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                  <text>AT SAVE•A•LOT
YOU NOT ONLY SAVE MONEY ••
YOU WILL SAVE MORE,
BECAUSE WE HAVE DONE
YOUR PRICE COMPARISON AT
OTHER LOCAL STORES!

.,

SAL
J

39¢
Muffin Mix 1 oz.
65¢
Yellow Popcorn a2 oz.
49¢
.Budding Lunch Meats 2.5 oz.
$5.49
Cheese Singles 31bs.
69¢
Pimentos 4 oz.
99¢
Tea Bags 100 ct.
$2.99
Wesson Oil 64 oz.
35¢
Chicken Gravy Mix 1 oz.
Instant Oatmeal Variety 10 packets $1.59
79¢ •
Chili Powder soz.
'
99¢
Pan Cooking Spray 9oz.
79¢
Sage 3oz.
Orange Breakfast Drink Mix 21 oz. $1~69
.

l

Wedne.day, December 13, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-20- The Dally Sentinel

BB

K·

61¢
98¢
69¢
$8.59
.
$1.15
$2.49
S4.49
7/Soz. 79¢
$2.09
4oz. $2.69
8oz. $2.89
.5 oz. $1.65
26oz. $2.49 ·

TOTALS.............817.81 . 831.60

65¢
$1.29
65¢
s9.99
79¢
$2.29
$4.39
7/Soz. 75¢
$2.19
4oz. $2.49
6 oz. $2.59
5/Soz. .$1.89
26oz. $2.49
832.45

59¢
$1.49 '
65¢
$9.29
$1.09
$1.99
$4.29
7/Soz. 79¢
$2.29
.5 oz. $1.69
8 oz. $3.29
.5 oz. $1.75
2601. $2.69
'

831.89

57¢
$1.01
89¢
$9.29
$1.11
$1.59
$3.99
118 oz. 75¢
$2.39
4oz. $2.63
8 oz. . S3.39
1. 3/4 oz. $3.53
26 oz. $2.79
833.93

Now That You Have Seen That You
Cannot ''Bear'' Those High Prices And
The ''Scissors'' Just Don't Cut The Cost,
Come And Shop Where You .Always
·S AVE • A • LOT!

THESE PIIICU WERE EFfEC1IYE
IN OUR COL EiliiMI11011l
DIC.I'IIIIIU 11

IIOl.RSI
I'IOftDAY-M'IUlDAY
8A.....eP.IIL
SUWAY, II AJII.-8 PJIL

MID MAIIIVIOUI', OWriER

RT.62NORTH

(304) 675-1155

POINT PLEASANT, WV

11

Pick 3

636
Pick 4
3465
Super Lotto
14-16-20-23-30-40

Low lontctH In mid teeu.
Chance of snow 10 percent.
s.- Friday,
Ia teens.

~!!L_JU

•

'.

.

Vol.40, No.113

r-

.

·-

.

·-·-

Z S.C.Iono. 14 PogM 26 Clnto

· ·~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 14, 1989

Copyrig-1888

Christmas Is ... ------____,

A Multlmedio Inc. Newopopor

COunties must front
•
•
computer....·•zation costs
•

v·

F
'

Shop today,
shop locally

Ohio Lottery

By NANCY YOACBAI\l
Dally SeaUnel Staff
The upcoming computerlza·
tion of the Meigs County Title
Office was dlscu ssed Wednesday
by the Meigs County Commls·
stoners and Larry Spencer,
Meigs Clerk of Courts.
The state-required computer!·
zatlon of all county title offices is
to start In February or March
with VInton County as the pilot
county, Spencer said. He antic I·
pates that computerization ofthe
Meigs County office will follow
sometime in early summer.
·
As pointed out by Spencer, the
counties must front all costs
related to the required computer·
lzatlon, although the state will
supply all the needed materials.
At some point, the state will
reimburse the counties for the
costs which will vary from
county to county and have yet to
be determined.
Spencer said he has requested
three terminals and two printers
for the Meigs office which Is
lOcated on the second floor of the
courthouse, however, whether or

remains to be seen.
Employees who wlll operate
the terminals will be required to
participate in training sessions,
the costs for which are also state
reimbursable, Spencer added.
Training Is expected to start in
June.
Spencer also presented com· .
missioners with an accounting of
summer salary costs when he
had to hire part·tlme workers to
replace employees who were
either IU or on vacation.
Only one bid was received by
the commissioners for office
space fo_r the county's Child
Support Enforcement Agency. ·
The bid came from Maxine
Gaskill and Is for the same place
where the agency Is currently
housed in Middleport.
Michael Swisher, director ol
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services, was present for
the bid opening. The bid, for 980
square' feet at $775 a month for

two years, was accepted bY. the
commissioners subject to state
approval, since the rent is
reimbursable from the state.
Bond for Shelly Fortune to
accept after hours recognizance
bonds for Meigs County Court
was approved by the commlssloners. Fortune IS a dispatcher
for the Pomeroy Pollee
Department.
A request from Kenny Wig·
gins, litter control program man·
ager, for a $5,862 advance lor the
balance of 1989 was approved.
The amount will be reimbursed
by the state In February.
In final matters, end·of·theyear Interdepartmental budget
transfer requests were approved
for the SoU and Water Conserva·
lion Service, Meigs Emergency
Medical Services, Meigs Clerk of
Courts Office, County Court, the
Meigs Prosecutor's Office, the
County Highway Department
and Probate-Juvenile Court.

• ht
rD.•ft
l '\/
-e
J.U
.J
•o'

are
Q;lll;~~~.:;s arrested in Gallia
~-c:!!.~
,
r:t!id.s
.-Wednes!kY
.
Q!Jip f..e!J!P.~rat~re . Y2Ul~ :dl:Dil.~- . 0lllllf:
, m1unn 00
into 'single digits by Saturday
GMNG TO O'DIERS'- The bulllaeas Prole&amp;·
lllonals of America Club at Melp High School
lpoMOred &amp; nil&amp;tea delve for the students enrolled
Ill tile Bead Start program In Melp Cnunty.
DoiUUID• were received from National Honor
Society memiNin, teacllera, and the student body.

Shown here decoratlnr; the tree are, clockwise
from rlr;ht, Allee Jacoba and VIcky Woods, from
Bead Start, Jennifer McKinley, kaeellnr;, Kenda
Kloee, Spring Reed; and Usa Daral. The studenla
are officers of the club. A total of 75 pairs of
mHtens were collected for donation.

By United Pre&amp;a International
wind had begun kicking up.
O~lo has been gripped by
The mercury is to continue to
wlotry weather for·weeks, so It's gradually drop over the next two
hard to believe the official start days, with Saturday morning
ofl"ln~tr IS stll)rn9rethan a week
readings being In the single
away. And tlie National Weather digits. ·
Service said Tbu~ay It will get
Snow moving across Ohio
even worse this week.
Thursday morning was to grad\i·
lJghl snow fell over much of ally diminish, giving the state a
the state early Wednesday and short reprieve from the precipi·
mld-mornb;lg temperatures were tation through most of the nll(ht.
In the upper teens and ._)ow 20s.
Anot)ler more significant ODS·
Wlnd-chW readings, howtlver, · laugh! of snow will reach southw·
were conslderabjy colder, below est Ohio late Thursday night and
zero In western Ohio where the spread over all o! Ohio Friday. It

By DICK THOMAS
Incarcerated untU he posted a
OVP News Staff
$00,000. His arraignment Is scheFifty-elght persons were ar· duled lor Friday.
Thomas R. Quillen, of Route
143, Pomeroy, pleaded guilty to
rested Wednesday as clty,county
One of the 58 persons arrested
and
state
law
.enforcement
offl·
yesterday
was not charged with
appears southern Ohio will expe- cultivation of marijuana on a bill
rience the most snow accumula· of Information when he appeared • ctals began serving warrants trafficking In drugs. Shelly
after the largest number of Banks· Patterson, 34, Gallipolis,
tions from Friday's system.
Monday .before Meigs Common
Early-morning accumulations Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III.'
indictments In the history of was charged with aiding and
Gallla County. ·
abetting a trafficking in drugs.
totaled 2 inches In northwest
Accordllll\ to Meigs Prosecutor
The day and a half-session of She pleaded not guilty on ar·
Ohio, and as much as 4 Inches in Steven L. Story, the charge
some parts of the Snowbelt against QuUien came about In
the grand jury resulted In the ralgnment and her case was set
Indictment of 62 persons , ori a for trial Feb. 13, 1990.
counties In the northeast.
August when Meigs Sheriff's
Looking ahead through Mon· Deputy Tom Smith went to the
total of 78 secret Indictments. .
Here are the people who
day, It will remain very cold, Quillen residence on an unreThe Indictments, according to pleaded not guilty to charges of
with a chance of snow in the lated matter and while there,
Brent A. Saunders. GalllaCourity lrafflcking In drugs, along with
Prosecuting
Attorney, resulted their trial dates:
saw
marijuana
piants.
northeast Saturday and state·
warrant
was
then
A
search
from a 10-month undercover
Jean Wamsley, 40, 41 Lincoln
wide on Monday. Sunday will be
drug Investigation under exclu· Ave., Gallipolis, Feb. 26, 1990;
fair. Highs willbe10to20over the obtained through Prosecutor's
weekend and in the upper teens to Investigator Don Snyder and the sive direction of the Gallia Charles K. Smith, 23, Gallipolis,
sheriff's department, Story County Prosecutor's office.
March 6, 1990; Sam E. Bennett,
mld·20s on Monday.
reports.
.
Arraignments were held be- 23, 37 Smithers St., Gallipolis,
A search of the Interior and
fore Gallla County Common March 6, 1990; Teresa L. Willi·
exterior of the home netted 13 Pleas Courl Judge Donald A. Cox ams, 34, Rt. Galllpolls, (3counts)
sizable plants, says Story, and an
yesterday afternoon and last Jan. 24, .1990; Debra Bradshaw,
agreement was reached whereby
night. Additional arraignments 33, 18~ Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
Qulllen opted to plead guilty to
are expected as more warrants March ·9, 1990; Mike Lee Rossi·
th'e cultivation charge.
after Indictment are served.
ter, 21, 41 Lincoln Ave., GalllpoA pre-sentence Investigation
Of
the
58
persons
arrested
Us,
Feb. 12, 1990; Phil E. Shafer,
Wanda Fetty, .Lula Hampton, was ordered by the court In the
yesterday
by
law
enf9rcement
24,
41 Lincoln Ave., Gallipolis,
Peggy Harris, Emma Clat· Quillen matter, Story says, with
worthy, William and Joyce Ho· sentencing schedlued for Jan. 30, officials, 28 were Incarcerated In Jan. 17 ,1990; Curtis Lee Lambert
the GalUa County jail, until they 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell, Jan. 15, 1990;
back, Florence Richards, Macel 9a.m.
posted bond.
Brian Arthur, 26, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Barton, Evelyn Gilmore, and
Also on Monday. LaDonna
Kenneth
R. Clark, 31, Rt. 2, March 27, 1990; Mark Shane Hill,
Gerald Wildermuth. Friendly Nestor, of Mason, W.Va., was
Circle of Trinity Churchhserved given a six-months suspended Bidwell, did not waive the 20, 729 Second Ave .. Gallloolls,
24·hour walling period and was
Continued on page 14
the canteen.
sentence, placed on two-years
The donors by communities probation and fined ·$250 and
were as follows:
costs for passing bad checks.
Pomeroy: Marsha L. Barn· Nestor had previously entered a
hart, Brenda S. Cunningham, plea of goUty to. the charge.
Lenora J. McKnight, Mary K.
Conditions of Nestor's proba·
Spencer, Billy J. Spencer, Debra tion include the continuation of
The position of coordinator for the talented and gifted
D. Mora, Scott A. Eichinger, counseling and that she not write
program
in Meigs County has been changed from a half-time to
Waller R. Couch, Phylls M. any more checks, reports Meigs
a
full· time position for the remainder of the 1989·90 school year.
Continued on· page 14
Prosecutor Steven L. Story.
Action to amend the contract of Kitty Hazier, the TAG
coordinator, was taken at the Tuesday night meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Education held In the county offices.
The board also voted to hire Donna Grueser as a substitute
teacher aide. Membership In the Ohio School Boards
Association was approved and Harold Roush was appointed as
legislative liaison for 1990. The board also created a position of
CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
teacher aide for the Severe Behavior Class at the Rutland
where, with those arrested being were no grand prize winners In
Elementary School.
.
held In several spots In the Wednesday night's Super Lotto
A school bus driver's .certificate was approved for Carl
drawing, boosting the jackpot for
building, awaiting arraignment.
Robinson.
By 11 p.m. last night, 42 of those Saturday's drawing to at least
The oraanlzatlonal meeting of the board was set for January
$19 mllllon,lotlery officials said.
arrested hat! been arraigned,
2, 1990 at 7 p.m. with tbe regular meeting to follow .
A tolal of 268 players matched
and 16 of those were released on
The oath of office was administered to Robert Burdette,
five
of six numbers for second
bond.
Harold Lohse, and Bill Quickel, a new member who will begin
The Gallla County Jail holds up prizes ol$1,000each. Third prizes
serving a termon the county board onJan. 1, by John D. Riebel,
of $75 will go to 12,735 players who
to 30 on an overnight basis,
treasurer. Others attencllni the meeting were VIrgil King,
matched four of six numbers.
according to Chief Deputy Carlos
Harold Roush and OriS Smith, members.
The Super Lotto numbers were
Wood, but is set up rqr 15 males
14, 16, 20, 23, 30 and 40. Tolal sales
and three female priSoners at
were ••623,797.
any time.
In the Kltker game, one player
"I'm pleased with thecoopera·
The Bailey Run Road home of W.rs. Eldon (Phyllis) Morris
matched all six numbers for a
tlve• efforts of the law enforcewas destroyed by fire early Wednesday afternoon.
grand prize of $100,000. Ten
ment agencies," Saunders said.
Pomeroy Fire Department was called at 12:55 p.m. and Chief
players matched five numbers
The element of surpriSe
Danny Zirkle reports ·that he Immediately called Middleport
for $!1,000; 100· players matched
seemed to work In the officers'
Fire Department for assistance. Flames were already showing
four numbers for $1,000; 1,096
favor, .with those named In the
fr-om all the windows as firemen arrived on the scene, Zirkle
playen matched three numbers
warrants being caught off guard.
says. Only a shell and the chimney of the two-story frame home
for
$100; and 10,909 players
Saunders said he could have
were standlna when firemen left shortly after 5.
matched two numbers for $10.
taken the charges to the grand
Mrs. Morris was not bome when the tire slarlled, Zirkle
The Kicker combla&amp;tlon was
jury one or two at a time, butthat
reports. A neighbor discovered the fire and called authorities.
8686t8. Total Kicker sales were
would have jeopardized the un·
ConUaued on page 14
$1,212,934.
dercover agents' Identities.

·Meigs Countians donate 85 -units
of blood during bloodmobile visit
Eighty-five units of bl.ood were
received during Wednesday's
visit of the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs County
Senior Otlzens Center.
Twenty-two of the units were
given •in appn!Ciatlon for blood .
received by a relative-or friend.
Multiple gallon donors giving
at yesterday's visit included
Wlllam H. Hoback, nine; Leafy
M. Chasteen eight; George Har·
rls, five; Adelle L. White and
Jeanette M. Radfoi-d, three, and
Ralph H. Ballard, Sullan A. Karr,
and Jeffrey D. Holter, one.
First time donors were Scott

Eichinger, Angela Cundiff, Jac·
quellne Wamsley, Cheryl D.
Halley, and Janet R. Leffle.
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the physi·
clans In charge with Lenora
Leifheit, Beulah Ward, Winifred
Marcinko and Naomi London,
·nurses, assisHng. Clerical
workers donating their time
were 'Jean Nease, Carolyn Bar·
ton, and Edward Cozart, repre·
sentatlves of the Vietnam Vets
Morotcycle Club.
Others assisting were RSVP
workers Marion Ebersbach, DOrothy Long, Helen Bodimer,

Local news briefs-....,

Board changes post to full-time

Elemen~ of surprise worked in

No one claims

lirwmen's
favor during Gallia raids
.

:Wtto jackpot

.
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
.
Like something out of a Holly·
wood movll!, pollee cars lined
Locust Street, and law enforcemeat officers awaited · their
orders early Wednesday. At '
approximately 11 a.m .. 40 offlc·
ers were spU\ _up into five teams
and they hit the streets to arrest
those Indicted by a special grand
jury Tuesday and Wednesday.
Within ,flve hours, 40 people
had been arrested and taken to
the G'a!l141 County Jail. By the end
of t~e day, 58 people had been
arrested In the sweep.
This was the first time a secret
tll'sn!1 ,jury bad been convened in
the county, and according to
offlclala, Is something even Co·
lumbus hasn:t done.
"We hope this will send a
message to those Involved with
'

drugs," Prosecuting Attorney
Brent A. _Saunders said of the
•
sweeping arrests.
Saunders' office spearheaded
a 10·month-long undereover In·
vestlgatlon which resulted In the,
indictments ,and arrests
Wednesday.
,
Most of the 78 charges held In
the Indictments were for traffick·
lng drugs, Saunders said, adding
all were drug-related.
_ After Common Pleas Judge
Donald Andrew Cox diamlssed
the grand jury, arrest warrants
were given to officers or the
GalHpolts Pollee Department,
the GalUa Cnunty Sherlfrs Department and the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control. The
officers then made several
sweepaln the city and county.
At the courthouse, there was a
packed courtroom and law en·
forcement officers were every-

Home destroyed by fire

&gt;to

�---..,---~-

~· o-mt.. 14, 1118

·Con•rnentary
· The Daily Sen~~nel
111 Court Street

Pomen17, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TBE IIIEIGI!-MASON

AREA

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

~~· ,...._,._.....
qfv

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asaiotaal Publlsber/ CoatroUer

Gellonl ..........

A MEMBER ol'lbe A.oorie'ed Ptas, ......... Dally l'rl!u .U. .
dation lllld lhe Anwlcan New~ Pub1181ws hMc'MiooL
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'nley slloulol be .... tllaeM
wordo Jaar. .\11 lelleu are oubject to edlllel ud m•ll be olped wllb
liiUile, oddreoo llll•telepbone Dounber. No 111lp.. Je«ero will be publlsloetl. LeiiOI'I slloulol be lo pOll Wile, a d - l s i - · lOt perMUII·
ties .

Democrats, GOP argue
over Bush mission to China

I

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
•
United PNM International
· WASHINGTON - Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn., complained that
President Bush sent a high-level mission to China to apoioglze to the
"butchers of Beijing," prompting a senior RepubliCan tochastlze him
for an "unseemly" attempt to embarrass the administration.
·
The disagreement occurred Wednesday during a House Foreign
1\ffairs subcommittee hearing on the weekend r.t!sslon to China of
Brent Scowcroft, the president's national security aUairs adviser,
and Deputy Secretary or State Lawrence Eagieburger.
. The visit prompted protesls from Democrats that Bush was
''kowtowing" to the Chinese in the pursuit of supl'rpower interests at
the expl'nse of the sacrifice of pr&lt;Hiemocracy demonstrators killed
en orders of hard-line leaders last June.
• Doak Barnett, a China scholar for 40 years, endor~ the trip as an
; Important effort to prevent the nuclear power and world's most
: populous nation from again submerging into isolation as a result of
' the international condemnation of the massacre at Tiananmen
; Square and jailing or political dissidents.
' But Gejdenson said Scowcroft and Eagiebu.-ger, who have Ior
•' years .enjoyed widespread respect from Democrats and Republicans
~ in: Congress, were sent to China "to humbiP themselves" for the
' sanctions Bush ordered in response to the crackdown.
:. He said Bush could send Eagleburger 6,000 miles to China to
~ "apologize," but not 2 mUes to Capitol Hill to te&gt;tify at the hearing: attended by five House members.
:. "By bowing and scraping to the butchers of Beijing, the
: administration has sent China and the world a message that Is not ·
~ worthy of the world's greatest democracy," he said.
. That was enough for Rep. Jim Leach, R-lowa, who said It was
; "unseemly" for Gejdenson to leave Eagleburger·~ Identification sign
: on the witness desk before his empty seat.
; Leach called Scowcroft and Eagleburger two "ethical profession: :alt" who used the high-risk mission to raise many significant issues
/:lieiween Washington and Beijing -and noted the trip prompted a
;~ge by China aot to sell ba!Ustlc missiles to any Middle East

:.mltJon.

.

Auto industry ha8 a friend ·in Cong~·ess.

~~;;:!:~o:; t!~~e~~~l:rth~~~b~Ut~0;~ ~~~S:s :~.c~e; grc:,:~

. ~ stability," he said.
' Merle Goldman of BoMon University disagreed, saying China has a
; weak and unstable government with "no place to go," and that no
; American concessions "should be made without Beijing's release of
· political prisoners or the lifting of emergency laws.
.
•''

..

Berry's World

we don't get some reforms around here,

there could b6 protest marches. "
I :

..

