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I

State foundation funds distributed
'lbe December State School
Foundation Subsidy payment of
$199,818,054.79 to 612 Ohio city,
exempted village and local
school districts has been r~
ported by State Auditor Thomas
: E. Ferguson.
Eighty-seven county boards of
education received $10,021,572.31
ilr the month, Including the
Meigs County Board of Education which received $68,198.
The State Teachers' Retir~
ment System will receive
$43,045,798.36 and the SchOol
Employees' Retirement System
will receive $11,343,803.63 as the
e·mployers' share of the pension
program for December, Ferguson added.
'
The 191 . city school districts
divided $120,271,671.46 while the
372 local school districts split
$69,957,404.99. The 49 exempted
village school districts shared
$9,588,978.34 o(thedisbursement,
Ferguson said.
Fergusons' s office reported
that 600 school districts and
county boards of education had
their December State Scllool
Foundation Subsidy payments of

Wed1'181dey, December 27, 1989

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The o.ily Sentinel

$195,207,796 electronically trans·
!erred to local banks. Additionally, payments lor the State
Teachers' Retirement System
and the School Employees' R~
tlrement System have been elec·
Ironically transferred for the
month of December.
In Meigs County, a total of
$131,492.37 In state subsidy payment went to Eastern Local 5151,!!26.37 in basic and transpor·
tation allowances, $5,019 · to
school employees' retirement ·
and $15,315 to state teachers'
retirement .

U,.tery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - TUes·
day 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3
108.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,170,629.50, wl!h a payoff due of
$750,360.
PJCK-4
0187.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$211,898, with a payoff due of
$646,000 . .

Meigs Local received
$380,837.23 with $437,907.21 for
basic and transportal lon allowances, $13,904 for school em·
ployees" retirement and $43,166
lor state teachers' retirement.
Southern Local's state subsidy
total is $140,054.07, with
$169,811.07 for basic and trans,
portatlon allowances, $7,706 for
school employees' retirement
and $22,051 for state teachers'
ret Ire men t.

Celebreeze reports on program

Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebreeze Jr. has Issued a
report on the successful compl~
lion of the 1989 Marljuna Eradi·
cation Program, a combined
local and state law enforcement
project which, lor the first time,
Involved active participation
from all88 Ohio counties and the
Ohio National Guard.
"We have worked closely with
the Buckeye State Sherlfr s Association since this program was
started In 1981," Celebrezze said.
"This year, we were grateful lor

marijuana . This year, 651 marl·
Juana plots were eradicated and
50,463 plants were destroyed
valued at $50,463,000.Inaddltlon.
66 weapons were seized, 33
greenhouses were raided and 200
Individuals were arrested.

the additional air and ground
support provided by the Ohio
National Guard. By working
together In this manner, we were
a !;lie to cover more territory than
we could In the past. "
From the beginning of June
through the end of September,
Celebreeze's Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Inves tlgatlon,
the Buckeye State Sheriffs Association. local county sheriffs and
the Ob.lo Nallnal Guard, con·
dueled air and ground operations
eradicating domestically grown

·'While It Is difficult to assign a
dollar value to these seizures, the
U. S. Drug Enforcement Agency
generally points to $1,000 per
plant, based on a national aver· '
age," Celebreeze added. "The
price of an ounce of marijuana
has nearly doubled In the last
four years'. Enforcement experts
claim this Increase Is attrlbuta·
ble to greater demand for the
drug while traditional sources of
supply may be slowing down.
Here In Ohio, marijuana Is
confiscated more often than any
other drug except cocaln~."
The raids usually take place at
the request of a county sheriff if
he suspects cultivation in his
county. Although most cuttlva. tion takes place at night, the
raids are conducted during the
day through the use of hellcop·
ters and low flying planes.

____ Audit reports are released _ _ __
The public release ol43 audits
of local government units has
been announced by State Auditor
Thomas E . Ferguson.
Included in the release of
reports were audits of 16 tyown·
ships, nfne villages, six counties,
five human services providers,
four schools, two cities and one
library.
Ferguson said copies of the
reports were mailed to the
Involved local and state officials,
at least three days prior to the

release date.
"Advance releas~ to the In·
volved public officials serves two
purposes, "the auditor said.
"one, to provide them opportun·
lty to study the report prior to Its
public release and any Inquiry
from the news media concerning
the contents of the audit reports.
He added, ''The advance notice
of public release of audits to the
concerned officials Is salutary
since the audit results are

reviewed with them in exit
conferences conducted by our
state examiners at the close of
our on-site examinations.
"At that time, the officials are
provided the opportunity to discuss the audit conclusions with
the examiner. or examiners, and
to have any explanations, objec·
lions or statements Included as
part of the public audit report."
In Meigs County, the audit
report of Columbia Township has
been released.

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Sugar, Classic

Page 3

•
Vol.40. No.t82
Copyrighted 1989

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II••

7-UP

By United Press International
A shifting jet stream chased
warm air back Into the cold·
stricken South early Thursday,
while blustery cold numbed the
Northeast and light snow pow·
dered portions of the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
said temperatures would leap
from biting cold to above aver·
age Thursday In most of the
South, and although the deep
freeze caused serious damage to
citrus crops and winter vegetables, agricultural experts said

'

the Icy weather will bring bene!·
Its this spring.
Atlanta expected tern per a·
tures a bout 10 degrees warmer
than normal, reaching into the
60s, forecasters said. States
south of Kentucky benefited from
warming temperatures as the jet
stream moved north and fun·
neled warm air back Into the ,
region.
Although the freeze that
ushered In winter for the South
caused heavy damage to citrus
crops and winter vegeta btes,'

agricultural experts said the co kl
killed .several bugs and viruses
that normally cause problems In
the spring.
"I think the cold weather will
be beneficial. We always notice
In Georgia that after a warm
winter, there Is a buildup of
Insects," said Georgia Agrlcul·
ture Commissioner Tommy Ir·
vln. "It's only logical to expect to
see a sizable decrease In Insects
after this cold weather."
Irvin said the cold also may
slow down a virus that in the past

79(

2 UTER

has damaged peanuts, tomatoes
and peppers.
The rebord·setting temperatures that chilled Flortda over
the Christmas holiday weekend
not only wreaked havoc with the
state's fruit and vegetable crops
but also threatened sea llfe as
water temperatures dipped to 46
degrees.
In Merrttt Island, Fla., 76
cold-stunned sea turtles were
pulled Wednesday from the
chilly waters where they were
floating helplessly 0': their bel·

lies, bringing the total number of
ailing turtles rescued this week
to 232.
In the Midwest. clou!ly skies
and widely scattered snow
storms dominated the Great
Lakes and Central states.
The weather service reported
some large breaks In the clouds,
especially In the area of O'Hare
International Airport In Chicago,
where a forecaster said tempera,
tures were "bouncing like a
yo-yo." Within an hour the
temperature. ranged from 20

degrees, down to 15 and then
back liP to 19.
Lake flurries were reported
along Lake Superior In Upper
Michigan and light snow fell over
parts of Minnesota and Wlscon·
sin. Freezing driZZle in southern
Ohio slicked roads and created
dangerous driving conditions.
Temperatures ranged from the
30s along the Ohio River tothe20s
In central Ohio, Indiana and most
of lllinols. North through Wlscon·
sin, the temperatures fell Into the
teens.

Gal.lia records 15th
auto fatality of 1989
County Emergency Medical Ser·
It's been a deadly year on
the road, striking a tree.
Gallla County Highways.
The car, which was wrapped vices ass Is ted the patrol at the
Wednesday, the Gallla-Melgs
around the tree, was demolished. scene.
Neal suffered multiple injur·
The accident Is under inves II·
Post, State Highway Patrol.
ies. Trapped In the wreckage, she galion, according to the patrol.
reported its 11th fatal accident
No one was Injured an another
and 15th traffic fatality of the was extricated with the "Jaws of
Life." Officials called lor a accident at 12:20 p.m. Wednesyear.
medlcopter. LlfeFlite at Well· day on Little Kyger Road, 0.5 of a
Irene Neal, 65, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
ston, Ohio, was unable to respond mile north of SR. 7, at the
died at 11 p.m. Wednesday In
Qecause of the weather. railroad underpass.
Cabeli·Huntington Hospital,
Troopers said a 1987 Ford
.
HealthNet out of Huntington,
Huntington, W.V·a .
Bronco
driven by Jon P. ThompW.Va.,
managed
to
reach
the
Only lour persons were killed
all last year on GaiUa County scene and transported Neal to the son, 18, Rt. 1. Cheshire and a 1987
Cabeli-Huntington Hospital.
GMC truck driven by James F.
roads, according to the patrol.
One lane traffic was main· Harwood, 39, Lucasville, Oh.lo,
Neal was critically Injured In a
one-car accident at 3:44p.m. on tained until the arrival of the met and collided In the under·
SR. 141, at milepost 21, about one HealthNet chopper. then all pass. There wqas moderate
traffic was stopped on the .main ' damage to both vehicles. There
mile west of Gallipolis.
,, ..
According to the patrol, Neal highwar, 10 make .a landing zone , was n(l clta~l9n.
.
,
Th'e patrol also was called
last control ofberwestbound ~98f · tor'llle chopPer.
The Gallla County Sheriff'S yesterday ' to •''lnv~stlgate two
Dodge Aries K on 'the slick road.
Her car went off the right side of Department and the Gallia car-deer accidents.

seriously Injured Friday by one
on X-ray and it was treated with of two hOmemade bombs In a
seriousness.'" ·
parcel delivered to his door
Police, prior to determining disguised as a gilt food package.
the package's contents, evacu- Investigators have said that case
ated families fr,om adjacept does not appear to be connected
homes. Traffic was also with the four others.
rerouted.
' A Washington D.C. television
Mail bombs, thought to be • station reported Wednesday
racially motivated, have shaken · there were four hom~ made
the South in recent weeks. bombs wrapped In the package
Courthouses and judges are' that exploded and seriously In·
taking extra precautions in r~ jured Corderman last week.
sponse to the man · bombing·
Federal Investigators said the
deaths of .r federal appeals court package had contained two
judge in Alabama and a civil bombs but WUSA·Tv, citing
rights qttorney.ln Savannah, Ga. sources, reported there were
· Package bombs were . also four bombs In the box, three of •
discovered, unexploded, at the which detonated.
Federal officials refused to
federal courthouse in Atlanta
and an NAACP office in Jackson- comment on the report, but ·
ville. Fla.
confirmed reports Tuesday that
In Hagerstown, Md., Circuit the explosives used In the attack
Judge John Corderman, 47, was on Corderman were different
from those used In the other
attacks in the South in the pastlO
days.
In Del roll Wednesday, 11 man
lobbed a small firebomb on the
steps of a courthouse In Detroit
but he was q\llckly arrested and
Due to water problems in the Rutland area, the
authorities said the .fncldent did
Environmental Protection Agency tEPA) Is warning that
not appear to be connected to the
Rutland residents shOuld boll their water at least one minute
recent rash of bombings directed
prior to drinking because the water may be unsafe.
· ·
toward judicial targets In the
South.
Darrell Marshall, 33, was ar·
rested alter he allegedly tossed a
Middleport businesses, with coin-operated amusement
firebomb on the,lront steps olthe
machines, are being reminded by village officials that all these
federal courthouse in downtown
.
licenses expire on December 31.
Dctr.olt shortly before noon WedUcense fees are $50 for a juke box, $50 each for the first three
nesday. There were no Injuries or
coin-operated amusement machines and $25 for each machine
significant damage and the lire
after the first three.
was quickly ex linguished, auThese licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office
thorities said.
Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
"ll'.arshall was apparently at·
tempting to get attention regard·
tng several civil cases that are
pending In U.S. District Court In
Detroit," said U.S. Marshal
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Anthony Bertoni. He described
investigated two accidents on Wednesday eventng.
the firebomb as a bottle 'filled
The first accident occurred around 5:30p.m·. on Morning Star
with flammable liquid.
Road about one hall mile off County Road 28. AcCilrding to the
Judge Constangy In Charlotte
report. Ina K. Cost, Newark, was traveling west on the §DOW
was
sued last month by a group
covered road and lost control of her vehlele In the curvl.' The
that
objects to his habit of
vehicle spun around and slid backwards Into the ditch. There
opening
court each morning with
were no injuries but the vehicle sustain~ light damage to the
a prayer. That suit, llled In
left side.
federal court, has yet to come up
The second accident occurred In TUppers Plains around 8:45
for a hearing.
p.m. According to the report, a semi tractor trailer owned and
The judge, who describes him·
driven by Mark Rutledge, Ironton, was attempting to pass a
self
as "pro·llfe Democrat,"
southbound vehiCle owned and driven by James S. Rucker,
earlier
this year was Involved In
Reedsville. As Rutledge was starting to pass, Rucker turned left
cases
Involving antl·a borllon
Into the side of the tractor trailer. Both vehicles received
protesters,
whom the judge
Continued on page 12
released.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. &lt;UP!j With the spale of bombings that
have hit the South recently,
District Judge Bill Constangy
decided not to tear open the plain
brown wrapper on a package that
arrived at his front door.
But when pollee arrived Wed·
nesday and opened the parcel
witli the most up-to-date bomb
handling equipment, they found
nothing more dangerous than a
doll.
The package; 18 by 13 by 4
Inches, was X-rayed and detonated at the scene because of
electronic circuitry inside that
could have been part of an
explosive device. pollee said.
"It turned aut to be a &lt;loll, but it
had fancy electronic circuitry
and everything, and showed up
on X·ray," Charlotte pollee spokeswoman Mickey Casey said.

"It appeared rather foreboding

SLIM HARVE,ST - Farmer .Tullo Arrayo
checks the quality of the small percentage of red
peppers that were able to be harvested from the
willed vines at DuBois Farms near Boynton

Beach, fla. Several nights of freezing tempera-

tures destroyed most of the plants left uncovered,
resulting In lllgher prices lor peppers and
tomatoes. (uPI)

Emergency HEAP program ·
will continue to March. 30
Friday at the Gallla Outreach
office, 220 Jackson Pike, Gallipo·
lis. and at the. Meigs Outreach
office, 39350 Union. Ave. , Pomeroy, from 8: 30 to 12 noon and 1to
3:30. Applications n\ay also be
made at the Cheshire officeofthe
Gal Ua· Meigs Community Action
Agency on MondaJI through
Thursday during the same hours.
Applications may not be made at
Cheshire on Fridays.
The regular HEAP program
for the 1989-90 heating season
closes Jan. 31, leaving only one
more month to apply for assist·
ance through the regqlar
program.

This program provides heating
assistance of a non-emergency
nature to enable low-income
Ohioans help meet the rising cost
of home heating. Applications
are available at the Gallls-Meigs CAA office: Cheshire,
the Gallla County Outreach Qf,
!ice, the Meigs County Outreach
Office, as well as at post offices,
senior citizens centers, court·
houses. and other public offices
through! the Gallla-Melgs area.
To discuss your healing situation or need. call the Cheshire
office at 367-'341 or 992·6629,
Gallla Outreach at 446-0611 or
Meigs Outreach at 992-5605.

Rutland water should be boiled

The Emergency HEAP program is still in effect lor the
1989-90 heating season. The
current program began Oct . 30
and ends March 30 so assistance
cab be au thorlzed on behalf of
eligible households that'have not
been assisted this program year.
Assistance through the emer·
gency program Is limited to once
per heating season. and must
resolve an. emergency heating
situation occurring from disconnection, threat of disconnection
or a bulk fuel supply that would
last only 10 days or less.
Emergency HEAP appllca·
lions are taken Monday through

Old vendors licenses to expire

Liquor won't be flowing .at some
Ohio taverns this New Year's Eve

T'l.Vl! wrecks probed by deputies

SLICE ORANGE
MUG ROOT BEER

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Wamt weather heads to cold-stricken South

Local news briefs-.....

VLASIC

oz.
can

46

2 Soctiono, 1 2 PogM is Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport...Ohio, Thursday, December 28, 1989

Suspicious box on judge's
stoop tums .out to be a doll

Natural

Cloudy tonight. Low In 301.
Cllance of rain 20 percent.
Friday, hlch near n. Chance
of rain 90 percent .

'·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Some tavern owners who do not
have permits to sell liquor on·
Sunday are unhappy because
they'll be allowed to sell only
beer on New Year's Eve this
year.
State blue laws will prohibit
drinking of hard liquor at many
taverns this New Year's Eve
because It falls on Sunday.
"It's lousy," said Jerry Robey,
owner of a Reynoldsburg bar.
"New Year's Is traditionally my
biggest night or the year, and I
can only sell beer.
"I'm going to close down," he
added. "I wouldn't have any
customers."'
Bars, restaurants and night·
clubs as well as grocery stores
and carryouts that normally sell
liquor on Sunday can do so on
New Year's Eve. But many
permit holders are not allowed to
sell hard liquor on Sunday.
State liquor control agents say
they will be out checking taverns •
New Year's Eve to catch any

cheaters. Those found gllllty
could lose their licenses.
Robey . said · he hopes his pa·
trons will be willing to celebrate
on Saturday.
"I ordered all these hats and
horns months ago, before I
realized It would fallon a Sunday,
so I guess we'll have our New

Year's party on Saturday night,"
he said.
Marty Calhoun, owner of a
Columbus tavern, said she will
serve beer until midnight and
then pop the champagne corks at
12:01 a.m. Monday, when her
regular liquor license kicks into
effect.

Firms get funds to study pollution
The demonstration project will'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The governor's office says two be operated at Ohio Edison's
northeast Ohio firms will receive Niles Station in Niles.
The governor 's office also said
$43.3 million In federal and state
grants to study ways of removing Wednesday Babcock and Wilcox
pollutants from coal burned by of Alliance will get a $4.7 million
federal grant and $500,000 In
power plants.
The MK-Ferguson Co. of Cleve- state financing to build and
land Is to receive $33.1 million In demonstrate Its Low-NOx CeU
federal money and $5 million of Burner, which removes 60 perOhio money to build and demon· cent of nitrogen oxide emissions
strate Its NOXSO process, which from certain coal-fired utility
is supposed to remove more than boUets.
95 percent ofsulfurdloxldeand 80 , The process Is deslgaect for 1llle
percent of nitrogen oxide emls· in plants that provide about
one-third of the electrical capatslons from coal· fired boilers.
ily In the state.

.

'

�Pomaroy-Middllpon, Ohio

Thuradlly, December 28, 1989

.Commentary
•

Ill Court Slreet
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb
Bffiiltl
qfv

'"'""--'.._...,..,....._=1,~

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publlsber
PAT WHR'EHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana1er

A MEMBER ol The Assoclaled Press, lnl1111d Dally Press Association and tile American Newspaper Publishers Asooclallon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesslllaa 380
wordo long. AU letters are subject to edlllag and mull be slped wttb
aame. address and telephone number. No unslped letters wDt be p•b·
llshed. Leiters should be Ia good Iaaie, addreoslngluues, nol per!Oilall·
lies.

