad juseconomy around. Continued de- table or refinanced flxed- home
clines In world oU prices and a equity loans and Installment
U.S. expo~:t surge fueled by the debt.
weak doUar could be crucial too.
"It's a positive effect," the
"II we were dependent on Washington-based economist
interest rates and Interest rates said. "Not all of It occurs right
alone, I would not be as confident away (but) someofltbeglns very
as •I am that tbls economy Is soon."
going to turn around very soon,"
Yet First Interstate· Bank
commented Lyll) Gramley, chief Corp. chief economist Jerry
economist of . tbe Mortgage · Jordan says interest rates taken
Bankers Association of America, at face value tell only half the
based In Washington, D.C.
Favorable resolution of the
Mldeastcrisls "lsgolngtohavea
verylmportantsalutarye!fecton
consumer confidence," said
Gramley. That could lead to a
surge In purchases of housing
and big-ticket consumer Items.
In a favorable enVironment
like that, he said, lower Interest

·
NEW YORK (UPI) '- Overall world's largest oil-consuming
U.S. oil demand dropped· 2.6 ·nation and tile No.2 aU producer
percent ·In November from yearafter the Soviet Union.
ago levels In face of higher fuel
Demand for most major petroprices and the slowing economy,
leum products, such as gasoline
the Am,erlcan Petroleum Insti·
and'bome-heatlngoll,declinedln
tute said Wednesday.
November, the oil Industry trade
The United States Is the group said In Its monthly report,
but deliveries of kerosene jet fuel
reached record levels for this
time of year.
Domestic crude production
slipped 6 percent to 7.08 million
barrels a day In No~ml!er fr.om
7.53 million barrels a day In
November 1989, partially reflectthe discount rate, the Fed recently moved to lower the lnter- Ing a slowdown In output from
es t rates It charges on Interbank Alaska's North Slope caused by
loans. That decision was also stormy weather at the Port of
seen as the Fed signaling its Valdez.
approval of the agreement on
Imports of crude and petrocutting the size of the federal
leum products continued to debudget deficit reached earlier cline in November because of
this fall.
weak demand and adequate
The Fed bas eased its Federal
domestic 'supplies.
funds rate at least four times in
~;"ecent months.

First National Bank of Chicago
cuts prime lending rate to 9.5%
. . NEW . YORK (UPI) - First
National Bank of Chicago Thurs·
.day cut its prime lending rate to
9.5 percent from 10 percent for Its
most creditworthy commercial
clients.
The move came two days after
tbe Federal Reserve Board lowered Its benchmark discount
Interest rate to 6.5 percent from 7
percent, apparently In an effort
to spur the nation's sagging
economy.
· Tlie discount rate, the rate the
Fed charges on _loans to financial
lll$tltutlons, Is considered a symbolic tool of monetary policy that
·serves as the. central bank's
primary indicator of credit
'conditions.
Southwest Bank of St. Louis,
frequently a leader In reducing
' the prime lending rate an,nounced on Friday, Dec. 7, it
,trimmed the benchmark for
commercial and consumer loans
:to 9.75 percent !rani 10 percent.

'

..

.

Since then, the Federal ~­
serve has lowered the discount
rate and Its key Federal funds
rate, which banks charge each
other for the short-term use of
reserve funds and serves as a
building block for other rates.
While the Fed bas eased credit
several times In 1990, banks have
not kept pace on the prime,
analysts said.
.
As a prelude to the lowering of

come down, money market condltlons are just starting to loosen
up.
' 'What we've had so far Is
lower Interest rates reflecting an
Intent to ease," Jordan said.
"Thelrlntenthasbeentoeaseup,
but because they were playing
catch-up to 'the market, It wasn't
working."
"I don't want (Fed officials) to
tromp on the accelerator," Jardan said. "I just want them to get
their foot off the brake."

d emand drops
·· ·

.

.

100-LIGHT INDOOR/OUTDOOR CHASING &amp; MUSIC
CHRISTMAS LIGHT SETS
· Testiog of this product has s_
hown some sets may be defective,
· allowing the musiC and speed contro!.bbx to overheat craaMg
a potanti!illira hazarc:t
·
If you purchased a 1OO·,Iight sat with a music control box from ourstore. you should:
1. Diaconnect ~IMMEDIATELY.
2. Return ~to any Big LatiiOdd Lots store for an
exchange or relund
Service Desk for details)

&lt;-or

Contact the manufiCIUrer at 1-800-245-5519

.

.
Southwest's cut was matched
'by Mamifil.cturers &amp; Traders
Bank of Buffalo, N.Y., a linlt of
First Empire State Corp., and
First Fidelity Bancorp of Lawrenceville, N.J., but no major
banks followed the lead.
, Tuesday, Norwest Bank of
-MIMesota lowered Its prime to
9.75 percent from 10 perc~nt.
' The last time banks cut the
prime rate, frequently the basis
for setting home equity and other
consumer · lending rates, was
Jan. 8. At that lime the prime was
brought down to 10 percent from
10.5 percent. ·
'

..-

•
•
•
•

•

Tyson was to defend his title
against Ruddock last Nov. 18 In
Edmonton, Alberta. However. he
pulled out claiming a respiratory
infection and took on Douglas
Instead three months later.

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E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

.•

The Daily Sentinel Page-7

~~:~! ~:.m tim-:.~~ ~~n~..~~~~~~S~=~r.w~~~,i~~"~~·

Three league games on weekend SVAC hardwood slate
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
.
This weekend's SVAC basketball schedule features only three
league games, as front-runner Hannan Trace, which will play South
Point In its first non-league game in the South Point Holiday
Tournament tonight, will finish Its participation in that cagefest
Friday night, whlle Eastern's Eagles, who ·beat Waterford 7S:62
Tuesday night in the only weeknight game involving an SVAC team,
will be idle until Jan. 4, when they host Kyger Creek.
Southern vs. Oak Hill- Before all else, Southern should be served
notice - this year's Oaks just ain't what they used to be.
They're better than before, and the team that was stuck in the resin
of l~ng losing streaks last year has gotten to thepo!ntthatlt will make
believers out of the rest of the conference. Ask North GaiUa, who as
the home team three weeks ago watched the Hlil dissolve Its 12-point,
third -quarter lead to four in th-e game's last minute before finally
fa ding by eight.
·
Oak Hill forward /guard Bill Potter will be counted on for his
t~ke-charge ways on the court, and that might Include firing up his
t~a mma tes in the second quarter. That quarter has been historically
a stro ng one for the Oaks, but In last week's 97-68 loss to Eastern, it
was witness to a seven-point drought uncharacteristic of the Oaks'
19.1-point average in act two after eight games.
Apparently , Eastern's backcourt broke In on Benji Lewis's private
line to the basket, because Lewis's five -game double-digit scoring
.s treak came to a screeching halt when he was held to two points. Don't
look for Lewis to have an offensive resurrection against a quicker and
more experienced pair of guards In Andy Baer and Todd Grindstaff.
Will S.outhern go against the Oaks by position, or will the Tornadoes
match up man lor man? No one knows for sure, butlfTornado skipper
Howie Caldwell decides on the latter, .Baer should draw Lewis, and
When he gets into the lineup, Jeremy Roush should go against Brad
Bavis, while Grindstaff should get Potter, with the latter
oonfrontation bringing back memories of football season. In the
paint, Tornado forward Roy Lee Bailey will go against Mike Simpson,
and Southern frontman Jeremy Rose might get either Jeremy Green
&lt;(r Ryan Morgan, whlle Michael Russell will battle Chris Simpson at
center.
: On Saturday. Southern will host Ross Southeastern's Panthers, one
rif last year's Division III final four.
: North GaiDa_vs. Symmes Valley- In spite of the fact that they Will
· ~rop anchor at Aid, maybe this is the chance North Gallla's Pirates

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nATI IOUTE 124

IUTUND

�The Daily Sentinel(

By The Bend
Christmas dance

Chester news

.

. The Royal Oak Dance Oub will
The annual Christmas party of
hold its annUli Christmas dance on
the
ladies auxilialy of the fire
Saturday frQm 8-11 P..m•.at Royal
department
was held at the home of
Oak Resort. Music will be provided
!lonnie
Landers
recently.
by ''Montage.• Snacks and pWICh
Roll
call
was
answered by each
will be furnished by the dance club.
naming
!heir
tavorite
Christmas
Membetship dues tor 1991 may be
song.
Card
money
was
collected
paid at this time•.Pe"'li~~e for 199!
.
and
bills
were
paid
Cards
for
the ill
membership is Feb. 28.
and shut-ins were signed. The
Christmas story from Luke was
read by llecky Edwards and
readings were given by several.
Door.prizes wete given and a gift
exchange was held. Mrs. Landers
assisted by lnzy NeweU, Clarice AI·
len and Clam Conmy, served
sandwiches, fruit, cookies, punch
and coffee to Betty Newell, Erma
Cleland, Elsie Folmer, Becky Ed·
wards, ·Golda Krackomberger,
Elizabeth Hayes, Jeannie Newell,
Opal Hollon, Paula and Chessey
W9Qd, Mattia Keller, Dorothy
Hawk, Lora Damewood and Ethel

Missionary
group meets
'

The Evagelinc Missionsry Group
of the Pomeroy, Church of Christ
met m:ently at the home of Janet
Vtlflla'J w~h was ~ fot the

season.

.

,

Eileen Bowers p-esided at · the
fM'lling in the absence or the pteSi·

denL Prayer was given by Gtztrude
Andrews and the oflicm reports

Orr.

WCR~given.

The annual Christmas dinner of
Roll call . was answered by
the
firemen was held Sunday evennaming the "best Christmas you
ing at the firehouse. A covered dish
ever had.• Cards
signe9 for dinner with baked ham was served
the sict.
. 10 76 firemen, auxilialy, families
· Sevcnil members received gifts
· from their . SCCiet prayer pa!OICJ'S and friends.
The firehouse was decorated in
and names were drawn for the comkeeping with the season. Santa aring ycat.
rived after dinner and visited with
Mrs. Bowels gave devotions and the
children, giving each a gil\ and
Mrs. Venoy read the Christmas a sack
of candy and fruit. Giunes
story fnlm Luke.
were
played
and prizeS given along
· Betty SpenCer had the mission
several
door prizes. The dinwith
study.
nez
was
plaMed by the Good of the
Prayer for the refiahments was
Order Committee of the auxiliary.
given by Pat Thoma.

w=

Thursday, December 20. 1990

Mayors report increase in hunger, homeless

ThursdaY. December 20. 1990'
·.
Page-S

Mother experience not isolated one·
. sitics without walls" !hat COunt life
experienoes as acaediled echrarion.
What do you · think of the
"confiontation" technique? ~
check widl a .eputable pmfeaional
happened.
.
and n:ply in prinL - ORIEVING
My daughter, "Lilly," is a R&gt;COV· MOTIIER
.
.
ering alcoholic. She is seeing an
DEAR MOTHER: I asked Dr.
expensive~ but has plenty Stuan Yudofsty, professor and
and IS paying bet own chairman of the department of
bills.
.
psychiatry at the University of
Ully telephoned to say bet thera· Chicaso, to respond 10 yair letler.
pist wanted me to attend a joint This is what Dr. Yudol'sty had 10
session. I would do anything 10 help say:
her get well, so I drove 1,500 miles .
"Under the guise of therapy,
for the session. Incidentally, I wu 'Orieving Molhet' is the victim of a
'chqed for (ive hours of therapy brutal psychological mugging.
"The described technique,
which mn into a good cica1 ofiDOI!Cy.
The. technique .that this therapist 'confrontation,' is the equivalent of
employed is called "confrontation." delicate brain sutgeiy penonned by
The therapist was a woman about a demolition worker using 8
Lilly's age and seemed extremt,ly jaclchamlner.
.
"Unfonunately, Grieving Mother's
hostile. I fek as though I were on
trial. They put me on the defensive devastating experience is not an
immediately. I was so stunned and isolated one. It is. shared by a
hurt by some of my daughter's
remarks that I was Wllble 10 say a
word. It wu just as well since I was
told that I .could not speak. only
listen. I experienced five hours of
Dear ADD Laaden: I n:cently
lil'ed iluouah a deVIIIating experience and need to know whether this
is what psychiatry is aDiboiu. If so,
I Wllll no pan or iL This is what

or money

or

number people who~ subjccled
10 poorly ll3incd, misplidod, unregulated individuals who pose as
qualified lherapisis and do a great
dtti of damage.
. .
"I agree that the screening of
therapists should be much more
carefully monitored, and it is up 10
the legitimate professionals ro see
that this is done..
Dear ADD Laliders: My heart
went out 10 "Pooped ill Phoenix"
lw:ause I, too, 1111 IIUIIried 10 a sex

WASHINGTON (UPI~ - A
survey of mayors In 30 major
cities reported a rise In zboth
hunger and homelessness during
tbe past year and most expect the
economic recession -' now hit·
t1J!g most cities- to heighten the
problem , the U.S. Conference of
Mayors said.
:~ At the same time, the city
o,f flclals also reported Wednesdlly that public sentiment Is
tutnlng against the homeless.
"More than three out of four of
the survey cities report that they
have eJ!perlenced an economic
slowdown In recent months and
aU but one of the cities which
reported It had not experienced
an economic slowdown ... anticl·
paled the recession will affect the
problems of hunger and homelessness during the next year,"
the report said.
Every oile of the responding
cities said they expect the
demand for emergency food
assistance and shelter - especially by homeless families - to
Increase during the next year.
The mayors' survey confirms a
report issued last week by the
National Coalition for the Homeless predicting that as the recession deepens, many Americans
- especially those working in
tow-wage jobs - are at risk of
becoming homeless and the
problem could become critical if
the Bush adminiStration fails to

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
" 1989. Loti .............
TlmH Syndll'Mf' and
c .... lllun s,·ndinl~

his sleep and rm a c8refullisleneJ:. ' ·
Don't tell me to leave him lwause
my boyfriend will not leave his wife.''
I'm 54. too old 10 start over. Please ~
":advi se. •• N.y .
DEAR N.Y.: Maybe if you elimi· ~~
nated your boyfriend, you'd have, :
more energy for yol!f husband. C

1ll81liat. The man never Bets enough
. ·
.• ~~
and I am sick his se1fishness. If I recommend it
Is
life
passing
you
by?
Want
to
:':
give him whit be waniS I 1;111 buy
improYe
yoNT
social
skills?
Write
for
,;,
anything I WIIIL If I refuse him, my .
Ann J..anders' new booklet. "How to
life is hell.
I went for counseting 10 learn how Make Friends and Stop Being,/
10 deal with Ibis problem. The !hera· Lonely." Sendast/f-addre.rst!d, long, .;
pist said my husband is eRiotionally busiMss-size enYelope and a check ·.
iulderdcvciOped because his fathez or money order for $4.15 (this in- .'
· died when be wu 2 and his mothet eludes pfJstage and handling) to: ·•
wu sick: a lot. He has no bad habits Fr~nds. c/o AM J..anders, P.O. Box
and does not chase other women. I 11562, Chicago,///. 6061/.()562. (In · i
.. i
am sure
Ibis because he talks in Ctutada, send $5.05.)

or

or

helL

·Just Received

I f~m~ly believe that the credentials of every so~alled therspist
should )le examine4. These people
are dealing with liveS, and fragile
ones at thaL They should be well
trained 8nd not products of"wiiver-

r~spond.

:'During the pas t year," the
mayors' sutvey said, "requests

·Thlc Weeki .

...

~nzyme,

,A Super Value on our

Princess Roll Top Desk.

Sentinel Calendar
' Comm::i.CaJendar Items
appear two
before an em~t
aad the day tbat event. Items
must be recell'ed in adva•ct to
iuure publication in the caleli-

dar.
THURSDAY
RACINE • Regular meeting of
Racine Post 602 American Legion
on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Plans viill
be made 10 sadc candy and fruit for
nursing home. Refreshments to be
served following meeting.
SYRACUSE • Syn~tuse Elementary School Christmas program
"Three Wee Kings" at 7 p.m.

POMEROY • A children's
Christmas program will be held at

the Pomeroy OlmdloHllrilt Sun·
day morning at 10:30 am. and

ROCK

SPRINGS • The Middleport
Child
Conserv.ation "Carols by Candelight" and t)le
League's annual Chrisanas dinner adult choir will entertain in the
and party on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. evening at 7 p.m. Minister Andy
at the ROck Springs United · Miles invit,es the public 10 attend
Methodist Church. Bring gifts and
food for needy families. There will
CHESTER • The ML Hennon
be an ornament exchange and United Brethren Chun:h (Texas
deconued pack&amp;gl'-s will be judged.
Community)
will have
its
Christmas program on Sunday at
POMEROY • The 'Pomeroy 7:30 p.m. The public is illvited 10
Group of AA and A1AIKin will meet attend.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE • Sanra will be at
Call 1'-8()().333-5051 for informa- the Syracuse Volunteer ' Fire
tion.
Department 10 hand out treats un
Sunday at 2 p.m.
RUTI.AND • There will be a ·
Christmas play at the Rudand
Community Church on New Lima
ROlli in Rutland on Thorsday a1 1
p.m. Paswr Dewey King invites the
public.

I

vciu plenry of storage. Sue 28 x 17 x 44.

REG.
530900

Joppa UMW meet

Cbtltfmst Ssle/

A Christmas meeting was held
recently by members of the J~
· United Methodist Women at the
home of Lavina llrannon with nine
members and five guests pteSent.
Margaret Gmssnickle read a letter from Theresa Hoover and she
reported on books of poetry "The
Glory of Christmas" by the
Salesian Mission which had been
sent out to several people.
It was noted that several fruit
baskets have been ord&amp;ed for
several shut-ins.
Carols were sung and several
readings pertaining to Christmas
were read.
Gifts wete exchanged and each .
member brought food which was
placed on the rable.

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FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE • The Scipio
Township Volunreer Fire Department will have a Christmas. treat
paity for the Children
Scipio
Township in Harrisonville on
Friday af 1 p.m. Santa Oaus will be
there.

or

niPPERS PLAINS • There will
be 8 round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Building
feaauing
Rocky
Mountain
llluegmss. ArlhiD' Conant will be
die caller. Cost is S2.SO for adults
and $1 for chil&lt;hn under 12.
Public illvited.
POMEROY • The Fust Southern
llaptisl Ch.-cb in Pomeroy will
have a live utivity M:One on Friday
frQm 6:30 10 8:30p.m. on. !he stage
in the Pometoy pamng kit.
.
POMEROY • There will 'be a

free blood peasure screening at
Rite Aid in PQmaoy on Friday
frQm 10 LDJ, to 3 p.m.

POMEROY • 1be Mllminl Sr.

Ulliled Metbodlll Church will
.s n-t its ChrillmU PfOII'8III 011
Jlriday at 7:30 p.m. The public iJ
invited.

.

OIBSHIRE • 'lbe Olllii·Mein
COcnmunil)' . •~ Ac&amp;6&amp;Y will
bold a free
1 day 111 Priday
froiD 9 a.m. to 1101111 at lhe old high
ICIIOol buildin&amp; iat Cheshire.
.

*' '

SATURDAY
POMEROY • '1111 IDyll Olk '
Dlllce Oub will IIOid its IIUIUI1
. Chrillmas dance on Sall!rday from
8-11 p.m. at Royal OK ltesort.
Millie will be povided by ''Mon·

...-," s-a 114 J1U1Cb

will be
tl1iiUiled by lhe daace club. Memberlblp duel for 1991 may be lllld
• dlii lillie. Drs ••• lbr f991
n.....,..nblp Ia Feb. 28.

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1969 Mollllt llo•, 2 bdr111. and •90 of an
aero.
fhtl Fan.on lank and Savlnp Co111pany,
Ptiii.,.Y, Ohio, rtMnll tho right to bid at
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_.. S1vL 11 Co111p If "•"• tilt rllht to
rlfnt -r or • IIWI _.aiiHH. ~
F• , • .,, tho abowo coltateral •• lie aold in
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breast cancer spread linked

WASHlNI.i'fON (UP{) - At
least 250 million sexually trans·
mltted infections occur world·
wide annually and the growing
epidemic Is creating "a public
health nightmare," the World
Health Organization reported
Wednesday.
Young adults account for the
largest share of the 250 million
infections, with the highest incidence reported among people
ages 20 through 24, WHO said.
"Sexually transmitted Infections and diseases have reached
epidemic proportions globally.
And If sexual behavior is not
modified and effective new prev·
ention and control programs are
not Implemented Immediately,
the resulting disease and mortal·
ity rates will be even more
staggering," WHO Director General Dr. Hiroshi Nakajima
warned.
. WHO emphasized that dis·
eases spread by sex are not
harmless and can cause serious
health problems, such as sterU·
ity, blindness, brain damage,

OAK
H~LL TREEs·

WE WILL CLOSE.
AT 1:00PM ON
CHRISTMAS EVE,
MONDAY, DECEMBER 24

.

possibly hook\!(1 up to toxins, to
attack and kill cells producing
the cancer-promoting enzyme.
Unlike other growth ·
promoting' proteins found within
breast tumors, stromeiysin 3
does not appear to play a general
role. in healthy adults, although it
can be found in tile placenta and
uterus, Cham bon said.
Dr. John Stevens of the Ameri·
can Cancer Society said the
French findings, published In the
journal Nature, may offer "a
different angle" of controlling
cancer's deadly progression.
McGuire also called the discovery "an exciting new lead which
deserves a lot of effort and
attention." However, the breast
cancer researcher said 1 he was
"wltholdl'ng judgme'rft" about
whether It lead to useful treatments, saying it remains to be
seen If the enzyme plays a role in
metastasis - the dead\Y spread
of cancer beyond the breast to
other organs - as well as in
localized invasion of the breast.
In addition to possible therapeutic advances, McGuire suggested tests for traces of the
stromelysln-3 may provide a,new
way of detecting breast tumors in
early, treatable stages.

unaccompanied youth 3 percent.
City officials reported that 46
percent of the homeless are
black, 34 percent white, 15
percent Hispanic, 3 percent
American Indians, and 1 percent
Asian.
Persons conslctered mentally
Ill make up 28 percent of the
hOmeless ·population, according
to clty.offlclals. Substance a bus-

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cancer and even death. In
addition, there Is evidence the
sores and Inflammation caused
by sexually transmitted· infections boosts the risk of contract·
ing the deadly AIDS virus during
sex.
Trichomoniasis, a parasitic
infection, Is the most common
sexually transmitted Infectionmaking up about 120 million of
the 250 million new cases that
occur each year. About 50 million
cases stem from chlamydia, a
bacterlallnfectlon that can cause
infertility. In some Inner city
ares of the United States, 10
percent to 30 percent of sexually
active teenage girls have the
infection.
Genital warts account for
about 30 million cases: gonorrhea, about 25 million;, genital
herpes, 20 mllion; syphlllls, 3.5
million; hepatlils B. 2.5 million;
chancroid, 2 million·, and the
AjDS.causlng human Immunodeficiency virus, 1 million.
"In many countries, sexually
transmitted Infections have be-

come a public health nightmare," Nakajima said in a
statement.
·
Dr. Andre Meheus, head of
WHO's sexually transmitted dis·
ease program, ·noted that the
infection rate In Industrial countries is rising faster than those
reported In the 1960s and 1970s. In
many Third World nations, recent migration to cities often
leads to new sexual habits that
Increase the risk of such Infections, he said.

ers are 38 percent and nearly a
quarter are employed In full· or
part·time jobs. Some 26 percent
are veter;~ns and 6 percent are
people reported to have AIDS or
HIV-related illness.
Cities in the survey were:
Alexandria, Va. ; Boston; Cha·
rleston, W.Va. ; Charlotte, N.C.;
Chicago: Cleve la nd; Denver;
Kan sas City, Mo.: Hartford,

Conn; Los Angeles: Louisville,
Ky .; Minneapolis, Minn.; Nash· :
ville, Tenn.; New Orleans: New
York; Norfolk, Va.; Phlladel·
phia; ·Phoenix; Portland, Ore.;
Providence, R.L; St. Paul, ,.
Ml nn.; Salt Lake City; San •
Antonio; San Diego; San Fran· •
cisco: San Juan; Santa Monica, :
Calif.; Seattle; Trenton, N.J.; ·•
and Washington, D.C .

Bush says .drug war is •paying off
WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Bush says a new study
showing a dramatic decline In
overall use of Illicit drugs,
Including a 72 percent plunge in
casual coca ine use, Is evidence
that his war on drugs Is "paying
off."
But Bush, referrhig to socalled crack. babies, druginfested ileighborhoo&lt;ls and
children threatened by narcotic
pushers, also admitted: " A dec·
la.ration of victory would be

premature."
The president released a survey of more than 10,000 Americans Wednesday that painted an
improving yet still chilling pic·
lure of the nation 's drug
problem.
The National Household Sur·
vey on Drug Abuse showed an
estimated 44 percent drop since
1985 in the number of people who
use Illegal drugs - ·fi·om pot to
crack~ at least once a month,
from 23 million to 12.9 million.
It also f ound a stunning 72
percent drop during the same
period in th'e number of people

who use cocaine at least once a
month, from 5.8 million to 1.6
milll·on.
In addition, it showed a 13
percent dec Iine, to 1.6 m ill ton, In
the number of teenagers who got
high in thepastyear. Itfounda49
percent drop, from 225,000 to
115,000, in the number of youngs·

ters who used drugs at least once
a mont h. ,
But the survey also found an
estimated 15 percent riSe since
19881n the number of people who
use cocaine daily, from 292,000 to
336,000.
In addition, it estimated that
the number of weekly users of
crack, an inexpensive form of
cocaine, held steady at 500,000.
An accompanying study found
cocaine.r related emergency
room ·cases fell ·by nearly 10
percent.
Bush, sejzing on the good news,
said: "Virtu~lly every piece of
information we have tell us that
drug use trends are are headed In
the right direction- down."
Democratic members of Congress promptly accused the
president of offering an overly
rosy assessment, and said his
drug war has shortchanged those
whO need the most help, people in
drug-ravaged inner· cities.

Sexually transmitted disease at epidemic level

SALE

NOTICE

for emergency shelter Increased
cities - 57 percent - there are
... by an average of 24 percent,
more negative attitudes," the
report said.
with four out of five of the cities
registering an increase •. 10 per·
According to the survey. those
cent reporting that the number of
who are homeless are remaining
requests remained the same and
that way longer - another sign
that the recession Is taking Its toll
another 10 percent reporting a
decline."
and making It mo re difficult for
Just under 75 percent of the
people to re·enter the main·.
stream of the economy.
survey cities reported an in·
crease In the number of home less
"About 20 percent of shelter
families needing emergency
users have been without their
own home for more than a year,"
shelter, ranging from an Increase of 60 percent In Phoenix,
according to Minneapolis offl·
40 percent InN ew Orleans, and 36
cials. Providence, R.I., officials
reported that the time frame of a
percent In Cleveland to 10 per·
cent · In Norfolk, Va., and 5 shelter sl{ly there "has gone
from four !() six weeks to. two to
percent In San Antonio. Kansas
three months ." ·
City, Mo., MinneapoliS and San
Francisco reported declines in
"rhe average length of stay,
particularly for families, has
the number of homeless families.
In 70 percent of the cities,
significantly icnreased over the
shelters are forced to turn away
last year," said officials in
homeless families needing aid
Alexandria, Va., the Washing·
ton, D.C ., suburb. City officials
bacause the shelters lack
resources.
cited a number of factors - the
The city officials estimated . lack of subsidized housing, an
that overall 19 percent of the
increase In single-parent faml·
requests for shelter by all home·
lies and more families entering
less people went unmet last year
the shelter with multiple
and 16 percent of the requests by
dysfunctions.
homeless families could not be
Alexandria. along with Kansas
City, Los Angeles, Louisville,
met despite an average Increase
New York, Philadelphia, Por·
of 3 percent In the number of
tiand, Ore., San Antonio and
emergency shelter beds and a 12
Trenton, N .J ., said families with
percent increase in the number
of transitional housing units
children account for 40 percent or·
.more of their homeless.
available.
Overall, the report said single
"Officials in four out of five of
men comprise 51 percent of the
the survey cities have seen
homeless population: families
evidence, of change In public
with children are 34 percent:
sentiment toward homeless peo·
pie, and In the majority of these single women 12 percent and

' WASHINGTON (UPI~ - The for the production of the enzyme.
discovery of an enzyme linked to
"It is th~ first gene that has
breast cancer' s deadly spread been Identified that seems to be
may open new treatment clearly related to (breast tumor )
avenues against the disease that invasion and Invasion Is very
kills nearly 45,000 American important. Usually, a patient
women . annually , scientists doesn't die from a contained
reported.
tumor - a patient dies from
A French research team said Invasion," Chambon said In a
Wednesday that It has Identified telephone Interview.
an enzyme produced by the
About 20 percent to 30 percent
tissue around invasive breast of breast tumors detected · by
~umors, but Is not present near
mammography are not Invasive,
tUmors confined to a single, while almost all breast tumors
small area.
found by manual exams are
The enzyme, called
invasive, said . Dr. William
stromelysln·3, belongs to a fam· McGuire, head of medical oncollly of proteins that destroy the ogy at the University of Texas
connective tissue surrounding Health Science Center In San
cells during growth of an em· Antonio. If caught In a non·
bryo. The new enzyme appears to invasive state, breast cancer Is
"eat through" a breast tumor's almost 100 percent curable, he
envelope of . connective tissue, added.
al)owlng cancer cells to spread
Chambon said the new findings
beyond the original tumor site open "a potentially new 3'\Tenue
and enabling blood vessels to for therapy" · against breast
feed tumor growth, said Pierre cancer.
Chambon, who directed the · One treatment strategy would
study.
be to develop a small molecule,
In addition to detecting perhaps a tiny piece of protein
sttomelysln-3, Chambon and his patterned after those that natucolleagues from INSERM's blo· rally inhibit related enzymes, to
chemiStry Institute In Stras· block stromelysln-3. Another tac·
bourg, France, also pinpointed tic that Chambon's team Is
the gene that carries instructions _exploring is creating antibodies,

· Colonial styling will make this princess
roll rop desk a beauriful addition to any
home. It's constructed of solid woods
and wood produas with a rich pine
finish.~ are three storage shelves,
one utility drawer and a multitude of
partitioned shelving designed to give

LONG liOTI'OM • The Long
POMEROY - The movie at the
Meigs County Public Library in llot!Om United Meth~ Chun:h
· Pomeroy on Saturday at 2 p.m. ·will will have its annual Christmas
be "The NutCracker" and "Very program on Sunday at 1 p.m. Tbe
Men:y Cricket." These are both . public is invited 10 attend.· ,
Christmas films. All children are
CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary
invited.
Chapter of the Izaak Wal10n
League will hold another muzzle
SUNDAY
FOREST RUN • The Forest Run loadet shoot on Sunday at I p.m. A ·
United Methodist G:hun:h will have 22-rifle shoot will also be held
a Chrisanas program on Sunday at
·7:30 p.m. The public is invited 10
attend.

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ 'Sexually

transmitted infec·
!Ions are not under control either
in the developed or the developIng world," Meheus said.
In addition to people !ailing to
take protective measures like
using condoms during sex, WHO
said the Incidence of some
sexually transmitted diseases
app9ars to be increasing due to
development of microbe strains
that are resistant to antibiotic
drugs.

years, from· 862,000 to 662,000.
Frequent cocaine users are •
defined as those who use cocaine
at least once a week, and Elden •
co ntended that this figure had ·
actually Increased, from 2.2
mUiion to 2.4 million.
Elden's numbers, unlike those
in the household survey, are ·
based, in part, on projections ..
from prison Inmates, the home·
less and those living In drug ·
treatment centers.
.,
"The NIDA study ... actually .
misses more addicts than It ,
counts," said Blden.
•

Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich.,
who House . Government Operations Committee oversees fed·
eral anti-drug efforts, said:
"While the household survey Is
dramatic proof that the Reagan
and Bush administrations have
succee&lt;;led . In reducing casual
use, it's equally dramatic proof
that they have failed terribly in
reducing hard -core addiction."
~nate Judiciary Chairman
Joseph Bl.den, D·DeL, Issued a
report challenging the federal
study's contention that the
number of frequent cocaine
users dropped in the past two

·
Ir-----------------------,·
Poet.s ' Corner

J''

were there on the scene
and witnessed re·btrth
of the Big Red Machine
The bookies In Vegas
had thetr heods In the tog

" Brother"
He was my
lrlend

heb~tt1::?

He treated me
with

respect

·

he treated me

like no other.

But when he

died,

''

'•

to~v:~'reJ:~~:,~;~

,,

The Reds led all season
In command all the way.
So why' be surprised
that they sweep at the Bay.

'.·

The Green Hurlers like Welch
Dennis, Honeywell and Stew

bul~~~ J:~:e~elt

were amazed they could hit
whatever they threw.

When he died tt Just
busted me up. •

The offense and defense

I loved him
as my n&gt;al
brother.

I low
you
Ed Lovatto
by Charlie

McKinney

GradE&gt; 6

Racine Elementary

ODE TO A FALLEN DYNIISTY

of a shortstop named Barry
dominated the A's
1
th t
naway a was scary.
Our third baseman, Chrts Sabo
though appeors as a geek •
With one swtn·g of his bat
makes Canseco seem weak.
a illy Hatcher's OWN hits
nearly·equaled the A's
providing offense that helped
end the Job In four days.

.,

·-·-

As the thoughts of spring training
drew amazingly near,
Just a frlendty.remlnder ....
We'll see you ne1et year.
Darin Slrnpsoo
submitted by tits grandmother
Dorothy Badgl ey

By Darla Slmpoon
The A's were prOOicted
to sweep It again
But who would have guessro
not one game would they win .

The Brothers- of Bash
Pom•ro~

Houn:

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Thuract.y, December 20, 1990

·Dollar opens lower, gold higher
LONDON (UPI) -The U.S.
dollar opened lower agaJnst most
of the major European curren·
cles Thursday, but the reslgnatlon announcement of Sovi(!t
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze sent the German
mark Into a slide, dealers said.
Gold was higher.
'·'The mark suffered rnost. It Is
Germany that Is seen as the
major beneficiary of Soviet reforms. " said currency economiSt
Avlnash Persaud, of UBS Phil·
lips and Drew.
"Ironically, the dollar hasn't
.benefitted. It has only rallied
against the mark," he added.

ThurSday. December 20, 1990

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Before 'he announcement, the
dollar edged lower to O)ll1n at
1.4775 German marks In Frank·
furl, against 1.4785 at Wednes·
day's close.
The dollar also opened lower In
Zurich at 1.2655 Swiss francs
from 1. 2680 on Wednesday.
In Lonc!on, the po~,;~~d slipped
sllghtly, to open at $1.9305 from
$1. 9330.
In Parts, the U.S. currency
opened lower at 5.0450 French
francs against 5;0460, and In
Milan It dropped to 1,117.50
Italian ltre from 1, 124.35.
In Brussels, the dol)ar rose to

30.78Be)gianfrancsfrom30.59on
Wednesday.
Earlier, a tax-evasion scandal
surrounding a member of the
ruling Liberal Democratic Party
pushed the dollar sharply higHer
In Tokyo.
·
It closed at 134.58 yen on
Thursday, up 1.31 yen from
Wednesday, the Bank of Japan .
reported.
Prosecutors Wednesday questioned Toshlyukl Inamura, a
former cabinet minister, on
allegations that he avoided $7.5
million In taxes on speculative
stock earnings.

Businesses .to ,increase capital
spending 2.4 percent next Year
..

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Bus!·
Spending decrease Q.1 percent
nesses plan to Increase their In the third quarter to an annual
spending for new plants and rate of $:;35 billion. Still, lhlfd·
equipment by an es t!mated 2.4 quarter spending was 0.4 percent
percent, the lowest spending higher than anticipated In the
level In four years, the Com- goverrunent's previous survey of
merce Department said businesses.
·
The goverrunent said spending
'Thursday.
. The level 9f capital spending, Is expected to decrease by 0.4
an Indication of confidence percent In the fourth quarter
among the nation's business . before Increasing by 4.7 percent
sector·, Is the lowest .since 1986 In the first quarter of next year.
Real spending . Is expected to
when spending declined by 3.1
percent.
• Increase 0.4 percent next year
Businesses plan to spend $547 after gaining 4.1 percent this
:blUlon on new plants and equip· year. Real spending decreased
1.2 percent during the third
. ment next year.
• Concerns about the economy Is quarter after gaining 0.6 percent
slowing business expansions dur- In the second quarter and 1.6
lng the fourth quarter. Overall, percent In the first
Real spending Is expected · to
capital spending Increased by 5.2
percent this year to an estimated decrease 0.9 percent In the fourth
quarter before rebounding 4.3
$534 billion from $507 billion last
.year.
percent In the first quarter of
: The goverrunent said this ye- next year.
Manufacturing lncjustrles plan
: ar's figures reflect a downward
to
boost spending by 0.7 percent
revision from the planned In·
crease of 5.4 percent reported In next year after a 4.6 percent
Increase this year. Companies
September.
that make durable goods plan to
cut spending 0,.8 percent next
year. The largest Increases are
planned among makers of elec·
By United Press International
trlcal machinery.
President Bush, Issuing a re.
Spending increases · also are
port that showed a 44 percent planned by makers of other
plunge since 1985 In the number durable goods, stone, clay and
:of people who use Illegal dr~s at glass products and non-ferrou~
·least once a month:
metals.
· : ''I am pleased to say that the
The largest decreases are
:news we have today suggests planned among the blast furnace
:that our work Is paying off, and
Industry. Other decreaseS are
·that our national strategy Is
forecast among makers of auto·
:having an effect."
mobiles, fabricated metals, air·

craft and
machinery.

non-electrical

I

Personal income, spending up
WASHINGTON (UP! ) . Americans earned, spent and
saved more In November than
the month before, the Corqmerce
Department said Thursday.
Personal Income increased
$13.5 billion last month td an
annual rate of $4.7 trllllon after
decreasing by $800 million the
month before.
Personal spending also increased, gaining $5.8 billion last
month to an annual rate of $3.8
trillion. In· October, spending
Increased a scant $300 million.
Savings . also Increased to
$154.9 billion from $149.3 billion In
October.
The goverrunent said last
month's Income gain Included a
large increase In subsidy pay·
ments to farmers. Without those
payments, Income levels were
about the same as the month
before.
·
Overall wages and salaries
decreased by $3.9 billion In

Holiday

November after ' falling $15.3 farmers ' income Increased by
billion the month before. Pay· $800 million each month .
Non-farm proprietors' Income
rolls of commodity- producing
rose
$600 million last month after
Industries feU by $10.8 billion
after decreasing $5.6 billion the falling $200 million in October.
Rental incomes fell $1.7 billion
month before.
after
rising $400 million in the
Manufacturing p·ayrolls,
previous
month.
,
trimmed by layoffs in several
Personal
Interest
Income
In·
Industries. fell $9.2 !;Jillion after a
decline of $2.6 billion In October.. creased by $1 billion in No!
But payrolls for distributors rose vember after gaining $1.2 billion
$1.2 billion after falling $7 billlon the month before.
Personal tax and non-tax pay''
in October.
Service Industries also posted ments rose $2 billion last month
a payroll gain, with wages rising ater falling $200 million In
$3.2 billion after falling $5 billion Octoqer.
Dlsposa ble personal Income,
the month before.
Goverrunent wages and salar· which Includes Income after'
les Increased $2.3 billion after taxes, increased by $11.4 billion
after falllng $000 million In
rising $2. 4billion In October,
Farmers' Income Increased October.
. Personal outlays, which In·
$13.9 bllllon In November after
eludes
personal spending, Intergaining $2. 4 billion In October.
est
payments
and transfer pay-•
Federal subsidies to farmers
rose $13.1 billion after gaining ments. Increased by $5.8 billion
$1.6 billion the month before. last month after rising $300
Excluding these . payments, mUllan the month before.

Greetings

;Quote of the day

"

'Legislation targets assault weapons
;: WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con"llress will be the key battleground over a new city measure
l)oldlng assault-gun merchants
and manufacturers responsible
for deaths or Injuries caused by
the weapons, observers said.
. The · measure, which was
signed by outgoing Mayor Marlon Barry, faces a review. by
.COngress before It can become
law, under the District of Columbla's unique "home rule"
charrer.
. Barry, who leaves office In two
weeks, signed the measure late,
Monday, saying, "We don't need
these guns on the streets."
The
covers
a varlety
of alegislation
sault weapons,
Including
the Uzl, the Beretta and the
.Tec-9. Shooting victims, or ·thelr
families, could recover damages
from the manufacturers or
retailers .
The City Council approved the
measure In the wake of record
violence In the nation's capital.
More than 465 people have been
slal.n in the city this year.
"We are real confident aboui
our chan~es In court. We're very
confident," said Bernie l;!orn,
legislative director Of Handgun
·Control Inc., an antl·gun lobby.
"The question Is Congress."
The politically active National
Rifle Association Is expected to
lobby hard, asking Congress to
scuttle the measure.
"There's nothing unconstitutional about It," · Horn said
Wednesday. "There's no decent
legal argument against lt. The
Congress Is a fight. I think we can
win this fight, but It's a big light."
Richard Gardiner, the National Rifle Association's legislative director, said, "It's an
absurd bilL It flies In the face of
every notion of justice that we've
ever known In our law, by~oldlng
Innocent manufac!urers flnan·
clally liable for the criminal acts
of people In the district."
Gar.dlner said, "It doesn't have
a prayer constitutionally. The .
courts are going to practically
laugh It out o! court."
Rlchard .Muchnick, legislative
director of the Coalition to Stop
Gun Violence, said, "We've fa·
vored his legislation. I honestly
don't know what's going . to
happen In Congress - fighting
the NRA Is always going to be
difficult."
If Congress allows the measure
to become law, "Our attorneys

5 s peed , stereo. rear
bumper. local tr~de .

repair
·.plan is proposed

,
I

•

'

l

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SEASON'S GREETINGS!!!

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Protect youl'8fllf with the
. . STUN·UM key chain sprayer
STUN-UM Ia the moat advanced chemical
Mlf defanM -pon available- your edge
agalnat personal crime .
. To Order $11111 Chec~ or M011ey Order
For $19.95 To:

SEO SEc•m

"0~~~:11

P. 0. lea 190, ••-roy,

. ,.,, .,

Chrlet111t C•••f
Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCATION
7 DAYS S AM-7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY

. Call 992-5114

For Current Prices
OPEN II DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY, OH. LOCATION
10 AM· 5 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
We Will Clo11 At Alban
Doc. 24 to Jon. 2 For
Chri•m.. Vacation

Call 698-6115
For Currant Prices
II·J0.90-I

...., ...

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
ALl MAlES
Bring It In Or Wi
. Pick Up.

KEN'S·APPUANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or ~IS-3561
Acr1111 From Post OHlco
217 E. Soc¥ Pomeroy
POMEIOY, OHIO

31&amp;/'90/lfn

. Banks
Construction
992-5009

110.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
S-d bldo will bo re·
oolvod by the Roclno VII logo
Clerk until 4:00 o'clock P.
M.. Moncloy, Jonuory 7.
1991. for 1 198.0 liretonker
apparatu1 or cheule onty.
Copy of tho opeclflcotlono
... IVIIIIbll from tho VII·
logo Clerk or from tM Fire
Chief.
Bldo to bo o - d ot 7:00
o"clack P.M. at the r-auler
council m-lng .
Council r111rvoo tho right
to accept or reject any and
oil bldo.
Moll&lt; on 111vllop.o BIDS
FOR TANKER APPARATUS
or BIDS FOR CHASSIS .
Jono G. Boeglo,' Clerk
Vllllge of
Roclne, Oh. 411771
814-949·2B81
11 2) 6. 1 3, 20, 3tc

Public Notice

~Gutter
~Helmet'

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GunERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED I
FREE ESTIMATES

12-19-'90-1 m

205 N. Second Str"t
.MIDDI.EPOIT, OHIO 4576
OHict 61'4·992·2116
Homt 614-992-5692
DOTTII S. Til_., .OlD
HOUSES•LOTS•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia Mrlby given that
tM Boord of Education of
tM Melgo Local School Dlotrtct, Molga County, Ohio.
will offer for 1111 by eutoid
bido, for light IBJ ochool
bu•o ond two 121 trucko. ot

1 .50 discount lor ads

'"'advance

p.~~id

Announce 111 e11 Is

"free Mt - Giveaway and Found edt und• 15 words will be

run 3 d.,s 11 no ch•ge.

"ftri~;:e

of ad for all

·

c~itall«ten

"7 pointliRt1YPI only UHd.
·
"Sentinel ia rtOt r..ponsibll for errors ·atter first df¥ . ICMeclt
tor lf'"ora fWtt d., ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 ·00 p m

Y•d Stl•

8 - Publie S1te &amp; A... ction
9 - Wtnttd to Buy

Bruce Vincent

- 2:00P .M . MONOAV
-

2 :00P.M . TUESDAV

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M tHURSDAY

-

2 :00P .M FRIDAY

Sales .

Meigs CoYnty
Area Code 614

Muon Co .. W'll
Area Code 304

441- Gallipolis

992 - Middlepor1

675-PI . Pt1111nt

317- Cfl•hire
388- Vinton
241-Aio Oren de

211-GYYin Oilt.

843- Arabis

379 - Waln.Dt

o,.,.

Real Eslale

981!1 - Ch•ter

&amp;76-Apple Grove
173- Mason

247-Letan fills

182-N.W Haven

949 - Ricine
742 - Autlend .

937-Buff~O

843-PorHind

74-Motorcvcl•

7!1 - Boau &amp; Motau for Sale

31 - ~omn tor Sale
32-Mobile Horn• tor S.le
33-Ferms tor Sale

78-Auto Pans 6 Acc•sori•
77-- Auta R•pair
78 - Camplng Equipment

34-Busin .. s Buildings

79 -:-- C•mpen • Mo1or Homes

35 .!..-Lots &amp; Acreagt
lB - Aeal Euate Wanted

89&amp; - Letert

861 - Cool•ille

S1:1 VICt:S

41-Houses tor Ren1

•2-Mobile Hom" for Rent

•

lht Ruufb fast

•3-Ferms klr Rent
44-Ap•r1ment for Rent
46-Furnithed Rooms
48 - lljpaee for Rent
47-Wanted to Ren1
48 - Equipment for Rent
•t - For L•••

81-·l:'lome lmprOw.m...,ts
82- Piumbing &amp; He•ing

'Monthly payments with $1,000 plus tax &amp; title down. 90' &amp; 89 - 60 mo., 88 &amp; 87 - 54 mo., 86 &amp; 85 - 48 mo., 83 - 36 mo.

.

•.

"

- d bldl will bo ...
LEGAL NOTICE
Notloolo horoby glvon that celwd Mid -ned In tho
the Boord of Education of T,_,.., •• Office It 12:!10
theM.... ~ So-l Dlo· - o n Jonuory 4. 1111.
triO!, Melgo County, Ohio. lido wPI bo oubmltted to tM
IOirtl of Education It their
deolrq 10 - - ONiod nut
Hgulor -lng lor
bldl far the fo-.,.g:
40 Ono·fald . . , _ tob· contldatedon.
TM lloeod of od-tlon In· .
In, I'ICtlfttlullr ....,.,
12'0" long by 30" ...... by t111cll to -opl the lo-ot
28" height. No fdlll bend· re-olblo _bid lor tho cefo·
Ina- ......... , _ , _ terie ....... but .._OtM
colora _
....,. Lllmlnote right to...,. MIY Mid an. or
of·- Mtl Ill bldo.
Top lotote ootora ovolleblel.
ly ordor of tha 1-.1 of
...... Ouote II to l n ' ohlp....,.to-111-tlon. :Education. Meilll I..Daol
All - Mlled
IIWIIDIIII Sahool Dlolrtot, 120 loot

,.m.

aontolft=oc.vmiiiA
-

..,.,....
olde "IIID PO
TAIL!I".

be
on theto.,...

Mt11n s-. ' .'0.1o11272.
-oy.
: ,... ,.,.,,417H.
T.....,..,
Olllo,

11~·· 11. 10. 17 ~

paa~eng•­

tolnod ot the Molge Local
Buo G1111111. Rutllnd. Ohio
1814) 742·2980.
Tormo of ulo wll IMi ceoh
or check with poaitlve ldentifiCIItlon.
•
Sold Board ~.....,eo the
right to waive lnformalltiea,
to ICC!Ipt or ..iect any and
oil, or Pllltl of onv ond all

8!5-Ganer-'

HM~Iing

•.,.••.,

••,,, 40t~

11-Mobila Home Aepei•
87 - Uphotseery

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlooll...,.byglvontMt
tho lloord of Educotlon of
tM ' M.lgo L-1 lcllool Dlotfl!:t. Molgo County, Ohio.
dill- t o - - IHlod
bldo for the ~1:
310 S-Ing Chllro.
17W' ooot hllghl, ono 111
ploco moldod polypropylene
ohlll. onolllll froflll lltlto
COlora..,..._),
Prlae Ouoll II to Include
ohlllolng to ••11 I '-tlon.
Ad
-lod ....,.. _ .
contolnlna blcll .,. to 111
rnortr.d cle.ly on tho outolde "liD POll CAFETERIA
CHAlliS" •
helod llklo will ... ~

oolvod and - o d In tho
Tr••·-·· o - a t 12:oo
Noon on Jonuory 4, 1911 .
lido wMI be oubmhtod to the
lloord of Edu01t1on at tholr
nollt regulor -'"11 for
conold.,.tlon.
T M - of education In·
tMidl to - t the lowelt
,._nolllll bid lor
tlrio tobiM. but -rv•o tho
right to ...,. MY lllld Ill. or
Pllotll of 1f1Y Md oil bldo . .
ly.-oftM-of
~tlon.
Mlloo t.ocol
le-I Olotrtct. 320 Eoot

the--

Moln . _ , '· 0. loa 272,

"'-Y· Ohio, 41711.
J-Fry.T_,.,

Do•tl• Sflatlf
12/20/50
W1 Lllr•

161 North. Second
I)Uddleport, Olio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.
fl
J

We C~ Fl1hin' SuppU•

Pay Your Phone

and

.
• .

-

·- ·-

r

&lt;i•ble Billo Hare

Po-roy, Olllo

. •

.

.

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
Drlvaro .. . 18
Wedges .. 16

Putters ... 13

GRAPHITE SHAFTS
INSTAUED
BAGS ..................... U5
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES. PLAQUES

6:30P.M.
factory Choke
12 Gaugo Sholglftls Only
Strklty Enfortod
9-25,'99-ttn

MOVING SALE
CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMMO
911 Hysell St.
Mldclaport, Oh.

992-2034

11 QO Remington

Slug Gun•
870 Remington
Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns

I 1·13·1 mo.

'1'"'""--------..,

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 015.3561
.Acron Frtltll Post OHlce

Seoul Camp IHd

Ch11tor, Ohio
11-!9-!10-1 ""

SHRUB &amp; TREE
·TRIM 9ftCI
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

GROOM
ROOM
ConJple·te Grooming
For All Brttds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820

11/14./ tfn

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

614-949-2635
11·23· 10-1 •••

HILL'S DEER
CUTTING

BILL SLACK
992-2269

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
IASHEN RD.,
RACINE

USED RAILROAD nES

949-2206

"FIREWOOD

8-12-90

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;.SUPPLIES
742-2421
21/2 MI. outside
Rutland on New
Lima ld.

HOURS: lll!onday
1hru Saturday
10 am to 6 pm

We Are A Deer
Checking Station.

11·6-90-1

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replecemeot
Windows

mo.

CAIN'
S
Of Ml ••leport
UPHOLSTERY
Hand Tufting
Custom Drape•

36 Years Experience
614·"2·2321
213 Marth SecHd
We Say Whit Wo Do.
Wa Do Whet We S1y
11-1 ...f.l.&amp;

CHRISTMAS
TREES
5 Ft. to 12Ft.
0 10 and up
FRESH CUT DAILY
WhiteS.
Scotch Pine

BOB SNOWDEN
Main St., lutlcatd

742-3051

11-29-1 mo. pd.

11·21-9-1 ••.

BISSELL· .
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGEI

•Roofing

"At loasonable PriCes"

•Insulation

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

JAMES IIEESEE
992-2772 742-2251
539 Bry1n Place
Middleport, Ohio

1 t /14/tfn

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Residential ond
· Commercial .
REWIRING AND

TROUBLE SHOOTING
CertHiad Electrlclam
Free Esthno111

..

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMI.NUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL . '/
SIDING CO.
llewH-It!lt
_.Free Eatimat•''

BANKS
CONSTRUcnON
992-5009

9~9·2101
or Res. 949·2860
MO SIIIDA'f CAllS
4-1&amp;.16-1111

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE

RACINE
GUN CLUB

12·19-'90- I mo.

THE

.

JOHN TEAFORD

985-4473 .
667-6179

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

. 992-6215

ll2BIIIn

Fr.ea Estimates

RACINE ·
fiRE DEPT.

-Gutter Work

-EIIICtrlcll• Plumbing
-Concrote l[l!ork
-Roofing
- lntorlor • Extorlor
Pointing
.
(FREE EITI~ATE81

Y. C. YOUNG II

•Complete
· R~modeling
Stop &amp; c.,.pare

GUN SlfOOT

CARPENTER SERVICE

-!loom Addltlono

·1614) 992-6550
jJisiOIH(E PHON!
16141 992-7754

KOUNTRY KLUB

r

·

! IUIINISS PHONE

•Garages

bido.
Jone Fry, Trooouror I I
Melga Local School Oiotrlct
USED APPUANCES
320 Eut Main Stroet
90 DAY WA'uAN1Y
P.O. Bo• 272
WASHER5-$10Q
up
Po..,.roy, OH. 46789
DIIYER5-$69 up
.1114) 982-5eeo·
I£FRIGEIATOR5-$100 up •
1121 8, 13, 20, 27 4tc
.RAIIGIS-Gas-Eiec.-$125 up
FREEZER5-SI25 up
5
HappyAds
IICIO OVEN5-$79 op

83-EICIVIIing
14-Eiectric81 &amp; Aafrlg•ation

•

OUR GIFT TO YOU

II

#D0822GHB25981
8. 19n lnt.ornotlonol buo •
81 p.oo-gor ·
#D0822GHB25964
7. 19n lnttrnltlonol buo •
118 p.ooolllgor
#D0822GHB29432
a. 19n International buo .
115 peaaenger #D0822GHB26948
9. 1986 Ford Truck.
F802A • #F80AL898381
10. 18711 Dodge S-tllne
Pickup. D10 •
#D14BB5S138032
All llllod IIIVoiOPIIO contllnlng bide ere to be marked
cl11rly on the outoldl "BID
FOR VEHICLE" .
Aclclltlon lnformotion on
th... vehiclu . ntlly be ob-

7 1 - AuiOI for S.. e
72 - Truckl for Sale
73-Vent &amp; 4 WO's

22- Mon-r to Loen
23-Prof•tiontl s..-victs

458-Leon

Pomeroy

151-ferm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
63 - livestoek
64-Hay • Grein
66-Seld &amp; Fertlliltr

21-Sutin•l Opportuni''l'

exchan~es ...

Gellie Count 'I'
Arl'l Code 614

!&lt;. iiVi:SIIIt:k

TransporlaiJon

Classified pa~es .corer the
follou:ing telephon'f'

Stle or Tr~de

Fum SttllltltP.S

1 1- Help W1nted
12"""$itultion WentH ·
13-lnsurenc:e
14-Busin•• Tretning
16 - Schooll &amp; lnstruetion
16- Radio. TV &amp; Cl Aepeir
17-Miscelleneoul
18-Wanted To Do

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
...,.11 :00A .M. SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDA'!: PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

5~-For

Employ rm: nI
Servrres

*A cl .. eifi.t edvertiHment piKed in The Deily Senttn~ \8A ·
CtPt , . cl•lified ditpl..-. 8utiM11f1 C.atd and legal noiices)
will elao eppear in the Pt. Pl•••m Aegieter 1nd lhe Gelli·
polis D1ily Tribune. ruching ov.r 18.000 homes
COPY DEADliNE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,E R

53-AnttqUes
• ·
s•-Mitc. M4trchendise
56-Sultding Suppli•
58- Ptts for. Slle
57-Muaicellnstrum«1tl
58.;...fruits &amp; V•o•ebiM

&amp;-Lost end Found
7 - V•d Sele (paid in edvaneef

"Ada lhll must be Plid in advance are
Happy Ads

51-HousehOld Gaodl -

82-Sportlng Oaodt

5 - Mappy Ads

d• ahllf publicMion to mllkecorrectlon .

Card of Th.,.kt

Merchandise

1- Card ofltl8nkl
2-ln Memory
3-AnnOUcements
4 - GiviiWIY

is double price of •d cott.

In Memoriam

Rate
Over 1 &amp; Wordl
$4.00
.
.20
86.00
. . 30
t9.00
.42
813.00
.80
$1 .30/ doy
.05/doy

Now loaltion:

•New Homes

Iowa:

Words
16 ·
15
15
16
15

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING ·

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

·

1. 1972 lntomotlonol buo •
88p.o.....ger #1 38820H348047
2 . 1973 lntemotlonol buo.
I I p ....nger#1 3882CHA20803
3. 1974 lntomotlonol buo .
18 pa... nger #13872DHA19902
4 . 1975 lntornotlonol buo .
I I paaung• ·
111 3872EHA33746
6. 19n lntomotlonol buo •

YOUNG'S

11·5·.90·11n

The vehiclu are •• fof..

Ra1• ara tor conMcutive run a. broken updaoawitl beGhll'ged
fnr eer.h d"" •• MDarata ads .

!'1-:iga. Gallia or M8aon caunti.&amp; mutt. be pre·

LOWER PRICES

fllJBBI flY

llrd'f

tlon.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Dallas Sayre

Business Services

Ohio, on January 4, 18111.
.. 12:00 - .... lido wll be
oubmlttod to Boord of Edu·
Clition It their next "gular
..,.otlnglor tholr conlidero-

Classifie

~ Hubble

'

have told us It shouldn't have a guns during the .past two years
problem at all, constitutionally, and some 70 percent were traced
In the courts," Muchnick said. to Maryland and VIrginia
"Law professors also have told dealers.
us It should get through the
Although strong opposition Is
courts."
expected In Congress, the council
Gun sal~ave been Illegal in said It tailored Its measure ,to
Washington since 1976. But there garner support from federal
Is a steady flow of weapons from lawmakers. The list of assault
neighboring Maryland · and weapons covered by the city
Virginia.
legislation Is Identical to a rosrer
Memblirs of the City Council of assault weapons that the
said a key purpose behind the Senate voted to ban t:ast year.
legislation was to make gun
Horn said, "This list can also
retailers In Maryland and Virgl- pass the House." He noted that
nia think twice about selling the House leadership so far has
assault weapons. City pollee prevented a vote on the Issue.
have confiscated more than 8.000
,.----------••••••••••••-\,

Sentinei-Page-11

The

the Tr..aurer'• Office, 320
Ealt Main Street, Pomeroy,

'

WASHINGTON (UPI)
pairs of very precisely, shaped .
: NASA has developed a $40 mirrors ranging In size from
: million plan to fix the Hubble about the diameter of a dime to
. Space Telescope by replacing about the diameter of a quarter.
one Instrument on the orbiting which would reflect Incoming
outpost and sacrificing another starlight to compensate for the
to make room for a corrective flaw, Pine said.
device, officials said.
"It would just intercept the
The repairs, which would be beam going Into the lnstrume11t
conducted during a spacewalkby and do a double bounce and go
shuttle astronauts In 1993, should Into an Instrument. In that double
restore the telescope to at least90 bounce you would correct most of
percent of Its Intended capacity, the spherical aberration," he
David Pine, deputy program said. "Right now, it seems
manager, said Wednesday.
extremely promising."
"The telescope today Is the
The major drawback to the
best optical telescope - by far plan Is that COSTAR - which
the best ultraviolet telescope would probably be built by Ball
in the world, even with the Aerospace Systems DlvisU&gt;n In
problems. Having the opoptunity Boulder, Colo. - would require
to bring It back to Its original sacrificing one of the telescope's
pre-launch expectations Is cer- five Instruments to make room
tainly very pleasing to everyb- for COSTAR, Pine said.
ody," Pine said. "It's looking
Under the plan, the telescope's
really good."
high-speed photometer -a highThe plan was submitted to top tech light meter - would be
NASA officials this week as part replaced by COSTAR, he said.
of planning the agency's budget The photometer was picked
and a decision on whether to because It Is the most specialproceed was expected by April,
Ized, and therefore the least
Pine said.
utilized, device, he said.
The $1.5 billion telescope was
Robert Bless, an astronomy
expected to revolutionize human- professor at the University of
. tty's understanding of the unl- Wisconsin In Madison and princl·
. verse by using a highly advanced pal investigator for the photome: optical system to peer deep Into ter. said he was dlsappob\ted his
·the cosmos from Its perch high device had to be the "sacrificial
above Earth's atmosphere.
lamb," but he understood the
But about two months after the reasoning.
long-awaited telescope was
"You wish there were other
· placed Into orbit In April, scient- alternatives. But given the
. Is ts were shocked to discover the
spherical aberration and the
: instrument's supposedly perfect necessity to recover at least
primary mirror was shaped some of the capability we were
Incorrectly. preventing the tele-. supposed to have · from the
scope from focusing properly.
beginning, It's a reasonable thing
to do," he said.
COSTAR would help compenAlthough the telescope has
sate
for deficiencies In the
proved able to conduct valuable
• research In Its current condition, telescope' s taint object camera
NASA has been·studylng various and .two light-splitting lnstru·
· options for correcting the defect, ments called spectrographs.
All the Instruments were de. called spherical aberration.
Jn addition to replacing the signed to be replaced and doors
telescope's wide field-planetary have been )Juilt In the back of the
. camera with a new camera built telescope to allow spacewalking
• with corrective tenses, the plan astronauts to remove them.
In addition, the telescope's
: calls for the Installation of a
energy-i:ollectlng
solar arrays
· device the size of a telephone
may
be
replaced
during
the 1993
booth called COSTAR, Pine said.
repair
job
If
a
vibration
problem
COSTAR, which stands for
corrected optics space telescope cannot be fixed new computer
axial replacement, would con· · programs or modifications, Pine
taln a structure that would said.
Also, a gyroscQpe that failed
extend out and be positioned
between the telescope's defec· Dec. 3 probably will be replaced,
tlve primary m lrror and the even though the telescope Is
being controlled properly with
telescope's Instruments.
The structure would hold five backup gyroscopes, he said.

Ohio

White &amp;
Scotch Pioe ·
6Ft. and Up
Well Sheared. Grown
on the .W eber Ferm In
Rutllnd
·

sn. s2o

READY DEC. 2nd .

742-2143

ll·Z6-'90'(MO.

PH.

GUN SHOOTS
1:00P.M.

SUNDAYS
12 Galftll Factory

cw. 4lllly

SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

• ... 4,tfll

112)1. 11. zo. 27, 4to

.,

'•

�2-The Daily Sentinel
A1• ,

• 1

LAFF-A-DAY

•~

, .,

4

-

....

In

tor trlinld, 2153oflorlp.m.

NMIHII

-

ntc.

·

•...

6038.

Honeom•• HIIIChow,Pupplo•,

Part AKC . Reg. Daln•Uona r~
3

mlxod brood, 5 .flmollo
moln,l14-tiZ.Z357'

6

Lost&amp; Found
loll In tho Pltriot A-. A......

and yell"" At ••ring a blue
collu. Lut a..n aboul a 112

mila oul Hannan Tr~ RDI.d. A
AlWard Ia being otfliN&lt;I for tiMI
,..tum. 6*379"-2lt0, 114-446-

410!1.

LOST-or 8tottn 1 flwn colofed
tomolo boHt, il-rd for 1-..
matlon, Cherry Rldga Aru,
Porneray, 814-992-8514.
·

Bullklomolo, hoi

•ntper Hoi-.

tow Rood, Groon Duly Rood,

to n1rne:
markinG on

an.wera

WhUa

choll. Rowordl Rob,

I~

16011.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Poorwon Auction CamponJ
now booking ouct-, ox·
peri•nc~~ make~

Llconood Ohio,

lh1 dlfMnce.

~ucky,

Will

Vlrglnll, 304-713-5711.

-

,._ 2

rwl-

--.

bnnahll. US Cull-, DEl,
ole. Hlrlna. COII1) _...,.

'

c:lllkl COrw WouUd .., I r-r

old. Dobbtl Drlvo A-. Allor
ochool • -loya M.f.
114 111 .....

u

Apartment
for Rent
1 IR, - - - .: 2 BA, t400/m0.:

2 •
utUftlee tnol

I

,

1 room -lonay oportmont
turnlohod, prtnto both. o~l

u111n110 pold. Rio Orondo. 114-

381•141.

1br lj)lrlmonl With_........
"101.
- · pold. COif Southern
Hllll "-1 &amp;tlte. Inc. 111 Ul
1824 or 11t 3• 1030.
2 oportmonto ono tumiiiiJ&lt;I,

one unfurnlahed, Neh 4 roorne
&amp; both, ........ ' .....rtt,
depod, na pllt8,,114o441-0444.

..

~

U II

lind

. . . . ....g..

,,........

30W71-11171.
Will loki .... at.the ....., In
l h l l t - f14.211M142.

neceaMry. Call ll1rc 11411125657.
.

21

bllon 1843. Crank typo - - .

Jukl boXoo. Old rwdlo tulooo and

Any aid IYI"' oloctn&gt;na tulll

typo. Chuch, P.O. 8"" He,
New Hllven, WY 25215. 30+882·
2220.

Wontod to buy: J..,. .... with

or without motor. l ICrap fMta
11. ~1129.

W•nlod To Bur: J..,k AutOI
wllh
wllllout311· COli
Larry or
Llvlly.I'M
1303

Experienced
Dry_nor,.._,, . 11
Clrdlrwl Drrclelr.rw., · m· ....

_ .......

Buelneu
~portunlty

._.wiN bo

-llul condldo11
Niipcnll*'
for ~
loon
......,
deviiiODing MW"\.n•nne

'Milt
1.: .• .....
,_..,
mil . . . . . . .
and

room • nvtng roam col'llllod,

441-3140.
3 bod_,. In Pomoroy, $mi. 1
bod"""" In lloolno, 111110. 2 _ , In P.......,, 11171. utll-

tt.l ~ do bu»nooowlh.....,..
rou:::'"iJnd
NOTIO..nd-1
the
..... urtlll ,.. ..... od
lUI&amp;.

-

304-

otovo &amp; rwtrtaontor tumlohod,
- · • trult tumlohod. 114-

INOIIC&amp;I

R

'

2br oportmont, tlrot ''-· -

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

DhloRIYw"'-.
Flnlnctot tnotn..lor! wtth oHiol
In Point P-nt hal lm-lllo
•r•nlng
for
•
._, tho -..g.

molnllln'1 a .,..., lOin

Employmt:nt Se rv1ces

r.~• r~~qulrM.

and

118242117.

Wontod aid tubo rocloo mode

trait.
.c-

Ploygraund tor clilldronr .
to och-. .. ,..od, onchon
turnlohod, Equof Houlln; OppcrtunHy. COl 304-'12-371f.
2 bodroorn tumlohod In Now
Hovon, WV. SocuriiY dopolll

.,. ~uorobockL Allo vtnyto. No
191h or ptotic. Battllo not

"'•'aga.

both._ filii. All
~tt ,..

~111.

~ulrod. COli l l : o IIIII 114-7733 ar 441
~

18 Wanted to Do
IIIIa _ .. Dar CON c.ntor.
Boll, ollordoblo, ahl'*"'-· 11-F
I Lin. • 1:10 p.OI, ~ 2 •10,
- . , ollor
- · lln&gt;fMno
114-441-1224.
•

.

Churah - . . y with oompoqr - - l pointing 114-'IQ.
l trwnoc~bor olporlonco. FuJI. :lUI.
b1droom apll'tmenl In Nn.
11... Cllllt444W111 lftW I Wl-lo do- Clolnlng, 2Haven,
total etectrlc, wa ~y

~-aa196C)'•1t'70'• mellll dome tope

JW~rtll

pold. 2 bodrooni In Racfno, fl85.

11wtl24321.

.

"Shhrr In Our - - Wolor
Ytncllnll
- Yilt Old
1Flrm
1With
Nitlottil 11

.....
..........
=n:t•"-.._ - · For - · ~
ROIIMI

GODD8.
toottnr ..1!"11.-. A Q - If W9t1.-nNO
......, awn tho cornponJ
~*'nd.-'"' ... tntondo ,..... Will!, ...,.,. ,.. • ~. 2 bt I
lng Md IF hlar.. D1f!- wlh

:*co a:

=-no:=:ow.

-·

_.Y

s:.r:: _ ... ''"'.=t·.:

·--·-

11

......

Business Services

FOR
CEtrriiALLY BUfED o•a

. . .----

....-..-.

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

-~·1

--~-

=:

2

I

1177 tar .... COlt
W an l-lp.m.114111:14111•

33 Farms tor Sale
Ita 4br Dlllolo ...... - .

.,.., ... -10.1110fllllm . . -

Wit
lor - · . . . . lnd up.
1~mt

CALL
VICIER'S WOOD HEATING

35 Lots &amp; Acruge
1• ...,_ ... - - .
~ an Rt. 12 lnd

o1 Polnl "'

............................ l!?.il...... •a c
Phone (304) . , . . .

Manor

OGIIM.

..._
-~·-lq­

-Ciolloraocl.81-I Nt (lulp
Q~
PO.oot lnogotlokfo) •

C.l
. . . . . . . 11Bo321D
'IIIII Of Fri. 1:30.4:30.

lDI1I POR 1A1.E In Gllllpollo
Fony. WIR -

tnl~oily

2722.- - · -

•QN.SITii SERV·ICll/REPAIR
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMIN&lt;O
•SAUlS
· •ON ~SITE .ClJS'fON TRAINING

ond

ma

Musical

Merchandise ·
112 corot llorqulo Engoaomont
Rlng,l11 411 0305.
12 Inch Boll-Sow, wood f11onor, I
HP, 114-1117-0131.
lft.x11ft. gorogo door whh track
l -.to, J110.114-241&gt;-11557.
Automatic -hor oooc1 sso.

'
. .~~
ll111. ...... "'"".... ldoll

_. . .,. . . --no

Instruments
84klwln e,occro Orgon Doubll

~,114448-NM.

c;-c== . :

--·-....RENT2DWN
114-441-31111

Boll ond Choir, $1.11 por -k.

='!!

I Pillall Waadga-., 114.01 per
wook. L-8111~ lunk Biela,
lnd Chill of Dnlwwo

1,
1
o

Wldo
·..... Ulodllnn
tJaciON
&amp; tm--da.
luy,

..u, .,.., 8:00-1:00 .......,.,
Dno ..... ooll. 20 lnah glrlo

bicycle. 311oHIWH8.
-bit llahtod llan JZIII. F. .
dlltwwoy/loltoro. PTolllc lot1oro

Sat. till "-·

Mochlnooy
Starogo
BPI.:
38'x:41'X11", 1·11' Kf1' 811dlng
dqor, 14' rn~ndoor, chok:e of 11
colora, $l333 IIWCiod. '""'

$37.110 baL 1 -1133 S41J,

..

lca...,row and Mro. King

1121•

e

r-tOW,

oo

c~&gt;&lt;.
. ..
. .. . ' .....
.

ILm.to lp.m., Sunclly, 12 Noon

nn lp.m.

53

•ntlqu-

Buy •

-

·

lf4lll~

.

Bllutltul Ch~llmll "i:l,ft3
•

&lt;.Hoppr NG PAY$

'

TILL Cff/ZIJTMA$

·

f

IAJHAT

J..\APIU!f.O?

00\1-\l.tJG

~

e

cru..r::f,n co
R:R Au... HIS

COOSTtlUESJlS...

i

Ricky Van Shelton Slnga
Cflrll-1 Ricky Van Shelton
sings holiday music. (0:30)
1:00 (l) D G)) C..._ Sam
struggles to remain friends
wrth RebeCca. IAI Stereo. Q
(i) (I) • Qabrlel'l Fire
Gabriel has a painful reunion
wrth his ex-wife. Stereo. Q
(!) (f) Mylteryl A murder .
suggests that a man formerly
!!.resumed innocent Is a killer.

~~........ $50.

'

.

Transportation

FNO lltlmlloo. Coil calloc:t 1· '
814-237-. dor or night. .·

71 . Autos for sale

;;:::::::::::-:===------- ...

1m C..ro. Dr.g car, W8ld
wh.a., tubbed, luln wtndowl,

~ laMmenl Waterproo.: . ,.~
llnj.
-··
Compllto llobllo Homo ·oot upo ·

a ....... elao plumbing a .~~
ltoctrtcll, rooting, ramadollng, olllal I docko ole. REMODEL· . ·-

nbo;r• trunk, bla INOI Refer.nc.. E•lmatn.
blac englno. 85100. 114J14f: 114-2141-111t
3003.
Aon'o TV Sorvtco, opoclal::~
tm Cldllllc, :10,000 1e1uo1 In ZlnHh aloo llrvtdng
ml!".!....PertiCI condition, IC,IIOG. olhlr brln*. HDUH oall81 al.a

BARNEY
~~

l'M MfSSIN' A HAN«
OF WHITE YARN It

•
,.

Joe"-. DH 1-IIIH37.f121.

1180 2 dr. Cllllan good
run• !load 114-tii-JMt 1100. O.vta

G~

firm.

'·

S.W·Yac
Service,
CI'Mk Ad: Pa11t, aup-

&lt;

;~

pltkup, and d•ilveoy. 114· • •'
1181 Buick Stltlon Wlgon, mull · ~42M.
~~
_.lhCOI Amorlaon Gliwal, ollr
for lck. 114-441-4111.
~ ~Buldoro:

ti'

till Chryllor Low, 4 .,; 1
- · a i r cand, nowtlroo,1'75-a313.
•

1185 lluotang LX, 41,000 .......
olr, -- ... -

brllkoo,
........0.1.0.
""""' J04.e7l.
...
..
.....,,1t3,400.
3111.

84

(!)Under Fire
all
Knots Lending

1121 e

__

Ll

ahead . Send tor your Astra-Graph pre- have problems working with co-work•s
dictions today by mailing S1.25 to As· today, especially It you are critical of
tro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. their otlorts and overly lnllotant upon
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. doing. things your way. Strive to be

ASTRO·GRAPH

Be sure to state your zodi&amp;c sign .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
•

'

Electrtcal &amp;
Refrigeration
A11ld•ntlal . or oomiMI'CJal

_.,

.,...,.,...

I d .. lalrlclan. RldMaur

El-t. ~17111 .

tl

85

General Hauling
·:··
.
' I
R l R - - - . c t o - '' ·
,_ t-11.-1,000 or '!
~·~· con 304-

Dac.21, ,...,
Financial indicators should be trending
upwards In the year. ahead and lm·
proved material conditions are

!lollll- IMio
!!"*....... lhloa
_ ,Apoo,
...

"Tille kid gete ooal. He gave hie younger
brother a pen wtth disappearing inkl"
~

--· (

I
... ...
_, .

--COlli, .. -

........ 11.

-... -·

-· ...

Top Rank Boling

10:00 (l) D G)) L.A. Law
Ma"rkowltz Is 1rreslld tor
driving drunk. IR) Sterao. Q
w NaW11
Cll w D Primaflme Live
Stereo. D
ClJ Fourtfi Annual Raport of
the lecratlriel of DefenM
Former aacrstsrles Of
delenaa discuss current
issues. (1 :00)'

1171 VW Robbh, llondordh 4
opood\i- 104471-2440 1 or Blpllc Tonk Pumt&gt;lna fl!!o.Golf" A' :·
Co. RON EVANS ENIERP"ISES;
o;
4:00 p .
•

~

IIOIIU
•anNG I COOLIIG

.i

"'""'....,.
rwpolro. wv •.. , :·
304.QI.HII
Ohk) 114-446-2454.

l,....no-2421.

·-11-Z711.

Joe"-

.llavarly HUll, 10210
Brenda loses Brandon 's car
while trying to pass her
driving test. (A) Stereo. Q
0 MOVIE: The Protector (RI
12:00) Stereo.
1211 Nllahvllla Now ·
a Ulrry King Llval
.2 1:30 (l) D 11J Qrond Carol Anne
adopts a wild boy whO was
raised by wolves. (Part 1 of
2) Stereo. Q
1111 IIJ • Doctor, Doctor A ·
~owel wrtten by Mike causes
trouble at the office. Stereo.

Uncondltlanal lifetime gUIIran- ~~
tM. Local r1ter.ric• fumlshH. .... •

112'1 E. lloln St-, Pamon&gt;y. BEAUTIFUL RED COLORED
•oatorn=lng,
Noon• II.T.W. 10:00 o.m.to 1:00 AKC REG. IIEAGLE, - · 1 11114 III'""IY
!fit. lull I
1!0,
114-'1112·2321.
.
p:~~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.hl. montho lldr "!•rtlng to run, d~vei,,V.a
pb,
pw,
AC,
aut
11=111
I'
tiOO, or ... atfer ott.r
11-. hiG1I nag. I
booglo'o
-.114
Ml
ii43.
• orii4WD48.
82 Plumbing &amp;
Cl. II I h r N pupe; Lola of
111114
Plymath
Rollont
AC,
wrlnkloo.
Chrlllmu
-'•1.
Heating
Bruce Beattie
IUICIIIIIIIt, -~~.... $1iiilo, 114MI-2177.
co~... Plumbing
ondHIOIIng
aPuppiH,
$50
·
81411114
S.10
Biuor,
l
..
o,
4
WD,
m.aee.
Founh •nd ·PTne
AIIIFII ..-o, AC. ~ - 1
Gllllpotlo, Ohio
lhlpo, M,IOD. 114-411-7100.

MOBILE HOME FURNAUS • HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNAd' PARTS

(I).

a~··
1D
MOVIE: The Black
Stallion lletuma (PGII2:00)
I:DII (J) MOVIE: 1'- T11o1
DiUni 12:15) &lt;
8:30 (l) • · IIJ Dllferant World
Whitley looks toward to
beComing closer to Dwayne's
family . Stereo. Q
(J) Thia Old Hou• Q •
1111 IIJ The Filth Akiller
seek&amp; Wllngeance against tho
Allen family . IR) Storao. Q
liD • llabea Cha~one
organizes a rent strike
~ainstthe landlord. Stereo.

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

=

:..:::rc::,.::r.
~'t
......

•

MO~E

finds hl111111ll bidding on a
rare jazz album over the
pltona. Stereo. Q .
(!) MDVII!: lomjthlng for
Joey 12:00)
(i) .
l'athar Dowling
Myllllflal Preatwick's life is
endangered after Dowling
. witnesaas a murder. (A)
Stereo. Q
(!) Venture At 8aa Ute and
work on board a SOviet
fishing ship and an American
catcher boat are profiled.
(J)HoonallmaC
all !ale Top Copo A
policeman ~· Involved
in a_gun beHie. Stereo. Q
liD 8J The Stmpaona Marge
sets out on a crusade to
stop violence in television
.cartoons. Stereo. Q ~
0 Murder,~ Wrote
1211 Amartcen Mulllc Shop

([D D

- " ' ta •nr ft!IIIIIO, hal 0f1111

'

rou~

~

1m 17 ft. ~ Slon:ratt Trt-llull
- · 121 HP, Evtnrudo Enalno,
aamototo tap, now upholllor,.
COli 114-:IH-1311 oftor 7:00 p.m.

. .. .

·II• I•
st..kll

f

e

•'

I - · lloodv ...
l:hrlitmull200. -·~
HAPPY JACK LOTION:
IIJIORID111 hMIIng ... Nlr

~

7:35 &lt;SJ The Jaflaraortl
8:00 (l)
IIJ COlby 811ow Cliff

~= ~ ::~71~

14) 446-6000

-

f~Nlf • • •

Services

Avo.
Point P-nt, :IOW75-2013,
tun IIIII Traplcal .f!."!'J__blrdo,
onlmolo and • ._....
For Bolo: AKC a- Chow Pup.

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

Gil Croesfire

THE~E 'J ONL.Y

.

~

/!ILAX

.,

Floh Tlllll, 2413

···-·-····~·

~AN

Uko-.

sum

.._..., .. Sllffertl Sdteilltl. off lt. 141 '
16141 ......16. 1• •. . ,....,

7:05
Dlyl
7:30 &lt;2J • 1111 IIJ ~nlyl Q
(!) Night Court Q
· · CIJ
E~tartaln. .nt
Tonight Stereo.
(I)
Mouna•a Family
liD • ThrM't Company
QJ College llaakolbel

2417.

lWin lizl bod, with mot,,... Mt, tiiOi tMw ctt.l .of
d,...., $11i l r i •• $10;
VCR topoo 85.00 lOCh; Alghllll,
Wlrioul Cotati, J50 IICh; 84by

Unruly- A"er- Quart- Basket- FUTUR~

8
&lt;Sl H_,

you

'' 'I"'

i

likely ~

provided
you
capltallza
on
opportunltlea.
IAGmARIUI (Nqw. 21-Dac. 211 Today you might expect more from per·
sons thin tltelr ctpalillltlla _ , and
oild up getting angry IMcau• they can't
deliver. StriWII to be tolerant . Get a jump
on llle by undaratandlng the i~fluionces
whlclo are governing you In the year

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) Upon
occasion you are sometimes overly
generous with the wrong people .while
Ignoring the deserving. It looks like this
might be one ot those days, so be
careful.
.
AQU@.RIUS (... n. :ZO.Fab. 111 This Is a
good day to reevaluate your ob)actlves,
becat~~e you might be trying very hard
to achieve a goal that won't gratify you
once II Ia analned.
PISCEI (Ftb. 20-Merch 20) II something disturbs you today you are likely
to sutler In lllence lnoteld ot bringing "
out Into the open whtre II can be re!IOived. Don't hold things ln.
AR.S. ( - Z1·Aprll 111 Be ax·
tremaly sel«:tlve today regarding your
choice of companlono. II you're carelOll, you might aiiOCiate with a per10~
who m.Y do 101118thlng• underhanded
and you could be accuMd of complicity.
TAUIIUI (April 2IHiaf 20) You're an
lndtpendent thinker who llkaa to eet
hlllltar own goalo, but today thla uolgn"*'t might be antruated ·t o an lndlvtdull llmt1 .,. not In hairmony
with youro.
GIMINI (liar 21-.1- 20) You • might

considerate.

CANCER (.tuna 21......, 22) SOmeone
who Is presently Indebted to you might
not comply to your demands tor repayment today If you attempt to - r e
hlmlltar. In order to get thait to wNch
you're entitled, you mt111 be tiCiful.
LEO (Julr 21-Aug. 221 Today you might
halve to rnol&lt;e 1 hard "eddtion !hilt af·
lects 80miOII8 lite u well u youro~~t.
It you do not consider hillltar lnl-11.
a problem could erupt.
VIIIQO (Aug. D-lept. D) Penon a ovw·
whom you haWII authority wNI M1Uiate
thai exemple you 181 today. 11 !hay I*·
~you to be incllllerent or lazy, It,.,' II
mirror ~ behavior.
LIIRA (llepl. D-OoL Dl You might not
be too proficient today II rnantiQing
your raourcea or thole of Dt'*-. You
won't be chutllecl lor,.,... loMas, but
IMi prepared to take 101118 Mal lor your
other mlllakH.
ICORPIO (Ool. 1M Ntn. 21) Gun
agalnat Inclination a today to ... r~
when you hiYII to con- w111t unex.pectedlruatrationo. Thera II a poulblllty you might tmall l~lrectton. out
ol proportion.
'

Paiga accepts Greg·a
marriage proposal. Stereo.

8Ganalatlon
D Star Tnik: The Next

BRIDGE

lal.

(!) NIIW11Walch

.-

-

CROSSWORD
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Slrike out
5 lower in'
character
11 Vilamin
addhion
12 leon Uris
novel
. 13 OlhBIIo,
e .g.
14 leenag ·
ers
15 Lamb,
lorone
17 ConceH
18 Carries ·
22 lnexperi anced
24 Take
potshols
25 Director
Howard
26 "Golly!'
27 Beneath
30 Had
yearnings
32 Prepare
the
turkey
33 Squealer
34 Symbols
or might
38 DownlaJJ
41 Concerning
42legend·

•

.,

"·•
Yesterday's Answer
melon
len
nuisance 35 Super·
22 Chow
man's
23 Column is!
adopled
' Barren.
name
28 Piiml!
36 Hislotic
ballerina
canal
29 Think
37 Transmit
38 F amiJy
JogicaJJy
30 louvre
membet
contents
39 Preceding
31 Btoad·
time
way stat
40 Buddy

Klnt

Stereo.

.......L

i:....~
a I:; 'ian lllallolr .....
Cll.illnln Ricky Van Slltlton
air? holiday mutlc. (0:30)

81t1DrltCMIIII
~pona TOitighl

'

.,

DAILY CRYMOQUOO'ES- Here's how 1o work it: 12120

..

•
J

'

II LONGFELLOW

'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for !he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day .the code lett~rs are'different.

'

CRYP'TOQlJOTE

'

UDXJIDJP· .

V G

D

D
EDZ

DXL

D

G U VS

zyp

G D S P

QYDXQP

'

RDQW

YPOMPOZ

Yeeter.•y'• Crypt011-te: IT MAY BE TRUF.
TltAT LIFE BEGINS AT FORTY. BUT EVERYTIIING
ELSE BEGINS TO WEAR OUT. ~ FAI.l OUT OR •
SPREAD OUT. - ANON.

'

.

•

DOP

QYDXQP

ZYVXJ

J

EIXIC.F

Ill TOitlghllllow

(J) CIMM ltoiY
(!) .John IIICLIUghtln'e One
on One

.-

ary
paradise
43 Norse
god
44 Sulli·
ciently
dressed
45 Explo~ed
DOWN
1 FOR

PXJUVGY

11:30 &lt;2J •

'.

•

An•alc.n MUiiC lhop

8

}

·I
I

12-20

-~line
~-end Mre.

a

portraM
sening
2 Cupid
3 Things lo
tie up .
4 lnlurlale
5 Acttess
Moots
6 Is
7 Stylish·
ness
8 Bother
II Calilor·
nia·s
Big 10 B~tlore
tee
16 Over
there
111 Some
loolballers
20 Fencing
need
21 Waler ~

e

liD Artenlo Hell Q
I!J IIWttl VIce

....

..

AXYDLBAAXR

10:30 (J) For lha ·Night ot

Coook and Cltlu
11:00(2). W (J)D illl
• IIJ ......
(!) Night Court Q

· 11-lt·M

1

RabtrtMn
10'.20 &lt;SJ MOVIE: 0 .1. a1,.1 (2:00)

a

NORTH

+a

.JIOH42
By James Jaeoby
8J43
-After Norlh's artificial pre-emptive
+a7S
openlua. East-West failed IAl reach
EAST
UM.Ir vulnerable small slam. South · WEST
+AQ76U
doubled two spades, lhe premise bein1 ~ + K J 10 9
' -'
'IB
tbat Norlh would pass only wben bis 'I A Q3
8 KQ15 2
true 111111 was spades. When North . t A 7 6
2
••
lltowed tbal bis suit was hearts, South · + K Q
·~
bid four clubs to show lhe ace in that
sou-m
suit u well as length.·west now asked
+52
'IU&amp;
for aces. North bid five clubs IAl1et in
8101
the opponents' way, and East's double
+AJIOI84
was intended IAl llhow one ace. Unfortunately West misinterpreted the
"'
Vulnerable: East-West
mean1n1 of the double and passed.
Deater: North
Tbis type of lhinl bapperis all lhe
..
Nortlo
time, even in lhe semifinal round of Sootll
2
••
World Team Cbampi0111blps.
Redbl. S'l
Tbe defense funcliDDed perfectly. Dl&gt;l.
4+
4NT 54
Don llil:, in lhe revised ICOI'in&amp;
scheme for touruamenllt, gave East· o\11·~re-emptive tn eltlter majOr
West 1400, a small •-. since their
teammates at lhe other table were miOpening lead: • K
nus 1430, their opponents having
reacbed the small slam in spades. Un·
forlunately, in the stress of compell·
"·
lion, everyone mis-acored the result.
Tbe score card indicated lhat declarer team, lhe ostensible wlnnen of' the
had taken six tricks, and the !Altai en· match, agreed tbat they actuaRy bad
tered was ooly 1100. Later, before lhe beell set 1400, lhe appeall CGIDIDittee, •.
final match began and wilhin the pre- on the llfOIIIldrt tbat tbe acore earc1
scribed time for correction, aU contes- manifestly Indicated that lia trleb
taats realized tbat the actual result bad been taken, let the reau1t llud.
This strange decision will loa&amp; be
sbould have beell.l400.
criticized.
Despite the fact tbat lhe German

a CNN Evening -~
1D 700 Club With Pit
CIAIIbiWI

rz .,,

The profeSI!Or startled the cute coed from her .d ay· .
dream. Sllenctng the laughing class, the professor lectured, "There is nothing Jlke a dream tD create the ..
FUTURE.·

=~r
ar.-,una

=----.··.
&amp;
Motors

SCUM-LITS ANSWIIS

.•

'•

for Sale

e tiL IIJ Wheal at
F-Q
W I Drotam at ,.annie
CIJ (I) tnolcla ~ilion
ClJ (J) MacNeii/Lahrot
Nawtltour
liD e Night Court Q
IIJ e Current Alltir Q

e

"

114 ... 2'11

r

,

::t

75 Boets

Andy Orlfftth

I!J lllcOyvar MacGyver
comes to tho aid of his high
SCI1ool ·-!heart. Q

72 Tnlcks 1or Sale

·=

-r

Sl'i/NG I'AUiiY PIIOFESSION.tt BUH.DING
J06 jACKSON PIKE ·
liiJ
G.tWPOUS, OHIO 4J6JI

'

112·

fi!l;ng in the milling - •
you dovolo!i from llop No. 3 bolow.

g

7:00 (l)

1
'

685i.

814-MI-zn 1 1ftw S:OO

the chuckto quot.d

llportslMk

' ..., ::
·
.
.
i•
MuM Hll 1187 Mercury Slblei ' •
3.0 IH., 1, cruiM, tin; .,., pm, · ....
::

~~~:::.

E;;..
·

1;35 (SJ Andy Grtlflth

Horao Bulk/oro, 114432·11l115.
Rocondftlonod Wuhoro, Doyoro. Bow cholno buy 2 all 1 lno.
:1 .1113.14 por
-k. Guorantood """""' for Sldo,. Equlpmont, ~11121. 76 Auto Parts &amp;
......
·
14.44
por-k. oli ....... . . - . Tho -hor
Roall- am.por -11. Otnotta DryorS'-' 114-44HM4.
Accessories.·
Llveetock
63
with 4 Chllrw, S?.IIO por - · 4 Romlngton 12 pugo Sport-n
BUdaot
Tranomlootan., Uood &amp;
-· lied, Jt2.20 por llaclol 11, lmpraYod cytlndlf' 280 lb. hog $121, 814-185-3818.
,.bulll, lllrtlng .t Sit: 11..245- .; :
-. 4
Chill at
$325. Dro..... $3.110 por-. Rt. 141, rolled ~bo.
Hoiwea For Sate: I~ 2 Y1ar Old sen. f14.379.2283.
4 Mlloo 011 111. 7 In Contlnloy. 175-1131.
AQHA Sorroll Golding, well
HOUIIS: llondey thru SaturdiY,
brokl: Big 2 Yoor Old' AOHA 79
campers&amp;
llo.m..ap.m.; Sundoy, 12 Noon·
C-nU1 Fllly..._l AOHA w-~
Motor
Homes ·
!rig
ShQuolny.
IM.:IIUIZZ.
Sp.m.
SWAIN
'81 Colchman Park Modlll, 35 fl 1 ~ •
AUCT10N &amp; FURNITURE. 62
2 tlpaut!J. root olr, ral With 1"'1 7".
moMr, .,,soo. 304-li75-3DDD or
Otl.. St., Oalllpallo. - . Uoocl
fumh.... hutlf'W, Watem I
17UZTI oftor 8:00.
--o.l14-44fo3111.
••'

..-~w; For , _ lntioo•tlaoo
coli :110U711-4100, I7I-20U ar

SNAFU® by

liD •

384:8~. op. rune v-w•

rear cMfoa. ...reo tape,. very
c..an 31.,~ mil• $5000 oba

One dummy to another: 'I
loaned a guy money lor a face
and now J don't know what

:1-2·1 Contact
all
cas Newi Q
(f)

cc
.

rI =========:J:::::======~

Rentals

lal•
=

-rH_Y~S.,K~Af"'""il~.

1---lr-0....;OI,...;s 1,.;-H...;,01,.;9D;.,l,.......ll ; ..
1...-'.L-..I.L-..1•...,..1.-..I. .....J. by

C:O.tello

~&amp;·~NawaQ

..

h••

...
...... =---":-::-=-:---""':""=-~ o;:""'.=!tlonh;::
1111. Rl-'ow ,.,...._

_ ••11.
.,_

1:30 ~. 11J NI!C Nlght!y New1

t_..,

=r,.

~

1:05 (J) 8tNerty lllb.NIIII

1Ji AllbDtt -

I I~·;:;·:;::.:~Jilt,
I' I
r.~·~·;:::;:·
6

IDOurHou•Q

••h•

· Rtnrwtao

b !han $1:t5.
utltllloo 12 ~ • bod-

aWorkiT-I.

,.·:,,

•'
For Bolo: . tl Cont"'J', Groncl Pllna, ualllont -~ 111111 . Chovy Halt~on pick-up!
3110-tour blrrll, 4pod. POll . ·,.
tlan, - olflr, 114-24WI41.
T111Ctlon R.....,d, new u,.., ...
Hommancl 110 IIIIO'o tub typo dual exhlu.t, $600. &amp;14-44&amp;.,
mac1ot 11, tun "'• - n J301J 11156.
.
boby bodo 11110 IIIII- or Exco.llant enawmcblla, or:-ty 137 .:,114-;.:.::115-314:;::=:.:.;'~·=::-:,.-=:--~
118G Volkawagon 01..-1 Truck ' ··,
box ollrinao full or twin '":2:1s~ mU•, axtru. co.1 P.400. J&amp;M Plano ServiM
all • For Sa,.. 814-367·7101.
~. ·!~
.... indQI.Quo.. . •
lllny Chrlllniu. I'll bo aut ol
up, King $3110. 4 d...... aholl ._rillco 111,000. 304-ilz-3318.
1181 Ford, pickup, F·150 I cyt, ' ..;
$11. Oun CablnMtl I, I, Ia 10 Bnlbd cant. • •· Naltpot .. me. fDr • whl .., bul wHI onglno Short bod, Gbod condl·
to 111 my cu.
gun. !llbY l l l l l l r - 135 &amp; 007 pillnt t.llilun. e~Z-3143 . fl!lum. Thanka
lion, ~100. 814-441·1025. .
·;~
Bill Word.
1145. Bod I n - $2$, OUNn
CDidlj)ot
side
x
aide
Slal35 • king_,_ $50. Oood
1111 Chevy 5-10, 4 .cyllnde_r1 !_.~.
. . . .ion Df .. *ccrft ...... N-tor-tnuor, 111!10. 114- 58
Fruita &amp;
IIIP'd, air condhlonlr, AMIFM ...:...
4411-131G.
nullo, fl~laM topper, 23,000 "'"'
Vegetablee
ond up Ia MI.IO dlyo 1arr11 10 Conaroto l ptutlc ooptlc ,tonko,
mlleo. 114-211-1124.
.
~,!!
cuh wllh •Pf!!'OWod croci!. 3 mi. Ron Evant Entet"'M''MI, J10k· Dunrovln P:rull Ferrn iu.t off Sr
Ford Rano-r XLT. AIC, V~
out Bulowlllo Ad. 0oon I A.M. ta
Ill 0111 :1 Albony. Wo ocaopt 11M
5 P.M. lion, thno Sot. COli 114- - · 011 1~37-tl28. '
onglno. $ 1 5 0 0 . - 4.
!-'!
laod ... _
Vlrloty at
441-0322.
Flrwood
For SolO: All 1mt.h
a . _ Mel butter, ml
""
nubl, honey or eorghum. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
CARPET
- .onytlmo.
dlllv.y, 37N811,
FURNITURE
Tuood•e.::•Y M
dolly, 11178 Ford 1 Ouo!11r Ton 38.5 ·-~
y. IM.aiWZIII.
lloltahan FumHure A C.rpiiL Flrwwood, $31 dlllvar8d, 114- c SwamJ*II: autamatlc,-fuiMlrM.
~
Ill. 7 North. 114-441-11144.
141 tmljl.
~ 114-:IIB.ftOII.
__;:
County Apptllnol. Inc. Good
1184 Ford Bronco II, rwd &amp;
i;
Farm Suppltes
Ulod -''",_,T.V. olio. Ooon
white, t owner, •xc. concf, auto,
•.
I a.m. to I p.m. Man.-Sal ••.,....
&amp;
Livestock
..,, caMtte; ext... • ..rp.
~
441,111!.. 127 .:ltd. A... Go~
waiTinty, $5,411 or 1111.45 per · .,..
llpolll,""
- · 814-441HI711.
• GOOD USED APPLIAIIC&amp;S Fllh tonko, 55 all 1110., 40 Gil
~.._., d,...., re~tora,
_$50., 10 fill. wllh 118nd1, 3Q4. 61 Fann Equipment
:::74=-:::::M~o::-t-:o:::rc~y=c=la~s::::-:::::- '"
rangoo. Skaggl APIIIIIOCII, 175-21113.
1!10 At; XT Sorllo I Troctcor WHh 11113 Honda 450, $300. 304·773- .~
IJptjor RIYw Ra. 8ooldo Stono
Far- 5hp lng- Lind, olr Cob, "IW , llaf"!r Point, 5641.
Crall-·· Clll1+44$.73118.
··~
~~l ,hl~ 1 year 31,15110; 0171 AC 1-or. PS.L :J: 1185 Hondli 7UO, 1150; VW Trike, -~
- W couch _, omoll ......l
Point HHc~ $1,111: 100 "''"'
orlnt. szoo. Coil wookondo 0( 1~
:J..~· Sprlngor, $1110. 114- •.: :
Sale: Glulen Slza Manrea wnh Ford Loodor, $3,HI; Ownor
lw lp.m. _do,.. 114.912· For
Will
Flnonco.
114-:zBI.IIII2.
Mt, SUi Oct. Game TabJe Ml;
7113.
1181 Kan11kl K·X 125,· good
Clll 114-441-0233.
2010 JD Troctor With plow cu~ -.dillon,
111415. 114-IIIH20D. .
PICKENS FURNITURE
corn plant!!, $2 111!;
F - Brulh EtOdroototlc ..r. tlvotarb
0
~·od
I* _.,., on aala. C.ll Dale 1020 J OIINI, $4,SDUi 101 Ju 11!10 lhmrkl Rll 121, gorago
tumlohlng. 112 mi.
whh JD lood•, $3,210; 2010 JD Upl:, ,..,. raced. Low Mile•,
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. P l - . WV, Woad, :tl04-'75-10110.
with JD loader, 13,111. OWner
llko - · 304-a78-1117:
coll304-475-1480.
Klnchwood Woodbumer, wtth wtll nnonco.,e,...._.uz.
Hondo TIIX 200, tour wholtor
bla
':!g
yaoro
old,
teOO.
114Quoin 1111 wotor bod with
Jim.. Fonn Equl-nt,_IR. :11, d~ve lhlft drlwWI. ft,4lfl. 1m
241-.
llghlo ond mlrrow. Full lizl oofl
Will GoiRpallo, 114....H777: Chltll' plok up 115!0. 3114-tl'li-

Vllllal

laudal.

ter trelned, wry loveabla, rudy
lor Chrlllmuf can
Clive
Raference. 114--317-7701.

54 Miscellaneous

LAYNE'S FUR!IIrUAE
Sola ond ahotn prlcocl tram
13111 to - · Tobloo $110 ond up
to $125. Hldl I bldl S3IO IO
..... Roctlnorw
to $311.
lompo S2l ta $128. Dlnlll•
ll10!1ond up Ia 14111. Woad lllllo
M ohalra 1211 to f711, DooM
1141 up tal375. Hutohll 1400 &amp;
up, l!unk bodo complllo with
mitt,_ 1211 lnd up tD ftll.

GL,

.' ' I' 1 I I
5

BudweiMr Tboraughbred

•'·

Eocort,

. KLOCF

Digall

Tt.IAT WAS A
LONGTIME
AGO ..

.,

1121•

=

Httl, AC, 54,000 mU•. 114--388outamotlc,
PS, PB, AMIFII :.8710:;;•..:;11::.1.::31::.11-82c::::40;:::--.
Antlquee
Pets for Sale
1111 comoro, fr.!,.m, T~-. '·
- - - - . . . . : . . - - - - ----------(olr,tlllcruloo,Pw,Daorlacb, ;•
1 own., hu wainnty, 18,111 or • 1;
Oulno
Roglll- lllntaturo Docrh- $208.58 por month, •-.am. • '
pro IMO~aod -lon. ohund. 30U71-3121.
.:=:.::=.:..::.::=':7.;,.:,:';::-:=-:'-::
•
•·rot photao 1 •-•~~Jion ta
~
For llolo: 1155 Sulek Clntu'l, 2 •' ·
;ge
-"
SlanMM KltlfiM ·wormed &amp; .... h rdl
...... 14-

YrRA FURNITURE
114-441-3111
liM. Clll 114-tt2·7711. EOtl. ·
BoCtlonol 2 !nell-., $141,
In Mlclcll1p art, Ohio, N. Third Rogullr Prlco, ".Ill: Swlvol
Aw. 1 bedroom tumiMecl 1pt,
Wlh Bock Coni-~ $?to
.._.. •nd ,.,.,..,_ ,.. Railkor
Roglllor Prlco, 1241: ....,.r
..lrwd, 104-112-2111.
Chlllll111, Rogullr Prlco, f2811:
Country
Pl....,_
Antlroro,
Ural , _ Alllllmont, IWI
. •rdrobo) JZ!I,. ~~~gular Potco,
KltCMn FumJ.t.d, 231 Flrwt $411
Gl.. And Mlrrorwi
Avonuo, PIO/-. ph• utllltloo, Chlld'oWHh
Hobby Hor111, Countoy
• ...... lio polo, Plrw t24.1~ogUIIr Prlco Adorable Chrllt- Chow Wolf
tM-146-111211.
$18.11; Clok
II Toblo WHh Pu....._ ll12lll14 1ll IIJI.
,.,._,
I Chllro $1121, llogul« Prlco
"lolly lwnlohod ......... - . 1
1111; Hoot ond ll1001gor AKC boo..Hul mole jot black
'"""
tawnb::::'nooklng
~v~ -~-holt,
• Rof. RICirnor SZ!!, Roaulor Prlco tiny tor Paodlo, 12 wko
1411; I "oblnllo,.Countoy clouo Chrlotmoo gift,
75111 ••• All.
Pirw, Corwod Daor - . 1114.
_,.h Thlnl arMI, Mldlll1part, 1111, R,uiM' 9rice l341i
Dhla. 2 bo* -~~ turn,_ opt, Country
uotlc Tobit With AKC mlnlaturw -lo pupploo, I
roforlrtcl and dlpoon roqutrwd, And ThrOI Chill,. tzn. - o l d , CFA Lltoc Hlmlllpn,
304 • 21M.
flogullr Prloo $311. Rautio 141, 4 moll aot, doctowod, · 114-256NEWLY AEIICIDELED with Dtl Aaut1 71n co.-oy. 1018.
RENT and 1 low do!'*' to tit Noon: llandoy Thru Sat-r, AKC r o a - Cockor Sponlll

1711- ··-

ROUII 2 Alhlon, 1 ICN k*, 3
.,,... oauth Gltllpotio Loeb,
public - · · no -llellono,
..... -~h ~ ... trontaQo, 117NJM.

Household

Ford

111

ClJ :1-2-1 ~TV'c
a'i~~ Q
I!J CartoOn!_..

' ,

1111

-d•

w Cllertat In ~ Q

::

'
•:

.

1 Patton, Athent, Ohio 5701 or
ull 1141112-5157 or 614/SDZ•
2481.

Goods

, . , . _ . In llkldlooart. , ....

11.100. firm. ___ , . ..

oUMI,.....--.~

LOAD EVEl'Y 12 HOBS

_,. oportftllntl II

11721raokwaad 12110, 2br1 MW
~ porch, 112,000. IM-

1172Iahulz

r.~erchand iSe

4:30.

BllutHul 1br, ldtchen, Wllor,
Help wanted
truh tumllhod, 111 month$ lor Chrlotm11 bUll. Soil Avon.
reduced. Rat.....,_, o.po.tt
-and
Froo gift with ligrMip. COli Kly with
_,rod. 114-411 1111
Bond
lo:
........
~COHllmbor­
P.O. lloll lM04, llow ._,. ,....,, tall - . 11141902-7110.
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEHT1 AT
aar-., WV 21302. EEO, IGN.,_,
$31CWAY PROCESSING
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK11/F.
'
PHONE· ORDERS! PEOPLE
ESTATE!I,. Ul J - PIM
Hount ptr br ..... monlh or
CALL YOU.
, _ 111_,..,, Walk to oholl •
fle;il Estate
NO EXPERIENCE NEC!SBARY. -tar-whahodlmovlle. Clllll14 448 2518. EOH.
~ CAU IREI'UNDABLEI
llltach, 114- 2410.
I '
Fumlohod
-~mont, owrd to
1·31&amp;-733..012 EX'reNSION P.
LPN- Po~~- ..n Row•w d
Library, p~~rtilng, oentn1 hMt,
61111
Clrl Cantor 3Qoi.I7S.I8N,. ook 31 Homn for Sale
Nlwenoe requlr.d, IUitablli lor
for Phylllo "' ..,,., Apptr In
1
· 114 Ill 03311.
AVON • All ,,_, Cll lllrilyn
'wooded
b olat.
dn
-. .... Ohla.
· 1\l'lua.
WNYif' 3CM ~211M-Fu'"'"'::
~1o •211171.
br, 11111
lllcond, 01111
-r
A portio! liM In Ia hllp cora tar
polcl, I
I oft« 7p.""
lady: Sond '""mo to:
Fumilhld oltlcloncr, on UIIHtl•
clo Box 059 Golllpollo Dally
...... lherw both. . , . , _ 111
Trlbuno, 125 Third Ave,_, Go~
.......... .,. 441 3141.
llpcllo, OH 411131.
Fumlohod ollloloncy: $171,
32 Mobile Homee
utllltlla pold, 120 FoUrth, Gil·
llpoll. 114-111 lltl-7pm.
rorsale
Groclauo living. I ind 2 bod-

a....,

_.,,.., •• ·

5I

1:oowe
w we
Ill ......

·~

l

""Jcgroat

..... .$75. 3Q4..171.1711 after
oo;aiS, nice,

''

ml._p, P!J._ pb,
, AM
.: ::
lt.,.o . 34,0Uu mllel, GREAT L...; '
CAR, 85210 or otflrl coli , ,
.IM-1141-2171 or 1141-2045.
,.

bid. 304-8711-1113.

....

a ...,_ In 11 uanoc tin, ftrto. ;: .t;;!1i:t ::;:
.nee Of ICCDU: . . il .. pi ....icd.
lnlo a • cc111 tu1 bu1ln 111. We
will bo - - ·

11

:='"

... -.

.,..

Slllrt.,

Wanted to Buy

putt. Old radlo

Countoy llobllo H- Pork,
~rta;::._at
'
1••~.:....-

tnl~

ae.1103befcntp.m.

obo 814-MI-2311 after 5 Mt-

1181 ChevY eor.• 11.110 ....... ', '·
4· 4 qlil)clor
~

~~~~~====r-~~~=~==:;~
~
.!'.:."C'Zi 53
56

46 Space for Rent

llootlo Fotry, *-1184207 till
1l:OOPII.
.
Untumloliod Mobile Hc&gt;niO. 'lory
ND, No 1&gt;111. 111 141 J:V. 1"-

poolllan".:;

,_...

room

'•

np~lr $75,000

8110.

81--·"h-ng.
Allo'trwlw · Alhooll-upo.
Cd. . . . z:oo p.m., 304·77311111,111-WV.

--::-;;-;'"='bod:;:''=:-::==--;::;Qll.

Alllljar -A ahlln II
ptll:g Eaoy W... l Eaolllnl Pori b="10811onl tar~nclcU. Mll'lllle Pnd11ct11t holM. call
lon ot ,, for
cllorw_...T11o
Eoit.~~lon. - bo lllhor lull « P I - ..~
tllxlblo ..,_ Tho Town a t - . """·
N)or RIIIICII, lie lneuranoe. FIN Dlpt and Malon E..,.,..
wocltiolo, ...dontol pion, -Squad oN In nood at,,....
plla, li1 diOplt-. Sorvt- -lrwd
onlllbll 4014
lnd.,..., Taoppty-- ln&gt;m . 1:00 PM 1o 1:00 All
to: 1110-. L.P. - · •• l:donlnd24hrw-kMido
Lourot
Clnlor, lnd halldoyo. Com-od bf
B.....-k, 01144212.
ond pold ulllltlooi.
I!Mumo 1111)' bo IUbrnlftld 01
ATTSmON GALLIPOLIS I
City 8ulkllng,-. wv.
._,.ALJOIIS•
111Ut ·-·No~-­ 14
Buslnne
-tlon lnlormlllon,
· For ....coli
lnd1-21&amp;.1111'
•111&gt;1'Training
1537 ll.m.-IOp.m. 7 doya.
Rllraln
-11-llorn
AVON I All - · I
=-~.f~~~"X
12liiB.
INTELLJQENCE
JOBS. All lloglll-lon

Fumlshed
Rooms

-:7.,

114-IIZ·

home 14x70, 3 biNI·

IIDbHI

topo,

Qloarrango ....., ol the
four tcrombled
bolow 10 form four ~mplo wordo.

ILAKLAI

EVENING

u

1187 Dadgo _S2r300. 1117 Yugo
$900. 1m t;aalll•c rroo. 1m.. .. •.
Cllov Iouck · 304-lll'S-2440.
1187 Ford Crawn VkrtDria u ; -~
Sho!'Po Fuly L.aadod, 51,000 · ,
mlllio. 814-3118-8240, 114-388- " •

llaamo for 1112GJmo.
- · - Glllto
ar month.
Hotol.
1111 11580.

dryw, AJC. 2 bi!Ciroctm8,
1"'==::=~==~=:r-=========1
·
304-m-1111..
11
Help Wanted
11
Help Wanted
llobllo r-- for oa1o 0..-

1000 Ext. K-10181.

8

45

. . . ..

to glvoowoy. 814-2564323.

Lazy Boy Roctlnor,JDW7H711
oftor 4:30.

• .....

lnl-.

n

.

"It's your wifie
.,_,,ail lorgo
szoo.lot,month
.
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long hotrod ldtten, p i - coli
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The Daily ~ei-Pagl

Television
Viewing

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Pomatoy- Midclaport. Ohio

BORN LOSER

North.._!_b'*"'"" lfll, lOIII

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WiliiO c.u. moM Ch-

Thursday. December 20, 1990

- · ...... dopoolt fiOO.

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KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriahl

Apartment
for Rent

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Giveaway

3 Kilt-:

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44

42 Mobile Homea
tor Rent

3 Announcement•
lwltlnolbo
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Thu,.day, December 20, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

.,

.
•
'
••

t

.'

�Paga 14-The Daily Sentinel

Royal Oak dedication changed
The teereational building 81 the
formtr Royal Oak. Park, now
owned by Family Resort, Inc., wiD
be n:named and dedicated 10 its
founder,
~
Kin,
in
ceremonies scbeduled for 1111. 13.
The ceremooies were planned for
Sunday but have been changed.
The J?Ublic is invited 10 allend
the dedicalioD ceranony wbc:n: a
bronze plaque will be placed in
honor of Karr.
William Stuclcey, vice president
bf Family Resort. Inc., arid park
manager, 1has also announced that
the park will be open for . public

•

viewing on the Friday, Saturday
and Sunday of the weekends before
Christmas and New Years from 10
a.m. 10 7 p.m.
He described the open house
weekends as an opportunity for
residents of the Bend aru to gel a
better look 81 the beautiful facility
which is in their own back yard.
Stuckey also indica!ed th8l special membership rates will be offered to local residents during the
"open house weekends. However, he
emphasized th8l there will be no
sales presentations during that lime.

--Local news briefs__,
B&amp;E investigated
Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating two brealcing
and enlering reports on Wednesday afternoon.
.
According to a department news release, Steve Giglio of
DyesviUe Road reponed that sometime &gt;Mthin the last month,
several guns were taken from his residence.
Delbert Fridley of Urtion Avenue reported that his garage had
· been entered and a six-'drawer tool chest and a small tool box were
taken, and both were filled with tools.
· · Investigation, according to Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby,
. is continuing.

· Imboden arrested
Brenda Imboden of Columbus, and formerly of Pomeroy, was arrested on Wednesday on a charge of grand theft auto.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby, she had been
arrested last week in Franklin Counly and had been released following a Rule 4 hearing.
·
.
She reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department and was
taken to County Coun, where she was remanded 10 the custody of
' the sheriff. She is being held in GaUia County.
, :·.
Her husband, Rick Imboden, is currently being held in the Meigs
· &lt;;:ounty Jail on a charge of unering forged checks. He was returned
· from Franklin Counly on Wednesday morning when he was unable
· :' 10 post bond following his Rule 4 hearing.

I

'
·." Collazo,
Herdman arrested

Thursday. December 20. 1990

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

. School boanl
holds executive
session, approves
leave, resignation

Announcements

.

Christmas procram Clllc:ellecl
The
Pomeroy
Elemmtary
Christmas program scbeduled for
tonight (ThurSday) has been cancelled.

Hospital news

.

Christmas program planaed
The VICtory Baptist Cbun:h in
Middleport will present two
Chrisunas . programs on Sunday
beginning at 7 p.m. The children's
program, "The Kind Heart Orphanage will be presented first, followed by the !!dullS program,
"John's Christmas Search."

The resignation of Susan
Roessler as a substitute reacher was
accepted Bl a brief meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education
Tuesday rtight in the board room at
village haD.
RObert Barton presided at the
mee!ing when financial statements
were presented and bills approved
for payment, M81ernity leave was
Trustees to !)lett
granted to Gloria Van Reeth from
The Board of Trustees of Jan, 16 · through the remainder of
Columbia Township will hold its the'lchool year, and dock days of
regular end-of-the-year meeting on Nov. 29 and 30 and Dec. 3 through
Dec. 31 at 8 a.ril 81 the fire station. 7 were approved for Victoria BumAn organizational meeting for 1991 pass.
will be held immediately following
The organizational meeting was
the regular meeting.
set for Jan. 8 at 7 p.m. to be followed by the regular meeting.
Christmas programs sei
Members moved into executive
There will be a Christmas session for personnel arbitiation.
program at the Coolville United Attending were Barton, Jeff Werry, ·
Methodist Church on Sunday morn- Robert Snowden, Larry Rupe,
ing. Pastor Harold Alloway-Priddy Richard Vaughan, board members,
invites the )i!lblic. The Hockingport and SupL I ames Carpenter and
Church will have its prOgram Sun- Treasuter Jane Fry. ·
day evening at 7 p.m.

Hospital news

· Cbristmllli Eve services
A parish-wide Chri$1Dlas eve
service will be held at the Cool ville
United Methodist Church on Monday at 7 and 11 p.m. Pastor Harold
Alloway-Priddy mvires the public.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS George Warner, Pomeroy; Brian
Nitz, Pomeroy; Thurston Stone,
Middleport; and Juanita Gerard,
Middleport
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGESNone.

Christmas play scheduled
A Chrisanas play will be held at
Mt. Union Baptist Ouu-ch on Sunday at 6:30 p.m. The chun:h is
located off State Route 143, north
of Harrisonville. Pastor Joc N.
Sayre invites the public.

Trustees to meet
The Letart Township liustees
will meet for their year-end meeting on. Friday, December Z8. at 2
p.m. at the office building.

.

Silt .calls .for assistance .were answered by units of Meigs Counl)'
Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday and early Thursday,
At 4:30 p.m. c;m Wednesday, Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine
31 for Danny Butcher, who was transponed to Holzer Medical Center. At 5:37 p.m., Middleport squad went 10 Overbrook Center for
Lilly Cummings, who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 1.1:09 p.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine No. 2
for John Hahn. He was transported to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
On Thursday at 2:28 a.m. Racine unit went to State Route 124 for
Rodney Stimpen. Stimpert was treated but not transported. At 5:12
a.m., Middleport squad went to South Fourth for Dorothy Pierce,
who was taken 10 Holzer Medical Center. At 8:44 a.m., Rutland
squad was sent to Leading Creek Road to transport John Lambert to
Pia-sept Valley Hospital.
.
. · .

·,

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.Sh

from page 1
__
__
d nad ze ...._Continued

eva~

. •fled to the bushes."
·· Sheyardnadze said he feared
the recent upsurge of criticism
from the right would lead to the
return of a dictatorship In the
country, but be made It clear he
was not attacking his close ally,
Gorbachev.
. "No one knows what kind .of
dlcatatorshlp It will be and who
will come to power, who will be
the dictator and .what kind of
" regime It will be," Shevardnadze
said.
"(Therefore), I would like to
make the following announcement. I am resigning," he said.
"Don't dare make any reactions.
Don't try to dissuade me. Don't
scold me.
. •'Let this be my contribution If
. you wish, my protest against the
Impending dictatorship.
· "I consider It my duty as a
man, as a citizen and as a
commlllllst. · I cannot reconcile
myselt to all the events that are
; occurring In our country, and all
: the trials that are awaiting our
• people.
; "I am neVertheless sure that a
: dictatorship will not happen, that
• our future Is oneofdemocracy,of
: ri'eedom."
; · The delegates to the fourth
' Congress of People's Deputies
; listened to the resignation speech
! In stunned silence, then rose at
• the end and gave him a standing
! ovation.
: Leaders of the "SOyuz" group
• of deputies that has been calling
~ tor a return to firm state control
' In the SoVIet Union said they
~ were pleased that Shevardnadze

I ~ Stocks
'•

•

l Dallr !Mock prices
~ (All

of lt: N a.m.)

' llrJU IIIUI,Mull Sml&amp;h

was leaving.
"This deed of his was un·
seemly, but It was a step In the
right direction," said Col. V!ktor
Alksnls, a founder of the conser·
vatlve group. ' 'Shevardnadze Is
leaving a sinking ship."
.
Most officials and deputies
agreed, however, that Shevar·
dadze's decision to quit was a
blow to SOviet foreign policy and
Gorbachev's government In gen·
era!. SOme said they ·hoped It
would . shoc:k reformers out of
their complacency.
"Shevardnadze's step Is a
deliberate sacrifice,.. Deputy
Nikolai Medved.ev said. "It Is
aimed at making the reformers
think better of It, to rouse us and
look at the situation · In the
country."
Shevardnadze said he would
like to give his "deepest thanks"
to Gorbachev. " I am his friend
and we think alike," he said.
"I support now and I will
support to the end of my days the
Ideals of perestroika, the Idea of
the renewal of our society, the
Idea of democratization," Shevardndaze said. ·:we accomplished marvels ."
Shevardnadze, 62, was ap·
pointed fo~lgn mlnls~r .bY Gor·
bachev on July 2, 1985, as the
Soviet leader was launching the
perestroika and glasnost reforms that opened up the Soviet
system and led to the dramatic
changes In Eastern Europe and
the end of the Cold War.
As foreign minister, Shevard·
nadze has traveled around the
world to carry out the new SOviet
foreign policy , He was responsl·
ble for the negotiations that led to
the Soviet withdrawal from Atgh·
an !stan and was Ins trumentalln
the changes In Eastern Europe
and the reunification of
Germany .

CER11FICAT~S
... stoteForoeta ..

199

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Ohio River crests
t ay in Pomeroy
slow fall." Rezek went on to say session.
that the Ohio River at Racine cresSeveral bus routes were disrupted early this morning (Friday) ted as a result of flooding in the
area Routes on State. Route 124
around 42.6 feet.
According to Rezek, another . along the river in the Eastern Local
Meigs County is beginning to
tetum to normal following heavy · precipitation event · is expected School District have been disl'!lpled
rains and subsequent high water, tOIDorrow afternoon and evening according to Arch Rose, transportawhich forced roads to close and and that rains could be quite heavy tion director for that district, but
schools to dismiss classes earlier at times, similar to the rains that other routes are running as normal.
occurred earlier in .the week. He . In the Meigs Local District,
this v.leek.
At press time on Friday, the Ohio f~s. however, that these rains Brent Manley, transportation direcRiver at Pomeroy was expected to should not cause the major tor for that district, stated that only
. partial routes have been diSrupted.
crest around noon, according to problems experienced earlier.
The
heavy
rains
and
flooding
They include routes along Leading
Alan Rezek of the National
caused
the
early
dismissal
of
Creek and Nease Hollow as well as
Weather. Service in .Charleston,
W. Va The most current reading of schools on Tuesday and cancella- routeS near Letart FaDs for the
the river was at45 feet; Pomeroy's tion of classes on Wednesday in the severely handicapped students and
Meigs Local SchOQI District The the Racine area for handicapped
flood stage is 46 feet.
Rezek stated that once the river Eastern and Southern Local School students there. In addition, routes in
has crested there will' be a "slow, Districis, h()wever, remained in
Continued on page II
By JULIE E. DILLON
and BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

Floor

Mats

waterproof

a large number of the masks in
Europe, Egypt's Middle East
News Agency reported Friday ,
Cairo radio said air-raid sirens
began sounding In Baghdad at 7
a.m. for the drill, which was
announced Thursday. It quoted
witnesses as saying that a
quarter or the city' s population
poured Into the streets, taking
private cars and special buses to
a desert location where they
were to be' housed In tents until

.

a tor

2599
Wolo
steering
Wheel

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KitS

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Hand
Riveter
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FIFfH AND SIXTH GRADE - These fiftb and
sixth grade students at tbe Rejoi~ug Lire Christian School in Middleport made this gingerbread
house a project ror the Christmas season. Pic-

lured, 1-r, f'rout, Sue Ellen Barnhart, Charlene
Ke~r, Tara Davis and Steven Rice. Back, David
Heighton, Kevin Sl!ields, Aaron Pangio,·Jeremy
Gatrell, Mike Newell and Teresa Davis, teacher.

THIRD AND FOURTH GRA.DE • Tblrd ud
flllll'lll ~ ltDdeDta fll ttr.a Dull It tbe
RejolciDI Life C.brlltltm Scbool In Middleport
made a alnprl!read bouse in keeplq ,with tbe
Chrlltmas aeason. Pictured, ~r, !'rout, Jacque

Joaes, Raebel Forbel, Sbalmon Earllbt and
'lllwny Joan. Baek, Joepeb Mccalf, Luke
Grlltser, Bnndon Larkl111, Jerrocl Clay, Aaron
Scbaekel and Joey Sisson •

F&lt;&gt;i'ttJ'11Y ck:W"~tl
L~· •1 2

: of ..... Ellll .. Loewl

•

:Am
' Electric Power .............273,4 Weather
on ........................ 2111.
l' Ashland
ATIIf ........................... ......30)1,
Bob Evans ..........................
14~

1

: Cbarmlng Shoppes .............. 10%
:pty Holding Co ..... ,............. 15%
·Federal Mogul.. .................. 13~
:Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 17~
~ Key Centurion ....................113,4
· Lands' End ................. .. ...... 13Y,
: Umltecllllc ........................ 17¥,
)luiUmedJa Inc. .................. 67¥,
R8x Restaurants................. %
:llobblna &amp;: Myers ................ 19Y,
· ~'slnc ..... .. ................ ll%
:litar Bank ..... ....................... 17
·Wendy's lnt'l. ..................... 6~
· JVortlllllgtoo Ind ............... :... 23

....

~

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••

..

Soulh central: Tonight. .. peri·
ods of rain ... heavy at times. Low
45 to 50. SOutheast winds 10 to 20
mph becoming south. Chance ol
· rain near 100 percent.
Friday ... periods of rain·
... heavy at times. Breezy and
unseasonably mild with the high
60 to 65. Chance oi rain near 100
percent.
Saturday tbrOUJh MoodB)': A
chance of rain or snow Saturday
and Sunday. Fair Monday. Highs
mostly In the 40s Saturday, 35 to
45 Sunday and In the 30s Monday.
Lows in the 30sSaturday, 25 to35
Sunday and 15 to 25 Monday . .

........
_""''"".,.............
.

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......fin,.,...........
.... ,.CI...
..........
- -.....IQI,,
~.....,,

GALUPOUS d
209 Upper RIY!!~r

(614)446--

'

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(

U.S. officials, meanwhile, tried
to keep Iraq guessing about the
readiness of American troops.
But President Bush minced no
words about the outcome of a
potenllal war, saylnglraqlPresl·
dent Saddam Hussein would get
"his ass kicked."
White House spokesman Mar·
lin Fitzwater made light of
remarks by a top U.S. general in
Saudi Arabia wllo said ground
forces would not be ready to
attack Iraq at the Jan. 15
deadline.
,
''It never hurlS to build a· little
uncertainty" Into the strategy,
Fitzwater said with a smile.
"We think It's not necessarily
bad to have a little mystery. We
believe our forces are ready
whenever they are called upon.

They are ready now In terms of
service and mission. They are
ready for a test," said Fitzwater.
Lt. Gen . Calvin A.H. Waller,
second In command o! U.S.
troops In Saudi Arabia. told
reponers Wednesday that not all
American forces In the Persian
Gl!lf region would be ready by
Jan. 15.
Pentagon spokesman Bob Hall
danced around the readiness
question, but noted air units .both
on land and on sea "are clearly
ready."
"The general (Waller) was ·
talking about the total packa ge.
That's different from being
ready for offensive operations.
We can do offensive operations
now. The·ques lion is, would you
want to?' ' Hall said .

By BRIAN J. REED ,
Sentinel News Staff
Five indictments on criminal
charges have been filed in Meigs ·
County Common Pleas Court following a grand jury session on
MQnday conduc~ by Meigs
County
Prosecuung Attorney
Steven L. Story.
Roben L. Riffle, 36, of Pomeroy,
was indicted on a charge of breakBy Mindy Kearns
ing and entering, a fourth degree
felony. According to the indictment
The $660 million rcpowering of the Philip Sporn Plant near New Havep
filed against him, Riffle is accused may be in jeopardy if American Electric Power decides on an option to
of trespassing into the Pomeroy build a new plant in West V~rginia.
residence of William Reitmire on
The Point Pleasant Register has learned an AEP Company;-Owned tract
May 10.
of land in Pumam Coun1y is being seriously considered for ·the proposed
An indicanent has also been filed new plan~ even though the company has adequate land near the Philip
· against Columbus resident Dean W Sporn plant on which it could be built.
Young, 37, who is accused of two
Although unconfirmed by AEP officials, a source has disclosed that
counts of theft by deception. Ac- Putnam County'is being given priority.
cording to the indictment against
In May 1988, AEP submitted a proposal to the U.S. Department of
Young, he . allegedly stole money Energy (DOE) as pan of the Innovative Clean Coal Technology Program.
from both Charles ADen and The proposal requested the DOE to cost share in the repowering of Sporn
George M. Grounds in early 1990.
'tJniiS 3 and 4 with a single Pressurized Fluidized Bed Combustion (PFBC)
Also indicted was Thomas Man combined cycle. The DOE approved the project in September 1988,
McCourt, 19, of Middleport, who providing $184.8 million of the project total.
faces charges that he committed a
Repowering is a technology which can be used to replace a significant
breaking and entering into the portion of an original facility and can achieve significant emissions reducresidence of Walter Roush in Mid- tions while increaing plant capacity, extending plant life and improving
dlepon. That incident allegedly oc- efficiency.
.
curred on August 9. As charged in
PFBC utilizes a combined steam-gus cycle to achieve a )0 percent in·the indictment against McCoW't, crease in efficiency over a pulverized coal plant equipped with scrubbers:
breaking and entering is a fourth- · That is, a PFBC plant will use. 10 percent less coal than a conventiOnal
degree felony.
.
plant to produce the same amount of clectricily. Lower fuel consumption,
The grand jury session on Mon. in rum, helps to reduce electric energy costs for customers.
.:
day also resulted in the indictment
Although no mention w~ ever made concemi!lg options when the
of Floyd McClellan, 29, of Mid- Sporn project was announced in 1988, recent news releases from AEP
dlepon. The indictment against have stated a detailed evaluation of both the Sporn project and the optiop
McClellan charges him with of constructing a completely new facility is underway. .
trespassing at London Pool in
The Point Pleasant Register was recently contacted by a West Virginia
Syracuse in August
University researcher, who said he was gathering information for a rcpon
In addition to the indictment
the project
charging McClellan with fourth - onSteve
Hiles of AEP's Public Affairs Peparunent in Columbus, Ohio
degree brealcing and entering, the stated both options are being considered and there is no word yet on when
grand jury also found that the the decision will be made. Hiles said the DOE funding will go 10 the new
defendant had a prior theft convic- plant if that option is chosen, even though the DOE money was earmarked
,tion on his record.
for the Sporn repowering.
·
·
.
Marc Tunothy Reed, 24, was inThe first combined-cycle generation of electricity from AEP's 70,000
dicted this week on a charge of car- kilowatt demonstiation Tidd Plllnt; located near Brilliant, Ohio occurred
rying a concealed weapon, a felony · on Dec. 7. The demonstration plant is Considered a flagship project of ~
of the third degree, and possessio~ U.S. Department of Energy's Clean Coal ,Technology Program.
·
a fireanit in a liquor perm1t
U.S. Senator Robert Byrd (0.-W.Va.), who has worlced clcsely with,lli
premises, specifically the Cedar nation's cle~~~~ co8l pro~. could not be reached for comment concernjng
Bar in Middleport,a fourth degree the new development
·
felony.
Whichever option is chosen, Sporn repowering or a new plant, the
According to a spokesperson facility will genemte 340,000 kilowatts and will be the largest PFBC plailt
from the Meigs County Public in the world. If Sporn is the victor, the boilers of the 1950-vintage, 150
Defender's Office, Public llefender megawatt conventional units will be rc!Jiaced by a new 330,.mw PFBC
Charles Knight represents Riffle, unit.
.
Young, McCoun, and Reed on the
Commercial operation is scheduled for 1996 if the Sporn option is .
criminal charges.
selected, and 1998 if a completely new facility is selected. The extended
Young, whose ·case was bound timetable associated with a new facility is required 10 lllow.sufficient time
Ova' to the grand jury from Mei$S
, .fQr add.itional environrnen,tal stUdies that would ~ required for a totally
CoiDity Coun. is being housed m new urut.
·
the Meigs County Jail. ·

..

Sporn repowerjng
may be in jeopardy

Lock
Wn•e s@eslas1
II'NB 4,0

•om

FOfe«Jl Of dOI""'eSDI:
Ll'l12

by floodwater from the Ohio River this morning. A
metal building, pictured In the background, also
appears to have fallen victim to the high water.

.

Indictments
fired in
Meigs court

'

cover

Oil Filters

NOT MOBILE TODAY - This mobile home,
located along State Boule 124 at Bowman's Run
(between Syra&lt;!use and Racine) was surrounded

companies In Germany. Bel·
·the drUI ended.
Iraqi television has been glum, and Britain In recent
broadcasting programs In recent · weeks.
weeks advising citizens how to
It said the companies had not ·
protect themselves from bombs filled the orders and had In·
and In case of fire, the agency formed au thoritles, who were
attempting to arrest the agents
said.
. Iraq developed extensive civil Involved for violating the U.N.· ,
defense programs ' duri'ng&lt; its Imposed economic , embargo
1980·88 war wlthlran.
against Iraq that Prohibits the
· MENA quoted an official news· trade of all goods except
paper In Abu Dhabi as saying medicine.
had ordered
masks from

111015

Plastieolor
Truck

RibbOn

.

3 Sactiont. 18 Paget 2,6 Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday. December 21. 1990

!~, ' STPOII·
Treatment
u ' .:

2199

99
54
Budge Blue

Motor Oil
lJo'11112

-~~) ·

•om

.Quaker state
· 10W30,
10W40or
sW30

4f

f'l

oes1gns IcE!
Shark scraper.
wfsqueegee 01
scrapt!'w1
broom handle

Motor
Oil
l.J••-.r 12

Vo1.41 . No. 171
!=opyrighted 1990

Flood watch toni ght. To•olgbt and Saturday ... rain II·
kely ...possibly heavy at times
with a chance of thunder·
storms. Low tonight 50 to Sli.
High Saturday In the lower
60s. South winds 10 to 20 mph
tonight , Chance ol rain Is 60
Jl!'rcent tonight and 70 Jl!'rcent
Saturday.

•

•

By GAYLE YOUNG
United Press lnlernatlonal
Iraq, preparing for the possl·
blllty of war, staged a massive
evacuation drill In Baghdad
Friday that sent an estimated 1
mUllon people scurrying for
safety, and the nation Is report·
edly .trying to buy gas masks.
.As a Jan. 15 deadline to
withdraw from Kuwait .o r face
possible military force creeps
nearer, Iraq Is attempting to buy

·~~~

.

oetalled

10W40
or5W30

until
Christmas

Weather

Iraq·prepares for the possibility of war

AVAILABLE·0

Kendall

Pick-3: 036
Pick-4: 2580
Cards: 5-H;
J.C; J-D; 2-S

STEAK NIGHT

GIF1

gg~.

4 days

Mason Family Restaurant
Friday Night Is

Marccs Collzo of Wilmington, Del., was arrested on a disorderly
after warning following an incident at a Scout Camp Road
residence. Collazo is being held in the Meigs Counly Jail pending a
hearing in Meigs County CoW't.
Also arrested on Wednesday was 29 year old Timothy Herdman,
who is charged with DUI and no valid operator's license.
He, too, is being held in the Meigs Counly Jail.

EMS responds to calls

Ohio Lottery

Blrlhs Dec; 19 - Mr. and Mrs . daughter . . Gallipolis; and !'.):r.
Roger Casto, son, Leon, W.Va.; and Mrs. Michael Roberts. son,
Mr. and Mrs. Bogart Napora, ?Pomeroy.

r -

;tj.

Hall, Riebel

\~

Panalo, C.u~ Werry, Sepbank

-,

,

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