By 8. III'ENCD OOOBNE

OV'P ltaft Writer

So~thern will play the Eastern
Eagles three times this seuon,
twtce in less than 18 hoiml this
weekend.
No, the Racine live won't play
Coacll Charles Riley's Eaales on
back-to-back dates, but the Tornadoes, who like Riley's Eagles
boastidenticai4-0 league records
·aad share the top percII In the
cohterence, wlll play another set
of Eastern Eagles Saturday at
noon at Ohio University's Convocation Otlllttr In Athens. Unlike
the Tornadoel' archrlvals, whom
they will host Friday night, these
-Eagles, which come from Beaver
In eastern Pike County, wear
brown and orange.
Riley's Eagles will give Howle
' Caldweli's charges the hardest
fight they've had so far. Granted,
the Eagle~~ aren't as fluid as the
Tornadoes on the last break, buf
t~e Eagles ~~hard and can
.. run If given th&amp; opportunity. But
the Eagles lhoilldn't ~ook for
many · opportunUtes tO run
against fbe Tornadoes •; 32mlnute, full-court press, nor
should Eastern look to have time
to set up for ~pointers, as
Tornado backcourt artists Andy
Baer, Todd Grindstaff and Chad
• Taylor will use their quick hands
aitd smothering defense to deny
Eagle three-polilt shooters Shaun
Savoy and Kenny Caldwell the
outside game.
The Tornadoes, who thanks to
· Mother Nattire have had 10 days
to prepare for this hardwood
marathon, · know they must run
and keep the court In a cauldron,
bec&amp;ll!le •the li;agles can easily
capliallze on zone defenses, as
they did In tllelr three-point.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
deaths · a year. The bill also
toughens the construction stand·
ards for minivans, light trucks
and lour-wheel drive vehicles.
It isn't the tough standards that
Olngell seems to mind. It's the
deadlines written in the law by
whlcli NHTSA must meet those
standards. Opponents of the bill,
Including the auto Industry,
resent the fact that Congress not
only wants to mandate general
safety rules but that It sets
deadlines for the lethargic
NHTSA to make sure the job gets
done. ·
Joan Claybrook was the
NHTSA administrator during the
Carter administration an·d now is
president of Public Citizen, Nader's consumer advocacy group.
Dlngell hates to see her coming.
She says NHTSA needs the
deadlines to motivate ft. "This
agency has done practically
nothing for eight years," she told
our reported Greg Moore.

bll~ Sen. Rlcbard Bryan, D-Nev. ;
said, "NHTSA •has a lonaer
gestatiOn period than anything
found under the laws ot nature."
His llittmldatlng tactics make
ltunllkelythat.anyoneelseonthe
coi'IUIIIttee wnJ champion the
·bill. His reputation for playing
hardball Is unmatched on Capitol
Hill.
Dlngell has fought alr bags
since 1978 when he led a battle to
keep NHTSA from Implementing
mandatoryalrbagrules.Fortwo
months last summer, D111geil
found himself the reluctant gui•
nea pig In an air bag test. His
wife, Debbie Dingell, Is manager
of strategic planning for General
Motors, and she was testing a
company Oldsmobile . equiped
with air bags.
,
The system appl'ared to have
no problems, she told us, but
Dingell was uneasy. "He was .
waiting for It to explode In hla
lace," she said.

,........-!~~~Se~n~a~te:,!h~e~a~r~ln~g~s~o~n~t~he~--~-----_:.'1

.

.

'

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'TO ~y f"OR 11':

I

I

•,

.

comebaet wtn aaalnst SoutbwetRrn -ru.tday ntabt. If not, &amp;-0
eenlors Brad Maynard and Breat
Sllull!r, Racine's guardtau af the
paint, wUI have to put all their
resources Into repelling i-4 senior center Mike Froat and 6-0
eenlor forward Scott Fitch, 1»cauae Fitch will take any open
lane In the paint and quickly
dr ive lutde, and the atmosph~r~
lfOWld the rim ill lust rlrht Jor
. Froat.
Simply pu t,.Jf the Tornadoes
ru11, they'll Win. If the Eagles
IIIB tltute the llaltcourt game,
Soutbern wlll be In trouble.
Th~ Eagles will also have to
play Saturday, but they will have
the home-court advantaae wllen
they , face Symmes Vallly that
night.
'
BlpJilDd..-.WIIdcllis
Practice for both teams should
be conducted with mirrOrs, as !be
quicknesa and height factors lot
both squads are virtually
Identical.
'
Hanaan Trace, like Southern.
.Will bave had 10 days !O Jlftll&amp;1'*.
,. for lt.s weekend hoops marathon,"
which begins with Southwestern
Friday night and ends with North
GaiDa on Saturday night. By then
point guard Eric Uoyd Will be
ready to n!turn the reillll to a
recovered J .J. Bevan. who was
-out for the Wildcats' last two
games becau~ of a kidney
infection. .

SVAC 8landings

CRIMINAL UCOIDS.

•

IN APVANCE.

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60212 Model 240 16'' ......................S21900

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Congress is our broker of pillage.

As one who has long felt that
the confrontational mlndset of
the cold-war needed to be reevaluated and moderated given the
existing nuclear arsenals of the
super powers and the potential
they hold for destroying the earth
as we know It, I've always been
eager to see the kind of lace tq
face exchange that took place
thll past week between the U.S.
and the Soviets.
11 current _developmen\4 In
world events continue, the recent
Malta aummlt between Pres!·
dent Bulb and Soviet Pretldent
Gorbaclu!v may well go down In
bill tory aa tbe turning point for a
new era In U.B./Soviet relations.
For tbe flnt time slnoe the
Second World War, the Prealtlent
ot the U.S. and tbe leader of tbe
Soviet Union aat dowa toptber to
dllcula common aoa11 rather
than to dllcu11 way• to reduce
teaslouln the face of conflicting
goala. Becauee of tbll, blltory
may well view the Malta summit
u the primary event marlllng
the end of tbe cdld war.
In fact, the entire tone and
atmoepbere of tbe Malta summit
wu anything but cold Both
leaders sought to buUd a warm

nesty and Integrity are my life,"
he declared In one interview) .
Help out a wealthy contributor In
trouble? Why, what of it? Provlding aid and comfort to the
distressed Is a senator's highest
duty.
Which Is, of course, the lnadvertent truth, II not quite In the
sense Glenn intended it. ln·fact,
Glenn has · unconsciously explalned a great deal about why
Congress functions as It does,
and why operators like Lincoln
chairman Charles Keating sanctimonious scoundrels - so
rarely get their comeuppance.
Look at the scandals In federal
housing programs. It would be a
simple matter for Congress to
cleanse these programs of graft
and Inside deals: Just halt
subsidies to contractors and gtve
the money directly to poor
renters. But Congress won't,
because to do so would distress
housing bureaucrats, developers
and assorted middlemen -loudmouth constituents aiL
Trimming the federal d"flclt
would be easy, too, if Congress
could only tolerate a bit of

distress among otherwise comfortabie voters. Literally billions
of doUars are squandered on
agricultural aid to corporate
conglomerates and well· to-do
farmers, but Congress lacks the
courage to stop tt. Too many
constituents would be distressed.
And guess why Congress won't
halt large subsidies to large
corporate exporters? Correct:
more distressed mUIIonalres.
Congress doesn't only protect
the wealthy, of course. It is just
as attuned to the distress of
prlvUeged segments of the middie class. That's why Congress
refuses to reform the clvU
service retirement system,
whose benefits. far exceed anything In the private sector.
And It Is why our elected
officals tolerate an unnaturally
costly . health-care system for
veterans - which treats, for the
most part, ailments wholly unreJated to combat. Not to mention
lavish military pensions, outrageous dairy price supports, or
-to name just two more logical
candidates for the chopping
block - subsidized electricity

.

Presidents Bush and Gorbachev did however, come to an
informal agreement on a number
of significant Issues at the
summit. Most Importantly, they
agreed to agressively work towards resolving ongoing negotiations on long-range nuclear weapons and conventional arms in
the hopl' that treaties may be
Signed on these Issues In 1990.
They also agreed to hold another
summit In the United States In
June.
In addition, the two leaders
discussed several proposals by
President Bush aimed at assist·
lng the economic reform underway In the Soviet Union. In this
regard, the President said that
he would recommend the lifting
of basic U.S. trade restrictions
against Moscow.
.
However, despite the wtdes·
pread areas of agreement at the
summit, several fundamental
areu of disagreement were also
apparent. Moat Importantly,
President Bush pr111ed the Soviet Leader to bring preuure to
bear on the commuallt govern·
ment of Nlcarapa to end Ita
support for the leftist rebels in El

v

• ...,, .... 17

•' -l

~

00

HYDE

A GREAT NEW ELECTRIC
STAPlE GUN FOR THE
HOME H"ND't'IIIAN OR WOMAN!

'

Tam .. ...,. at OM Nit, I p.m.

-..4 •.
......... ""-&amp; ,.m.

VnJ.Cent Car.roll

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from Power Marketing Administrations and the Rur!ll Electrification Administration. · ·
The potential list of sensible
budget cuts In almost endless,
but year after year Congress ·
Ignores lt. Our leaders prefer to
repeat the convenient fiction that
the federal government has been
trimmed to the bOne.
"The state consists of a gang of
men exactly like you and me.
They have, 'taking one withanother, no special talent for the
business of government; "they
have only a talent for getting and
holding office. Their principal
device to that end is to search out· ·
groups who pant and pine for ·
sompthlng ·they can't Ret and ·to
promiSe to give It to them. ' ·
"Nine times out of 10 that
promise Is worth nothing; .The .
lOth time it Is made good by
looting A to satisfy B. In other
words, government Is a broker In
pUiage, ·and every election ls ·a·
sort of advance auction of stolen
goods.''
Amen.

Salvador. Mr. Gorbachev also
declined to go along with a new
Bush Initiative to reduce the level
of chemical arms in the world.·
Similarly, President Bush would
not go along with a Gorbachev •
proposal for negotiations to .reduce the level of naval forces
presently deployed by the two
super,powers.
It was notable, however, that
even when discussing these
areas of disagreement, PreS!·
dents Bush and Gorbachev' s '
claim that' the Soviets hall
stopped shipping arms to·Central
America. In resJl!lnse he simply
suggested to Mr. Gorbachev that
the Soviets have been misled by
the Sandlnlstas. Slmllar(y,
rather than reject Mr. Bush's
proposal for chemical weapolll!
reductions outright, Mr. Gorba- '
chev responded that the pJ"Oo
posed was ''new'' and
"Interesting."
In summary, only history wlll
tell bow permanent this ' new
positive approach In U.S.ISOvtet
relatiOns will be. Certainly the
future for such relatlonl now
loo~ a lot more promising as a
'result of this recent get together.

•"

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1999

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4911108

. Register

Gelllea..... llh...._.

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Olllk..OI.Me ... all
TenMile .a, Dill .... 2
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A: II p.m.

.ing, of a neW era Cong. Clarence Miller

and cordial relationship based
upon respect for each other's
concerns. For his part, Soviet
leader Gorbachev tried to reassure Americans about his foreign
policy Intentions. He proclaimed
that the · Ideological struggles
between our countries should be
a "thing of the past" and he
declared that the Soviet Union
would never stlirt a "hot war" ·
against the United States. In
· turn, President Bush reassured
Gorbachev that the u.s. would
not provoke Instability In the
Eastern Bloc and offered support
for Gorbachev' 1 efforts to restructure Soviet society. ·
Thill new attitude was epltomJz.ed In, their joint news confer. ence at the end of the summit
whlcb wu .characterized by a
remarkable deiree of agreement
on laauelaacb u the M1ddle Eut
. and anna control that have
traditionally been attclllna polnta
In the U.S./Sovlet relatlonablp.
Thua, wbUe !bill summit dld 1101
produce uy new formal agree. menta or treaties, It did tay down
a foundation of cooperation upon
which future agreement&amp; be. tween ,our two countrlet can be
buUt.

