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.·
16--The Daily Sentinel

Wednetday, D1CM'Iber 28, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

U.S. Steel closes plant
By Tbe ABMllated l'ml8
As a report showed American steel production is up
by 17.2 percent tbls year, U.S. Steel Co11&gt;. announced
it Is cutting back operations and dismissing 15,400
employees due to "global economic and market
conditions."
U.S. Steel said Tuesday it will close six steel plants
and reduce operations at24othersby June. More than
4,500 active employees and nearly 10,900 already
laldofl workers will be affected.
In New York, the American Iron and Steel institute
said domestic steel production last week- shortened
by !he Christmas holiday - was 6.8 percent lower ·
than the week before. Production for the year to date
Is 17'2 percent ahead of 1982, It said.
Although domestic steel production has been !ising
as the U.S. economy has revived, American steel
executives complaln they are hurt by high levels of
Imports and burdensome labor contracts.
David M. Roderick, chairman of U.S. Steel, said
that "whlle the decision to suspend operations at the
affected units are difficult for tbe employees and
communities involved, !hey were unavoidable In Ught
. of global economic and market conditions in steel."
He said non-competitive labor cost was "an
Important factor" in the company's decisions.
U.S. Steel. which lost $497 mUI!on the tlrst three
quarters of this year, said the closings would result In
a fourth-quarter after-tax · charge of $650 . mllllon.

ROderick said the moves would generate an
additional $00 million to WJ mllllon 1n revenues next
year.
In other economic developments Tuesday:
-A forecast by Standard &amp; Poor's Com. predicted
that the economic recovery wUI broaden ·"
Its base next
year to encompass "most major industry groops." In
!ts aJlllual survey of eight key industries, s&amp;Psaid the
economic recovery wUI grow in l!lW, with "surging '
profit growth" in the airline, auto, chemical and steel
industries, and "substantial !hough less dramatic
gains" 1n other industries such as coal. industrial
electronics and oU.
-The Nat!onal Association of Realtors said resales
of single-famlly homes rose 0.8 percent last month,
due partly to a decline 1n mortgage rates. Home sales
were at a seasonaUy adjusted annual rate of 2.63
mUI!on units in November, compared with 2.61
mUI!on the previous month, when sales had faUen
sllghtly, the group said. The latest rate was 22.3
percent above November last year.
-Citrus processors in Florida and Texas began
working around the clock to squeeze juice from Icy
fruit after two days of freezing weather. Despite
losses, growers said prices for orange juice probably
would not go up. Flortda·v egetable growers, however,
were predicting losses of 75 percent, expected to
reach at least $30 mUI!on. In Texas, citrus growers
said they feared losses of $30 rn!Uion or more.

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

Area deaths

twocouslnsonhls father's side, Ted
Reed, Jr., of Pomeroy; and Ann
Kaser of Freeport, Ullnois.
Reed was a grandson of the late
W.F. Reed, founderoflheFarmer's
Bank In Pomeroy.
Funeral services wUI be held at
the Holy Family of Nazareth
Church, with burial In Calvary
Cemetary, Dallas.

Golden B. Hazelett
Golden B. Hazelett, 86, New
Haven, died Tuesday In Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Dec. 1, 1897 in Branchland,
he was the son of !he late Robert B.
and Harriett VIrginia Diehl
Hazelett.
He was a C8ll&gt;Cnter.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia
Spencer Hazelett; two daughters,
Bernice M. Kunkel, VanNuys,
Calli.. and Rosalie Wingren, Scotls·
dale. Ariz.; one son, Evan B..
Hartford, Mich.; one sister, Dilla
Taylor, West Palm Beach, Fla.; one
brother, Roscoe, Lake Worth, Fla.;
five grandchUdren and three great·
. grandchUdren.
Funeral services wlil be atlla .m .
FrldayinFoglesongFuneraiHome,
Mason, with the Rev. Manford Cass
Hutchinson ofliclating, Burtal will
foUow · in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 24 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
Thursday.

Althea H. Bryan

Robert E. Reed
Robert Elliott Reed, formerly of
Pomeroy and recently a resident of
lrv!ng, Texas. died Monday in the
Irving Community Hospital.
Reed was a native of Pomeroy,
but moved with his parents to
Columbus, where he graduated
from high school and atlended Ohio
State University
He was an engineer. and worked
as a consultant with the Fire
Protection Service Company In
Dallas, Texas.
Reed was preceded indeathbyhlS
parents, D. Curtis and Mary
(Elliott) Reed, and a sister, Mary
Catherine, who died In Infancy.
He Is survived by his wtle,
Martha, eight chUdren, thirt""!'
grandchildren, an uncle, Frederick
Reed. Okemus, Michigan; William
Curtis Reed, Saratog!l, Callfornia;

Althea Hyseil Bryan, 87, Clncin·
nat!, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Tuesday In Cincinnati.
Mrs. Bryan wasaformerteacher
In the Pomeroy Schools and resided
In Pomeroy for a number of years.
Sh~ Is survived by a daughter,
Bonita L. Bryan. at home; a sister,
Tacy Wilson; a brother, Homer
Hysell of Pomeroy. She was
preceded in death by her husband,
Leo J . Bryan.
Graveside services wtll be held at
3 p.m . Friday at Beech Grove
Cemetery In Pomeroy. Friends
may call at the Andrewson Funeral
Home In Cincinnati from 5 to 7 p.m.
on Thursday. Services wUI be held
at 10 a.m. Friday at Andrewson
Funeral Home.

Clarificatiof! made
on HEAP funding

A clarification on the avallablllty
of additional HEAP (Home Emergy
Assistance Program) Funds an·
nounced by State Representative
Jolynn Boster Friday l"as made
Tuesday.
Boster's ofllce now reports that
the addltonal $15,txXl . funding in
Meigs County appUes only to PUCO
regulllted utility· companies where
an actual disconnect of service has
taken place, ornon·PUCOregulated
companies, such as Buckeye Royal,
where a final notice before dlscon·
nect has been received. On bulk fuel ,
· a 10 days or less supply, Is required
for participation.
For !his additional HEAP emer·
Weather forecast
gency assislance, application must.
be made In person at the CommunSnow and colder tonight. Lows Ity Action Agency at Cheshire, Rep.
between 20 and 25. Cloudy and cold Boster reports.
with a chance of flurries Thursday.
Temperatures falling to the teens by
evening. Thechanceofpreclpltatlon Meets Saturday
Is 8J percent tonight and 50 percent
The Sutton Township Trustees
Thursday.
will
meet Saturday at 1 p.m . In the
Extended Ohio Forecast
Syracuse
Municipal Building.
Friday lhrough Sunday:
addition,
an organizational
In
Cold Friday with a chance of
flurries in the northeast. Fair and meeting for 1984 will be held
DOt as cold Satunla.v and Sunday. January 1 at 9 a.m. at tl\e home of
Sutton trustee clerk Paul S. Moore,
mgt.~ 1n the teens Friday and In the
'
:.Ill ~ and Sunda.v. Lows Racine.
between5belowand5aboveFrlday,
The Lebanon Township Trustees
between 5 and io ~ and
will
meet Saturday at 9: lJ a.m. at
betweenl5 and 25 Sunday.
the township garage.

AFTER CHRISTMAS

·1

Emergency runs

.

ALL SALES FINAL

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Noxt to Elborfelds In Pomeroy

Story on Page 4

See court story Page 12

e

•

at y

•

enttne

•
'(
upheld

.

2 Sections, 12 Pcge5
20 C.nh
A Multimed ia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Decell)ber 29, 1983

Emergency Food and Shelter
National Board Program. The
aUocatlon requires a voluntary
organization to administer the
program and Blakeslee indicated
that Sidney Edwards of the Com'
munity Action Agency Is a candl··
date for doing that. Blakeslee said
Edwards will be In touch with them
and Alwllda Werner, Red Cross
treasurer, who received the data
from the National Board Program.
Jones reported that work on the
budget Is progressing and !hat final
figures should be available from the

Themattercameupatlastweek's
meeting when Joan Tewksbary.
tuberculosis nurse, met with com·
missioners to request hospltallza·
tlon Insurance (not now offered to
other non-contract · county employees) at a cost of $3,656:88; for
three employees.
However, a commissioner reports since !hat earlier meeting,
Mrs. Tewksbary has Indicates the
other two employes would not be
asking for the Insurance.
The office Is currently operating
$12,iXXl over levy receipts and It was
suggested by Orion Roush, a
trustee, at last week's meeting that
services of the ofllce be cut to
provide the hospitalization.

night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 766. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 4006.

IIF;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::;
WATERMELON PATCH

Union Avenue, from Osborne
Street to Prospect Hill, will be closed
beginning at noon today, possibly
through Thursday, and a detour wUI
be set up around the blocked area.
The closing is due to test drilling In
preparation for repair of slippage
along the road.

Veterans Memorial

One call was answered Tuesday
by the Pomeroy squad, at 4:30p.m.,
when Kelly Chapman was taken r-----;_-----~
from Meigs High School to Holzer
Medical Center In Gallipolis. The
tlrst of Wednesday's runs was made
by Middleport at 7:50a.m., transporting Tim J;:bersbach from the
CA~&lt;E.
Imperial Electric parking lot to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

ANN'S

M~license

paled receipts by about $.lXI,iXXl.

CLEVELAND (AP)
The
winning number drawn Tuesday

Traffic rerouted

Admltted·-Clarence Sargent, Ra·
cine; James Richman, Rutland;
Troy Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Patricia
Cleland, Langsville; Donna An·
dress, Guysville; Julia Haynes,
Vienna, W.Va.
Discharged-Nom Smith, De!ores Wickline, Steven Dunfee.

County Budget Commission by Jan.

3. Original requestsexceededanticl·

Lottery winners

Extends mvltatlon
At yesteroay's meeting the commissioners decided to lilvite the
trustees to attend next Tuesday's
meeting to further discuss the
matter of !he Insurance as well as
the overall budget of the tuberculosis office which is asking for about
$10,iXXl over . levy receipts for
operation in l!lW.
As It was pointed out by
commissioner David Koblentz, It
doesn'tseemfairtoglvetoonewhat
you can't give to everybody else In
!he county.
C. E. Blakeslee presented a letter
to the commissioners a ietter
advising that Meigs County Is
eligible to receive $10,8J'i !rom the

. COUNTED CROSS STITCH
600 LINCOLN HILL

·

POMEROY

COAL MEETING - Gov. Richard Celeste, left,
listens Wednesday ·as Sen. Eugene Branstool,
D-Utica, addresses a group of New Lexington civic

25% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE
.. STOCK UP NOW!!
1 GROUP OF BOOKS 50% OFF
1 GROUP OF KITS 40% OFF
THIS WEEK ONLY

.