Next year's budget more smoke and mirrors
By BUD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - It's looklrig like President Bush and
Congress are heading toward another year of budget stalemate and
"smoke and mirrors" solutions to the nation's continuing deficit
problem.
Less than a month before Bush submits his proposed fiscal year
1991 budget to Congress Jan. 22, leaders of both parties are
pessimistic about finding easy ways to cut the deficit by the required
$40 billion or more to meet the $64 billion deficit target set by the
Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law.
In fact, congressional leaders said In interviews it will be much
harder to meet the deficit reduction target this coming year - an
election year- than it was to meet the target ofS100blllion this past
budget year.
_
Congress failed to meet that $100 billion target, prompting the
imposition of automatic across-the-board spending cuts Oct. 16 as a·
penalty. Those cpts are to stay in place until early February.
"I think the questions from last year (fiscal 1990~ are the same
questions we're going to face for (fiscal) '91 - in spades," House
Budget Committee Chairman Leon P11,11etta, D-Callf., said in an
Interview. "The likelihood Is that we will probably have togo through
some of the budget dance as we have In the past."
Both sides agree that some deficit savings will come frmn cuts In
defense spending made possible by the dramatic changes In Eastern
Europe and the· accompanying reduction in· the Soviet military
threat. ·
·
But they acknowledge that the upcoming debate on the size of any
Pentagon spending cut could be among the most bitter partisan
battles of the upcoming budget year. Some Democrats will push for
billions more in defense savings than Bush and Republicans will
want.
And the divisive Issue of whether to cut the capital gains tax ratea dispute that tied up Congress for months In 1989 before .t he plan was
defeated in the Senate- will certainly return.
Bush is expected to push again in 1990for the taxcuton profits from
the sale of assets, such as stocks, bonds and real estate. He contends
such a cut wlll spur Investment and create Jobs.
Many Democrats say the capital gains cut as proposed in 1989 was
merely a giveaway to the rich who would benefit most.
And they are expected to oppose Bush again In 1990 on capital gains
unless the president abandons his 1988 campaign pledge of "no new
taxes'· and agrees ·Ia a significant package of additional revenues to
help reduce the deficit so that domestic programs won't have to take
the brunt of spending cuts.
"If the administration Is unwilling to include revenues then ... they
are basically going to have to play the same game as they did last
year, which is to take most of their (deficit~ savings o~t of
non-defense discretionary spending, domestic spendin~. plus
• entitlements, probably with the largest amount cohl!Jlg out of
Medicare," Panetta said.

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Over the last few years, the
federal government has greatly
stepped up Its efforts to dlscour··
age the use of Ulegal drugs, and
we have begun to see some
benefits from these efforts. A few
short years ago, taking drugs
was perceived to be common
behavior by some Americans,
particularly the younger gen'e ra·
tlon, and It was even, to a degree,
glamorized In the movies and on ·
television. Today, Americans
across all segments of society
are much more aware of the
dangers of illegal drug use and
share the belief that drug use is
morally wrong.
Surprisingly however, even
now that the tideofpublicopinion
has decisively swung against the
use of illegal drugs, a number of
academicians, political commentators and public o!flclals
have begun to step up the call for
the liberalization and decrlmi·
nalizatlon of our drug laws, to the
point where some are calling for
outright legalization, as a means
of taking the profit out of drugs
for the criminal element in our

society .
Supporters of drug legalization
argue that federal efforts to stop
the use of lllegai drugs have not
worked in the past and that the
violence associated with drug
trafficking would not exist 'it the
trade in these drugs were legal·
!zed. Instead, they belteve that
currently illegal drugs should be
sold In a regulated market, much
!Ike alcohol and tobacco are sold
today.
They belteve that this would
reduce the amount of crime
associated with the lllegal drug
trade and the costs to society
associated with enforcing our
drug laws. As one federal judge
who advocates legalltatlon said,
"providing safe narcotics and
treating the users would ulti·
mately result in a healthier
America." However, while this
argument may be gaining in
popularity in some circles, it is
based upon a very weak set of
assumptions.
It also harms our economic
well being by sapping the productivity of our workforce and by

Increasing the overhead costs
imposed on employers . Legallz·
lng drug abuse will not make
these problems go away. In fact,
it would only make these prob·
!ems worse. The legalization of
drugs would send out a message
that the use of illegal drugs is
socially acceptable. This can
only mean an increase In the
problems that we already have
with drug abuse: higher health
care and insurance bills, reduced
economic performance, and
more drug-related accidents on
the roads and in the workplace.
Clearly, legalizing drugs will not
solve the root problems assoelated with drug abuse.
Furthermore, the arguement
that current federal efforts to
discourage the use of drugs
aren't working is simply wrong.
Whlh? the number of drug addicts
remains high, the numbr of
casual drug users has fallen
dramatically aross all segments
of American society. A recent
survey by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse ,revealed that the
number of people over the age of

WASHINGTON~

Behind the
walls of some American nursing
homes, mice nest In the hair of
once-dignified ladles and forgot·
ten people drown in bathtubs.
These are not threadbare stories from a less enlightened era .
They are fresh accounts of the
abuse that still. goes on In many
nursing homes, where the elderly
pay for care and attention and
instead get neglect and

Letters to
the editor
Applauds action
Dear Editor:
We applaud the action of the
State of Ohio In choosing Southeast Ohio as a test site for the
Eldercare Options Program.
Ohio Presbyterian Retirement
Services has long promoted the
avallabtllfy of options for the
aging which permits them to
maintain an Independent lifestyle as long !i5 they are able.
The Eldercare Options Program wiUprovlde much needed
homebased care lor many of
Southeastern Ohio's elderly. We
enthusiastically support this new
Initiative.
Sincerely,
G .Gronlund, President
Ohio Presbyterian Retirement
Sen \ces

•

intimidation.
Our associate Jim Lynch obtained an unreleased report of an
investigation by the Department
of Health and Human Services
Into abuse of · nursing home
residents. The draft report con·
eludes t~at the abuse· often goes
unreported and that there is no
effective system to investigate
complaints.
The most common complaint is
neglect. Residents are scalded
when left unattended in hot
showers. Others are strapped to
their beds an!l chairs for too long,
or not allowed to go to the
bathroom when they need to.
Those are the everyday abuses
- the result of undertrained,
underpaid and overworked
aides. Other abuses are·crlmlnal.
At a Michigan nursing home,
two aides devised a way to
. silence chronic complainers. One
would stand guard while the
other would smother a resident
with a pillow. The smotherer got
life In jail. The lookout Is on

·A nearly two-week break lor

prevalent there that Intravenous
food lines to residents had to be
taped over so the mice wouldn't
chew through them.
All of the state om!Judsmen we
talked to said that many nursing
home owners have the money but
not the will to make
Improvements.
The crisis will only get worse.
Modern medicine is keeping the
elderly alive and making them
the fastest growing population
segment In the United States.
The number of Americans over
65 is expected to double In the
next 40 years. If the number of
nursing home beds has to double
too, what will happen to the
quality of care?
Modern medicine will be no
advantage if the reward for
growing old Is abuse and neglect
by the young.

. ,.,..

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By DAVID MOFFIT
', ":;
UPI Sports Writer
'&lt;;;\ ATLANTA (UP!~ - Peach
&lt;. BOwl ·opponents Syracuse and
·:.!1 Georgia have something to prove
·.,~j. Saturday when they play each
,i •' other for the first time.
,;;,;. •Both were ranked last year
, i •; when Syracuse was 10-2, includ·
::. ing a Hall of Fame Bowl victory
• · over Louisiana State, and Georgia was 9-3, including a Gator
Bowl triumph over Michigan
" State. But both had disappointing
. ' seasons this year, with Syracuse
going 7-4 and Georgia 6-5.
''We thought we were a Top 20
team going into the season,"
4 · Syracuse coach Dick MacPher·
~· , ~ · son coach. "We won the game~
· , ' , we should h'ave, but we !oat the
·~'.1'' rest. We'reexcitedaboutplaylng
il; .in the Peach Bowl. We're talking
· ~' /about , national television. Who
; . 1doesn't
know about those red
,(Georgia) helmets with the

'· I.
'

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~

Who says GMC liucks are first in sales satis·
faction? GMC Truck customers do. And they

told J.D. Power and Associates, in an indepen"- y dent survey that ranked salespeople of all major
-- brands of compact trucks, foreign and domestic~
Evaluaied were how the truck was sold, how '
salespeople and dealership personnel treated
customers and the quality of the truck when it was
delivered.
The results? Buyers of' our ~om pact trucks like the
GMC S-15 Jimmy were the most satisfied with their
total buying experience. Which means GMC Truck
ranked higher than Dodge, Toyota and even Ford.
Hi9hest ranked compact sport utility in domestic
customer satisfaction. In a separate J.D. Power study
that ranked compact sport utility vehicles after a.full
year of ownership, we were the highest ranked domestic in our class~· The S-15 Jimmy from GMC Truck .
ranked the highest among domestic compact sport utility vehicles.

'
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(USPS 1411-tM)

•

A oivlllon el Multimedia, Inc.

'G' on the side. We just want to
show Atlanta we're a good

team."
"We're going to find out some
things,'' Georgia coach Ray Goff
said of the Peach Bowl matchup.
"We're going to find out how
important it Is to some people.
This is an opportunity for us to
get better. I'd much rather have
seven wins than six."
The Peach Bowl, ranked 12th
among the 18 postseason games
in money with a payoff of $800,000
a team, Is the only bowl besides
the Independ~&gt;nce Bowl to have
two teams with a combined nine
losses. However, Syracuse and
Georgia each had only three
losses at the time they accepted
bids.
"Despite our losses, we ~re
competitive with anybody,"
MacPherson sl!id. "And Georgia
was In the upper echelon of the
Southeastern Conference, the
best conference In the country."

Published every afternoon, Monda)'
througb Friday, 111 Cour1 St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio VaUey.Pub·
llsbln1 ' Compt~ny!Mul~lm(ldta, · Inc.,
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POSTh!ASTER: Settd aclclress chanaes
to The Dally Setttlnet. Ill Court St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 457ti9. ·

SINGLE COPY

SUllocrlberl DOl d~1o pay the car·
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(All games~
TEAM
WL
Eutern .............. .5 1
Nortli Gallia ........ 5 3
Southern ...... ... .... .4 2
Soutllwestern ...... .3 4
Hannan Trace .... .3 4
Symmes Valley ... 2 3.
Oak I:lill .... .. ....... 1 5
Kyger Creek ........ O 7

PI' PA
451 406
~ 519
422 385
518 f84
408 405
308 344
381 442
362 573

(SVAC games)
w L I'F
TEAM
Southern ........... 4 0 317
Eastern ........... .4 0 291
North Gallia ..... 4 2 423
Hannan Trwce ..3 2 319
Southwestern .... 2 4 429
308
Symmes Val'ley 2 ,,'
Oak Hill ........... 1 ~ 265
Ky&amp;er Creek ... .. 0 6 321
TOTALS ......... 26 :It . 1111
,
(lteserve&amp;)
TEAM
W L
Southern ........... 4 0
North Gallla .... :.4 1
Oak Hill ........... 3 1
Hannan Trace ..3 2
Symmes Valley 2 3
Southwestern .... 2 4
Eastern .... ........ 1 3
Kyger Creek .... 0 .6
TOTALS . .. . . 20 21

PA
239
245
384

275
441
344
298

SAU ENDS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1989

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BLOCKS PROGRESS- Indiana forward Eric Anderson (top)
blacks the progress of Wichita State forward John Cooper to the
bll8ket In the opening game olthe Hoosier Classic Wednesday night
In Indianapolis. The Hoosiers won 75-M. (UP I~

'

One Week................................... SUO

500 East Main .

tournament, start~d its eighth
lineup in nine games.
Wichita State fell to 3-6.
CheaMY scored 13 of his points
in the first hall, while Gre&amp;
Grallam added 11 points and Pat
Graham 10. John Cooper led
Wichita State with 16 points .
At Atlanta, BrlanOIIverscored
23 points and Dennis Scott added
21 to lead the Yellow Jackets over
Morehead State In the Kuppenhelmer Classic. Georgia Tech,
Improved to 7-0, its best start
since the 1!62-63 season, when
they opened with 11 straig~t
wins. Freshman Kenny Ander·
son scored 16 and , Malcolm
Mackey contributed 10 for Gear·
gia Tech. The Eagles, 5-4, were
paced by Elbert Boyd with 16.
At New Orleans, Lionel Slm·
mons scored 26 points leading
co-No.16LaSalleover0hloState
In the Sugar Bowl Tourllament.
LaSalle, 6.(), which tralied 32·30
at halftime, took the lead tor
good, 35-34, on Doug ,O verton's
jumper with 17:31 left. La Salle
scored13pointslntllesecondhalf
from the foul line. dropl)lnl Ohio
State to 4·4. Randy Woodascored
19 poinls and Overton added 18
for the Explorers. Perry Carter
Jed the Buckeyes with 23 paints.

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•

The Orangemen's option offense features quarterback Bill
Scharr, · who passed for 1,625
yards despite missing time because Qf Injury; tailback Michael
Owens, who rushed for 1,004
yards; and flanker Rob Moore,
who caught 53 passes for 1,064
yards.
Georgia's offense will depend
on tailback Rodney Hampton,
who has been hampered by a
knee injury. Hampton rushed for
1,059 yards and 12 touchdowns
and caught 26 passes for 219
yards. The Bulldogs' next lead·
ing runner, tailback Larry Ware
gained only 207 yards.
Goff, '\'hO succeeded 25·year
Georgia Coach Vince Dooley this
past season, had the formerly
run-oriented Bulldogs throw an
average of 24 passes a game. But
quarterback. Greg Talley was
only marginally effective with 92
completions for 1,330 yards and
six TDs .

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The Daily Sentinel

~

•

prrlo1manu, d!l1wry oldivrtiH and lfllllal product ~ua••t~
••J 0 Fcwe• aNt Auodttl!li 1989 Com !)aCt Truck. Cu5ttJmer Sat1sfact•on wnh f'fodva QuaHty

Patients who have an appointment with Dr. Lenh at his Hill·

••••rial
tll••h•••

point guard and Frank Gapretta
(5·10, junior) as the other guard
against Harrison and Schubert if
Rio Grande's lineup doesn 't
change. Rome Is averaging 11.7
points and 4.5 rebounds and
Capretta is . supplying the
Badgers with 16.5 markers and
4.5 assists a game.
Brock Coach Ken Murray will
pla&lt;&gt;e Rob J)@Mott (6-3, sopho. more, 12.8 points, 7 rebounds) at
small forward and Dave Dennis
(6·7, sophomore, 10.8 points, 6.7
rebounds) as power forward . At
center will lie 6-8 sophomore
Cord Wood, credited with 21.2
points and 12:! boards.
The Badgers will enter the
tournament after a month-long
respite in their schedule. Brock's
last game, played Nov . 29, was a
win over SUNY ·Freedonia.
The Redmen opened a road
series with the Shawnee State
game that ·will continue with a
visit to Waynesburg !Pa. ) on
Jan. 6; a Mid-Ohio Conference
game with Mount Vernon Naza, rene on Jan. Sand a trip to past
District 22 champion Defiance on
Jan. 12. The Redmen will be at
home again Monday, Jan . 15
against Dyke.

•,

'#

Dr. IA!atz's patients at Veterllespftal in
~uauey •• stll ... hiwl as •ullllt thl hospital on Ts11daya,
ft lap ... Salwll., ••rnia11. 1lle
bs,., for
•••a lisa or 1ppllllltussll at Vetwala II 992·3632.

tull-court preas to power the
Sooners ov@l' the Dukes. The
Sooners, 6·0, who are averaging
134 points per game, forced th•
Duki!S Into folD' early turnovers
with a full-court press and
opened a Hi-&amp; lead. Davis, who hit
13 of 20 from lhe field , was one of
seven Oklaboma players In double figures. Including Skeeter
Henry with 22 points, Jackie
Jones with 16 and Damon Patterson with 14. Steve Hood Jed
James Madison, 5·4, with 36
points while Fess Irvin added 22.
At Memphis, Ten~., reserve
John Mcintyre hit a threepointer, stole a pass and connected onaslamdunkforhisonly
polhts of the 1ame, helping the
Tigers turn a three-point deficit
into a one-po!Dt lea~ .and down
Memphis State. Missouri, 10-1,
were led by Nathan Buntin's 14
points, whlleAIIthony Peeler had
12 and Doug Smith 10. Elliot
Perry led Memphis State. 6-2,
with }6 points while Cheyenne
Gibson added 14.
At jndlanapolls, Calbert Cheaney and !!:ric Anderson scored 17 ·
points each to lead the eighthranked' • Hoosiers over the
Shockers in the first round of the
Hoosier Classk&gt;. Indiana, 9-0,
whlchh;lsoeverlostailameinits

:' Syra~use, Georgia to collide
--~~. Saturday in Peach Bowl

1·\

crest location after January 1, 1990 should keep their ap·
peilltMtnt date and tilne at his new office in the Orthopedic
Dep aa lasent of Holzer Clllk. For more information or to
tdl1llule an appointment, call tho Holzer Clinic Orthopedic
Dep• huat at 446-5401.
·

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To The Clinic: Staff
Malcolm W. Lentt, M.D., Board Certified General, Thoracic,
and Othopedic Surgeon will loin the Clinic Staff on January
3, 1990, having previously been in private practice at Hillcrest Clinic. Dr. Lentz lamed his medical degree from the
University of Pennsylvania in 1958. His internship was at
the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He has had separate
surgkal and orthopedic residencies at the University of Cin·
cinnati hospital, completing Orthopedics in 19 78. Dr. Lentz
is a fellow of the American CoHege of Surgeons and a mem·
ber of the American College of Chest Physicians. He has en·
ioyed a very successful practice in the Gallia, Jackson, Ma·
son, and Meigs County areas.

tics were avalla ble on the Cry·
phons. Coach Tim Darling. will
men's basketball team (7·3) ends· send in Ray Darling (5·11,
tonight when It encounters the senior~ and Rene Luypaert (6·3,
University of Guelph (9·5) In the senior) to oppose Harrison and
North Canton Elks Classic at Schubert's defensive skills.
Walsh College.
Jeff Brown will return to the
Walsh wlll face Brock Univer· power forward slot he has filled
sity in the opening matchup of all season lor the Redmen.
U.S. and Canadian teams In the Brown is currently averaging
two-day iournament. The Red- 14.3 points and 9.1 rebounds per
game. Darius Williams. the 6-3
men play Brock Friday.
Rio Grande enters tonight's forward from Gainesville, Fla ..
game with two Immediate wins who has provided ready suppori
under Its belt. The victories were for the offense, is expected to be
over Central State, 97-81 and at the other forward. Williams is
Shawnee State, 94-92, the latter · providing 5.1 points and 2.5
containing · a 33-point perfot- , boards per game for Rio Grande.
Tim Mau (6·8, sophomore).
mance by · starting point guard
Guelph's
leading scorer at 22
Gary Harrison. Harrison has
boosted his to-date statistics to ma~kers a game, will confront
19.1 points, 9.4 assists and 2.3 Brown. Teammate Tim Spring
(6-6, senior~ takes the small
rebounds per outing in his first
forward position against
season with the Redmen.
The Redmen last met Guelph Williams .
The Gryphons will also start
at Walsh in December 1987 and
handed the Gryphons a 110-61 Eric Hammond (6-9, sophomore)
defeat. Brock · also fell to Rio at the post as Troy Donaldson. a
Grande In the same tournament . 6-7 freshman from Sebring, Ohio,
continues In the same position for
97-50.
Rio Grande. Donaldson is aver·
The Guelph contest will see
HarriSon return as a starter, with aging 6.3 points and 4.8 boards
Brad Schubert (14.2 points, 3 entering tonight's game .
. Brock (4-4~ Is expected to start
rebounds) ·repealing at shooting
Kevin
Rome 16·2, sophomore) at
guard.
A
though
no
current
statis.,
!~e University of Rio Grande

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Aua
probation.
Investigators found that many
nursing home staffers lack empathy for the elderly because
they lack the knowledge necessary to understand problems
such as Alzheimer's disease.
The elderly are easy to abuse
because so many or them can't
stand up for themselves and had,
no one to act as their advocate. If
they don't report abuse, who
will?
Reports of abuse rarely make
it as far as the local police. The
investigations are left to state
ombudsmen or Medicaid fraud
units. Rarely is anyone arrested.
They gel away with It because
there are no witnesses, one
ombudsman told us.
Wbere were the witnesses
when the mouse built a nest in the
ha!r of a woman at a Maryland
nursing home? Mice were so

violations.
The Tar Heels, coached by
Dean Smith, who has won 674
games In 28-plus seasons, ave
struggled so far lhls season but
have played arguably the na·
lion's most demanding schedule.
North Carolina continually
beat Kentucky downcourt, hit tlng61 percentoftheirshOtsfrom
the field and leading by as many
as 28 points.
Rick Fox added 20 points for
North Cardllna, Kevin Madden
16, George Lynch and Hubert
Davis had 14 each and Pete
Chilcutt and Scott Williams had
11 apeice.
Deron Feldhaus led Kentucky
with a career-high 27 points.
Mtller added 26 and Richie
Farmer had 21 off. the bench.
Reggie Hanson scored . 18 and
Jolul Pelphrey had 10.
Elsewhere In the Top 20, No.5
Oklahoma outscored James
Madison 142-109; co-No. 6 Mlssour! held off Memphis State
71-68; No.. 8 Indiana ripped
Wichita State 75-54; No. 13
Georgia Tech topped Morehead
St. 98-76 and co-No. 16 LaSalle
defeated Ohio State 74-62.
At Norman. Okla., William
Davis scored 33 points and
Oklahoma deployed a stron&amp;

Redmen end respite with .toomey appearance

t

Is Pleased
To Welc:ome
MALCOLM W.·LENTZ. M.D.

"

12 who use Illicit drugs declined
from 12~ of the population in
1985, to 7% in 1988. That Is a
decrease in the number of people
who do dr1.1gs of 8.5 mlllion in
three years alone. Futhermore,
this decline In drug use occurred
among both men and women and
among all age groups. It OC·
curred among blacks, whites and
his panics; It occurred across all
levels of educational attainment,
and It occurred throughout all
regions of the United States.
· Therefore, our efforts to actlvelydfscouragetheuseofdrugs
through better education and
enforcement have been having
an Impact. These efforts 9end out
a clear message that Illegal drug
use Is not only wrong, and subject
to severe penalties, but that It Is
life ttlreatening as well, and
Americans are listening to that
message. Legalizing drugs
would only undermine much of
the good that we have already
accomplished and It is hard to
believe that some are seriously
promoting this approach.

Nursing homes in need of attention·

Orthopedic And.
General Surgeon

....
....

By TOM WITHERS
UP18porta Writer
North Carolina moved a step
closer to being crowned king of
college basketball Wednesday
night, thanks In part to a
performance by their own King.
Tar Heel guard King Rice
scored 22 points and handed out
13 assists, leading six other Tar
Heels In double figures and the
No. 19_Tar Heels went on to a
121·,110 vJotory over Kentucky In
a matchup between college basketball's two wlnnigest schools.
Kentucky, which had tied an
NCAA record with 19 threepointers In their last game,
bettered that by two, nailing 21
trllectas in 42 attempts. The two
teams combined for 31 in the
game, also an NCAA record.
North Carolina, 7-4 this season,
has nowwon1,465games,second
only to Kentucky's 1,469. The
· Wildcatsdroppedto5-4thlsyear.
Wednesday's .game was the
first meeting . between the two
powers Since 1981 and the 20th
all-time. Carolina now leads the
series 14·6.
.
· . The Wildcats, who are in their
first year under Coach Rick
Pitlno, are currently serving the
first year of a three-year NCAA
probation for recruiting

Thursday, December 28, 1989

HOLZER CLINIC
..

No. 19 North -Carolina posts 121-119 win over Kent

Page-Z-The Daily Sentinel

Legalization doesn't m~ke sense cong. c'M~U:

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

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Pomeroy

Thursday. December 28. 1989

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 28, 1989

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Pistons win fourth. straight with 99-82 victory over Cavs
a)' STEI'IIEN Ktmi.OWSKI
UPI Sporta Wrller

the Detroit PlsiDns and Cleveland Cavaliers are two teams
headllla In opposite directions.
James Edwards scored 25
points and Bill Lalmbeer scored
14 and had 12 rebounds Wednesday night, lifting Detroit to a
99-82 victory over Cleveland. The
Pistons recorded their fourth
straight victory while the Cavaliers· have lost four In a row.
Detroit, the defending champions, played 17 of Its first 27
games on the road. recording 17
victories. The Pistons counter
with eight of their next 10 games
at home.
"We're hanging around and I
think that's what you have to ·do
In the race," said Detroit coach
Chuck Daly. "I think we're
playing pretty good basketball.
we're about where I thought we'd
be. I think our best basketball is
ahead of us."
Cleveland Is not making Its
shots. Mark Price· scored 22
points Wednesday for the Cavaliers, who made just 31 of 85
attempts from the field. Cleveland, which was 20-5 after 25

games a year ago, fell to 10-15.
''They (Pistons) beat us In
every phase of the game,"
Cleveland coach Lenny Wilkens
said. " We hung In there a little bit
In the tlrst half, but I don 't know
how long you can hang In a game
shooting :10 percentand the other
team shooting SO percent.
"When there Is no margin for
error, every shot Is a must and I
don' t think you can play basketball that way. I'm trying to relax
the guys, but when you fall
behind, all of a sudden that
pressure mounts and makes It
difficult."
Detroit used a deep bench to
secure the victory. The Pistons
got 38 points from their nonstarters, including 11 from VInnie Johnson and 10 each from
· John Salley and Dennis Rodman.
Salley also had 10 rebounds.
"We got our guys off the bench
that really wanied to play and
they played well," Daly said.
''We're a pretty deep team and
good rebounding anr iefens!ve
team.''
"! think just realizing that
most of the West Coast trips are
out of the way, we can concen-

Irate on making our move now,"
said Johnson. who scored eight
fourth-quarter points for Det ro!t.
"We're very pleased right now
after being on the road so much.
To have all that behind us and
still be in contention for the
division , we feel reaCgood about
that. "
Elsewhere in the NBA, San
Antonio socked Washington 10797, Indiana conquered Orlando
106-101, Minnesota bested Houston 108-91, Dallas dusted Atlanta
114-101, Seattle edged Philadelphia 110·106 and Boston beat
Sacramento 115-112 in overtime.
Spurs 107, Bullets 97
At Landover, Md., David Ro-

binson scored a season-high 34
points and Terry Cummings
added 17 to pace San Antonio to
Its seventh straight triumph . At
7-5, the Spurs are one of three
teams with a winning record on
th&lt;;&gt; road. Jeff Malone scored 26
points for Washington , which lost
Its fourth straight game .
Pacers 106, Magic 101
At Orlando, Fla. , R!k Smits
scored 11 of Indiana's ilnal 14
points to lead the Pacers to their
17th victory of the season. Last
year, Indiana did not win 17
games unltl March. Orlando
suffered Its 12th loss in 14 games
this month.
Tlmberwolves 108, Rockets 91

Mavericks . . Dominique Wilkins
had 16 points and Kevin Willis 15
for Atlanta.
SuperSonics 110, 78ers 106
At Seat Ue , Dale Ellis scored 33
points and Derrick McKey added
21 for the Sanies. Charles Barkley Jed six Philadelphia players
In double figures with 22 points.
Celdcs 115, Klnp 112 (OT)
At Sacramento, Ca!!f., Larry
Bird scored nine of his tum-high
31 points · In overtime to help
Boston extend Sacramento's losing streak to 10 games . Former
Celtic Danny Alnge led all
scorers with 39 points, Including
nine in the extra period for the
Kings.

At Minneapolis, Sidney Lowe
and rookie Pooh Richardson
combined for 18 fourth-quarter
points to help expansion Minnesota snap a nine-game losing
streak and record !Is sixth
victory of the season. Lowe
finished with a career-high 22
points and Richardson scored 18
points In his second professional
start. Tyrone Corbin scored 18
points for Houston. ·
Mavericks lU,. Hawlui 181
At Dallas, Sam Perkins scored
U of his 22 points in the second
quarter to give Dallas its fourth
straight victory. Derek Harper
scored 25 points and Rolando
Blackman added 22 for the

·-

•
•.

Perry named to UPI
AFC All-Star team
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports WrHer
NEW YORK (UP!) - NFL
rushing champion Christian
Okoye of Kansas City, rookie
teammate Derrick Thomas and
second-year players Thurman
Thomas, Michael Dean Perry
and Erik McMillan Wednesday
highlighted UPI' s 1989 AFC AllStar team.
Youngsters made their mark
on a team that Included just
seven first -team repeaters from
1988 in voting by 42 pro football
writers.
Okoye, who led the NFL with
1,480 yards, and Buffalo's Thurman Thomas, who led the league
with 1,913 yards from scrim·
mage, were joined by first-time
pick Warren Moon at
quarterback.
Derrick Thomas, who had 10
sacks, was joined by Cleveland
nose tackle Perry and New York
free safety Erik McMillan, who
scored three touchdowns, on
defense. Playoff-bound Cleveland, Houston and Buffalo each
placed four players on the first
team. Wide receiver Webster
Slaughter, cornerback Frank
Minnifield and inside linebacker
Mike Johnson joined Perry from
the Browns.
Houston guards Bruce Matthews and Mike Munchak and
punter Greg Montgomery were
the other Oilers.

•

AFC receiving leader Andre
Reed, center Kent Hull and
defensive end Bruce Smith, who
had 13 sacks, joined Thomas
from Buffalo.
Minnifield, Matthews, Smith,
Hull, Clnc!natt! tackle Anthony·
Munoz and strong safety David
Fulcher and Kansas City cornerback Albert Lewis were repeaters from 1988.
Bengals tight end Rodney
Holman received the most votes
with 39 one more than
teammate Munoz. Indianapolis
tackle Chris Hinton completed
the offense.
Rounding out the defense were
San Diego end Lee Williams, who
led the AFC with 14 sacks,
Chargers outside linebacker Les·
lie O'Neal and Inside linebacker
Karl Mecklenburg of Denver.
First-year Denver kicker David
Treadwell joined second-year
punter Montgomery as the
specialists.
Eight first-team 1988 picks
were voted to the second team in
1989: Cincinnati quarterback
Boomer Eslason and guard Max
Montoya, Buffalo outside line·
backer Cornelius Bennett and
nose tackle Fred Smerlas, New
England tackle Bruce Armstrong, Houston defensive end
Ray Childress, Miami inside
linebacker John Offerdahl and
Kansas City free safety Deron
Cherry.

NBA

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.,

�Thursday, December 28. 1989

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday. December 28, 1989

Paga-6

Beat of the Bend

Joppa UMW meeting held

What a Christmas ...
again a tradition of the Christ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
Wl'll-lf you were dr!'amingof · mas season- was a blg, big day
a White Christmas it, at th&lt;' stores. That's the day
many people chose to haul all of
along with the
the stuff back to the sourc&lt;' for
Blg Chill- AND
exchanges. refunds or credits. It
the pr!'sents
doesn't matter !hath on Monday,
som&lt;' of which
you told Cousin Maude how
you wanted and
'
beautiful that sweater she gave
some of which
you is or that you oobed and
you didn't .
aahed over the elephapt book
Of course, the
days of the jok&lt;' about the ends from Uncle John. While
traditional neckties for the men your l'nthuslasm. dld pleas&lt;'
on your Christmas list are gone.
them, you know what you likeand the sweater with the att·
At these prices - It's hardly a
ached bells which really rangjoke. You can no doubt remember when ties were one and didn't fit into your life style and
two dollars - for the two bucks nelth&lt;'r did the book ends. After
all, you're a Democrat. Why you
you could really select an elite
could get thrown out of the party
one from the. best rack.
These days it's hard to find one If anyone found out you actually
under eight and th!'se are the W&lt;'re using l'lephant book ends.
Fortunately, many stores dd
cheaples - the better ones start
have
very easy return policies so
at about twl'lve and at theblinkof
Tuesday
made for a great outing
an eye can go much hlgh&lt;'r - to
$25 and $32 - no probl!'rn. Small and you could select something
that you REALLY like.
wonder the younger set doesn't
Fortunately. it's easier to take
cotton to ties. Th&lt;'Y not only
realize that ties don't make for a
the stuff back than it is to fac&lt;' the
comforta bl&lt;' neck but they also
later I'Xplanatlons. However, by
realize that for the price of a tie
the time, Cousin Maude and
today, you can buy another pair Uncle John get around to as king
of jeans. Those of us who live by whatever happened to th&lt;'lr gifts.
the tradition that to be dressed you'll hav&lt;' a good answer. You
you must wear a tie should make
know the sweater was so sensa·
a great potential for a business tiona! that you put It away for
which would produce adult bibs.
very, very special occasions The thought of dropping a blt of which won't be attended by
food on a necktie at today's Cousin Maude - and of course,
prices Is traumatic. It's almost you 're absolutely sick about the
enough to kill the appetit&lt;'.
cat having knocked the bookends
In my part of the world. this off the desk. I'm telling you year seemed to be a great1year there are ways to handle these
for houseslippers. Some people I things- and you 're pretty clever
know got as many as four pairs,
so you'll work lt out.
Perhaps, the upswing In their
The Big Chill which they
popularity as gifts was brought
promise is going to fade from
about by the fact that this y&lt;'ar 's sight. at l!'ast temporarily.- as
colorful houseslippers -and the did Christmas - Is supposed to
be healthy W!'ather. I'm sure you
size doesn't have to be exact
these days - were on sale In
remember all of the comments
many of the stor!'s . On the other you heard during our mild
band, the Big Chill' could have
winters on. how unhealthy they
are. If the Big Chill is so healthy
bad a positive effect on demand.
Aftl'r all, we all know that a great
why is it that most everyone I
percentage of body heat leaves
know is either getting a cold,
through th&lt;' head, so we offset
getting over a cold or has a cold?
that by buying hous!'sllppers to
Arid these ar!' great colds- with
keep th&lt;' feet of our family and
body shaking coughing and unatfriends warm. We should have
tractive free flowing noses.
Maybe we should forget a bout
bought hats - but who would
havewornthem? You"vegotltthe crowning glory and wear the
hardly anyone. Many of us do
hat .
believe In.dressing likes eskimos
I'll take my tongue out of my
during th!'se Big Chllis. But to
che&lt;'k now - and say that I hope
wear a hat too? No way' We've
you had a wonderful Christmas.
become convinced that our hair
Believe it or not- mine W."'S one
of the greatest.
Is our crowning glory and there
ain't no way we're going to cover
I've got to run- now what did I
It up. Blg Chill or not.
put those book &lt;'n&lt;ls and that .
sweater with the tacky ringing
Tuesday, of course. - and
bells'! Do keep &gt;mlllng.

A potluck dinner Christmas
party was held during th&lt;' rec&lt;'nt
meeting of the Joppa United
Methodist Women h&lt;'ld at the
borne of Lavina Brannon.
Th&lt;' hostess served punch and
there was a $5 glft exchange.
Glenda Benedum was given a
fruit basket. and othl'r baskets
were given to the elderly and shut
Ins of the community.
Attending were Helen Kibble.
Dorothy Warner, Opal Harris.

Margaret Grossnickle, Gladys
Dillon, Mary Ann and TI!R
Harris, Katie Ifill, Lavina .B ran·
non, and Robert Hill.
Margaret Grossn lckle presided at the business meeting.
Mary Ann Hartis presented a
program In which all member's
participated.
The next meeting will be held
Feb. 19 at the home of Opal
Harris with Lavina Brannon as
program leader.

'

New Year1 Service ·

Organizational
.
meeung set

The Mt. Olive Community
Church, Long Bottom, will have a
New Year's eve service on
Sunday beginning at 7p.m. T)lere
will be special singing and Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the
public.

The Letart Township Trustees
will holc:I an organizational ml'&lt;'l·
lng on Jan. 2 at 6 p.m. at the office
bulldlng.

..

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~·~~~~~~~~~·

IHAFF'Y NEW YEAR I
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

' " .. :: :"

Family holiday dinner held
The Brannon Christmas dinner
held at the borne of Eileen
Brannon]{lrkbrlde ln the M.ansfleld area.
Those traveling from there
from this area were Lavina
Brannon, Nina and Rl'v. Robert
Sanders, De Leah and Jonathan;
'I'.T .. Deedrah, Thomas, Tyler,
and Trista Simmons. Logan; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Holbrooks and
Ben: Mr. and Mrs. B.M. Brannon
and children. Dan. Michelle. and
Eon, Florida.
Others present were Buzz
w;~s

Brannon, Kevin and Randy
Stone, Katie, Robert, Linda,
Tom. Stacy, Jonathan, Ryan,
and Scott Bollinger, Patty Bran- .
non Grelves, Greg, Lindsay,
Andrew, and Austin.
Those in attendance gather!'d
aound ·the Wurlitzer plano f9r a
slng-a-long of their special
requests.
The Sand!'rs and Lavina Bran·
non returned home Saturday
evening and others returned on
Sunda;r.

LONG BOTIOM -The Flame
Fellowship Bible Study will be
held at thehomeofMaryFolml'r,
Long Run Road. Long Bottom, at
7 p.m. on Dec. 28. The public is
invited.
POMEROY -The Pom!'roy
Group of A.A . and AIAnon wlll
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church ln
Pomeroy. For information call
1-800-333-5051.
FRIDAY
LETART -The Letart Township Trustees will meet Friday at
1 p.m. at the offici' bulldin~ to
discuss end of lh&lt;' year matters.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP-The Scipio Township Trustees will hold
their final meeting of the year on
Friday at 6 p.m. at the township.
building.
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP -The
Bedford Township Truste!'s will
have their year end meeting on
Friday at 5:30 p.m. at the
town hall.
SATURDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
The Board of Trustees of Columbia Township will meet In regu-

lar end of the y!'ar s!'sslon on
Saturday at 9 am. An organizational meeting will follow .

PAT HILL CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE INC.
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CHESTER - There will be a
regular ml'eting of the Chester
Township Truste!'s on Saturday
at 9 a.m. at the townha!I.

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RACINE -The Sutton Township Trustees will have their
regular me!'tlng on Saturday at 1
p.m. at th&lt;' residence of the clerk.
Following the me!'tlng the trustees will hav!' an organizational
meetin!: for 1990.
RUTLAND- There will be a
round and squarO? dance on
Saturday at the Rutland Amerl·
can Legion, Eli Dennison Post
46i from 8 p.m. to midnight. This
will also b&lt;' a potluck.
SUNDAY
LONG BOITOM - The Mt. Olive
Community Church will have
New Year's ev!' services on
Sunday beginning at 7 p.m. There
will be special slnglng and Pastor
Lawrence · Bush Invites the
publlc.
CARPENTER - The Mt.
Union Baptist Church will have
New Year's eve services on
Sunday beginning at 7 p.m . "Jan
and Kathy" will sing and Rev.
Noel Russell, Athens, will be the
speaker. Pastor Joe N. Sayre
Invites the public.

Judgemental wife? No,
Ann says she was right
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a
43-year-old woman with a job
that requires some traveling.
When I returned from a two-night
business trip, I found leftover
barl;lecued chicken In the fridge.
My husband (age 45) explained
that he had Invited his young
(attractive) student-assistant to
our home for dinner so they could
catch up on some paper work.
(She had never been In our home
before.)
I exploded when "Jim" told
me, He couldn't understand why
I was so furious. He made me
sound like a hysterical nut. ·
The following day I received a
letter from Jim's assistant saylng the evening was perfectly
Innocent, that there was no
hanky-panky and she Is upset
because I accused her of
misconduct.
,
.
That letter did not make me
feel better, nor did It convince me
that the evening was an Innocent
one. In fact. her denial made me
eve~ more suspicious.
Now Jim Is angry because I
reacted In such a volatile
manner. He called me "priggish
and judgemental.'' I am furious
with him for telling the woman I
was upset. I consider that
disloyal.
This Is a second marriage for
both of us, and I want It to work.
Am I wrong to feel that Jlm
should not have Invited the young

Ann
Landers

woman to our home when 1 was
out of town? Am I being oldfashioned and unfair? I'm too
close to this situation to be 100
percent objective. - Hurting In
Texaa.
Dear Hurting: In my opinion
Jim was out or line. You had a
right to feel that he used poor
1udgement.
Jim's assistant has no business
In your home when you are out of
town. I also believe he should not
have reported your explosive
reaction and that the woman's
letter of dental made her look
even more guilty. ("He who
excuses hlmsel f accuses
himself.")
Dear Ann Landers: 1 always
told myself that when I had kids 1
would never treat them the way
mymothertreatedme.Momwas
quick-tempered and high-strung.
She never actually beat us, but
we were slapped around a lot,
screamed at constantly and were
always being punished for some
little thing.
I'm22yearsoldnowandhavea
beautiful, active 3-year-oldson.l
love my child with all my heart
but I see a lot of my mother tn m~
and I hate it. I'm always yelling
at '"Tommy" and spanking hlm
too hard and too often. I want to
raise him differently than I was
raised. but It Is difficult because
It's the only way I know.
I feel guUty and ashamed, Ann.

ANN LANDERS

''1919, t..An,...t ...
Tim-

!ilt~,.dl,.. ..

aiMI

CrutoN. "'yndlul"

child deserves a
better mother. When I am angry
or frustrated about things that
have nothing to do with Tommy, I
find myself picking on him. When
he reacts, I let him have I!. I know
II I don't stop doing this, the boy
wlll hav&lt;' zero self-esteem and no
confidence.
He Is a beautiful boy, inside
and out. I don't want to ruin his
life, but I'm afraid I'm doing just
that. Please, Ann, rescue me. ,I
can't do this alone. What should I
do? Wher&lt;' can I go? 1 don't have
money lor therapy. Help me and
my son. I love hlm too much to
hurt him the way I was hurt. - A
Cry lor Help Ill S.C.
:Dear S.C.: There IS h!'ip lor
you. and bless you for asking.
Millions of others need it, •too.
Here's where to write: Parents
Anonymous, 6733 ~- Sepulveda
Blvd., Suite 270, Los Angeles,
Call!. 90045.
Do you. have que.uion.• obout .ex.
but no onl' YOIJ ron roUt ro? Ann
Landeu' ba.aklet '"Sex and th£1
Tetna~er." i., frank and to the
point. Send a ~elf-addr essed. long.
bruinesfo.si:e envelopP, and a check
or monpy ordpr for 13.65 'o Teen.
c/ o Ann Landen P.O. Box 11562.
Chicop:a. Ill. 61)611-0562.

O:&gt;ld-stunned sea turtles resrued

Community calendar
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Firehouse.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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•Must buy from stock by January 31st. Gee details and guarantee claim form at dealer.

MERRITT ISLAND, Fla.
tUPil - The prognosis is good
for most of the 232 sea turtles
found floating .on their backs
near the Canaveral National
Seashore, cold -stunned from a
sudden drop In water tempera tures, wlldllle experts said.
Seventy-six cold-stunned sea
turtles were pulled Wednesday
from the chilly waters where
they were floating helplessly on
their bellies, bringing the total

number of ailing turtles rescued
thls week to 232.
The record-setting temperatures that put the state of Florida
into a deep freeze over the
Christmas holiday weekend not
only wreaked havoc wlth the
state's fruit and vegetable crops
but also dropped water tempera·
tures to 46 degrees .
"When the water gets around
50 degr&lt;'es .. . It starts get ling
stressful for turtles," said Bruce

People in the news_-.,
By United Press International
'
BAD BUY FOR SLY: Actor Sylvester Stallone has flied a $5
million suit against bls New York art consultant. The star of
"Rambo" and "Rocky" claims he overpaid for art and sold it
for less than market value on the advice of Barbara
Guggenheim. The civil fraud suit, fil&lt;'d In Los Angeles's
Superior Court, charges the adviser prompted the actor to
overpay for a damaged oll painting by calling It a
"masterpiece," and that she defrauded him In other
transactions. Stallone bought the painting - "Pi eta." by 19th
century British artist Willlam Bouguereau -for $1.7 million,
and the art consultant collected an $85,000commlsslon, the sult
says. But one private dealer estimates its worth at no more
$250,000, and Stallone's lawyer. Martin D. Singer, says someone
recently offered $400,000.
BUSH TAKES A BREAK: President Bush says h~'s
comfortable with his declslon to spend a New Year's fishing and
hunting holiday In Texas despite unS€'tled events in Panama,
saying the llghtlng bas cooled and the whereabouts of Gen.
Manuel Noriega are known. Bush said, "Look, I don't make any
cover. I'm going to be enjoying myself and I think the Am&lt;'rican
people understand that. And I think I have worked pretty hard
all year long. So I'll keep on this path and I hope Its correct ." His
parting hollday words for reporters: "I hope you all have a
marvelous time and that you don't have to work every minute.!
hope there's some 'R-and-R ' for you."
BERRY SLAPPED WITH LAWSUIT: A former cook at a
restaurant owned by rock ·n· roll Jeg!'nd Chuck Berry ls
accusing the guitarist of videotaping woinen while they used the
restroom at the Missouri establishment. Hosana Huck filed a
suit against Berry, 63, In St. Charles County Circuli Court. She
was a cook at the Southern Air R!'staurant in Wentzvlll&lt;', about
. 35 . mlles northwest of St. Louis. According to the suit, the
musician-restaurateur "intentionally and without just cause or
excuse Intruded upon !Huck's) seclusion and privacy without
her permission by surreptitiously making or manufacturing
vldeolaP&lt;'S d&lt;'plctlng (Huck) undressing and dressing and using
the tollet at the restaurant." Berry could not be reached lor
comment.
·
L.A. LAW TAKES THE GOLD: The jury is in on Golden Globe
Award nominations, and lawyer-chic television serif'S "L.A.
Law"ls out In front. Nominations were announced Wednesday
by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. The NBC series
collected eight nominations, followed by !'Cheers' •with four. In
the film cat&lt;'gory. Oliver Stone's "Born on the Fourth of July,"
Trl-Star Picture's "Glory," and Rob Reiner's "When Harry
Met Sally" each received llve nominations . Tom Cruise stars In
the Stone tllm, and his portrayal of a VIetnam War hero who
turned antl·war activist, Ron Kovlc. earned him a nomination
tor best actor In a drama. The 47th Annual Golden Globe Awards
will be announced Jan. 20.

Bllhovde, a spokesman for the
Merritt Island Wildlife Refuge.
which coordinated the rescue. ·
Twenty turtles were en route to
Sea World of Florida In Orlando,
where 75 W!'re already recovering ln tanks of warm water, said
park curator Frank Murru.
"Almost all of them are doing
very well," Murru sald. "They
just n&lt;'ed to be warmed up. Quite
a few of them are eating already.
so that's a good sign."
Two healthy turtles were released Wedn!'sday from the
Merritt Island Wlldllfe Refuge,
which coordinated the rescue.
"They were in real good
shape," said r!'fuge spokesman
Bruce Bllhovde.
The others were to be trucked
to Disney Worl.d In Orlando,
where spokesman Jim Hampton
said some would be put In a
snorki!l'lng pool at Typhoon La·
goon, a water amusement park.
and others ln an aquarium at
EPCOT Center.
Of the 232 turtles puiled from
the water by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service since Monday.
61 wl're dead or have died,
Bllhovde said.
.,"Very few died aftf'r we
brought them back. Most of them
were already dead In the water.
for all Intents and purposes," he
said. "The ones that we picked up
live and brought back ar&lt;' doing
Wl'll."
Two airboat cr!'ws worked
untll early Wednesday afternoon, patrolling about15 miles of
shoreline In the Mosquito Lagoon
and the north end of the Indian
River, Bllhovde sald.
··we've pretty much finished
up all we could find today," he
said.
Mun·u said once they had
recovered, the turtles would be
tagged and released.
"!The turtles) do float with
their backs up, and they try to get
a little air every now and again.
but some of them get so weak
they drown ," Bllhovde said. "It's
all cold r!'lated."
Most of the turtles are green
turtles, an endangered species In
Florida. Bu I rescuers also found
lO .loggerhead sea turtles, which
are listed by federal wildlife
officials as a threatened species.
"The · green sea turtles are
pretty docile. The loggerhead sea
turtles, they will bite, but th&lt;'Y're
so cold, ·they 're not any problem.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Quirks in the news----By United Pres• lnternatillnal
'Miracle' baby coatact&amp;larnlly
GALVESTON, Texas tUPI)Thirty-one years alter Kenneth
Davenport discovered a 12-hourold girl In a pile of b!'ach trash,
the "miracle baby," now a
mother herself, has sought him
out to find clues to her orlgln.
Davenport ahd his wife, Joyce,
first thought the abandoned girl
was a doll, but when they realized
she was allve they rushed her to
the hospital. They later tried to
adopt her, but the child was given
to another family and the res·
cuers received no furth!'r lnlor·
matlon on her wher.eabouts.
Now, Eliza beth Ann Antilla has
tracked down the Davenports to
talk to the family that saved her
life and try to lind the mother
who abandoned her.
Antilla Is married, has a
10-month-old daughter and llves
In Ventura, Calif. Last year. she
began her quest to learn the
Identity of her birth mother and
eventually was told by her
adoptive parents that she had
been abandoned.
"I told them l could face the
truth, whatever It was." Antilla
told the Houston Chronicle In an
Interview publish&lt;'d Wednesday.
"They did not tell me !'very thing
because they wanted to be
protect! ve.
"At the time, I said It wouldn't
matt!'r to me lf I were given up
for adoption or found In a
dumpster. When I said that about

the dumpster and saw the look on
their faces , I reallzed what the
truth was.
Davenport sald he was
"amazed" to have heard from
Antilla after 31 years.
"We cared so much about what
happened to her, and then she
was gone. " Davenport said. "We
always thought about her at
Christmas . She wants to be part
of our family . and WI' want her to
b&lt;' part of ours.
"They called her a miracle
baby when we found her and, In a
way. she was ... If we hadn't
found her. she would have died."

tortoises. 27 "big-headed" tur·
ties and 18 "giant yellow"
tortoises.
Two turtles and one lizard died
at the airport.
A pollee source said a Thai
district court Monday convicted
Shlrawa, 20, of attempted ~nimal
smuggllng and sentenced him to
three months Imprisonment and
a $100 fin&lt;'. Th!' court suspended
thl' jall sentence lor one year a~d . ·
allowed Shlrawa to return home
on probation.
The pollee source sald Shlrawa
told pollee that he did not know
the animals were protected by
law.

Nearly 300 garged reptiles
smuggled In suitcases
BANGKOK, Thailand (UP!)A Japanese merchant has been
arrested for attempting to smuggle nearly 300 protected lizards
and turtles to Tokyo ln suitcases,
many with their mouths taped
shut.
A Wildlife Division statement
sald Tsuyoshi Shirawa was ar·
rested Sunday night while preparing to board a flight to Tokyo.
Wildlife officials found 283
rep till's cramm!'d Into lour of his
suitcas!'s. All were rar&lt;' species
protected · by Thai law, · the
statement said.
Most had their mouths taped
shut to prevent them from ·
making noise. the statement
said.
The reptiles Included 185
••giant" lizards, three "spiny
bill" turtles, I 50 ··elongated"

Army to use microbes lo eat
explosives
HERMISTON, Ore. IUPII The U.S. · Army Is enlisting
hungry microbes to do cleanup
work on the residues of TNT and
other explosives .
The Army's 19,700-acre Umatlll Depot near Hermiston ln
eastern Oregon wlll be the testlng
site for an &lt;'Xperirnental method
for treating soli contaminated by
explosives, officials said.
The system is known as cornposting. Capt. Craig Myler sald.
It uses mtcrorganlsms to literally eat the contaminants in soils
and sediments.
Myler, project of!lcer lor the
Army's Toxic and Hazardous
Materials Agency, sald the microbes do not naturally feed on
TNT particles at a very rapid
rate, -· so they will have to 1:/&lt;'
coaxed .

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�There was a lot of panic and .I
feared we would be killed."
Workers labored hours after
the tremor to stablllze a 300-ton
retaining wall resting at a
precarious angle over the club's
crushed auditorium, where the
gainbl ing operations are located.
As many as 50 elderly people
were feared trapped in the
auditorium. chief fire officer
Alan Easy said.
"It's a very slow, methodical
job. unfortunately," said pollee
superintendent Ian Oeary, in
charge of rescue operations at
the club. "We are getting heat·
seeking equipment here as soon
as possible to try and locatett&gt;ose
who are under the wreckage."
Even though temblors of slm·
ilar strength have not done near
the damage in Southern Catifor·
nia and other earthquake-prone
regions of the world, many
buildings in New Castle that were
worst hlt Thursday are more
than 100 years old and have not
been reinforced to withstand an
earthquake.
Buses and emergency vehicles
backed by army units were on
standby In Newcastle to evacuate thousands left homeless by
the quake and to transport
casualties to hospitals.
Two people were known \lead
inside the Newoastle Workers
Club, one in the club's parking
lot, and two others were killed by
falling buildings in Hamllton.
said police spokesman Craig
Regan . Details of the other
fatalities were not immediately
known.
Newcastle real estate man
Noel McFarland said the front of
his office building collapsed
when tlie quake hi I.
''The front of the Kent Hotel,
which has just been refurbished,
was also blown out onto the
road," McFarland said. ''There
were people under the awning
when the pub collapsed. There

IV.AN n.A, Philippines IUP!l Opposlllon leader Sen. Juan
Ponce Enrllewas charged Thurs·
day for his Involvement in this
month ·s failed coup attempt
after witnesse~ allegedly saw
him meeting with renegade
army Col. Gregorio Honasan
during the uprising.
Honasan, 41, leader of a bloody
failed uprising in 1987, allegedly
led the Dec. 1-7 rebellion that left
119 people dead and nearly
toppled President Corazon
Aquino.
Honasan served as Enrlle's
chief security officer before
Aquino fired Enrile as defense
minister in November 1986. Nine
months earlier, Enrile assisted
in the February 1986 popular
revolt that forced President
Ferdinand Marcos tnto exile
after 20 years In power .
Enrile, 65, a Harvard-educated
lawyer, denied the charges,
which carry a penalty ranging

were people laying around on the
street, It was really horrifying."
Power . outages. interrupted
water and gas supplies, trans·
port delays and minor damage
were report.ed all a"ross New
South Wales, which has a popula·.
lion of aboul5 .5 million.
More than 35 people Injured in
the quake were admitted to the
Royal Newcastle Hospital. "but
it was subsequently found to be
unsafe and the injured and scores
of other patIents were evacuated
to nearby Llnguard private hos·
pita!." Regan said.
The Mater Hospital was found
to be structurally safe and
another 43 Injured were admit·
led. six Of them in serious
condition .
The quake triggered a series of
small fires in the massive Broken
Hill Propriety steel works at
Newcastle.
''There is a lot of smoke still
around but we are in control of
the situation," said Broken Hill
spokesman Bill Hope.
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka CUP! )
Hundreds of homes in Sydney
- Fighters of the strongest
and the central New South Wales
Tamil rebel group, pressing their
coast were without electricity
campaign against an Indian·
following power failures, and gas
backed Tamil militia, killed at
and water lines were broken by
least 28 rivals Thursday and lost
the quake.
three of their own men in a battle
Tr3J!sformers failed at most
in northern Sri Lanka. a senior
power substations and banks
miiitary official said.
were forced to close when their
Meanwhile, violence related to
compuiers failed, said a spokes·
a ieftlsf Sinhalese insurrection tn
man for the Sydney County
southern and central areas of the
Council.
island left at least 20 people dead
Kevin McHugh, a senior reduring the 24-hour period that
searcher for the Bureau of ended at 8 a.m.' the official said.
Mineral Resources. said earth·
The victims Included a radical
quakes of the Intensity of Thurs- leader who was arrested only
day's tremor were not as unusual
hours before he was killed
as many Australians thought.
leading security forces to a
''We average such tremors
hideout of the Janatha Vimukti
about every 25 years In various Peramuna. or Peoples Liberaareas in New South Wales bu I tion Front.
today's quake over this area is
The military official. speaking
about the seventh in the past 100 on condition of anonym ltv said
years, but no quake has ever guerrillas of the ubi-ratio~ Tig·
caused this much damage, " ers of Tamil Eelam anacked two
McHugh said.
trucks carrying members of the
Tamil National Armv nearVavu·

51 dead in political violence .

PRE·

The TNA is a militia trained
and armed by India to prevent
the LTTE from moving Into
areas Its troops vacate and
toppling the New Delhi-backed
provincial administration of the·
E~lam Peoples Revolutionary
Liberation Front, a former rebel
group.
The EPRLF won power in
Indian -s upervised December
1988 polls n:andated by a July
· 1987 Indo-Sn Lankan accord that
was designed to end a war by
Tamils for independence from
the Colombo government, ":'hich
IS controlted by the ethnic SlnhalesP majority.
The accord provided for the
deployment of Indian peacekeep·
mg troops.
.
The plan was rejected by the
LTTE, which_ haS killed more
than 1,100 Indian soldiers. It has
lost more than 600 fighters. but
retains signifiCant •trll6gth to
threaten the p:ovlnci•l admlnis·
tra!lon as Ind1a graduallY With·
draws at the request "(Colombo.

Ssvingg Coing On
ow AI.....
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Cabbage

Spare Ribs

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SUPERIOR

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99c
Zesta Crackers •••••••••••••••• m..... 79 C
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With a look toward Improving
its 5-6 overall record, the Unlver·
slty of Rio Grande women's
basketball team hosts two Dis·
trlct 22 opponents at Lyne Center
thIs weekend.
Findlay (0·6) meets the Redwo·
men at 7 p.m. Friday, while
' Bluffton ~4 -5) visits at 3 p.m .
Saturday.
,.,,,
The Redwomen came off a
two-game string of wins over
• Lake Erie and Notre Dame
if:l
• ~Ohio) on the road and traveled
to Tiffin on Dec. 20, where despite
a 23-point performance by start·
lng shooting guard Debbie Fred·
rick, they fell 84-82 \o the Lady
Dragons.
Since the season's beginning,
Coach l)oug Foote's club has
consistently Improved its shoot·
lng percentage and has been
concentrating on a more rugged
offense, which shone In the Lake
Erie and Note Dame vfctor!es
I
and in the 78-71 loss to.Shawnee
State. At the same lime. the team
has de~eloped a strong defense in
the work done by Fredrick,
Mindy Montgomery and Cindy
Ridgeway.
Fredrick is currently averagIng 8.4 points, 2.4 rebounds and
4.6 assists per game for the
Redwomen and Is expected to
start against Findlay and Bluf·
!ton. AI point guard Is Jennl
· Couch, who is providing the team
with 6.5 points, 2.2 assists and 2.6

'

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·Peas.......................................... 112 cAsE S599 CASE $999
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Applesauce ............................... '12 CASE S4 99 CASE $8 99
• Beons ............................... '1·2 ·CASE $599 CASE $999
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3 FOR $1 19
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3 FOR $129
3 FOR $119
3 FOR $119
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Classified
• the Area's Number 1 Marketplace

•

TO PlACE All AI '~U 99%- 21S6
MONDAY tin FIDAY I A.M. lo 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

RAVENSWOOD - The South·
ern Tornado boys freshman
basketball team defeated Ra·
venswood· 50-48 at Ravenswood
recently.
Southern got 9ff to a fast start
and led 13-9 after the first period
of play, only to have Ravenswood
come back and lead by one, 23-22
at the hall.
From then on the game was a
-real dog-fight, but Southern
came out red hot In the third
frame and scored 18 points to
regain the lead at 40-36 before
marching on to the 50-48 win.
Mark Allen led the well·
balanced scoring attack with 12

points, includllll 7 of 8 from the
free throw line. He was followed
by Michael Evans with 10 points,
Russell Silllileton and Kyle Wick·
line with 8 points each and
Jeremy Dill with 6 points. Dill
was cited for his overall great
floor play by SHS coach Jimmy
Caldwell.
Jason Balls led Ravenswood
with a game hi(h 23 points. Balls
was followed lby Brad Hunt with
12.
Southern Is now 3-2 on the year,
playing their next game in the '
Trimble Holiday Tournament on
Dec. 28 and Dec. 30.

ron Skeens 7-0-6·20, Mike Brown
1-0-0:2, Mike Adams 8-0-1-17,
1'/.lke J'ordan 2-0-0-4, Chad Jordan
8·0·0-16, Chad Mitten 1-1-0.5,
Kann l-0-0·2. TOTALS 1111-1·74.
801.JTIIEBN (til)- Andy Baer
2·1·3-10, Todd Grindstaff 3-1·3-12,
Roy Lee Bailey 4-0-0-8, Kevin
Burgess 1-0-P-2, Jayson Codner
0-0-1-1, Jeremy Rose O.Q-2-2,
Brent Shuler 4-0·2-10, Brad Maynard 1·0·1-3. TOTALS ll-t-1t-tll.

,,

-- '

,.

1
3

6

GMif.

1Utto41 . . . . .

or MIIQR

·Cc:.w, I !»0 ~vwnt for ada pa1d '" IIINJnce,..,,,,g,
1S

'A cl•"•hed tftllf1...,...1 , . .

, OAY 8£fOAE PU8LICA110N
-- 1 1·00 AM SATURDAY
- 2 OOP .M MONDAY

·- 2.00P.M TUESDA\1
·- 2 00 PM IIVEPNESOAY
·- 2.1DP.M THURSDAY
2.08PM fFIIOAY

Clll'&lt;'r

the

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eAdJUII!(C'&gt; ...
Muon C11 , WV

liiiethpohs
Jl7 Ch•hira
Ml ~ Vmton
JU .... fUoGrlnU

6 71 - h

•rea Code 304

PtNSant
411 - i.•gn
571 -Apple Gruve
7?''-· Me•on

UZ-- Midlll.-.1
p.....,oy

IH-Ch• ...

141-- Pon .. nd

-N- """""

247·· Leura Fall&amp;
!t41 --Recine
741- · Rutlancl

:111 -- Gwyen lit•tt
843 · Arabia "Oist
371 - Walnut

ail l•l•rl
111!37 - Bufflkl

54 ·-M•tc . Metchll\dllt
~5 - 8uil&amp;ne Suppl••

56 - Ptll h» Salt
57 - Mvllclllntttume~tll
II - Fn••tt .. Vtgll'l•bl•
59 - for $4de 01 fradl

m ldYJn~;el

~11rn

f.

1 1 - Help W~•M
12 - Sit~tion w..-.ced

61

13 - Insurance
14 - lu••• Trau11ng ,
15 ...... SehOdlt l lnttrutt10n

lt,~a•n•• Opportu&lt;'HI"f"

Lo•n

23 -- Pr~tl•llonaj lll'vteH

31-HQIYift ku lala

12 - MobiJa Homtl tor 5ela
1~ - F.,m• for Slle
J4-8ut•n•• auihllnit

SEbiCE

We can r4!f~Dir and re·
core ralliators and

71 - AutGI for Sale
72 - · Truckt lor Sale
73 - V«tl. 4 WO I
74 - Molorc:o;cl•
76 - 8ualt &amp; Moto" lor S•l•
76 · Auto Pertt&amp; A~&lt;~:• toll•
77 At,~IO Rap•"
78-- Clmptng EQmpmant
78 - Campetl &amp; Mutor Homllt

'II"'I
81 - Home lmpro,..menu
82 - ·Piumboni &amp; He•lng

83- hcw•llng ·
14 - Eiactncal &amp; Atfr~•auon

Rooms

41 - h•ce tor Rant

85 - G•n•al Haulmg
11 -· Mobile Home
17 -- Uphotale•y

"••n

47 - Waniad to R•nt

41 - Eq ... l,mentlor Aaftt
41 --For

L•••

I. L IOUON
TRUCKING
CIIISTEl, OliO

...... Corll. . . . .

•GRAVEL .

. . ICMI lllil •'"' re4l
r-.rors.......

•U.MESTONE .

r.,.., ... ,.....

. ovt

PAt

•u POll

·2·21H

Mlddl1port. Ohio
· .'

1-IJ-tlc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Itt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Altt Tr••••l.,l..
Pl.~·5612

., .. 2.:7111

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

915-4.422
11-1-lt·lfh

BISSELl
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUU
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
~'At

IMSonabte Prtds"

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

lftiiiOI 11!11101
lontal (loanups &amp;

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
Take thl ptilt oul of ..........

An Orclftence t:o provide
eddltionll o-mpen..tion for
vii... em, II, . . tor 1989.
. . it enllined fly the
Council • the Vlllego of
Mlddtotilli. • followo:
- Bee. "t, 1!111 for tho yeor
1918

tt• Villego shall poy

eoch lull-time employee in
tho octlve employment of
tho VIII"'" • of Oocembo&lt;
11. 11118 In eddhlon 10 oil
othor=ondirin.. benoc:e provided the

fl1• h

oum of line H u - dol-

lora !UOO.OOI oo H&lt;ltfonlll
Nfory.

s.c. n.
,.......,.

""' tunhef

11111 111 h

VII! llAliOIIAkl

. IIAVI 11111111(8

Is still awnl!d ond
operated by Millie
Duncan.

..Free Estimates"

for Good H ••m••
Cook in' f..onw -\.-.- l ""!

... ·-llooilt

Pit 949-2801 •
., hs. 949-2860

HOURS: 6 AM -9 f- M D•iiY
CLOSED SUI\: JAY

NO -SUNU Y CAW
J.ll-lfn

lr...wy Rd., Mir dloport

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
NfW Location:
161 North Stcllftd·
MiiW!oport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

. 16141 985-4110
-

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SUI.LDOM
IMIM •t Ylllty l ......
IRIIIH...... t, 011.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cycle
StO&lt;:k Pana fer
Hometite, WMdaMer.
Teeumaeh. 8rig11 Ar.

ltronen.

Pl. tt2-3911
. 6·

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Wl1ttr Steel• I 0•
VINYL SIDING

VlfCYL RDUCE.NT
WillOWS
f"EE ESTIMATES

992-2772

ll·l .......

GUN SHOOT
EV11Y SllftAY
Cln

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P

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{121 21: 11 .len. 4

992-7713

L-----.1~~0- 'f mo.

COUNTRY ·
MOilLE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lo1 Rentals

992-7479

.., ... Nitht

lt. 33 North of

NO SUNDAY CAW

Dill
CUT AND
WltAPPED

P-eroy, Ohi•

..,,

··" d•t
.. 1:00
Sept.P...
11
St.m
•••, Olebtl 12

DOUBLER
TACK SHOP
ALBANY, OHIO
698-6500

MAPLEWOOD

Westam Boots, Hats.

614-949·273.

Shirts. Belts For
Men, ladiet1 &amp;
Children.

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MILUE'S
RESTAURANT

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PH. 949-2101
....... 949-21.0

lttu1doitfof¥•·

enginM

ORDINANCE NO.
1211-Btl

Hey folks!!

. 1· 12-"88-lfn

PAINTING I CO.

l

_,.,m Equ1pmen1

Business Services

TEAM
W L P OP.
Miller ...... .... .... ... 5 1 419 377
Wellston .............. 4 1 328 269
Vinton County ...... 3 2 311 303
Alexander ........ .. .4 3 458 444
Belpre ................. 3 3 411 401
Trimble .. ............. 2 :l 319 330
Meigs ................ 1 2 136 177
Fed -Hocking ........ 2 4 400 431
Nels-York ...... ...... O 6 284 411
Tonilhl's srune:
Miller at Crooksville
Frldafs gllftles:
Alexander at Waverly

Public NOtice

I&lt;

41 - Houtet tor llilt"nt

46 - Furn~shtd

LiliA'S

tournament

Ill,

11 - i.otl &amp; Acreage
36 - Rut htate W111111d

43 - Farmt. for 'Aent
44 - Apartment lor Rent

(All Games)

Logan at Meiga
Trimble at Warren Local
Saturday's games:
Wellston vs. Unloto 1at Convo1
Alexander at Waverly
tournament

• •

14 - H1y &amp; Gnon
•6 - Saad &amp; Ferl illle r

11 ·- Ractlo, TV &amp; Cllhp~r
17 Milelttla~~aous
11- Warulld To Oa

lo

~ 111 •l1•d

1

&amp;.2 - wana~d to Bur
6l - lh,auodr.

42 -· Mc:IDIIt Hornet lot Rene

Oet ·Rttults Fatt

G~

!:3 - Anl~tt

4 - GW..wty
5 · Htppy- Ath
I - i.ott 1nd Fo o.~n ll

21 -

01111•• CQ~o~my
Area Cod• 8U
441

05/ day

t1 .30t d•v

S1- Houuhold

22 - Mon_.

fullowiug ldepltun&lt;'

30
42
.6()

•13 00

_.If\

Clauifit•d page.,

.20

56.00

I - Pubt1c • • • Auctio n
1 - W.M1ed lu l~o~v

The Dl•l'f' i enton .. I•
capt
dMINfied dlt. . .. lwlin•• Cerci and h19-' nuH01W
will &amp;leo appe11 in lhe ·~ Pt~11nt Rto9i11e• and ttlt Oath·
pcMII o ... r TriiM.Ine. ,..-.n, aver 18.000 homes

-

$9.00

Wotds

U-IPQf'tlnt Gooo.

7 - Yifd Slit (pau;l

Htp~y ~d1
YMd Sal•

Ca•d ot Thtnf11

16
16
15

.

""'"I b• .

run J ._. 1 11 n• c:h•t•
'Pric. ot M lor ... c _ . l•lltfl 11 Hultle pr1ce Gf ~d i::llll
'7 ...... lfn11 IT,. Gfttt' uted
'
'&amp;Miin,.. ls not •,_po.,....,.. aHQfl eh11 '"''d-.. !Ch•r;io
lear erra11 lltst dllf ad runt In paper) C•H belgre 2 0011 m

h1 Memo;H-

f4 .00

mutt bt " ' '"

COUI\11.

.,,.. . . - c;..,.... !IIY and fO&amp;Ind " - und..,

o ...,, 1 ti

R11111

16

TVC standings

80VTIIE.UTBRN (II)- Aa-

lt,...... I nllounlla

D•v•
10

167 - COOhl~le

At small forward is Tami
boards per outing.
Naumann
15·7, freshman, 7
Starting against them lor FindI and Kris tie
points,
3
rebounds
Jay are Sonya Morris· (5-4;
15-8,
sophomore.
9.5
Conley
freshman, 2.4 points) at the point
6.1
rebounds)
as
power
points,
and Tammy Lorton 15-5, sol'ho·
more, 16.3 points, 4.6 assists) as forward. Diane Kempf (5-10,
junior, 10.5 points, 6.7 rebounds!
off guard.
,
takes the post.
l,eadlng' the Redwomen of·
Bluffton's victories have been
fense are Kerri Kidwellt8 points, recorded over St. Francis, 87-75;
6.3 rebounds, 2.Lassistsl as small Siena Heights, 69-58; Ohio Do·
forward and Kathy •Snyder (4 minican, 77·53; and Spring Ar·
points. 4.5 rebounds) as the bor, 59-54. Losses were to Ur·
power forward. Findlay Coach
bana, 78-65; Hillsdale tMich.),
Sher~·l Neff is expected to fleld
79-64; Ohio Wesleyan, 84-64;
against them Joelle Gottfried , Taylor (Mich.), 60·56; and Dear·
~5-7, freshman, 11.2 points) at
born. 57·52.
one forward and Stacie Klein·
Following this set of games,
hotter t5-10, freshman, 5 points)
the Redwomen will travel to
or Pam Hart (5·6, sophomore, 2.8 Cumberland !Ky.) on Jan. 4 and
points) as the other forward.
will home on Saturday, Jan. 6 at2
Ann Barnltz, the Redwomen's p.m. against Notre Dame.
leading scorer (14.5 points! and
rebounder (6.9 per game) will
repeat as center, and faces
Tammy Graham 16·0, junior, 12.2
points, 9.3 rebounds) fort he Lad~·
Oilers.·
Findlay has been a loser to the
University of MichiganDearborn, 78-77: Huntington
(Ind.), 68-53; Lake Superior
State, 103-52; Spring Arbor
(Mich. i, 75-70; Wooster, /0-46;
and. Bethany !W.Va.), 64-59.
Bluffton mentor Kim Fischer
Is expected to star: Kelly Halpin
~5-6. sophornol"f'. 11.6 points, 3
ANN UKNfl'Z
assists) as poinl 'g uard and Sandy
Leadll JIG IJCorlng
Heitkamp (5·6, junior. 9.9 points,
at I U pelllls/ game
4 rebounds l as shoo ling guard.

RA
Wordl

Monlhly

SHS frosh triumph ·

R!Cl-IMONDALE- The South· · being mired In an offensive
ern Tornadoes trailed by eleven drought in the second quartl'r
at halftime, but becameburif&gt;d in that netted just 11 points.
The third quarter was the real
the Intensity of an 18-7 third
'killer
tor the Tornadoes, who
period by the Ross Southeastern
tallied
only seven third-period
Panthers, who went on to defeat
that frame Adams and
points.
In
the Tornadoes 66-48 last
Jon-dan
combined
for 16 of their
Saturday·.
team's
1A
markers
and llkewls&lt;"
Ross Is now perfect at 6-0 and
deflated
the
sails
of
Southern's
will play Coach Jay Rees' Alex·
comeback
ship.
and\'r Spartans Friday at 9 p.m.
-Both clubs had 32 rebounds, as
In the Waverly Holiday tourna·
Andy
Baer and Todd Grindstaff
me~t
at Waverly. Southern
were
high for SHS with eight
dropsm to·4-2 afier a perfect start
each.
and
Adams rolled an eight
and will host Athens Friday in
for
Southeastern.
Racine.
Southern hit 17 of 53 for 32
Southeastern's Aaron · Skeens
percent
hit 12 of 1A at the line for
tallied 20 points to lead all
66.7
percent.
had 10 steals led by
scorers, while 6-5 Mike Adams
Burgess's
threee, 20 tur·
Kevin
had 17, and Chad Jordan, son of
novers, and 10 team fouls.
Coach Larry Jordan, had 16.
Ross hit 29 of 60 for 48.6
Todd Grindstaff led the Soupercent, hlt7·11 at thellne,had14
therners with 12, while Andy
steals, 15 turnovers and 15
Baer and Brent Shuler each had
personals
whistled against them.
10.
More
woehilly
for the Torna·
Southern held Its own early.
was
the
fact
that they lost
does
but fell to a 18-12 deficit before
the st!rvlces of Chad Taylor last
Friday when he fractured his
ankle In practice and may be out
4-6 weeks. Ailing Bra&lt;l Maynard
also limited action because of
illness that has plagued him most
of the seuon.
Southeastern won the reserve
game 58-40, led by Ragland with
17 points. Michael Russell had 12
for Southern.
Score by qlllll'ten
Southern........ 12 11 7 18~
Ross SE ... ,... .18 16 18 14..:.a6

LetlloulllleniMa
I

6, and Heather Ramsey with 5.
Redovlan had 8 rebounds and 6
steals to lead Eastern.
Score by qlllll'll!rs:
Box Seore:
Oak Hill ............ 18 16 21 13-611
Eastern............. 6 24 9 3-42
· OAK HILL &lt;•l - Galllamore
4·1·1-12, Lloyd 2-0-4, Adkins 6-315, Fisher 2-0-4, Morgan 2·1·5,
Jones 7-2-16, Stiltner 4-4-12. TOTAL'i 27-1-ll-&amp;8.
EASTERN ( 42) - Michelle
Metzger 3·0-6, Gillilan 1-0-2,
Morris 0·0-0, Hill O.Q-0, Otto
5-4·14, Gardner 4-0·8, Phillips
5-3-12, Golden O.Q-0, Lambert
0-0-0, Roush 0-0-0, RedovianO·O·O.
TOTAL'i 18-1-42.

dlfll atte pullol,c.-:i.n Ia m.ae c:onu1ion
'Adt th• mwn Ita piNdln attwance ••

·Southeastern hands
Southern·66-48 loss

T8DD OBINDIITAftl'

I

Tabby Phillips had 12, TlHany
Gardner 8, Michelle Metzger 6,
and Lee Gillilan 2.
Gardner led EHS with 15
rebounds, followed by Stephanie
Otto with 7 and Lee Gillilan with 6
of a total35. OakHillhad401ed by
Jones and StUtner wpth 8 each.
EHS had 11 turnovers, hit 18 of
60 from the field and 6·25 from the
line. Oak Hill hit 27 of 50 from the
floor and 11-25 at the line.
·Eastern won the reserve contest 19-16, led by Theresa
Lambert with 5, Leigh Ann
Redovian with 4, Lisa Golden 4,
and two . each by Lee Glllllan,Toby Hill, and Jennifer Roush.
Oak Hill was led by Fisher with

Rio ladies face weekend schedule

Russet
Potatoes

2°/o -Milk

2%
LOW

EAST MEIGS - Sandwiched .
between the icy weather and
frigid arctic air the Eastern
Eaglettes squeezed In a high
school girl!;' ·basketball contest
here recently, but could not
squeeze out enough offense to
pull orr the win as the mighty Oak
Hill Lady Oaks scored a 68-42 win
over the young Eaglettes.
Oak Hill raced to an 18-6 first
period lead as Eastern got its
shots off, bu I could not hit neither
from the line nor the field. In the
second quarter, however, the
shots Eastern missed were now
going In, sparking a hugh 24point
quarter and pulling he Eagles
back Into contention ·at 34-30 at
the half.
Ones treak In the second period
saw both clubs hit six times In a
row between them without a miss
during
a fjne exhibition of
basketball at any level.
Eastern then couldn't get off
the ground In the second half,
scoring meager 9 point and 3
points each In . the last two
quarters. Meanwhile, Oak Hill
continued Its torrid pace and
scored 21 and 1) points consecu·
lively for the 68·42 finale.
dH placed four girls In double
figures, led! by Jennifer Jones
with 16, and V. Adkins with 15,
fl)llowed by C. Stiltner and
Michelle Gllllamore . with 12
each.
Freshman Stephanie Otto
again had another great game
with 14 points to lead the
Eaglettes, while sophomore

from six months to 12 years in of the rebellion before proceed·
ing against the remaining
prison upon conviction.
"I have not committed a mutineers.
crime," he said. "I am willlng to
An independent survey re·
face (the charges) frontally."
leased Thursday showed Aqui·
The investigation that led to no's popularity rating has re·
the filing of charges named three bounded since the rebellion and
waiters employed at a hotel that that Filipinos appreciated U.S.
provided catering service to . mllllary help In saving h&lt;:r
Enrile in his swank Dasmarinas embattled government.
President Bush, on Aquino's
Village home Dec. 1. The waiters
tes tlfied they saw En rUe con- request, sent F-4Phantomjetson
ferring with several mutineers, ''persuasion flights" Dec 1 after
including Honasan.
rebel aircraft bombed thQ pres!·
EnrUe is the third civilian to dential palace.
face charges In the insurrection.
The Social Weather Station
the sixth against Aquino's nearly survey of 500 Filipinos In metro4-year-old government. Rebel· politan Manila Dec. 11-18 · re·
lion charges also were filed vealed that 67 percent of those
Wednesday against retired genInterviewed opposed the
erals Felix Brawner, a military uprising.
consult.ant in the Senate, and
The survey also showed the
Jaime Echeverria.
popularity ratings for En rUe and
More than 1,800 officers and Vice President Salvador Laurel
soldiers surrendered in the have plunged. Aquino has lmpll·
aborted uprising. Aquino has cated both in the failed coup
directed the mllllary to first
attempt.
court-martial the top 15 leaders

niya, 110 miles northeast of
Colombo in Tamil-dominated
North-Easter!\ Province.
The 6: 30 a.m. ambush lgrilted a
three-hour gunbattle In which the
LTTE lost three men and killed
at least 28 members of the. rival
group. the official said.
"The two vehicles were com·
pletely destroyed. The Tigers
have also got away with a large
quantity of weapons from them,"
the offiCial said.
The battle came only a day
before 2,000 members of an
Indian military contingent were
to vacate the Vavuniya district
under a phased withdrawal that
New Delhi announced should be
completed by March 31. Some
25,000 of more than 50,000 soldi·
ers have already left.
The L TTE has kllled hundreds
of TNA members in taking
control of other areas vacated
since late October by the Indian
Army and experts expect heavy
fighting'to eruplfor the Vavunlya
sector in coming days.

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio

1989

Eastern girls defeat Oak Hill

For1ner Aquino ally charged·

Australia quake kills at least 8;
elderly victims trapped in club
SYDNEY, Australia IUPI) -A
powerful earthquake rocked A us·
tralia's populous New South
Wales state Thursday, killing at
least eight people and trapping
an untold number of elderly
victims under rubble In a gam·
bling club.
The area hardest hit was the
old steel mill town of Newcastle
and its suburb, Hamilton, 125
miles north of Sydney, emergency officials said.
The quake, which registered
5.5 on the Richter scale, was felt
over a wide area of New South
Wales . . The epicenter was detected about 60 mlles from
Newcastle, authorities said. The
U.S. Geological Survey in
. Golden. Colo., said it measured
the earthquake in the range of5.5
to 6.0 on the Richter scale. .
Along with the eight confirmed
deaths in New South Wales, at
Ieast102 people were injured, six
seriously. said the Police Crisis
Center iri Sydney, . Australia's
largest city.
The deaths were the first ever
reported from an earthquake in
Australia, officials said, although a more powerful quake
registering 6.9 on the Richter
scale hit sparsely populated
Western Australia in 1968.
The quake, which hit about
10:30 a.m. and lasted about 45
seconds, was felt as far away as
the national capital of Canberra,
100 miles south of Sydney, to
Kempsey, a dairy town 310 miles
north of Sydney .
Dozens of elderly people were
playing bingo and slot machines
in the Newcastle Workers Club
when portions of the building
collapsed after the quake, trap·
ping many inside.
"Everything went black and
the manager told us to clear out
because there was a bomb in the
club... said club bartender Judy
Warrington. "The auditorium
was completely blown to pieces.

Thundey, December

Thursday. December 28. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

614-949-2635
11-~7-'H·

1 mo.

SADDLES &amp;
IIOISE EQUIPMENT
11-24-1 mo. ,.r.

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE
742-3088
•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; lube
· •Brake Work

MAIN ST., tunAND .
12· 7-"89· i mo.

CHIPWOOD
.WANTED

FIINACE
FUINACI

W- Va. Chipping,

PARTS ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

Rocksprings ttl.
Pomeroy, Ohio

FUINACE

Inc.
PH. 992,3561

KEitt'S APPLIANCE
SDVIU

--··,_

Buying Hours :
7 :30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri .
7 :30-4:00 Saturday

.....

992-SUS or ti5·3S61
117 L

511EWORI • ROADS
ClEARING

NEWLAND
ENTEIPIISIS
DUMP TRUCK
S•nd·S--·Dirt

...... ,.

(614) "7·1171

ill) 7-"!9- t mo.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOV~l

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269
EVDIINGS
4 / l / 89/ tfn

G.
............
SHOOT .
UCIIE
Fill DEPT.

•n

EYUY

SAT.
6:30 , ...

r.tery Clllb
I Z &amp;.,.. Sllltt- Ottly
Mllylitht. .
10·9-lln

KOUNTRY KLUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP
•New Grips
•Clubs Cus-

tomized

JOHN TEAFORD
46317 Stout Camp Rood
Chester, Ohio
11-17-"89-1 mo.

MY·T·SHOP
CUSTOM SCIIIII
PIIIIIIITING

HATS
T-SHIATS
JACKETS
CHEml, OHIO

915·4300

�Thursday, December 28. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--.......

LAFF·A-DAY

44

-. ...

A800f ~£U§51C

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

=
,.. .... .._.,,.re·

r....

CIOM

TV FOil: 0/~
1D

IIIT!.IICIX¥: MIJ.SI5;

to

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

prowlltld.
441-0213.

lrolnod.
,wMI

pedo.

iialmo. C..

Television
Viewing

a:iM£ Ql, NOW ...'(ell
• ~mrra: A ~...,.,.-.....

!lAlii, 1 ~ IT, f.WJ

sa w. opt 2 11r., • llolh; '"""'"

m1.
----·1~

=D~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE«&gt; by Larry Wrlaht

Apartment
torRent

• atand

The Daily Sa ltinei-Page-11

1989

u~--.,,..-

II Ill (I) • (J) ill .1121

(!) MolorwHk

Lost&amp; Found

l .WANT TO WRITE TO 6RAMPA
At-ID 6RAMMA, BUT I DON'T

-··---.. -·

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PAICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1131 .1-... Plu

11571.

mo-.

KNOW WHATTO CALL ~EM ..

(J)

DON'T WORR'f' ABOUT IT...
Tl-lE'f''LL JUST BE GLAD

9 AmeriCan Magazine

CoH 11...._2111. EbH.

6:05 (!) Bever1J Hillbilllet
6:30 D (2) IIJl NBC Nightly Newt

...............711.

.

~ SportaLook (0:30)

•
• "

For Ront: 3 111'1 2 bolho,_upotolro.
_1pt. on 1tt Avenue,
Dip.
114-44&amp;-107t.
.
Fumlahed Apt. 1br 120 Fourth,

"•1.

DOI.l'l LOOK AI Mf..
THAT WAY...

Golllo&gt;olll, S2:15. ilttlhloo Paid.

11. · t1
SCitAM-LETS ANSWIIIS
Sketch -IM)eat- )fJhoo- Csnc91- TWO CHECKS
Man in car shOwroom, "It'$ hard to write one check for such a
large amount.• Ouicll1hinking salesman, "Not to worry. we'll take

D (2) PM Magazine
(!)

Spor11Center

a

'TWOCHECKSr

(J) Current Allalr

C!l MtcHoll Leh,.r

(!)

N1waHour

goo-

.aow 1 ..... u liMttlr, needed
II "d'tj. 114-44H821. .

............ My-loft.
Cooh - . CoiiiWIZ 11107 or
IIW-1.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Fortune D
Ill !Ill Night Court 1;1
0 Monayllne
®Cheero
0 MlamiVIca
9 VidiOCountry
7:05 (!) JeHeroona
7:30 D (2) FamUy Feud

ond llnllh _ . . ,
oldllo .. tho Adllll EduCation
Conlor, Tri-cciuniJ Yoclllonll

Team
CiJ Entertainment Tonight
C1 (I) USA Today
1111 1111121 1m Jeopardy! 1;1
ID(!]) M'A'S'H

rough

IRS
TAX AUDIT
DEPT.

==

ScMol. Tho Adull Cotpoortr~

5.
Carpi rr akllla .,.

tDbKOIMI

•

·- --

111111 ......llo lhol - . .lredo
lhollrglolal llullrl"t
- . . . . To

......, ...

.loiluory 2nd ooll 1 .a.a1'

0 Croullre

®Night Court
12!1 Top Card
7:35 (!) Sanford And Son
8:00 Ill MOVIE: PoaaeiPGJ (2:00)
D
1m Colby ShoW Cliff
gets to know his
step-granddaughter while

rn.

~

~ MUt'Oie PI,Jbh to
- nl
.......
- · of
,.,·
........
... -

Help wanted

(!) t 989 AM-America Foolbllll

FRANK AND ERNEST

Build for your tuwr.. L.Nm bolh

-·~JOUwll

(lullg

Denise is away. (AI 1;1

EA.. MONEY Rnd'ng looUf

(!) COII198 F-~
CiJ
(J) Tha Ice C.padn

ao.-,..

a

1 . . - 11010111111.
Dllllllo. 11) - - Ell. y.
111n.
EAAN IIONEY IJplng II homo.
1311,000 JNr lncomo 11011111111.
Dllollo, 11) IONI7- Ext. 8101H.

With Ja1011 1111- l
Alyaae Milano Enjoy this
dazzling holiday treat, with
special guests Leslie
Uggams, Christopher Hewitt,
Doc Severinsen and Olympic
skaters Robin Cousins, Jill
Watson and Peter Op~gard.

,Iii

Business Services

(!) This Otd HOUII
Thomas and Barbara visit a
kitchen design center. C
1111 1110 "Houra CBS
News repons on .the
dangerous drug called
Crystal or Crank. C

-MI':".:.MAIN STIEO
PIZZA

1D [ll @ Uberty !Jowl
l!ll PrimaNews
1!J Murder, She Wnll8

lOWEST PRim .
HIGHEST QUAliTY
FRn lOO\lDU.IUI'I

SP/,J

1211 Convaroation With Dinah
8:05 (]) MOVI!: The Killer Elite
(PG) (2:30)
8:30 D (2) 1DJ DIHorenl World

U~LESS, Of ccx;RS£, 'TtiE:
(()JSTlltWT ~'S HE.LPfiJG
IS HI~SELF

HCNJOOA~

1-\E.'S I-IELPIIJG A

(QIJSTflUJJT. ..

I'OIIIOY AND IIIIQIDL£1'01T'S OHl Y

Whitley meets Dwayne on

the plane and is impressed
with him. (A) 1;1
.
(ZJ Sneok P,.viawa Goea
Vldoo
C!J Trying Tlmea Moving day

LOCAI.I. Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-2228 11-16.'19·1 mo.

brings helpless hysteria lor

an optimistic divorcee. 1;1
9 Crook• Chan

9:00 D

(2) 1DJ Cltoen Robin
Colcord sweeps Rebecca

U-.EY'S IECYCLE CENTER
97 mea 511111, IIDIKEPOn, 0110
te . , , , ,

r1 ,,,,., ..

Serv1ces

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

-i:
E

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonal llt•llllll guar~~n-­
IH. local Nt.renc.. tumlahed.
frM MtlmiiH. C.U cola.d 1·
114437-. dly or night.

~

":'

FOIINFO.AnOIII CALl 992-3194

:::1

=c:: ...........
-homo.

W. ..,. for oldllly and hln20,..,.
• LPN on call. Low

44

Apartment
tor Rent

Coiii1WIZ-tl73
oftor 7:00 p.m. lor moro 1--

.-

ROQeN

Wotorprooft,.. .

RACINE GUN SHOP

Olhor--

15

Ron'o TV SIMco, opoclollzlna
In Zonhh lloo M -.. moel

IACIIIE, OliO

GUNS· AMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• $2.20 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITAI STRINGS
OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am-&amp; pm

949-2161

11-6-1 mo. 'pd.

2454.

18 wanted to Do
0...1 Malnlenance I Np,~lre,
-ric. oturnhl,. I carpontry.

SNAFU® by BI"'ICe Beattie

446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
Awooe, 1101 l2l3
. 45631
oral
Veterans Memorial lln&lt;,nit.l
.Mulberry lllls. Pomeroy,

Dlwta

Qu~

Transportation

11- Autos for Sala
1m Dolaun 510Stotlon::r,;.

··~·

-11114 otllr
......
751:00 ,..., I:GO
.,. 1o 5:00 pno, 114o44&amp;-M73
ooklorRon.

Bulin...

-.Yoc

___
i - - - -

__ _:__

'

becomes so fond of him , he

movas. (A) 1;1
10:00 (2) 700 Club With Pat

R-1011

·BARNEY

D

EENY MEENY
MINEY MO

PAY tT OFF
WITH
WHAT?

I'M GO IN' .DOWN
AN' PAY OFF OUR
DADIUIN

82

attorney. (R) 1;1
OSU/Sugar Bowl Toumay

(I)

(!) HewaWatcll

10:30 (!) MlllerploCI Theatre
Playwright thinks his troubles

are over 'til he 'meets his
play's star. Q
(J) Aran'o Den

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

a

Clrttr'l Ph1mblng

and Haling
Fourth •nit Pin•
Goii-,Ohlo
114-44&amp;-3111"

.........

IIIII liCIT to tfnuall
... - until JOU- ....

M,DOO.

""'* ...

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

IIIIW75-1111

1112 ~ T=:o,

•a:::=

AthoJ Wllor -ling. 2100

...

ca- z.a. •

danad wllh a -

1M1 -

madlo by

anolhar.lltlllloccuraft . . putyoulna
d

got.

ton lqld.I1WI7·7T20.
71' , • J.ll.'t Moun::,, ~""" truck lor
fti'*'O, 00111,
v-e- ....... dl~, """"'· ............

1111
81ue wllh ove:drlw1 llr,
- , , . , PW, T•'llopo,I044l'lo
~

to do to make 11111 relatlonllllp wort&lt;.
Mall t2 to Mat..........,, P.O. lox
81428, CIIMiand, OH 44101-3428.
A~IIUI (olatl. • l'lllt. 11) 1111 on
guwd today or .... you might be bur·

bad lrWM o1 mind far the Nal oltho

£.~-=•~t:t4: 85 General Hauling

.•mAF•d ... _ , .

on swve

10:35 ()) Mg::~waH Flvl-0:

k., romance? Tht Aalro-Graplt Match·
male.- ..,lltllp ,au to
tel what

1NO 2ltiZl, 241 I opood/
10000--·--

.....,

1m L.A. Law Kuzak

II (J) P-tlme Uvei;J
(J) Under Fire
aJ eal A Ye• WRh Andy .. Rooney: 1tB9 CBS News
Correspondent Andy Rooney
takes a look at the events
that sha~ 1989.
!I)) Evening - •

, Retrtgennlon

INOTICll
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHING CO.
Niall...... .....
W0U do
• I
iM1 ,,.,...._,

(2)

wages an uphill battle
against a savvy defense

CO. RON EVANS ENTERPKISE8,
Jockaon. OH 1-037-81528.

,.._, ~.fll.3141.

·~-.

±

•
'

Sortloo,

S•n•• Sho..,.!
..

•-

i

Electrical &amp;

Opponunhy

'Where

WICKER
QUII.TI
CLOCKS
CHAlliS

(2:00)
1211 Nathvlllo Now
9:30 D C2l !Ill Dear Jolin John
takes in a stray dog and

Soptlc Tank Pumolng SIO._~IIIo

: shoP.

i

&lt;UJ larry King Uvol
1!J MOVIE: Hlrdbodlel (AI

CI'Mk Ad. Parte, aupo

:m''
==-====;-;::;;-;:;-;-:-:;:'
' .... ....

OWl

e.uNCH.

~~~-kup,- cloi'-J. 114-

· Dependable Heirin&amp; Aid Salts &amp; S.n•ictl
Hearinc Evalualions For All A&amp;es

Lic:ensecf Clinical Audiolocist ·

famous surgeon pushes her
son into becoming a
surgeon. (R) 1;1

CL.OSE:·Ma.llHE:D

IILL II

114-SI1-4181.
Mlu - · • ~r Core Contor.
Solo, oHonllbll, dllldclro. 11-F
1 a.rn. • 1:30 p.m. Aoll 2'n-10.
lloforo, otllr ool1ool: Drop-Ins

21

g 111 0 loland Son A

AN15ARiiA
NOTORIOLJ5LY

I

DOCTOI

Wlllllbyollln my homo,lnlonto
'""' 4,... olcl.l14-44fo2Mt.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

00111,-

-:104-6~
-~~-Ohio
_.,,.._
... wv

walcaJM. 1111111224.

Devices

BlllfMIIt

FIIIJ TIW Trimming, llump
,.movlll, caN -..75-f331.

-loo.

49919 IIEASE IIOUOW II.

Mrltaryl A reverend
wants Rumpole to defend
him on a charge of ad unary.

(ZJ

HON'ARETHE'
WIFE AND
KIDDie5'+

Home
Improvements

0

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 12:00 to 5 p.m.
s.tunl8y I a.m. to 12 noon

(A)

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

BUYIN~

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS FOR
NON-PROFIT GIO..S

awa~on a jet-set weekend .

..

a.-11111 'line . _ . . . . . 'mnica 11m
l_-

BRIDGE

iiiJ 1111121 1m Whool Of

C) ttBt by NEA. Inc.

•.._..,_Not.

was going to eat the pig. Wide
ey~~*~e asked, "Is he the big
Complere rho ckuckle quoted
by f illing in the inNiS$in q bwoods
you de..,e 1op 1rom step o. 3 e1r:iw.

·

OHe·M..

CiJ

ohlnll . , . wHII or wlhout
, CoU """' LlniJ ....

8

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l--r.i;....;,l"''.:.,l;;;...."ri..;;..TI-118
1
. lL.......JL......I-...1.-.L.....I..
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6:35 C!l Andy Orillllh
7:00 III Our Houae

114-411-4410 oftor 7p.rn.

7

8

AJ

My young granddaughter
watched a chef on TV prepare a
roast pig. I explained that he

a

,_rwon

~f :.

l

CiJ
(J) ABC Newo 1;1
lll Body Electric
(J) 3-2-1 Conllct 1;1
i11J 811121 cas Newat;J
til &lt;Ill Thm'o Companr
® WKRP In Clnclnnlll

kllchen wl'ltovt A retrig., no I
mo. INN, tingle
prefer.
Nd. 114-441-1667.

-

11~

r

l~-==·~-=~·==·::::·_:~~!

® Charteo In Chorge
OJem

qulred, 304-812·2111.
CIMn, 11&gt;&lt; opt., 211 Stllo !II.,

_...

.,., ...... 1100

0 UL E E
I I 15 1

o Wofld Toller

a-h ~~~- M-por1, Ohio.
1 •nd 2 bedroom hlmtahed
apta IIIIo 1 room efHclency,
ulllhlooi pold, roloronc• ,..

..

Squa,. Ona TV 1;1

II &lt;Ill Andy Orllflth

TO HEAR FROM '&lt;OU ..

wo.-do.

WE N Y L

utuatrated

(0:30)
(!) Shining Time Slltion
(0:30) 1;1

:!/'
i&lt;\',:;ltal.r ,:;,:, .~~
monlh, liUD. ,..._.7W104.

lutly 1811; . . . . . . .h ...... -.-~

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letters of tN

SERFOC

EVENING

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four xrambled words b.

&amp;:00 (J) Hardcaotte And

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114-

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lome •barllly lucky breaka~
your In 11111 '19MoontiCII
-,_.._ •
¢1 ull~llthal. . . . . . to
~-~ lf8clon the grellluCie

....... ..... ...He

•

•••
"I must be snacking too much. The plants
are growing toward the refrigerator light
Instead of the window."
__:___ __ _ _ _~---~--------__:__ _....::__ _ _ _ _ __

~-........... 11) Oon't

::.:.:.~dwi)G!I8:

m:~-= .

you a W11 a hlltol'lllr. W1hare II any
J 11111'0 10 do, lie . . . ,au're , _ ,
10 do L T,... 10 11111111 liP a brOl,

.

=ell (irw. • ;; oto :io) The
lhoughltlla btha¥tclr o1 a lrllnd could
prod- aomechlngelln your .-.today IIIII irt1t .,.._ you doing 1101 wltat
you klltt • d or dnl etl. Don, let your... be manipulated.

Htne·

allord.

~2:00)

CNICIII (oluM 21.,., II) There'&amp; a
pouiblllly you might feel luckier Ilion
you ICiually are today and IIIII COUld

11:00(])(J)

-youtomakea....,.w.•attontllat
allectaolh.-uawetlaayourutf. Wtig/1
your - - ·
LIO (...., . . . 21) Your dutlel ond
raoporlllblllllle will not- cano o1
Iller-today,_, tflougl1 yau may

!I)) M....,.lne
0 Miami Vice
QD VltllaCountry
11:30(])11tmall

•1111 rn
•
Ntwo

(DOneOnOne
D (J) Nlghtlt• g

boOk II ...._..,..,o . _ tod8y,...,...
QMtbllt or IIWICIIII lilkt
are cooarnad. A WOI!d to the wile
IIIDI*I be IUIIIciltol
LIIIIA (ltpL II o.L II) You're In a
good lllltll:w•d .,at, pro.tdetl ,au
do not-..,.. far arlnlld. In aniW

.U.I (lllnll21•-""' 11) Today your
op1n1one may Ill dl-111)' oppc.ct
to a-~~~- o1 your am- Ae· think your p c1111oo-. ~,au might to • • 1ad, you -tolklw eiW/IIIInll
be llil- W1to Ia 0U1 ofaiiP.
1hrotiDit 10 JOII'41II.IH.
TMIIUIIAIIIII• sO 1 II) Ytu atten- ICOMO (UirL II lkt. B) Wildt
liOn ..... might not be up to I * today ,.. ... II' dD 10~:= •
and JOU OOUid haft I problem II'JtniiO thott;hlkt lSI... Cl'lll
10focul • _,.. IMka. HIM aon 1ana lion coulll haft you alll•ng yau .,...
11110111. your WOIIt •••• ol • crttlcll . capable., ......... at ....
,..,..._ ·
IAGITTANUI(IIII•• ha.I1)Tryto
,c. .,........ 111 You're 111111
&amp;ling.._ a borrnot 0111 ollli _..-.your llnM- or 1 .....,...,, 'OtiA . . ._ G1tt1c81
cta1 at1a1ra n ooc-ned, 10 be pru.. . _ allare p 1lblll pool*ma coukl
dent In .... IIIINIIJIIIIIft ol your . . tnlpl.
anuroN. Don't buy ,au can't_ ,

tbe queen. Back came the beart two .
South put up the jack, covered by tbe
klnl, and declarer played low from
dummy once apln. The third heart
bad to be won by dummy's ace. Wben
dummy's club nlne was led, West toot
tbe queen and was canffOIIted with a
C01D1D011 defeasiye problem. He kMw
biJ partner bad tile 13th heart to cub,
but bow could be Bet him oo lead? He
UIIIIIM!d that declarer held the ella·
mood aee, but wilat about the spade
ace? On the off-cbuce that East
mi&amp;ltt bold It, Weal led a low apade. ot
course the DiDe was played fram dum-

Deac~apelles

12:30. (2) 1111 ..... Nlgltt With
Dlold .....mtlll

~=a.~~30)
'

tAU
.Kt08H

I.

.'

VuiDerable: Neither

'

Dealer: Soutb

s...

Norlll

I NT

2NT

••

Eut
Paa

All-

OpeniDglead: • 5

invented tbe entry-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
44 "Harold - "

ACROSS

1 Pant
DOWN
5 Check
1 Audacity
9 Muslim
2 Space
deily
visitor
11 Summon
3 Shade
12 Woody vine of gray
13 Golf score 4 Sylvan
15 Allow
deity
16 Variety
5 Trident
of lea
6 Chinese
18 Owned
pagoda
19 Drink ol
7 "Double
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21 Purpose
8 Potpourri
22 Greedy one1o Actor.
23 Heroic tale
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24 Boxing term14 Norse
26 Successful
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27 ~ulle
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31 Construc24 Budding
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32 Color
25 Aooling 36 Peasanl
material 38 Actor
26 Mistreat
Johnson
27 Brooan 40 Skimmer

lilm

28 Destiny
29 Chinese
dynasty
30 Choice
33 Table
scrap
34 College
in Iowa
35 Sunder
37 Slur over
39 Alan Ladd
film
41 College
in N.C.
42 "It lakes
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TO US. -JOHN FOWLES

1 C) 1990 by King FNturn Syndicate . Inc

'

�•

Png1

12-The D!i!y S1 1tinel

---Local news briefs... ----,
Continued from page 1
moderate damage. There were no Injuries.
Sherif! James M. Souisby also reports the arrest of Ricky L.
McClellan, Pomeroy. and Mike Hlndy, Middleport, on bench
warrants from the Meigs County Court, tor fatung to comply
with the court's order. Both men are lodged In the Meigs County
Jail.

Commission session brief
Approval was given during a brlel session on Wednesday of
the Meigs County Commissioners to a request from Bedford
Township Trustees to add Park Road, from U.S. 33 to the
IntersectiOn of Township Road 243, and an extension of
Township Road 243 to a dead end, to township mileage. The
entire addition Is less 'than one mile. Approval of the additional
mileage to Bedford Township was recommended by County
Engineer Philip Roberts.
In a related matter, Meigs Highway Superintendent Ted
Warner 'reported that the stale mileage man will be In Meigs
County on Wednesday, Jan. 17, to certify mileage of county and
township roads. Township officials will receive notlticatlon of
the visit, Warner said.
The commissioners ended Wednesday's meeting in recess. to
reconvene later in the week or early next week to adopt the
county's 1990 budget.

Squads have 6 calls Wednesday
.

Units or the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to six calls for assistance on Wednesday.,
At 1: 26 a.m. the Tuppers Pi.a ins unit was called to Route 248
for Francis Andrews who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
· At 2: 24 p.m. the Rutland unit went to Beech Grove Road lor
Virgil Yarbrough who was transported to Holzer Medical
Center.
The Pomeroy unit, at 2:46 p.m. went to Easl Main for
Pleasant Ellis who was taken to Veterans .
•
The Racine unit transported Goldie Lawson from Barringer
Ridge Road to Veterans at 3:12p.m.
At 4:16p.m. the Rutland unit was called to New Lima Road for
Ida White who was transported to Pleasant Valley.
At 10:19 p.m. the Olive Township Fire Department was called
to Rice Run Road for a chimney fire at tl\e Burl Putnam Jr .•
residence. According to Olive Township Fire Department Chief
Rick Barringer, damage was estimated at $1,000 and the
Pumams do have Insurance.

--.Area deaths-Shrine Temple. the BPOE Elks
Pleasan1 EUis
Lodge, the Retired Officers Association.
the U.S. Army Dental
Pleasant Arthur Ellis Jr.,57. of
Corps,
and
was a life member of
Pomeroy. died Wednesday after·
the
Omicron
Kappa Upsilon.
noon at Veterans Memorl;il Hos·
He
is
survived
by his wife,
pltal following a sudden illness.
Ruby
Ellen
Haskins;
one son,
Mr. Ellis, who managed the .
P
.
Haskins
of
Ocean
Willlanr
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes for over
City,
Md.;
three
grandchildren
34 years, was born Dec.13, 1932at
Cheshire. He was a son of the late and two great-grandchildren.
Graveside services wlll be
Pleasant A. and Vesta Mae Little
12: ao p.m. Friday at Barrancas
Ellis.
Survivors · include his wife. National Cemetery, Pensacola.
Mary Ellis; three sons , Daniel, Fla.. with a military .chaplin
Donald. and Timothy Ellis, ail of officating.
McLaughlin Mortuary, 17
Pomeroy; two stepsons, Timothy
and Scott Frazier, Middleport; a Chestnut Ave., Fort Walton
grandson, Michael ElliS; a step Beach, Fla. . is In charge of
grandson, Victor Altai; three arrangements.
sisters, Eunice Christy, of Pomeroy, Kathleen Lowe, of Colum· Lola Neal ·
bus. and Roma Lit ton. of Dele·
ware: a brother, Louis Ellis, of
Lola Irene Neal, 65, Route 5,
Middleport; and several nieces Gallipolis died Wednesday, Dec.
and nephews.
27. at Cabell· Huntlngton
Besides his parents, JV.r. Ellis Hospital.
She was born February 25,1924
was preceded in death by four
sisters, Ruth Darst, Etta Mae In Mercerville to the late Tracey
Eills, Virgie Ellis and Vesta and Lola Hively Johnson.
Ellis; and two brothers. Sidney
She retired from Robbin~ &amp;
and Maynard Ellis.
Myers and was an active
Services will be Saturday, 1 member of the Gallla County
p.m.. at the RawUng-Coats· Senior Citizens.
Fisher Funeral Home, MiddleShe Is survlwd by one daugh·
port. Friends may call at the ter. Mrs. Gary !Karen) Flis&lt;in of
funeral home on Friday from 2 to PSR. Gallipolis; one son, Scott J.
4 and 6 to 8.
Neal or Arvada, Colorado; and
two grandchildren.
Also preceding her in death Is a
Helen L Andel'!lon
half brother, Ray Notter.
Services wlll be 11 a.m. Satur·
Helen Louise (Red) Anderson.
day
at tl\e Willis Funeral Home.
59, of 857 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Burial
wUI be at Ridgelawn
died •Wednesday, Dec. 27, at
Cemetery.
Holzer Medical Center following
Friends may call at the fl\neral
a brief Illness. She WIIB a retired
home 6 to 9 p.m . on Friday.
employee of Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Born Dec. 28, 1929ln Gallipolis,
Ruby Frederick
she was a daughter of the late
Ruby Deem Frederick, 93, of
Alonzo Armstrong.
Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, died
Surviving is her mother, Au·
early
today
(Thursday ), at her
rllla Williams McWhorter of
residence . .
Springfield, Ohio; two children,
A housewife, Mrs. Frederick
Christopher !Pete) Anderson of
Gallipolis and Linda Penick of was born Nov . 28, 1897 in Meigs
County.
Gallipolis; six grandchildren,
Survivors Include one son,
two great grandchildren; three
sisters, Mrs. Phyllis English of Lawrence Deem. of Marietta:
Pomeroy. Mrs. Donna Collins of seven grandchildren and several
Rio Grande and Mrs. Hattie Reed great-grandchildren and great·
-great grandchildren.
of Springfield, Ohio: two broth·
She was preceded in death by
ers, Alonzo Armstrong Jr. of
her parents; her husband, Henry
Philadelphia, Pa .• and William
Frederick: and a ·daughter,
Armstrong of Gallipolis.
Services will be conducted Zelma Stewart.
Services for Mrs. •Frederick
Saturday, 1 p.m. at WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home, the will be Saturday, 1 p.m., a\
Ewing Funeral Home. Burial
Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating.
Burial follows In Pine Street will be In the Sutton Methodist
Cemetery .
Church Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 1
Friends may call at the funeral
p.m. Friday.
home Friday 6 to 9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Mike Hurt.
Paul Richard Qualls, Howard
English Jr ., Charles Williams.
Gene Armstrong, William English and Christopher Anderson.
Soulh Cenlral Oblo
Cloudy Thursday night, with a
low In the lower 30s. Chance of
Harold Haskins
precipitation Is 20 percent. Rain
Friday, with hiJhl near 45.
Harold P. Haskins, 76, 30
Chance of rain IS 90 percent.
Oakdale Rd., Fort Walton Beach,
Exlellded FonCM&amp;
Fla., died at his residence
SaluniQ lhr.qb Monday
Wednesday, Dec. 27.
A chance of snow each day.
Born June 11, 1913, he was
Highs
will be In the 30s Saturday
formerly of Gallipolis and moved
and Sunday and between 25 and
to Fort Walton Beach in 1972.
He r01e to the rank of coronet -30 on Monday. Overnight lows
be In the 20s Saturday and
asa dentlatln the U.S. Army,and
Sunday mornings and In the
retired after 37 years of service.
teens early Monday.
He was a member of tlie Hadjl

Jr.

ThuiSday, December 28. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Common Pleas Court news

Endara urges Vatican
to kick Noriega out
PANAMA CITY, Panama
(UP!) - President Guillermo
Endara Is urging the papal
nuncio to cast Manuel Antonio
Noriega out of the Vatican
Embassy so the deposed strongman can be tried for "common
crimes of the wors t sort."
As Noriega spenthisfourthday
ens&lt;;onced In the Vatican Em·
bassy In Panama City Wednes·
day seeking political asylum,
Panamanians jammed the capl·
tal 's streets. returning to work
and piecing together lives and
businesses shattered by the U.S.
invasion that toppled Noriega's.
regime Dec. 20.
Traffic janis replaced firefights as the main obstacle for
drivers.
U.S. troops surrounding the
Vatican Embassy compound to
prevent Noriega' s escape tightened security and began what
appeared to be a campaign of
harassment against those inside.
A speaker in a parking lot
across the street from. the em·
bassy blared loud American
music, ranging from. country
singer Lee Greenwood 's "God
Bless the U.S.A ." to Lind a
Ronstadt's "You're No Good."
Other tunes included "Somebody's Watching You," "!
Fought the Law and the Law
Won" and songs by Twisted
Sister, David Bowie and U-2.

A U.S. soldier on duty outside
the embassy said the programming - broadcast over the
Southern Command network was aimed at Noriega, a known
opera buff.
The Los Angeles Times reported In Its Thursday ed.ltions
that the Vatican Embassy. In a
memo, authorized the U.S. Army
to free any embassy,workers In
the event they are overpowered
and taken captive by Noriega
and his loyal isis and others who
have taken refugewithhlm In tile
compound.
The memo. obtained by the
newspaper, was signed by Papal
Nuncio Jose Sebastian Laboa.
dated Dec. 26, or two days after
Noriega took refuge in the
nunclature, and au thentlcated by
U.S. officials, the Times said.
One U.S. official Interpreted
the authorization as an Invitation
to the U.S. military to seize
Noriega, but another official was
more cautious. " It doesn' t mean
we can just walk in any time we
want," he told the Times.
One u.s. official took pains to
distinguish between Laboa 's
written "authority" and the
necessary Panamartlan pres!·
dentlal authority that U.S. forces
would need to make a rescue
attempt.
' 'That's not authority. It's a lot
less than meets the eye," the
official was quote&lt;! as saying.
Noriega was staying alone In
an upstairs roomoftheembassy,
cut off from telephone or other
outside contact, according to a
source close to a .clergyman
inside.
•

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 32%
AT&amp;T .................................. 45
Ashland Oil ................. ...... .39\-1
Bob Evans .......................... 13%
Charming Shoppes .. .... .. ... .. .10\-1
City Holding Co . .. ...... .... ...... 15
Federal Mogul. ...... .... .... ..... 21 \jj
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ..... .43\-1
Heck's ..... .. .... .......... ... .. ......... 4
Key Centurion ..... ..... .. ........13\-1
Lands ' End ............... , .. .. .. ... 20 V.
Limited Inc ........................34%
Multimedia Inc .................... 92
Rax Restaurants .................. 1%
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... ... .... 15%
Shoney's Inc . ............... ....... ll')!j
Star Bank .................. .. ....... 21 ~
Wendy's Inti ........................ .4%
Worthington Ind .. ... .... ..... .... 22 \-1

Donna J . Miller, charged in ing case in u. s. Dlstrld Court,
Meigs County Common Pleas Southern District of Ohio, of the
Court with passing bad checks, United States of America against
entered a voluntary plea ot,gullty Barbara J . Boling, formerly
when she appeared recently known as Barbara J. Smith,
before Judge Fred W. Crow Ill. Middleport: Rober! Boling, Mid·
Sentencing for MU!er Is sche- . dleport; unknown tenants, If any,
Middleport; et al.
duled for Jap. 25. •
In other court matters, Hun·
In another criminal lnatter,
Timothy Davidson, serving sent· tlngton National Bank has been
ence In the Chillicothe Correc· granted judgment of $5,439.51
Ilona! Facility, is to be returned plus 'Interest from Mary -L.
,
to Meigs County to appear In VVoods.
And
the
Meigs
County
Grand
court for arraignment and
further disposition on another Jury was to have reconvened this
morning (Thursday) to complete
charge.
·
business not fully concluded In an
Notice has been filed In Meigs
Commoo Pleas Court of a pend- earlier session.

--Mayors court.news-Eleven people forfeited bonds
and six others were fined In the
Tuesday night court of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were Jea·
netta Klnane, Columbia. Md .,
$48, speed; Mary Arms, Syra·
cuse, $46, speed; James Duncan,
Pomeroy, $45 speed: Gopal G.
Naidu, Columbus, $63, traffic
light violation; Terry Bowie Jr.,
Fleming, $46, speed; Jos~ph
Ayers. Monroe, Md. , $46, speed;
Laura K. Smith, Cheshire, $47,
speed: Frederick Young, Pome·
roy, $49, speed: Guy E. Bing.
Syracuse, $63, expired vehicle
registration; Karen Straus·
baugh, Athens, $49, speed: and
Margaret Bollinger. Pomeroy,
$63, traffic light violation. ,
Fined were Paul Milleron,
Racine, $63 i'nd costs, expired
vehicle registration; Macle
Salser, Shade, $63 and costs,
expired vehicle registration;
John W. Roach, Letart , W.Va.,
$43 and costs. stop sign vpola·

lion; Douglas Seyler. Mason,
W.Va., $63 and costs, traf!lo
violation; Charles W. VVhlttiltgton Jr., Pomeroy. $48 a.nd cos.ts,
speed; and Michael Goeglein,
Long Bottom, $63 and costs,
failure to control.
In the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, five Individuals were fined.
Tony R. Chapell, Pomeroy.
$424 and costs, three days jail,
D .W.l.; Nancy A. Mullen, Middleport. $10 fine. running a stop
sign; Randall A. Arms, Syra·
cuse, $40 fine. excessive speed;
Wesley M. Whitlatch, Middleport, $15 fine, speed; and Chris·
tine Varian, Cheshire, $10 fine
and costs, illegal tags.

To end maJTiage
Brenda Darlene Nelgler and
Kenneth Ray Neigler have been
granted a dissolution of mar·
rlage In Meigs Common ~lea$
Court.

TWO DAYS ..
ONLY!
ALL WINTER CLEARANCE ITEMS
UP TO

A marriage license has been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Robert Owen Willis Jr ..
22, Syracuse. and Shawnna Lynn
Bobo. 19, Portland.

.

Hospital news

.

CORNER ·COLLECTIONS
OPEN

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
Leona Ebersbach, Middleport.
Discharges - Clair Boso and
Bud Darst.

•

On The "T" In Middleport

10 AM-6 PM

RD INC.

IN MIDDLEPORT

IS HAYING THE BIGGEST SALE EVER
FROM AMERICA'S CAR ·&amp; TRUCK LEADER
THE

Vol.40, l'lo. 183

· ~~

Ohio,

~UY

A

A 191l8 IT&amp;duate of Southern
High Sebool, McCoy joined the
army In September 1988. He
reported for six months of duty In
P111ama on Dec. 11, shortly
before problema In that country
belan. He lsnowpardclpatlnJin
mUitary operations In Pauma
as a communlcatlona speclalllt
supporting the 82nd Airborne

.

FORD INC.

461 SO. THIRD

.

992-2196
l

~-- .:/.

-----

...

-

December

MIDDLEPORT
----

--

2 Sections. 16

1989

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
It's been a !1-lfflcult process to
systematically check every water line In Rutland Village, but
thanks to the efforts of Dave
Davis, village maintenance supervisor, numer11us &gt;~olunteers
and general relief workers, the
s:v.stematlc check and repairs to
any leaks which may have been
located as a result of the check
are nearing the end. "If nothing
else major Is foul)d," reports
Sandy Smith, village clerk, water may be restored to village
residents some time this
evening.
Rutland Village has been expe·
rlenclng
water problems since
HOME DI:S'ntOYED BY FIRE - 'lbe Juanita
home a&amp; S: ~ p.m. TbursdQ. Middleport l'lre
just
before
Christmas when
Hannon family resldeaee on Happy Ho Dow Road
Department was ·called a&amp; 4:02 p.m. to aalllst.
temperatures
began dropping
In lhe Rutllllld area was destroyed by fire
There were no Injuries reported. Olher details ol
In the lines
below
freezing.
Leaks
TbulsdQ after1100n. Rutland and Pomeroy Fire
the lire were not aYallable.
'
of
water
suppUer,
the
Leading
Departmnts were called to tbe one story frame
Creek Water Conservancy District. were repaired to allow
water to be restored to part of the
village, at least for a while. But
leaks within village lines meant
that Leading Creek had to curtail
water supplies to Rutland which
left some village residents with·
water for many days.
out
By Unlled Press International
The front moved from lower
Sheriff's Department spokeswoVillage
workers and volun·
A return to wintery conditions
Michigan Thursday, heading into
man said.
leers
have
been working dill·
is forecast for parts of Ohio
A temporary shelter was set up northern Ohio. With a weather
gently
to
restore
water service.
during the final days of the year .
at the First Baptist Church of system aloft, It was expected tO
On
Thursday,
Jeff
Crisler, of
The National Weather Service
Proctorville for people who had cause snow or freezing rain to
the
Environ·
the
Logan
office
of
said Friday that nasty winter
no aiternate means to he~t their develop In the extreme north by mental Protection Agency, was
~aather would move l9to. ,thE!
afternoon.
. ;
• . ~ " , '" "-'· Friday
al.t eqst·•nce
northern tlrlrd of''the- stiti!'-1131 j ,l;!Qm_e~.
·TWO" to ~rout ' incliA '"orsnow · In R~.tl8RCI tu
· ''We're assumtng •it (cii'•c.......
In
solving
the
waler
Piiiblems.""
aflertloOn, llngt!t11tl: tll..rl&gt;' for' a
line) Is from the wt'ather due to could accumulate in the north by
Crisler reported about noon on
while.
the freezing of the ground ," said evening, with higher amounts
Thursday that workers were
A winter storm warning was
·
Harry Papay, manager of Co- east of Cleveland.
doing
just what they should "to
Issued for extreme northern Ohio
lumbia's Portsmouth Division.
If the warmer air aloft arrives
isolate
the system line by line"
for Friday afternoon and night.
Resident Guy Adkins was near sooner than forecast, the precipiand
make
repairs to any leaks
Cities In the . warning areas
the gas line on old Ohio 7 when It tation wlli be mainly freezing
that
might
have been found. At
Included To.ledo. Findlay. Nor- apparently ruptured.
rain, the weather service said.
that
time,
according
to Crisler •
walk, Cleveland and Painesville.
''! went down the road to get a The tl\reat of freezing rain
about
half
of
the
systzm
had been
A freezing rain advisory was
friend to help me unthaw some, continues through Friday In the
isolated
with
half
to
go.
Issued for the rest of norJhern
pipes, and saw a flame abQut 100 warning areas and travel could
Shortly before noon today
Ohio for the afternoon, with a
be very dangerous. If enough Ice
feet In the air," Adkins said.
(Friday)
, Smith reported that
winter storm watch In effect by
Crews could not begin repairs accumulates, power lines and
two
streets
remained . to be
evening. The watch Included
until they went house to house branches could fail down .
checked
and
if
no leaks were
Lima, Mansfield, Akron, Canton
The northern counties could
and turned off gas service. They
found, hopefully water could be
and Youngsto;oon.
had to return to the homes to see rain or freezing rain Satur'
turned on by evening. The upper
The NatloiUII Weather Service relight pilot lights after service day, with highs ranging from 35
end
of the village was to be
warned the freezing rain could be
was restored shortly after to 45.
first so that village
restored
very dangerous, and advised
Precipitation will continue on
midnight.
storage
tanks
could be refilled,
people In northern counties to
A front moving from the north Into the weekend, with a chance
she
said.
monitor forecasts.
was expected to reach the Ohio of ral n or snow forecas I for
As explained by Smith, al·
In tite Proctorville· area early
River community by Friday Sunday,
Friday, service was restored to
On Monday, the first day oft he
night, bringing mainly freezing
nearly 1,500 Columbia Gas Co.
new year, the weather Is ex·
rain and sllppery roads. .
customers about 16 hours after a
The southern two third of Ohio pected to dry out as high pres sure
main gas line . ruptured and
was expected to receive rain works its way Into the stale,
cau~rht fire, a Lawrence County
Friday. with highs In the mid 30s bringing a drop in temperature,
•
with highs of 15 to 25.
to lower 40s.

An early morning telephone
call on Christmas day was the
greatest blessing Syracuse restdents Barry and Caroline McCoy
could have received. The call at
5: 15 a.m. was from their son,
Barry II, a member of -the U. S.
Army stationed In Panama. He
was calUng to let them know he
was safe. It was "a wonderful
Christmas gift and · a great
relief," says his mother. His
younger sister, Michelle, and his
grandmother, Genevieve Campbell, of Leon, W.Va., agree.

It Would Make Me

---Meifpi announeements

.

26 Cents

A Muttim6dia Inc.

Rutland water may
be back on by tonight

"We are replanting very
,q uickly," said Reggie Brown,
spokesman for the Florida Fruit
and Vegetable Association In
Orlando. "Florida will come
back on line with a volume of
produce sometime in late February to mid-March, depending on

from Fort Bragg, N.C. but has
orders to go to Germany on July

No paper Monday

SP-4 BARRY MCCOY

Recipients
of ADC to get
pay lncrease

Recipients of Aid to Dependent
Children will see an increase in
their monthly checks beginning
Jan. 1. .
According to officials of the ,
Department
of Human Services
weather conditions we expe·
the
four
percent
Increase was
rlence In the meantime. As the
In
the
state bien·
provided
for
supply increases ... generally the
nlum budget of Gove. Richard F .
prices will moderate."
Celeste
and received full support
Brown said the recent freeze
Ohio
Legislature.
of
the
"basically kllied" Florida's citGrants
Increased
each year
rus and vegetable crops.
beginning In 1984 through 1987,
and again In 1989.
''The Increases have been
modest ones," said Roland Hairston, director, Ohio Department
of Human Services, ,"but I think
we have shown a consistent and
concerted effort to address the
needs of the poor."
The average ADC family Is a
15 for a two-year tour of duty In mother and two children: ADC
benefits for a family of three will
that country.
Increase from $321 to $334 per
Although his family remains
concerned for his safety because month. Any eligible for ADC Is
of the uncertainty oi the Panama also eligible for medical assist·
situation, his mother says the ance, social services, and Inmost
family Is comforted that at least cases, food stamps.
The number receiving assist·
for the time being "things seem
ance
, the current monthly pay.
to have quieted down."
and the moathly payment
men!,
While In Panama, friends may
as of Jan.1,11stedrespectlvely,ls
write McCoy at this address; Sp.
as follows:
4 McCoy, Barry W. II,
One person, an Increased from
273-72-4750, 35th Signal Brl·
gade. APO Miami, Fla . MOol- $191 to $199; two persons, $263 to
$274; three persons, $321 to $334;
5000.
"I know he would enjoy letters four persons, $397 to $413; and
five persons, $46C to $483.
from home," says his mother.
Beca11ae each of Ohio's 88
countlea shares In the expense of
the aeneral ullatance procram,
The Dally Sentinel will not the amount of uutsnce paid to
publiSh Monday In order for an Individual or family varies
'employees to obllerve the New from county to county. Persona
eltalble for GA may also be
Year't hoUday.
Publication resumes on e!Ietble for medical assistance,
food stamps, and social services.
Tuesday.

Meigs County's Sp/4 McCoy
is reported safe in Panama

HAVE A HAPPY NEW YEAR,

Low tonight In mid 308.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Sa&amp;urday, hlgb in mid 40•.
Chance of rain 80 percent:

•

ORLANDO. Fla. !UP!) Consumers can expect to pay
more than double present prices
tor fresh vegetables and citrus
until mid-March, when growers
hope to have some Florida-grown
produce In the stores, farmers
and wholesalers said.

FORD MOTOR CO.

wlll

Monday (New Year's Day), 7:30
p.m., as scheduled.

Page4

Christmas day freeze sends
produce prices .· skyroclteting

Weather

E•teraa&amp;ar
The Racine Chapter of the
Order of Eastern Star will meet

Pick 3
460
Pick 4
1434

ol,.,

OFF

112

Bowl season
underway

Freezing rain predicted for
Ohio over holiday weekend

BELOW OUTLET PRICES ON

Licenses issued

Ohio Lottery

though Leading Creek's meters
to the village are on, each
individual meter to customers
has been turned off, leaving all of
Rutland without water. Once the
water is back on, workers will be
checking each Individual meter
in town to be sure there are no
leaks at those points.
Smith said that workers fixed
another leak on Thursday making a total of four line-leaks, as
well as a hydrant, which required
repairs.
Once water Is turned on again,
Crisler urges Rutland residents
to "conserve water as best they
can and just gra~Jually Increase
usage."
Also, as a precautionary measure, Crisler said residents
should boll their water for the
first few days "untlltwoconsecu-

Federal officinls have
first· clue on bombings
ATLANTA (UP!) - Federal
authorities said they never heard
of a group claiming responsibilIty for two deadly bombings In
the South. But they are taking
seriously a threat that more
black officials will be kllled "any
time a black man rapes a white
woman In Alabama, Florida or
,Georgia."
'
' Brenda Wood. a news anchor at
WAGA-TV In Atlanta, Wednes·
day received a letter signed
" Americans for . a Competent
Federal Judicial System" that
claimed responsibility for bombIngs thll.l killed a federal judge
and a city councilman.
The Atlanta Constitution, quot·
lng unidentified sources close to
the Investigation, reported Frl·
day that the letter sent to Wood
had the same Identifying code as
follow-up letters sent to some of
the bomb targets.
The letter said the bombings
were in reprisal for the rape and
slaying of Julie Love, a 25-year·
old wblte preschool teacher abducted In Atlanta more than a
year ago. Two black men· we.re
charged in the slaying, and one of
the suspects is expected totes Iffy
against the other as part of a plea

agreement.
"Americans for a Competent
Federal Judicial System assassi· ·
nated judge RobertS, Vance and
attorney Robert Robinson in
reprisal for the atrocities in·
flicted upon Julie Love," the
letter said.
''Two · more prominent
members of.tlte NA4CP shall be
assassinated using more sophls·
tlcated means as part of the same
reprisal,'' the letter warned .
William Hinshaw. the FBI
agent in charge of the bombing
investigation, said he had never
heard of the group, but is taking
the letter seriously.
"We believe the writer could
very well be at least associated
with (the bombings)," Hinsha w
said. '
The ·Jetter was mailed in
Atlanta Dec. 21. but was not
received at th e television station
until Wednesday evening.
· The letter warned that "any
time a black man rapes a white
woman In Alabama , Florida or
Georgia In the future, Americans
For A Competent Federal Judi ·
·cial System shall assassinate one
federal judge, one attorney and
one officer of the NAACP."

Local news

briefs-~

Fire damages automobile
The Gallla-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported
an auto fire at 12:17 p.m. Thul'sday on SR. 124, In Sutton
Township, 0.4 of a mile east of milepost29, near Syracuse.
Troo~rs said Toby D. Venham, 29, Rt. 1, Little Hocking,
Ohio, was westbound when fire broke out under the hood .ofhis
1977 Plymouth Volare. Venham escaped injury. There was
heavy damage to the car.

One accident probed by deputies
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Investigated one accident on Thursday evening.
According to the report, Harry Carleton, age 38, Calaway
Ridge Road, Coolville, was traveling north on Sumner Road
around 6 p.m when he met a southbound vehicle that was in the
center of the roadway. Carleton pulled his 1990 GMC to the righl
and go tin the snow on the berm of the road . His vehicle went off
the roadway on the right and went over an embankment.
Carleton's vettcie sustained light damage and there were no
reported Injuries .
Sheriff James M. Soulsby also reports that deputies
investigated an attempted breaking and entering at the Sheila
Allen residence on Route 338 above Tanner's Run that
reportedly occurred Thursday evening. No other information
was released.

EMS has 12 Thursday ca~ls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered twelve
calls for assistance on Thursday.
At 12:32 a.m., Racine was called to Front St. for Ruth Saven
whO was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 1:52 a.m. was called to.Meigs Mine No. 2 for Jim
Gusman who was taken to O'Bieness Memorial HospitaL
Middleport at 4:08a.m. transported Margaret Sheridan from
the Overbrook Nursing Center to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Racine at 7:02a.m. was called to Third St. forKarr!Urlbewho
was treated but not transported.
Pomeroy at 7:35 a.m. treated but did not transport Ruby
Frederick, Mulberry Ave.
Syracuse was callld to Water St. at 10: 42 a.m. for Rebecca
Lav811der to Pleasant ValleY HospitaL
The Racine Fire Department was called to an au Ill fire at
12:13 p.m. Tbe vehicle, owned by Brenda Hack, was destroyed.
Middleport at 2:26p.m. was called for but did not trans~rt
Continued on page 12

-------------9----------··--/);)

- - - - - -----11'&lt;'

live days of safe samples are
obtained."
Crisler pointed out that boiling
Is a precaution only and 11\at
there may not be any problems at
all with the water content .
However, any time a system
depressurizes and the Water
level is lower than the surface,
there's always a posslbllty that
undesirable properties may have
seeped into the water.
Smith says she appreciates
and admires the patience of
village residents as they've waI ted for the water to be restored.
Smith, who Is among those
residents who have had to do
without water, understands what
&amp;; hardship It's been. She also
commends the efforts of workers
who have been searching the
lines and making repairs.

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