\o•

8Q .. 011 ...... I p.D'I :
. , ..... ill ClltCIHii~ .• p.m.
. . ..,. at .... _ , . , I p.111.
~~~~-- al CleH,Iatl. I p.m. ,

.

. .SJ .·f100·"C'·J····t··'··
....................-................

60214 SXL Auto •

Dl!awrll&amp;ft.-.,4,...
Gree~~

.

60210

Iamie IA!d ... I h .. ., IPrMk
"1!
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•

·•.

the &amp;-0 eenlor, who has accounted
point missile plallorm who,
Kyger Creek Friday nltllt, their more than 20 points In a game,
.lor a third of the Hlgbllndera'
and
he
did
It
once
a
23-point
scored
a game- and season-hlghadvantaaes In heliht and quick·
oHense after six aames, won't
ness should 11111 allow them to effort against Eastern last week. 30 points, T1 of them on bonus
have to take on the llon'sshareof
come out with the victory. But The drought will end someday, buckets, In their 69-U&amp; loss to:
the oflenee, as junior center
the Pirates know that If they but not against the Pirates.
McDermott Northwest Tuesday
Chris Metzger has picked up
Vildl!p-Oab
shoot Into the GO·pl'rcent range
n~ht, will seek to draw the:
quickly on low-post play In his
Even though Symmes Valley
from the field aplnst the 0-5
Vikings out the paint and away
flnt varsity season with doublefrom Smith. But the Oaks had
Bobcats, they will have the has won Its last two games, Oak
figure scoring efforts In his last
opportunity to start a habit that Hill lhould pick up Its first win
better learn to play defense - :
four games .
and last, because if Chad Renwill stand them In good stead lor Friday night, as the Oaks will put
T!'ace has L'Ome close to
6-4 senior Chad Smith against
fr oe, a 6-ljunlor forward whc had
the rest of the season.
shooting 50 percent from the field
Kyger Creek hu dropped Its either the Val~y·s Kevin Nicho- his second 20-polnt-plus effort of
just one,., alld that was in Its
the season In Valley's 11-point
las I eight games and shows little las (6-2, sr.) or Todd Casteel (6-3,
landslide victory over Symmes
win over Kyger Creek Tuesday
signs of putting that streak to an jr. ) in the paint.
But that's not the i:lggest
Valley, when the 'Catsshot25for
night, can take advantage of a~
end. Though the Bobcats have
58 ((3.1%). If the Wildcat&amp; are to been getting to the boards with reason why the Hillis the odds-on · Oak Hill squad that has commit•
beat the Highlanders, as they
favorite to win. Junior forward
ted at least 30 turnovers a game
regularity, only one player have usually done at home In center John !!lpple- has scored Shane Maynard, the Oal(s' threeIn Its last four games, the Oak!\
recent years, front-liners such as
will be headed farther and
Todd Boothe, Riehle Cornell and
farther into a season-long night
Craig Rankin must not let the
In the cellar.
•
· Hliblanders' tough defense disGames re8&lt;heduled
(Alii-)
·
(Keeerves)
tract them 1rom shooting f9r a
The North Gallia-Oak Hill
TEAM
· W L PF PA TEAM
W L PF PA
higher pl'f.Centa&lt;e in tbe paint, Eastern ....•..........5 1 451 406 Sou~rn ........... 4 0 212 136
game, which was postpone~
and Wildcat guards such as Southern. ............. 4 0 317 2311 Oak Hill ........... 2 1 140 131
because of last week's snowJason Black, Lloyd and Bevan Southwesrern&gt;..... . 3 3 . 440 403 North Galllil .....2 1 139 122
storm , will be played on Tuesmust use radar to guid' them SymmeS Valley ... 2 1 248 Til Hannan Trace .. 2 2 128 103
day, Jan. 2, according to Nor111.
past tbe high-pressure defense Hannan Trace ..... 2 2 239· 231 !lymmes Valley 2 . 2 166 174
Gallia principal Patrick Stout. •
Southwestern guards Joe HamNorth Gallia ..... ... 2 3 342 332 · Eastern ......... ...1 3 149 177
mond, Bill Potter and Brad Oal! Hlll .............. p_ 5 308 382 Southwestern . .. .2 -3 202 231
Bryant will offer.
Kyger Creek .. ......0 ~ 273 436 Kyger Ctteek ..... o 4 119 181
CDs, CASSITTES, POSTDS, • ,
Bobcat•Pirates
TOTALS .. .. .... 15 U 1215 1Z55
StilTS, SONG 10015,
' In light of the .fact that North
(SVAC gamel)
MAGAZMS, GIRTAI
Gallia has not shot 50 pl'rcent 'l'EAM
w L PF PA
Friday's J&amp;mell
from the fioor after five ·g ames Sou.thern ..........:4 0 317 239 Eastern at Southern
ACCESSO.S, IUTTONS
!hill year, skipper Tom Riccardi Eastern ..... :......4 0 291 245 Southwestern at Hannan Trace
may want to paint a sip In the · Hannan Trace ..2 1 196 176 Kyger Creek at North Gallia
Pirates' gym that reads "Take . Symmes Valley 2 2 248 271 Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
43 CMrt St., G 'lpals, IIIJ, '
ail the shols you want, buOilake Southwe~tern .... 2 3 351 36o
Slliunlay '• action
446-3302
all the shots you take." ' ·
North Gallia ...• .1 2 209 1~7 Pike Eastern vs. Southern at
J
Cutto~
O.,tan Muat Be , •
Granted, the. Pirate$ have Oak Hill ......... ::o 3 192 · 238 Athens, noon
Ma• lly Dec . 19
But the Wildcats must do what enough quickness and aggres: Kyger Creek::· .. 0 4 ~ 310 Hannan Trace at North Gallia
flO, a 120 Gift
only two teams - Pak Hili and slveness that even If they ~n't 'TO'JIAL8 ........15 u · ze• 21138 Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
Symmes Valley "": have been "shoot at least 50 pl'rcent again~!
Certlfleateo Available
Symmes Valley at Meigs East' ·
.__,;;;;;;.;;;,;;;;~~=~ .;
able to do, ant! that Is to contain
. "
"' · ,. er111 ·
Southwestern forward John Ehman, If containment can be used
to desert~ holdlni blm to 19 and
18 points, respectively. However,

-- __ .............

Result•

\

No remorse. No regrets. Only
defiance or tightly closed lips.
This Is how lour of five senators
- the "Keating Five" - have
_reacted to the embarrassing
revelations that their.pressureon
federal regulators delayed actlon against Lincoln Savings and
Loan and so cost taxpayers ($1.5
billion.
Even Sen. John McCain, RAriz.; the sole member of the
cabal to express second
thoughts, mainly regrets the
"appl'arance of Impropriety."
He did nothing technically
wrong, you understand. It Is
pl'rfectly normal, apparently, to
strong-arm regulators on behalf
of wealthy contributors, but to
the extent that such actions look
bad- meaning, if people like you
and me might resent them they should be avoided.
·Come to think of It, McCain's
patronizing attitude Is more
lrrltatlng than the blunt .unrepentance of Sen. John Glenn.
D-Ohlo. To hear Glenn defend
himself, you'd think St. Francis
of Assist had returned to Inhabit
an ex-astronaut's be~: : "~o-

3

..

1HE"f Wf\N'f €-rt\llAL BEAA~Io~?
FINE. WE CAN GNE "THl:M
·
E1'1o\ICAI.. !&gt;E"'A'II OR_.

The

"If

leglsiaUon, eatlmates tbat
100,000 lives could have been
saved had all the safety measures Dingell has opposed gone
Into effect when they were first
put on the table.
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader calls Dlngell, "the No. 1
enemy cit consumers In tbe House
of Representatives."
Sitting In one of Dlngell's
subcommittee&amp; currently Is the
reauthorization bill for the National Highway Trafltc Safety
Administration (NHTSA), the
agency that writes and enforces
auto safety standards. The bill
passed the Senate unanimously
In Auglist, but. if history Is any
Indicator, it will sit In the House
for a long time. The last reauthorization bill died in Di11gell's
committee 1111987.
The current v~rslon Includes
some long-overdue changes.
Among them are provisions to
reduce the damage from sldP.Impact accidents that are re·
sponslbie lor more than 9,000

The Dally Sentinel hg1

Eagles, Tom&amp;does battle for fll'8t place Friday night

Th&amp;nday. Deoember 14. 19~

WASHINGTON- The technolOIY baa.beell around for years to
subotantlalty reduce the number
of people who die every year In
traffic accldentl, but the auto
Industry has retlsted safety
modlflcatlons. Stubborn resistance alone would not have
stymied safety regulations If the
auto makere did not have a friend
on Capitol Hill - Rep. John
Dlngell, the Democrat from
Detroit.
Olngelll has championed the
cause of consumers on many
Issues, but when It com'l" to auto
safety, be bas a blind spot. As one
auto safety expl'rt put It, "Dingell Is the congressman from
Detroit, not the congressman
from the United States."
SinCe 1981, Dlngell has used his
powerful position as chairman of
the House Energy and Commerce Committee to stall almost
every important piece of proposed auto safety legislation. The
Center for Auto Safety, a private
group that lobbies for stronger

-------------------

~

Pomeloy-Midclapcrt, Ohio

SVAC cage preview

Pega 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pclnwov-MidrlapcM't, Ohio

·

• · ' 'I think the majority has overstated its case to such an extent that It
; ulil1ercu ts your concerns," Leach said of Gejdenson's criticisms.
; lt Is ironic, Leach said, that "liberals" who have pressed for arms
:control with Moscow and better relations with Latin America
: "appl'ar lri this instance to prefer a posture of rhetorical belligerency
~ toward a formidable nuclear power rather than firm, principled
• dialogue."
; "This time it Is the Democratic Party that appl'ars to prefer
: ideological Intransigence and it Is a Republican president wl!o wants
.-to open the door io the future ...
;. Barnett, of Johns Hopkins University, spent five months In China
• last year, returning alter the June 4Tiananmen Square massacre. He
: strongly supported Bush's decision, and said Congress should not
; automatically condemn the effort to Improve Sino-American ties "In
• the heat of emotion."
~ "The reason It Is lmpl'rativetocontlnuetalklngtotheChlneseat"the
~- highest levels is that China is a country of Immense Importance, a

-----

......
22 99

1999

R98d
Air

pan11y door, utility room, etc.

18Wx 72H in.

.....

A

Giant

Par Emergency
inflatel

~uor

tires tine! air lllac:t.,

8'

551531

The -Daily Sentinel '

.

'

179000uai

(tiSI'II_,
AniJIIoitf'"'t-• .ef Mllllss•a. .. e;

(All Games)
TEAM .
WLPOP
Miller .. ........... ..... 3 0 218 189
Wellston ... .. ......... 2 0 117 104
Belpre ............ .. .. .3 1 280 251
TrJa.lble ..... ,......... 2 1 215 207
-vJaton Counlf ...... 3 ~ 311. 303
Fed-Hoc~........ 2 3 342 350
Alexander ........... 1 3 276 280
Meigs .......... .. . .'... ,1 2 136 177
~els· York ..... .......0 5 234 336
Tueadq'l JUDell:
Federal Hocking 67 Trimble 66
Wellston 70 Alexander 58
·Melgs50 Nelsonville-York 43
Miller - open
Belpre 69 Vinton County 63
Frldq'• .....ell:
reda'al _ . _ at Alexallder

.. ~pre - pPen
. ......,'ij)lhw:
~exander vs.

,.

Ceredo-Kenova, at

0\J

Berne Union at Miller
Trimble va. Huntlnaton, at OU
VInton County vs. Greenfield, at

ou

Wallltea VI. Wallla.all,la4, at OU

.

.. .....

.

'

batt.~.

llohlnl Compony/Multbnedla. Inc..
Pomeroy, Oblo 611719, Ph. 9112-2156. Second class po~t.ae paid al Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: Unltld Pr-lntenaUonal,
lniUcl Don, PrtuAuaolatlonand tbe
Ohio Newlpl=r::AIIIO&lt;Iatlon. N•ttonal

Mvlltlllltl
l!lllattv•.Branham
Now~ TS3 Tlllrd AYillllo,
Now Yortc, !lti"J:'Ofk ID017. .

33 99

to 'l1N DillY a""' U1 Clout k,
POI'niASTER:
Ptmws
e, Cillo ..._ - IKJBKUP'l'ION 11.\TIIII
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CUrl•- Mli.. . . . .
0ae Week.... .............. ...... .. .. ...... .$1.e
Oae Month ............ ,.......... .............10

o.. Yeor ................................. mil
liNGLE COPY
PaiCZ

.

~ .

Prices Effective thru
Saturday, Decllllber 23, 1919

Dally .... ............................... :til Ceoll

"Not ftMpOnlible for Typographical Erroro ...
•

MIQ.at W.ellltan

: . ~at V.lllton Count¥
~Yilllt·York at Trimble

with-

table oamllinalion Joclt, 4-in.

PuiiUabed every afterDOCil, Monday
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'·

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Christmas
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Tluldey, Dec11mber 14, 1N9

Paga 4 The o.i!y Sentinel

Redtromen ready for road contests
Rio Grande's Redwomen are
·on tile road In northern Ohio this
weekend and despite a loss
earlier this week to Shawnee
State, they are ready to capital·
lze on some good things arising
from that game.
Pleasing to Coach Doug Foote
was the Rio ladles' improved
shooting as they converted 28 of
53 field goal attempts for 52.8
percent. Against Mount St. Jo,
seph last Saturday, they were
34.5 percent (19-55) and 35.1
percent (27-771 In their 66·54 win
over Cedarville on Dec. 5.
By employing an aggressive
offense. an area In which the
team had been lacking In the
early part of the season, Rio
Grande sliced down Shawnee
State's lead to single digits and
led 37-35 at halftime on performances by Angle Packard,
Kathy Snyder and Kerr! Kidwell.
Rio Grande's large number of
turno\lers were u tlllzed by the
Lady Bears of Coach Robin
Hagen-Smith to pull in enough
extra points in the final minutes
for a 78-71 victory.
The Redwomen will travel to
Lake Erie on Friday for a 6 p.m.
game, and will head to Cleveland
Saturday to be hosted by firstyear team Notre Dame (Ohio) In
a 2 p.m. encounter.
Foote plans to start Jennl
Couch (5.1 points per game) at
point guard and Debbie Fredrick
(6.6 points, 3 assists) at the
shooting guard slot against Lake
Erie's Beth Mullen (5-7), a
transfer student who wlll be
playing her first game tor the
Storm, and Ann McKeon (5-4. 8

and overall consistency. It owns
points. 4 rel)ounds).
wins
over Mount Vernon NazaStarting forwards for Rio
rene.
50-48; Ohio DominiCan,
Grande Include Kidwell (8
63-48;
Lakeland
Community Col·
points, 5.7 rebounds) and Snyder
·lege,
71-61;
and
Pennsylvania
(6.1 points, 4.6 rebounds) . Angle
70State
Unlverslty-Shenango,
Kane (5-8, 7.5 points. 6 rebounds)
52.
Losses
have
been
to
Tl!tin,
will oppose Kidwell at small
forward while Julle Staska (6-0, 9 68-46; Gannon (Pa.). 96-42; Carpoints. 8.7 rebounds) will face negie Mellon (Pa.), 88·28; HI·
ram, 76-55; Mount St. Joseph,
Snyder as power forwar.~ Ann Barnitz continues as Rio 85-33; Oberlin, 60-53; and Walsh.
Grande's leading scorer (14.7per 75-66. Lake Erie plays Notre
game) and rebounder (6.2 per Dame tonight.
Notre Dame' s program Is
outing) at center. She wlll
confront Cheryl Burden (6-0, 7.5 " going well overall, but with an
points, 7 rebounds ) for Lake all-freshman team, It's almost a
dally thing." according to Coach
Erie.
The Storm, coached by Its Roxanne Allen, who has guided
former assistant, Richard And- the ruue Falcons to a 3-3 record
erson, Is 4-7 and looking to entering the Lake Erie contest.
Allen's probable starters In·
overcome problems with Injuries

cludeUsa Oravecz (5-6,4polnlll
at point guard and Jacqule Fllple
(5-5. 9 points, 3.2 asslalll •• the
off guard. Aqela Neff (5-7, f
points) will take small forward
and Hollie Kslezyk (5-10, 14.2
points, 10.7 rebounds) Is the
power forward. Center will be
Selene Rich (5-11. 10 polnll, 12
rebounds).
The Blue Falcons have posted
victories over Malone. 88-84;

Lakeland Cornmunl!y Colleae.
54-$3; · and Dyke, ~71. Lo111n

Spcn briefs

to Waltb, !16-54; Cuyaqa
Community Coltep, 75-Q; and
MaiCXII, 83-ft.
ClirrentJy, the.Redwomen posa G.5 percent field aoat
standlnl (213-5011 aad are 6U
percent on free throws (82-123).
They have ICOred 527 points and
nrrendered 524 to their
opponents.

Los Anples Kings teammates
Wayne Gretzky and Luc RDbltaiUe were running 1-2 In Camp-bell Conference vottna for the
NHL All-Star team. GretzkY
received 210,883 votel for center
In voting through Dec. 8 and
Roblt.llle had 210,747 at ten
wing.

Wlll'l!

Hoe key

Jim Cobb's Year End
Used Car··~Tax Reduction
Sale!!l

89 -schemhechler steps down as Michigan football coach
me stepping down at this time Is I
don't want to run my luck too far.
... I just think at 60 years of age
It's time for me to step down." .
Schembechler, the Wolverines' coach since 1969, Is the
wlnnlngest football coach at
Michigan with a record of 194-475 through 1988. He never has had
a losing season ln. 26 years as a
coach.
"I've been a very fortunate
coach," he said. "I've coached 27
years as a head coach. That had ·
to be, when I was appointed In
this room, the greatest day of my
life because Michigan Is special
and the opportunity to coach here
was tremendous.
"If I shed a tear It's not
because I'm sad. I hate to leave
the players. I'll miss coaching,
but Its time to go."
In thepasttwoseas~ns,Schem-

By !!CHARD L SHOOK
uPUporta Writer .
ANN ~BOR, Mich. !UP!) Bo Sc~bechler, the fifth wlnnlngest coach In coneae football
history, said Wednesday he will
resiiiJI as 'U!Iiverslty of Michigan
coach after the, Rose Bowl hut
Will remain the Wolverines'
athletic director.
He will be replaced by Gary
Moeller, his assistant head coach
and .offensive coordinator the
last three. /ie!ISons.
Sc.hembechler, 60, has suffered
heart problems the past 20 years.
He had a heart attack before the
1970 Rose Bowl and underwent
major heart .surgery In 1987.
"I want It understood I am In
good ,hape physically," he said
at a news conference. "There's
nothing wrong with my health
although a primary reason for

2 DAYS ONLY
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BO To RETIRE - UaiYenlly of Mlchlgaa football coach Bo
: Scbemjleehler (R) llup Gary Moeller, hit! u8181ant helld ·coach
i durin( a p,...s ccniference Wednesday, where Schembeehler
·• UIIOUIICed he would rei Ire after the Roae Bowl game January 1,
ud pleked Moeller lo replace hbn. Scbembl!chler, 10, coached
, Mlcl!llan for the past 21 years. (UPI)

CADILUC·GEO INC.
PO.IOY, OliO

·.: Oaks' -Webb named
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You'll Find Plenty of
Christ•as Sawingslt
Stewart's Gun &amp; Supples &amp; Gift Shop
Friday, December 15th thru
Saturday, December 23rdll

· IIJ GENE CADDES
'" (JpJ Sports Wrl&amp;er
COLUMBUS, Ohio · (UPII
Runnllli back Ron Mast of West
Jefferson and Steub~~vii.Je Catholic I_WO-w~y ' lineman Frank
·Marclno head the 1989 United
-Press Internalloltal Division IV
'All-Ohio football team. .
_ Mast, a 5-8, 175-pounder,
·scored 70 touchdowns In his
'three-year c~r!lt West Jefferson, f.!iq!udllig 30 the past season
'ivhen ·he also rushed for 2,162
yards, averaging 8.1 yards · a

·carry.

1

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·------

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) history of River Downs when she
The Ohio State Racing Commisrode 31 winners at Its last fall
sion has upheld a judges' rulln~:
meeting.
a.n&lt;l a hearing officer's recom. Tbe commission also approved
mendation that Jaguar Spur be
of!lclals, surety bond waiver.
declared .winner of the $100,000
post limes, number of races,
"Battle .of Lake·Erie" June 3 at
betUng format and slmulcasUng
for the 76-day thoroughbred meet
Northfl~ld Park.
, Wednesday's • decision came
from Jan. 5 to May 6 at Beulah
after a te:ngthy discussion at the Park In Grave City, for the 89·day
meeting from Jan. 1 to May 18 at
end of Its regular- monthly
meeting and reviewing testimNorthfield Park and the 74-day
ony and tapes of the race between, meeting at Lebanon Raceway.
Matt's Scoi&gt;ll!r,and Jaguar Spur. · both harness tracks.
::; Matt's Scooter originally won
the race. but was pia ced second
l!ehlnd Jaguar Sp1jr for Interference .by driver Don O'Dwyer of
Brooklyn, Ohio, who also was
~vena 3-day driving suspension.
.Juguar' ·Spur was driven by
Richard SUIUngs of Washington,
Pa.
·
. The winner's share oft he purse
\las $50,000 and second place was
worth $25,000.
.
::: Matt's Scooter Is the leading
candidaII! tor the 1989 ':Horse of
!he Year" and Jaguar Spur was
the winner of the 1987 Little

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son records Include six touchdowns In a game, bepch presses , ·•
360 pounds.
"H~'s · such a strong kid," said
Metz, "but he really works at it.
That's one of the nice things
abOut Ronnie. He's just as hard a
worker as he Is talented."
Marclno, a 6-2, 240 pounder,
played center a year ago, when
he was a second team All-Ohio
selection, hut moved to guard
this season. He also was an
outstanding defensive lineman,
leading the Crusaders In tackles
with 95, lnludlng seven quarterback sacks and 10 other tackles
behind the line of scrimmage..
"Even though he. was our
biggest lineman, he also was the
most mobile," said Steubenville
Catholic coach Mark Bjelac.
"We liked to lead him. He was
critical In our short yardage
situations. "
Tbe versatile Marrlno Is a
catcher on the Crusader baseball
team and also did the football
!P,am's placekiCking.
"He's one of the most mobile
big kids I've seen In a long time
and a team player, •• said Bjelac.
"When we asked him to !nove to
guard this vear, he just said 'no
Continued on page 6

Jaquar Spur Battle of Lake Erie winner.

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amount of speed, but" he's probably got . the ~&gt;est balance of
·anybody I've ever seen," said
·west Jeff coach Dave Metz. " He
cuts back against the flow as
good as anybody I've seen, also."
·· Mast. who . rushed for 1,400
yards as a sophomore and more
than 1,800 last season, carried 750
Urnes In his career for 5,457
yardS~ an avetag11 of 7.2 yards
every time he touched the ball.
. "With 750 carries, It's obvious
he's durable," said Metz. "He's
played hurt, but when you get
that adrenalln going, It's a
different st.o ry:; ·
Mast.-whose.manyWestJetfer-

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the game with a 15-4 run over the
iast 3:05.
After EMU's Roger Lewis
basket hit the first basket of the
game, the Eagles (7-6) took their
brief and only lead on Garth
Howard's 3-polnt field goal. Tbe
Hurons responded by hittlngllof
the next 13 points to take a 13-5
advantage.
Howard led St. Mary's with 11
pOints. James Lakes and Denny
Butcher each added 10.

IIICIS II BOCII

GIFT SHOP•••••• ALL CHIISTMAS ITEMS

•

Oosterbaan.
Schembechler's outburst ln.
1973 after Michigan and Ohio
State played to a 10-10 tie and a
share of the Big Ten title
prompted the current tiebreaking procedure to determine
the conference's Rose Bowl
representative.
Before then a . vote of the
conference athletic directors determined the Blg Ten entrant
with no team allowed to repeat.
"The state will be the loser,"
Detroit Lions coaach wayne
Fontes said. "He's been a tremendous asset for Michigan.
"I can Imagine him jumping
out of the bOoth If he's AD and,
somebody else Is running his
football team. I wlsh him well.
Maybe It's his time to gQ off Into
the sunset and enjoy life."

IIWCAISaD

We would like to thonk all of our customers
for their bwine11 t'!roughout the year.

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unsuccessful seasons at Illinois
record In bowl games.
from 1977-79 before rejoining the
His 234 victories are four Jess
Michigan staff In 1980. In 1988,
than his mentor, the late Woody
Moeller
masterminded Michl·
Hayes of Ohio State.
gan's
last-play
28-24 victory over
Southern Cal coach Larry
Alabama
In
the
Hall of Fame
Smith coached under Schem·
Bowl.
_
bechler from 1967-68 at Miami
Schembechler, who took over
(OhiO) and 1969-72 at Michigan.
Michigan takes a 10-1 record Into from Bump Elliott In 1969, has
the game against Smith's billed himself a coaching dinosaur, one of the last head coaches
Trojans.
"H's a shock- all of a sudden, who gets down tn the trenches
Bo Is out of the game," Smith with players and actually
said. "Anyone who has coached coaches. He says the trend now
·wllh or played for Bo thought calls for coaches who are slick
he'd coach forever. College foot· public relations men and goad
ball Is losing a great organizers.
Schembechler was an un contributor.''
Under Schembechler, Ml.chl· known when he became Michl·
gan Is p~tting the finishing gan's coach but has since joined
touches on a $12 million football Wolverines coaching legends
building that will house the such as Fielding Yost, Harry
coaching of!lces, meeting and · Klpke, Fritz Crisler and Bennie
weight rooms plus dressing
rooms for practices.
Schembechler confirmed to
UPilong ago his successor would
be Moeller, · wllo coached three

uv•s 011100

TADSI

301 UST IIAIN

KEBRJ KIDWELL

""··

1••1••
for
,._.,._:rhl• Stle./
V"
11•DIOUS

•m
SELL
IEFOII WE PAY

.Jim "Cobb

YPSll..ANT!, Mich. (UPI) Kory Hallas scored 24 points and
Chris Pipkin added 21 Wednesday night to power Eastern
Michigan to a 111-74 nonconference rout of St. Mary's
College.
The Hurons (7-2) Jed 48-33 at
halnlme.
Eastern Michigan continued to
dominate In the second half and
built Its lead to 93-62 with 4:28 ·
remaining. The Hurons finished

Ve•lel11

..___....,~~·~J-

bechler has guided the Wolverines to back-to,back Big Ten
titles and Rose Bowl appearan·
ces. He Is again aiming for a
national championship - one of
the few prizes to have eluded
him.
"Bo Schembechler has meant
a great deal to college football
and the Big Ten Conference, "
Jim Delany, the league's commissioner, said In a statement
from Schaumburg, Ill.
"His success on the playing
field Is well-documented and the
successes hls many former football players have achieved In
their chosen professions after
tbelr playing days were over Is, I
am sure, another great source of
pride. We wish him well."
Schembechler was named athletic director In 1988, replacing
the retiring Don Canham. He
takes a 234·64-8 overall record
Into the Jan. 1 Rose Bowl against
Southern Cal. He holds a 40-17-3
mark at Miami (Ohlol and a 5'11

Eastern Michigan rips foe, 111-74

.......,Alii••

••, 60

Over

The Dally Santiuei-Paga 6

Thurldav. Decerwlbai 14, 1989

. . . . . . . . . . . ., . . .1.1

_.....__

........

'

.. In other business, the commisSion suspended jockeY Lynlee
Smith of Covington, Ky., for six
dayi, effectiVe AprD 21, 1990, for
careless rldlnl at River Down•
on Oct. 29, 1989, af\er she ·
Wlth4rew .an appeal of a atewards' ruling.
Smith became tbe flnt woman ,
to capture a riding title In the
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OPEN SEVEN
.

sw•

9 •·"'·

DAYS A WEEK
daytttroughfridiY
nd•Y
.Mon

hoUrs: 9 a.rn. to 8 p.md tO a.rn. to 5 p.m. su
to 6 p.m. satunltY' an

.

.

...

�Thuradey,
Pag1

Thurldly, t"ecember14. 1989

6 The o.lly Stllilltl

Oaks...

Continued from page~

DIproblem."'
u.. . . - SWve Conkel, Amando·
Besides Mast, the other three ClOll'&lt;~ek. 6-1, 21~ or.: Bryan Dyar ,
members of the first-team often- Akrm Na,nch~r. &amp;.4, nJ, sr.; lla&amp;t
..................... 11. t-1, HI. or.;
·slve backfield were quarterback Devin
RHdll•, 5-.1, 235, jr .
Mark Brungard of Petersburg
''-•'•dr•a- DuTopplq:, Ondnuti
Springfield and running backs lnditln HU~ 6-1, 210, sr.; AnthonyNoplel.
Warren Kenntdy, 5-10, 205, sr.; Mike
Bill Grubaugh of Fredericktown Dlxm, Clllumbuo Hartlty. 5-10, 180. or.;
and Dale Duns ot Burton Berk· J.D. Wouls. Batavia, 1-2, 215. ar.
Badio- Roo Nlplll!llo. Rootstown. 11-1,
shire. Both Brungard and Duns 170,
sr.; lfJke Zapolllk. Steo~beiiVIlle
are juniors, Grubaugh a seniOr.
C.tboUc, 6-3, 190, sr.; nm Vtck~s•.
The :&gt;-8, 180-pound Grubaugh Lolldonvllle, 6-2. m. sr.; Stacy J...,r,
helped lead Fredericktown to a Columbus Hartley, 5-7, 170. sr.
Poo- - DontCII Topplne, Ctndnnotl
10-0 regular season. He rushed Indian Hill, &amp;..1, 210,&amp;r.
for 1,404 yards and scored 22
SECOND TEAM
011touchdowns and added another
Wlde ruelwra- Dlvld Dick, Andover
..400 yards and three more TDs In Pymaluntnc Valley, 5-9, 160, sr.; Chip
Glenny, Eat C.ntm, 5-11, 165, u .
three playoff games.
'liP&amp; •• - Jeff Leate, Lata)'title Allen
Duns, a 5-11, 175.pounder,
E11t, i-1, 215, sr.
.rusHed for 1, 786 yards and 21
U.a• - R .G. Miller, Apple Cleek
touchdowns for a Berkshire team Wayaedale, 6-5, 270, n.; Steve LaMar,
JefferSCII, 6-8, 265, sr.·: Kyle Marell,
which wound up with a 9-l mark. West
New London, 6--4, 235. sr.: Jay LaValle,
He alsnls an outS landing student. WyCI"'Iilll, 6-3, 2'5, sr.
Brungard, a 6-2, 190 pounder,
Ceater - Dave Cas~ella, Perry, 5·10,
completed 164 of 284 passes (57.7 190, sr.
ljur1erboel&lt; - Mallllllllor, Wlo.......
percent) for 2,336 yards and 30 IIIII'J, 1-1. tiS, M'.
. . . . . boel&lt;o - Ken Bal... , Vf!f·
touchdowns the past season,
giving him nearly 3,900yards and sllllel, 5-11, 180. sr.; Scott Smith, Plain
City Jonathalll Alder, 5-10, 170. ar.: Jon
41 touchdowns In two seasons -of WeU., Mt. Blandtud Rl""rdlle, 6-2, 17~
competition.
sr.
,
Plaetlddl• - W!UIIm Harney, Bel·
Brungard's favorite target was
Mile Oeor Fork. 6-0, tn sr.
·
Cory Gregarina, who hauled In 77
o.rpasses for 1,192 yards and 17
u.neo - Ian Nye, Carnlngtm, 6-1,
SeniOr; Scott Newnore. Burtoa
touchdowns. Gregorlno was 200,
Berkshire, 6-3, 225, u.; Joe Uss. New
named as the tight end on the LoDdon. 6-1, 175, sr.; Chad Martz.
first offensive teaJ11.
Archb:&gt;ld, &amp;.0. 170, sr..
U~~ebaekera- ·fl.ark Reed. Sarahsvllte
The first team offensive unit Sheu.ndolh,
&amp;0, 205. sr.; Tom MC'Ciure,
also Included wide receivers Amanda·Clarcreek, 6-2, 215, ir.; Cbad
Jason Evans of Lorain Catholic WIIBCII, PlllnCityJonotllanAidf!f.ll-3, 1115,
and Ryan Kldd of North Robin- sr. : Olrls Kopp, East Canton, 6-3, 195, sr.
Bacia - Anthoay D&amp;vls, Warren
son Colonel Crawford, linemen Kennedy, 5-9, 175, sr.; Dammd Moallle,
Marclno, Brian Froehlich of Gatet Mills Hawken, 5-10, 16,. sr.; Cratg
Black River, 6-Q, 170. sr.; 'IY
' Columbus Academy, left Webb Cllllonl,
Stringfellow, WeUingt(ll, 6-0, ~00. sr.;
of Oak Hill and Andrew Bowman Alrm Peru.sek. Garret1sv~Ue Garfield,
of Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 6-1, 180, sr.
hiller ~ See:1 Freem:~n, Andover
and center Clinton Foor of Pymatunlng
Valley, &amp;-4, 210, sr.
Archbold. The placekicker was
Bad&amp;-of-dle-Ye.er .;... Don Mast, West
!an Viets of Fredericktown.
JetrerSCD.
Uaemaa-ef-lle-Y.,- FrankMau-elno,
Selected to the first team
SteubenvUle CAt hoUc.
defense were ltnemen Steve
Ceaelt-of·tlle-Y•ar - Joe Tresey,
~onkel Amanda-Ciearcreek,
f'redf!fldltown.
lltatl'&amp;bl ... MnUOD U•em•
Bryan Dyser of Akron Manches·
Luke Beal, Clear •·ork; Joe S.Joma~,
(er, Matl WUBams of Wlleelen- CantCI'I Ct&gt;ntrlll Catholic; Joel Bham·
but'l and Devin Browning of enlhal, BPachwooc!; Darrta a.,, C.al
Reading; linebackers Dan Top- or- _ _ ..,..., RoDdy Chu..,b.
Wyoming; Brad Crabtree, Wellsville;
ping of Cincinnati Indian Hill, Steve
otmmerl"'£ Shtaandolb: Mark
who also was the first team D\IICkwall. MarlemC~~t; Barry Espo.Uo,
punt~tr.
Anthony Naples of Huron: Jas111 Fraley, Clear Fork; Tim
Allftl East; Jody Hartzll.
Warren Kennedy, Mike Dixon of Goodwin.
Steubenville Ca&amp;hoUc: S.m Hohler.
Columbus Hartley and J.D. Huron; Jakel:Osttnrr, Wl:)'nedale; Mark
Hammcr.d. MarlemMt; Matt JohMM,
Woods of Batavia.
Akrm ~ancllf!'~r; Joba KeJhl. Ver·
, The,four defensive backs were salllfl;
Kelsey I:Oae, Colcmet Crawford;
Ron Nipuello of Rootstown, Mike Fritz KaullmoJl. Smithville; David Miller,
Zapoinlk of Steubenville Ca- Batavia; Jerrod McComas, Columbus
Acadany; a... llllloa, aJdlm_. Dale ·
tholic, Tim Vickers ot Loudon· ......
....._ Mlll:e Matoteaux, V•·
ville and Stacy J eler ot Columbus sallies; Brer.t Morris, Cincinnati IDdJaa
Hilt StaCY McNeil. Eost Olntm: Mike
Hartley.

Bt......,

Munno, Warren iCeLDtdy; lluk llllllr,

The 19M United Press lnternatJonal
Vlvlsion IV All-Ohio fooe:ball team is:

.......,,.. Pat Oakes, Wyorntnc:
Steve Poor, New London; Steve P'o'fti'S.

FIIISTTEAM

on-

Wide receiwrs- Jas(ll Evans, Lorain
CathoUc. 6-2, 180, sr.; Ryan Kldd, Colmel
Crawford, 6-1, 160, sr.
'ftpt eod- Coey GreKorlno, Sprtnll!eld
Local. 5·10.170. sr.
Frank MarchiO. Sla~beo­
vfJie C.thoUc, 6-2, 2t0, n .; Brian FrOPh·

U.-• -

Haaallol River; Chrll 1bas, Sycomoro

Mo..wk; Scott THpe, WeiUqta~: Scott
Tu.,ar, Gartelt~Uie Gar8ad: Corey
Torey, Steubenville Catholic; ..... Voa-

llch, Cotwnblls Academy, 6·2. 235, sr.; Jea
W....,, Ooll llll~ . t-1, 141, or.; - - . C o l i Gr.,. Daw-&amp;-JIOII,t-1,
180, sr.
Qurterbadl- Mark Brungard, P~IIPI'S·
burg Sprln&amp;Oiid, 6-2. 19o. jt,
Ron Mast, Wes1

JefferSCI'I. 5-t. 175. sr.; Dale DuDS. Burtoo
17~.

Berkshlrf', 5-11,

jr. ; BllJ Grubaugh,

~eo!e&lt;lckt..m, !'&gt;-8, 190, ...

. Placeldt:lk• -

towa, 6-2, 185, sr.

went one-on-one,'' Arkansas
Coach Nolan Richardson said.
"At the half, Itoldhlmweneeded
to get the balllnslde. Sometimes

Ian Viets. Frederldl:·

•I.ewat Prlca

•But Rllta

•2.2 Ef, S.O.H.C. engine •Interval Wlpen
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When the snow-hits the ground
And the church bells sound
· . All of a sudden Christmas Is

· '· her~
'&lt;
ADd r you look ·UP alld see
Sa)ltf• relqdeer.
.
By t~anny Cobb
' ··
·
, , ."citrtsti'!ias Is a wonderfUl time
:
The.trl,)lted !P'all .

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Chrlatmu Is here
It' a the time ot year
To celebrate
AJ!d, to be tull of cheer.
By Stacle•Reed
·'

Winter Is a time tor snuggllne
up .
In tact YQU mightllke cocoa In a
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Christmas time IJ a time ot
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It Is a time tor the Saviour
above.
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Winter Is Jretty with Chr~t·
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And lights that people put up In
red, pink and· blue.
Winter Is pretty with snow on
(Contlllued on Page 8)

ITEMS ·

I

WRIIND

--~--------------------

i'

992-2124
POMEIOY, OHIO··
WEST IWN

Low AI S1S Por llontt&gt;•

The Icy trees
,
No school for weeks,
No books to read.
By Nate Sls11011
Oh the tree 1oo1cs so free
As the wind wlllspers through
It sounds like happy laughter
I like tile sound, I really do
And If you !Iaten, you will too.
·By Tina Boothe

· I Corner
·
C
ollections
•• .,.. • _.,..n
l
I

Domino's Pitta

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Nazarene Church will have special services on Sunday with a

Save u0 to
4491 5 ~25. 1 05 311043

I
I
I

t• ~=··" ,MISS IRIS ONE! I
THIS

. , • .,.,., OIL I

IIIIITII

DIUVDTAaA

lOOOHX

thoughts...

ON ALL

.

4-PIPSI'S, 16 OI.

. TANDY®

'

stOREWIDE SALEf .

1

"Chlrstmas Comes to Det.ait
Lallie" at 6:30p.m. Treats will be
given at tbe morning service.

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

luy the 1llftdr 1000 MX With CII·S Color
ThrM ProgN- at No lldra Chartlel
Reg. Stparote c~~oo.. From a Yitrt.ty
hemo 898.15 01 Stlectecl TIIIM"I

lunteer Fire Department will
hold Ita annual Chrlslmas party
on Sunday at~: 30 p.m. at the fire
station. EveryOne II to bring a
covered dish. 'l'llole wbo helped
with the Melp County Fair and
the bar-b-cues aN Invited to
~ttend.
.'

~· :i. .SALEI SALE I SALEI

1984 CHEVY ~10 4X4

CARPENTER - The Mt.
Union Baptist Church will have
Its Chrlatmas pr011:ram on Sun-

Page-7

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

l'OMEROY - The public Is
Invited to atiA!nd a ChriStmas
Concert on Sunday at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs High School audltorlqm. Music will be provided by
the high school and junior high
bands. Toney Dingess Is the
director.

RACINE - The Racine United
Methodist Church Choir Is presentlne a ChriStmas cantata
"Christ Is Born," at the Sunday
rnoming worship service. The
public Is Invited to altend .

MS-OOS

•--•••n--••••••••••--••••

·.r

day at 7 p.m: The church Is
located off Route 143 on County
Road 14, two miles south ot
Carpenter. Pastor Joe N. sayre
Invites the public.
·

Chris lmas program on Sunday, 4
p.m., at the Southern Junior High
School. The public Is Invited to
attend.

SUNDAY

,•

On Cbrlltmaa Eve
.
When you're faat asleep·
You wt~~~e up In such a fright
But It's sllCli a pretty sight
When you hear sleighbe!IJ ring
Look for presents under your
Christmas tree. ·
'
. By Andy Sanders
ChriStmas Is near
It's the best time ot the year.
It's when Jesus was ·born
In a manger one night,
While the Cbrlstmas star
Shone warm and bright.
. By Tara Grueser

••rao

NOW

RACINE -Barbara's School

ot Dance will present Its annual

CHESTE.R -The Chester Vo-

A lone ttme ago on Christmas
night ,
Whllr ~ snow lay deep and
·
··
white .·.. "
A chlld.wu bclrn out 'at
·
God's love trom abolle.
By Krlllln Foreman

'4995

1985 FORD ESCORT

a:

children's program at 9: 30a.m.,
a contata , "Reason to ·Rejoice"
at 10:30 a.m. and a play,

'·

FRIDAY
.
RUTLAND -'l'heRutlallll Fin
Department Auxlllary. will hOld
Its Chrlslmas Party on Friday at
6:30 p.m. at the tire statiOR.
Those attendlna are to brlnt a
covered dish dinner, There !YIIl
be a $5 gift . etcchanle and
everyone Is to bl'll\r tlve game
prlzAit. .
"
,

WAS

1983FORD
CROWN VICTORIA

COOLVILLE -Tile Lottrtdae
Community Celllltl', LottrldJe,
will haw Ita aanual Cllrlltmas
diDMr on Satunlq at 30 p.m.
at the enter located oa Athena
County Road !13 South. Tbol!
atlendtni are to briDI a covered
dllh. Meal aad drlnkl will be
provided, and tbe public Is
Invited to attend.

ffere, 'are some seli!C!tlons of
Christmas 'poetry written by the
fifth grade a\lJdents ot Linda
Stanley at ID Pomeroy Elementary Scb09l. ·

1988 FORD BRONCO II

SIDt:k '8787-1, • - . ....... tent *ill. 6 C¥1-,lir, PS, PI, ptlllll' ..,_, ptlllll'

The Deily Sentinel

us.

·Chrt~tmas·

1

Your Cost

Sec

•AM/FM C ~ 1 IHI

•SecuiiiY Group

are Invited to at Ind. Ham will be
tumllbed aad memlltrt and
petlll are to brlnl a covered
dill!. A N 11ft exclwtp will be
held fOIIDwiDI the meal.

B,URL~GHAM -The Bed·
POM!;ROY ..._ Joan Welllngford-todl TiiWDShlp Hlatory ton, lead slnaer,'wlth the FellowGroup will m~t Frlclay at 7p._m. ship Slnprs, from VInton, will be
~ at lbe Modern Woodman Hallin slnglq during the Sunday even· Burllqham. .Interested. parties Ing 6 p.m. servlceat the Pomeroy
of loeitl history are Invited to Church of the Nazarene. Pastor
atiA!nd.
· GleM McClung Invites the
publiC ..
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER -The Star
RACINE - The Mornlllg Star
(::ranJII! wUI hold Its annual United Methodist Church will
Ohrlltm,a s dlimer and 1f(tt ex. have Its Cbrta,tmaa party on
chaDJif! OJ! Saturclay_ at .6:30p.m., Sunday, 7:30p.m. Putor Ken12y
.at, '!We . fire . statiOn In Salem Baker lllvllel the public.
·
.
\ :.
.
.

WAS

S$.88

.

CeDWI'. All membln aJid friends

'PQMPtOY'-TheLaureliCllff
Better !fealtb Cl'!lb will ba'lle Its :
RACINE -The cantata,
Chrlitmu PartY. on Thunctay, "Christmas From Scratch" wUI
.6; 30 p.m. at lila bllrM of·Marae be prnented at the Jll.aclne
Nazanme Church on Saturday at
Route
l)lnner .will be a
JIG(liack With aalad and 'des~ert. •.1 p.m. The clllldrell's ~m
There will .a llo be a N gift will be J)telented Sullday at 10:30
e~¢hanp: :.
a.m. Tile public Is lllvlted to '
,.
attend . .
POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta starna Phi
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Sorority, will meet Thilriday, VFW Post 9053 and Ladles
6:30p.m. at the home Ann and Wuxlllary In Tuppers Plains will
Richard Rupe, Wright Sl. have a Christmas party tor
Members are to llrlllf MCret members and family 011 SatursiJter gifts, .an ornament, and day at 6:30 p.m. The auxiliary
Items tor the .needy tamlly.
will furnish the meat and eve- .
ryoDe Is to bring a covered dish.
'
'
I
I
REEDSVILii: ' -'Tbe River- Santa Clau1 will be pn!lent to
, ·view . Garljel) Club Wtll meet give out treats and there will be a
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home 1f(tt exchange for the kids with a
ot Gladys Thomas. Co hoatesl!s $3 limit.
will be Grace Weber and Polly
Baker.
PAGEVILLE -A Christmas
parly tor tho! residents of Scipio
CHESTER -The Shade River ToWlllhlp, aponsored by the
Lodge · will hold · Its rerrular Scipio ToWIIIihlp Fire Depart·
meeting on Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. ment will be held at lite fire house
at the lodge hall In Chester. ·aa Satllrday tram 4-5 p.m. Santa
There will be an open lllatallatlon Claua will be !here with a sack of
of officers.
. treats for the children. ·

.,

srocK UP FOR CHflmfAS RJN wnH

I.

_

'

Blanford,
Volley;
O.mCII Broca, Cadiz; Steve Carpenter,
West Jeffer1011; Joe Day, Welt Jefter100;
Grea El . .bel'l, Beacllwood; Steve
Holmel, D-ytcm Oakwood; Jaa(Jl Hul'll!)'.
CardfqtCII: Shllby HitchEns, Frankfort
Adena; Sllue Jernigan. ArcbbokS: Erldt
Joepb, Mencb•ter; Gus JohniOII.,
HurCII; Todd Mcl..lln, Vlema Malhews;

SAil
PIKE

The Rock

potluck ·and ~ben are to
JOocla to. the
, brill&amp;
_..._ canned
,,
.._uug.
i
'

•IAreat Se..etfoll

For Those Christmas Toys,
Jam Boxes and Any Household
Need••••

1 II!

JlQCK Sli'RINGS -

..

M&lt;llnfllnn. Block Rl...-; Milt&lt;
Dele - - r o ;

JEFF CALDWEU.

.

,!lprblea Gr._p will meet Thundayo $: 30 p,in, Tbll twill be I

Just Honest To Goodness Pre-RoUday Values For You!

Local trio begins second
. Marietta College sophomores
.Keith Burnette and Chris Petro
have started the 1989·90 basket·
baJI season by Jo.inlng teammate
a!ld fellow sophomore Jeff Cald·
well on the varsity squad.
Burnette (North Gallia '88), a
6,4 forward, and Petro (Hannan
Trace '88), a 6·2 forward, split
their freshman campaign between the junior varsity and the
varsity squads, while Caldwell
(Southern '88) , a 5-10 guard,
started last year and averaged
18.7 points per game In his Initial
season with the Pioneers.
· The Pioneers, who lost 58-57 In
cwertlme to Kenyon, are now 1-6
overall and 0-2 In the Ohio
Athletic Conference. Marietta's
next game Is Saturday at
Heidelberg.

'

.

i,

No Gln11nic•• -No GlveaWGJS ••••

a......eMnt'-lli•

season at Marietta College

TIIUII8DAY
RUTLAND -The Church ot
Je~us Chro.~t Apostolic Faith,
· New Lima Road, Rutland, will
have revival throua'h Saturday at
7 p.m. ntahtly. Tile evaapllat
will be Lovle Foster and there
. W\ll ~ apeclal slnriD&amp; each
nJrht. · ,
,

While Mourning, a preseason
all-amer~a gets most ot the
attention, MutOmbo Is beginning
to assert himself aa a torte. '
Mutombo, a 'l·foot-2 1unlor
from Z4ire,arabbed 17 reboullda,
scored 15 points and blocked 8
shots as the Hoyaa manhandled
NCAA Division liSt. Leo. MournIng added 13 points and 12
rebounds.
'1
Mutombo averaged just 3.9
points and 3.3 rebounds last
season for Georgetown, 6-0. This
season, the big center Is averag·
lng 12.6 points, 10.6 rebounds and
'1'm Improving a little bit;"
Mutombo said. "But 'I haven't
proven It yet because the' re11I
season didn't start yet. The
teams we are playing against are
just to be ready tor the Big East
conference. When the Ble East
. conference starts In January or
Febi'uary, that's when we're
going to find out who's ready and
prepared."
In other games,.lt was: Amerl·
can 72, Wichita state 71; St.
Bonaventure 72, Nlalara 62;
Seton Hall ~. RuiJen 74; Ball
State 69;Valparatao:62; Eastern.
m. St. · Miry's' ot

TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS

A._
Bl_,..Pymotunln&amp;
Shone
Jim

Center - C1tn1m Foor, Archbokl, !).11,

bdul -

players are iuppoeed do at
halftime - he llsteDed to his
coach. Maybe he sbould'nt have.
Mayberry, Arkansas' outstanding sophomore guard,
scored 14 points In the first halt
but noDe In the second half and
the No. 6 Razorbacka fell a point
short, droppln&amp; an 89-811 decision
to No.4 Missouri In Fayatll!vllle,
Ark.
Doug Smith scored the last ot
hiS 24 points on a layup with 13
seconds lett to help the Tigers
end Arkansas' 14-game home
winning stnak.
·
Mayberry's · 3·polnt attempt
with lour seconds remaining
bounced ott the rim, leaving the
Tigers unbeaten at 8-0. Arkansas
dropped to 5-1.
Mayberry helped the Razorbacucome out flying as an early
13-4 run helped them get out to a
21-12 lead.
"In the tlrst half, Mayberry

d.n.ol, ()ool or... Daw-Jin&gt;ul.

m. •r.

.......,

New Lebanoa Db:le; Shawn Frire, Wyom.
Ina; MlkeRullq, OIEI!tanl)·; KyleRnoe,
Hannibal RJver; Bruce Schuet•, Ver·
sollles; Dorns Smllh, Warren Kenaecly;
Lenny Spacek. Gates Mills Hawken; Greg
Sc:blll.., !lack Rl""'; Bill ~

1JPIIpDI'D Writer

Lee Mayberry did what all

Lee does too much ot what you
Nathan Buntin also scored 24
say because he wasn't offensive
for the Tigers and Anthony
minded at all In the second hall."
Peeler added 11.
Ar.lulnsas had an early 9·point
Todd Day paced the Razor·
lead but Smith and John Mcinbacks with 26, Credit had 20 and
tyre touched otf a Missouri
Mayberry had U - aU In tb~ tlrst
stnali: that booated the Tigers to halt.
a 43-33 lead lat~ In the first half
Missouri has now beaten five
before they settled tor a 49-4~ teams this season that played In
advantage at Intermission.
last year's NCAA tournament.
The Razorbackll played catch·
In the other game Involving li'
up throughout tbe second hall Top Twenty team, Georgetown
and finally went ahead by a point martyred St. Leo 92-51.
with 3:15 to play.
At Washington, the St. Leo
"We dldn' t shake, but we were team toured the Smithsonian
trembling a little bit," said
museums In Washington before
Missouri Coach Norm Stewart.
the game. Afterward they got a
Arkansas was stlll up by a point firsthand view ot the city's new
with 52 seconds to go after Marlo skyline.
"We had a great ·day today at
Credit hit a short Jqmp shot.
the museums, although that
Electing to go without a timeout,
Missouri calmly came down, set wasn't the focus of the trip," St.
up their halt-court ottense and Leo Coach Mike Gillespie said.
worked the ball to Smith wbo
"We came up here (from Florbroke free for the game-winner.
Ida) with alllntentlonsofwlnnlng
''Missouri Is big and strong," a game and w~ gave It our best
Richardson said. "They stuck It shot." ··
Unfortunately for St. Leo, they
bact( In the hole on us all night.
"Smith Is an excellent player," , don't have anyone that can
he said. "When you have a 6-10 match up with Georgetown's
player who can take the ball Twin Towers -Alonzo Mourning
coast to coast and score, It makes and Dlkembe Mutombo. But
you're entlre team better."
neither do 294 other schools.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar ·

No. 4 Missouri stops No. 6 Arkansas, 89-88
117 TOll WlTIIEB8

Dec..,,._ 14, 1919

\.

AM Flavoraclios®

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l'un lantem. Sale! #60·1071, 2.58
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Thursdey,.Dec:~ber 14. 1989

.... 8

Video View:

Good cold night videos

8J IEJI'I' BPI .EAJlY
Jf tbere were a currt!llt poll of
womea who are movie watchers,
I'm sure that lleVeral, If not most
of !bern, would name th~ tall,
aood-looklng lead ol the movie
"Dirty Dancl111" 114 one of the
most sexy men with wbom theY
would not mind being stranded
on a desert Island.
I am talking, of course, a bout
Par trick Swayze who stars In the
.new release, "Roadhouse" as the
·legendary bouncer, Dalton, hired
:to clean up the rowdy Missouri
·roadhouse called "'The Double
,Duece.''

. From the start It becomes
clear that his Job Isn't going to be
; easy when he finds that he has to
deal with a tlll-sklmmlll&amp;' bar·
lender and a group of assistants
who need to be whipped Into
- shape. And let's not forget his
' greatest challenge In the form of
a resident villlan, played with
· ease and crafUness by Ben
Gazzara. Oh, yes, there does
happen to be tbe required love
:·interest In the lonn ol the
• gorgeous Kelly Lynch who plays
: the small town doctor who finds
herself attracted to and repulsed
by the violent Dalton.
Swayze sings and acts to
- perfection In this nearly two hour
. Jllm that has a short bravura
; pertonnance by tbe fantastic
··actor, Sam Elliott as his mentor.
..There does happen to be nudity
and sexual scenes as well as
violence and swearing but all in
all tbls will go down In film
blstory as a masterpiece or the
: good guy-bad guy showdown type
. of movie. It's got an R rating so
-make sure that you use parental
: supervision before you let you
children watch this.
Speaking of good guys and bad
guys, who among you haven't yet
seen the Batman movie. No, not
.tbe campy but channing one with
Adam West and Burt Ward. I'm
:ialklng about the fUm that stars

Michael Keaton and Jack Nichol• the story of a madman who sets
son. I've sat through It three out to destroy Gotham City with
Urnes and each time I have found tbe help of tbe deadly chemical
myself fall!ng In love with the · Smylex which transfonns those
tale of lhe rich playboy who puts who use the products tainted with
on the bat costume and knocks 11 Into horrible caricatures or the
the villains Into the next century Clown Prince of Crime. In a
In his ceaseless quest to avenge violet battle In the belfry of the
Gotham Cathedral the two reprehis parents' deaths.
sentatives
battle It out as the life
Now don't get me wrong, this Is
of
the
woman
Bruce Wayne loves
a good film but 11 Is not a perfect
hangs
In
the
balance.
one for wh!le 11 ~lis tbe story
Now I wUI admit that the
somewhat faithfully It ddoes take
Impromptu
dialogue of Jack
some Uberties. Nicholson may be
Nicholson
tickles
the funny bone
a great and even more sinister
his
cavorting
leaves you
and
Joker than Caesar Romero, but
chuckling
uneasily
and
Keaton
In the com les he bad nothing to do
with the murders or Wayne' s does 11 beau Uful Job as the
parents. Joe ChUI was thek!ller's tortured hero who may not be
name. The Joker never had a very tightly wrapped but at no
name and be never had anything time does It leave you with any
doubts that good will triumph.
to do with cosmetics.
I Just wish that It had been done
Harvey Dent, the DA In the
years
· a110 as It Is a truly
movie, was white and not black.
atmospheric
rendering or one of
Alfred !lldn' t come along until
tbe
greatest
legends
of our time.
after Robin did. VIcki Vale
VIolence
and
swearing
are the
wasn't Bruce Wayne's first girl
only
drawbacks
to
this
movie,
friend. So what does this have to
but
watch
II
anyway.
do with the wonderfu I film?
It'll make you young again.
II you haven't seen It yet , 11 Is

P~-Middhpon, Ohio

·DAR chapter meeting conducted
·Mrs. Rae Reynolds, regent.
Opened the December meeting of
tbe Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter; Daughters of the Amer·
lean Revolution, In ritualistic
form with Mrs. Mary Yost acting
as chaplain.
For the national defense report, Mrs. Reynolds said It was
the Ume of the year for hopeful
new rather than bad news. She
read from Leo Buscaglia's " Bus
9 to Paradise - The Miracle ol
L!le." She noted that the challenge to make the world a better
place should make people differ·
ent with something good to
contribute for the future against
hunger, war, lear, suspicion, and
loneliness. She went on to say
that people should never be
~lthout hope bel'ause miracles

do happen and with the.support of be take.n there. The National
famDy and friends who care for magazine has a picture of Mrs.
each other by accepting faults Reynold's cousin, Kathy Lynn
With forgiveness, .
. Green who Is Florida's outstsndThe election of delegates to the lng Junior and who acts as a page
state and national conventions at Continental Congress.
was held with Mrs. Reynolds ,
The chapter's corresponding
June Ashley, and Eileen Buck · secretary Maye Mora has been
being elected. Franc~ Roberts, sending cards to Mrs. Grace lch
Mary Yost, Roberta 0 Brien, and who Is reported to be recuperat·
Eleanor Smith will be the lng at home.
alternates.
Christmas carols were enjoyed
Convention will be held Marcil by the group and the hostess
9-12 at Independence. Mrs. Rey- MarySkinnerplayedaplanosolo
nolds will also be attending the before refreshments were served
National at Washington, D.C. to the 12 members and guest
Apr!l 16-20 with Mary Rose, Mrs. Betsy Horky .
'
Frances Roberts and June Ash·
Mrs. Yost and Pat Holter were
ley as alternates. ·
.t he assisting hostesses. Contrl·
The Chllllcolbe Veterans Hos- butlng hostesses were Mrs. Ed·
p!tal will be sent a donation !rom ward Foster and Mrs. Harold
the chapter and members are Hager.
reminded to save magazines to

Chnstmas program·;

Cindy Lambert lost the most
welaht In the Monday nteht Five
Points class of Slinderella.
In the Tuesday night Mason
class there was a tie lor most
weight loss between MarDee
McDade and Ne!Ue Casto, and
also a tie for runner up bet'!"een

The Christmas program at the
Long Bottom United Methodlat
Church w!ll be held Dec. 20 at 7
p.m.
A fellowship hour will folloW
tbe program and Rev. Char1es
Eaton Invites th e public.

you want it ...
you ve got it ...

~

...

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

1'
'

OBSESSIONY 3.4 oz. Spray······~········ · ························· · ········ 11 4&amp;.00
KNOWING. 1 o;r. ............... . ............... . ... . ............. . .................. ·3&amp;.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW. 1.8 oz................................... "14.50
EUZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1 .5 oz .............................. "27.00

OMBAE ROSE. 1 oz . ...... ..... .. .. .. ... .. .... ... ... .......... .................. 1 18.00
SHAUMAR, 1 oz...... ....... ........ .. .. ...... ;... ... ...... ...................... '23.00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1 .7oz .................................. 1 24.00
OPIUM. 2 oz. ............. ..... .... ........ .. ;.. ..... ................................ •47.50
1 29.50
OSCAR, 2 oz...........
UZ CLAIBORNE, 1 oz .............. : .. .. : ....................~ .......•.•••..•...• 1 22.50
CALIFORNIA by Jacklyn Smith. 1 oz......... .. ........ .................. •17.50
CHER'S UNINHIBITED. 1 .5 oz.............................................. "30.00
UZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET ....... ........ : ........... ............ •40.00
ANNE KLEIN II •.1.7 oz . ..................... ............ ....................... "32.00
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz .... ..................................... •48.00
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET .... .. , ................ .... ~ ........ : ..... •40.00
PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ............ ..... .... .... ................ "5&amp;.00
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt ............................. -~ ..~ •
o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• o . o . . . . . o • • • • • • • • • • • •• o • • • • • • • •

Kroger Employees Group has done a similar
ser~ce project. This project, somewhat blgrer
tbu uanal, was made possible because the group
raised all the money for the dinner through
various fund rallllnll' projects.

DINNER 18 SEJ,\VED - WDma Davidson,
. right, of t~e Kroger Employees Gro"", was busy
. oa TuesdBf evealng ser~ng dl•er to resldenn nf
. the Maples In Pomeroy. Pictured here recel'Vln§ a
, dinner Is Jim Travis. ·For the past few years tLe

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

.Quirks in the neWS-------

&lt; omcers

or the Rutland Fire
; Department have been elected
·tor 1990 and are as foDows,
Charles D. Barrett Jr. and Dan
Davis, presidents; Dan Ed~ards, vice president; Fred
Wnllamson and Carlos
McKnlgllt, secretaries; Homer
Parker and Dan Edwards, treas·
urers; and Guy Hunter, reporter.
Bill Wtnlamo, chief; David
Davis, Charles Rile, Mike Willford, and Charles Barrett III,
assistant chiefs; Dave W1lllamson and Dave Davis, captains;
Carlos McKnight, Steve Morris,
and Dano King, first lieutenants;
Mark Richman and Marty
Spangler, second lieutenants;
and Ray Willford and Dan Davis,
training officers.

, By United Press International

College tries 'fun' flqala week
GRlNNELL. Iowa (UPI) Cbl- children turn In nude
Few college studen!S think final
baby plctareB In aatl-smul camexams are fun but Grinnell
palp
'
College Is trying to change all
BEIJ~G !UPI) ...., Students .ln
that.
an elementary school class, fired
To help relieve stress and
up but confused by the govern- · make finals week' a real blast,
Jllent's anti-pornography media
Grinnell's Committee on Student
blitz, turned In ·tbelr nude baby
Health gave each of the 1,256
pictures to their teacher, a letter
students a package of stress·
In a state-run newspaper said.
busting fun and games. The
The Jetter In • .Wednesday's
package Includes a eat's cradle
editiOn of the China Youth News
puzzle, word scrabble and three
!rom a "concerned citizen'' caurlddl'es.
tioned there Is such a thing as too
The kit' also h·a s lnfonnat!on on
inuch propaganda and warned
stress and suggestions for 25
that bringing the anti-smut cam"low-calorie" WI\YS to relleye
paign to the elementary school
tension.
level had brought unexpected
Donna Bailey, Grinnell's dlrec·
results and created confusion
tor .of health service, said the
among :Vowtasters.. ' .
packages were meant to educilte
:. In one case, the letter said,
students about stress and to
primary school ' pupils asked
emphasize the Importance ot
definition of a . retaliation and creativity during
their teacber.
t nude picture ' and "Were told
high-stress periods. ·
,;'.anything naked from the waist
~Jp. ; • ·'Fhey responded by du II fully
City lifts ban on Soviet vodka
. bringing In their own baby
HUTCHINSON, Minn. (UPI)
pictures for coni!Scatlon.
- Glasnost has reached the city
; ."The teache~ ·did not know
of Hu tc h!nson, wit)) the City
Y.,~ther tolaughorcry,'' said the
Council warming Its ·relations
lelt~r.
,.
.
with the Soviet Union.
· 'the anti· pOrnography blitz Is
Six years after outlawing the
part of China's recentnatlonwlde sale of Soviet-made products In
c:aJilpalgn against various, social
their city In response to the
Ills. Pornography h11s beeh offiSoviets' downing of a Korean Air
cially branded as one or "six Lines Flight 007, the City Council
evils""· to be wiped out natlon- voted unanimously Tuesday to
lvide. The other five are gam- llfl the ban. The action allows the
bling, drug trafficking, swln· sale ol Russian vodka In Hutchln·
dllng, sell!ng women and
son's municipal Uquor store.
children, and con games employ"Six years Is a long time, and a
supe~~ tillon.
.,·
lot of things have changed,''
• .. Nightly news broadcasts have Mayor P au I .Ackland said.
featured footage of poUc!e conf!s- ''There's a lot more openness In
C:ating Yldeompes and breaking that country. We just want to be
part of the world working
rings.
up prostitution
•
I '
0

.'

'Pythian Sisters
elea officers

· YourCholcel

sgg

Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of tbe Py th ian
Sisters, Rocktand Temple 615
)leld In Long Bottom.
Elected were Alta Ballard,
most excellent chief; Mae
McPeek, excellent senior; Ada
I!Sissell, excellent junior; Beulah
Maxey, manager; Melody Ro~ts. treasurer; Betty Young,
IM!Cretary; Judy Holter, protector; Phyllis Larkins, guard;
:Juanita Wells, three year trustee; Harlan Ballard, musician,
knteht; Juanita Wells, representative to grand temple; Beulah
Maxey, alternate representative; Juanita Wells, press
corespondent.
• Following the meeting a
.C hristmas party and gift exchange was held.

WlrHCOUPON .

Lady's or Man's

"'

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Your Choice!

$149

Valua to $291

,.

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1JCr For The

··

,.!~,..$

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

What would Christmas be
without a lift
Oh what would It be?
Josh Harris

· 106 NORTII SECONO AVENVE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
'
(fl4) !192-2635

.............
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Mcstercad

PONDEROSK

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ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
(614) 446-8084

TOLL FREE (800) 4:141-5581

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GALUPOLIS·
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Upper IIY• ltl. - It. 7

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VISA • DISCOV• • MASTEICABD

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I
I
,_

CNRIITNA$ SAlE
SALE PRICED FROM ONLY

CURIO
CABINETS

Beautiful Accents
- Corner Curios Bunching Curios
and More.

ASSOITED
STYLES AND
FIMSHES

SALE

FROM ONLY

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Mon. 9:30 em-8 pm
Tuet.-S.t.
9:301m-1 pm

S1.43

$231
CHRISTMAS
SALE

WOOD
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CHRISTMAS
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Ch~k Oar Frt4•f llltht S•l• Spt~l•l•l
WT WED'S DOOI PillE WIMI: GOIDAN YOUNG
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and hrllill Falirics.
Stylilig. Str... F,_.

KNEE-HOLE DESKS - ROLL-TOP DESKS and
PRINCESS ROLL-TOPS. Oak. P~ean and Pint Finish

Will Be Open This Friday Until
8 P.M.,' And Every Friday
·1
Thereafter Until Christ~~~as. 1
1

Holiday offer includes Sirloin Tips
wilh potato, plus Ponderosa's
.
Alt•You•Can•Eal Grand Buffet'"

WIIIAS lfOIIINIIIS
fAIL-7P.&amp;
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HOUdays

CHRISTMAS
SAlE

.Ij--'7·---------------..
--.,
MIDDLIPOIT DEPT. STOlE

TJP.s.For The .

(Continued from Page 7)
the ground
The Christmas tree Is pretty
with toppiql all around.
And that's what makes a
Christmas Day.
By Marla L. Sellers.

·

ta:

!

•••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••

Christmas ...

271 NORTH SECOND

gether and this Is one way to do
It."
'

!*

wilh potato, plus Ponderosa's
AII•You•Gan•Eat Grand Buffet·

. There wlll be a Chlstmas play
on W.onday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Jtutland Community Church on
New Lima Road, ome half mOe
out of Rutland. '
Pas~r Dewey King Invites the
public.

992-6669

V!f!

·.

·Shop early, avoid the rush,..
·Compare the price before you buy...
·Clip the couponS' below,
then come to POnderosa foi our
s3.99 Sirloin Tips Dinner Special.

Retail $149

· Otristmas play

By Chad Baloy

IIIHI

P;;;;;;;:-::;;;:o=NDER.-=-:OS;;;::-';;A

Rutland FD
elects officers

.

...

,,,

- The HarrisonVIlle Senior Citizens Club will bold Its annual
. Christmas dinner at noon on
"Tuesday at the town house. There
wUI be a $3 glfl exchange. All
membe.-s are urged to attend.

Santa with his great big lli!ny
Ju1t like a bla bowl of jelly
He'• alway• merry,
ADd bill beard Is very hairy!

Betty Bur ton and Kate Stone.
New members are now being
accepted Into the class.
The Mason class will have Its
Christmas party next week and
those attending are to bring a diet
dish.

na&amp;lve Melp Cou..Uaa, aotone eut(J dllcolll'llled
eveu by tile acba aad pal• of the octoreurlaa
yean, lu18ted ber family laddie up tile ltone for
ber tradiUonal bh11tda)o ride.
.

SHE RIDES AGAIN - For more yean than
aayone caa remember, Ada Bolter bM ridden a
bone on her birthday. Tbll year at 88 olle rode
a gala at tbe Holler funDy farm on Boote 7. Tlie ,

t

Slinderella class meets recently

Chnstm&amp; party

. I want a white Christmas
I want It lvltb cancllelllbt.

The Daily Santinei-PIIgl

SALE PRICED FROM ONLY

$199

~trleNOK~

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APPUAIICIS, TV'S, ROOI COVIIIIG

ttl-1671

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DOWIITOn PO...UY, OliO
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0-The

S mtinll

Following the payment of bills
for the annual musical of the Big
Bend Minstrel Association, proceeds totaled $1.672.
The profit wlll be shared
evenly by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce and the Ru t!and
. Civic Center Organization,
meaning that each group wlll
receive $836 as a sponsor of the
annual musical. .
Pomeroy Barber Bob Tewksbary underwent major bypass
heart surgery at Riverside Hospital in Columbo son Wednesday.
Bob had been having some
health problems and catherlzatlon processes at the hospital
earlier Indicated that he had a 90
percent blockage.
Bob and his wife, Joan, wlll
need your support and prayers at
this time. I know you wlll see
they have these things .

There are 11 men and seven
women from Meigs County confined to the Athens Mental
Hospital.
A box to · receive Christmas
gl1ts for the local residents has
been placed In the Quickel
Insurance Agency in Pomeroy.
There Is a shortage of tollet
articles for these patients and, of
course, gifts are not to be glass
Items, razors or anything sharp.
Soap, toothbrushes, shampoo,
colognes, after shave and other
slmllar Items are needed. I'm
told that there are plenty Items
sucl\ as socks, handkerchiefs, ,
combs and that type Item alreadY collected.'
Jimmy and Katie Weber, wellknown Middleport reslden Is, ex·
tend most sincere thank-&lt; for the
flowers, cards and telephone
calls from you on the recent
observance of their 60th wedding
anniversary.
The WebersJtave bE-en spendIng their winters In Florida for
the past 40 years. However,
these days they like to stay right
at home In Meigs County and this
Is their second winter to skip the
annual trek to Florida. They
want to extend their best wishes
that you have a happy holiday
season.
Geez, it running Is so much fun,
how come those runners aren't
smiling? I kr.ow - the only
running you do Is to the dinner
table- butlookyuu'resmllingand that·~ good too.

extremely Jow-b!r:h-welght Infants," they s&amp;id.
To determine whether there
has been any prOI!fess, the
researchers compared 98 very
young babies delivered at the
MacDonald Hoapltal for Women
In Cleveland between 1982 and
1985 to that of 129 very young
lntants born between 1985 and
1988. :
The frequency of Caesarean
sections Increased from 12 percent to 19 percent during the two
periods and lntants were lnereas!ngly put on respirators to help
their underdeveloped lungs.
But despite the more aggressive approach, the chances that
the babies would survive did not
Increase significantly ·overall
and the outcomes of those who
did live did not Improve substantially. they said.
"Des pile a tendency to
perform more (Caesarean)
sections and active resusclta·
lions, no Improvement In the
survlv al of ba bles with lengths
of gestation below 25 weeeks or
birth weights under 750
(grams) was observed," the
researchers wrote.

De..- AIUI 14aden: I have
followed your columll with ereat
1
wu In colletle. I
lirso ud continue
to enjoy
. it.
In 1976 my husbud committed
suicide. He was humtllated becauseofcareerdlaappolntrnents.
had a bad back that prevented
him from partlctpatlna In sports
he loved and was depressed
about the state of the world. He
took his life when he was 43.
Our children were very young.
The girl was 4 and the boy was 2.
They do not know how their
father died.
When the tragedy occurred I
asked our pediatrician when the
children should be told the facts
about their father's death. He
said It would best to walt until
they were adults, perhaps 23 or

t:Pt'::'blee [

By the way, June Eichinger,
county courthouse employee, did
undergo major surgery at Grant
Hospital In Columbus on Dec. 8.
Her room number is 708. We
know you join in wishing June a
speedy recovery.

Preemies. still dying,
CWRU study shows
BOSTON (UP!) - Despite the
latest advances and more aggressive efforts. doctors have
. _-been largely unable to Increase
- the survival . rate for the most
·. 'preinllture bables, ·researchers
reported.
Researchers at Case Western
Reserve University's medical
school In Cleveland found the
chances of survival remained
low for premature babies born
. less than 25 weeks into their
development.
"I think we' ve reached the
limits," said Dr. Maureen Hack,
an associate professor of pediatrics who led a new study
publiShed Wednesday In The
New England Journal of
Medicine.
The question of when a baby Is
viable outside the womb has been
an Issue In the nation's abortion
debate, the researchers .noled.
"With pregnancy being terminated in some parts of the United
slates late In the second trlmest~r and with live-born Infants
delivered at 22 weeks of gestational age occasionally surviving, It Is Imperative to determine
the probability of survival for

.

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• I

1189

Tell the kids, but they probably know

Cooking yesteryear
By IIOB HOEFLICH
The Pomeroy Sesquicententhat a
nial ComlttH Ia
yesteryear
cookbook will
appeal to you
Christmas
shoppers.
The cookbook
prepared by the
committee to
raise fluids for the celebration
which will take place next year Is
entitled Treasured Recipes of the
Past. It Includes recipes dated
during the 1800's and · some
recipes used In the South long
before the Civil War. By the way
there are recipes from the
former Guth Bakery and the
Mayer Bakery, both of which·
hwere In Pomeroy.
The prtee of the cookbooks Is
$6.50 each and you can secure the
books at The Daily Sentinel
Office or through the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Office.

.
Ohio

Beat of the bend

l

~

24.

Altllough I have always talked
to the chlldren about their father,
Jettlne t,bem J(now what a fine
person he was, I have never
discussed his death. I am bellnntne to suspect that they fee! II is
a forbidden subject.

My dauehter is now 17 and my
son II 15. They are well-adjuated
kids, excelletlt 1tlldenta, have a
ereat many frlencll and achievementa of which they can be
proud.
I am beifnlllng to feel aslfl am
lylne to them by wttllholdlq the
facta. Pleue ilve me your vtews.

pany" syndrome are not only
Interesting but iood examples of
what Is happening to our health·
care delivery syatem.
I am not trytna: to top the letter
about the $7 uplrtn or the $60.25
charp for wearing a cervical
In the emeraency room for
15 minutes, but I do have one that
I coDIIder a claaslc.
- a.w., Tornllo
A few yean a110 I was hospitalDe..Tell your child·
ren how their father died, .but Ized for a series of routine tests
don't be aurprlled it .they already that required going 24 hours with
know. It Ia extremely ·unlikely . no food or liquid. My bill
that they have not heard the truth ldentl1ted this as "special diet." I
from one of their was cbaraecl $35 lor not eating
any food or drlnlclng any liquids.
contemporaries.
The fact that you suspect they - .I.C.L., Lakea Buibea, Callt
consider It a "forbidden subject"
11a an Important clue. Most
teen-age children would certainly be Inquisitive about how
their father died. The fact that
they have not come rleht out and
asked you should have beell the
tip-off. Don't procrastinate. Do It
Immediately.
Dell' Alln wclen: Your columns on the "stick It to the
WAS *41.0o
patient or the insurance com-

To..-.,

ROCK CHAJUTV, PART 1:
There's a new version of Bob
Gelclof's famine-fighting anthem
"Do They Know It's Christmas"
and It's already a smash hit in
Britain. More than 300,000 copies
of the new record, which features
a group of pop stars Including
Kylle MIIIOIUe, Baaaall'ama
andCJUfRichard, have been sold
since It went on sale Monday.
Ge!dof has taken a low-key role
with the new version of his song.
He showed up out of curiosity at
the recording session last week,
but he Isn't pushing it the way he
did the original song In 1984.
' Band Aid '89 Is hoping to raise
more than $1.56 million before
Christmas for Ethiopia, In an
effort to ward off a repeat of the
devastating 1984 famine. Geldol's Band Aid movement raised
more than $172 million through
the Live Aid concerts In 1985 and
talks . about staging another
trans-Atlantic concert by the new
Band Aid are continuing.
ROCK CHARITY, PART II: A
group of British rock stars plans
to record Bod Stewart's hit song
''Salllng'' to protest !Mrep~~tria­
tion of Vietnamese boat people
froin Hong Kong. &amp;eve Hackett,
formerly of Genesis, Is organizIng the remake and has asked
Bomde Tyler, Jadle Tzuke• and
Brlu lli8¥ of Queen to parliclpate, although Queen's recording
schedule might prevent May
from taking part. Hackett said
the proceeds from the recording
will go to charities supporting the
refugees, but said It was a protest
song, not a charity record.
ROCK CHARITY, P.\BT In:
Willie ·Nelson and Joha Cou1ar
Melleooamp say they will hold
their fourth Farm Aid concert In
Indianapolis's Hoosier Dome on
Aprll 7. "I had hoped we wouldn't
have to do another concert,"
Nelson said. "But we're losing
family farms every day and
many who are slill on their land
are just barely hanging on."
Nelson and Mellencamp are so

IJ'ho1 con you ,;..,lhe per1011 lllho
h01 ..,ery1hin1P Ann lAnder~' ,..,.
bookle1. "Gemo." i• • coUe&lt;fion of

Lendert' moll requeued

poem• ond "'"'Y'· Send • lfl/·
addreued, long. bu•in•••.Ue ern.te•
lope and o check or mOM)' order for
14.85 lo: Gem1, ~/o A1111 Londero,

P.O. Box 11562, ,. Clti,.!O, Ill.
60611-1)562.
-

' • . I'

CIILDIEII'S UNGAIOOS

TENNIS SHOES .SJ 6"

. TINISDAY Til. SATUIDAY .·
Happy Holidays From All 9/ V$
POMEIOY

Buttons &amp; Bows

'

SAVINGS OF

.

20°/o-50°/o ON
ALL CLOTHING!

"UIGE SILECDOII
STILL AVAILABL~"
SHOP LOcALlY- YOU'IIE GLAD

'

.

YOU DID.

"RR GIFT WIAPPIHG" .
DIY CUANING AND PliCEL.
POST PICKUP.

aunoNS AND aows
992-5177

220 EAST MAIII

,•

,
'
-· . WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
FOOd and Drug Administration
reported It ~ rlndlng slightly
fewer pesticides in food , but
envlronmentallsi4 questioned if
the FDA's Inspection efforts are
adeqliate to gauge food safety.
The FDA said Wednesday that
61 percent of the 18,114 food
samples tested In 1988 sho~ no
signs of pesticide residue, compared'wlth 57 percentof&amp;amples
checked lil1987.
Of samples 'foUnd to cOntain
pes tlclde residue, less than 1
percel)t ' .o r. domestic and Imported .food samples exceeded
safety levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency, the
FDA said.
FDA officials emphasized the
decline In pesticide-laden food
canie despite 11 25 per~nt increase In the number of samples
tea led. But critiCS said even with
that lncrene, government testIng efforts"~all woefully. short.

''The fraction or the food
supply they are able to monitor Is
very, very small. It Is so small
that It Is hRrd to make an
estimate of what an average
American's exposure actually
Is,.. said Ellen S!lbergeld, a
toxicologiSt with the Environmental Defense Fund.
Sllbergeld also noted the tests
used by the FDA are not capable
of detecting many of the newer
pesticides, and the government
monltOI'Ing also falls to take Into
account eating patterns of highrisk groujlll, such as children.
''The public still has .every
reason to be concel'ned about this
Issue," she said.
The FDA tests checked 7,639
domestic fo.xl samples and 10.475
Imported ~ood samples for 256
pesticides in 1988. About . the
same ar!'lly of pesticides - 118were detected In looc! In 1988 a~
the previous year.
About 4 percP.ntofthe Imported

ythlng was generall¥ mtnQr,
Robinson said.
n&amp;,.h w!ll
The deaths at Shena ails for
undoubtedly renew c
mandatory sprln~ler systems in
VIrginia nursing omes. fire has
. Th~ Oct. 5 HI:!::V~~te Sen.
alrealey &amp;r~::'.fr ol Norfolk to
Stan Y a
u1
all
1
pre-file le~llon {eq h!;::s
to

state-lie~~ kle n;!':e~ installed,
have sdplr --1' ~ swhen they were
regar ess o
built.
The Hlllhaven fire started
·
ldent violated no.arte~l a r~es The facility had
smo ng ru ·
II a
no sprinklers, which 1nves g
tors said might have prevente

d

S34 66

~DAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

5 - HIP"' Ads

u-•--

7-Y•d Salelpaid in advance)

157 - Mt.~liCIIIn11Nm.,ts

3 - AnnGUCetnWIII

&amp;3-Antiqu••

4 - GivtiWay

8 - Publlc s ... ' Aucltan

! ::· p 11J) '1'1' f
l

11 -- Hetp

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUEIDAV PAPER
WEDN!IDAY PAPER

TttUfiiDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

GUN ClBiffET$
STAlliNG AT

$2 5900

'TI. DIC. 16, 1919 ~

lUNDA¥ PAPER

.....,_,
9tU

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
.,

Frillay t te.l
Open Sua. 1·4

I

11 - Frultt•

Vea••bl•

1

I

.I'

w ...tad

r,\' r·,
:\

.\IJ!iilllfl~

pI 1,1!''

ild ~

- 11 ~00

13- lnsuranu

11 - Farm Equipment

- z,oo

15- Sehootl A Instruction

13-liwstoell

17 - Minellan~•

15 - Setd &amp; llart•ll•r

1~ - lusln•• Tr~lnlng .

- z,oo

11 - Radlo, TV. Cl R-..afr

- z,oo

- 2 :00

18- Wtnted To

- z,oo

M · ' C
••• aunt'
Ar. . Code 114

M•on Co.• WV
A••• Cod• 304·

.11,2- Middl..,art

171-~.

Pom•oy

o,... Dally

•

Bl - luldint luppli•
151 - Ptlts for 11111 ·

&amp;1 - fDr Salt or Trade

12 - Situelktn w.,ttd

DAY BEFORE

paice-~ .&lt;"orer the
. Classified
.
following relephone exchan#l('s ...
'
··•
Oelli• c;,_,,..¥' , &lt;~
Attl Code e1~

JIl

. 111 :.c~~oo..

' l43-,ortlond

Retain your qment joh.

Call Don Hickman
Toll Free I-Mflfl-6J ~·0670 or

Coll&lt;et•Jj-_19'J-J7cl.

~~
: 711 Mllrh•'•'\1-ilfll M.l .
r\n1iu1:h. 11'11111''"'•' .\ 71111

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Homo
P1t11
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rental•

992-7479

lt. U North of

1

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Moir. County s-d
of - I l l otaiCiotlon/Dovolopor.atlill Dloolltllttoo wM
- · ...loll. - . . . ot tho
Molgo Caunty ' - d of
MR/DD otllco on C.rloton
In SyntcuM, Ohio on
F•ldoy, D-bor 15 at
2:00 p.m. Tho purpo10 of
tho - • to to fiOI'* public comm- on tho 4 yoor
"Stnmatc Plono" ond tt.
1881 "Annuli Action Pion"
fur tho Molgo County Boord
of Monlll Rota-n/Dovolopm•tol DloololtHtoo. A
copy of tt. pr-Md Plono
bo noll- for rovtow
by intor- poroono ot tt.
Molgo Caunty
of
M-t Rotordotlon/Dovetopmontot DloobllHloo oftlco.
1121 18, 1tc

w•

-nl

Public Notice

247-Ut~

, ..,,

..1- flooino

?42- Rutl.,..

117-Coolville

Ac••-'•

PH. 949·2101
949-2160
I Day ., Night
NO SUNOl Y CALLS
"'·I
'or los.

DOZER
SITEWORII • ROADS
CLEARING

.NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Din

(6141 667-3271
Grant l. ~~~ltirNI

Ev111in1s Best

PLUMIING

IIATING

lltwt.......
161 North Soclllll

tlllll Clll flcilty

1111 lttHwediatl fuR tlmt
ptlliU. for R.ll. SupervlltMI. CGI!pltillvt . .
IIIII btlllllt pert• .

...

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

KEN'S APPUAIICE
SEIVIU

992-5335 or 915-3561
Acreu ,,.. Post Office
217 L

SALES I SERVICE

Flot.Mt luppll•

Phone
L~~ci,Po,!bl• Billa Here

IISINDS PIIOIII

,.,., 992-6550
ttiSIIIIIa

Roger Hysell '
Garage

MY-T-SHOP
CUSTOM SCIEEN
PllfiTING

11. 124, P-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

REPAIR
Alu Tr..s•lule•
PH. 9\2·5612
or 992·7121

CHEml, OHIO

985-4300

DOUBLER
TACK SHOP
AUAIIYI OliO
691-6500
Children.

SADDLES,&amp;

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
StartJ at 1:00 P.II.
Factory Chlltld 12

MOISE EQUIPMENT

Gauge

II-24-1110.

Millloport, Ollie 457 60

USED FURNITURE

•SHRUB S. TREE
TRIM end REMOVAL

UVIIG looM Sllns

IEPIOOM SUITES
DINEm SETS
"NEW" IECUNEIS

•LIGHT HAULING

Locoted Behind
. Trocto• Dellienhip

USED APPUANCES

MOIRIS
EQUIPMENT

90 DAY WA.AJIITY

742-2455

WASHEIS-SIOO up
DtrffRS-161 .,
IEfiiKIOAfOII-$100 UJI
IIAIIOB'-Gu-floc.-$125 up
FUIZEIS-SI25 up
ltCRO OVENS-S7! up

liN'S APPUANCE

SEIVICE
992-5335 ... 985-3561
Acren ,,.. Post Offlco

SaleM ··:•&lt;.-;-·

~

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

I. L HOLLON .... . 1'
TIUCIING
. .. ,....
'".

J&amp;L

742-3088

Wlllfer Sp11111 0•
VINYL REPLACEMENT .
WIHOOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
12-13-'19-1 010.

985-4422

12-7-'lf-1110.

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
97

••ca mEET, ..oLEPOn, 0110

41-Hou . . .., ...,..

41-FUfftilhed Roams

41- SatKI for Rent

47-W.nted to fllern

41 - hu...,ont to. Rom

41 - For LIIMe

,

...................... s.,.., ......... \.
fn,W.a
i

,. •r••••rt

BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, GLASS,
PLASTIC. COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM, RADIATORS AND MORE

,.

'

!-•

SPECIAl ACCOUNTS FOR

NON-PIOFIT GROUPS
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 12:00 to 5 p.m.
Sotuntoy 8 o.m. to 1 2 noon

•VINYL SIDING

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELl
SIDING
._ CO.,

... ....

"Freo Ealmllln"

PH. 949-2801' ·
ar Ill. 949-2160
NO SIIIDA YCAllS
3-ll·tfft

FOI INFOIMATIOIII CALL 992-3194

DEEI
CUT AND
WRAPPED

MAPLEWOOD
UIE
614-949-2734
or
614-949-2635

11 -27-'89- 1 mo.P cl.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE .
· FilE DEPT.
losllallit lulldlng
6:30P.M.
f•t.ry (hob
12 Go,. Shott- o.ty
!lriclly Eilferatl
10·5-tln

...

ECHO-YAIDMAN DIAUI
WE DO SAW
REPAIR
•Sew Suppllea
•Ch8ins •Choln Oila

MOIIIS EQUIP•trr
742-2455

SaloM St., a.tl...., Oh.
11 10. '19-tfn

Her Felb!l
Is still owned and
Dpll'atlll br MiNit
Duncon.

lockspri"'l 1•.

Buying Hours;
7 :30-B:OO
Mon. thru Fri .
7:30-4:00 Saturday
7-'H-1 tno.

For Good Homr
Cookin' Come Se.. U.!
HOURS: I AM -9 PM O.lty
CLOSED SUNDAY

992-7713

lro6ury Itt. MioltlloMrt

,,.:JO.t mo.
----.:.;.;;.;..;:;:;..&amp; '

IJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIJIIIMJIIIliiiiiiiiJIIIJIIIIIiti:

Shop

van•-•
IIAWI maliCE$
ana,,...

1614) 915-4110
............

··

Where •
S•nla Shop.i-1 ·

MC&amp;DIIki Ul

FAEIIITIMATES
'lohl.. , . wl ol,..itl
'"' . . . . fol ,_

..

MIWE'S
IESTAUIANT

W. Va. Chipping,
Inc.
,_,.,, OWo
I'll. 992-3561

•

AIITIIOIIUD

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

~II)

UNDA'S
PIIN-G I CO.

•IN STOCK•

ZETOI TIACTOIS
INTERSTATE llTTDIES

.._.CIIa:J't I

•:z
-Mollllle Ho~:~~• for Rent
43-Farnit tor Rem

• • ~ r ,:·.

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

MAIN ST., IUTlAND

INSULATION

~

CHESIU, OliO

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change a. Lube
•Brake Work

EVElY
SAT. -HT
I.Gitl

F.... ACE

'WtOO GALLON
WlTEI SEIYICE
UMESTONE
SPUAD
DIIT HAUUD

We1torn Boota, Hetl,
Shlrtl, Belts For
Men. Ledin •

1990.
No school books or
paperbacks.
1·693-8916

FURNACE

,...,...

·.

44-A"''"*'' tor Rent

.let R111lt• F11t

?2- Truck I lor •••
73- Yans 6 4 WD 'I

75 - lolll a Motorl for Sale •
71-Auto P•" •
77 ~· Auto Rtplif
78- C•mtttne llluipm.,.l
71- Cemp. . • ~otiH "om•

eez- New H8V~

111-i-010'1
137-lutrllo

71-Autool"' IIIIo
74 - Molorcvcl•

171-IIPPI• o.....

"WANTED TO BUY"
Cash for old
books and
papers, diaries,
and letters before

14- H"Y • Or1ln

TI ,111\flil' 1.11Jflll
21-lu••• Opportunirv
22-Mon-r to Loan
23- Pro. .t6onel l•viOM

Wamed to Buy

FURNACE

"At lmanaltle Pricls"

"'41

IZ - W811tld to luy

~o

Pl..,nl
411-Ltoft

. 773-.llii•a•

.

s•-Mtsc. Metchlftdlll

6 - Lott and Found

(lONLYI

M''" h.111rll~l'

&amp;1-Hou-id Goad•

2 - ln Memory

OFFU GOOD

I

lnvesrment 1001. secured hy
modd home. staning at 512.475.

II

An nn 11 IW'lll rnl ~

•Layaway

.DDIIPOIT, OliO

UCII.I.-1' INCOM! PO'mnW.

(121 14, 1tc

· . 8 A.M. 1111til NOON

"Shop Where Sa1t1 Shop1......"
271 IOIJH SICOfiD

&amp;trltton. ,

moo

.TO PLACE AN 'iD CALL 992-2156

UP TO

992-6669

enaln•
Stoc:k 'hns far
Homollto, WHdootor.
Tocum..h, lrlggo •

E-rn Locot Boon! of
Ed-lon
sA 1
A-vMlo. Ohio 4tlnZ

9 - Wentlll to luy

Gift Wrapping •

BISSELL
BUILDERS

tu

w•

•' '

SOME
SELECTED ITEMS

.•"Free"

DlYE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII

hoorlnD Ia to -tow ""'
1llo-t1 ....... for ""'
lohool Dtotrtot. Tho budgot
bo noHoblo fur lnapoctton. Att Jnt-tod pontoo
oro •kod to ott•d- .
Eloloo lolllon. T.-..urw

~ :T~e Area's Number 1 Marketplace

BEAN
BAGS

1:_C.rd Of Th.,kl

•CHRISTMAS CARDS
•DECORATED TREES
•PLUS MU(H MOlE

Mldclloport,

A public hoortng will bo
held on Dacamber 28.
1111, ot 1:00 p.m. In tt.
tre•urll'' 1 office It E•t...
High lohool. Purpooo of liMo

lclsSifie

I

•TOYS
•GIFTWARE
•CHRISTMAS WRAP

992-2198

PARTS AND SERVICE
Far Moot Z ond 8-cydo

•o

ALLEN'S
HAULING

PAT HILl FOlD

laMiilll....... 011.

FAIM

c-.

Public Notice

ShenandoahHomes,lthlnkeve~:

and was contained in that one
brokeoutina~untnghomeearly · room. · Authorities quickly
Thursday, kUling four elderly · brought the blaze under control
residents 81ld InJuring a score of but had not determined a cause.
others,-authorities said.
The survivors of the fire were
it was the second fatal night- evacuated to the Star City
tbne blal!'! in,· fou_r . months to sJ&lt;atlng rink, where they were
erupt In a Vlrglrila nursing home examined lor possible Injuries,
without an automatic sprinkler officials said. ·
system. In October, lire swept
The four victims wer!! not
.through the Hlllhaven RehablllImmediately Identified, pending
tatloa and 'Convalescent Center
notification of next of kin.
In Norfolk, claiming the Jives of
Robinson said at least three
j
12 resld41nts and Injuring 1(10
firelighters suffered minor 1n 11r- .
thles. Thefirstdeputyonthescene,
o ers. .
Roanoke County Sgt. · R.L. Carol Paxton, "received a lot of
RoblrisOn '$Bid ihe blaze started smoke Inhalation'' and was taken
-In a thlrd·fioor room or the
h
11 1 for
Shenandoah Homes retirement to an area
osp a
communl_ty shortly after 2 a.m. 0~1'si~~~~Y lnju!res Involving

sn to S18

46317 SciiUt
lead
(hooter, Ohio
11-17-'15-1 010.

lho acill IIIII _. roll
iut ratliatii'J, Wo alto
repair Gcn ,...,_

dealership .

food samples were found to be In
violation, mostly for containing
residues of pesticides for which
the U.S. government has set no
safety limits, the FDA said.
The FDA. found Jess than 1
percent of l!omestlc samples
exceeded pesliclde safety limits,
and another 1 percent contained
residue of pesticides not permitled for use on that type of food.
Vegetables appeared to have
the biggest problem with pesticides In 1988. About 3 per~ent of
U.S.-grown vegetables and 7
percent of imported vegetables
were In violation of pesticide
rules, the FDA said.
In a separate test of prepared
foods like those found on most
American tables, the FDA said It
found the average person's diet
In 1988 would contain "less than 1
percent of the acceptable dally
Intakes established for most of
the pesticides measured." That
level is slmllar to 1987.

ROANOKE -Va, (UPI)- Fire

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

You'll Find Savings On

""
,............
lltatlr certt. We can

....... at v.111y l

FRESH CUT
• SHEARED

JOHN TEAFORD

We call t. . 1111111 ro·

log homes

Fir~ . ~laims nursing home reside1J-ts

orawide Holiday Sal.e!

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

50°/o OFFU

SER~E

In

WIITI I
SCOTCI PI•

•CiuiNI Cuotomized

PUIIUC NOTICE

THIS WEEK
AT THE

EVERYTHING IN THE STORE
EXCLUDING COLOGNE
;

Services

lions, they said.
become "a magnet that draws
At a May summit in Bruasels, the forces of reform toward
NATO headl of state backed Eastern ,Europe."
President Bush's proposal to
Woerner said at the session, all
speed the Vienna talks In hopes of allies agreed "the alliance must
reaching a treaty In 1990.
stay to provide security and
NATO Secretary-General stability throughout the lollli
Manfred Woerner, at t.beopen!ng period of transltloll we are now
of Thursday's session, outlined entering. "
NATO's two prlorltlea were secAlthough developments In
uring a CFE agreement In 1990 Eastern Europe so tar have been
and creating favorable condl- . peaceful, "the pressures which
tlons for reforms In East Europe. mliht be released by lOIII·
Conference officials said the overdue change c;ould be exploministers were agreed In their slve," he said.
evaluation of East-West relalfe said the a!Uanee would ai.O
lions in light of the rapid have to play a vital role In the
developmenta in Eastern Eu, 1990s by carrying out an orderly
rope, which Woerner said de- reduction of Its forces as proserve active support.
vlded for
an eventual CFE
There Is new thinking in the agreement.
alliance emphaa!zlng the need of
· "Finally ... we Will need to
West European Integration as a consider the future polltlcall!nd
factor of stability in Europe, the security architecture that will
officials said.
result from thetrl!nsformatlonof
Bush, at the NATO summit 10 the post-war order to a Europe
days ago, urged the 12 European whole and free and to a state of
Community countries to lnten- peace... In which the German
slty their integration process to people regains Its unity through
self-determination," he said.

CHRISTMAS
TREES

!COUNTRY ICLUI
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP
•N- Gripo

VINYL SIDING

SAVINGS

20°/o OFF

ustness

PestiCide
residues down in food
..

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
210 UST MAIN
992-6254

•

NATO OKs draft ag•eement
for conventional
, BRUSSELS, Belllum (UPI) NATO foftllp m!nlstera Thurs·
day approved _a draft treaty on
cultllllf convelltlonal weapons In
Europe for submisilon to the
East-West negotiations In
VIenna, conference officials
said.
, .
· Specifics of the draft were not
released bur officials ' said It
might be submitted Thursday at
the Co'nventional Forces In Europe talks In Vienna, where the 16
NATO nations and the seven
WarsawPactcountrlesarenegotlatlng cuts in conventlbnal arms
from the Atlantic to the Urals.
The draft may tie submitted
with the reservation that some
paragraphs may be ~hanged by
NATO, the of1lclals said, lndlcatlng •some members wanted a
cbance ' to ,l'l!(oa,lder the word- .
lng of some articles after further
cana1!1tatlonS'. ·
But this does not prevent the
Weaterri' alliance ffom submitUnit the text as a draft likely to be.
chaneed In the course of negotia· '

Sentinel- Page 11

Ohio

,,

u,...,.

er....... ~y ndlt'lllf'

ALL LADIES HANDBAGS
40'/o OFF
NURSE MATES
· NOW $4 100

far the only performers lined up
for the show, which has attracted
plenty of big names -In the past.
A REAL LONG STORY: Even
when Louisiana's colorful Gov.
Earl Lon11 was cavorting about
with stripper Blue Starr, he still
came home at night to the
gc;&gt;vernor's mansion, his widow
says. Blanche Loq, 87, discussed Long's romps, which are
portrayed by Paul Newmaa and
Lolita Davldo'llich In the movie
"Blaze," with the Shreveport
Times, and ~ld, "He was down
there on Bourbon Street a lot,
((but he) would be right at home
that night. You know how men do
that sort of thing, don't you?"
Historians agree with · Mrs.
Long's contention that Starr was
not the Jove of Earl's life,
because he also was seeing otl!er
women at the time. "What with
the drugs he was taking, the
liquor and the cigarettes, he was
almost Impotent. and that's why
he was gra bblng these young
women," said Mor&amp;an Peoples, a
Louisiana Tech historian. "E!arl
Long was going with Blaze Starr
to charge his battery. Blaze Starr
was going with Earl Long to
enhance ber care«,"
GLJMPSES: Michael Jack'
son's herd ot pet giraffes escaped
unharmed when a fire deStroyed
their barn at the singer's ranch In
Santa Ynez, Calif. Three giraffes
were In the structure, btl! got out
before firefighters arrived. Several fish In a nearby pond were
kllled ... Joha Taylor, the bass
player In Duran DuJ'1¥1, has been
barred from driving for a year
after he admitted driving while
drunk. Taylor also was fined $400
for the offense during his court
appearance in London.

o

Daoemblr 14, 1989

I

.. 1919, ..... 4.,...,.
Thnn ~..
•d

Ann

• .,.. •.

•

eollar

People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TR01T
Vnled Pl'l!lls lnterllallonal

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDEII8

••• '

GLAIS
WICKER
QUilTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

LAMI'I
IDDKCAIES ·
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS I
CROCKI
BEDS
-~
DRESSERS PfltMJTtvES
~
DRY liNKS TAILES
,1,
POCKET WATCHES
-

"lit IMt ,...,.., ,., ,.,.,..
1114 L IUIII

tft·IJI•

PI

.
•

Ol, OliO

.
.
~-----------------·
..
,..

.

•.

,&gt;1

�......
Declmber 14. 1989

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY
t»&gt;t WH/1&gt; M ~-l

Ar,.-.. .::...........~Cal
bolh
and nall:i.
...
up and IlL :10 ...... Holl:lay......., - -

.......
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as.•

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nalll:.l1~11.

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0

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Aller

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2

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Pll.
I t ¢&amp;all

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..... »MJJ..

Television

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

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1t71 ...

Mllllo'l R-....r:o. _ ,
Ad., Ml-polt. 114-112·7?11

Giveaway

==------ForL1118

4-old--~
lr::lnod. ...... 11gor .......
2085.

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,_ s.-:... ~IIJO&lt;'I ...,.., ._...

'7

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"I' m th•m k'mg about caII''mg 1't
'Impending Doom.'"

a••-or. mixed
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(f) lqut• One TV

TilE ~OLE CORNE!t, .
LI611TS, POI.ES,WIRIN6,
LABOR .. COST SIXTI'
TIIOUSAND DOLLARS

,.,...,.,...... .....
.... JGO • .,.. - · - .
PUll,-. eolld. 111141 MU
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To 0 good ~ 2 biiCI: 6 110 AVON I All I _ . , llpooll:llolo, _ . . . , Ccljo
pa~-lo pupa. - . 114- tp=ra, SOW15-I 4tl.
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A varloiY o1 fun.
Founrl: Aoldlah rod Labrador - . ,
and rllnt _,.. lo ""' "" ,.......,.
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EARN IICNiiY AtAdlng - . 1
130,-,r. pota:llal.
Dalallo.lll-- Ext. Y·
1018t.

130,000 ,..,.

&amp; VICinity

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--:00 tlng f rl' H'kM• fDr . . ... Of

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CD llody I!IIDIIIc
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Care for Mnlar altlllnl In my
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AIIIDMble.I1
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Cu:ntr.
Al&gt;l!lr lo
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CHRISTMAS AUCTIOit. Cammunltr
Building.
1:00
p.m.S..n
Dao.17.
Alcl:ard
Raynaldo: ACid-. 301111.

EitUM41A 1or •-llotlnga.
EARN-"'*" • _..,..
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304~15-311111.

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mor:ll:.

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~!.ATI1ES.
1M ...!!k'kto-~"""•
nvm
12/mo..
-.Calll1t til tiii.E .
Elllclonoy ..,., Fumlll:ul wlol·
I Iced
6 o1

·;-r:&gt;'r

war:oad 10 Buy: Uood 11a1ft.

-

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lnl:oa,

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and

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NOT

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-~ .... unlll ••"
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l:rougl:

listening Devices
;Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp;Senrial

an,um..

CJ Hearinc Evaluations For All Aps

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
c UcensecrC6nical Audi.w..nst

:::.::·:..=:..! ~ ~=
-•htar?p.m.

=mllftln~--

:

oral

Laurel Land ..... -

-.,...lor-.
par

-

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\':'::O.Salollla C:wlo:•••lor

"1s1~ital
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SWAIN
AIJC110N a FURNn'URI.

a

041Npollo. - · 1MN

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old-

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eoncrele alab

56

I mo. old la:nalo lhll:-llu, block
6wt:lo,haollll-.,llot-a411117.

-••c Collie ·
- : ; · --~··- a
1121, .....
111
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AKC loh
$110. Clnly 2 ::.... .. =~

Lllulll-t
(2:00)

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M:aiil' •
• ·- .......
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01 Pllu4Nawa
!IJ MOYIE:~ In
Cor•-lcut (2:00)
IIJ Murder, .... • ConverMtlon Willi Dinah

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Coming To DlnMr (2:15)

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~
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Dweyne, Freddie 111&lt;1 Whllley
rulh Kim to be with her ·
lither. I:!
(!) llteiJI: Pic ulan Goee

Auto Parts &amp;

11771..,wulla,ID1-and
:

1:30 • ezt 111 Dtrre•.,.. w-

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concre111 alab l~ad

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II deed. !;I

CD (It MM!iireiiiiiiii&lt;Yyl Rumpole Ia
lnvi!M by the 'Dally Beacon'
to defend their editor. !;I
ill e111 11111111 lan Daniel
gNel Slim en ullimetum to
nred I job Or relum to school.

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IIN81hwlleNow
1:30 !21 Ill DHr John Jahn"a
Cl oldtely neiallbor helpl him

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Home
,~...,.. .

....., -

'· ;

llon'ITVIuvloa,ap1 I
In Zenlll ....

SCHOOL. TODAY

1

'L

THAT?

! L'ARNT

(!lUnder .....
Ill
0 Knoll Llndlng
Glry lelml the extent of
Amllnda'l .lreU11111 Ired

e

NEVER TO CALL
MARY BETH
"tiDWL ••I"

:O~~zIIJ l!venlntl Newt

··~ .

Ohio

~~~1il:2o IJ)
MOVIE: GoM Willi The
Wind 11'11 01 :1) (2:001
10:30 &lt;Il MuWplece Thenw Or.

..

Mll'lllle Ia raloued from
prison, 111&lt;1 1 pe111nt"s son
Ia killed. Q

01 ,,., - R d. . . - . -

~

(It Ryan'• Din

~.

eo cm.w.tc~~ Ton~g~~~
• llappJ IIDidlyl Willi

t."'~~'.:ll.
Jao-.

11o1111r Oal~•' oro Bobby

.-.

OH 1 _ 7 . . _

__,_

lloldlboro parfonn1
111sonll favorllea such ••
"SIIvw Balli" Ired 'What Child

PlUmbing &amp;

...
.

I

.....,.
Ia Thla '.

e

.

. · BERNICE
BEDEOSOl-

.

-·
. . . . --·!WI*ft-

i:f=:':..
Dllonerlne

IIJ ....... VIol

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Vl~soCountrt
11:30()) '17 \IIIII

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~~=::.:-

·1~
:=......

11-6-1110. .

STIEO

. . . . . . . . . . . Moon
o- Utlnul: The Final

PIZZA

lOWIST PIKES
. III5HIST QUAliTY
FIB tOEM IBIVIIY ·
POMEROY AND llliDDLEPORT'S ONlY
IOCAU. Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

. ~acr- .

"11M!I!IIOVII: OIIUIIIIII (2:001

.,,..
.
.
,
tl!r_.:::

•£=~

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•

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Pizza·Subs-Sai. .·Daily Specials
992-2221

'

If

th ln. . IIDw

'11:10 (I) IIICWII: I

I

'·

••

+JH

••

EAST

+K4

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.QUS2
+AK7
SOOTH

+Qn

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Vulaerable: Nortb-8outh
Dealer: Soath

Soo:..

Weo1 · NA111

,.

P- I+
All pun

I NT

Euo

P•

Opeaiag lead: +J

L---------.-J
trump.
Tbe IDIIIIUai I -

of tbiJ deal II

that It is belt clef- for Eut to bold

au Ilia 1111&amp;11 bearta. By doiDIIII,
be jKeteull declarer from &amp;ettlDI a
complete coant 011 the Uild. 'l'laat
sbottld ca- declarer to 10 W1'1lll at
tbe flllilb and loae a trick to lbe ~
of dlamoadl.
,.
011 to

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 1968
· 1 Conductor
Beetles
Celdwell
hit
II Opening
8 Pierces
·10 Demonstrale 7 Ship's diary
11 Jewish
8 Sounded
scriptures
II Mulberry
13 FHIIng
Iabrie
'" Astonished 12.Jinx
15 Football's
Lou "The

17 Anger
1II Cap
- • Groza 20 English
18 Ship's sail
river
11 Remiss
21 Uncool&lt;ed
1t Explode
22 Girl's name
21 Subside
23 Pro and 2" Maitha
25 Strain
of comedy
- gnat
21 Venetate 211 China's ·
2t ReiCh
Sun- -sen
30 Ebb
27 French
31 Conlribule
season
32Robbery
:MJapanese
city

29 Glv~ 11

36 Imitated
36 Twofold

a lry

31 German 311 Regarding
arllcle · 40 "I've
33 Close by
3" Mining
had!"
find
42 Terminate
35 - out of "" " mind
pro nobis"

37 Nigerian
31 Put on

make-up
"1 Malure
43Awaken
oil5 Correct
a text
48 Seeing red
47 Whirlpool
48Ciaw

DOWN
1 Barbecue
· rod
21taHan
river

3 Function
"One Mrs.
Slnalra

DAILY CRYPTOQUOJ'ES- Here's hew to •ork II:

t2J1t

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
. One ltller stands for another. In this sample A is I.ISfd
for lht three L's, X for lht lwo O's, etc. Single letters,
,apostrophes, lht length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each dlly lht code letten are different,

atNewhlrt

...

kola. Declarer made one IMHrump
with careful card-readlnc. plus one
llllbt error lrom Eut.
West led the jack of spades. Declarer played amall from dummy and Eut
won tie I
Eut cubed the kiDI of
the five of bearll, a top.
Welt won the aee and
. played · a club, and the clefeaden
.look tbree more club tricU. Eut di&amp;cardlq a dl•"""''l. Oo the fourth club
declarer tUn a beart from dummy
aad a low dlamcJIId from biJ band.
Welt DOW lOt off lead with tbe iO of
bearta. Soath played 11p1de to tbe ace
lD dummy and -. spade back to biJ
...-, Eut DOW went 'WJ'OIII by
lllrOwiDI biJ lut bear!. AI tbiJ point,
wbell dummy • • left with a small
apade and IC..J-4 of dlamoadl, SouU.
led biJ 1ut hlcb heart. Welt followed,
the IPade- dbcarded from dummy,
and l:ut dilcarded I cliiJnoDd. It WU
now clear that West bad started witb
four 1padel, four hearts and four
clubl, and coald bave oaly ODe diamond. So declarer pla,ed a low ella. mond to clumny'l klDg. West followID&amp; with tbe loae 10, and thea fbte11ed
agailllt Eut'1 queen to make one no-

·=

11:00CD lall..,
(Jt (J) • (I) 11m

............... ........ .
'I •••
IU.alr1m_.,

llbor.I;J

~:::::··Live 1;1

- - IIPIIIIIinoa _.... WY

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration · ..

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am-5 pm
.

WHAT
DAOBURN
LESSON WAS

•••IGhua ....

In 441

DEER SLUGS ••• 52.20 lox
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS

I SHORE L'ARNT
ME A LESSON IN

"Mitntlna. ....... .

4DII;~fll1.

Q~"lpaii,Ohlo

12 Ga.

.

--.........
=.,....
-·-'"..."-,..........
I

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l...
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GUNS· AMMO

1;1

celebrate Chl'iatmaa. (R)
10:00 (J) 700 Club Willi Pit
Rab1rtaon
e (Jt Ill L.A.....
M1rl&lt;owllz becomes a lunauc
when hl1 wife goea Into

HeetlrJII ,

lAC., 0110

Joe From San Franctaco, CA

=.::r;::

=:lOW;;::.:;::::.;·______

lflt

(T)

82

RACINE GUN SHOP

([J

a- Pupploa no
••oo.
... - ..,
11• -7-11
~~--~·L-~.-~iiOP~

au • 130( or ~~~~·-~a~-uta.~:~~
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lor C U II Paloh oonci.IIM?I-'I?M.
111
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Fum
• - and • - *-· o- tor Qaropal GrouP. 114Rooms
:O::..f"l. ... -.. ~ - .

=PoW,.._.,

8 Lartr
Kina LM:I
Dtlc a en ... On

WHY DON'T

'!OJ TAKE IT
ot..IT:i

Pultl odad

._

In

1:00-~·CIIa"ae
• (Jt G Chelrl Slim hapH
to raiN money by r!ICing
Robin Colcord'a Y~:
®COIIgllaallellllll
(J) eiJl YIIUIIII Rldlrl
TNepoon lelml flrallhal he

I100.NI _ _ _.IIrelor

.,..lllo*up_•__

Hitlln:ift:ola-rornnn kin-. Ct.u a1uc1

are

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w-IRt

Pets tor Sail

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lnltaled in the Concord bam.

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011
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Af. '~.!....tiJ!ILEi
Cl!n1....,AY

-••
· lola,

.Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy.

949-2168

Building

W
RI»WIIill i~:;;;;;A;;o;;;;.;iOiiiiiOii
Pit Poocl QIM. Julie
Mldlllar:c,.:
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14
EOH. ._., ~ ""' Caucl: Min., nylon ~Oil

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114-44'-a4u, Zan1x
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UJ ,614) 446-71il9 or (614) 992-2104
""'5'
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1417 Second Avenue, llax 1213
.• Ohio 45631

49919 IUASE HOUOW ID.

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55

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MarchandIll

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SCRAM LETS ANSWEIS
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Frosty- Aware- P&amp;Qan - Hearlt! - GET it WET
The man returned a delective life preserver. It had tom all
apart. The clert&lt; asked, '" What did you do? GET il WET?"'

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTER S

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"2 Mobile Homes
for R nt

StandiniJin the middle of
the road IS dangerous. You
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mind
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LAVNI!'S I'IIIINITURI
11 Help Wanted _
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Ynlut 1'e Caltl••••••• NEVER YET HAS LAW
FORJTD A GREAT MAN; 'TIS UBERTY THAT
JREEDS GIANTS AND HEROES. -VON SCHDJ.ER
C) 1 - King F - Syndlcolle. Inc

/

I

�1~'T)tl

o.ty Sentinel

._ • ~ ht••• --....l1Coe!n~tln~-IIIL~from~IJ,na~a:~e~1~~::-:-:-- ---...... Local news briefs..:--.---.. .f'l:'•!j•y.~-n~.g"
Darlelle Campbell, M, 12 State
Continued train paee 1
Zirkle uyslhe tire apparently started In the utility room of
the bome, altboucb exactly wilY lhe fire star11!d Is stU! unlmown.
Zirkle did not lulow lithe borne was Insured.
AltbolqJb no lnJlll'k!l were reported at tbe scene. Pomeroy
flremaD Cbarlel Werry was Injured later In a !all at the station
bouse as equlDJ11Zllt was being put away. according to Zlrltle.

-·Area deaths--Vi.p.ia R01111h

the Rejoicing Lite Baptist
Chu reb, and did much Volunteer
Vnginia Mae Roush, 74, work ln the COII\munlty with
Hanford, died Wednesday, Dec. 13. various organizations Including
1989, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
the boy scouts, the Meigs County
Born April4, 1915, in Hanford, Health Department. the March
sbe was a cllluiN« of the late of Dimes, and the Meigs County
Major Marie and Mary Hudson Jus- Humane Society.
tis.
. Private graveside services
She was also prec:eded in death were beld today at 11 a .m. at
by br:r husJwMI, l:lonaJd G. Roush, Meigs Memory Gardens. Donawho died in 1981, and a brother, tions In her mell)ory may be
~ Fmis Justis, who died in made to the Meigs Chapter,
1914.
American Cancer Society.
She was a flllmer employee of
the Latin SlaW: Hospital, 8lld a
member of the Father's House
~h. Hartford.
V elerana Memorial
. Suniving are one daughttr,
Wednesday admissions
l!lleU L. Fneman, Syracuse,
Ohio; two sons, Donald M. Roush, Josephine Parsons, Pomeroy;
Lellrt, Jack L. Roush, Hartford; a Unda Brunty, Racine; Ruby
lJiutt., Richard Justis, Utile R,oclc, Frederick, Pomeroy; Charles
Art.; llalf-brother, Raymond Justis, Werry, Pomeroy; Marlon
Ebersbach, Pomeroy.
.
~. Ohio; eight RfiiJidchildren
Wednesday discharges- Lora
81111 ciJia grat-grandchiklrcn.
Saviccs will be conducted Circle, John M~t:rger, Gary
Friday, I p.m., 81 the F~g Snouller.
Funeral Home, Mason, wtth the
Rev. Oydc Fields officiating.
Burial will follow in the Zerkle

Hopital news

'I

may call IOday at the
funeral bome, 6 to 9 p.m.

Marion Miehael

•

l

Marian RubY Michael, 69, of
2t4 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
died Tuesday evening at the
Holzer Medical Center lollowlng
an extended Ulness.
Born on AprU 3, 1920 at Little
Rock, Ark. sbe was the daughter
of William Webster Bennett and
Gladys Mary Johnson Bennett.
She Is survived bY a son and
daughter-In-law, David and An·
nabelleMicbael, Leon, W.Va.; a
daugbter and son·ln·law, Mary
Ann and Woody Call, Langsville,
ana. a daqhter, Nancy Acker·
man, Coolville; two brothers,
Cbarles Wesley Bennett, Memphis, Tenn., and Wlllam Webster
Benilett, Horn Lake, Miss. , 12
grandchildren and eight great·
grandchildren, along with two
spedal friends, Ruth A. Priddy.
Rutland, and Marilyn Weaver,
Gallipolis.
She was preceded In deatll bY
bet' parents and her busband.
Ollwr (Mie) Mlcbael.
Mrs. Michael was a member or

~

Bearhs, Llcyd F . Blackwood,
Nancy W. Woola~d , John F.
Snyder, BryanS. Shank, Audrey
C. Kinzel, Lawrence D. Leonard,
Loretta A. Brown, Howard P .
Logan, Deborah L. Grueser.
DavtdM. Klng,DanE.Follrod,
Jeffrey D. Holter, Patricia J.
Barton, Gerald E. Rougllt, Janet
Letrle, Harry L. Leffle, John H.
Anderson, Tracey L. Odell, Vir·
gil K. Windon, Donald R. Smith,
Keith D. Phalln, Janet M. Am·
brOS(&gt;, C'lrolynA.Charles, Adelle
L. White, Danny R. White, Paul
F. Marr, Gregory W. .Cunnlngham, Dould A. May, and
Edward M. Cozart.
Rutland: Mary E. Davidson,
Dinah M. Stewart, Marta H.
Blackwood, Donna M. Davidson,
Gregory M. Stewart.
Langsville: Cecil E . Johnston,
Rebecca J. Johns iOn, Ellis E .
Myers, Alva B. Clark, Karen S.
Oark.
Syncuae: Kathy J . Cummlngs, Delores · F. Whitlock,
Teresa M. Tyson-Drummer, Deborah A. Lowery, and Richard G.
Thomas, Carolyn s. Barton,
Sherrie A. Roush, and Johnny L.·
Roush.

eift
'
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~
..
....
..........
~
ill, •J
'· "·

2•.

1910; ~- F. Duty,
n~
UncoiD Aw., Ga!Upolll, Feb. U,
ltiO; J - Gl- Shaver, 20,
RloGrudeEstates, Rio Grande,
March 2, 11111; ~ Leourd
Ga!Uamore, Blacldork, Ohio,
Feb. 16, 1990; Keith Slaven, 25, ·
Rt. 2, Patriot, Feb. 15, 1990;
Kenneth William Taylor, 18,
Kanauaa. March 2, 1990; David
t,f.Saunders, 22,Rt.2,Btdwell, (2
counts), Feb. 9, 1990; Charles M.
McBrayer, 37, Rt. 5, Gallipolis,
Jan. 18, 1990; Karen Shaver, 25,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, Feb. 26, 1990;
Mark K~,18, Rt. 5, Gallipolis,
(2 counts) Jan. 23, 1990; Lana

St()Cks
Am Electric Power ..... .. ...... 32*
'AT&amp;T ................................. 46~
Ashland Oil ........................38')(,
Bob Evans ........ .................. l4~
Charming Shoppes ' ............. 10~
City·Holding Co................... 15
Federal Mogul.,......... .......... 20
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .46%
Heck' s ................................. 3~
Key Centurion ..................... 14
Lands' End ......................... 20%
Limited Inc..... ,.................. 32\1
Multimedia Inc .................... 86
Rax Restaurants .................. 211
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ......... ~.. 16*
Shoney's Inc . .. .............. ·.. .. .. 11%
Star Bank....... .. :............ ..... 20~
Wendy's Inti............... ........ .4%
Worlhlngton Ind .................. 23*

St., GaiUpolls, March 21, 1990;
~Ike R. Pitre, 33, 26 Mill Creek
Road, Galljpollll, (2 counts) Feb.
U,lt90; Shawn G. Patleraon, 26,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, (2 counts) Jan.
25,1910; Janet B. Swisher,~. Rt.
2, Bidwell. (3 counts) Jan. 4,
· lteo: . Debi!Ae L. Holcobnb, 351 29
MIH Creek Road, GaiUpoUs, Feb.
27, 1190; Carmel Long, 26, 547
Burnett Road, Kanauga, Jan. 9,
1990; Sherr! Hylton, U, VInton,
Jan. 16, 1990; Malvin Valentine,
40, 714 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Feb. 6, 1990; Ray A. Hylton, 31,
Vinton, Feb. 28, 1990; Angelo B.
.Hardy, 30, Rt. 2, Bidwell, March
8, 1990; Ople E . Moore, 43,
. GalHpolls, (2 COilnls) March ,
1990; Junior Lee White, 31, 920
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, April 3;
1990; David R. Johnson, 19,
Kanauga, March 14.1990; Eric
Edwin Golf, 29, 180! Eastern
Ave., GalllpoUs, March 7, 1990;
James Michael Williams, 25,2134
Chatham Ave. ( GalllpoUs, March
13, 1990; Paul Rogers 20, Rt. 2,
GalllpoUs, (2 counts) Feb. 9,
1990; Randy M. Waggoner, 27, 46
Central Ave., Gallipolis, March
13, 1990; John F . Johnson, 22, Rt.
4, Galllpolla, (2 counts) Feb. 7,
1990; Randy P . Deckard, 36, Rt.
2, Bldwl!ll, (2 counts) Jan . 31,
1990; and Robert D. Angles, 25,
Rt. 2, Bidwell, March l, 1990.

Meigs Co'(J,ntians... Continued from page 1

~

I.

March 7,11111; Bill R. Sareent, 26,

a Court St., Gallipolis, Feb. 16,

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Clirlltmu prOIIftlftl
Heath United Methodist
Cburcb, Middleport, will present

at 7 p.m. A social hour will follow
the program. Everyone ls ll'el·
come to attend.
1

Shop today,
shop locally

Pick 3
595
Piek4

•

~~~

';( ,.. ..

.

.

40°/o OFF

Vot.40, No .1U

• ...

For That Special Gifl For -Your
Special Lady

C~rky' s Classic~

112 W . Mam

·

.
Pomeroy ,

_
·
992 2851

•

COUNTY OFFICIALS

1oar•
of· CDII!IIIinionln: Richard J-. David lobltllf.z .... Ma1•ting Rousll
Phil Roberts, IDgi~~~er; T.. Warntr, Hwy. Supt.; James Soulsby, ShlriH; Yfllliam Widdint,lucliter; Mike Swisher, Dtpt. of H - Services

ADVISORY IOAIID MEMIEIS

TO: O.D.O.T. s.pt. Jim ProfliH, Trust- of ·- 12 towMhips,
Mayan and Yilclge Oflicials of Mi•dltport, P-ay. loci111,
lutiDIIII 111111 Syroc•t; A•llilli1trattl'l and Teachen of Ealfll'll,
Meigs .... Southern SchaOl Diltrich; lill liMiter• !Fair lo.anll,
Dick War~~~rll,....l, Jim HiH (f'ltallll), Staff ef 1ht Daily Sentintlantl WMPO;Itadtn and -1111trs of 4-H Clilll. Glri'Scouh
and hy Scouh; John Costanzo I111m. Supt.); Jim Mit"' !Shade
liv• S. F. Mp,)J Mtthellilt Co-Op Parish; Tom O'Grtllly anti Etl
Nt"- of Athtnl Program, a... llpiCiaHy to all cQIIC&amp;rnttl citiz..._

.,

D,vt lollltntz-Chrm.
Charles illlrrett
lolltrt low..
Victor lrawn
Slllila Curtis
Roy Millar

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Stateboue Reporter
COLUMBUS - Battling dr.ugs
and combating drunken driving
are the two main goals or a
one-day solo session ol the Ohio
·.,,..,,House Friday.
The session, expected to be the
last one ol 1989 ln lhe General
Assembly, Is scheduled to begin
.at 10:30 a.m .
At the top ol the agenda Is
House Bill 685, a comprehensive
attempt to arrest the growing
drug problem by lormulatbtg a
. statewide drug plan, calllna for
cooperation with local oltlclals

and channeling federal money to and for driving with a suspended
operator's license.
them.
The state Bureau or Motor
The bill, drafted by Speaker
Vernal Riffe Jr ., D· Vehicles sald that 37 percent or
Wheelersburg, and rewritten by the drivers arrested for driving
a select House committee, also while Intoxicated last year had ·
. Increases penalties tor drug · already had their licenses
abuse and. drug trafllcklng, In· suspended.
Both the anti-drug and the
eluding mandatory driver II·
cense revocation for felony drug drunken driving bills will require
oflenders, and life sentences with House-Senate negotiations early
next year before lln~l products
no parole tor 14 to 30 years for
can be passed.
repeat violators.
The Senate already has sent to
Also up for a vote ls a revised
the
House two drug-fighting bills
version of a Senate-approved bill
which
were largely Ignored. But
Increasing the lines and license
suspensions for drunken driving their provisions will come Into

-

1. •

..

Pat O~ritn

John ~a
John litJ!II .
IIIith W...
•-~oy,

Union Ave. at St. lt. 7

Ohio 45769

.

20°/o
OFF
LAIGE SELEmGII Of •M.Es, IIlLI
COVEIS, .IIIEfdENCI IOOIS

* FilE IIIPIIImNG oi •BLEs *

30°/o
TO 50°/o OFF
AU C.STUSS ABAIGIMIIIIS,
WIAPPIIIG PAPa, DICOIA11011S, DC.
us for the Full Una of Fine Carlson Creft
Greduatlon Announcements
1990 GRADUATES!

0N\ifl
5tt:~u,t a3ook.s
..........

play during the Senate-House Rep. John Shivers Jr., D-Salem,
compromiSe talks, probably In generally raises lhe penalties tor
drug violations by one level. It
January.
·
also
cuts In half the dellnltlon of a
Meanwhile, there -are several
"bulk
amount" of drugs, mean·
major stumbling blocks to enact·
lng
a
dealer
could get in trouble
ment ol the drunken driving
sanctions: the municipal judges with only half the amount neces·
want stronger penalties, the Ohio sary under current law.
There are additional •penalties
Department of Highway Safety
wants restoration of on-the-spot for corrupting a minor with
license suspension by pollee drugs , and a mandatory five·
olllcers, and everyone wants the year extra jail term lor using a
$10 million In federal highway weapon during a drug violation.
safety financing that may be cut JuvenUes committing a drug or
olt unless penalties are alcohol abuse offense would have
to undergo treatment.
Increased.
The House committee voted to
House Bill 685, sponsored by

Gallla County Sheriff Dennis until the Investigation has been
R. Salisbury announced today completed.
that Dennis J. Baisden, 18, was · Olllclals refused to answer
found dead early this morning In quesdons on the tlme the body
his private cell at the Gallla was discovered, who discovered
County JaiL
·
the body and when Baisden was
Sheriff s8IIsbury said Baisden last seen alive.
Baisden, Indicted and con·
was discovered by a jailer on
routine cell checks. Dr. Edward fessed murderer In the throat
J . Berklch, Gallla County Cor- slashlngs of three people at
oner, was called to the scene. The Kanauga, was kept separate
body was transported to the trom tile other prisoners, the
Franklin County morgue In Co· sheriff said.
Baisden was Indicted on three
lumbus for an autopsy.
Preliminary Indications are counts ol aggravated murder In
that Baisden died !rom banging the ~pt. 24 deaths ol Marvin W.
Wears. 9', and Beulah Wears, 81,
himself with a bedsheet.
Sheriff Salisbury has re- 'and Mrs. Wears' Daughter, Aud·
queHid that ~ :the,. Bureau ul l"ey,Fbalei', · ··Milton.
at
Crfn\tnal ldentlflcation and In· the~an' residence, C5 F!JUrth
vesdgatlon, Attorney General's Ave., Kanauga. Baisden was also
Ofllce, London, Ohio conduct a Indicted on two counts ol aggra·
vated robbery and aggravated
complete Investigation.
Sherif! Salisbury said no one count ol aggravated
further details will be available burglary .

... nAFF...
. . ::
l""'l' Wiggi•-Program Harold lraw•-Coll. ., :
Rolltrta litlt--S.C'J· . Ricllorcl. H~I-L En. ·
,.

WREATH - Taryll DoldJe,
Uncola HID, Pomeroy, and an aooJJte
lor
knon &amp;bat a pari ol Cbrllitmasla
tbe 1.._1 o1 the
Ia tbe adveat wreath. Taryn Is tbe
JI'IUlddaupter ol Ferman and IJUian Moore, Pomeroy.

1985 VOYAGER LE

tr-., air.

S8995
1988 DODGE

AlliES

$5295

1987 FORD

TAUIUS.

S8695

1988 DODGE

.

MINI VAN
Loldld.

Olllclals believe robbery was a
motive lor the slaylngs. Beteween $550 and $600 along with a.
ladles watch and a diamond ring
was ta~en !rom the Wears'
residence.
Baisden pleaded not guilty and
not guilty bY reason of Insanity to
the murder charges. Judge Donald A. Cox ordered a psychiatric
evaluation on Baisden's sanity at
the time olthe alleged orrenses
and his abiUty to stsnd trial.
Alter testimony lroin Dr.
James R. Hagen, Shawnee State
Forennslc Center, Portsmouth,
Baisden was rwed competent to
stand trial and ~udge Cox set
A•n 30, 1911CH0r1lls trial.
IJaiaden admitted murdering
the three people during a videotaped confession on Monday
night Sept. 25, after his arrest by
the Mason County Sherltrs
,Dtipartment.

;• , · ,1
,, '' ! - .....

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Meigs County grand jurors
are drawn for January tenn

(3) 1989 DODGE
SPIRIT
Clwy... r F•tery Sale Cars

Y·l, aute.

•

2 Seeliono, 18 P1901 25 Cento
A Multimedio Inc. N-opopor

Gallia County prisioner found
dead ·in jail cell early today ·

-.

.IGS COUNTY Llml COmGL ·

$7995
PICKUP .

FIIDAY AID SATURDAY ONLY

•

'

House to.meet on drug, drunk·driving. bllls

SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS

·cHRISTMAS
.
SPE·CIALS

'

perceal. PU11y clolldy Saturday. IDp In mid leena.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Otiio, Friday, ·December 15, 1989

COP!riphtocl 1989

~'

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ud lt. Chance ol • - ..

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY
.
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Low to.rpt . , . , _ five

6384

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Ohio Lottery

a Chrllltmas pfllll'am on SundaY

nWtcs-FOIIII.PING otll PROGRAM TOWARD A ClEANER, HEALTtiER MEIGS COUNT(
To the ADMINISTRATION. AND STAFF OF DLPI-Larry J,'Caaper, Dill. IV Co-Ord.

AIWhMIDrlve

tt2_..57 I....OOIS)

~

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TOPll4 DR.

tJ .St.

'

w.va .,

·.1989 MEICURY

•

Meigs announcenaaats .

. \.

.........

,,

Ash.
IVJddleport: AprU Cundlfl, An·
gela Y. Cundiff, Cheryl Halley,
Jacqueline Wa~ley. Cyllnda L.
· Frederick, Sharon K. Hawley,
Linda L. Haley, Paul P . Gerard,
Geroge Harris, Jr., Maurlsha A,
Nelson, Leafy M. Chas1een Wil·
Ilam H. Moody, Jr., . Sarah J. ·
Fowler, Nanna H. Wilcox, Jean
A. Durst.
Raclae: VIrginia Bland, Paula
R. Brown, Larry Rapp, Dorotha
P. Rlffie, ·William H. Hoback,
Marie Bush, Charles w. Bush1
Frederick R. Thompson, Bar·
baraF.Beegle,CharlesF.Pyles,
Jr. , Randall R. Simpson,
Jeanette M. Radford,
Long Bottom: Ralph Ballard
Wilma Ballard. Paula J. Wood:
Susa11 A. Karr, James w. Hayman, Laura "L. Hawley , and .
Bruce Hawl~;y.
;
Reed8vllle: Joseph Marcinko,
Mace! S. Barton, Fonda G.
·

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$4995. . ,
1985 FORD F2 50 '
&lt;
414

s.

~799.5

$549
A.P.R.
11.75°/o
FINANCING AVAILABLE
16 MODBS &amp; NEWD

1984 NISS4N·,

.

•

.

PICKUP

$29'95:·,;

--~------~~~
- ~-~-~-~~~~~~----~~~
•• Dell•• S•vrt Dale ·Hill . ., .
.
,Monday, Wednesday a.. Friday Open 'Til 7:00; Tuesday a.. Thursday Open 'Til 6:30 PM

or

'Til 4:00 PM; Clo"d Sundliy

N

Tbe following Meigs County
residents were selected by ran·
dom draw on Tuesday for possl·
ble service during l!le January
1990 term ol Grand Jury.
.Gregory William Cunningham,
Pomeroy; Marty Lee Cline,
Pomeroy; Marjorie Loretta
Rood, Reedsville; Don Roger
Smith, Rutland; Mark A. Ml·
cbael, Pomeroy; Unda Nelsol).
Langsville; Jettle M. Arlx,
Pomeroy; Glen L. Kennedy,
Pomeroy; Ella May Romine,
Pomeroy; VIolet MDlhone, Cool·
ville; Karen Hatfield, Dexter;
Gary Michael Smith, Middleport; Adolph Saelens, Middleport; Emerson C. Johnson, Portland; Ruby Evelyn Congo,
Portland; Racheal Lee Lefebre,
Pomeroy; Matthew Paul
Grueser, Shade; Jamie H.
Mauch, Albany; Dwight Edward
Spencer, Pomeroy; Norma Ann
Torres, Middleport; Marian R.
Michael, Pomeroy; Larry G. ·
Spencer, Tuppers Plains; Eldon
Lowell Vining, Rulland; Rose D.
Carr, Coolville.
Gary M. Johnson Sr., Long
Bottom; Edwin Oberholzer, AI·
bany; Marvin Spencer Murphy,

Tuppers Plains; Robin A. Rittle,
Shade; Mary E . Walburn, Mld·
dleport; Randy Allen Jewell,
Pomeroy; Betty L. Donovan,
Syracuse; Margie Jean Schuler,
Porlland; Dian M. Molden,
Langsville; Pamela Susan
Demlco, Albany; Cathy Darlene
Cllllord, Long Bottom; Dudley
W. Meadows, Portland; Oark D.
Baker, Middleport; Patricia
Anne Henderson, Portland; Donald Ray Eichinger, Reedsville;
E. Louise Well, Shade: Brian
Allen Beeler, Long Bottom;
Cheryl Anne King, Pomeroy; ·
Nola R. Bradshaw, Middleport;
Lisa Henderson. Guysville;
Donna ~uth Pullins, Middleport;
Sarah Jean Roush, Racine;
Roma Lynn Sayre, Racine;
Donna M. Davidson, Middleport;
Lester A. Lathey, Middleport.
Present lor Tuesday's jury
selection In the office of Meigs
Clerk ol Courts Larry Spencer
were Jury Commissioner Wal·
lace Bradford, Sherif! James M.
Soulsby, Common Pleas Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill, and Marlene
Harrison, Diane Lynch and
Spencer, ot the clerk ol courts .
olllce.

....-Local .news briefs-Deputies prop~ Thursday wreck
An accident which ~rred Thursday night abqut 6 p.m. at
Tuppers Plains was lnvesljgated by the Meigs County Sherlfrs
Department.
According to the report, a 1984 Pontiac, owned by Mark Boyd,
Tuppers Plains, was parked on private property when It was
struck by the vehicle ol Phyllis Owens, Coolville, as she was
backing up.
There was light damage listed to .Boyd's vehicle and no
damage to Owen's 19M Chevrolet.
Sherlll James M. SoullbY alao reports that 35-year-old David
Lee Jo-. of PoiD~Pieuant, W.Va., fonnerly ol New Haven,
W.Va., has been artesledon slxbadcheckcharges. Middleport
Pollee bad ltopped Jo- on a traltlc charge.
Jones wu lodged ID the Meigs County Jallln lieu of a $1,350
bond on the alx cbarpe, the aherlff reports.
·

.

Continued on page 8

SHOVEL, SHOVEL, SHOVEE - Tbat'a what
Donald Pealrd was doJnc Ia PomerOJ Ibis.
momtng (Frlday):Tbe aldewallm were covered
wUb qUite a bll ol lbe white atuff, and more Ia
expeded later Ia the day. 'l'bll picture was

captured as Pealrd nowled snow !rom tbe
sldewalb of Qulckel ...-ce. Tbe snowfallalao
caused the caacellatlon ol all clu- Ia Melp
CountJ IIChooll.
•

;

allow law enforcement agencies
to keep all profits from the sale of
confiscated drug equipment and
property. But one-third ol the
Crtme VIctims' Compensation
Fund would be diverted to drug
education programs.
,
Senate Bill 131, sponsored by
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus,
was rewritten by the House
Public Safety and Highways
Committee, headed by Rep.
Marc Gulhrle, D·Newark.
Guthrie removed the so-cilled
"administrative suspension" of
driver licenses bY arresting
Contlnlled on page 8

~-

DENNIS J. BAISDEN

Winter.
stortn
•
arnves

..

By United Preas lnlernatlolllll
All schools In lhe Meigs, Gallla
and Mason County area were
closed lor the second straight
Friday today due to the overnight
snowfall and expected snow this
afternoon and even lng.
.
The winter storm blew Into
Ohio from the Mississippi Valley
early Friday, bringing snow that
could total up to 6 Inches.
Wind-chill readings bY the end ot
the day were expected to drop tQ
as low as 25 below zero.
·
As of mld·mornlng, more tbali
2 Inches of sr- had alreadJ!
fallen In southwest Ohio, causing
extensive problems witll rush·
hour trafllc. Roads across Ohio
were all snow-covered and sUck.
Southern Olllo Wl!S under a
whiter storm warning, with 4 to 6
Inches ol snow expected bY lateln
the day . Snow advisories were
Issued lor northern Olllo, with
accumulations ol 3 to 5 Inches
expected.
The National Weatber Service
also said a cold northwest wind
was to develop during the day',
and with afternoon temperatures
not expected to reach 20, wind·
chill readings were to plummet.
At mid-morning, It was as -low
as mlnus-16 In Toledo, mlnus-12
In aeveland, Akron and Youngstown, and mlnus-9 In Dayton.
The snow was to end across
weslern Ohio Friday evening,
with more accumulations possl·
ble Friday night over Ohio's
eastern counties. Temperatures
were to !all into the single digits
during the night and Saturday
was to bring partly cloudy skies
to Ohio as lake effect flurries and
Continued on page 8

Meigs petit jurors are selected for January tertn
Selected Tuesday as possible · · Anne Cale, Middleport; Gordon Yoenlce Miller, Pomeroy; Craig
Meigs County Petit jurors lor the
B. Teaford, Racine; Sandra K. T. Chapman, Rutland; James R.
January 1990 term were the 1 Iannarelll, Middleport; Dorothy Cundiff, Racine; Melissa Ann
lollowlng Meigs County 1 J. Douglas, Pomeroy; James S. · Barker, Racine; VIcky Lynn
residents.
Stettler, Reedlvllle; Ruth Ann Rusaell, Rutland; Sulle Mary
Leon Carol Pierce, l..angsvllle; 1• · Riffle, Middleport; Debra J · Fischer, Racine; . VIrgil P . Phil·
Kathryn Mllrose Mora, Pomti- J FanaiDg, Albany; Delbert F. lips, Middleport; April I.
roy; Wald H. Johnson, Racine;
Mltcllell, Lanpvllle; Rodle R. Lowther, Albany; Janet Lynn
Mlcbael Scott Grueser, Racine; 1 · Hatfield, Rutland; Melba Jane 'Howard, Pomeroy; Elmer C.
Marshall Ricbard Rouah, Ra·
Stobart, Lolli Bottom; KellY Ann 1Sr811dt, Coolville; Charles F.
cine; Glen R. Bllaell, Lolli Roub, Pomeroy; Janice Ruth 'Wildermuth, Pomeroy: Debbie
Bottom; Tina J. Spencer, Cbl!l'
Weber, Raelae.
.
Ann Miller, Pomeroy; Cbarlel T.
ter; KimberlY Kay Luta, PomeSalldra K. Folmer, Pomeroy: · ·IDU. RaciDe: Paarl Jean Swain,
roy; Jane A. Stewart, Pomeroy; · Welldy Mlcbelle Fry, Pomeroy; IReedlvllle: Helene Forwt GcJe.
May Mayle, Pomeroy; WIWam
Ada Lenora Neue, Pomeloy; 'IJlelo, Pomeroy; Alfred 'lbamu
Keith Curtis, Pomeroy; Jerry R.
Linda L. Yonker, Pomeroy; Wala!l, Albany; Tammy Ranay
Aleshire Jr., Syracuae; BoDDie . Cheryl A. Rouah, Middleport; Capebart, Racine; Buena
A. Conde, Middleport; Marcia · Beslle A. Landaker, Pomeroy; 'Grueser, Pomeroy; MaxlneRu&amp;:

sell, Syracuse.
Richard W. Thomas, Long
Bottom; Mary Lucille Casto,
·Pomeroy; Tina Carol Sloter,
Racine; Barbara L. Grueser,
Pomeroy; Delores R. FranJc;
Long Bottom; Tony Carnahan,
Racine; Opal MarJe Grueser 1
Pomeroy; Paul John Shatter;
Portland; Donna L. Gibbs,
:cine; Walter J. Haw Jr.,
Rutland; Ronalb G. Beegle,
Racine; Pauline F . Smith,
Reedsville; Genevieve o. ne.
IIIOPy 1 Middleport; Rlcbarc:J eltl!
Wolfe, Long Bottom; Karen
Daniels, Dexter; Ronald

a..

a:

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