SAVE.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State and local officials
hope to save the jobs of 520 Perry County miners, but
they see an uphiil battle in an environmental dispute
over Ohio's high sulfur coal with a Michigan
regulatory agency.
Gov. Richard Celeste, Republican U.S. Rep.
Clarence MUier of Lancaster, state Sen. Eugene
Branstool, D-Utlca, and state Rep. Paul Mechling,
DThornvllle. discussed ideas with New Lexlng!.on and
Perry County leaders at the Statehouse on
Wednesday.
Representatives of the Peabody Coal Co., which
owns the SunnyhUI mine where the jobs are In
jeopardy, and the United Mine Workers also sat in on
the hour-long session.
The consensus seemed to be· that the fight with
Michigan Is not yet over- there's stUI "a crack in that
door," as MUier put it - that new markets may be
found for Sunnyhill coal, and that steps must be taken
to diversify the economy of southeast Ohio.
Sunnyhill Is the largest employer In Perry County.
the second-largest having .a payroll of 125. 1t faces a
shutdown due to refusal by the Michigan Air Pollution

20%To 50%
STOREWIDE

Lifestyle
THIRD &amp; OLIVE
446-3045

GALLIPOLIS

DECORATING

A marrlke license has been
issued to Danny Joe Hood. 31,
Pomeroy, 3.nd Rachel Johnson. 28,
also of Pomeroy. by the Meigs
County Probate Court.

Route 7
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
667-6485

Control Commission to aUow a utility In that state to
continue burning the higher-sulfur coal !hat Sunny hill
produces.
Consumers Power Co.'s J.H. Campbell Units 1 and
2 burn 5,iXXl tons of SunnyhiU coal daUy under a
contract with Peabody which runs through the end of .
19&amp;1.
Sunnyhlll coal has a sulfur content of 2.6 percent,
compared to 1 percent permitted by Michigan. That
state's control commlsslo~ refused to aUO)I! a
five-year moratorium while Peabody seeks ways to
clean SunnyhUI coal.
Although neither !he governor nor MUier predicted
success In the effort to keep the mine open, they said
t.)1ere are avenues to be explored. Mliler mentioned
intervention by the federal Environmental Protection
Agency.
Celeste said he Is taking steps for at least a
short-range solution. He said he has directed state
Development Director Alfred Dietzel and other state
officials to begin a search for new markets for
Sunnyhill coal.

Natural gas explosion
levels Fairborn home

ELBERFELDS

Famous Hanes 2 layer construction for extra warmth.
Men's and boys' sizes plus Bigs and Talis. Men's
and Boys' Department 1st
floor ..

and

le.,.;m
Perry county officials ahOut the expected .
closing of lbe Sunnyhlli coal mine near New
Le~lngton. ( AP Laserphoto).

Icy roads forced an emergency squad. to deliver a
baby in a parking lot and Ohio's weather-related death
toll reached eight as the state was pounded by almost
every kind of precipitation in !he book In the latest
weather onslaught.
The GaU!a·Melgs Post State Highway Patrol Post
Wednesday investigated 25 traffic accidents In which
three people were injured.
Much colder air returned to Ohio today on the heels of
a holiday weekend winter storm.
Snow that began early Wednesday changed to
freezing rain and freezing drizzle. That mixed with
sleet and as temperatures rose above freezing it
became just rain. The rain changed back to snow as the
storm pulled northeast of Ohio during the afternoon
hours.
The National Weather service predicted cold
weather through Friday as the northwest to north flow
from Canada continues, with highs in the lower half of
the lOs. Flurries were predicted Into Thursday night
and temperatures were expected to rise for !he New
Year's weekend.
Baby arrives
In ClrclevUie, Casandra Renee Ammon weighed 7
pounds,l5ounceswhenshewasborn Wednesday in the
parking lot of Renick's Family Market on U.S. 23.
Medics from the Harrison Township Fire Depart·
men! answered a call to take her mother. Diana
Ammon, 20, to Berger Hospital, but Icy roads slowed
the trip and after a hall hour on the road, theywereonly
a few rrtUes along on their 15-rnlle journey.
Her husband, Dwaynee, 23, had returned home
because ·glilzed roads prevented him from going to
work and they called the medics rather than try to
drive to the hospital.
The medics pulled into the parking lot, where
Casandra was born, and !hey later made it to the
hospital.
"They were scared too, but theydld a good job. She's
perfect," said Ms. Ammon. "Itwasscarybecausethey
said they had practiced, but had never had io do a
delivery before."
In Wood County, WIUiam Vanvoorhis, 26. of Grand

Celeste, Miller.continue
fight to save coal jobs South hit

OPEN FRI. 8o. SAT. 10-6
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-7682

SECOND &amp; GRAPE
446-0332

Winter storm's death
toll reaches 8 in Ohio
By The Associated Press

SAVE ON SELECT .GROUPS
OF SHOES

.

Local

'

CLEARANCE

PRICE

ruling

Meigs meets Warriors

operations at the huge faclllty. Company olflclah said
a IAital of six U.S. Steel plants will be ~ and
operations will be reduced at U other plants,
eUmlnatlng 15,400 Jobs. (AP Laserphoto).

1&gt;_ _ _ _ __
S c i p i o Trustees._(eo_n_tin_ued_fro_m...:....pa..::...ge_

(Continued from page 1)
Bentley and Kathryn Crow.
, Fire Chtef Gene Imboden met
with council and discussed making
application for a federal grant for
the fire department and was given
permission to proceed with that
application.

Story on Page 8

•

An appeal has been made for
clothing and furniture for a famlly
whose home and all Its contents
were destroyed by fire Christmas
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Cooper and
daughter, Sherrte, ·were guests of
th~ Gary Cooper famlly at Portland
when the fire, believed to be caused
by an electrical problem. struck the
five room frame structure.
There was Insurance on the house,
but none on the furniture.
The famlly, now staying at the
Gary Cooper hOme, need clothing,
furniture and other household
Items. These can be left at !he Gary
Cooper home, or Items will be
picked up If !hat Is more convenient
for the donor.
Cooper wears a size 1~ 16 shirt,
pants--36 waJst, 30 length, and a sizeS
shoe. His wife, Terri, wearsaslze30
waist, 32 length pants, small or
medium tops, and a size six shoe.
Their daughter, Sherrte, nine,
wears a size 12 pants, medium
shirts, and a size 4 shoe:

New law

Story, photo Page 3

' Voi.32,No. 182
Copyrighted l 983

STEEL PLANT OPERATIONS CURTAILEDWorkers leave U.S. Steel Corp.'sSouth Works plant on
Chicago's South Side Tuesday. The · company
announced earlier that It will close "most of' the

An appeal was issued today for
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Mollohan
whose home and clolhing were
destroyed by flreTuesdaymqrn!ng.
Mrs. Molloban wears a medium
(34) top. 7-8 jeans and size 7 shoes.
Mr. Mollohan wears 34-34 trousers,
16-16\lJ shirts; size 12 shoes.
Anyone who ·can help with
furniture or clothing Is asked to
contact Mrs. Mollohan's sisters at
~or 992-7429 or Items can be
left at the Robert Manley home, ~
Park St .. Middleport.

Insurance required

•

Items sought
forfamily ·

Help appeal made .

Bengals' new coach

MaY the harmfmY
and peace ()f the
seas()n abide with Y()U
thr()UQh()Ut the year.
'

FAIRI30RN, Ohio (AP) -The
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. received
dozens of calls Wednesday from
residents concerned abo\lt the smell
of gas In an area where one house
was damaged and ·another des·
troyed by explosions.
A natural gas leak was blamed for
an explosion and tire that sent one ·
couple fleeing for safety and a later
explosion on the same Fairborn
street that destroyed an 'unoccupied
house.
The DP&amp;L office .In Xenia
reported about 150 cails- mostly
. from southern Fairborn· from
residents complaining of natural
gas odors around their homes
Wednesday. While most reports
probably can be traced to the gas
main leak, crews are checking each
canplalnt, said DP&amp;L supervisor
Thomas Blrt. No other leaks have
been found.
Tbe leek, wblch was described as
not being weather-related, was .

traced to a main line buried under
the street between 212 and 213 Cozad
Drive, thetwodarnagedhomes.Birt
said earlier excavation damaged a
section of pipe, and natural gas
leaking from the \leterlorated pipe
became trapped beneath !he frozen
ground and seeped into the homes
along water and sewer pipes.
The section of pipe was replaced
and service was to t:.e restored
Wednesday nlght and today.
Repair crews had to dig up the
street, which remained closed
Wednesday evening. ·
DP&amp;L was first alerted T\lesday
afternoon when a mall carrier
reported a naturalgasodoroutsldea
vacant house at 205 Comd Drive. A
crew found no gas leaks at the
residence but shut of! the gas to !he
house, Blrt said.
Shortly before midnight Tuesday,
John and Norlene Frazier of lll4
Cozad Drive saJd they smeUed ·
natural gas in their home, but fire
J

officials at first believed a defective
ful'nace motor caused the smoke,
Frazier said.
About an hour later. across !he
street, Drexel and VIrginia Brock of
213 Cozad Drive were shaken by an
explosion that blew out their home's
front window and started afire in the
basement. They escaped lnj~ry .
Damage was estimated at $5,000.
Drexel Brock, 64, said he was
sitting In his Uvingroom and his wife
had just gone to bed when !he
explosion occurred.
About three hours later, Norlene
Frazier heard an explosion and saw
flames in the basement next door at
the Charles Richards residence at
212 Cozad Drive.
The Richards house was "a tolal
loss," saJd Fairborn fire Capt. Geoff
Billows. He estimated damage at
$60,0ll to the structure and $30,iXXlto
the contents. The famlly was out of
town on vacation.

By DANA FIELDS
Associated l'ress Writer
The mercury took another dive
across the Deep South today,
spa\IJnlng a snowstorm In Alabama
and at least one tornado in Florida,
plunging Texas Into subzero
weather and raising the death toll
from 12 days of violent weather to
nearly400.
From west Te.;as to snowy
northern Maine. winter tlld more of
its worst: Icy sleet in Louisiana that
closed a major bridge over the
Mississippi River; gusty snow
squalls off the Great Lakes in Ohio,
Michigan, New York and Pennsyl·
vanla; freezing rain that laid a fresh
glaze over roads from Washington.
D.C. to southern New England.
A new mass of cold air settled Into
the upper Mississippi Valley and the
Great Plains, with Worland, Wyo.,
down to 25 below zero by midnight

Rapids, died Wednesday when his car slid off
snow-covered U.S. 6 about three miles from Weston.
State troopers said Vanvoorhis' a utospunandcrashed
into a tree.
Youth killed
And a South Websierl7-year-old , Shane Phipps. died
Wednesday in Grant Hospital In Columbus from
injurjes suffered Tuesday when his car hit therea r of a
tractor-trailer rig on icy U.S. 52 near Sciotoville in
Scioto County.
In Hamilton, the Butler Countycoroner'soffice was
investigating the death of a 70-ycar-old woman,
Pauline McDaniel, who was found in her home
Monday night.
Police said the woman was found on her sofa after a
neighbor saw that the front door of her housewas open.
The thermostat was set at 00 degrees, but the furnace
wasn't operating, officers said, and water was frozen
In a sink and the toilet.
Five other Ohioans already had died in the severe
cold weather which feU over the state just before
Christmas.
Many roads were v(ltuaily Impassable Wednesday
in central, southern ""d sowt heasternOhio,postponing
the opening of state government offices and some
businesses.
Snow parking bans were in effect in Cleveland and
the suburbs of East Cleveland and South Euclid.
Interstates In the Cleveland area were slippery, Police
said.
Bill Fair, operations engineer for District 8 of the
Ohio Department of Transpo11ation in Lebanon, In
southwestern Ohio .. said It was difficult to keep roads
in good condition.
"Roads were cleared se\'eral times. but dropping
temperatures are refreezing roads and icing them, a
general problem throughout the eight -county area, "
Fair said Wednesday.
Residents of Addyston in western Hamilton County
enjoyed running water for the first times inceSaturday
after a damaged pump at the village waterworks was
repaired Wednesday. Many of the viUage's 'higherlying homes went for three days withOUt water after
sub-zero tempera tures caused two water pumps to
malfunction .

by violent storms
MST, and a new Pacific storm slid
into Idaho, bringing rain and snow.
Since Dec. 17. when an arctic cold
wave blasted northern states. the
weather has been blamed for 398
deaths nationwide, and the toU rose
steadily Wednesday as snow and Icy
storms blanketed the South and
East. Florida citrus growers issued
a prellmlnary estimate saying 25
percent of the $1 billion orange crop
had been lost.
Paramedics in Circleville, Ohio,
delivered 7-pcund, 15-ounce Casan·
dra Renee Ammon while parked
outside a supermarket Wednesday
because roads to a hospital were too
dangerous. In Maryland, where
there were so many accidents that
pollee told some motorists "to
handle It between them selves,"
jockeys refused to run on the icy
Bowie Race Course near Washington, D.C.
Utahns had something to cele·

NATURAL
LEAK- A aalural gas leak on
Cozad Drtve In Fairborn, Oblo, touched oil an
explo8loa and a lire at the Cllaries Richards residence
al Zl2 Cozad Drive early Wednesday momlng. 'lbe

•
·.

brate - the sun. Wednesday's 467
minutes of sunshine were more than
half as much as the 713 minutes in
the previous 27 days of December,
the weather service said. ,
"But it's not just Utah. Pretly
much across the sou t11ern states, the
Plains and lots of other places, they
haven't had a whole heck of a lot of
sun in the past threeor fourweeks,"
Bill Sammle r. a forecaster at !he
Severe Storms Forecast Center in
Kansas City, Mo .. said this m orning.
"There's a lot of snow that needs ro
be melted out there, and the only
thing that can do that is !he sun."
Waves of thunderstorms raced
ahead of the cold front across !he
Gulf Coast late Wednesday and Into
South Carolina, Georgia and north
Florida by early today, dropping
hailstones as big as baseball' near
Bainbridge. Ga .. a nd prompting
tornado watches in much of the
region.

Richards were not at home and were on vacation. The
diUJlall' to the home was estimated at SOO,OOO. Shown
In Ibis photograph Is part of the Interior damage. (AP
I a erpboto).

I

,,

..

...

_,\

�Thursday, ~mber 29, 1983

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

Page 2-n.·Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middlepo!'f, Ohio
Thul'lday, December 29, .1983

Lessons from a batn ______Ja_m_e_sJ_._K_ilp_a_tr_ick
WASHINGTON - There are price supports.
sermons in stones and books to be
Very well. The milk program
drawn from running brooks, said
worked fine until about 1976. The
the exiled duke In "As You Like It,"
net expense to the government was
and If there had been cow barn in
relatively small, and the program
the forest of Arden, that noble succeeded In promoting. adequ;1te
philosopher might have found a
supplies of milk and dairy products
politiCal lesson amid the milking at reasonable prices, But a funny
stools. Our federal milk program
thin~;: happened on the way to the
has turned Into the moonbeam stuff 1976 elections. The nation's 312,rm
from which Shakesperean fanta·
mllk producers flexed their mus·
stes are made.
cles and burst into political action:
First, a word of commiseration:
They contributed $1.3 million to
Farmers who undertake to operate congressional candidates - the
small dairy farms are gluttons for dairymen that year ranked second
work; they have to love their only to tbe doctors among the
unremitting labot or they wouldn't
national lobbies - and they got
keep at it. Second, a word of their money's worth,
resigna tlon: In creating the original
The 1977 farm bill evolved from a
milk stabilization program many · scratch·back agreement between
years ago, Congress may have had the city boys, who wanted liberal·
some justification under the com, !zed food stamps, and the ' country
merce clause of the Constitution; l
boys, who wanted higher support
am resigned to laws that create prices. When the deal was cut, the

a

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT '
Publisher
.

.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General 1\IS.nager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The .&lt;\ssoclated Press, Inland Dally Press Assodatlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wel co med . The)· shou ld hf&gt; les!i than 300 words
lon g. A.JIIetters are nbjed to editing and must be slgn«l with nume. address and
telephone numher . No unslgnt!d letters wUI be published. Lt&gt;tters should be In
good last e, addressing issue!li, not persmudlties.

Economic goals
for next year
Being a big goal·seeking mechanism, the economy in 1~ will be
wqrking toward record highs in gross national product. employment,
~O!plra te profits, personal income and others.
The goals set last year - even those by the White House - were
exceeded, because the .vast number of forecasters felt Ihe recovery would'
be bogged down by high interest rates , consumer caution and a
burdensome budget deficit.
This year they are taking a similar approach, The economy, which grew
at a 6.5 percent annual rate in 19&amp;1, c.a n't possibly duplicate that level in 1984
:- or so the consensus of forecasters seems to say.
• Here are some of the consensus goals:
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCf- About $1.6 trillion, in "real" dollars.
Real dollars these days are 1972 dollars, a year chosen arbitrarily. Any
year would do so long as it was used tor both years, the idea being to apply
the same measuring stick, rat her than an enlarged or shrunken one.
That amount would represent a gain of about 1 percent over 1983's
!'Verage GNP of $154 trillion.
INFLATION - As measured by thl' consumer price index, about 5
percent, or less than 2 percentage points higher than this year's estimated
rate of about 3,3 percent.
An increase. but still not bad, at least when compared with some of the
disastrous numbers on·the fever chat1 in recent years: ·13.3 percent in 1979,
12A percent a year later, 8.9 percent in 1981, al)d 3.9 percent in 1982.
EMPLOYMENT- A record high number of people at work, averaging
out to about 104 million for the year, but probably reaching an'annual rate
.of about 105 million people late in the year,
, . In other words, if the goal set by many forecasters is achieved,
·employment would be at a record high , with close to 5 million more people
at work in 198'1 than in 198'2, the year the recession ended .
Though the jobless might average around 8 percent - high when you
.consider that from World War II to 1975 the rate never reached 8 percent
for a full year -it still represents a sharp impro~ement from 1983's 9.6
percent average.
DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME - Would you believe that many
of the forecasters expect it will come to about $1.15 trillion, a remarkable
figure that is about $600 billion more than in 1983. And thosedollarsarereal
rather than current.
.
.
CORPORATE PROFITS AFTER TAXES- The goal seems to be about
$160 billion, a fair sum and a record to boot, even if the amount is in current
dollars, whose buying power is reduced from the previous year by the
amount of inflation.
U the goal is reached, it would mean an increase of morethan20percent
over this year's total of about $1.32 billlon, and almost 4Upercent over 1982's
deeply depressed totaL

'

Sonia Johnson: a
different candidate
For 37 days in 1982, Sonia Johnson fasted, living only on water, She
chalned hersell to the White House fence. She drew blood with a
hypodermic needle and spllled it on a copy of the U,S. Constitution. '
Now to further advance her heresy, she is running for president,
Her purpose is not to win - she knows she cannot - but to win the
country's ear for her ideas, which are feminist, radical and unfamiliar. She
says she is willing to die for women's equality, and she finds nothing
.strange about that.
Ms. Johnson was a dutiful mother and church organist until thewlnterof
· 197!),1'0. Her radicalization started when the Mormon Church put her on
:trial and· excommunicated her for her outspoken protest against the
:church's opposition to the E qual Rights Amendment.
. In June 1982, in the last weeks before the amendment died for lack of
· ·ratification from a sufficient number of states, she and seven other women
· tasted in the Illinois Capitol in a futile effort to get the Illinois Legislature to
.approve ERA,
, She was emaciated at the end. When she returned to her home in
suburban Virginia, near Washington, she was so weak, she says, that she
.had to crawl up the steps.
· Ms. Johnson says she and the other tasters got thousands of letters frOm
·women who said the episode brought home to them how desperately
-important the issue of equality Is to women.
' On the day after the ratification deadline, Ms. Johnson and other radical
:protesters spllled their own blood on a copy of the Constititution on the steps
·Of the National Archives bullcllng.
.: She wrote a book, started lecturing for a livelihood and ran for the
:: presidency of the National Organization for Women, but was defeated as
• too far out for NOW,
~ Now she seeks to be the presidential nominee of the Citizens Party, which
was founded ln 191'0 to offer a liberal, antl~rporate, anti-nuclear energy
alternative to the other parties.
1n the 19!ll campaign, Its presidential candidate, environmentalist Barry
Commoner, got 234,294 votes and finished tlfth, behind Ronald Reagan,
·· Jtmrny Carter, John Anderson and Ed Clark, the candidate of the
~ Libertarian Party,
.
:: The Citizens Party wlll pick Its canclldate in June. Ms. Johnson Is by no
· means sure she wlll be the delegates' choice: She may tum out to be too
radical even for a fringe party.
.
,
Her political Ideas begin with rape. She argues that as long as society
: casually tolerates the crime of rape It will tolerate all other forms of
·: violence, Including nuclear war.
.
.
:- "We don't even know what peace Is," she says. "Women are being
· ~aged war upon, In our most intlrrlate lives, we are at war. Peace has got
to begin with peace between the sexes."
Is rape a crime that can, as she suggest, be wiped from the face of the
earth?
"We don't know, do we?" she says. "We've never considered It
important enough to find out. We don't even have a presidential
coounlsston on It. We ought to have some of our best lntelllgenceces ·
concentrating upon how to change that violent habit of mind."
.
~
~

price support on milk went from 75
percent to !Klpercent of parity, with
promised adjustments every six
months, and for the dairy farmers
this was money In the bank. The
government's outlay for milk pay,
ments went from $1.9 billion In 1981
to $2.2 billion in 1982; in the fiscal
year ended last September the bill
cllmbed to $2.5 blllion,
The higher price supports ln
recent years have been accompan·
led by slgnHicant Improvements in
technology. On efficient farms,
cows now are milked three times a
day, The animals are fed the bovine
equivalent of caviar and sirloin
steak. They produce fountains of
milk, rivers of milk, whole ·oceans
of milk - and the government Is
compellect to buy all the stuff that
can't be sold,
Let me throw some figures at
you: This year the government has

N

,.,. ~'i~ 4t

fi#i

given away 484 million pounds of
cheese to needy households. We still
have 900 mllllon pounds of cheese In
storage. The government has given
away 174 mllllon pounds of butter.
We still have 391 million pounds of
butter on hand. For reasons too
technical to get into, lt apparently ls
tough to "instantize" non·fat dry
milk In vast quantities. For this
reason the government was able.to
give away only 45 mUUon pounds of
non-(at dry milk In 1983. But behold:
We stU! have 1.35 bllllon pounds of
powered mUk left.
This Is lunacy, In a bid for
relative sanity, Congress provided
some changes. The new act, just
signed by a reluctant president,
culs the support payments from
$13JO to $12.60 per hundredweight.
At the same time, the charge levied
upon farmers for administration of
the prog,.am is cut from $1 per
hundredweight to 50 cents. These
adjustments are a net wash,
But the act provides a lovely new
wrinkle: The government (mean·
ing all of us) will pay participating
producers over the next 15 months
the sum of $10 for every hundred
pounds of milk they do not produce.
What wlll this cost? No one has any
clear idea. Two billion dollars,
maybe: or maybe more.
On the typical dairy farm, I am
told, the average cow gives 40 ,
pounds of milk per day, or about
12,rm pounds over 305 lactation
days. Let us suppose the farmer
wtth 4lJ cows decides upon a 10
percent cut, Under the diversion
program he culls his four poorest
producers, takes them to slaughter,
certifies that he will not produce the
48,CXXJ pounds of milk the cows
otherwise would have produced,
and pockets a check for $4,!00 from
a government grateful fOr his
contribution to the publlc weaL
Such sacrifices will constitute
hard lines for the dairy producers,
but that's the way lt goes.

Boondoggle of the year _ _ _ _Ja_ck_An_de_rs_on
WASIDNGTON - Congress Is In
the midst ·ot Its favorite holiday
task:. stuffing the turkey wtth
extravagant, unnecessary construction projects that will cost the
·
taxpayers blllions.
My associates Corky Johnson
and Donald Goldberg have complied a list of the more outrageous
suspects In this annual raid on the
Treasury.· They're enough to give
any taxpayer a pre·New Year's
headache:
- The Narrows Unit, a dam and
Irrigation project on the South
Platte River, is my nominee for the
boondoggle of the year. At a cost of
just under $400 million, It Is
supposed to supply water to a few
farmers in northeastern Colorado.
Critics both in and out of govern,
ment say the Narrows Is bad news
economically and environmentally.
The Interior Department's Bu·
reau of Reclamation claims the
pmject's cost,beneflt ratio heats the

break·even mark. But the Office of
Management and Budget dis ,
agrees. Some critics say the
Narrows would return less than 50
cents In benefits for every dollar it
costs.
Environmentalists predict that
construction will be a dlsasfer for
several rare species of birds that'
use the area's wetlands on their
migratory flights each year. "It is
our biological opinion that the
Narrows Unit is likely to jeopardize
the conttriued existence of the
whooping crane," a Fish and
Wlldltfe Service memo warns, The
whooping crane Is already an
endangered species.
In addltlon, the Environmental
Protection Agency has warned that
waste runoff caused by the Nar·
rows project will cause serious
water problems. EPA sources say
the Reclamation Bureau refuses to
cooperate in any attempt to solve

this problem,
Finally, engineers found flaws in
the origfnal design that wtll cost a
bundle to correct. Congressional
Investigators are checking the
blueprints to make sure the dam
will be safe If It's buUt.
- Another Reclamattoit Bureau
boondoggle has drawn fire from the
EPA. The Anlmas·j..a Plata lrlga·
tlon project ls intended to provide
water to farmers in Colorado and
New Mexico, at a cost of about $550
million . But the EPA points out that
one-fourth of the farmland ls out of
production under the government's
PIK subsidy program. The plan
also calls for pumping Irrigation
water from a site near uranium
wastes.
- Rep, Gene Snyder, R·Ky., a
veteran member of the Publlc
Works Committee, is tryingdesper·
ately to snare a $200 million dam for
his conslltuents. Kentucky doesn't

want the Falmouth Dllm, south of
Cincinnati, and . refuses to pay its
share of the cost. So Snyder is trying
to have the federal government pay
It all ..
The dam Is justlfled as a
flood,control measure, but critics
say a floodwall would do a better
job ·at one-tenth the price. Army
engineers' figures show the Falmouth Dam would destroy up to
9,rro acres of prime farmland, part
of a state park and two wildllfe
refuges, and would displace as
many as 500 families.
-Reps. Tom Bevill, D,Ala., and
Jamie Whitten, D-Miss., powerhouses on the Appropriations Com·
mlttee, tacked $9.4 million for the
Appalachian Regional Comrnls·
slon's highway program onto the
supplemental funding bill. The
money will be spent on roads In where else? - Alabama and
Mississippi.

The

Sooners' star
cans 61 points
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
The biggest name in Big Eight
history is WUt Chamberlain. Someday, Wayman TiSdale might be
placed In Wilt's company.
Wednesday night, Tisdale · did
something that not even the great
Chamberlain ever managed, The
Oklahoma sophomore scored 61
points, setting a conference record
in leading the Sooners to a ll2· 72 rout
of Texas·San Antonio in the openlng
round of the All·Cvllege Tourna·
ment In Oklahoma City.
Tisdale's 61 points, on 24-for·34
from the field and 13-for·18from the
free throw line, also shattered the
tourney mark of 53 by P ete
Maravich for Louisiana State In

1968.
Chamberlain scored 52 points for
Kansas against Northwestern in

1956.

.

"It's a great feeling and honor,"
saki the fi,foot,9 Tisdale. "I consider
Chamberlain to be the greatest
player to ever play, Wilt Chamber,
lain Is the guy I've admired for as
long as I've remembered. "
Tisdale, an All·Arnerlcan last
year as a freslunan, also set a
conference record with 24 field goals
and his 22 rebounds were a career
high, Hls previous polntshlghwas51
last year,against Abilene Christian.
"They were playing behind me a
lot and I was able to get off my
turnaround Jumper," he said. "I
never really thought about the
record until they announced I had 39
points. There was still about 10
minutes left in the game and I
thought! bad a good chance to break
lt then."
In the second game, Arkansas·
UttleRockbeathostOklahomaClty
~72.

Among ranked teams, No. 2
Kentucky beat No. 18 Purdue ~7;
ftfth. ranked Georgetown topped
Marshall 82· 71; No. 7 UCLA 82,
Brigham Young 73; No. 10 Wake
Forest edged Jacksonville 57·54 to
win the Gator Bowl; No, 13 North
Carolina State walloped Towson
State 8849; No. 14 Louisville
whipped Hawaii·Pacific 89-61; No.
15 Michigan was edged 59{;8 by
Texas Tech In the consolation game
of the Sun Bowl, whtle No. 16
Texas·El Paso, the host team, beat
Arizona 51491n overtime to take the
rournament; and No. W Illinois
outscored MlssouriG&amp;-60.
In tournament finals, .the Golden
Triangle Classic was won by host
Pittsburgh, which beat lllinois State
59-54; the Mllwaukee Invitational
was captured by host Marquette,
59-57 over Miami, Ohio, and
Vanderbllt won Its Music City
championship with a 5S44 decision
over South Florida.
Opening roonds
In opening rounds of tourneys, It
was Arizona State 53, Penn State 50
and 'CoMectlcut ~. Columbia 60 in
the Connecticut Mutual Classic;
Alabama 81, Michigan State 69 and

Georgia Tech 66, Nebraska 49 in the
Cotton States Classic; Wyoming 65,
Northern Arizona 55 and Loyola,
Calif, 74, Wisconsin-Green Bay72 in
the Cowboy Shootout; Oregon 72,
Cornell 50, and Gonzaga 73, Robert
Morris 57 In the Far West Classic;
Providence 16, Pennsylvartla 42 as
Friars Coach Joe Mullaney earned
his 300th careervictory, and Temple
78, Rhode Island 66 in the Fleet Bank
Classic; Northeastern 55, Princeton
34 and St. Bonaventure 97, Ameli·
can 77 in the Rochester Classic;
Kansas 07, Tillane64andSouthwest
Lout slana 74, Florida 65 in the Sugar
Bowl; North Carolina A&amp;T 75,
Appalachian St. 63 and North
· Carolinl!,Wllmington 82,' North
Carolina,Charlotte 77 In the UNCC
Hollday Tournament; George Ma·
son 63, Rider 61 and Wagner 65,
Utica 63'trt the Utica College Matt's
Classic, and San Diego 78, F1orida
A&amp;M 52 and Nevada·Reno 81,
Ca l·Davis 64 In the Wall Pack
Classic.
In non·tournament play, it was
Indiana State 66, St. Louis 58;
Minnesota 60, Detroit 56; Arkansas
82, St. Peter's 49 and Las Vegas 00,
Clemson 55.
1n a late tournament at Honolulu,
the Rainbow Classic, It was Ala·
barna Bl!mlngham 57, Pacific 48
and SMU 78, Duke 76.
Top Twenty
Kentucky blew out the Boilermakers in the first half, holding Purdue
to 25.9 percent shooting from the
field while hitting on 51.5 percent of
its shots, The Wildcats led 53-27 at
halftime and coasted behind 22
points by Mel Turpin and 18 from
Kenny Walker.
David Wingate scored 23 points
and Patrick Ewing Contributed 17
and 10 rebounds for Georgetown,
9-1.
UCLA used 1(),() and 12-2 ~purts in
the first half to take command
against BYU. The Cougars rallied
within 56-53 but that was as clOse as·
they got Stuart Gray led the Bruins
with 19 points .
wake Forest made seven of eight
free thfows in the final 1: 28 to
cement its Gator Bowl title. Danny
Young's two free throws snapped a
5().50 tie and the Deacons, g,o, kept
their record unblemished.
Lorenzo QJarles scored 26 points
for defending NCMchamplonN.C.
State.
Lancaster Gordon's .18 points led
Louisville to its easy victory over
Hawaii Pacific In the Rainbow
Classic.
In the Sun Bowl tourney, Luster
Goodwin scored 16 points and Juden
Smith's two free throws provided
the winning points In OT for
unbeaten UTEP, 11).0.
Michigan probably wishes It had
skipped the Sun Bowl. After a
one-point loss to Texas-El Paso on
Tuesday, the Wolverines were
beaten by Texas Tech v;henQuentln
Anderson put in a 1S,foot jumper
with six seconds remaining.

It sounds like a story from the

'60s. The hero ls the kind of young
man mothers want their sons to
become.
He's 23, a surfer, a rock-cllmbing
hobbyist and an outdoorsman. He
led his class In primary school and
attended one of the best high
schools ln the country. Soon, he'll
graduate from college with a
science degree .
He's also facing two years in
prison.
His crime: refusing to entet; his
country's army.
But this isn't tbe United States at
the height of tbe Vietnam War. Il's
South Africa In 1983, and the youhg
man Is one of a small- but growing
number of whites who've
actively demonstrated against the
role the South African military
plays In upholding apartheid at
hOme and expanding It in Namibia.
Most young men like Brett
Myrdal - more than a 1,rro chose to leave tbe country rather
than join South Aflica's military,
But Myrdal made a different
choice. In a country where a wltlte
minority exercises absolute eontrol
over a non·whlte majority, Myrdal
has cast his lot against the
plgmentocracy.
All wltlte South African males
must register at 16. Brett registered, but his compulsory military
service was deferred until this year
because of his continuing
education.
In July 1983, he was called up to
begin two years service with tbe
Medical Service Corps, He refused
to enroll and told the army he would
not serve.

"Whites have a role In this
country," Brett Is quoted in Africa
News, "Either they are going to be
a part of the (white supremacist)
system or they are going to unite for
a free and just South Africa. It Is
·Immoral to fight against our own
people:·
·
Other young men have refused
mllltary service, but most have
based their actions on religious
bellef. Now, some are arguing that
they cannot fight In a war they
consider unjust. One of these,
22,year-old Peter Hathorn, was
sentenced to two years In jail in
March.
The Committee on South African
War Resistance estimates there
are over 1,rm white South African
war resisters in Britain alone. One
white youth has received asylum In
the United States after proving · as petitioners must - that he had a
"well founded" fear of persecutton
In his country.
Beyond surface slmllarltles,
there Is little comparison between
the war protestors In Arnertca In
the 1960s arid those in South· Africa
today.
The white minority government
enjoyhs pollee-state powers and
does not hesitate to use them
against anyone - white, colored,
Asian or black - who threatens,
hnwever peacefully, the rig!~ sys,
tern of racial separation and white
dominance. Also, there Is little
support for draft resisters among
the white population.
When the South Aflican parlla·
ment - an all·whlte body recently debated tougher measures

against "political objectors" llke
Brett Myrdal, the opposition party
"officially" opposed the strictness
of the punishment and the principle.
But one opposition leader said, In
referring to objectors, "When I
hear of this sickening stuff, I feel the
easiest way would be to stick !hem
up against the wall as they did In the
good old days."
Gen. Magnus Malan, South Afrl,
ca' s defense mtnlster, stated the
government'~ position succinctly:
"We can never allow national

servicemen to be given a free
choice as to whether or not they
want to do military duty."
South Aflica had no compulsory
service duling the second world
war. Pleter Botha was one of those
who didn't serve. "You could·joln or
not, as you pleased, and I preferred
not," Botha said recently. "What of
it?"
Bot~ Is South Aflica's pljme
minister today, head of the govern·
ment that Is prosecuting Brett
Myrdal, wl)p has no such choice.

"

MEMPHIS, Tenn, (AP) -Notre
Dame quarterback Blair KeU says
he and his teammates hope to inake
a major point tonight when tbe
Fighting Irish tangle with 13th·:
ranked Boston College in the 25th
·
annual Liberty Bowl.
The Irish, who dropped their last
three games of the regular season,
balked at accepting a bid to tonight's
7:30 CST contest at Liberty Bowl
Stadium against the 9·2 Eagles, and
are out to quiet critics who have said
Notre Dame should have stayed
home with its S,5 record.
While Fighting Irish players are
putting plenty of emphasis'oq what a
victory could mean to the Iong,tenn
future of the Notre Dame football·
program , Boston College coach
Jack Bicknell's Eagles have more
iqunedlate goals in mind ,
With victories over such powers
as Alabama , Penn State and
Clemson salted away, the Eagles
have the opportunity to not orily
move Into the Top 10butcan become
the first Boston College team tp
en joy a 1{).vtctory season in 43 year!.

ATTEMPTED THEFT -Marquette University
forward Marc MaroUa (rlgltt) tried ln vain
Wednesday to steal ball from Chuck Stahl of Miami

CINCINNATI (AP) Sam
Wyche, who bad little success
leading the Cincinnati Bengals as a
backup quarterback in their forma·
live years, has returned to try to
direct them back to playoff glory as
head coach.
Wyche, who turns 39 in one week,
became the National Football
League's youngest head coach when
he left Indiana University to take the
Cincinnati opening' Wednesday.
"He was the first and only man we
Interviewed for the job," Bengals
General Manager Paul Brown said
in a: prepared statement. "He was
the man we wanted from the
beglnning,andweareveryhappyhe
has elected to be with us:·
Wyche replaces Forrest Gregg,
who left last week to take the head
coaching job at Green Bay.
lncllana finished 3-8 in Wyche's
first season there. He goes to a
Bengals team that ended up 7,9 this
season after twoconsecutiveplayoff
seasons.
Wyche's naming was a mUd
surprise to some Bengals players,
but not to former teammates who
knew his interest in coaching the
team one day,
"The Browns (Paul and his son,
Mike, the team's assistant general
manager) havethoughtalotofSam
through the years," said former

FaRce i~
WiTH U&amp;.
BIG TEN TO NFL - Sam Wyche, lndlaDa Unlverslly footbal
coach for llle past year, Is leaving to become the head coach ollhe
()lnclnnalj Bengals It waa leamed W""""""8Y allei'IIOOII. Wyche
replacee FOI'I'ftlt Greg who went to Green Bay. Wyche atarted as a
player to C1ncbu1at1 for 111e Bengals. "ll'a 8 ch~ of 8 UfeUme," he
llllld. (AP ~).

LOST
PIT BULL
WHITE AND BRINDLE WITH
BRINDLE PATCH ON RIGHT EYE
HE ALSO HAS WHITE ON CHEST

..·

LOSj AROUND VINEGAR ST. OR EAGLE RIDGE
CALL 992-5006 OR .949-2366

'

quette won, 5947. ( AP Laserphoto)

Bengal quarterback John Stoia,
who played ahead of Wyche. "You
could tell there was a mutual
admiration there.
"You can see some guys express,
Ing a stronger interest In what' s
going on with the game plan. Sam
wasoneofthose, Thinking kept Sam
ln pro football, not athletic abUity:'
Wyche played three years under
Paul Brown In Cincinnati (1968-70),
then went to Washington, Detroit,
St. Louis and Buffalo. He was
quarterback coach and offensive
coordinator with the San Francisco
19ers for four years under Bill Walsh
(1979-82) before signing a five-year
contract as head football coach at
Indiana,
Indiana agreed to releaSe him
from his agreement after only one
year to take his first NFL bead
coaching job.
"The selection of Sam Wyche
follows a trend in the ·National
Football League where quarter,
backsarebecomingheadcoachesat
marty places," Paul Brown said.
"lndlana University was very
cooperative In making It possible for
Sam to join the Bengals. They gave
him his release to take what they
eonceded was an advancement in

his career."
Brown and Wyche were traveling
Wednesday and unavailable tor

Cincy players don't
remember new coach

back for three years in Cincinnati
(1968-71). More recently, he was
quarterback coach and offensive
coordinator with the San Francisco
49ers for tour years, and head Coach
at Indiana University last season.
"I sure don't know much about
hinn, " said offensive tackle Mike
Wilson. "I know be was an assistant
with the 49ers, but that's about IL"
Wben notlfled of Wyche's selec·
tlon, running back Charles Alex·
ander said from his Baton Rouge,
La .. home~ "How do you spell that?"
Several of the players thought the
Bengals would choose one of their
assistant coaches to succeed For·
rest Gregg, who took the head
cilachlng job last week at Green
Bay.

T~e

(Ohio) durlnr; champlo.whlp game of Marquette's
annual invitational basketball tourney, which Mar-

·

Wyche,·new Bengals coach .

our new coach."
Wyche, 38, was a hackupquarter·

~EiN '''
f2a:ll'l M IN
Nllol~·,. CA

Notre Dame
detennined
to make point

CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati
Bengals players generally didn't
know much about Sam Wyche when
the former Cincinna tl quarterback
was named their head coach on
Wednesday.
"I don't know anything about
hinn," cornerback Louis Breeden
said. "I don't know anything about
Indiana. All !really know is thathels

Question of conscience _______

Daily Sentinei-Pa-3

"I thoughtmaybesomebodyfrom
within the organization would get
It," Breeden saki, "But we don't
have any say·so in It ... I just thought
It would be somebody from within
the organlzabon.':

Wyche's relationship with Ben·
gals General Manager Paul Brown
goes back to the formative years of
the franchise, when Brown was
head coach and Wyche a backup
quarterback. Punter Pat Mclnally
thought that was a reason Wyche got
the job over assist&gt;. •!coaches Hank
Bullough and Dick .LeBeau, who
both applied for It.
"Our two coaches, HankBullough
and Dick LeBeau , would have been
fine choices also," Mclnally said,
"But Sam's relationship with the
Bengals goes back a long way, and
he did a great job at San Francisco.
' "I think It's a good choice. The
trend is going toward offense.
Offensive strategy Is becoming
more important. .But with the
perfonnance of tbe defense this
year (finishing with the NFL'sNo, 1
ranking), they could have stayed
within the organization. But that's
their decision.''
Backup quarterback Turk Schaner! was glad the Bengals went with
a coach who will fit into the team's
passing strategy.
"I don't know him, but I know he
was
with San Francisco and the
·
quarterback coach tbere," SChonert ·
said. "He's offensive-oriented and,
In that sense, I thought they'd want
that type of person."
"I thoilght they'd get someone
offensively oliented because that's
been the tendency in the past," said
offensive lineman Blake Moore.

•"i':~.~~~~
" ·Pomeroy Fire Dept. New Year's Ball
9 P.M.-2 A.M.
POMEROY ELEMENTARY

$15 A COUPLE

$8 SINGLE

, TICKETS AVAILABLE AT G&amp;J
AUTO PARTS OR ANY POMEROY FIREMAN

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Phone 446 -4524

comment, a Bengals spokesman
said. A news conference was
scheduled with Wyche for Friday in
CinclnnatL The announcement of
his hiring was made from Brown's
winter home in LaJolla, Callt
"Sam Is a btilliant young coach
with a dlverslfled background,"
Walsh said, "He did an excellent job
in San Francisco and matured into a
head coach, He is ideally suited for
the Cincinnati job. I personally
recommend him very highly.''

BARGAIN MATINEES TODAY/
ALl SEATS $2 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2.00

Wyche Is expected to fit into the
Bengais' offense, a
move that players applauded.
Several players said they had no
Idea before Wednesday who the new
coach would be,
" I don't know anything about
him," cornerback Louts Breeden
said. "I don't know anything about
Indiana. All rreally know is that he is
our new cOach.''
"I think it's a good choice," said
punter Pat Mc!nally. "The trend is
going toward offense. Offensive
strategy Is becoming more impor·
tant. But with the performance of
the defense this year, they could
hav e stayed within t h e
organlza tlon."
Two of Gregg's assistants, defen,
sive coordinator Hank Bullough and
defensive secondary coach Dick
LeBeau, applied tor the head
coaching job,
pass~rlented

'..4

.

• we w•s
• h you
enters m,
all the best that any
1\Tew Year ean bring ... ·
peaee. prosperity, joy
and love. We espeelaUy ,
thank you for your
friendship ln the 1•a..'!it.
SPECIAL HOURS THIS WEEKEND:

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�4 The Daily Sentinel

Page

By KEITII WISECUP
Meigs' Marauders wUI attempt to
put al!alt to their five-game losing
skid and at the same time put an
end to Warren Local's six-game
winning streak when the two
Tri-Valley Conference toes meet at
the Larry Monison Gymnasi um
Friday.
The heartbreak kids, as the
Marauders have been called recently, have lost tthose five games
by 18 points. Although sporting a2-5
record. Meigs has outscored Its
opponents 400-397.
Fear of a letdown In attitude Is not
a problem, however.
"Our attitude Is a good or better
Lhan ever because now we know we
can play with anybody in the
teague. We had a very good
practice Wednesday," commented
Meigs coach Greg Drummer.
More good news Is that leading
scorer Nick Rlggs, 17.0 points per
game, will dress and probably see
action if not as a sta rter . Riggs
suffered a strained ankle Ugament
In third quarter action against
l{lexander last week In the Marau·ders' last outing.
If Riggs can 't start, the job will
either go to senior Mike Kennedy or
junior Jac kie Welker.
Both are noted tor hustle and
good defense, which is what Meigs
h$s been working on this week.
"We've been working on our
defense more than anything else
this week. Warren Local likes to
fast break, but will try to punch it
inside when they set up. They have

43 12 98 14.0
:rl 16 &amp;"JIL-l
2J 3 49 1.0
10 11 Jl 4.4

very good size In a 6-5 center and 6-3
forward," added Drummer.
Warren Local, defending tri·
champions of the TVC a year ago
along with Nelsonville-York a nd
Trimble, is 6-2 overall and 5-2 in the
The Warriors opened the year
with losses to Belpre (5240) and
Alexander (58-51). but have reeled
off six straight wins since. They are
In fourth place In the loop. Meigs Is
tied with Vinton County for seventh.
Other starters tor the Marauders
Include 6-2 junior Jay Carpenter
and 6-3 sophomore Mike Chancey at
forwards , 5-9 sophomore Rick Wise
at the other guard, and 6-1 ~enlor
Jay Evans at center.
Chancey, the Meigs County
"Player of the Week, " comes off his
finest showing in his brief varsity
career wit h 25 paints against
Alexander.
The other highly-touted sophomore starter, Wise. Is Improving
with experience. The blond-headed
Wise is on the verge of a high-point
breakthrough.
Carpenter. Meigs' leading scorer
after two games. has relegated
shooting to Riggs and Chancey
while dominating the boards. The
steady Evans Is the kind of player
Drummer referred to as "one that
will never hurt you."
In other action Friday, Alexander Is at Trimble; Belpre at
VInton County; Federal-Hocking at
Mlller and Wellston at NelsonvilleYork .

L. Powell ................. " .. 7

5

1 11

J . Welker ...................... 7
D. FIShE'r ...................... 5

3
I

3
3

M. KE&gt;nnedy ............ ..... 5

0

4

Tolals .......... , ... ,....... ...... ; US 90

Prep scores

4()6

LoyLJI.a M&lt;if)'m&lt;:J..Iflt 74. Wb.-Gr-een Bay

12

Bcxk&gt;y 62. Col. St. Chari&lt;'S ~ 5
Brt.stol :&gt;~ , Grand Va u~· 39
Canton McKinley~ - \1/hel&gt;\lng 1\\ . \ 'a .)
PaTk E&amp;
Cln . Lasalle 76. C\n. Taf1

Te~&lt;a5 · EI

tl3

SW MIMesola lfl. Wlrma St. 76
Not1 hcastern 55. Prtn('('ton 3-1

"

Cl('. East 81. ae Unlv. !¥:Mol i7
Clt·. S1. JCN"ph 93. Connei!S\'llif' IPa.l
Gei!J::'I!'l-1
Columoos Cf'O'ot'i' ill, Pnnl.l()ra -G IItoa 49
OJ•tln~ un f'O. 1\llami E. 3!1
Falrwrt 39. Pcrr'Y 37 •
F'\('ld [;7, Waii.Tioo :\6, 20T
Hubb:lrd 8'2, Western Bea-.;pr 1Pa.1 )II
Kt'l1ton Ri~e ml, Mcchanlc-sbuf'Jl --l..l

St. Bcmavenmre '!1, American Ti
!&lt;an~-~ 6i. Tulane &amp;I
~w L..oolslana 74. Florida 65
N. Carolina A&amp;T, 1\ppalaC'hlan St. 63
N.

~tarlNnont

~2

Wedne!lda_y's Games
Mllwa llkff' Ill New .le!'SE')' 85
Detroit Ul. New York Hll
Dallas 100. San Diego 9'2
Phc:olbc t ~JK Cnldt--n ~tatf' lffi

Brou,:n 52

58. Ctn. Phys. Ed. -n

Utah 113, Sl'attle lffi
n.u-sday's Gumes
Allanta :11

Cle\·('land

B.Jston at Houston
K.art..•KlS C ity at San Antoo~
Pon lancl at Ct1lcaj;io
Plllla~pllla at Denver
Frida,y'"' G~

Indiana at N('w Jersey

N{_..,. York at Washlngt\)1'1
O'llc~o at DPtrolt
ClwE&gt;lmvl :;~t Atlanta
Boston at Dalla"
Sal1 DIE'({O at Kansas City

PIJnlanll at ~tnwaukf'f'
Houstoo at f'hoult.x
Utah at DI.'IW('r
Colck&gt;n Stat(' at L.os AA~I$
Pllll~lpltl a al St&gt;at1le

College scores
Wedneiday's Rmlllts
0100

Hockey result!!

Olllo ;&gt;;onht'm 74. Ct!Ill'\'a M
J)pflance 7i. Alma 76

ntftn 51
Fim!la\' II);, Mlcll.-Dl'aroorn 91
Mu.... ~gum 58. WllminWon -'fi
~1.

Cf1ltm lffi. O!J::'rlin 87
Bat11-1n W:~llaN' 78. Ka13ffiazoo ffi
Malonl' 56. OttertJtoln 54
Taylor 7'9. Wht&gt;alorl 00
Woost('r 71 , Blufflon 'lU, err
Kmyon 62, P!!M St .. B£lhrrocl 51
FAR \\'V31'
Loui~l.'llle [{1, Hawaii Padnc n
w. wru;tung1on 60, Sa('ramPnto Sf

Carolln&lt;~ ·

NBA resulls

Massillon~- Cle. ~th 73
Mayflekl 00. Solon tiS, OT
McDonald fil . l.orrlsiCM'n 44
M('dlna Hlghlnnd 1.l Brooklyn~
Mlsslss\nawa Va ll 57, Bradford ~l'
NPW"tun 47. Tlpp Ci ty Bt•thl&gt;l &lt;l,.'j
Oak HU L~ 49. Cin. St. Xavie- r~
P 3iru:'Svllil' Han'l'Y 13, Kl11land 171
Parma 66. N. Royalton ~
PauidinR :-B. Van Wt&gt;r1 ~~
l"'ortsl'nO:luth 76, Col. MlfnJn ffi
Ru!;!lla 6-'i, An.'iOnla 4!l
Slrulht•Jii. -L1. Ywng. ChaJWy oiO
Triad i!J. W. l.ltrrty Saif111 52
\'crmllkm 57. Elyria w. 51
-wayl'l(' TraC£' 78. S1. Marys 57

Dvkf'

N.

Georli,'f' Mason !il, Ritrr 61
Wagner ffi. Utica 63

l..owellv!llf&gt; 73. Columbiana Crt'SMi'W 50
W~11•m

Carol ln&lt;~ -Wilmington ~.

Charlotlr 71

Lak(' Cath:lllc- 68. Wlc kH1fP &lt;l':.

Mat'Oil Eastern 56.

Paso 51, Arizona 49, OT

Va11d€&gt;rbUI $11, S. Fbrlda oW
TeJU~S A&amp;.M 44. Mr Fon.:e .U
S. Dakot11 IJ;, N. Dakota -ni
Mlnn:-Dututh !ji, Mlrut.-MoJTts 45
M1J..JriV:'ild SL 93, Btmktjl St . 13

Cln Mc;&gt;;lcholas fol:i. Lie Sl Jgrw,!lus 'i'l
Cle. Ek'nMictinc 63. Parma H o i~ Naml'

l.lma !1),-l.ima &amp;uh 45
Lima catholic 61 ' Lima Shawn«'

73, Robert Morrts S7

UNL\' 00, Oemson ~
Grofil"ta.~.· n R2. Marshall 71

BadgPr .l i, ~arm I Pa .l Kl'llnr,.ly .'W

N&amp;Uonul Hockey LetPe
Wi!dno;d.a)''s GlWI4!ll
IA_.troU 3. Washington 2 OT
MIIUV'SOta ~. Toronto 6
/'.'.\', Ran~rs 7, Chicago~

Boston ~- Calg-dry 3

S.V.lslanders 6. Los

A n ttl~

.'i OT

Edmontoo &lt;1, vanrouvrr 2
Thur8day'1 Garnet~
Quet.&gt;r &lt;~! Buff&lt;~lo
Detroit a\ New Jer.it'y

~7

Toronlo

.:It

1.6

4 0 8

TOlfRNAM»-'TS

Gon2&amp;~J:a

I

9 1.3
5 1.0

Ark,·Unli' R()('l( 78, Oklahoma Clry 7'l

Akron Kenmore 88, Kent Roosl-~'C' It 53
Austintown F1tch 78, Yoong. W!lson :u;t

-

St. Louis

AFTER
CHRISTMAS SALE
CONTINUES

!11.0

MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEE
PlAYER OF THE WEEKMike Chancey, six loot lour Inch
sophomore forward lor the
Marauder cagers. scored 25
points and had 9 rebounds in last
week's narrow 69-66 loss at
Alexander.

Kentucky
defeats
Perdue
By 1be Associated Press
No.15 Michigan was upset 59-58 by
Texas Tech and Michigan State
suffered an upset at the hands of
Alabama as the Crimson Tide rolled
to an. Impressive 81-69 victory over
the Spartans.
Texas Tech Coach Gerald Myers
called his team's \1ctory Wednesday night one of the biggest wins in
the school's history.
"It was a big win for us because it
came against a great team from a
great conference. We've had some
big wins ·at Texas Tech over the
years, but thismustrankupnearthe
top," Myers said.
In other games involving Big Ten

teams, No. 20 Illinois defeated Missouri 66-60; No. 18 Purdue fell to
No. 2 Kentucky 86-67; and Minn.esota beat Detroit 00-56,
· In El Paso , Quentin Anderson hita
·15-foot jump shot with six seconds
remaining to give Tech the victory
In the consolation game of the Sun
Bowl Basketball Tournament.
The final play was designed to go
to guard Bubba 'Jennings, Myers
said, "but he was covered so he ·
dished It off to the open man. Thank
God Anderson made it. "
Anderson said, " All I could think
about was making the shot. I didn't
have time to think of the pressure."
Michigan Coach Bill Frieder
pointed out that his Wolverines. 8-2,
hit only 34 percent of their field-goal
attempts.
"You can't win games when you
shoot 19 of 55 from the field, " he said.
In Atlanta, Bobby Lee Hurt hit 12
of 13 free throws as Alabama
outscored Michigan State by 20
points from the foul line in the
opening game of I he Cotton States
Classic.
Trips to the foul line dominated
the game as the Spartans were
called for 29 fouls and Alabama 18.
Alabama built a 12-point lead
midway through the first half, but
Michigan State pulled within eight
at haiftlme. A flurry at the start of
the second half brought the Spartans
within two points, but Alabama took
control and led by as many as 16late
In the game.
Hurt led Alabama with 22 points
and Buck Johnson added 19 while
Scott Skiles had 22 for the Spartans
and Sam Vincent had 13.
In Louisville, Purdue Coach Gene
Keady said the game against
Kentucky lasted only 8 minutes,
even though the players kept on
playing.
''They had a burst of scoring In the
first half that took us out of the
game," Keady sa id .

,.

STOREWIDE

·'

.-

heritage house
OF SHOES

.·

MIDDLEPORT

~!~~·~e ~~id.somebody

the first

Rles will retire as an assistant

~~e;i~~~~~~r~;~;~th:,~~~t~
1984. "Thatwayrubearoundtorthe
first three home games," he ·s ald.
The Wadsworth native, a onetim e sports writer for the Ca nton
Repository, returned to his. alma

Sports
mater inInformation
1946 and moved
Officefrom
to the
ticket office three years later.
"!would have liked tohavestayed
in sports. but I just got married In
1949 and I needed the income, " he
said, "and I was still affiliated with
sports."
Rles Is In Scottsdale with the Ohio
Sta te football team, preparing to
meet Pittsburgh In the Fiesta Bowl
Monday.
Rles helped break in two ticket
directors before he was appointed to
the head job in 1969.
But with such success, there are
headaches.

Golfing great
Demaret dies
HOUSTON (AP) - Three-time
Masters champion Jimmy Demare!, whoseflairforshowmanship
helped popularize goHas a spectator
sport in the 1940s, died while
boarding a gall cart on a course he
founded.
" I guess he died like he would have
preferred to go - not bothering
anyone," Champions Golf Club
developer Pat Morgan said Wednesday after Demaret died, at age 73, of
an apparent heart attack.
Demaret, who had suffered
recently from heari ailments, was
stricken as he worked at the
Champions club he founded in 1957
and ClHJWned with veteran pro Jack
Burke Jr., according to club
spokeswoman Laura Guillot.
.Jack Nicklaus, winner of19major
tourname nts, said, "I admired him
for his fl air and flamboyance. And I
admired his ability to keep things in
perspective in that, to Demaret, golf
was a parto!llfe,apartoflifeand not
the overriding factor of llfe.
"He's been a good friend . He was a
good man. And he will be missed."

every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Va.IJey Publishing Co mpany - Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,99221..56. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
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1979 Ford LTD ......................... $4695

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1981 Merurv Courar................. S6295

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SALE ENDS SATURDAY AT NOON

WITH 3 TOPPINGS
AND RECEIVE A

I

,.

SEE THESE SALESMEN: .

2 LITER RC FOR

Jack Hamer, Ed Slater, Gary Coon
Dallas Weber, Chat Sininger, Scott Fee

9 9¢

With Coupon
COUPON GOOD IHRU DEC. 31

OPEN 8 TO 8 DAILY, 8 TO 5 SATURDAY
CLOSED AT 12 NOON ON NEW YEAR'S EVE

oiii!N M.ONDA•r -FIIID~~ Y 11 A.
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Today&amp;

Sports World

Bowden doesn't see
high scoring affair

1981 Olds. Cutlass .................. s5995

LARGE PIZZA

The art icle for Playboy reports
that Schlichter's gambling escalated from $5 bets at a local track to
$50,00J bets with bookmakers.
Former OSU Coach Woody Hayes
signed Schlichter to OSU in 1978

Tom Landry has been on the TV screen during the past couple of weeks
more than President Reagan , Mr. T and the Muppets .
There Is one scene In which he rides up to an old Western saloon in a
wide-brimmed hat, calf-length sheepskin coat, chaps and dirty boots , gets
off his horse and strolls through the swinging doors.
"Not many people know who I am," he says In effect as he steps up to the
bar and then launches on his pitch for a well-known credit card.
Afier extolling the merits of the recognition tool, he ends by saying, "You
never know when yo~'re going to be surrounded by redskins,'' and being
engulfed by a groupo! beefy Redskins (Washington football variety) .
ThiS Is a tricky twist!or the normally dapper longtime coach of the Dallas
Cowboys who can point to a scalping by the Redskins In Texas Stadium
nearly three weeks ago for starting the Cowboys' slide out of the National
·
Football League playoffs.
Even more ironic has been the series of commercials on all the networks
which begins with a film cUp showing Drew Pearson snagging a touchdown
pass from Roger Staubach a few years ago. "Dallas wins! The Cowboys are
In the playoffs again! "screams an announcer above a roaring crowd.
"You may think football is the most Important thing in Tom Landry's
life," Intones a voice in the background. The balding Cowboy coash steps
through the door to Insist It isn'tso. The most Important thing in his llfe Is his
religious faith.
·
It's a peg for Introducing a book entitled "Power for Living," offered free
•' to thepubllc. A centerfold ad was featured in TV Guide and the commercial
was still running in the screens after Monday's 24-17loss to the Los Angeles ·
Rams which knocked the Cowboys out of the playoffs for which they had
qualified in 17 of the past 18 seasons.
It must be galling to Cowboy fans and players- not to mention Landry
himself.
Obviously, nobody expected - particularly advertisers - that the
Cowboys could be ousted so quickly. Thus, TV wasstuckwlth the 30-second,
outdated spots.
No wonder the ~ailed "America's Team" has come under such
widespread adverse criticism - not only from fickle supporters but from
the press and genera l pubUc, as well.
The Cowboys suffer from their own success. Though not indon\tnatable,
they have been football's constant- 18 straight winning seasons, p&lt;ilsed,
computerized, error-free. To lose three vltal games in a row - to the
Redsklns, 49ers and Los Angeles Rams-was unthinkable.
So what happens now?
·
High-jumper John Thomas had the answer alter falling to win his event In
the 1960 Olympics in Rome.
"Fans are fickle," he said. " They are like the spectators In the ancient
Collsseum. If you don't wlrl. it's thumbs down. They want blood. They are
cruel and Insatiable."
So who's the sacrtficlallamb for this most consistently successful NFL
franchise? Fire the only coach the Cowboys have had the last 23 years?
("I'm not quitting," Landry says 1. Sack the quarterback, Danny White,
because he threw three interceptions? Rebuild the team from scratch?
On the basis of thls one failure, some critics are demanding an infusion of
new blood. One New York crttlc writes that Landry might have lost
credlbUlty with his black players because of his political support of Jesse
Helms, the co~rvatlve senator from North Carolina.
It Is Inconceivable that the Cowboys, who have been one game away from
the Super Bowl the last three years, could have deteriorated so quickly.
It's a crazy game, built not just on strength, splrlt and savvy but also on
emotion. Much of the Cowboys' will was dampened two weeks ago when,
fired up for the RE&lt;Isklns, quarterback White changed slgn&lt;lls on a crucial
and aborted fourth down play in midfield as the normally !rnplaccable
Landry stood on the sidelines yelling "No, no! Danny, no!"
The Cowboys' flame flickered there and died. Against the 49ers and
Rams, what we had always interpreted as Dallas' tremendous poise and
cairn became nothing-more than lack of fire and spirit.

949-221 0

COME IN &amp; TAKE ADVANTAGE

mygambUng...
"1bat's not easy for me to say ...
I'm used to h!cl!ng things Uke that
Inside me and just smiling, and
saying things like, 'llearned to win
at Ohio State ... I learned character
... I learned teamwork ... "
"Now I'm lryll)g to learn how to
tell the truth. To myseH, first of all."
Schlichter's gambling became
public knowledge last April when he
turned state's evidence against fou r
Baltimore men accused of bookmaking. He has been suspended
indefinitely from the National
Football League.

'

alter his career at M!aml Trace
HighSchooL
"I admired him as a coach and a
man," Schlichter saidofHayes. " He
put me 1n ahead of a senior
quarterback named Rod Gerald.
Gerald was black, and right from
the start I had trouble with some of
m y black teammates ... and with
some of the white ones, too. It was a
veteran team .. . and I was an
18-year-old kid who didn't smoke,
didn't drink, didn't even go out for a
beer with the guys. I was a loner by
·nature, and the situation m;1de me
~en

more of a loner."

Schlichter said the situation
worsened after Hayes was fired for
strtklng a Clemson University
player who intercepted a Schlichter
pass In the 1978 Gator Bowl.
"Right from the beginning , Earle
(Bruce, Hayes' successor as OSU
head coach) and I didn't get along,"
Schlichter said. He quarterbacked
the OSU team to an unbP.aten
regular $eason, although he &lt;Udn't
throw as many passes as hewanted.
."When you're winning, you don't
rock the boat. Besides, I was being

By wm Grtmoley

·

BUY A

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,

."
•
'

•

-·

ATLANTA (AP)- Florida State
three games, runnlngfor24yardson
Coach Bobby Bowden doesn't 10 attempts and connectlrig on three
envision a hlgh-scortng affair In
of eight passes for 71 yards.
Friday's Peach Bowl against North
In addition, Florida State lost
CaroUna, despite the explosiveness starting fullback Cedric Jones for
of both o!!enses.
the season with three games
Bowden's Seminoles scored 353 remaining and No. 1 tight end TOm
points dwing a 6-5 regular season,
Wheeler and frequently used wide
Including five games In which
receiver Hassan Jones wer e injured
Florida State produced at least 40 dwing practice for the Peach Bowl,
points. North Carolina, 8-3, pro- and also are out.
duced l'l4 points, recording at least
"I'm assuming that both teams
~ In six games.
will play defense as well as they can,
" We've lost a lot of our explosive- so I'm not looking for a high-scoring
ness," Bowden said Wednesday game," said Bowden.
after practice. ''We'D have a change
"If the turnovers are kept to a
In quarterback and a new fullback mlnlnnum, I'm looking at something
for Ibis game, so our style has llke 17-7," he said, adding he did not
cluJn&amp;ed a Uttle bit."
know who would be on the winning
Bowden lost his No.1quarterback end.
KelleyLowelylatetntheseasonand
"I'd besh&lt;ickedltit'sa38-35game.
went with bea!P. Bob Davis In the I see one of us getting a coupte of
· final two games. But lor Friday's 3 breaks and winning by about 10
p.m. EST nationally televised points," said Bowden. "ADd I don't
contest at Atlanta-Fulton County . know If we can stay within 10 points
· Stadium, sqrhomore Eric Thomas of them."
wiU make his first coUeglate start at
North Carolina quarterback Scott
quarterback .
Stankavage, who passed for 1,'721
J..oweJypt dforl,T.Dyardsand yards and 16 touchdowns to comPle12 touctodtlwnS before a dislocated ment the rushing of tailbacks Ethan
!alee lol'ced tile Senior to miss two Horton and Tyrone Anthony, each of
games and play briefly In Florida's whm! rushed for more than 1,-001
53-14 JWt d. F'kll1da State In the yanls, said Wednesday the SemireaWar __ fllla1e_
nole defense, which allowed lJ9
MeiDwblle. Tlmlas played In points, really Isn't that bad . ·

treated Uke some god."
The undemdlng tlleme to the
Playboy article Is Schlichter's
displeasure with his lack oJ "passing
time" with the Buckeyes.
In his junior year, after a game
with Minnesota, when OSU threw
just 11 passes, Schlichter said, "1

talked to him on the telephone," trea t ment for compulsive
Bruce said.
gambling .
Hugh Hindman, OSU -athletic
"I began to see how other people
director, said, "Ifhlsstatementsare had created me, pushed me, molded
true, he has stated his own position. m e; howlhadn'tbeen all&lt;&gt;Wedtobe
That's the best I can say. I haven't myself," he said. "I've got to be
seen the article."
careful that I don't get too cocky . I
Schlichter also discusses his know I'm not cured."
lied. 'WhateverCoachwants,'Isald, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -'I'm behind him 100 perrent. All we
want to do Is win . That's all that
matters .' ... Inside, It was teartng
me up."
"'Areyou frustrated because you
don't throw more?' reporters would
always ask. "'Oh, no, not me.' I
never said a bad word about Earle.
I'd gohomeandscream atthetopof
my .lungs, and I'd cry . ... I was
miserable. I escaped the only way I
knew how ... gambling. Doing It to
spite people to spite everybody."
Bruee said Wednesday in Scottsdale, Ariz., where the Buckeyes are
preparing for the Fiesta Bowl, "I
haven't seen the article. I have no
comment." lie said the last time he
saw Schlichter was at practice for
theWisconslngametheweekofOct .
29 . "I haven'tseenhimsince thenar

Right Parts- The First Ti

AP Correopoadeal

Home Nat'lonal Bank

1979 Jeeo CJ-10 4X4 ............... s4395

949-3011

••
"

Three acres with a nicely constructed
concrete block home 26x60, 3 bedroomS, one bath, 12x15 living rOOm
and 24x24 family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel oil furnace with facilities for woodburner. 12x 15 block .
storage building, 20x3Q block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country setting, V2
mil.e east of Chester, Ohio.

Great for snow ~ ice.

5th &amp; Pearl

Suspended Baltimore Colts quar-·
terback Art Schlichter has told
Playboy magazine that he was
miserable while playing football at
Ohio State, though he was treated
''llke some god," and that he turned
to gambling to get away from the
pressure.
"I had to relieve the pressure, and
I did It by gambling," Schlichter said
In the first-person account ghostwrttten by . Dick Schaap for the
February edition of Playboy. "Out
at the track, I felt like a normal
person. I could sit In a corner and eat
a hot dog and drink a Coke and
giggle, and I wasn't a big football
player. I was just another horse
player."
"I was very good at lying, "
Schlichter said "It was the thing I
learned best in college. I had to hide

1972 V.W. Sedan 4 Dr.............. s1735
19.81 Chevy Pickup .................. s5795

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

40°/o OFF
20°/o TO SOo/o

theunlversltycoutdposttheposltion
and find a replacementhecoutdhelp
tratn.
"I ftgureit's ttmetostepdown, to
train somebody and steer them
. through the rough spots and rm the
football ticket orders. It's too

SPENCER'S SNACK SHACK

WOMEN'S ·DRESS SHOES

•

R!es says he announced his
retirement almost a year early so

NOW OPEN IN RACINE

ALL

SAVE

C
OUldn'tor have
the
tickets
they
wanted
couldn't
have
any a tall,"
he said.

By 'l1le Aeocle!ecl PrEM

Publish~

SCOTI'SDALE,Ariz. (AP ) -Bob
'Tmelthertheworld'smpstloved
Rtes, Ohio State University 's retir- personorthemosthated," saldRles
lng ticket director af!er 35 sea5!Jns, in reference to all or thertemands he
offers advice to his Sl!ccessor ne~ has for Ohio State football tickets.
fall .
"Durtngthebusyseason, I'llget50
"He's got to work long hours and · to 100 telephone calls each day
handle the pressure," Rtes said wanting tickets," he said.
during an interview Wednesday.
And he remembers one letter he
"It's the greatest humart relations received from an ingenious fan.
job in the world."
"The guy must have been a
R!es, 66. admits It was difficult pollt!can," Rles saki. "He was an
controlling his temper at times to alwnnus from Detroit and said the
people who demanded Ohio State Michigan game was important to
football tickets.
him. He said he knew we would
'That, indeed , was an every day always find tickets for big-wigs,
problem at Ohio State, a school that such as President Nixon. So he
ted the nation in college football wrote that he knew Nixon wasn't
attendance tor 21 of 23 seasons and coming and he wanted Nixon's
played \0 86 straight home sellouts.
tickets."
" If I had a weakness, I was too
Rles says Ohio State Is the only
abrupt," he said. "But you have to school tn the .nation with both
team to !)old it in.
spilt-season ticket sales for both
liked
bou
"The thing I dis·
most a
I
football and basketball, adding,
my job was telling people why they "And in football. we have 50

~r29, 1983

Play_b oy article says Schlichter was miserable Buckeye

I \lSI'S IU·IHMI)

A Dlvllloa of Maalllrnedla, Jac.

By George Strode

TVC.

Scoreboard ...
otOO H.S. fto3rs 8a'Ji!elball
Wtdnl!'«!a,y's Reoiults

Oliio
Sportlight

.

Meigs cage scoring
G Fg F1 Tp A' ··
.n .17 119 17.0

Thunday,

The Daily Sentinel .

Marauders meet
Warriors Friday

Pla)·er
N. Riggs .
... 7
M. Chance~· ... ........ ...... . 7
J. Carpenter ... .............. . 7
R. Wlse .......
.. .. . 1
"J. Evans ....................... 7

Thunday, December 29, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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•,

�The Daily Sentinei-Poge-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Honor roll

-Names in the news·-

Salem

Aetress faces misdemea~or charge .

The second s!x weeks grad ing period honor
roll of the Salem Center Ele mentary SChool
ha..~ been annou nced. Ma klng a grade of "B"
or above In all their subJ.ec ts to be named to
the roll were:
Ftrst grade - Jessica Cochra n, Kimberly
Janey, Mandy J ones, Tabitha Large, Patr1etc
McGuire , Susan Page, KE&gt;rry SexTon, Crystal
Vaughan, JQ:Sh Sigman.
Second grade - Matthew Clark, Jason
Ervin, J ason Geo rge, Kevin J ewell, Ullle
La mbert, Den ise Shenefi eld, And rea

BOSTON (AP) - Actress Jodie Foster, released by airport customs
officials last week after allegedly admitting she was carrying a small
amount of coca1ne, now faces a misdemeanor charge filed by the state
police.
Notice of the complaint has been sent to the actress in California, David
Rodman, a spokesm an for Suffolk County District Atlorney Newman
Flanagan, said Wednesday. It was signed bY a member of the district.
attorney's state police task force, he said.
"We hope she' ll be answering," said Rodman.
U.S. Customs officials stopped Miss Foster, 21, at the airport D€c.l9and
said She admitted a white substance found in her possession wascocaineand
paid a $100 tine. They said she was relea~ after both state and federal
authorities declined to prosecute.
Rodman says the actress, a Yale University senior best known for her
portrayal of a teen-age prostitute in the movie ''Taxi Driver," was released
"without the district atiorney's authority."
Conviction of possesston of a Class B substance, such as cocaine, In
Massachusetts carries a maximum sentence of oneyearlnprison and a fine,
·
authorities said.

McDonald .
Third grade- Allison Gannaway, Michelle
Young. Ra ndall Johnslon, Ricky Price,

'

Jessica Slivers. Lorena Olle r , Ta ra Shepherd,
Net! Barreu , Ki m Fetty, Virginia Shiller .
Fourlh grade Andrea Hale, Man

Haynes , Terry McG uire, Be&lt;.·ky Ocker man.
F ifth grade - Carr ie Scarberry, Tll\£i

Molden.
Si xth gra~ - M ary Hale, WenQy Gilkey, ·
T ammy Lambert.

Governors make food bets
GIFT FOR CARPETING - Unda PoweD on behaH of the American
Legion Auxlllary of Drew WWebflter Post 39, Pomeroy, presented a $50
check to the superintendent of the Xenia Children's Home, left. Pictured
center Is RobertMIDer, a resident of Harding A cottage.

Auxiliary attends children's home
holiday party in Xenia recently

CLUSTER RING WINNER- Margaret Johnson of Mason, W.Va.
was the winner of a diamond cluster ring In a Christmas promotion of
Clark's Jewelry Store In Pomeroy. Pictured here presenting the ring to
Mrs. Johnson is Teresa Courtney, salesperson.

Linda Powell, children and youth cottage sponsored by the local
chairman for Drew Webster Post39, auxiliary unit.
American Legion AIIXillary, and
Gifts from the DepartmentofOhio
Mrs. Iva Powell, also of the unit, .Auxiliary were distributed to the 186
attended a Christmas party given at children at the home by Santa
the Ohio Veteran's Children 's Home
assisted by the legionnalres and
at Xenia last week.
auxiliary members there. An extra ,
The two attended a dinner with gift and candy. made by Mrs . Powell/
lVlrs. Helen Hampson, District 8 were given to the boys of Harding Apresident, and one of her officers,
cottage.
Lorene Snyder:
Entertainment was provided bY a
At the party that evening, Linda · magician. After the party Linda and
Powell presented the children's
Iva Powell visited the 10 boys in
home superintendent with a check Harding cottage.
for $50 to be applied toward the
purchase of new carpeting for the
Harding A Cottage. Harding A Is the

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. ~AP) - Gov. Bob Graham is betting that the
Florid~ Gators will beat the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Gator Bowl on Friday and he s backing the bet with pecans, peanuts, honey, grapefruit, oranges
and avocados. All Florida products, of course.
It figures. The governor of Iowa Is laying on the line a "taste .of Iowa
package" to include pork chops , popcof11, corn candy, eggs, honey and
turkey.
·
'
This is a wager with a difference, however.
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad says he'll send hls products no matter how the
game turns out. And Gra ham, who has made similar wagers with other
governors in the past and actually opposes the concept of gambling
including the casino type, doesn't call his football bets bets.
'
"Challenges. They're challenges," he says.
Word of the latest "challenge" came from press secretary Steve Hull on
W~esday, as Graham vacationed In the Bahamas.

WINNER ~ Cindy Thomas, lef!. Chester, is presented a S500
diamond cluster ring which she won during the holiday promotional
progra.m of K and C Jewelers, Pomeroy. Making the presenll\11011 Is
employe, Kim Krautter Young. Other winners at the store were Bonnie
La.mbert, Pomeroy, a quartz wlltch, and Edith Barton, Pomeroy, a$100
gift certificate. No purchase was required for participation.

Calendar
SATURDAY
BEDFORD 1WP The
Bedford Township Trustees \vi.U
hold a special meeting Dec. 31 at
6 p.m. at the clerk's home. The
public Is Invited to attend .
OLIVE TI\'1' - The Olive
Township Trustees will have an
end of the year meeting Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Reedsville
fire station.
The Olive trustees organlza·
tiona! meeting for 1984 will be
held Monday at 10 a .m,. at the
fire station.

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the
Masonic Temple. All dues must
be paid by this January meeting.
SALlSBURY 1WP - The
Salisbury Township Trustees
will meet Jan. 2 at 1 p.m. at the
home of Clerk Wanda Eblin.
Laurel Cliff Road. The meeting
1s open to the public.

Happenings
OES instruction
MIDDLEPORT - The annual
25th District School of Instruction, