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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

December 10, 1989

Ohio-Point Pleuent. W. Ve.

..........

Pick 3

Shop early,
shop locally ·

ONE· YEAR HONOREES- Bob Evans Farms,
Inc., employees recelvlaa oae-:year service
awards duma tbe linn's Dec. 2 Cbrllltmu party
were, left to rlaht, Mike Bryant, tranaporlatlon

dlvlllloa; Terry Woan, Ga!Upolll plant; Jtodne:r ·
Moraan and Gre1 Grimm, Bidwell plant. 'nle .
awards were presented by RobertS. Wood, rlcht.'

...,. WALKING UNrl' Olrlaeo.&amp; Brolnlle Troop 1415
e1 o.r1p ••· was lWIHlll the
._. • .,..., Uall Ia tbe

I

!q Dee. I CbriJtmu
. . . . . 'l1le JII'I*P Ia . . . .

Preliminary
deer results
are released
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Qe.
partmeat of Natural Resources
IODNR) reports prellmtnar:y fig.
veJ lbow that 75,789 deer were
kl1led by Ohio Hunters during the
slate!• sill-day deer gun season
Nov. 27 throueh Dec. 2.
Offtclals say this figure repres·
eats a decrease of 9,053 from last
year when hunters were permit.
1l!d to kW two deer In 11 counties .
Hunters killed 84,8422 deer
dllrlag the 1988 deer gun season
ud 64,838 during the 1987 season.
'fbls year, as In 1987, hunters
_.., permitted to k!ll only one
deer.
The 1989 deer gun results,
q.uaty by county, show Gallla
County's deer kill was up over
Jut year but Meigs County's. kill
wu tbe lowest reported over the
last three years.
Gallla's count was 1,936 for
1M; 1,884 for 1988; and 1,679.
Couaty's lUll was 1,91 Ia
3,374 In 1988 and 2,257 In
, aOC'Ordlng to Division of
Wildlife figures.
ODNR'a Division of Wlldl!fe
ftjiOi Is that 19 non·fatal deer
lhultiDa·related accidents were
i\!1)01'ted last week. The 1974 deer
gua season was the most recent
Ia whlcb no fatal deer hunting·
related accidents were recorded.
Lut year, there were 22 deer
buaUng related accidents, In·
eluding two fatalities.
Preliminary figures show. the
1011 counties In which deer were
cbecked and tagged last week
were: Musklngum 2,748; Tuscar·
awaa, 2, 661: Guernsey, ~.654;
COsboclon, 2.582: Washington,
1,425: Jefferson, 2.268: Athens, '
2,242; Harrison, 2,121; Noble,
2,014 and Ucklng, 2,000.
WIJdllfe offlcal say this year's
results were lower compared to
lut year because the two-deer
lbnlt waa then In effect for
counties where the deer popula·
tiOa was above desired levels.
. "Comparing this year's
IIIIJIIbers to 1987, when one deer
IJmlt was In effect, there was a
l'141'ked Increase. This compara·
ble IIICI'ease Is due to a contlnu·
ally expanding deer herd In other
areas of the state and a tncreas·
· liiC number of deer hunters,"
aald Division of Wildlife Chief
Clayton H. Lakes.
'nil! deer longbow and cross·
bow season, which was sus·
pt!IICied d~rlng deer gun season,
remalna open statewide for deer
o1 either sex through Jan. 31,
1990. The .statewide primitive,
weapons season wm be held Jan .
4·6, 1990. Hunters may k11l only
del!r per license per year, which
ntends annually from Sept. 1
tbroueh Aug. 31.

Food Town
workers voting
MAUMEE, Ohio CUPI)
Members of the United Food and
Commercial Workers Local 954
bepi1 voting last week In three
nortlnreatern Ohio clUes on a
piop ared contract with Seaway
Fopd Town Inc.
Tile union and the suburban
Toledo grocery chain reached a
telrtattve agreement last week
and lcbeduled voting for Ia at
week In Toledo, F1ndlay and
Saadulily.
About 2,000 workers are covered under the proposed

coatract.
A pl'II!IOAI waa rejected last
nwalll, and Local W President
Gelll Kolllmall said Food Town
... made It clear that this was
die
Onal offer.

company'•

..

f
~----

SLEEP
SOFA
FOAM MAITIESS
PLAID
FULl SIIE
NOT 1449.95

IASSm OAI FIIISH

DOOR DRESSER, WIIG
MIRROR, 7 DWR. CHEST
ON CHEST, NIGHT
TABLE, POSTER QUEEN
CANOPY BED
NOT S3999.95

.S197 S1997
SWIVEL ROCKER
RECLINERS
RST, •owN
OIIBGE

110T S399.95

$·1 97
FLEXSTEEL

SOFA
LOVESEAT

MAIYE VILVD
NOT $2399.95

ENGLAND

2 PC.
SECTIONAL
BBGE WITH INCLINERS
NOT '1799.95

S797
DRESSER, HUTCH, MIRROR
IIG. 17H.95

S397

RIVERSIDE CORNER '

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
CHEBY FINISH
NOT S599.95

S297
IASSm

SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT
WIITE UCIGIOIIID
MAm &amp; IUC. GIIIN &amp; RUE

ROWm
NOT $1499.95

S697

S29

FLEISTEEL

GROUP

BEIGE, BROWN, BlUE
NOT S299.95

$497

S147

.IGE, YRLOW
...,, 1219.95

BUY ONE
GET MATCHING ONE

S87

FREE

SAVE AT LEAl

50°/oo,,

~--------~~~-------.----------~,
U5Sm IIG CHEIIY
ROUND DINEnE
AU ITEMS SUBJECT TO
PRIOR SALE. MANY ONE
OF A KIND ITEMS. FIRST
COME, FIRST SERVED.

vavn
BENCHCRAFT SOFA

CHEST, MIRROR DOOR

4 IIOWN VINYL sw1va CHAIRs

NOT 1899.95

NOT $499.95

$497

$247

PINE HUTCH

CIIAiliAM COIMY COUNIIY OM

NOT 1799.95

NOT 1599.95

NOT 1199.95

$

S29

COINER HUTCH

40"

$447

ENGLAND

SLEEP SOFA

INNERSPRING MAmESS
BEIGE _
NOT 5899.95

$44·7
NAME IIANDS
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS

REXSTDL

NOT S499.95

JIOT 11~99.95

$249

$157

$547

ENGLAND

IIVEIS.E OAK FINISH

llSSm UTE PINE

. SECTIONAL

SOFA, LOVESEAT

10 .01 12 GUN

·J-COVEIS
NOT S1199.95 ·

S597

GUN CABINETS

RECLINERS

SIDEBOARD
TABLE, 1 LEAF
1 ARM, 5 SIDE CHAIRS

NOI S1199.U

NOI S2999.95

A Pomeroy man was reported
in serious condition In a Colum·
bus hospital alter being injured
by a tractor-trailer Sunday at
4:25 on U.S. 33, just north of
Pomeroy. according to the
GalUa·Melgs Post of the State
· Highway Patrol.
Michael A. Celli, 33, of 1634
Lincoln Heights, was ttanferred
to Ohio State University Hospital
from Veterans Memorial Hospl·

FIND WEA'l'REK B&lt;\LL()ON - Glenn Dou·
glas, right, and his grandson, .Jonathan Douglas,
recently found a weather balloon at tbe Reedsville

Fellowship Church of tbe Nazarene. The unll
came complete wltb a radio traasmltler device,
strlnJ, parachute, and large rubber-like balloon.

R~edsville

grandfather, grandson
find weather balloon near church
By JULm E. DJUON
like balloon.
SenUnel News Staff
Look! Up in the sky!
The name on the boil read
Il 's ·all!rd,lt'saplane-or-!s "'Radiosonde" and stated that
it a weather balloon?
·
the device was used to measure
Glenn Douglas and his grand· the atmosphere's temperature,
son, Jonathan Douglas, found out pressure. humidity, and winds at
that 11 was just that. A weather various heights. A .no lice on the
balloon.
small rectangular box stated
A coUple of weeks ago Douglas that the device could reach a
was leaving the Reedsville Fe I· height or 17 miles.
The unit also came complete
lowshlp Church of Nazarene
when he noticed an odd looking with Instructions ori what to do II
device with a box, a string, a an Individual found the device.
parachute, and a_;;~:,;r~u~b~be;!r::.·....!!2.2!~!L~~

calls and will send the small
radio transmitter device, Inside
the box. back to VIZ Manufactur·
' lng In Ph111delph1a, Pa .
Douglas' grandson. a third
grader at Riverview Elementary
took the weather balloon and all
of !Is apparatus to the school so
that the students could a ·rtrst
hand look at the device, and the
l!fth grade class went one step
further and did reports on It.
So, keep your eyes open folks.
You never know what you might
find.

CORNER TABLE
2-LOVESET t«&lt;NRS
ACnON VILYO COVEl
ILIE
NOT SJ999.95

$599 S1397 S997.

90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH
LONGER CREDIT TE,.MS AVAILABLE

Fill DELIVERY
CHRISTMAS LAY-A-WAY
.J

SUNDYS 12 110011 10 5 P.M.
MONDAY IIIII FIIDAY I Ul. 10 I P.M.
SA'IIIIAY I Ul. 10 5 P.M.

142

Awe.

OROUNDBRE.U:ING CEREMONID GroUDd waa br·allen Sunda.J tor llle aew ll:ri'8CIIIe
Churclr ol tbe ~- to be biiUt a?lll' 8)'racu1e
on 8eate Route JU, The proper1y wu pa1'Chal8d Ia
ltlll•
Olea McMIIIall expects tile claucb
to b~ eompleted Ia Sprtna UIO. Ella QuDien,

Phone 446-1405
GaiHpolis

..,_.Be\'.

cen•.
• • the im·=~~==~
,...,.., tire
tile lllillat
plow •
1o -breu
membera particlpa&amp;llaa were,
lo rla:,t,

Ellad- wat-. Raclrel (!Ia) Caadllf, Tbelma
Cundlft, Larry ~hew, Grea Cuad?ll, llle Rev. Mr .
McMII., BliP Rller, and Marilla Blur.
PltoU ......, ............... ''·

'

---

...!.----...-·---·-- - .. -

----I

re-eiectlon In 1986 by 600,000
votes while Frank Celebrezze
was defeated.
Celebrezze made headl1nes a
week ago when he said that
despite his personal oppos111on to
abortion. he would support the
right or women to choose abor·
t!on as long as the fetus could not
live outside the womb. He said he
also favors tax-supported Medl·
catd abortions 'tor women who
could not otheerwlse afford
them.
The only announced Republl·

can candidates for governor,
George Volnovlch and Robert
Taft IL are pro·llfe suporteres.
Celebrezze and his wife.
Louisa , have three sons. Anthony
III, David and Charles, and two
daughters, Catherine and Marla.
Ce!ebrezze will take his cam·
pa!go to Cincinnati. Columbus,
Canton and Youngstown Tuesday; Lorain. Akron , Lima and
Dayton Wednesday: Portsmouth, Steubenville, Mansfield
and Toledo Thursday, and to
Springfield Friday.

tal after a 1979 Kenworth tractor·
traller driven by Ronald R. •
Brammer, 53. of FrankUn Fur··
nace, backed up over a fallen
Ceill.
Cell! was admitted to OSU
Hospital's Intensive care unit lor
treatment or fractures to his legs,
cuts and bruises.
Brammer was heading south
toward Pomeroy when he saw
Celli. who . was standing In the

road, trying to stop tralflc.
Brammer stopped. backed up
and then tried to drive to Celli's
left. Then Cell! laid down In the
road and Brammer drove over
Cell!.
In addition to the patrol, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment and the Pomeroy Pollee
Department were on the scene.
Brammer was not cited by the
patrol.

Pomeroy police probe ·three
"lltishaps";·~ two. -·~ are treated

SWIVEL TOP, SLIDE-OUT
TRAY, 3 FINISHES
NOT S$49.95

S222

2 Secliona. 12 Pagta 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwaptper

Pomeroy man hit by semi is
reported in serious condition

TV-VCR STANDS .

6 IEIGE v•n CHAIRS
NOI 1319.95

VELVET CHA.

IIG IIAN'S

DINEnE

challenge Celebrezze In the De- and Is a captain In the U.S. Naval
mocratic primary now that the Reserve .
attorney general has become a ·
Celebrezze served four years
pro-choice advocate on the a bor· In the state Senate and then upset
t!on Issue. Others belleve Fergu· veteran RepubUcan Secretary of
son could move In as a pro-life State Ted Brown In 1978. He was
candidate.
elected attorney general by
Celebrezze Is the son of An· 800,000 votes In 1982.
thony Celebrezze, a former
Celebrezze' s political stock
mayor of Cleveland who served was questioned when his cousin,
In President Kennedy's Cabinet Frank, then chief justice of the
and Is currently a federal judge Ohio Supreme Court, received
In Cincinnati.
adverse publ!clty about his ad·
The younger Celebrezze gradu· ministration of the court.
ated from the U.S. Naval
But Anthony Celebrezze won
Academy, obtained a master's
degree from George Washington
University and a law degree
from Cleveland State University,

lASSEn

IIVEISIDE
CHATHAM COUNTY
SPRING AIR
llSSm
RESTOIIC
ILACKSMITH SHOP
IMPACT

EJIGUND ILUE AmOII

For the last two years, Celebrezze has been regarded as the
strongest choiCe of the Demo·
crats to succeed Gov . Richard
Celeste, who cannot seek re·
election next .year. PoUs have
shown him to be the frontrunner
for the May primary .
Celebrezze is the first' Democrat to officially announce for
governor. His only potential
challengers are state Auditor
Thomas Ferguson and Cleveland
attorney Joel Hyatt, founder of
Hyatt Legal Services. Both are
expected to announce their In ten·
lions soon.
Some political Insiders are
speculating that no one may

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

LUMBAR SUPPORT
6 COLORS
NOT S999.95

Low tolllald Ia mid . 2h.
Cbance of aaow 10 percent.
Tuesday, btch . In mid 2ts.
Chance of snow 10 percent.

'

CLEVELAND (UPl) - State
Atio~qey Genenil Anthony Cele·
brezze Jr. will officially an·
no~nce Monday evening that he
Is seeking the ~mocral!c nom!·
nation lor governor hl1990 - his
lh\J'&lt;l tr:Y for a different statewtd.e
oft!ce 1!1 12 y~ars. ·
The Cleveland native· s an·
nourtcemimt, 'which has been
anticipated lor months, Is scheduled for 5 p.m. at the Cleveland
Centre. It will kick orr a weeklong
string of appearances In 14c1tles.
Celebrezze, 48, has been attor·
ney general ·stnce 1983. Before
that, he served foul' years as
secretary of state and was a state
senator In the 1970s.
'.

VAC

S497

VINYL IECUNEI .

LAMPS

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, December 11. 1989

WET &amp; DRY

NOT '999.95

WALL HUGGER
RECLINER

,o

HOOVER

PICKS UP WATEIAS
WELL AS DUST

RESTONIC oR SPRING. AIR

SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR

$119·7

HUTCH

MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING SETS
MAnRESS &amp; FOUNDATON SITS

ENGLAND

NOT 52399.95

CHATHAM COUNTY
COUNTIY OAK
43" OAI FINISH

Empire Furniture is
Giving You the Chance ·
to Get January Clearane
Prices in DeceMber.
Now is the Time to Buy
at January Clear-•
Prices. Empire Has
lt4room, Dining loom
and Living looin Suites,
Dinettes, Recliners, a.
. Stooh, Waterbtds,
Mattress &amp; Foundations,
YCI's, TV's, Callinets, .
Daybeds, Sleepers.
Buy Now with
Days
S....as Cash.
FrH hlivtry on
ChristMas Layaway.
Sale Over D•-ber
17th, 1919.
.,,

DAH P!NI

51197
BEIGS PIINT, OAK TIIM

,- •' A CE SALE
BER

Pick 4
3619
Super Lotto
7-16-23-39-&lt;W-42

Celebrezze to announce his candidacy tonight
'

. Sat

lllll'e • ... ,_,mueh wlilllll!
.-:&amp; Pn da1, Mar:y NewIOIIIie(Jeft) ud Lena Elliott
(rfP*). Tlam Sea&amp;lael pholo
., Dldl '111omaa.

Vol.40. No.160
Copyrighted 1889

183

Three acCidents were Invest!·
gated over the weekend by
Pomeroy Pollee.
At 10: 18 p.m. an accident
oCcurred on the Excelsior Salt
Works parking toi. Joseph Mar:
cinko, Reedsville, driving a
pickup truck backed Into the
parked vehicle of Roderick Fox
ox Vincent.
According to the report, there
was light damage to the pas·
.

senger rear side of the,Fox truck
and Ught damage to the left rear
bumper of the Marcinko vehicle.
There was no Injuries nor cit·
allons In the Incident.
At 3:21p.m. Saturday on East
Main ,St. Pomeroy poUce r~·
sponded to an accident at the
Intersection of Kroger parking
Ioi and East Main St. According
to the report, Ola St. Clair,
Pomeroy, pulled from the lot Into

. the path of a car dr(ven by Ellis
Myers, Langsville. '
The St. Clair vehicle struck the
passenger side of the Myers car.
causing moderate damage·.
There was heavy damage to the
St . Clair vehicle.
St. Clair was cited for failure to
yield the right or way ·
The third accident occurred at
11 p.m . Saturday night with two
being transporte~ by the Pome·
roy unit of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to
1:'1
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where they were treated and
released.
.
Pollee reported that Rebecca
The official purpose of the Sturm of Ravenswood was at ·
censuseachdecadetstoreappor· tempting to turn .into the upper
tlon congressslonal districts. parking lot In Pomeroy from
Ohio Is expected to Jose two of its East Main Street when Jonathan
21 congressional seats next year M111er, Pomer oy, passed on the
because of the population de- left and struck lhe r_e ar of the
cline, down from a high of 23 Sturm vehicle.
seats during the 1960s.
M1Jler and his passenger, Jill
•
Gentry, Ravenswood, was taken
Population counting In Ohio to the hospital by the EMS for
w111 be done by mailing question· treatment or minor Injuries.
nalres to each home. Aprll 1 is
The Sturm vehicle received
Census Day , the day by which all moderate damage to the rear
homes should have received and whlle the M1Jler car was heavily
returned questionnaires .
damaged on the passenger side.
M111er was charged with r eck·
People In rural areas, as well Jess operation, passing on a
as homes that don 't return double yellow line, having an
ques tlonnalres. can expect visits open container in lhe vehlcle . and
failure to conlrol.
from census counters.

Ohio population eXJ'VIICted to
• htly m
. '90 c ensus
f aII. onIy sI•g
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) The Census Bureau projects Qhlo

w!U lose less than one-tenth of 1
percent of its population In the
1990census, but the statewlll still
suffer badly In congressional
reapportionment.
The state's population Is expected to drop to 10,791,000 from
10,798,000 In 1980.

Environmentalists
meet with EPA
regional director
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
state environmentalist said Sunday a group of 15 acttvltls ts met
Informally with an Envlronmen·
tal Protection Agency director
for the first time In eight years.
VIctoria Fleming of Citizens
Against Pollution said the group
conducted a brainstorming ses·
slon in Columbus Saturday with
Region 5 Director Vic Adamkus
to voice concerns regarding
hazardous waste tnclneratton,m
air pollution and deep Injection
wells.
Adamkus has a six-state terri·
tory that covers the Great Lakes
region.
"We reiterated our concerns,
that Ohio Is the fifth worststateln
terms of air qual!jy In the United
States, " Fleming said.
The environmentalist also dis·
cussed the placement of tnclnera·
tors In Ohio.
Fleming said Incineration ·
technology Is not far enough
advanced to destroy heavy metals contained In toxic wastes. As
a result, she said, those poUutants become airborne and are
recycled Into the environment.
Fleming said a positive step
from the meeting was the pledge
by Adamkus to conilnue meeting
on ·a frequent baals. She said she
hoped another meeting could be
accomplished within six months.

_Local news briefs--..
Local firm auxrrded training grant
Rep. Mary Abel and Sen. Jan Michael Long announced toda y
the awarding of $446 to King Hardware In Middleport through
the Ohio Industrial Training Program. The grant willenable the
company to train sill employees In the are as or inventory
control, point of sale, and communication.
Long said that he Is extremely pleased that King Hardware Is
receiving this grant, stating that ,this Is another ste p In the
ever-changing business. Abel said she Is pleased that stal e
government Is able to act as a financial partner ln wel!-deslgned
projects that help create jobS and ~t!mulate economic
development.
. Administered by th,e Ohio Department or Development In
conjunction with the Ohio Department or Education, the
program provides technical and financial assistance toeUglble
companies when employee training Is required.
.
The program offers worker training assistance to companies
across Ohio that are Interested In modernizing or plan to
Implement state· of-the-art _tech~logtes .

EMS has 12 weekend calls
Six calls for assts tance were answered on Saturday and six
calls on Sunday by un!ls of the Meigs County Emer gency
Medical Services.
Pomeray at 7:07a.m. Saturday was called to Spring Ave. lor
Audrey Arnold who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 10: 52 a .m ., Tuppers Plains transportl!d Glenda LaFebre to
Continued on page 5

.
J

••

�Commentary

Pega 2-'"':~~Sa 11tital
OhiO

Pu.Miov M'
~OI'ICMy.

Marauders host Buckeyes; eye first win

Decerllblr .11. 1989
' -N·:

...,,
..........
.................
..... cc ...
..... "'I.NIW... Jl

·The Daily Sentinel
•111 Court S.reet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHJ::AI)

CHARLENE HOEFLJCH

Assistant Publlsber/ CoatroUer

Geaeral Maaa,er

A MEMBER oiTheAssorial&amp;l PrEss. InlaadDaily Press Ass&amp;
clatioa and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPJNJON are welcome. They lhould be leoslhllll 300
wonls lonr. AU letters are sobject to edltlar oad must be slped with
name, address and lelepllooe IWIIber. No uaolgfted leiters wUI be publiB bed. Leltero should beln rood taste, addresslnr losueo, not perso•all·

......
Celebrezze flip-flop on
abortion may help, hurt him
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Late last month, Cleveland attorney Joel
Hyatt spoke to a group of Democratic Insiders ln Columbus, hinting
he might make a run for the party's nomination for governor next
year.
Many ln the audience found him attractive, though they were wary
of supporting an outsider, even if Hyatl is the son-in-law of Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, a party standard-bearer whose credentials
are unquestioned.
Kathy Tefft-Keller, who once worked in the office of Gov. Richard
Celeste, said she might be enticed to support Hyatt because he is
pro-choice on the issue of abortion.
· " It depends on what Tony does," she said, referring to the abortion
stance of Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr., the leading
Democratic candidate.
Tefft-Keller and thousands of other Democratic women and men no
doubt are back in Celebrezze's camp now that he's made his dramatic
switch to the procholce side.
A week ago the Roman Catholic attorney general renounced the
pro·llfe doctrine and said a woman, her famtly and physician ought to
have the right to choose abortion during the first six months of
pregnancy.
. "The threat of Joel Hyatl Is not one that has us quaking In our
boots," sniffed Wayne Hill, Celebrezze's communications director.
when it was suggested that Hyatt's potential candidacy forced the
- change.
It is well known that Celebrezze spent weeks re-evaluating his
position on abortion following the Supreme Court decision permitting
states a greater role ln setting policy on that issue.
The attorney general talked to prollfe and procholce advocates,
studied the legal ramifications, consulted his family and conscience,
and discussed lt with Democratic political leaders.
He managed to justify his new position legally, personally and, not
by accident, politically. For the weight of evidence ls that any
Democrat In 1990 will be best served campaigning on the pro-choice
side.
What Celebrezze did was to gamble that he will gain more votes
than he loses among Democrats by lining up with the pro-choice
advocates. In fact. he may have chased out any competition In the
Democratic primary.
- -As for the general election, Celebrezze was gambling that many of
the prollfe votes would go to the Republican candidate anyway; both
declared GOP candidates are pro-life.
The negative side of Celebrezze's change of heart Is that he has
handed the Republicans an issue that they didn't have before- that
the attorney general can !lip-flop on a moral question, and that
political expediency is uppermost In his mind when he makes
decisions.
Whether this Is true or not, the GOP can be expected to make hay of
It during the 1990 campaign.
"What should be of concern to Ohioans ls Tony Celebrezze's
blatantly political switch on an issue of conscience," said Republican
State Chairman Robert Bennett. "What else will Tony Celebrezze
give up to appease a faction of his party or to pick up a few points In the
polls?"
·
Republicans believe they now have what they need to 1plant the
seeds of doubt In the public mind about Celebrezze's Integrity. They
were already planning to lather him for falling to blow the whistle on
various Celeste administration scandals; now they can make a
connection .
Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo says the GOP is playing
with fire lflt tries that tactic. He says bringing up Celebrezze' s switch
will merely highlight abortion as an issue and ''the Republican party
Is out of the mainstream on this issue. It Is going to hurt them, and
hurt them badly, in 1990."

Berry's World

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nitti .

Citizens help veteran VA passed by
WASHINGTON - When U.S.
Navy veteran Frank Weldon
came down with leukemia, he got
Utile from the Department of
Veterans Affairs except red tape
and excuses. But from generous
Americans who read Weldon's
story In this column last month,
he got what he needed - the drug
to treat Ills leukemia.
Weldon now has $11,000 worth
of Alpha Interferon from two
readers who, In their own grief,
found room to help someone else. ·
Steve DeAngelo of Titusville,
Fla., and Juanita Anderson of
Clarkesdale, Mo., each lost a
spouse to cancer recently and
each had a leftover supply of
·
Alpha Interferon.
DeAngelo, a stockbroker and
city councilman In Titusville,
read our column about Weldon
and was moved to tears. Hfs wife,
Angela, 43, a high-school
teacher, died of the same leukemia that Is threatening Weldon's
life. He arranged to give Weldon
the $10,000 supply of Alpha
Interferon he had when his wife
died.
"I've vowed to keep Angela's

memory alive and thlllljust one
way I've done that," DeAngelo
told our asSOCiate 1bn Warner.
"My mother read the column &amp;lid
called me whUe I atUI bad tears lD
my eyes. We both had the same
thlDg lD mlnd - send Angela's
extra Alpha Interferon to FraDIL
Angela would have wanted
Frank to have lt."
Anderson lostherhusbandof45
years, Clint, to bone marrow
cancer. She too read about
Weldon, consulted with
few
doctors and then arranged to
send him $1,000 worth of Alpha
Interferon and other medical
supplies. "I saw thll and just
coulda' t let It pass by," she told
us. "The Lord laid It upon my
heart to do what I did."

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VBIIIIII ... tl,t.IU• .. 41
WG•. .aiC, Peri')'U

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
helping Weldon and others lD Ills
circumstance. When Congress
debated the Atomic Veterans Act
of 1987 to compensate veterans
who have been exposed to radla·
lion, the VA bargained down tile
cost. One compromise struck In
the blll Is a 30-year statute of
lfmltatlons on leukemia. If a
veteran ls not diagnosed with
leukemia within 30 years of the
exposure to radiation on the Job,
then the VA Is not obliged to treat
it.
Weldon's leukemia did not
show up untO :W years after he
participated In Operation Wig·
wam - a series of undenrater
nuclear tests.
In May 1955, Weldon and his
shipmates on the USS O'Brien
were observers of the tests ln the
Pacific Ocean about 500 mUes
southwest of San Diego. Weldon
retrieved a buoy after one
underwater atomic blast and.the
buoy was later found to be
radioactive.
Over the years, Weldon

a

Weldon was overwhelmed. "I
sure didn't expect this to
happen," he said. "Botb Steve
and Juanita's generosity has
helped a great deal. It's nice to
know there are some people out
there who care, ·even though the
VA doesn't seem to want to help
much.''
·
The VA negotiated ·Itself out of

thought about that buoy each

.......

time he read of others whose

WC"u Me-w H. Be ..... L&amp;ke-

cancer was blamed on exposure
to radiation. He always thought ·
the VA would treat htm, but he
thOught WT(lng.
When Weldon, a 50-year-old
engineer from Long Beach,
Calif., was diagnosed with leukemia last February, six VA
doctors told him It was probably
related to Operation Wigwam.
But the VA found the loophOle ill
the Atomic Veterans Compensation Act and lnfonlled Weldon he ·
was not eligible for treatment.
He has been getting Alpha
Interferon - an experimental
drug found effective In the
treatment of leukemia - frOm a
clvUian doctor at a cost of more
than $3,000 a month, and his
Insurance runs out In AprU.
Now Weldon ls back at work
with an ex tension on that dead·
line, thanks to two caring people.
He has yet to hear anythln' more
from the VA.

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Adieu '71. Ne&amp;u.vllle-l' erll 41
lletiW'I' LK.. lt. 8.. 111 &amp;.pit

PeACE? AND
DeftR:RACt,J

A~QR@AKlNG

CAN1T

OUT ARoUND
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Don't annoy the poor on a holiday
about such an event. I wanted to
record the evening for others,
and I sttll believe the Information
Is valuable- even though I know
the photographer and I subtracted from whatever happl·
ness the dinner guesta enjoyed.
Since then, I've been en light·
ened by many journalistic portraits of the poor and homeless. It
Is Important that we have access
to tills knowledge. I hope that I
feel the same way lf someday It Is
my 111m to be the subject of the
public's right to know.
But I believe we have stopped
providing any valuable new
Information about the poor and
homeless during the holidays.
We have simply adopted another
seasonal "easy shoot" for news
crews.
"OK, Jessee, Tllankglving
Day," the news director says,
"we start with the bymn-slnglng

at the Victory Mission, get over
to the Salvation Army In time for
dinner, and then get some B-ron
over at ... what's tile nameoftllat
fiopllouse the nuns run over on
Ninth Street?"
· ·
Anyone who doesn't know that
there are homeless people eating
at soup kitchens on holidays
couldn't have wat&lt;;hed any TV
news for the past 10 years. Yet
among those of us who have
watched countless homeless peo
pie eat turkey dinners on televl·
sion, precious few of us know any
more than how they look as they
try to eat their meals while TV
cameras are pointed down their
guUets.
We stUJ don't know why they
are there, how they feel about It,
whether they have any Incentive
to try to get out, If there Is
anything out there lf they do try,
whether there Is a reasonable

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&amp;lplf)t 11, SnniUikU
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Salem H. Yo- Vh•• U
SaM1111Q Kl, S. . ..,. Periii•U
Sllenr... Pair.,.,.. 'II. . . . . . . u
N-, t.lllrl.M 11. ,...... II

Sarah Overstreet
expectation that with a little help
they might someday aot be poor
or homeless.
Folks, It's time to get on with lt.
Either we earn our keep as
journalists and tell the public
something It doesn't know about
these people, or we oughttoleave
them the heck alone.
This Christmas, I propose we
all Interview the Victory Mission.
directors at the doors and keep
the cameras out of dinner and
away from the lines formtnlto go
ln. I propose we talk to some of
the diners a few days before the.
holiday suppers. We Just might
find out some things we don't
already know. ,
For God's sake, this year let
those people have this brief time
of pleasure In private.

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Cunllr.,aelt Markt&amp;a 44

C'ol WU'W.e a, Lalll'•&amp;er F1111ter U

Who really ended the cold war? William Ruslu!r

'

An almost comical fight has
broken out between liberals and
conservatives over who deserves
credit for ending the Cold War.
The liberals - e.g. Michael
Kinsley In The New Republic for
Dec. 4 - are the more feverish
about it, quite obviously because
their case Is weaker.
Some conservatives take the
position ·that the Soviet Union
ultimately crumpled because
Ronald Reagan rearmed Amer·
lea beyond Moscow's ability to
compete•. while steadfastly res,
lstlng communism's worldwide
expansionism. This Is true as far
as It goes, but there was obviously a lot more to It than that.
Tip your hat, then, first to
Harry Truman, who decided as
early as 1947that Stalin was up to
ao good In Greece and Turkey
and had to he stopped. That
policy fiowered into Geoi'Je
Kennan's concept of "contalnment," which baa been Amerl- ·
ca' a blpartlaan policy evt!l' sllk!e.
The Republicans bad no paycbolollcal problem about re~llt·
lng communllt expa~~~loDiam
and supported tbe policy frlllll
the start. A good many liberal
Democrats, however, had trouble percelvlnlt Molcow's hand In

,,

various Third World political
The current convulsions ln It was the decat;te of the 1980s that
movements that were shrewed Eastern Europe don't contradict took the remaining air out of
enough to describe themselves as this polnt - they . prove 11. communism's tires. The bullymerely socialist, thereby quality· Gorbacllev's pullback from the boys ln Moscow may ·11ave
lng for liberal sympatby. Worse · domineering style that has char- thought they had a fighting .
yet, many liberals couldn't bring acterized Soviet foreign policy chance against 11te likes of
themselves to believe that tbe heretofore lin' t II any sense Jimmy Carter, NeD Kln!IOCk &amp;lid
Soviet Union Itself waa all bad, "voluntary," or lD answer to WUiy Brandt. But they cannot
and fell repeatedly for tile normal pressures. It 11 the have enjoye!f the stcht of
slightest hint that MoiCOW was desperate response of a regime Western front line consisting of
ready to mend Ita ways.
that II facl~~&amp;economlc collapse. Ronald Reagan, Margaret
All the more credit, then, to Co~~~ervatlves ware well aware Thatcher and Hellhut Kobl..
such stalwart liberal anti· (more 10 by far tban most
Or does Kinsley thlnk that wbat
communllta as Hubert Humpb- liberals) that tbll was bound to really made them pack It In was
rey and "Scoop" Jaclrloa, wbo come, sooner or later; we just that photograph ot Michael Du·
held their party oa COUI'II! for didn't lmow when.
kakls lD a tank?
containment for three decades
StU!, It' a undoubtedly true that
despite Henry Wallace, Abbie
Hoffman and everytllinc Ia
between.
But Klnaley baa It WI'OIII',
probably out of sheer lporaace.
Neither Klrlqlatrtck aor any
IIY United Preu b&amp;ernallonal
other conservative ever laid that
Today II Monday, Dec. 11, tile :M5th day of 1989 with 20 to follow.
communlat natlona ~ Jut
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
forever. (After all, It 11 wdtl8u,
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
dear Mlcbael, that "t!Je ptel of
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn •. ,
Hell shall not prevan acalnat
Those born on thll date are under the sign of Saal!tarlus. They
ua.") What conaervattves have
Include Scotlllh physiCist and kalefl!oJCOpe Inventor DaVt'cl Brews)er
aald II that a commullllt nation,
In 1781, French compo~er Hector BerHoz In i803, German pioneer
belnc In !be crJp of a totalllt bacterloloallt Robert Koch In 1843, New Yor~ Maror Fiorello
worldvtew that pmnlq Deltber
LaGuardia lD 1882, Russian novella! Alexander Sqlzhellltlyn lri 19l8
amendment nor c:Giltradtctlcm, 11
(age n), actress Rita Moreno In 1931 (age 58) and sln~r Brenda Lee
ln~apable of movtq voluntarily
1n 1944 tare 45).
·
;:
toward deJnocriC)'.

a

Today

'

CoMOieUoa

GwrslaSWII.ShawaHSt II

Results
Ohio Colll!!p Feelhidl Sell_. It

•
m

Dec. II

history

I

Cneb\flllr 12. w....... JUwr \'lrw n
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Df'Gralf Rlvrl'llltle W. olacboa Ce•lf'r

"Drnd .. Tri·YIIIey 11. New l.ellnllf:on

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EMMn,TriCoN-d
EIIIMNI 811. •cbfr SM' &amp;II
J'Urlud IS, hlrWew (Ky. ) 31
Fru WI• Molftt' sa. C.vi•Po• St

On Thanksgiving, we once
again watched the hOmeless eat
the wonderful meals provided for
them by the good samaritans
among us.
In shelters across America,
mlnlcams peered Into the faces
of the poc:ir; newspaper reporters
supped with the unwashed; and
TV reporters taped the testimonies of the benevolent.
I did the same thing, once.
Years ago, I spent Christmas
Eve at the Victory Mlla!Dn In our
town. A photographer went with
me, and spent the evening
clicking and whirring within
sight and earsbot of the diners.
He was able to hide behind his
equipment; they weren't so
lucky.
I can't say the story didn't have
merit. To my knowledge, It was
the first time a journalist In our
town flied a first-person report

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

NATIONAL ROCkEl' LE.4.0UI!l

By cldslng down Rl.o Gr-ande's
offense durlng the final minutes
and capitalizing on turnovers,
the Tiffin men's basketball team
sc;ored a 74·66 victory over the
Redmen Saturday ln Lyne
Center.
The Dragons posted their big·
gestlead, 13 points, In the game's

final minutes, capping off a
heated Mid-Ohio Conference bat·
tie that saw both contestants tied
at the half. Tiffin ls now 1·0 ln
conference play while the Red·
men are 0·2.
"The kids played hard. I have
no problem with their effort,"
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
said afterward. "Just down the
stretch, we didn't control them."
"Our guys played .well defen·
slvely down the stretch, we had
better shot selection and we got'
after some of the loose balls,"
Dragons mentor Jim Hammond
remarked. "Rio Grande ls wellcoached, and you know you're In
a war when you play a team like
that. This was a good win for us,
as,lt Is anytime you win against a
class program."
·
The game put defenglng District 22 champion Tiffin at 7-2
overall, while Rio Grande Is 5·3.
· Us~g a patient otfense, Tiffin
was ahead 6-4 until 13:53 when
Brad Schu~rt's !lei!! goal )mot·
ted the scor!' the first time. Rio
Grande seized the lead (11-10) at
11:20 on a Jeff Brown 3-polnter,
but It was answered at 10:48 by a
Tyrone Trbovich bucket which
kept the Dragons In control until
Schubert's trlfecta shot at 5:07
put the Redmen up by three
( 23-201.
Tiffin cut away at the lead,
holding the hosts' advantage to
lour, and tied ar 30 with 57
seconds left on a Brad Reaman
shot. Schubert's pair of free
throws 19 seconds later placed
the Rio men ahead by two, but
Brian Bicknell came through
with two more points at 3seconds
to deadlock going Into halftime.
The lead continl'led to rock
back and forth until 7:10, when
Wllllains' 3-polnt shot (60-55!
sparked a scoring spurt by Tiffl.n
starter Dorsey Birdsall the Red·
men couldn't counter until freshmen Brown, Darius Williams and
Lyndell Snyder pumped ln the
Rio Grande's final points In the
last two minutes.
"Our young kids came in and
played extremely well," La·
wborn said.
Brown led the team scoring
with 18 points and 12 rebounds,
while Tony Ewing posted 15
markers and also hit the boards
12 times. Schubert added four
assists. For Tiffin, Birdsall had
18 points and 12 rebounds,
Trbovich supplied 17 markers
and nine boards, Don Williams
recorded U points and Brad
Reaman pumped In 11 points.
Tiffin connected on 30of71 rleld
goal attempts !43.5 percent)
while the Redmen were success·
ful on :W of 99 tries for 38.5
percent. The Dragons also doml·
nated on foul shooting, hitting 17
of 23 attempts for 74 percent,
' compared to Rio Grande's 50
percent (5·10). Tiffin led Rio
Grande ln rebounds, 41-36, and
held their turnovers to eight
while Rio Grande committed 21.
Tifflnhlts the t:aad Thursdaylo
play Point Park (Pa.). The
Redmen wlll host Central State
Tliesday at 7:30p.m.

Honors
Mark Tillmon of Georgetown
was named.Big East player of the
week. He was al10 named MVP of
the Big East-ACC Challenge
series.
Maralhoa
Simon Robert-Naall of Tanza·
nla overcame windy conditions
to win the Honolulu Marathon ln 2
hours, 11 minutes and 47 seconds.
Robert-Naall, 23, led this year's
Boston Marathon for 13 miles.

-

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.·fiiASAM tAIIJY IOSPIIIl

lac.:

ED, Nost ·a THIOlT
GIIIIAL ALLIIIGIST
~'WfE
•ARitlf AIDS"

''

before traveling to Wellston
Friday night.
The Buckeyes, like Metgs, are
onnless on the seaspn as the
Buckeyes will enter the contest
with a 0.3 record . On paper, both
teams look even. The Buckeyes
are having problems scoring as
they are giving up an average of
71 points a game and scoring but
50. The Buckeyes were leveled
72-41 by Athens Saturday night.
Meigs wlll enter play with a 43
point scoring average while
giving up 67 a contest. The
Marauders and the Buckeyes
met last month In the Shrine
Preview In Athens with the
Buckeyes coming from behind to
defeat Meigs 30-29 .

Division I UPI All-Ohio
COLVMBU &amp;. 011.. (UP I) - Tile Itil
U.-ed Fraa Wer_.le_. DIY.Ioll I
aiJ.Ohto folltb.Utearn:
1-"fH.'OTl"r-."-t'f

fl!J..., ...

WI*' recehen-:f.ot' Bar~)'. O.ltlln,
H. WI. 8tntlt'; Ramler llertia, M•.U·
loa.~. 1'71, Senior.
'h. . e..-lo .. laedd•, Onelaad 81.
I(Mtlu., &amp;-3, Ul,lealor.
UntmH-Ilt'l&amp;h F•lmer, CIK:i•.ali
Moeller, 1-1, 211, 8e•ler; Mnr O.Uy,
H....-. 1-J, nt. Sulor; Met, llerry,
Tolfdo ~VIIIMt~, S.., nt, Senior: 0. add

Della. 8 .... _. •.,..., 111. 8•alor.
Cnter-UeGoahL Dlv ••WI)lle, I-I,
~.Se•lor.

QM&amp;rterlteck-.lot Plrkea,. Clt'Yel Md
81. lr~Mtus. 1-4. ttl, Senior.
Ra•-a:bDI-Robl!!l'l8mhl\ , Euclid,
H. liS. Sl!!iJior; hlf c.u.,..., Middle-town, 1-l, - . Senior; JUjaaa Cark'r.
We.terwllle 8oull, M, •5 • .la...,r.
l"laceldcller-CII• Cox, Luuater,
S-t, 111, 8ealor.

ll4·f·,. ..·

IJaemt'n-MIIU Bo...._111o Q.-:la.CI
El•er, 15-5, Ul, S.• ..r; D•n Wlller10n,
l;lAJIOn Durilar, IU, ell, Jll.aor; Cbd
Ellis., Troy, 8-4, tiO, Sealor; Bill &amp;!II,
W•ft'a Weslern Keeerw, f-2. UO.
Srlllor.
Lhtebacllera-By•• Wilson, D~.rt.on
Me ...wdak, &amp;-!, ns. Senior; Derrick
Terrel~ MldclllCOWD. 1--3, 211, Senior;

K..-mlnpam. 0e¥r... c1St.ll_.._,

I· I, !II, Sea6or; Trn-or Wlllllfr, Lane•

eer.Bacb-Kevta
"'· m. St'lt~or.
Gal. ., &amp;lciN,I-1, 115,
SeniOr: Bo..&amp;e Red4. Da.f 111;1111 Wa,.ne,
1-11, 111. 8ealor: ToiQ' Moorr, Belford, ·
1-1. ltl, !k!a•: M.lke .J•dlaea. Uma
Se•6or, M, 18G, ~~Dr.
Pu•r-Georxe r.-ct. LUnrood
81. Edward, 5-11, 115, la.llior.
... 1-.' f:(l \II Tf~ I \1

0/jo'luo·

Whtrrecehen-Malt O.ffy, Ma.Yfteld.

H. 111,&amp;-oiOr; VIUIC't &amp;e. lOft, Clnoel and
Glnt\'Ue, 5-11; 111. Sealor.
11Pt ee4-M'Y c . . IIH. Grow CRy,
1-1, 01, Senior.
Uoemea-8eetlstntlon. Wl!lltOieMer
Lako&amp;a, M. WI. lllaior; a1aa Dt-....-co ,
Lorala .WI'nlntl ltl•lo 1-1. t75, SeniOr;
Brlu "'ellllw. Clnrla•ll Eldl'r, 1-11,
Ul. 8en6or: .IHII Dewtu. OnrlaiiMI
S,l!lllltOI't'. N. ns.se•••·
Cealer-Todd Sheller, Clncln.al
MoellfJ', I-I, al, Sealor.
qu,nertJacll-loel FoMr, Luc..aer,
H. IlL 8ea1Dr.
...... b..S1-WIIM-rt •••· Columbu llrookh.ven, ~II, 11%. Stn•r;
Andrew DelM.ch, Wo0Bier 1 f.l , liS,
Senior, Jell Hill, Ml. HuMIIy, &amp;-1. 181,

Scm..
Placellk:ker-IOe Hukht'IIOII. Grow"

CKy, 11-S, IIIJ, Seliler.

''•i•"'*'

Uaemet-Rell,. llobtason. SMduN.f,
N. 121. S•aiDr: aurMe Lo-r. Fairfield,
1-1, Ill, Se ... r; Tl'ftlt le•Rw'ICI, Of'\'~
land 81. lleotlu, 11-J, :OJ. lu lior; Ttav~
•lie.,., We.~ Carftllhoa, 1-1. JII.Seaior:
1ftm M~la. AuallllloWn P1tch. ~II,
IH. 8ealor.

Unebacllera-leff Cr•bl•. Clllt'fn•U

Moeller. 1-J. Ill. Sealer; .Iamie Phlllp!f.
Cl.rlnaMI Pr•etoa. 1-t, •5, .lulor;
Kyle MSIIII. Ttlfdfl Wltlun..-, 1-1, Ul,
81!111w: Dave Roiii•P.•. Stow Walsh

1•1111. 1-2, nt. 8e•lor.

a. ..-u-Mehot• lo-.., tl-.:la..tl 81.

Xawler, f.l, 111, lielllar. !Shawn Lor~~.
Eul Llver,_L f-Z, IU. llnler; Mel
Tucker . .aevetaad
t-t , 1115,
Selllor, SrOIIIIO Co...._ Ml . . n-a, i--1.
liS, Se•IOr.
Plllll&amp;er- T.D . Du~Ry , " 'twl.enillt'

Hel,.._.,

Norlh, H. Ul. J•.Ur.
Rrlo ·~-ufi " '" "'"' - H " I" ·r t ."m • l h. ,.~,,-J ;,/

l.j., ,..,,...... ,f- /lo&lt;a)""'-

..; ,.,..,4 j Elolo •r,

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t : o ~~to· h-&lt;oj: l il • •.u· m-- ( ,"/.,wk

~..,,.,

Honoralllfo

Me~~don

.--

lfto ..l.tluJO. f.i

rl ·

/o,\ ·r, •. 1'14'''' "

Unl!!lllea

Cllr .. "*•k. ctnrlnraU Mot'iler:
Tyro.- AbWqla11. Col .... 11 Brook·
ba~e•; O.vld AI lea, EMt Unr p;10l; Ben
t\111Uitt-n Rch; Tom Bar 1111,
Mentor: John Ill' own, Reynolchhu tW:
.laihlt Bowmaa. Uma Sra6or; lleb Cooclr.
Mellklr. Ed Clakhl!!'l'. Ort'IO• ll.,;

•rto•.

W-.t'DI! Da\'11, Akrea Garleld; JermaiM'

Daelt'la. 0.., •• Wltfllle: Iamie Frommell,

Boardman:

Antltony

Ya•••·

Grow City: John Fell. Grow Cily: JE'fr
Grune. Fremoal Ro a ~~;
Galuka.
Slroaprille; ll)' HI.-•, Lanc.Wr; Tim
Haltl'ha* , Parma VaiiiP)' Forte; Gre1
Harrn.yer. Onrla•l Elder: lob Jolutun. ManNfll!ld Madfa• A.rlc Kvha.
O.blln; R-., Xn&amp;&lt;:ll/11, Man611oa W•

J•••

11hln&amp;toa; Tom Manle)', fllllllay; Kl'\'1•
MuUn. Clnoclnaall ElM-: SU.no•
MO!ti . Ond•NaiiWithl'aw: Shawn MOIL
Princeton: Pek MaUn:w~~o ZMI!Kvllle ;
Derrfck Mlilrm.h, • • • ,..; Dupre..
Mlx11111,
lt'lf Pewer11, AullnW.n FUch; lelf Parlf'tl , Millmlilbu fW:
Daa Per-.. MtlMiet.rs lll!!lpts Ml,_

•••rd;

park; Doa Popr, Nonh RldfevUie Jor
l"len:e, M...Uion W_,.lqton: Terry
Ro~e•e. Eud ld; llrlaa R....,.,. , C'l nclnlllll

Sl. l'l:avler; Scott Smlltl, WHt OIMoer
Laktta: ErkSI•I, ll'remolllllRoss; Rich

sa ......-. Galtu• u .....tn: 0&amp;11!! Stl ..
nett. "'mtervlle North; Brad 8waa80L
Uppt'r .VU111Poa: stu Smtth, EllcUd ;
lerr)·Turele. Pal.-..tllf'IUvt'r ..de; Tim
TMmp110n, Sprin&amp;fl~d Soa•: Bro-n
Trehbl, CtnclniiOtl St. :-tilvler. 8oh
Vmberr. Ciacla.all LaSalle; DuleY
WIUiun•. Orepn Clay: Gre1Woodward,
La~~euter; .Jolal W andoerliJellen , EU~IId;
Mille WHt , Fairfield; Troy Zl"l'mll..
Upper .VIInClOL
Gre~~;

""··k·
Colurnbu11

u......,.,./11,. u..,"i'"'
.4.rma&amp;roJII,

~ook·

h•¥n ; lon Abramcz)tl, MlMeburx
Helll;tlll MI..,. It; Todd .4.11ea. Dablln:
&amp;od Boykl., {)aftonMe-*"rdale; Terry
caner, Ftrmelli Boa; RyanCrow•ver.
Manllteld M• . .• Tom Vet-. Lyndllul"!!t
llnatll: Alltealo CarWr, a:;.~..,.,t.sSeallt;
Chi~~; ·DoMidloe, Troy: Kn Dutty,
Clnclnaatl M:Dfller; Brlu lMIIberiO,
Eala.llr Nor111; Prier Fll.alttck.
01!!'1!1Ud St. l~~;natllla; SOOit Garleck,
Fln4ay; "'"" Hyxclu , ClnelnnaU
Motller: f'al llela.ere. Gahu• U.:ola:
Marat•IDil, MI. HrallfiJ: Slt'\'e JIDda~.

P'telloa Harrilon, CohmiN!il
So•: Chr• tlawleckl, Toklcllo ()ontdl
~mrille;

catbolk; BriAn KlnJ, Wf!lt CheHtl!r
L11kata; J .R. kaiJIII, HamlhO&amp; Thornll"

Ll!!wl!il, Aki'IINI Garfield; Du..e ~ere.
Daylon Du/llbar; Reb PaU, Oneln•ll
El.,: ..... .,.._. IUclt&amp;rdseiL Wltl'l'l'n
..-• .,,. RHerw; M•k llwllb'. Clt\lf'·
laa• Sl. 11_.1111.,; Knln Smllil, IMI
U~erpool : M.MtSiaan.G.ii.... •IJ•ola;
Mlll'k Spoerke, PIII'IM ValMy Fora-e;
0.\'ld TbornoiJ. DaJto• Sff'bbln~; Rat~

T..._•oa. Wl!!lll Chta-.r Lakau: llryen

Wlnkl'll, ToledoMacamhl!!r: .ldtWIIIdnK.
_.llflllaltM'a FlleiL

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tt••

•

\11111

The Marauders held a 15-12
lead at theendofthequarter, but
Ed Chilcote came off the bench to
score eight points In the second
quarter to glve ·the Buckeyes the
victory . Nelsonville· York Is
gnided by veteran Buckeye Head
Coach Virgil Grandy, who came
out of a 5 year retirement to once
again lead the Buckeyes.
Cary Betzlng leads the Mac
rauders In scoring with a 12 point
average. On of the bright spots of
the Marauders has been the play
or sophomores L. J . Mitch and
Shawn Hawley. Mitch in his first
year of playing ls scoring points
at a clip of 8.5 per game and has
averaged 9.5 rebounds a contest.
Hawley, on the other hand, Is
averaging 7 points a contest.
In the first two games, Coach
Rusty Bookman has started a
lineup of junior Jason Wright at
point guard, Robbie Fields and
Betzlng at the wings and Jay
Humphreys and Mike Van Meter
at the post positions. Van Meter
· Is coming off a 11 point perfor. mance In last week Joss to Miller.
In the same contest Humphreys
held the Falcons scoring ace
John Doughty to only 10 points
well below his average.
The reserve game will begin at
6 as Rick Ash and his little
Marauders also are looking their
first victory. Friday night's
game with Trimble has been
reset for Saturday , Jan. 2.

312 GIFTS

RIO GRANDE (641) - Mark
Erslan, 3·2·0·8: Lyndell Snyder,
2-0-4; Brad Schubert, 2·1·4-9;
Tony Ewing, 7-1-15; Darius Willi·
ams, 2-0-4; Jeff Brown, 7-4-0-18;
Tim Christian. 1-0-2; Troy Do·

........... 1, Mollre .. (I
DI!I'NilS,M....... I

li;Lt.lla~V-•wrfl

.
.
naldson, 3·0-6. TOTALS 2'7·7-5-66.
TIFFIN (74) - Don Williams,
4·2·4·14; Brian Bicknell, 3-0.6;
Brad Reaman, 2-1-6-11; Thad
Patrick, 0-2-2; Dorsey Birdsall,
9·0·18: Tyrone Trbovich, 7-3-11;
Mike Conrad, 2·0-4; Dale Kuhl,
0·2·2. TOTAL'! 2'7·3·11-74.
Balfllmi'IIOOre: Rio Grande 32,
Tlfftn 32.

Box score:

-Sports briefs_;_

NV._..,.
••. n .........1. u.
a.._e.ru.,..,..,

win column as they host the
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes In a
TVC match-up Tuesday night

District leader
outlasts ·Redmen

Wallllllqlta1,BMlo.l
PIIIU..ei,Wal. QMellft I. ae
Hardo .. 1, NN ler_, I

......-~~ -Sports b~f&amp;­
lloldq
...~
Ma~k Bl'elud stopped Japan's
Jtiljlo OUkilD the fourth round of
llll!lr scheduled 12· round title ·
bbut In Tokyo Sunday to retain
hll World Boxing Asaoclatlon
welterwelcht crbwn. Referee Ju·
IJo Cesar Alvarado of ~anama
stopped the bout 35 ,ecoDds lnto
the fourth round after tile rlngslci• doctor ruled Ozakt c:ould not
~iltlnue becaule of a .-pmg cut
OYWIIII r.tphye.
·

••.-•Ae......,.t

Placed fe....,.d Ilea

Hll-.llee -

By DAVE JIABRJS
.
ROCK SPRINGS -The Meigs
Marauders will try and dent the

•

�Monday, December 11. 1989
Mondey, December 11, 1989

Pon111oy Midcleport, Ohio

Colts rally to 'edge Browns
23-17; Bahr misses are costly
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) - lndla· !Ions," Bahr said "I not only let I would need to cut underneath,"
said Taylor, who was tackled "by
napoUs remains in contention for myself down, but my team. That's
the NFL playoffs because Cleve- what's so.hard to take."
Kosar. '1 wasn't sure I could get a
land kicker Matt Bahr missed two
touchdown because I started runpressure kicks and the Colts'
Kosar, suffering from a swollen ning out of gas."
defense made' three ga~vlng
Eric Dlcker!nn rushed 26 times ·
right elbow, completed 26 of 40
plays.
for
137 yards and surpassed 11,000 ,
passes for 353 yards for his best
career
rultilng yards against the
Safety Mike Prior raced 58 yards
passing day In two years. But two
with an 'interception ot a Bernie Interceptions were crucial AFC's t01&gt;-rated defense.
Kosar pass with 4:06 to play in
Prior's and one Keith Taylor
Keith jones blocked a Rohn Stark ·
overtime, giving the Colts a 23-17 returned 77 yards to end a
pWJt and Lawyer Tillman rerotriumph and their first overtime . Cleveland threat and set up the
vered the football In the end zone,
victory since 1983.
tying touchdown, a l·yard toss from
giving
the Browns a 17-7 lead 1:42
"I looked aroond after the catch, Tom Ramsey to Pat BeacJt with
Into
the
second half. The Colts "
took a second look aroond and knew 1:56 remaining In regulafun.
pulled
within
a touchdown on Dean
I had a touchdown," Prior said.
"We thought our play&lt;if chances
"It just wasn't meant to be," Blasuccl's 47-yard field goal rnld·
weregone.Nowwehaveachance.'' Carson said. "A lot hasn't been · way throogh the lhlrd quarter.
Bahr kicked a 48-yard field goal
The Colts, 77-7, would have been meant to be this year. We've lost
as the second quarter ended, giving
eliminated fran the AFC playoff sane tough ones In the last weeks. I
race with a loss. Instead, they was embarrassed with what hap- Cleveland a 10.7 halftime lead. Eric
moved within a game ot AFC East pened out there. The team Is down. Metcalf had snapped a streak o!
seven straight scoreless quarters
leader Buffalo.
You won't get them back up."
for the Browns· with a 12-yard
"It was the high point ot the
season for this !Pam," Colts Coach
Ramsey replaced quar!Prback touchdown run 2:Z7 into the periOd.
IndlanapoUs scored on Its third
Ron Meyer said "We consider Jack Trudeau, who completed 15 Of
METCALF SCOREs Cleveland's' Eric
Prior (38) aad Michael Ball (31) look at each
play of the game when Trudeau
ourselves fortunate. We dndged a 32 passes for 200 yards but suffered
Met call (21) scores during second period action at
other. the Colis won 23-17 In overtime. (UPI)
bullet (with the missed kicks). a concuSSion !alP In the lhlrd periOd
threw a 51-yard touchdown pass to
Jndianapoll~ Sunday as Colts defensive back Mike
There are no guarantees In the when AI Baker and Clay Matthews Andre Rison. Cleveland comerNFL.''
back Hanford Dixon fell at the line
slammed into him after a pass.
of scrimmage and safety Felix
Cleveland, 7-6-1, Is 0-3-1 over the Trooeau was hospital121ed.
Wright moved forward to help
past four weeks, the Browns'
longest winless stretch in four
Cleveland appeared desUned to cover Bill" Brooks, leaving Rison
years. The Browns no longer extend Its 17-10 lead when Webster uilguarded as he ran down the lett
control thelrowndesttnyin theAFC Slaughter caught a 43-yard pass sideline.
from Bernie Kosar at .the IndianaCentral.
The rookie caught Trudeau's
"We threw it away," Cleveland polls 6-yard line. The catch gave
Coach Bud Carson said. "We tossed Slaughter a !Pam-record 1,100 pass at the Browns 16 an(! strolled,
this one away. I'm not in mourning receiving yards this season. But into the end zone just 2:03into the
CINC INNATI (UP!) - Steve said Wyche. " It's so unfair, but slet snapped: "We played bad,
we turned the damned football Taylor in!Prcepled Kosar three game with the longest touchdown
that
Largen t's 100th career touch- there's nothing we can do about we coached bad and we lost to a ·
over
and lost. We had our chances. playsla!Pr ID set up the tying score. reception allowed by the Browns
down pass reception Sunday did it . ltold my players, 'It's kind of bad team."
God knows, we had our chances."
'1 saw the pass coming and knew this season.
like officiating, some things just
more than set an NFL record. It
Bahr, who had made 12 straight
Seattle, 6-8, won its second
aren't fair."'
triggered the Seattle Seahawks
field
goals Inside 40 yards, missed a
During the game, Wyche took straight game after losing four In
toward their 24-17 upset win over
39-yard
field goal with 25 seconds
the Cincinnati Bengals.
the stadium public address mlc· a row.
~mal~
In reguffifun. CleveImmediately after the game, a
three years, was selected by
"That was the key play in the rophone to quiet a few rowdy fans
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) land's
Gerald
McNeil returned a
fellow
Division I coaches from
game." Seattle's Dave Krieg who had tossed snowballs at the lot of the Seattle players mocked
pWit 46 yards In overUme and only . Chuck Kyle, who guided Cleve- around the state, receiving 14 of
said of his 10-yard TD pass to Seattle players. Wyche, who has the favorite ungrammatical
land St. Ignatius to a 13-0 record
Largent just before halftime. ''It been very critical of Cleveland chant of Cincinnati fans- "Who Michael Ball's dlv!ng tackle and its second consecutive big the 41 votes cast.
Lima Senior's Leonard Rush
gave us momentum for the rest of fans tossing objects at opposing dey think gonna beat dem Ben- averted a touchdown. The runback school state championship, has,
set
up
a
35-yard
attempt
by
Bahr
gals?''by
chanting,
''Who
dey
players, told. Cincinnati fans that
the game."
and Brian Cross of Grove City ·
that hit the lett upright and bounced been voted the United Press tied for second with seven each,
Seattle, trailing 10-0 before " This Is not Cleveland" and think dem Bengals are?"
International
Division
I
coach
of
back with 8:55 rernai~ in
followed by John Sabatalo of
Largent snagged his record- urged them to report any
the year.
overtime.
setting TD catch with a high leap snowball-throwers to security
Cincinnati's Eric Thomas reKyle, whose Wildcats will West Ches!Pr Lakota and Tom
"It's frustrating because I had
in the back of the end zone, went guards. No more snowballs were turned an intercep!Pd pass 18
en!Pr the 1990 season with a - Grlppa of Cincinnati Elder.
two opportunities Wider ideal condl·
on to score 17 unanswered points thrown.
yards lor a touchdown that pulled
29-game winning streak covering
and then won the game in the
As for the game, Cincinnati the Bengals into a 17-17 tie with
closi ng minutes on an 80-yard offensive coordinator Bruce Co- 9: 39left.
scori ng drive kept alive by a
33-yard Largent reception.
Tied 17-17, the game-winner
.cam e on Krieg's third TD pass of
the da y, a 1-yard toss to Curt
Warner on a 3rd and goal with
3:51 left.
Largent, who also has caught
passes in an NFL record 175
straight games , had shared the
TD reception markof99with Don
Hutson, who pla yed fortheGreen
Bay Packers from 1935-45.
" I'm sure Steve is happy about
breaking the record," said Seattle coach Chuck Knox, "but he's
.probably happier that he broke
the record when we won .the
game."
" lt 's hard to say what the
·. record really means," said Lar. gent. ''I' m just thankful to the
: guys I play with for helping me as
much as th ey have these 14
.. years. "
.
·· Largent said his record-setting
- catc'h came on a play " designed
· to go to me, but it was my job to
: find a hole. Dave scrambled and
• saw me. The only thing I wa s
worried about was I might have
been out of the end zo ne when I
caught it. But I saw no flags, no
calls and I knew it was there, I
knew It was No. 100."
The loss crippled Cincinnati's
playoff hopes. The Bengals, 7-7,
who have lost six of their last nine
games, trail Houston, 9-5. by two
gam es in the AFC Central
division . Cincl nnali faces a do-ordie game against the Oilers next
Sunday .
Cincinnali coach Sam Wyche,
unhappy about some officiating
WILUAMS BRUSHES OFF BENGAL - Seattle's Michael
cal ls in the ga me, said very Utile
W!Uiams (32) brushes oft Benrals' Leon Wlllte wllb a sllff-arm
after the game and ordered his
during Sundy's 24-17 upset win In RlverfrOIII Stadium. (UPI)
players not to talk to reporters.
" 1 feel so sprry for ou-r players
that they had to lose this way,"

Seahawks jolt Bengals, 24-17;
· playoff hopes are crippled

Top Division I Coach is Chuck Kyle

MANLEY'S
RECYCLE
CENTER

; TVC standings
(All Games)
: TEAM
WL P OP
Miller .................. 3 0 218 189
Trimble ............... 2 0 1~9 140
Wellston , ............ 1 0 47 46
VInton County ...... 3 1 248 234
Belpre .. ............... 2 1 211 188
Alexander .......... .1 2 218 210
Fed-Hocking ........ l 3 275 . 284
Meigs .................. 0 2 86 134
Nels-Y ork ............ o 4 191 286
Friday's results:
Alexander - open
Vinton County 78 Federal Hocking 64 ( played Saturday,
. makeup)
: Meigs at Trimble, ppnd, reset
· Jan. 6
. Miller at Nelsonville-York,ppdn,
reset, Jan. 6
Belpre at Wellston, ppnd, reset
Feb. 3
Saturday night's ~:ames:
Jackson 61 Wellston 41
Athens 72 Nelsonville-York 41
Tuesday's games:
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Wellston at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Miller - open
Vinton County at Belpre

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

You Are Invited To The
Grand Opening of

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
On December 14, 15 &amp; 16
Froni 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
BUY.G GLASS, PUS'IIC, A....JIUM CAJIS, COPPEI, ·
BWS, SI&amp;T Al.lll., UDIATOIS
AIID OMII mas.
EVEN IF YCMt IIAVIIIGniiiG 10 STOP IJI AND
LOOI AT 011 . . fACIUTY.
Grlllll Op 1 i .. Special
SPIOAL ACCOUNTS
Dec. 14, 11 &amp; 16 only.
fOI NON-PROm
IUYIIG Alll·l· CANS
FOI 40&lt; PEl POUND
GROUPS
(Thr• lllcb W.w S.,. Alllerallut ten" p1111upl:4ul

97.mCI

511&amp;1

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Wish all your customers and
friends -a very Merry ·christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 2.2nd ..

ADVERTISING·

ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
99~2156
&lt;c

The Daily Santinei-Pitga 6

Pomaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Weather

--Local news briefs----. Subdivision dedication scheduled Tuesday
J:ontlnued from page 1
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 9: 22p.m. to Butternut Ave. fog Kenny
t unsford
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10: lO,p.m ., Tuppers Plains transpor!Pd Lena Viola from
Eastern High School to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Pomeroy at 11: 01 p.m. took Scott Miller and Michelle Metzger
from ' a motor vehicle accident at the upper parking lot to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine at 11: 29 p.m. was called to County Road 28 lor Laura
Baker who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· On Sunday at 4:48a.m., ltaclne went to Trouble Creek Road
f\)r R;lymond Kerns to Holzer Medical Cen!Pr.
Mli1dleport at 11: 15 a.m. was called to S!)cth and Palmer Sts.
for John Metzger to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 1:07 p.m.,
Middleport transported Margaret Sheridan·from the Overbrook
Center to Pleasant Valley Ho8pital.
·
At 1: 37 p.m., Racine transported Marilyn Powell to Holzer
Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 4:22p.m. was called to R6ute 331or Michael Celli
to Veterans Memorial HospitaL Celli was later flown by
SkyMed to the University Hospitals Trauma Unit.
At 9:01 p.m . • Pomeroy was called to Route 681 for Juanita
Gearhart who was taken to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-------Denny L. Roberts
Denny Lanzo Roberts, 54,
Route 1 Galllpolls, died in Holzer
Medical Center Monday. He
retired frolO Galllpolls Developmental Center In 1987 after 30
years' service.
Born Oct. 23, 1935 In Gallla
County, he was a son of the late
Roy andCiara Carroll Roberts.
He Is survived by his wife,
Thelma Jean Wise; three stepsons, David Woodyard , Casper,
Wyo., Randy Lee, Columbus, and
Kelvin Lee, Galllpolls; three
step-daughters , Dorlee Collins,
Salt Lake City, Utah, Sheila
Cundiff, Middleport, and Vicki
Bell, GalllpoUs; two daughters,
Trilla Roberts and Beth Wllll·
ams, both of Casper, Wyo. Also
surviving are a brother, Rex
Roberts, Gallipolis and 10
grandchildren.
He was preeeded in death by '
his grandmotb11r. Sarah Carroll,
in whose home he was reared.
Funeral arrangements will" be
announced by McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home Weth~rholt
Chapel, GalUpolts .
r

Mary DeCoy
Mary DeCoy, 75, ol 438 Jerry
St, GaiUpoUs, died Saturday at
Holzer Medical Cen!Pr.
Born May 10, 1914 ln Hlllards,
Penn., she was the daughter of
Teny and Pasqua DelVeechio.
She married Andy DeCoy, on
Jan. 2, 1938 at Wheeling, W.Va.,
. and he survives, along with a son,
Andrew Donald DeCoy of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va., and a daughter
· Joyce Marlene Phelps, Las Vegas, Nevada: lour grandchildren
and one great - grandchild ."
There are also four brothers
surviving, Frank DelVecchio,
New Pl!iladelphla, , Ohio, Pat
DelVecchio, Bradlngton, Fla.,
Dam DelVecchio, Shadyside,
Ohio, and John DelVecchio, Los
Angeles, Cal~. One brother pre·
ceded her ln death.
She attended Grace United

Methodist Church.
Services will be conducted
Tuesday, 1 p.m. at WaughHalley -Wood Funeral Home, the
Rev. Joseph Hefner officiating.
Burial to !lows In Pine Street
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home, Monday 6 to 9 p.m.

Dale W. G81Tett
Dale Webster Garrett, 55, Rt. 1,
Point Pleasant, died Saturday, Dec.
9, 1989, in. the Pleasant Valley
HospitaL
He was a fonner employee at
Value City, Columbus, Ohio, mem·
ber of the First Chun:h of God,
Point Pleasant, a veteran of lbe
U.S. Army, where he served for 13
years, and a member or American
Legion, Mason Cqunty Post 23.
Born July 31, 1934, in Point
Pleasant, he was a son of Mildred
Hannon Stephmson, Gallipolis,
and the late Harold Garrett.
He was preceded in death by his
sister, Billie Garrett. Surviving in
addilion 10 his mother is his wife,
Eileen Bundy
Garrett;. one
daughter, Thmm)' Jean· Yost,
Columbus, Ohio; two sons, Bobby
Dale Ganett, Chillicothe, Ohio, and
Steve Dale Bayloclc, Collimbus,
Ohio; step-father, Oscar Stephen·
· son, Gallipolis; brother, Paul Garrett. Colwnbus, Ohio; four sisters, ·
Alice Gleason, Point Pleasant,
MaJy Wood, Keyser, W.Va., Dottie
Burgess, Lakeland, Fla., and Betty
Burkhead, Shepherdsville, Kr,.;
mother-in-law, 1lilna Bundy, Chll·
licOihe; three granddaughters; and
several nieces and nephews.
The service will be held Tuesday,
ll a.m., at the First Chun:h of God,
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Dale
Vo~ officiating. Burial will follow in the Suncrest Cemetery,
where militaJy graveside rites will
be conduc~ by the American
Legion.
at the Crow·
Friends may
Hussen Funeral Home today, 2 to 4
p.m. and 7109p.m.
The body will be taken 10 the
chun:h one hour prior to services.

can

WILLIAMSON, W.VA. - The raised, according to lnlonnation
Valley View subdivision, a unl· from the Corps ol Engineers'
que cooperative effort by the U. Huntington olflce.
Valley View subdivision is
S. Army Corps of Engineers and
the West Virginia Housing Devel- open to residents of Williamson,
opment Fund, will be fonnally Matewan and South Williamson
dedicated Dec. 12 by local, state that are eligible for the home
.replacement option. So far, 42
and federal officials.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd will be homeowners have elected to
relocate to the new development.
keynote speaker at the 2 p.m.
The WVHDF has 20 homes,
ceremony at Valley View, about
two· miles southeast of
Williamson.
The site ln Mingo County was
developed by the Corps as part of
Its program for reducing flood
damages along Tug and Levlsa
Forks in the Big Sandy ltiver
Basin ofWestVlrglnia, Kentucky
and Virginia.
This Is the largest floodprool·.
ing and relocation program ever
undertaken in the U . S. by the
Corps of Engineers.
Valley VIew has space for 56
houses. In Sep!Pmber, the area
was turned over to the West
VIrginia Housing Development
Fund (WVHDF) for the actual
construction of dwellings .
After the Corps determined
that a flood control dam on Tug
Fork would not be cost-effective,
the federal Energy and Water
Development Act of1981 directed
the agency to find other means of
reducing chronic flood damages
along Tug Fork and other
streams in that region .
Engineers devised a threecomponent plan, Including floodwalls at community centers,
flooclprooflng homes in certain
areas by raising them In-place,
and offering the owners of
qualified homes that can't be
· pro!Pcted the option of selling
their floodprone home or buying
a new home out of the floodpla ln.
More than 200 homes have been

So• Ill Central Ohio

~now

including four models, already
completed or under construction.
The first six residences are
expected to he occupied before
Christmas.
The Corps ol Engineers' site
development included paved
s treets, utility lines and surveyed
lots. The WVHDF will manage
the subdivision until it 's annexed
by the City of Williamson.

likely Monday night, with
a low between 20 and 25. Chance
of snow isOO percent. Snow likely
again Tuesday, with highs between 25 and 30. Chance of snow
Is ro percent.
Extended Foreeut
Wednesday lhrourb Friday
A chance of snow each day,
with highs ranging from 15 to 25,
a nd lows generally between five
and 15.

99

DEALERS WELCOME

No top prize
winner in Lotto
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Players of Saturday's $10 million
Super Lotto game failed to pick
all six numbers correctly, al·
though 173 tickets have five ofthe
six numbers.
The numbers were 7, 16, 23, 39,
40, and 42 and the total sales were
$5,942,925.
Players with five numbers
have tickets worth Sl,OOO. There
were 8,492 tickets with four ol six
numbers worth $75 each .
Wednesday's drawing will be
worth at least $13 million dollars.
In the Kicker game, the winning sequence Is 531587 and
there's o.n e ticket with all six
numbers worth $100,000.

Hospital news · ·
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- Amber
Warner, Pomeroy;
Saturday discharges - None.
Sunday admissions - John C.
Metzger, Middleport; Steven
Pickens, Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - None.

Voinovich softens stand on abortion
CLEVELAND (UP I)- Republican gubernatorial candidate
George Votnovlch eased a little Inhis views on abortion Saturday,
saying he would support abortion
lri the case of rape or in~est.
· In an Interview with. the
Cleveland Plain Dealer, he said
that lf he were governor and a blll
came before him that provided
for abortions If the pregnancy
resulted from rape of Incest that
he would sign lt.
"I think what we have to do is
realize we are in the real world,"
the Cleveland mayor s~id.
He said that as governor, he
would not seek such a bill, but
would sign II if It came before
him.
Just last July Voinovlch said ~e
favored abortions only If the
mother's life were In danger.
"My position ls what ltls . So be
it," he said ln July. "I'm not
· going to be wishy -washy on the
issue.''

Voinovich's statement drew

Stocks
, Dally stock prices
(As of 10:10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
·of Blunt, Ellll &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 32
AT&amp;T .................................. 44
Ashland 011 ........................38')8
Bob :Evani .... ,.....................14\lo .
Charm ina Shoppes ..............11\lo
City Holdlq Co ................... 15 · .
Federal ~oiiJ) ....................19"'
Goodyear TAR ................... 46"'
. , .... , ..................... 3Jl
Heck' ........
Key C.iltutlon ..................... 14
Lajldl' EJU( ......................... 28'(o
Llftllted Inc........................33!1
Multlinedla .Inc ...................88\S
Ru fltat.urants .................. 2%
Rollllllllll A Myers ............... .15\lo
Sbne,•'alnc.......................12%

'

Stlr Blllk ...,:... , .. , .......... ;, .. ,20%
WeJidY'a Inti..........................5
WortlllllltGO Ind. ............ •....2416
(.., Celllatea II
teday)

l,l

•

"'lllvl._.

criticism from Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze Jr. who is to
announce Monday night he is
seeking the Democratic nomination for -governor. Just one week
ago Celebrezze wavered on his
views.
· "We certainly take offense to
the past week of verbal attacks
on Tony Celebrezze for the
process of formulating his pos tlon when one week later George
Volnovlch follows lhe same
path," Celebreeze · said in a
Saturday statement. "Weare not
attacking his position. We are
att&lt;Jcklng the fact that he attacked the process. It's the

epitome of hypocrisy." ·
At a news conference Dec. 2,
Celebrezze said thl:it although he
opposed abortion, he felt that the
'w oman . should have the right to
make the decision a bout an
abortion.
A spokesman for Voinovich's
possible opponent in the spring
primary, Robert Taft, expressed
pleasure with the Cleveland ·
mayor's stand.
"We felt all along that the
Voinovlch position was far to
extreme and we're happy to see
him come around to a more·
reasonable point of view," said
Dan Schnur.

----Meigs announcements--Chamber lc! meet
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce will hold their
monthiy meeting Tuesday at 12
noon .at Veterans Memorial Hospital. The chamber will be

discussing the llnallzlng of plans
for the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce. All members are
urged to attend. This will be the
last olflclal meeting of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce.

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Pornaoy-MiddiiiiJC)rt. Ohio

• •

.'

Ann
GRAND OPENING -Hood
FamUy Shoes ill Pomeroy, t~
lonner Hartle)' Shoes, celebraled Ita IJI'&amp;Dd openlllt oa
FrldQ. The stere lA under the
ownenhlp or Job abd Ceyatal
Rood aad business lloun are
Moaday thrOII(h SatardaY. ~ • _
Lm. · to 8 p.m. and Sallllay
(throuch the llollday se•on)
to I p.m. Rood Is
employed ~th the U.S. Postal
Service and Mn. Hood Is
employed with Dr. R.A. Averton. Mr. and Mrs. Hood bave
three sou, Tyson Lee, and
Jell and Todd Hood.

Landers
ANN UNDEII!I

........... 4 ......

T..._s,........ .
u...... s,-.t•"*

.

n-

Mom wants
no more
remindersI, : '•

,.
Dear
Ladera: Thill wU\be
a different kind of letter. I have
tbougbt of writing to you many
times, but today Is the day I do it. .
My only son was • kUied In . - - - - Vietnam In 1969. It took our
famtly 10 years to accept this loss
and ·lead normal lives. I am •
wrttlngto'youaboutthewall, tbal
VIetnam Veterans Memorial In
Waahlngton.
Many friends and relatives
who mean well have visited the
wall and sent me photos ·of my
SQII'' name. Every time I get a
picture my heart breaks. I
become depressed and my day Is
ruined
l had high hopes and expectations for my son. It Is no pleasure
for me to see his name etched on
a wall wltlt thousands of others
who died In a war. The wail, to
me, is a giant tombstone. If
people want to go there and pay
their respects, fine, but please
don't write to me about II or send
me pictures. I have never been
there and I do not wish to gti.'F01ever Sad In Madlsota, Wis.
Dear Sad Mo&amp;ller: Your letter
Is evidence tltat ·not all ol us see
tltlngs the same way. Thousands
of parents , have traveled to
Wasltlngton to see lite name of a
son-or daughter on that wall-And
II was a peat comfort to them.
You say you have accepted
your loss, but It sound&amp; as If.you
are stU! In a state ol den!lll. 1
respectlutly suggest that · ·you
consider grief counseling. I feel
· 5ad !o.t you, dear. No pain can
equal that of losing a cltlld. ·
•
~

,j

Au

DearAaaLaaden: iam55.My
husband Is 65. My eyesight and
bearing are normal for a person
my age. I wear trifocals. and
wben I can't bear something I
admit lt. But not Harry. He brags
tbat bill eyesight Is :11-20 wltboul
glasses (It Isn't) and Insisted that
If I would stop mumbling, his
bearing would be perfect.
Ever)' day we get Into an
argument because Harry cannot
bear. For example, I'll say, "It
certainly Is a lovely day," and
he'll come back with,. "Who did
you say Is on the way?"
Whoever wrote that line,
"Come, grow old wllb me, the
best Is yet 'to be," didn't know a
cotton-plckln' thing about growIng old. If these are the golden
years, why bother.
Wbat do other people do when
they have a problem like this? I
am - Euauted In Los Anplee
Dear Exllautetl: Some of
them become frustrated and
upaet, like you. The smart ones
keep the lid on and the blood
pressure down. You know by now
the ·game Harry Is playing, so
wbat would It cost to go along
with It until lte Is ready to admit
tbat he needs IM!tp?
.
Dear Ana Laden: Why aren't
the laws ol etlquette based on
common sense? l just returned
from a dinner party, and lor the
SOOth time there are spots on the
front of my dress.
Food never falls on my lap,
wltlch Is where . the napkin Is.
Being a fuU·bosomed woman, the
gravY, salad dressing, etc., fail
on my chest. Can you come up
with a socially acceptable alternative? - Soan M., Camp Blll,
Pa.
Dear Soan: If you don't have
'nerve enough to defy convention
.and put the napkin where lt .wUI
dO the most good, the only
alternative is to concentrate on
being extremely carefUl.
l• aloohol ruining your life or I he
lif' of a loved one? ..AlcoholUm"

How to Recogn.Ge It, H0111 lo Deal
WliA I.a, How to Conquer It" can
around. Sen.d a •elf~
bu•ineU•Ii:e e"t~e·
lope ond o check or money order for
13.65 lo; Alcohol. c/ o Ann Londera,
P.O. Box 11562. Chi&lt;O,o. ' Ill.
6116 II _.,562,
turn

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00&lt;
ABGPIIOI

'

..

Monday. December 11, 1989

Monday, December 11. 1988

topic IS -sage

Pomaroy-Midclaport, Ohio

The second six weeks honor roll
for the Letart Falls Elementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects t&lt;l be named to
the roll were: ·
First Grade: Jim Alley, Kat!
Cutm:ntns, Holly Hannan, Garret
Kiser, Christopher Meldau, Jessica Nance, Fallon Rous.h, Matthew Shain,. Kayla Stov~r
Second Grade: .Jessica Alley,
Steve Chapel, Autumn Hill, Ryan
Hill, Mike Manle)(, Misty Seller-s
Tlttrd Grade:. Daniel Hannan,
Jane Hill, Jennifer Morris, Rebecca Wolfe
· Fourth Grade: Wesley Hall,
Tr.avis Ransom, Jennifer Roush.
Billy Tacl\ett, Hillary Turley.
Ranetta Wheeler
Fifth Grade:· Eva Crabtree,
Jeremy Lyons, Ryan Norris,
Adam Roush, Jessica · Sayre,
-L ora Sayre, Vanessa Shuler
Sixth Grade: Jason Barnett.
Jason

'·

Maggie Smith, Emily Silvers,
Myca Haynes
April Travis, Cltrlstoplter Ward,
Fifth Grade: Chelsie Dodson,
Terra Barton, Thaddeus Bum·
Raquel Maddux, Tim Peavley,
gardner, Jessica Chapman,
Chris Roush, Melissa Whaley,
Heather Foreman, Hollle Grif·
Adam White
!lth, Breyden Haptonslall, Tl·
Sixth Grade: Jeremy Hubmothy Heldreth, Sarah Houser.
bard, Dorothy Leiflteil, Mindy
April Large, Richard Michael,
Patterson, Tracy Shaffer
Jeffrey Moore, Mandy Powell,
Shannon Price, . Jonathan Ru·
nyori, Alex Shuler, Brandy Meigs HIp School
Smith, .Ashley Thomas, CltrisFreshmen : Debbie Alkire,
toplter Yeauger, Melissa Young
Carrie Bartels, Linda Chapman,
Second Grade: Tod Daniels,
J{elly Doidge, Elizabeth Downie,
Melissa Davis, Sean Fahner,
Alison Gannaway, Randall John·
Tim McGraw, Michelle Painter, ston, Lori Kelly, Chris Knight,
Wesley Thoene, Adam Thomas,
Kevin Lambert, Courtney Mid·
Whitney Thomas, Ryan Well,
klff, Lorena Oller, Tammy
Michael Williamson, Amber Queen, Beth Roush, Tara SheBlackston, Jackie Buck, C.D.
pJ!erd, Rusty Triplett, Katrina
Ellis, P.J. Erlfln, Jessica Hems-. Turner. Thomas Wilson, Miley, Lester Lowery, Mlstte chelle Young
Musser, Amber Perkins, Ryan
Pratt, Jennifer Shrlmplin. Julie
Sophomores: Barbara AnderSpaun, Christian Welker
son,
Trlcia Baer, Frank Blade,
Third Grade: Missy Darnell,
Jessica Matson, Benjamin Julianne Buck, Misty Butcher,
Molden, Stefani Pickens, Bonnie · Sharla Cooper, Heather Davenport, ;&gt;tacey Duncan, Stacey Fry,
Rejoicing Life Christian School
Smith, Kasey Williams, Cltrlssa
Kindergarten: Heather Bax· Braham, John Davidson, Jen- Tara Gerlach, Rebecca Graham,
"If Mom would bake &amp;he giJIIerhread." The
GINGERBREAD CARPENTERS WWI
ter, Allison Story, Ehran Wilson nifer Heck, Amy Johnson, Sean Stephanie Haggy, Kimberly Hanoverall prize w• a gUt certlftcllle from Powelrs
waxed paper windows BDd colton -amoke comln1
ning, John Harrison, Jeremy
First Grade: Cltasldl .Biggs, Powell, Brandy Snider .
·
Super
Valu Supermarket In Pomeroy. Other
from a snow covered chbnaey, thiA glnaerbread
Heck, AprU Hudson, _Penny
Erin Harris, Rose Schrock,
Fourth Grade: Clay Crow,
enlrle11 In different categories belonled
winning
coHa1e, made by Nancy Yoacbam, right, and her
Klein, Darin Logan, Steve MarDebby.Searls ,
Danielle Grueser. Ronald. Hirth,
to
Mellll8a
Coleman, Loag Bottom; and 1\lerrtlee
mother, Audrey Oun, both ol Racine, was
tin, Tammy Miller, Joseph McEiSecond Grade: Tawny Jones, Stacy Hubbard, Amy See, Chris
BryiUit, Lon1 Bottom. The winning eatrte. are
selected • the owerall winning entry In the
roy, Roger Parllow, Loretta
Joseph McCall
Stobart, Adam Thomas, David
sUII on dlaplay at the mulleUJII alo111 with
Glnprbread
Holllll!
Contest
sponsored
by
the
Reltmire, Jason Reynolds. MeThird Grade: Jacque Hall, Anderson, Wayne Barnhart,
Melp Ploaeer and IUalortcat Society Ia conjunc- ' glalerbread creations from Toby's Sweetlll!lle
lissa
Rollins, Paul Sharp, Kyle
Rachel Fangio
Wendt Daniels, AprU Foreman,
Shop and The Homemade Touch- The contest was
Uon wltb their recent open boUle at the Melp
Fo11rth Grade: Tara Davis, Steven McCullough, Scott Sinclair, Bobby Vance. Christina
ludled by Melp High home economlca teaclaer
County
Museum.
Yoacbam,
a
member
of
The
Weaver, Robby Wyatt
Aaron Fangio, Steven Rice
Sellers, Wendy Shrlmplln, Amy
Kathy Reed.
Dally SenUael staff. apeed to do the decorallng
Seventh Grade: Emily Asbeck, Smith, Jennifer Yeauger
Jerrod Vanlnwagen, Mandy
Fifth Grade: Taryn Doidge,
Juniors: Jeanie Arms, Teresa '
Jones, Jason Pangle, Kristen
Ben Freeman, Joe Hill, Shawn Deem, Haena Eblin, Amber
SPRING VALLEY ~INEMA
King, Erin Krawsczyn, Kim Eblin, Kim Ewing, Robert
Bradbury Scbool
Petrie, Jodie Sisson, Tara
446 4524
:..
Fields, Stephany Gardner,
Fifth Grade: Stephanie Ste· Grueser, Jessica McElroy, Whit- Mandl Harris, Resa Harris,
Ward, Michelle Ward, Amanda
wart, Libby King, Ryan Baker, ney Haptonstal!, Stacey ,Price, Candy Harrison, Eric Heck,
Melp Junior High School
Amy Clonch. Chad Dodson, Anna Stacie Reed
Seventh Grade: Sarah Ander· Well, Melissa Wilfong, . Tonya
Susan Houchins, Missy Leach,
Fink, Oar rick St. Clair, Amber
Sixth Grade: Travis Abbott,
James Lester, Jamey Lillie, · son, Robby Baker, Joey Barrett, Will, Dana Wlillams; Adam
Slaven
Anne Brown, Corey Darst, La·
Sonja Bateman, Jessica Coch- Wyatt, Julie Young ·
Amy Might, Tina Molden, Mary
Eighth Grade: Heather Burch,
Sixth Grade: Michael Franck· Deana Grover, Alicia Haggy, Morton, Jeanette McDonald, · ran, Vanessa Compston, Keith
Lorrl
Burnem, Dan lelle Crow,
owiak, Alison Gerlach, April Palma Wiles, Cynthia Cotterill, Missy Nelson, Kim Osborne,
Darst, Becky Diles, Ryan Dod·
Arnie
Elliott,
Tracy Fife, Jeremy
Halley, Nicky Mills, Tanya Tara Filchpatrlck, Israel Jenny Peyton, Lori Pierce,
son, Tara Erwin, Benny Ewing,
Grimm.
Dawn
Hockman, MePhalin, Paul Pu'U)ns
Grimm, Amy Harrison, Todd Shelly Pullins, Spring Reed,
David Fetty, Jarrod Folmer,
lissa
Jeffers,
Brad
Knotts, AnDl!: Scott Autherson, Michelle Hawley. Suzanna Henderson,
Travis Grate, Kelley Grueser,
Aaron Sheets, Kristen Slawter,
drea
McDonald,
Jason
Miller,'
Casto, Chrystal Conkey, VIcki Monty Hunter, Heather Knight,
Heidi Huffman, Kimberly Janey,
Joseph Smith, Jennifer Taylor,
Anne
Rime,
Denise
Sltenelield,
COlby, Diane Hook, Shawn Leach Luke Snodgrass, Jessica Stobart, Jodi Tillis, Amy Wagner, SteChuck Legar, John Mattea,
LD: Francine Laudermilt
James White, Lee Williams
Becky Meier, Reggie Pratt, Stephen Smith, Jack Stanley,
phanie Walker, Amy Warth,
D.H. 1: Marianne Carsey,
Sherr! Ramsburg, Adam Sheets, Tim Vance, Erin Warner, Marlo
Jennl Werry. Catina Wolfe,
Harrisonville. Elementary Howard Eblin, Stephen Grueser
Brent Smith, Brian Smith, Jason Willie, Jason .Witherall
Darcl Wolfe
.
School
D.H. II: Carllsa Barton, Lisa
Taylor, Crystal Vaughan, Allen
First Grade: Adam Bullington, Taylor
Seniors: Nancy Baker, Tract
Joshua Clark, ChriStopher Dod·
Bartels,
John Barton, Steven
son, Ben Haley, Julia Kennedy, Rutland Elementary School .
Bass, Melanie Beegle, John
Michael .Lambert, John Mace,
First Grade: Jenny Allen,
Betzlng, Sean· Braley, Tricla
Jonathan Maue, Amanda Par- Derrick Bolin, Zachary Bolin,
Burke, Sherr! Carl, Held! Caruthsons, Tenaya Spen·c er, Patricia Noah Chasteen, Matt Cotterill,
ers, Jerry Cleland, Barbara
Walker, Dawn Yost
Skip Dodson, Justtn Gilmore,
Coleman, Walter Crooks, Lisa
Second Grade: ' Raina Bennett, Alison Hays, Billy Kennedy,
Darst, Angela Donohue, KimStacy Gilmore, Amanda Hamon, Aaron Krautter, Bethany McMilberly Eblin, Lara Hall, Kelly
CryStal , King, Tonia Mllard, lin, Paul Michael, Tiffany
Hamilton, Ryan Harper, Pall!
Jason Miller .. Kristy Six, Kyle Priddy, Eliza beth Smith, Matt
Hetzer, Cecil Johnston, Krlsttn
Smlddte, James Stanley, Har· Stewart, Zachary Williams
mony Thobaben, Gilliam Wilt
Second Grlfde: Jake Birch'. King, ·Kenda Kloes, Bra'cy Korn,
Tammy · Lambert, J.J. LawThird Grade: Erin Dillon, field, Tamra Dugan, Heather
Kristina Kennedy, Jennifer Lam· Ferrell, Tlllany Halfltlll, Jess! _ rence, Amy Mann, Kim Masters,
Jennifer McKinley, Shannon
bert, Jason Preas t,· Shannan Hutton, Amy Hysell, Amanda
Newsome, · Rebecca Pearson, _
Stevers
Miller, Kevin Snodgrass, Shawn
Wendy
Phillips, James Rey ·
Foufth Grade: Michelle Bis· Workman, Jessica Waugh, Chris
nolds, Terra Schoonover, Cheryl
sell, Jgseplt D'Augusttno, Scott Jones
Stevens, Doug Stewart, Natalie
DOdson, Robin Donohue, Rusty
Third Grade: . Jamie Barrett,
Tromm, Jon Van Meter, Melissa
Haning. ' George Miller, Kevin Kristin Brown, Robby Diddle,
Wells. Thomas Werry, Anne
Neel, · Mei'(ssa Reeves, Jessica Ben Fowler, Amanda Hays,
Wheeler
.
.
Justtn Jeffers, Matthew Justtce, · Williams, Tara Wolfe, Derek
Yonker
Fiftll ' Grade: · Laura Arix, Tonya Miller, Alyson Patterson.
Brian Young
Brandy Stanley, Clayton
Sixth Grade: Amber Bennett, Tromm, Clark VanMatre, Stacy
Bethany Cohee, . Gary Stanley, Williamson, Missy Summers
Dennis
Workman, Donald Yost . Fourth Grade: Emily Fowler,
.
Brianna Gilmore, Nathan Halfltill,
Jill Lemley, Sean O'Brien,
Middleport Elementary School
Danielle
Peckham, Missy Titus,
First Grade: Heather Boyles,
Vaughan,
Melissa Williams,
A.J.
Marjorie Bratton, Jason Chaney,
Sandra
Young
Abby Harris, Derek Johnson,
Firth Grade: Chad Bartrum,
Jason Knight, Carrie Lightfoot,
Amanda Neece, Chris Parker, Michelle Miller, Beverly Ste·
Lee Reynolds, Brandl Smith, wart, Jamie Williamson
A catered dinner was held for
Sixth Grade: Phyllis Clark, members
J.P. Staats, Cassie . Vaughan,
of the Eight and Forty
Brltnl Bevan, Jessica Cundiff, John Cleland, Jeremy Coleman,
Meigs
County
Salon 710 at the
Sabra Davidson, Michael Haw- Vanessa Harless, Jeremy Hohome
of
Julia
Hysell,
Syracuse,
kins, Jeremy Jones, Leah Mor- naker, Angle Powell, Lori Ruswhich was decorated In a Christrow.. Matthew Nelgler, · S~taun sell, Clndi Stewart, Roxanne mas theme.
R&lt;;&gt;uslt, Amy Sarver, Brooke Williams
Guests were Dawn Friend and
LD: Timmy Erwin
Smltlt,lan Story. Rachel Taylor,
her daughter, Heather, who is the
,
·
Amber VIning
cysttc · filtrosls child lor - the
Second Grade: Se~lt Baker, Salem Center Elementary
organization. The child was
Bethany ' Boyles, J.P. Boling,
First Grade: Kendra Cleland, presented gifts by each member
Charla Burge, Missy Cremeans,
Brian Tarleton, Brian Searles. for Christmas and the Salon also
Brant DiXOI), , Mindy Halley,
Amber Roush, Jessica Marcum, bought her clothing and a game.
Chris Imboden, Scott Johnson,
Eric Montgomery, Dustin
Christmas cards were exJennifer Nease, Nicholas MI- Eriewlne '
changed between members, and
chael, Ryan Pierce, Davy Reysecond Grade: Orton Barrett, a card was read from Fern
nolds, Brandy· Stevens, Renee Scott Colwell, Brandy Lauder- Clteesebrew. Shawnee, who was
Stewart, John Ambrose, April
mllt, Laura Payne, Jeremiah unable to attend.
Blankenship, Melanie Blevins, Smith, Jeremy Smith
Dues were paid and it was
Max Bratton, Stacey Brewer,
Third . Grade: Andrea Dunfee, noted that the group is seven
Asliley l)urt0n, Janie Compton,
Jessica Priddy, Bridget members short of membership
Kathy DUes, . Celena · Dillard,
Vaughan, Lori Kinnison
goal.
CJ!ris Gilkey, Brawn Herman,
Fourth Grade: Amanda
BP!dget John son, Jos.hua Jones,
It was voted to make a donation
Napper, Leigh Ann Canterbury,
Cry~(al . ],.ea9h. Seth Rawson,
Larry Ogdln, Paula Rupe, Re- to th~ National Jewish Hospital
Franc.esc.a Roush, Tommy
becca Russell, Leanna Davis, In Denver, Colo. A $100 donatlon
Roush, · Joshua Sorden, Brandy Tina Fraley
was made to the state scholarTobin, 'Aslt·lee Vaughan ·
. Firth Grade: Jennifer Ervin,, ship fund which can be used for
Third Grade: Bambi Breeding,
Carrie Harmon, Timothy Lewis, nurses to further their education .
Jo Sandy
Donald Carnahan, Joe Davis.
The scholarships are available
Jennl Howerton, Sarflt Larkins,
Sixth Grade: Jake Gannaway, for nurses of 23 years of age, and
Mike Jarvis ,
may be obtained through the
Joshua ·Price, W'llllam Scanlon,
salon·.
Mindy Stjpnan, :MellshaSwlsher,
Sara , Wllliams1 Shawn Tibbetts, Salisbury Elementary
It was reported that the sale of
AusUII' Carr, Jessica Johnson,
First Grade: Sarah Clifford, pecans was a success, and
T.J. KIJ!I, Joshua Lynch, Patrick Daniel Custer, Abby Hubbard, Heather Friend sang "Jesus
Mar~,' · Hope 'Neace, Rusty
Loves Me." Florence Richards
~obert Johnson, Grace Kitchen,
Stellrar.t •
Carson Midkiff, Christopher Self, reported that the all bills iiave
been paid.
.
. FOurth Grade: Rachel Ashley, Josh Lemley
Jenny Hayman, Sheila Neace,
!,lecond . Grade: Kim Conde, · Marie ~d thanked the lfOUp
Matthew Williams, M~llssa ~op. ' Jo!arjorle Halar, Tiffany Harder, · for remembering Iter durtna her
KFC" -.an!S.
pick, Ginger Darst, Chad ff~n­
Morgan Mathews, Anna Story, mother's death, and Ola Knapp
son, James Hudson, Nancy Kim Peavley, Marrtssa Whaley
was remembered wltb fiowers
Whaley
Third Grade: Lacy Banks, and a card.
At the January meeting the
Tricla Davis, Becky Johnson,
hostesses will be Veda Davis and
PomerOJ El emenlar7 School
Daniel McDonald, Tamra
. ' First Grade: Benjl Call, Andy O'Dell, Cry1tal Salser, Bobbl Loretta Tiemeyer
Attending were Veda Davis,
Davis, Nicholas Dlttwlller, Ash- Stewart
Julia
Hysell, Loretta Tiemeyer,
leiY Ha!Jaalis, Ctlrtll Han1ttne,
F0\11111 ·Grade: BUll Bentley,
Katherine
Welsh, Iva Ponll,
Melissa.Jl(lljlei, .udret Kraws- Juon·
Heldt , Le11ar,
cyzn, Derek Miller, Autumn Michael L.elfltelt, Seth McDo- Mary Martin, Marie Boyd, Dawn
and Heather Friend, Lula HampPhillips, Christopher Pickens, nald, Melissa Ramsburg, SaJusllll Robson, Brenna Sisson, brina · Smith, Jared Warner,
ton, and Florence Richards.

Me~gs

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County honor rolls

10 Pieces Chicken
4 Biscuits
1.Large Colonel'sSavory Stuffing

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County hon()r rolls--

The Tltanksglvlnc Harvest and jeiUes made from herbs.
dinner or the River Valley
Jujlnita Conrad, Ripley, W.Va.
Herbalists was held recently at gave a demonstration on dried
Royal O.ak Resort with Mro. herbs and everlaaUng, making
Dorothy Karr as hostess.
topiary of dried flowers, and
Members and guests brought Christmas ornamenlll wltlt sev·
new and traditional herbal dishes · era! other ldeaa being shared.
decorated lit a holiday theme.
Jan Gerhold, Ravenswood.
'Following the dinner was a W.Va., showed decorations using
short business meeting con- sewing appliques ff'r slt\fts and
ducted by Connie Hill.
room decor.
Books on herbs will be pres·
Tile December Cbrtstmas
ented to the Meigs County meetlng will be,held at the home
Library and the Jackson County or Lila Ridenour, near Chester,
Library in West Virginia.
on Monday at 7 p.1f1. Members
Debbie Gilmore gave the herb are to bring a wrapped C)ulst-or the month report on sage. She mas ornament !or the exchange
noted that Ills used in cooking as and cookies In packages wltlt
well as a medicine. Famlllar recipes attached.
.
varieties are purple and Russian
Connie Jtlll displayed a dried
sage.
.
J
herbal Chrisl/llas tree and
A silent auction was held with wreath.
handmade Items and preserves

One of the great things • · ·
about being older is having time to
travel for pleasure. Whether it's a
jaunt to see the ~ds, an excursion to sane exoting comer of the
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That's why a lot of folks tell·us
they~ the ootings and travel
Pf08!:3111S that come their way (at
terrific prices) as members of Senior
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Eight and
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tbe annual Hgbtlng ol the ofllclal New York Slate
Christmas Tree l~llowed by !I reworks at Empire

State Plaza, Albany N.Y. The tree was olllclally
lir;bted by Governor Mario Cuomo. ( UPI)

Bush believes timing right
for opening relations to China
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Chinese government about mls· Scowcroft and Eaghiburger trip:
Bush administration denied It sile proliferation, which is some- "It' s another example of . the
had ''kowtowed" to China by
thing that does seriously concern president's tendency to kowtow
sending a delegation to Beijing
us."
to Beijing In spite ofthe failure on
and the president's spokesman
the part of the government to
said Monday Bush believes the
A White House spokesman relax the repression:"
timing was right for his surprise
denied the CNN report , saying
Baker, speaking with repor·
overture to pave the way for
Beijing had recently assured the ters outside the ABC studio, said,
better relations.
administration that it had "No, we're not kowtowing to the
Bush declined any comment
planned no such weapon sa·Je to Chinese. ... It Is not a matter of
SUnday on the weekend trip to
Syria or Libya .
backing off human rights. We
Beijing by national security
Baker, appearing Sunday on still have major difference with
adviser Brent Scowcroft and
the ABC News program "This the Chinese government. We still
Deputy Secretary of State LawWeek with David Brinkley," have a host of (economic sancrence Eagleburger, which broke
satd, ''The preslde.nt deplores the tions) in place.
a six-month ban against high·
tragedy of Tlananmen Square.
level U.S. contacts with China,
"But he Is of the view that we
bUt told reporters his adminlstra·
"It ts a question of balancing
shouldn't run the risk of comtion would soon have more to say .
pounding that tragedy by trying these . interests, and it's a ques·
White House press secretary
to Isolate China from the Interna- lion of moving responsibly, reaMarlin Fitzwater said Monday
tional community," Baker said. sonably and with due regard for .
that Bush "felt it was the right
''If we were to Isolate China, we human rights to try to preserve a
thing to do. The timing was
relattotishlp," the secretary of
might compound the tragedy."
state
said.
right."
The visit represented a U.S.
Baker
said Scowcroft and
Fitzwater said Bush, who
concession since Beijing had said
Eagleburger,
served as U.S. envoy to Beijing In
in their talks with
it was up to the United States to
1974 and visited China last
the
Chinese,
provided them a
make the first move lo Improve
February. knew there would be
briefing
of
Bush's
recent summit
strained relations. It had also
with
Soviet
leader
Mikhail Gor·
"some criticism" of the trip, but
rejected calls to ease human
that Bush said the mission was a
bachev
and
also
stressed
human
rights a buses.
"first step" in restoring better
The White House announced rights In China.
"We made it clear to the
relations with the Chinese go·
the visit by Scowcroft and
vernment. He also said that the
Eagleburger ina brief statement Chinese In these discussions that
president believed that Beijing
at 2 a.m. EST Saturday, shortly they are golngtohavetohelpus if
officials should be briefed on his
we are to preserve this relatlopafter the Chinese had done so.
Malta ·summit talks with Soviet
shlp,"
the secretary said.
"We both announced it at the
leader Mikhail Gorbachev Dec. same time," a White House
2-3.
spokesman said. "They said that
Bush declined comment Sun·
Fitzwater said he was certain
is the way they wanted it, and we
day
on the U.S. mission. When
that Scowcroft's toast at a
went along with them."
reporters
tried to question him
banquet Saturday night In which
The spokesman said Scowcroft
about
It
after
church services
he told the Chinese leadership
and EaglebUrger were scheduled
near
the
White
House,
he waved
Bush wants to bring "new
to return to Washington on
them
off,
saying,
"We'll
have
innpetus and vigor" Into U.S.·
Monday, at which time the
more
to
say
about
that
later.
"
Sino relations, had been cleared
administration would Ukely have
Scowcroft,
in
a
toast
at
a
first with the White House.
more to say on the miSsion, which
banquet
In
Beijing
Saturday,
Secretary of State James
drew stunned and angry reaction
Baker said Sunday that while from several members of said, "We ... come today to bring
new Impetus and vigor Into our
Bush deplores the bloody crack·
Congress.
down against democracy demon·
"It appears that the massacre bilateral relationship and seek
strators In Beijing's Tlananmen
in Tlananmen Square has made areas of agreein!lnt- economic,
Square last spring, he wants to
no difference to the adminlstra· poll tical and strategic."
ease tens Ions - and expects
tlon," Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D·
hard -line Beijing to show some Call!., told The Washington Post.
movement.
Pelosi sponsored legislation
Cable News Network, quoting that would have allowed Chinese
unidentl!ied administration ottl· students to remain In the United
clals, reported that a major States after their visa• expired
reason for the weekend trip was
this spring. But Buah recently
to try to persuade China not to vetoed the measure, which Bell·
sell ballistic missiles to Syria or lng had opposed. He did, howLibya.
ever, provide students slmUar
Baker, while not denying or protection with a presidential
confirming the report, said, directive.
"This Is a good example why it Is
Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y. ,
innportant to talk. We have had chairman of a House Foreign
discussions (In the past) with the Affairs subcommittee, saldoflhe

BE AHAPPY OlVER

and Jay motionless to honor those
who have died of AIDS.
Scores of protesters entered
the cathedral and were arrested
after laying down In the aisles
while some handcuffed them·
selves to each other and to pews
as cardinal John O'Connor began his homily.

"One group of people did a
die-In In the center aisle." said
·the protester, Mike Signorile, 28,
of Manhattan. "Tht!Y just lay "
down. Then people began jumpIng up all over singing· and In ·
groups some standing pews."
About 400 police surrounded
the cathedral as churchgoers
were .forced to walk around tl)e
throng of demonstrators, who
were marching four a breast,
ringed by blue pollee barriers.
One police officer suffered a
leg injury when a group of
demonstrators surged forward
against pollee barriers, authoiltles said.
The ACT-UP protesters car·
rted signs proclaiming "Papal
Bull," "Fight Religious Arrogance" and one with a black-and·
white photograph of O'Connor
with a white line across his face
above the legend. "Public Health

Pollee used bolt cutters to cut
through the handcuffs and remove the demonstrators, who
remained motionless and were
carried out on orange stretchers.
Thirty-seven protesters were
arrested Inside the church and
more than 50 were arrested
outside, where one group stopped
traffic on Fifth Avenue by laying
down across the street as part of
a highly organized demonstra·
tton, said pollee, who earlier
arrested eight demonstrators.
Bearded men in nun's habits,
·
scores of men wearing paper Menace. ••
The counter-demonstrators,
replicas of bishop's miters and
men · and women . with red lay people from the St. Joseph's
Neo Catechumenate Community
helmets topped by lights and
sirens burst through pollee lines in West New York, N.J., sang
and danced In the street at one hymns and carried signs reading
point during the four-hour " Jews and Christians Condemn
Abortion" and "This Gay Event ·
protest.
Threatens
Religious Freedom
One man was wearing inflated
and
Famlly
Rights."
condoms fashioned on a wire
New York Mayor Edward
frame to fonn angel's wings and
another wore a condom sus" Koch, who attended the mass and
was aware a protest was
pended from a rosary.
Police said most of the prates· planned, said he supported the
ters would be charged with · demonstrators' right to speak out
but felt they should not have
disorderly conduct and released.
One ACT-UP protester who disrupted the service.
The protesters marched downwas inside the church but wasn't
arrested said th~&gt; action In the town to Washington Sqqare Park
church aisle began quietly but after the demonstration began,
breaking up by mid-afternoon.
erupted In pandemonium.

Special Prosecutor Paul Rich·
walsky, an assistant attorney·
general, has called 107 witnesses
since the drunken driving
murder trial began Nov. 8 In
Carroll County Circuit Court.
Richwalsky said he planned to
rest his case Monday, allowing
the defense to take over the
proceedings before Circuit Judge
Charles Satterwhite.
·
Kentucky Medical Examiner
George Nichols, the final witness
for the prosecu lion, said Friday
he couldn't believe what he saw
when he entered a burned-out
church bus and saw stacks of
bodies, most of them children.
Nichols said aftl'r his Initial
look in the bus he sat In a pollee
cruiser "closing my eyes hoping
that what I had seen would go
away." '
When he entered the bus,
Nichols said he saw 15 or 17
people :'draped over the backs of
seats" and there were "people
who were toenailed in the aisle- .
way stacked on each other."
Mahoney, 36, a chemical plant

the spokeswoman said of the
Jones girl.
' .
Doctors havE' forecast a dlffi·
cult recovery for Sarlna because
of her pre-surgical condition,
which lnchlded a bout with
Infection. She also was malnour·
isbed because of poor liver
function.
On Nov. 27, Smith, of Schertz,
Texas, underwent the first such
procedure in America . Her
mother, Terri, who donated a
portion of her liver that was
Implanted In the girl, was re·
leased from the hospital
Thursday.
The two girls are the fourth and
fifth people to receive liver tissue
train live donors. Three of the
operations have been performed
In Australia and Brazil.
The children suffered from
blllary atresia, a blockage of the
bile ducts that can be fa tal. The
segmental transplant offers hope
to children suffering from the
disease who might otherwise die
while waiting for a compatible
organ from a dead donor.
·
In a segmental transplant, a
piece of the live donor's liver Is
removed and placed In the
recipient. The liver contains .
eight distinct segments, each
with Its own blood supply. A
single segment can be removed
without harming the donor,
whose liver returns to normal
size within about a month.

worker from Worthville, Is also
chaqied with 12 counts of assault,
42 counts of wanton endanger·
ment and one count of driving
under the Influence of alcohol. He
has been free on $54o,OOO ball. If
convicted, he faces life
Imprisonment.
Nichols testified that all 27
victims, 24 of them ages 10 to 19,
died of smoke Inhalation and
burns, and not as a result of the
Impact of the collision. He said
most of the victims were burned
so badly they had to be Identified
through dental records.
When Mahoney's pickup
slammed into the right front
section of the 1977 bus, Its ga,s
tank exploded, causing a !lash
fire that quickly engulfed the
bus. The medical examiner' said
· that it was "extreJ;Dely doubtful"
anyone would ha~e died ,on the
bus had It been equipped with an
enginE' for diesel fuel, which is'
less flammable than gasoline.
Rlchwalsky pointed out that 99
percent of school buses built In '
1977 had gasoline engines.

. I

'

HANOI, VIetnam (UP I) .-.
' Vietnam rejects any forced repa·
.tela lion ot Its refugees and will
iurn away any planes attempting
to return them from Hong Kong,
,Foreign . Minister Nguyen Co
Thach said Monday.
•'They will not be allowed to
come Into our territory from
Hong Kong," Thach said in an
Interview with United Press
International.
. Thach, reacting to reports.that
British offlctals planned to force .
"some of. the 57,000 Vietnamese
refugees lri Hong Kong back to
.their homeland .this month, said
··,any planes carrying such refu·
•gees would be refused landing
rights.

~fc1~::M:oi~fi1~.:Ool:.li1 01

Mason counti• must be

p~41·

t-~fr1r

•fi•

·A 'laulfied adnniMmeftt placed in The OaUy Sent in• I• ·
c:ept - cl•sifitcl displl\', Busin•• Card. •nd legal notice~l
will a lso •ppear in the Pt, Pl•••nl RegtSitr 1nd 1h• Galhpolil O.ily Tribune. ,. .ching over 18,000 hOm..COPV DEADLINE -

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
l'olnseHias 17 colon I

MONOA'V

Poinsoltia Hanging latbts ..t Tr•~
cto lshiNil Caclvi, failoogo .......

PAPE~

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
..:.. 11 :00 A.M SATURDAY

2-ln Memory
3 - Annaucements
4- Givtl'tNay
5 -- Happv Ads
6 - L011 and Found
7 - Y•O S_ale (paid in advance)
8 - Public Sale 6 t Auction

9-Want• IO Buy

Str VIIY'
11 - HelD Wanted

1 2 - Siluation Wantad
13 - ln•urance

14 - lu•in•r Training

-

2:00P.M FRIDAY

18-Wanttd Ta Do

- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY

Ar. . Code 114

4o\t-Qalllpolts
3e7-Ch81hite
318-Vimon
:146-Rto Grande
211-Gu~n Ol•t••'- Artbll Oist
379 - Walnut

992- Middleporl
Pomeroy

981-Ch•ter
e•l - Port&amp;Md
2•7- Leurt f•ll•

t•I- Racine

7•2 - Piiutl.nd

Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304
175-Pt. Plenent
411 - Leon
578-Apple Gra'&lt;~e
773-MISOn
BI2-N4W HIYin

15-Scl'looll a lnnruction
1:? - Misc~n•us

22-Mon., to Laan
23 - ,.rofel.lliottal Serv~Cti

H~ l•

IQQIII£1

89&amp;-Ltllrt
937-luffllo

117- CoolviMe

IWII ST.,

•tort 6 p.m. leafl

~m•oa

53-Anttqi.HIS

mmo1

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

AfTll 6 P.M.

1614) 91$-4110

auna•
12·7-'D-leo.

"llt llllr lill N"" St., Glrilf"

~

·FUINACE

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

FUINACE

z

RACINE GUN SHOP

W. Ya. Chipping,
Inc.

FUINACE

PARTS AND IERYICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

49919 NEASE HOLLOW .D.

.Po-rey, Ohio
PH. 992-3561
Buying Hours;

7:30-8:00

992-5335 or 985-3561
217 E. S.C. ,'.~~Y.

Man. thru Fri.
7:30·4:00 Saturday
7-'89-1 mo.

DAVE'S

Roger Hysell

Across ,,.. Poot Office
I

..,........

SMALL ENGINE

........,,

OPEN 9 'AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 Bm-5 pm

949·2168
•IN STOCK•
ZnOII TIACTOIS

Garage

UPAll

INUISTATE IAnERIES
AUTHORIZED
ECHO-TUDMAN D£ALEI

Rt. 124, Ponooroy Ohio

.. lllclcl.....t, Oh.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al11 Tu..•lulo•

PARTS AND SERVICE'
For Moat 2 and 4-cycle

engines

S~ock

Parts for
Homellte. Weede..er.
Tecum1eh. Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

WEDO SAW
REPAIR

PH. 9\2·5682
or 992-7121

PH. 992-3922

Form SUPI:I 11 !S
X I" r::.1111 lo.
61-F•'r m Equipment ·

62-Wtnted to Buv
63- Livertodl
64-H•y 6 Gram
65--.Saed &amp; FtrtWiler -'

•

WIST MAIN

'

.

FuiidlfortiU.

71-Autostor Sill
72-T,..l;kl for- lale
73-Yinl. 4 'f'IO' t '' ,.._
74-Motorcvcl•
75 - loa11 &amp; Motors fDr Sale
71 - Aulo , ...
Acc:•tori•
77--Auto Repair

,,a

78 - Camping Equipment

79 - Campen 6 Motor Hom11

WASHEIS-1100 up
DRYERS-$69 up
REFRIGERATORS-$100 up
UIIGES-Gas·Eiec.-$125 up
FRE!ZERS-$125 up
MICRO OvtNS-$79 up

BEDROOM SUITU

DINEM SETS
"NEW" IECUNEIS
Located Behind
Tractor Deal.-ship

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

992-5335 or 985-3561
A&lt;ross p,_ Ptist OHi&lt;O
POMEIOY, OHIO

742-2455
Salem

10/30/'89 tfn

MILUE'S
RESIAUIANT

CHESTEI, OHIO

Is still owned and

•GRAVEL

operated by Millie

Dun(an.

•LIM~STONE

We Cany Fishing Suppil•

Your PHone
L . on•~ .i:.:oblle Iiiio Hare
.,SINES! l'ltONI

16141 992,6550
IIEliOENCf rHONf
(6141

'.~:lliilf~
,,
...

-·-

,.,:!lefNmTm9.trt:
t:la"I,IM;
lwlmmlng Pool Fund -

•FILL DIRT

For Good Homt'
Cookin" Comr Ser Us!

•ANYTHI NG
AT ALL

HOURS: 8 AM -9 PM Daily
CLOSED SUNDAY

992-7713

614-949-2635

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1 :00 P.M.
ftXtory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.
9·6· 89-iln

DOUBLER
TACK SHOP
ALBANY, OliO
698-6500
Western Boots. Hats,

Shins. Belts For
Men, Ladies &amp;
Children .

SADDLES &amp;

985-4422

lrodbury ld, Middleport

BISSEU
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT
I ACINE
FIRE DEPT•

CHRISTMAS
TREES

11·24-1 mo. pd.

11-30- f mo.

11·8·89-tfn

DIATOR
SERVICE

We can repolr and rt·
core radiators and
heater cores. We Clln

CUSTOM IUILT
' HOMES &amp; GARAGES

also tXid lloil and rod

"AI Reasonable Pricos"

aut radiators. We also
repoir Gas Tanks.

PH. 949-2801
or Res•.949-2160

PAl HILL FOlD
992-2196

f

Day ar. Night

Middleport, Ohio

I

NO SUNDAy tAUS

Basham Building

EVElY
SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
factorr Choko
12 Gouge SlootgiMII Only
Stri&lt;lly Enforctd
10-9-tfn

FRESH CUT

8o SHEARED

S12 to S18
WEBER FAIM
IIIYlAIIID, OHIO

742-2143

11-28·1 mo.

CUSTOM SCI&amp;N
PIINnNG
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHISTD, OHIO

'

Itt AIillllll WMTNJf

HllliWIIfAUbl I!I!IIUIIIIIIJllll.liltl

I

litiAWII/IItiiiNUIIIIIINII/IIHIII/NII:

985-4300

WAIII TO GIVE SOMETII•G

11·17-tfn

DIFHBNT FOI CHIISTIW 01

TO THE 1990 IUDIATEI

KOUNTRY KLUi

CALL SUSAN COLEMAN ANiliJI 742-2771

GOLF &amp;

FOI "TANNING CEITIFKATES"

TIOPHY

6 TANS $12.00 PlUS ONE "FREE"

SHOP

1111• CWIJIICAIIS CAl. PICIID
If 01 WI'U.IIIIL , _ 10 101.

DIW8\' M.

-

-- . . .

DOZER

SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

s•'S UP TAUUIG

A_,: Jan P. Bucto. Clerk

H-.
Plal't ot of Counall

Willi &amp;
SCOTCN PINE

MY·T-SHOP

f':,

11214, 11, 21c

or

NOISE EQUIPMENT

3 Announctmtntl

ohlll elfeal ........ In
-27, , ....
from .,_ Nov.
,..... the 27th illiy of
Novam.... 1111.

.,

.If!!'~!!!~'.

Ht¥ Folktl!

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

I

Public Notice

.. " •dtlhlil lly 'llle - 171,000 Ia 111.000.

5

USED FURNITURE

01 SUE HALL AFTD 4•30, H2-3936

to

614-949-2734

Solom St.,

l·ll·tfe

'

•••.aeo
''""·zu.
1tn11 Mcolnl- Fund

LAKE

UVING ROOM SUITES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

11-Mollll• Homolr.,olt

1nt fundi:
Genal,_- ......

•Saw Supplies

90 DAY WlDAinT

MiWJoport, Olio 45760

s•-Misc. M~~rchandi&amp;e

P-U....'-Y ·

faRou

MAPLEWOOD

•Chains •Chain Oils

MORIIS

USED APPUANCES

Now Loaotia,.
161 Nortlo Soc..t

83-hc"'r.'i1

ORDINANCE NO. U";l.a
""'
Onlol- toIn•
-•
AppxplltiUuw
Verloue

DEER
CUT AND
WIAPPED

11-27· '89 · 1 mo: pd.

:AtLEft'S
HAULING

84-Eitetr cat Aefrla•etion
81-01ft8f'IIHauMnt

P - Notlc:e

11·6· 1 mo.

1

51- lullding Suppli•
51 - Ptulor Salt
57-Music.. lnstruments
68 - Fruila &amp; \let-'•biM
~9 - For S1le or Trade

St'l vII

IICIIIE, OliO

GUNS ·AMO
12 Ga. DEfR SLUGS ••• S2.20 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS

lodrspri"'ls ld.

liEN'S APPLI~CE
SE.VKE

Uc;ensecf Clinical Audiologist

::t: \614) 446-7619 or (6141 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
·- Mulberry Hrts. Pomeroy, Ohio

BILL SLACK

of

POIUIOY, 01110

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
«

•FIREWOOD

992-2269
EYDIItGS

"2·2526

Television Listeninc Devices
· ·Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; Sentiell
·CJ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Aces

•LIGHT HAULING

992-7479

LAMPS
BOOKCASES •e
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS
CROCKS
BEDS
·j;
DRESSERS PRIMITIVES
: .·
DAY SINKS TABLES
~
POCKET WATCHES
-

1124 E. MAIII

•SHRUB 8o TREE
TRIM and RE·
.MOVAL

S.l7·1fn

&amp;2-SportMg Gooch

Shop
Wh.,re
Santa Shop•!

FREE ESTIMATES

•Mobile Home
Paru
•Mobilo Home
· Rentals
•• "'Lot Rentals

Merr:hand1sr

mo.

lllital Cllanu)ll &amp;
Painting

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PAll

81 ·-Home lmprowmenu

WEDNESDAY, DIC. .I 13
,

Ta.. the plin 111t ef ,-tillg.
Ltt "" M it fer you.
YIIY IUIONlal
NAYI lifiiBtm

82 - PIUmblnt. HeMing

•'

POMDOY 511101 Cmlll CINIII
1:00·5:30

I ;.!1IP

31 - Hom• tor Salt
32- Mobile Hom11 lor Sale
33 - FIIfms fot S1le
3•- lu•in•• Buildings
l5- LtJts a Acreage
36- Rul Estete W.nted

4-PEPSI'S, 16 OL

lED ClOSS ROODMOIIU

•Tiro Sales
•Front Eod
Algnment·
•Oil Change &amp; Lulie
•B111ke Work

51 - Household GoocH

992·2228

Tr ,Hispor l.t1111n
21 - Butin•s OppoMunlty

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

.

••s.

SPIEAD
DID HAULED
992-5275

[mpl111 1111'111

SUNDAY PAPER

Mtii'County

''

1 - Card ol Ttl .. u

16 - R•dio, TV &amp; CB Aep•ir

Open Daily 9 AM·&amp; P.M.
Sunday 1 P.M.-6 P.M.

Olole

Ann 011 nr:r 111 r.nl s

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

NO SUNDAY

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

•

LOCAU Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

PH. 949-2101'
or
949·2160

IUTLAND t•E
SALES and
SEIYICE ·
·.742-3008

1

"

"F,.. EltimetM"'

1-2().-tfn

Ov,r 15 Worde

as HDafale ads.

2•00 P.M . MONOAY
2•00 P.M . TUESDAY
2'00 P.M . WEONUOAY

:jo(lou:ing· lf!ephone exchanKes ...

o,_.

tiiN

-

.' Classified pafle.~ cm·er the

I.e••

ear.h

... ...,

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

lt. 331

LOWIST I'IICES
IIGHEST OUAUTY
FREE LOCAL DEUVERY
POMEROY •ND IIIIDOUI'OIT'S ONlY

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

·1610 GAU.ON
WATEI SEIYKE

Rate

Services

INSULATION

LQIISIONE

TUESDAY PAPER
W!ONESDAV PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
F~IDAY PAPE~

lorriod Holy ,,., n lartt Show
Planh, lin ..t Cut ChoithiNII Tr•1.
fw ...
Ono'1 Gran l ...oh,
MonuoMnt Sprays. C-•y ' - .
IWII&lt;h lor our Chriltllou11l

s,..._,

•

1
15
54.00
.
.20
3
16
$6.00
.30
6
15
19.00
.42
10
15
513.00
.&amp;0
Monthly
16
$1 .30/ doy
.05/ doy
· Rai• are tor conMcutive runi. broken updiVI will be chtrttd

..cc:c.._ S.50 dircoun1 for ads P,id In aclvance
-Giveaway 1nd Fownd •d• und• 16 words will be
run
11 no ch•g•
·~rice of •d for 111 c:tllitlllettett is double price cf 1d cost
•7 point line type only u•d·
•sentinel i1 not raponsible for .-rors 1flet first d-r . (Checll
fot errors firrt dft' d runs in piper), Ctll before 2 :00P-m
d•
pullli clition to m-. e correction.
•Ads th.t murt ~· paid in adonnc:e 11re
.Card of•Thtnks
HIPPY Ad!J
In Memoriam
V•d Sal•

Vacation Money

H-AIDS GIDNHOUSE

mlsund,rstanding," he said.
· Thach, however, explained
that Vietnam beileves !here are
many refugees who, while pre!· ·.
erring resettlement In the West,
would not oppose repatriation If
faced with Indefinite detention In
grim refugee camps ,as the only
alternative.
"Never will we accept forced
repatriation but between the
voluntary repatriation and the
forced repatriation there Is a
great majority not against repa·
trial ion," he said.
"Those who are against repa·
triation, we must respect (their
wishes)," he said. "Forced repa·
trlation Is· a violation of· human·'
rights."

W.orcft

D.y.

until NOON SATURDAY
y

---~

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

STEWART .
TRUCKING

5

Y thru FRiDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

WANT ADS bring.

"2·5776

rep~tri~tion

"They can fly over us or go
back to Hong Kong," he said.
Thach, who also Is deputy
prime minister and a senior
member of the ruling Communist
Party Politburo, said he did not
know why British olficlals ap·
pear to have persisted In p~ns
for forcible repatriation of
refugees.
'
Britain has pledged to begin
forced repatriation as early as
mid-December, despite condem·
nation from the United States
and the United Nations.
''They can make any state·
ment bUt I have . given a very
clear cut-declaration that never
will we accept forced repatriation. Tl)ere is no room for

'JO .PLAc:E AN AD CALL 992-2156

BA.M.

·--- ........ __

1===:=~::===;~F.;::;:,=;::;;:==ilf===:;:::::===::::=:~;;;;;;==;
I
SIREn
•VINYL I !DING
.L W•
•ALI,IMINUM SIOING
PIZZA
•BLOWN IN

e. The Area's lumber 1 Marketplace

Success with the new proce- ·
dure would mean a significant
reduction In the backlog of nearly
700 U.S. babies who need new
livers each year. About half of
those children die wafting for ·
compatible organs.
.
Sarlna's father, RObert, who
underwent about eight hours of
surgery Friday, was awake,
walking and sitting up In ·a chair
during the weekend. He remained In serious but stable
condition Sunday .

.,

Busine~s

Classifie

.

'

__

-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Vietnam rejects forced

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

DOIATE BLOOD

•

--

SRINAGAR, India (UPI) - A
But other officials, speakin&amp; on dominated Kashmir region to the
deadline set by the abductors or condition of anoainnlty, said neighboring Islamic Republic of
the daughtl!r of India's home lbere were many snago, lnciud· Pakistan, which disputes India's
minister for the release of five ing a concern by the Abdullah control over the area .
pro-PakiStan 'Moslem radicals · government that the kidnappers
Kashmir Liberation Front
rounder Amanullah Khan said In
passed Monday with no word on would not honor the swap.
whether negotiations stalled a
."We can set free five people a Sunday news conference in the
threat to kill the hostage.
but we don't know If Rublya will Pakistani city of Rawalpindi the
The extremist Kashmir Llber· also be released," one official hos~age would be killed only if it
atlon Front had vowed to kill said. "No, positive breakthrough was "unavoidable." Islamabad
Rublya Sayeed, 23, a medical has been made."
released a statement ca!Ung for
Intern, unless the five prisoners
An emergency session of All- negotiations to resolve the
were released by 7 p.m. (8: 30 dullah's Cabinet concluded with kidnapping.
a.m. EST).
a declaration that only state
"The government of Pakistan,
Ofllclals said the government Secretary Moosa Raza was auth· on humanitarian grounds, apof the northern Himalayan state brlzed to talk with the kid· , peals,, to those holding (Rubiya
of Jammu and Kashmir agreed nappers. The measure was ap- Sayeed) ... not to carry out the
to the Kashmir Liberation parently aimed at eliminating threat to execute her," the
Front's demand hut that talks on confusion created by a number of statement said. "Such acts are
implementing the trade bogged uncoordinated negotiating In lila· contrary to Islamic precepts."
down.
·
tives undertaken by different
· In an apparent demonstration
of a campaign pledge to reduce
Earlier in the day, pollee made Cabinet members.
Officials also said one of the New Delhi's intervention In the
baton charges to disperse a bout
10,000 people who gathered in extremists whose freedom was states, Singh's government has
downtown Srinagar, the state's demanded, Hamid Sheikh, was played a low-key role In the
summer capital, 400 miles north too weak to leave Srinagar Investigation, leaving it largely
of New Delhi, amid rumors the Hospital because of serious gun- In the hands of the Jammu and
exchange • was a·bout to take shot .wounds suffered when he Kashmir administration.
place.
was captured last month.
But Sing~ ' s decision represThey said ·the other four ented a majortestfor Abdullah to
Members of the crowd shouted
radicals ))ad arrived in Srinagar disprove charges that his ~oali­
·~Release our warriors'' and
"Down with Indian Imperial· from a 'prison In the · winter tlon government is too weak and
Ism" during the three-hour con- · capital of Jammu in preparation feud-riven to control the seces·
frontation, which left at least 10 for the swap, which the. Press slonlst movement.
people injured. A bomb set by Trust of 'India reported would
Underground groups have
suspected Moslem ;radicals at the take place In a crowded quarter sponsored crippling strikes and
protests almost weekly In Sri·
city's airjlort also wounded five 'of Srlnagar's old city.
· Rublya Sayeed was abducted nagar and other Kashmir Valley
j:Jeople, officials said.
Some 6,000 security personnel FridaY by three men who forced towns throughout the year. Do·
pressed a search .across the her oft a small bus as she was zens of people have died and
state's northern Kashmir Valley returning to her suburban Sri- hundreds have been Injured In
for tbe daughter of newly ap- nagar home from a hospital clashes and In attacks byextrem·
lsts, who have acquired modern
pointed federal Home Minister where she works as an Intern.
The kidnapping came only small arms and explosives.
Mufti MohammadSayeed, butno
.t hree days alter her father, ~
The agitation has become
progress was reported.
native
of
the
Kashmir
Valley
highly
charged because o~' Isla·
Offlcia'ls said details of the
town
of
Anantnag,
was
sworn
lri
mabad's
claim of sovereignty
trade were still being worked Qilt
as
!Iidia's
first
Moslem
home
over
Kashmir,
which has 'been a
. as the deadline approachec:J.
minister
In
the
minority
National
baftleground
in
the three wars
; Kashmir Po)ice Commissioner
Front
goverrunent
of
Prinne
fpugbt.
by
India
and Pakistan
Ghulam Jeelanl Pandlt told
Minister
V;P,
Singh.
since
1948.
The
government
of
United Press International: "We
The
Kashmir
Liberation
Front
former
prime
minister
Raj
iv
· have established contact with the
abductors. Only modalities (for 'is one of several underground Gandhi claimed Pakistan was
the exchange) are to be spell Moslem extremist groups advo- arming and training the radicals,
eating the linking of theMosiem· an allegation Islamabad has
out."
denied.

Liver patient critical, but stable
CHICAGO (UPI) - Alyssa
Smith, the 21-month-okl girl who
became the nation's first livedonor liver transplant recipient,
was in critical hut stable condi·
tlon after her second operation In
two days to correct minor
bleeding.
The Texas-horn child spent 3
hours and 40 minutes in surgery
Sunday at the University of
Chlc3go Hospitals, which has
perto~med the nation's only two
live-donor or "segmental" transplants In the past two weeks,
spokeswoman Mary Fetsch said.
Doctors said It was too early
for a prognosis after the surgery.
which began at 10: 50 a.m. and
ended at 2:30p.m. ''The bleeding
Is under control at this point and
they will monitor her closely over
the next few days," the spokes·
woman said.
Fetsch emphasized that the
bleeding was not life·
threaten Jng, noting that postsurgical bleeding Is not. uncommon In liver transplant patients.
The girl also underwent 3 ¥.
hours of surgery Saturday night
to stem bleeding.
Meanwhile, 16-month·old Sar·
Ina Jones of Millington, Tenn.,
who received part of her father's
liver In the second live-donor
liver transplant pertonned In the
United States, experienced a
good night after 10 hours of
surgery Friday, Fetsch said. She
remained In critical hut stable
condition.
"We're pleased she Is doing
better than we had expected,"

-

Deadline passes in kidnapping case

\

Defense blames maker for crash

TREE LIGH11NG - Sunday, by slanders view

___...

Mondlly, December 11. 1989

Over 100 arrested in ACT-UP
protest outside St. Patrick's •

CARROLLTON, Ky. (UPI)Lawyers defending a man ac·
cused or causing the nation's
worst drunken driving crash said
they would show a mechanically
faulty school bus was at least
partly to blame for the27 deaths.
Def&lt;'ndent Larry Mahoney is
charged with 27 counts of murder
and 55 other charges In connec·
tlon with the May 14, 1988,
collision between his pickup
truck and the bus owned by the
Radcliff First Assembly of God
church.
His lawyer. Wllllam Summers,
expected to b!'gln Mahoney's
defense Monday when the prose·
cu tlon ends Its present~ lion.
·
Summers said he would dem·
onstrate that the 197'1 school bus
owned by the church was defec·
live because of manufacturing
flaws by the Ford ~otor Co. and
Sheller-Globe Corp.
Sobriety tests following the
accident Indicated Mahoney's
blood-alcohol level was more .
than double the legal limit ·of .10
percent in Kentucky ..

-

---·

Monday. December 11, 1989

Ohio

NEW YORK (UPI) - Men In
nun's habits and condoms fashl·
oned Into angel's wings were
among the symbols of protest at a
4,500-strong demonstration by
AIDS, homosexual and women's
rights activists at St. Patrick's
Cathedral.
John Cardinal O'Connor led the
crowd inside the Cathedral In
hearty prayer to drown out the
commotion and chants screamed
inside and outside during church
services Sunday morning. By the
end or the day, more than 100
protesters were arrested.
The protest by the AIDS
Coalition. to Unleasl\ Power, or
ACT-UP, and Women's Health
Action and Moblllzation, or
WHAM, began about 9 a.m. It
stretched along Fifth Avenue
from East48thStreet toEast50th
Street and the southern side of
the cathedral.
Nearly 100 anti-abortion
counter-demonstrators gathered
a block from the protesters.
The .ACT·UP protesters said
they were demonstrating against
Roman Catholic Church policies
on AIDS, a bortlon, homosexuals
and women's rights.
"We're doing this to bring
attention to people that the
church has overstepped Its
bounds," said ACT-UP spokes·
man Stuart Tom. "Basically,
they're mixing the Cathollc
church philosophy with public
policy."
The demonstrators, who had
threatened !o disrupt mass,
characterized the protest as a
"die-in," in which they fell down
on the ground outside the church

---- -·--

1614) 667-3!71
Grant A. Ntwl....-

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1-ll-' ft. tift

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The Daily Serrtinei- PIIgr

Page- 10- The Deily Sentinel
Announcement:;
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firM """"""

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Chritlmoo t - lor 1111. $11.

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31 Homes for Sale

Long·holrod kiHtnt 10 good
home. PI..H pick~ 1n.r
5:00p.m. 114.&amp;43-5445.

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"They're right! There IS 100
yards of dental floss in this
packet!"

Yard Sale

........
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For Solo: 121110 mobile ""-•

newtr ,.., adaltd on 1.1 acre

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111.7, 10 mi. South Oolllpollo, u.

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n11d1
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lrdor lol, .11,100 ...... &amp;14117..:1:10.
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35 Lots &amp; Acreage
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53

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48 s~ for Rent

Mullcal
1n1tn111enta

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polnllnp, - . o r - llileal
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1111. Mooon wv.

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1111. •

54 Mlscelllneous
MerchlnciiN

Slortlllll
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441 1110
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aas.••••

CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR: Hocllng T~~ehnlcal Coltear IIIMki!'Q
oppllcanlt lcr o 110% ol,_l In'
structar
podJon.
Poehion
rooponllbllltlll lnokldo llldllo
labofatory t•lng and cUnlcal
lnstNCtkmln • ~
and ot.tatrfcal area. O.."lred
quaiiUcationa Include reoent
medlcalfawrgal and abllllrlclll
nPtrience, a lacMior of
Sclonoo DogrM In nurolng ond
lither • Maater't Degrw 'itltl 1
major In nursing or wtlllnp•
Ia enroll In • gr.dulte
prog,..m. Contact tt. Pe
Ofilca Hooking Toohnlcal CCIII~•. Nei1011Vllt., OH 45714;
114-7!13-3!181 . An Equol Dpporlunily EmplOyer.

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PIN""' • Tri-Coo""'
IIdia. Wild 1re . . Nift'r ekllrtd
montlr, dlpoolt. I14-M91D27.

tltfoldtnj

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In - - - · Colt
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tho Adult~1·
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O.ola, (1) .....7. . . Ell... tooalmlng .Joiiuory 2nd.
4512.
~ to receive

Holp _ _ , ,...
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town ..... • bncf ..aata ~
lox DZ1 cho OoHipOIIo Dol
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tc:.nrr ...tolillp
old

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3br, 1 112 bolh, living - .
ldtchon, 201120 lomlly
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Rt. 2 -h, l't. , _ . . ,
portly lum"od._ 1310-. 114-

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for Rent

aolf-

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VISAIIIAITEIICARD.
U.S.

CIWKII

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Situation

12

wanted
Con lor ...... In ""
---ond-la.

Au ••bii.I14-HIII01.
Dad h
PrMI• HoMe Cere·

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114111 - · lhrtlmt. ,,.......,
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w

Night Match-Up San
Franci&amp;&lt;:O &amp; LOs Angeles
Rams
(I)
MecGrvor
MacGyver comes to the aid
Of his high ,SChOOl
sweetheart. Q
·
tD ,,..., Ml(lllzlne
(!) Trwvelo Lorenzo and
Mirella Ricciardi rebuilt a
dhow and sailed to Kenya, Q
1111 til 1121 Mojor Dad Mac
and Polly argue over a
,punishment lor Casey. Q
'aii!D 21 Jump Street Army
buddy of Fuller's gets
H~nson and Panhall to hunt
lor a deserter. Q
I!)) PrimeNewo
I!JJ MOVIE: Tho Bilhop's
WHe t2:00)
11J Murder, She W10te
8 Johnny Cesh: An !nelda
Look Johnny Cash talks wilh
host Ralph Emery about his

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Hay &amp; Grain

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2 t j " " ' apt., bath, ldlchen,
Middleport. C,_ lo otoroo.

'171 mont1r pluo dopaolt. 114182·7101.

flla(ENS FURNITURE
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Hot II hold tumlo~. 112 ....
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Improvements

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Alhor
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yoyr ·
dlcUono toda,. M811 $1.25 10 AatroQl!. . (..., 21.,_ •1 One o1 your
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BERNICE
..,. to 11a1e yoo.- zodiac ttlgn.
do an elfecll.. job wtt11 one. n·a
CAJIIIICOAN (Dec. ......,_1t18etler oldhattoyou,buliUIIII-otltera.
BEDEOSOL
cornrnunlcatloi can be ...,.._ at CANCIII (.... twulr II) The lmpor·
thla time wttll co workii"S. H thOle Ia a
tont thing today Ia to do property
mllund.-lltdlna youw been llllllloua , you Intend to do. H you're to ~. put tfMi ,....., on tile tlble olhlrllt lin~ Important who getl credit ,
toder.
lor What.
AQUAIIUI Colan. • l'ab. 11) You 1MY LIO (oltllr D-Atil. II) Toda, you"ll
biiiUb)llcted to llrelllul condltl.,. to- 1 more eomlortabla with •..;,,;~nlol11 l·l
da,. E.., though n ll..rly in t h o -· ·who don't toke lhonllllvM or
too .
In order to the 1...,., lf*ld :1011ou11y• .....,.. whO laillo _ . thil l
lima on a -~ aQIIvlly • . . .. . cr1tar1a oould lpoll your day lor you.
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pilla can bllllnabed toller H you're of ' doy 1rom devllapment• you
COMtructlvl d.,.IOCH1*'ta could 1111 1n • tile mind to do ao. MM• tltlm tile top- , your
1111111a1 to 11111 - ·
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tlvl If I IIIII today end nG!'*'OIUctlr : •Aited advlt-. Today, hDUM, N you
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youriiOIIOa. You ftlbolltcurl- , r..goocl • g; iUDita lhatCM help a ,
yoo.- jUdgmoftl
IIOtiilnllllltltodl and lltQif to gain or Imparl , .,._
up.
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tobiiOIIqUII.._
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. u.al : you'l ba.,. one whO can lmplt ...,,,
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I

the chuc;: kle quoted

in the missing words

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

.. ....

=

10:30 Cll Seventh Annuol Report
Of The SlctwtailtJa Of State
Former secretartas Dean
Rusk. William Rogers , Henry
Kissinger, Cyrus VanCil ,
Edmund Muskie, and
Alexander.Haig discuss the
nalion"o foreign policies .
(1 :00)
!!II e 1121 Ooctor, Doctor
Mlka "s falls in love with a
patlenl whose llle he has

NORTH
+AQ5

BRIDGE
Rubber bridge can be played for
matchsticks or a king's ransom. What·
ever the stakes, as declarer you want
to guarantee making your contract
It's different al duplicate bridge.
where your score is compared with the
results at many other tables. An over·
Irick or two can make your score better lban · all others, In loday's deal
South took advantage of such an
opportunity.
West mistakenly led the queen of
hearts (better to lead the club king and
look ai dummy). Declarer assumed
that West held six clubs, and the queen
of hearts was likely to be doubleton.
Soulh won tbe ace of hearts aod played
a spade. Nice! Up came the king. Next
came the A-Q and two more spades,
picking up East's 10. The contract was
now safe, with overtricks if the diamonds split. But the defenders' dlstri·
bulion bad to be considered. West aP""
parently bad started wilh six clubs
and the lone king of spades. What if he
.also beld four diamoods? Entries were
lacking to play queen and 10 of dia·
monds, but declarer could lead the 10
of diamonds and watch for the defend·
I
reaction. Alas, West could not re11sist ~outt:lngin the jack. The ace won in

•au

tAK8S3
+87
EAST
+1010
.KJI7Z

WEST
+K

•Qs

••

tJ972
+AKJ5S2

+Q 104

SOUTH
+JI762
• A 10 6
tQ to 6

+ts

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Soutb
Soot•

West , Norlll
1+
Db!.
2+
2+

Pus
I+

s+

Eut
1•
3+

All-

Opening lead: 11' Q
dummy; back came a diamond to the
queen, and tbe suit ran.
Wbat wootd bappen if West did oot
cover the diamond 10?
With a certain niDe tricks, declarer
could not afford to let the 10 of dla·
munds ride, since the defenders would
quickly tlke four more lrlcb if IIIey
won a diamond .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Humorist .
Louis 1 Inept actor
4 ""Cheers" 43 Seoul unit
character
7Vield
DOWN
8 Actor Jack 1 Reddy
10- bar
of song
11 Impede
2 Dentist"s
13 Indian
group
tribe
3 City

Yeaterdlly'a Anewer

14 U.S. gov"t
in Mass. 15 Aslronaul"s
agency
4 Aulo
reply
16 Fruit
5 Ginger - t8 Go under
6 Corrida 21 London
drink
star
street
17 Indian
Ocean wind7 Roman
22 Pub order
19 Price drop
stales':" an 23 Spider"s
welcoming
20 Annoy
9 Holy c1ty
21 Ossum
ol Islam
place
24 Begin
22 Pay out 10 Total
25 Virtuous 12 Ward off 25 Wil(l duck
26 Armored
car
27 Embargo
28 Table
scrap
29 Counter
sign
33 Mexican
tree
34 Buddy
35 Monk's

27 Pythoh
29 Ultered
30 Repeatedly
31 Russian
river
32 Coal
extract
37 sushi
sauce
39 Actress
Remick

lille
36 Art
museum
piece
38 Church
part
40 Chess
piece
41 Scotlish
dance

DAILY CRYFI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

t2111

AXYDLBAAXR .
Is LONGFELLOW
letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
tunis. Each day the code letters are diffetent.
One

CRYP'TOQOOtE

12-11

JMR

DRKZRJ

IZ!Iflliolcy Van 8holton Bin;•
a . - Alctcy van Sholton
porlorml holklly lavorltal
Including 'I 'll Be Horne For

BRAA

QD

Chriltmll" and "Silent Night".

11-U·If

CROSSWORD

savad.C

• «D cnmewatch Tonight

'1·11

Letter - Audit - Poise - Pellet- LimE
After dining out at an all you can eat restalKant my sister
sighed. ""Now I know why people never complain olllating too
LITILEI""

!RINiw,l

year. Send lor your Aatro-Grapll pre-

THE BEST
f ln1HIC1dl

Murphy steps in to play
mediator between the union
and the network. Q
ID Ill) Allen Nation A
Newcomer prostitute is found
dead in Detective Sikes'
apartment. Q
!!Jl.,. King Uvel
11J Prime Time Wroatiing
Ill N111lwllle Now
9:30 !!II till!)) Designing Women
Suzanne's former
classmates tease her about
her weight gain. Q
10:00 CJJ 700 Club Wllh Pat
Robllrtaon
!!l Advent\n Great

(1:00)

ca...,..-....,"
W

NBC Monday Night
At Tho Movies (2 :00) Q
(!) Celabritr Quail Hunt
From Buford, GA
(I) II ()) ABC Monday Night
Footban D
CD (!) H.A.H. Prince Ch1rle1

!Ill til 1121 Newhart Joanna "s

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

114 • •

Corne~

(Jlln Concert At The U.N.

Joo.._,OH 1-.s1.eu1. ,

- ....,...
- 1224 llnltHna
wrta
11t 111

i :OO 8 (J) @ MOVIE: 'Lady In A

American Events
Cll NewaWatch

.Sopllo Tonk P u - HDLOolllo
Co. RON EVANSINTERP"ISII,

- · ·'h,
Dor. .c..
..........
. . .Contw.
. ....,
I o.M. • 1:10 p.111. 214-11.

.

1111 e 1121 Murphy 810wn

HERE
COMES
....., •

future .'Q

tt :00)

'· •I

Schoola&amp; ·

RE-TRAIN NOW!
sourHEAITEAN
IUIINESS
COLLEOI, 121 Plko.
c.. 11 t 441 1387. . . . No. ...
11-1-.

-

I HOPE"
THI515,1SN

J

i

Serv1ccs

r-r-r-r·

I .AM, A 1.:-L·I.:-L.L·L- L- L-ITTLE..

'"tU.l N6R\Q.IS~

I

114-MS.

rehabilitation. recent heart
surgery , and his many
friends.
1:05 (J) MOVIE: Patton (PG) (2:49)
1:30
@ Hogan Fomily .
Davic:t encourages Sandy to
go out with a dentist who is
married. Q
(!) NFL Mondlr Night
Ma;azlne
(!J Treveiln' Gourmet
1111 Ill 1121 Famouo Tec&amp;dr Z
AI is vis~ed by lhe ghosts of
Christmas past, present and

e (])

76 Auto Plrtl &amp;
Acce II ~rles

241-111

Apartment
' forRent

success, personal life. drug

•=-

County At&gt;PI'"- lno. Good

2 lr., lum. • Unlum. Cllblll t .v.
looulllullot~rt- "' Kanouao.
~...
PortL 114-1102.
2 bod-. No ..... In Mid......... Co11114-I02-34311.

1o-

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Ad. Dpon I A.M. 10 I P.M. - .
thnl .... Colll14 41111 1123,

c.....n..

(!) Zenllh'o NFL Monday

a.- ~ ~...1 old, $271 • Jll'. !!1111 1110. 4 - - ... -.00. ....., .......... e·'-. 171-11117.
m, 11m1

(!) NFL Tllvle Game
(I) Ent-inment Tonight
II()) USA Today
II!IJ
@ Jeopan&amp;rl Q
.I!Jl M'A'S'H

111111 QIIC
,.,. lo11
•• C.Oio
·
.....
CIWCob, 11,000-11...._

$11D llorw- . , 1. . 114 lti4Dt
tlllor boil OIMinaolulw-

- . bob7 -

7:30 • (]) Family Feud

11WM 1•7 or 144. 1101.

, 11100.

114 ·
. . II
. .000.
.. Call 1. .111 ....

-Air

laD VldooCountry

7:36 (J) Slnlord And Son

1117 Clio"! lo10 W't...~II,OOO

2 ........ -

· ·

IIJ Miami VIce

8:00 I]) MOVIE: Tho Shadow

---=4-.

.,. t 111

· ach.....

a~

7710.

:_:.,.:-~.:cr:~::

WKRP In Cincinnati
IIJ He-Man
8:36 (J) Andy Grillitll
7:00 (J) OUr Houoe
11 (J) PM Magazine
(I) ·SportaCentar
(I) II()) Cu11"111t Affair
(!J (!) MacNeil Lehrer
Ne-r
1!1) • 9 01 Wheel Of
Farltlne Q
ID liD Night Court t:;1
• IIJ MoneyMne

® Night Court
Ill Top Cerd

ton, Ford 414,

te

~====:::_....,

...

Man to cabbie: ""Can't you
go any faster?" "Sure,"
laughed the cabby, ""but I'm
not allowed to -· ···.""

.
Q

ec

-

$3Nto-.
ond - T-NOond
P!laool - . .
to 1111. Hldl 1 'tdl . . . to
..... Aocllnora to an.
-hor Clooll, .. - .
Lampo . . 10 1111. $tDI ... !'P 10 ...... or - $71.114-2111-1~
-· Cor
H chAIN 111111 to 1711. 1711,
Cool,-14,
0Nkii1AI up to h7l. tt~•ae.

t-:

SportoLook (0:30)
.II) ABC Newl

Aldera (2:00)
8 (J) @ ALF Tho Tanners
hide ALF in the attic and host
aluau. C

1 - • ..,..,.

CHUTH

you develop fr om $tep N o. 3 be low.

7:05 (J) Jolloroono

Inat ruction

HERE'l ACALE
MFORf YOU
INTNE
eLAlCifiDADC

•

•••tlnfa.

:IID7I.

Household

=-~ 127

1 lr., uniUm. opl.. Fl,..
114 411 3140.

rk .,..

exc ooncL._ .:k MaWIIg wrinftr
-, 11-~4.
'
1m ford 114 1011 plok • Coli
114-7-.

IIIUII -

2 ... . - - . . . - .....
6 0.. RlqUind. Call all.- 2
p,iil. 41-4 Ul 0521.
.

44

(1) - =Ext::.;;
...:,101;;.;::1'"=----72 Truckl for Sale
1m ~
_,.. .. J'
-.,
, auto.,

......

FOLTY

®

1 - 0Nao ~
11:1 ton,oon~.
I - one
·
awner, o.1
ei....,.

~=-:":::::-~..::-;-::-=::
~ S,DGO oq. ft. o1 OJIOOO
lonnootr aoculllld~
....
Plua 1M In 8pilnG
Sho~ Coillor. 11

I. I I. I, I .~~-:
I I I' I I

•I!Jl Th-'• company

ChovJa. .......uo.

1'-111, -

2

(l)BodyE(!) 3-2·1 Contact Q
1111 eG CIS NeWo Q

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

-

14xlll h~ Ioiii oloo.
dryor·
.............. 11441WII7,111441-''!'q

(I)

$50. OoM 811ectlen of l*lra a•
.......
IMIII
oe'l 1..

•
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eon eourc11
ond •k- our 42 Mobile Homes
tlnlnclia
TYPIST4100 Woold)l II - 1

i

•-lo In

111-ta-7110
.. ohlp -oltor lp.m.
· -

MUGPSY

8:30. (]) @ NIC Nightly Newt

Cot....~

1177 -

· LAYNE'I FURNITURE

allo II! ,..u jollo, Tho Adult

1:05 (J) . . . .rty Hlllblllieo

-.111
· ....
_..... olcillod
_ ..
114-

51

3 bodroom In lllddleport. No
...... Coi1114-IIIN43&amp;.

IIJJIIII
Ill - n Mogazlne

4421

r,1crchandiSC

2 badl001n. 1121 montll. c.11
11...W187.

TilE 6RAVE ''

11oow ~ 1141011
$4111. 11711'o!d [.T1) , , . ......
104-4111131 or -1721.

Goods

BabysiHer n•dtd kl my
home tor 3 ~ 12 yNr okll 7 mo.
old, Mon-Frl, day lhlh,. Send
Reft rencn to: RU Box 147,
GalUpolil, OH 45631.

@Worldt-y
9 Charlet In Cha'IJI

1m ford,

114-W-3412.

Houaes for Rent

OF 6LORI(

LEAD SOT TO

Uo.l1~1012.

304-675-1421.

AVON • All

..•

be as Wild as Wildlife. Q
(!) SqUire One TV Q
.aJ)AnclyOrlltHh

1m
-loroe!
t1ol bod
truok. ... 1"1'00
\IP__to- houl

Camn.clol 1400 oq.ft.
c
ond Plno. Amilll
iloltllng. Coli 114 Ul 4241, -

Rentals

AVON I All Arooo I Shirley
Spooro.

..' ...

T~E PATHS

iiii1.
Vohlaloo
from 1100. ,.,._ llerl 1 1

304 23 1114

A-lorranl·_.or,_.IL

-........ 49

Pallllc .,.,. 304-4171-

-·

11

...1'-·.··~

- . 114
-·•·

-

Clydo

lolo, ...,_ ftftlnclng, Hontord,
WV:IIIIUIUIIIII.
Loll For - . Oolllpoil• FIITY.

Serv1ces

or

Rooms

tot

olodgloi-.Aioo·on lho 1o1, ,In nood ol ,.,.lro.

114 182. 1:11114

FurniShed

45

...

(I)IIIIOfAmerlcan
Motorcycle AIIOCiation
Cll Wild Amertclt Tlme~apse .
photograplly prcwea plants to

aae
....,pod~.:=======:;:====·===~~ ll:i
-~~:n,:::
OOVIIINIIENT I&amp;IZID

ldtollon.
""'·
In Ao,_nco,
.Poor-. dopooll ,..
quiNCI. I1C •s 4441•awlp.nt.
1 .,apt, 114 ttl D:.O

32 Mobile Homes

O.lllo. (1) -7.-10 Ell. ..
t011111.

lpoota~ SIO

3 bodr- 1-112 llath

Ono lr., tum. or uniUm.~. In

EARN MONEY typing o1 homo.
$:1111.DGO Jlllr lncomO .........

--~~~-

II!IJ . 1121

@-

,., _ , 1m Pontlae ' - '

.

114&lt;141-D444.

Employment

I

tuu....a.

.

a...•
ltock - • . or _...., top ol

11M ,.,.. on oar, . .ce, lo ,...
..anu. ~- I ......:u I aiL
Cor • - with -tlor Uro rMtc.
Cor ond t - r....~ 11210. Oot
.... ..... Coli 114-Mf.
:11171• IR-14f.2D41. 1oo. 3nl

st.Frolll
In Oolllpollo. blocko $114.-lluouah ....... 1L
---Aioo-""-10 - - - l r o o t o Coli 11.._.7717.
.... hmoltJ'. I14281""·
~lnSC!P"

mt nt
Kroger
5739.

lito -

Oreal•• ..,.,._ 1 Md 2 .......

Lost&amp; Found

.,....,., tor . . ..

$110. 11...,.,..2112.

Hudbaord
•
bod-.
usaa.tta.. 114-441-15S5.

7

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I

: I I I 1I

8:00 1]) - - A n d

Mire.
T - a-: 1111 ll!!llol:lr. 11.-: 1114 Unc. W, ftlo!z...~-; MD llolora,

HWy. 11DUR. tH t41 .1118, 114- ·

11~

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EVENING

.1...

11.

I'Yfilwtl.

1D-

Giveaway

llttllt' ,,.1,.., .,.,...,
4737 afl•l:30.

MON., DEC.
11
I

' ' on, •;.:::
-.oaoaw.
1111., 'IWo 1117

I month old m11 . . r:~ blul grey,

6

•

1•

........

not your home. 304-77'J-.5341.

Stilti ng

1114-~lopoN,

T.V. • IIIIIAIII A Jilt

1111~
. . . 1M. ... 'alA " "
Q .,. ••~
OH. CAofoM, FroM
~,
._).
~ . . . . . C• Ita •• ,. tor

potlotoce oloanlng I rollnl"'" IIIIo

Television
Viewing

71 AUIOI for Sale

.............
........ ..,
---~-·
::-ill, = z!..,;
$ ' 8

Aon'o Chlmnoy _ , a- 1

kMp t ho homo

KIT N' CAIILYLE~ by Larry Wrtpt

44

LAFF·A·DAY

I

Monday, December 11, 1989

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

11

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BZQJQYT

CYNB

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Ill e!D GNiwl
liJihter 81111 Of llportl

EVX

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PR

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Billy fubbl

• iD Alwnlo Hill

ar••••

IIIII
Ill Nutat
ill ...... VIol

·~

11:30(Jl···.(Jl • . , . Of car-

EAROEYXRZ
INIR
Yee ......e CaiPI••••te: FUlURE: THAT PERIOD OF TIME IN WHICH OUR AFFAIRS PROSPER,
OUR FRIENDS ARE TRUE AND OUR HAPPINESS IS
ASSURED. -AMBROSE BIERCE

�I

..... .

'"-f IS I'
ftS·IH1

I ...............

WSI. . ...

THIS

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3
012
Pick 4.
6719

Shop today,
shop locally

EEK'S~

GAMES

•

MEIGS
BOYS

IIOtiiSI
. . . . . . Fri.

7:.So ....... s:ea,...

r------.,..--.

,

Dtc. 12-NelronvHit·Yol'k-Home
Dtc. 15-Wellston-Away
Dtc •.19-Vinton County-H01111

Vol.40. No.111
C.Wrietlld 11..

GilLS

....... Dtc. 11-Nelsonwillt·Yol'k-Away
Dtc. U-Wellst1111-Homt
Dtc. 11-Vinton Co.-lway

716 .. 2nd

Middleport council OKs ChristmaS bonuses
By CllAIU.ENE BOBn..ICH
The 'village signed fire protec·
tlon contracts with Cheshire
Dall7 Seallnel S&amp;aH
Christmas bonuees for village Township In the amount of $4,650
emp!O)'I!H were given final ap- and Cheshire VIllage In the
proval at Monday night's meet· amount of $2,800 tor 1990.
ln1 of J\lllddleport VIllage Council
Mayor Fred Hoffman dis·
at vtllase hall.
. cussed Increases In health lnsu·
FuUtlme employees will re- ranee premiums for employees.
ceive $:110 each while the part· · He noted that the AdvaCare
time emplOyees will receive $150 program In which the village
each. The ordllance provld lng participates wlll have a 47
for the bonUIIeS was given a third percent Increase on Jan. 1. He
and final reading and then listed the cost Increases as going
adopted at the meeting.
from $105 to $148 for slngles,.$210
Other ordinances on which to $296 for two party. and $270 to
action was taken Included a · $415 for famllles. Despite the
second reading of the one es tab- Increase In cost, there wUlalso be
llshlng court costs at $35 with $16 a decrease In coverage, the
of that going to the State of Ohio, mayor said. He noted that the
and another regarding perm It cost or $46,000 In 1989 will go to
charges which remain at $10 $68,000 In 1990, an Increase to the
except In the case of political vlllage of $22,000.
signs where the charge Is $25.
It was decided at !he meeting

BOYS
Dtc. 15-Southtm-lway
Dtc. 16-Srn-s Valey-H01111

GilLS
Dtc. 11-Southem-Home
Dtc. 14-Syrnmes Valley-Away
Dtc. 16-FHirai-Hodring-lway

SOUTHERN
BOYS
Dtc. 15-Eastem-.llome
Dec. 16-Easttm-Pike-at O.U.

that the Insurance with Adva·
Care wUI be extended on a
temporary basis. Meanwhile,
plans were made for the vlllage
to check Into self-Insurance to be
admlnl-tered by Buckeye Hllls·
Hocking Valley Regional Devel·
opment District. The mayor
explained that an eight county
area Is Involved In the distriCt
which Is administering several
self· Insurance programs at this ·
time.
·
A representative of Buckeye
Hills has been asked to attend the
first meeting of Council In
January to explain the program.
The clerk was authorized to
make necessary transfers to
bring all the village funds Into
Une before the enlf of the ,year.
A letter was read from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour·

GilLS

...s

CALL 992-3311 or

992-2342

·CLEVELAND (UPI) - The' expanding economy during most
number of Ohioans Uvlng below of the decade.
George Zeller, senior re!he poverty line In 1989lncreased
to 13.7 percent - about 1.5 searcherforlhecouncll,saldthe
mUllon people - reversing a number of Jobs In Ohio had
four-year decline.
Increased by 15 percent since
The annual Ohio Poverty lndl· 1983, when the economiC recov·
cators report was released by !he ery began, but the poverty rate
Councll for Economic Opportunl· dec;llned by only 4 percent over
ties In Greater aeveland Mon· the same period.
day, the same day Gov. Richard
At the Columbus seminar, Eric
Celesteandbuslnessleadersheld Berkland, president of the Ohio
-a -~tnar tn Colllmblts to boast ·Manufacturers•· Association.
about :tbe'state•s @C!OIIDI'IIle )ler· sald('"i""le 'revitalization ot our
formance over !he past decade.
manufacturing base Is the grea·
The councU said the poverty test quiet story of the decade."
rate Increased by 25.4 percent
But Zeller said In the report,
during. the 1980s, despite an ' 'Most of the jobs created In Ohio

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. !-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 8- Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. IS-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co. .......... .......... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre ........................... Away
Dec. 29-Lopn .................... ....... Home
Jan. 5-Aieunder ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Ftdetal Hockin&amp; .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .......................... Away
Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ............. .......... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............................ Away
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........... , ............ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21-Mill,tr ............................. :Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hockmg ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ...... .. , ........ Home
Dec . 1-Hannan Trace ........ : ......... Away
Dec. 5-Kypr Creek .................... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. 15-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .............. Home
.Dec. 22-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Dec.~30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ......... ...... Away
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .................. Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia .......... ......... Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
Jan . 26-K~er Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 27-M Iller .... , ...................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ........ ................ Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTHERN HIG~ !ICI:IQOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALl
Nov., 25-Southwestem .......... ..... ,. Home
Now. 28-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .. ....................... Home
Dec. 5-North Gall ia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eastern .:........... ........... Home
Dec. 16-Eastern Pike .................. It D.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern .... l ............ Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
Jan. 5-0ak Hill ...................:....... Away
Jan. &amp;-Gallipolis ........................ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswocid .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ................ ,.......... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ....... ........ Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern ........ ........... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

''DIGNITY AND
SEIVICE AlWAYS"
IM .H. Ewillf-Dirtctor

PH. 992-2121

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-Miller ................................ Home
Dec. 2-Eastern .......................... ....... Away
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home .
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-York .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
Dec. 18-VInton Co ............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpree .. ............................ Home
Jan. 4-Aitunder .............................. Away
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking ..................... Away
Jan. 11-Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ............................... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Ntlsonville·York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............................... Home
Jan. 29-Vinton Co ........................... Home
Feb. 1-Btlpra ................................... Away
Feb. 5-Aieunder ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking .................... Home
Feb. tO-Southern ........... :................ Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-9D GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ..................... Home
Dec. 2-Meigs .................................. Home
Dec. 4-K~pr Creek ........................... Away
Dec. 6-Tnmble :................................ Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Horns
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley ........... ......... Away
Dec. I&amp;~Federal Hocking .......... .. ....... Away
'Dec. 21-Gak Hill ....... ...................... Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace .. ,...................... Away
Jan. 10- Tnmbla .... ........................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-Meics ................................ .. Away
Jan. IS-Southwester~ ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Federal Hoekma ..............:: .. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek .............. .......... Home
Feb. 1-South~rn ............................... Away
Feb. 5-0ak H1ll ................................ Away
Feb. S-Symmes Valley ......... ............ Home

VALLEY

•

:-----

,

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989·90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Mei&amp;s ................................ Home
Nov. 27-Kypr Creek.. ...................... Home
Nov. 30-Dak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-llorth Glllia ......................... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Eastern ...... :........................ Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ...................... Away
Dec. IS-Waterford ........................... Ho111e
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away
Jan. 4-0ak Hill ................................ Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ... .................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ................ Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ........:................... Away
Feb. !-Eastern ................................ Home
Feb. 5-Sytnmes Valley ...... &lt;.............. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................... ... Home
Feb. 10-Mei~s .................................. Away
-

.

during the 1980s have paid less
than $12,000 per year. This
Increased ,Ohio's nofmber . of
workinf! poor, and It was an
Important factor underlying the
slate's modest poverty decrease
despite beallhy job growth dur·
lng the las I six years."
For a sl~le person, the feder·
ally def~ver,\Y level Is an
annual Income ofless than$5,980.
For a famlly of four, the
threshekl.ls-Sl)..659-a year;-;
Vlntoa Tope Llsl
The state's highest poverty
rates are In the traditionally poor
Appalachian region In the souContinued on page 5

Eastern, Southern school boards
approve routine matters .Monday

_ _.;...__________ GIRLS SCHEDULE,--------

't

demnlflcatlon clause. Councll
EmplOyees were commended
members were In agreement for the attractive Christmas
that they want to do ever ything decorations at village hall by
possible to make It easter for BHI Councilman Paul Gerard.
Haptonstall, owner, to continue
It was repdrted that Mitch
with his expansion plans.
. Meadows' plans for construction
The construction of restrooms ot a two story building on North
at Hartinger Park was discussed Second St. are progressing. The
and CouncU passed a motion to Prescription Store, now next
assume responslblllty for any door, wlll move Into the flntnoor
cost over $10,000. A letter re- of the more spacious bullding
questing that action was re· once It Is completed. The second
celved from the Ohio Depart· floor wm be another Meadows
ment of Development following rental unit. It was reported.
the awarding of a block grant for
The mayor's report showed
the $10,000.
receipts of $12,112 for the month
Councilman Bob Gilmore re- of November.
ported on the erection of a sign by
Attending. the meeting were
the Ohio Department of Trans· Mayor Hoffman, Clerk ·
portatlon at the Intersection of Treasurer Jon Buck, and Coun·
!he Route 7 bypass and County
cllmen Dewey Horton, James
Road 3. He proposed that the Clatworthy, Gilmore, Gerard ~
village put a directional sign at Wllllam Walters and Jack
the end ot Route 3.
Satterfield.

Oh-o poverty rate up in '89

WE WILL'.

ALL YO.·
INSUUNCE

ces, Division of Waterways,
regarding the $25,000 grant
which the vlllage received to
upgrade the Middleport levee. A
meeting was announced for Dec.
l4 at 1:30 p.m. In Columbus for
the actual awarding of the funds
and signing of the contract.
Mayor Hoffman will attend.
Presented at the meeting was
an amended agreement pre·
pared by Attorney Steve Story
between Pomeroy and Middleport regarding handllng of the
sewer service charges on bus!·
nesses In the area near the north
corporation limits.
Action on the agreement was ·
tabled pending approval by
Pomeroy VIllage Councll. The
agreement addresses the points
of connecting areas and rate
Increases, and contains an In·

Meigs fourth; Gallia seventh

Dtc. 11-Eostll'n-Away
Dtc. 14-Southwmern-Away
Dtc. 11-Watll'ford-Home

TAlE CARE OF

1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 Cento
A Muh-o Inc. N-opopOt'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, December 12, 1989
'

EASTERN
•

ae-.

Low &amp;oaf&amp;bt Ia mill
Cbaace of 180w It perceat.
Wedae-dll)', cloudy, blp Ia .
mid U.. Chuce of •now SO
percent.

WINNERr· - These alx Meigs County younp&amp;era aent &amp;he m011&amp; mice to coUege during &amp;he
Melp County Cbap&amp;er of the American Cancer
Soclti&amp;y'a annual Send A Mouae To College
campalp. UIUan Moore, director of the local
chapter, preaented cheeks &amp;o &amp;he &amp;op money
collectors. From, left &amp;o right beside Moore .a re
!!rat place winner John Cleland, from Pomeroy .

Elementu-y, recelvln1 $100, ud sixth place
winner Marjorie Halar, SaJJabury Elemenlal')'.
receiving 125. From left &amp;o rlr;blln troat are Jenny
Hower&amp;on, Middleport Elementary, second place,
S'75; Ashley Hanaaha, Pomeroy Elementary,
lhlrd place, $40; Amber DufJy, Raclne-8outhern
Kindergarten, fourth place, 1211; and Nicholas
Dettwlller, Pomeroy Elementary, fifth place, $25.

Icebox door
closes on Ohio
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
The Man Behind the Town.
This article about Samuel
Wyllys Pomeroy, whose family
name was given to the village, Is
taken from the dlaryo!Valenllne
B. HoriOn and was recorded by
Grace Horton In April or 1954.
Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy was
the son of Eleazar and Mary
Wyllys Pomeroy. He was born In
Hartford. Conn, In 1764, and his
parents were of English descent.
He lived as a boy at the home of
his maternal grandfather, called
Wyllys Hill, and as a boy played
In the hollow of the famous
Charter Oak, which stood on his
grandfather's lawn.
As a young man he moved to
Boston, Mass. where he was a
merchant and ship owner l.n the
East India Trade. He built a
hoUJe at Brighton, Mass. on the
Charles River. He married Cia·
rlssa Alsop, of Middletown,
Conn.
Early in the century, he bought
some land warrants from Revoludonary Sokllen .'Thls land was
located In Green Township, Gal·
lla County,. whlch later was part
of Meigs County. He also bough!
land In Sutton Township ~hlch
wa1 limber land and farm land,
·and at ·Graham Station, now
Racine, be sold land.
The land he owned In Salisbury
to1'1hlp extended along the

J!'urnace repairs at Tuppers
Plains and Hlvervlew Elemen·
tary Schools and Eastern High
School were approved at Monday
night's meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
The board voted to contract
with the Columbus Heating and
Ventllatlng Co. to tear down and
rebulld the units at !he Tuppers
Plains School. Supt. Dan Apllng
was authorized by the board to
proceed with the job of caulking
and packing the furnaces a
Riverview and high school.
· Again discussed at !he meeting
was the dis trlct policy on honor
roll attalrunent and the K
through 12 grading poUcy, Action
on a recommendation to modify
the existing pollcy was tabled.
Edna Householder was em·
ployed as a half-time teacher
aide, whlle Ralph H. Werry and
Nancy L. Basye were hired as
substitute teachers for the re·
malnder of the 1989·90 school
year to be used on an as needed
only basis. Also employed was
Teresa Evans as a substitute ·
teacher aide for the rest of the

By Ualted Press ln&amp;ernatlonal
The Icebox door has closed on
Ohio - and It wUI remain closed
for at least the next four or five
days.
Snow was likely over much of
the state Tuesday, with some
spots In eastern Ohio along the
Ohio River, as well as the east
lakeshore counties, to receive
Robert and Per;r;y Lewis of
about 1 Inch. A dusting was Middleport are looking for an
expected over much of the rest of unidentified woman who Mondll)'
the state.
nlr;h&amp;, came to Mr. Lewla' aid
Some flurries may bang on In after he was Involved In a
the northeast, but for the most one-vehicle accident on Sand mu
part the Buckeye St4te was In for Road near Letart, W.VL
partly cloudy and dry conditions
According &amp;o Mrs. Lewis, her
Tuesday night. On Wednesday, buband's vehicle weal over a
clouds are golnl to Increase &amp;lid slx·foot embankment between
a chance of snow will return.
5:30 and &amp;Jut nlr;lil. It was about
While the majority of Ohio U mlaules however, before
should avoid getdng much snow . . , _ spotted lbe vehicle and
through Wednesday, &lt;;old came &amp;o bit l'etCIIe. · The helper
temperatures will be wu a wamaa, whom Mr. Lewis
Inescapable,
tblalta mil)' have beea tram
· Highs were forecast lobe In the GalllpoU.. She came &amp;o hill aid,
20s or near 30 Tuesday and &amp;ook &amp;he al&amp;uadoa Ia bud and
Wednesday. Lows Tuesday night weat to a bo- where lhe lllked
are expected to be from 5 to 10 In for the ap(II'OJrlate authorltlea to
the northwest counties and from be called. lr all lbe coar.lloa,
10 to 20 elsewhere. Such readings &amp;Jr. Lewla did 110&amp; ret &amp;lie
are 5 to 10 degrees lower than woman's name.
what would be normal during the
LeniiiiRalaed minor lll,larlea
coldest part of the winter.
In tlae aecldeat, aad be aild IIIII
There Is a chance of snow wife would like &amp;a lhanlt &amp;lie
statewide Thursday, with a wamu periOIIaiJy. The)' ulllllat
chance of snow In !he north but If p aJJ'Ible, de call ctem collecl
fair In !he south Friday and II*
home at
Coni!Dued on page 5

Good Samaritan
sought by couple

river tor about five miles from
Kerr's Run, nearly to Leading
Creek, and back about one mlle.
Most of this was coal land.
In 1825 Pomeroy made a
journey to Ohio and saw his land
for the first time.
Pomeroy's future son-ln·law
was Valendne B. Horton, son of
Zenas and Nancy Seaver Horton,
Windsor, Vt. wbowereofEngllsh
descent. He was born Jan. 29,
1802.
He studied law In Middletown,
Conn. under the honogable Sa·
muel Dana and was ildmltted to
the bar In 1800. He moved to
Pittsburgh, Pa. which he thought
would "someday by a city." ·
On Nov. 30,1833, In Cincinnati,
Valendne Horton married Clara
Pomeroy, daughter of Samuel
Wyllys Pomeroy. They came to
Nyesvllle at the moulh of Kerr's
Condnued 01\Fge 5

••Jr

-·---- ..

•18'73.

,year.
hired and the resignation of a
The .board authorized partici- substitute bus driver accepted at
pation In underwriting Its share a meeting of the Southern Local
of the excess costs of a teacher School Board Monday night at
aide for the County SBH unit for the high school.
the balance of the school year.
Added to the substitute
Modifications to the Class of · teachers list were Ralph H.
1991 budget, the Chester Elemen· Werry 11nd Carol A. Smith. Don
tary Activity Fund budget, and Smith ·resigned as a substitute
!he 1989 Chapter II budget were
bus driver.
approved.
The board au lhorized the re·
The hid of Nationwide Insu· · pslr of the film strip projector at
ranee, the John Turner Agency, the high school and approved the
for fleet Insurance for 1990 was district remaining with COG·
accepted.
SEOVEC, the minimum pre·
Appropriations for the 1990 mlum dental Insurance program
Title III fund were approved.
with J.W. Didion and Associates
Wednesday, Jan. 10, at 6: 30 for the period of Jan·. 1 through
was set as tlie time for the June 30, 1991.
organizational meeting, to be
The Nationwide Mutual Trust
followed at 7 p.m. by the regular lnsural!ce Co. was awarded the
meeting In the high school liability Insurance contract for a
premium of $2,923. Johnson Con·
cafeteria .
Members met In execu tlve trois of Nitro. W. Va. was
session to discuss personnel authorized to proceed with heat·
lng system repairs · at the high
matters.
Attending were Jim Smith, school.
president, Kathy Manlcke, vice
Attending were Scott Wolfe.
president, and members Ray Charles Norris, Denny Evans,
Gary Wilford, and John Murphy.
Karr and Charles Knight.
board members and Supt. Bobby
Southem Meeting
Ord and Treasurer Dennie Hlll.
Two substitute teachers werP.

Local news briefs--.
Patrol cites driver after accident

.

One driver was cited In a three vehicle colllslon at 5: 45p.m .

Monday In Meigs County on SR. 7, at the Intersection of CR. 75,
at Pomeroy.
Troopers said southbound Sue P. Murphy, 43, Racine, driving
a 1987MercuryTopaz, attempted to make a left turn onto CR. 75
Into the path of northbound Kenneth B. Bol!O, 34, Mlllfleld, Ohio,
driving a 19lll Olds, and the vehicles collided.
The Impact of the collision knocked the Murphy car into a 1986
Plymouth driven by Richard L. Gilmore, 58, Pomeroy. Gilmore
was stopped on CR. 75, at the Intersection. There was heavy
damage to the Bobo and Murphy vehicles; minor damage to the
Gilmore car. Murphy suffered minor Injuries but was not
Immediately treated.
The patrol cited Murphy for !allure to yield the right of way
when turning left.
·

Squads luzndle 3 calls Monday
Three calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units
of the Melp County Emerpncy Medical Services.
At 8:45a.m., Racine went to Brewer Road for Edcar Brewer
who wu taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3: :M p.m., Pomeroy waa called to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Fred Shain to Veterans Memorial llotpltal.
Pomeroy at 5:411 p.m. tranaporll!d Sue Murphy from an auto
accident on Hlgbland Church Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospl&amp;al.

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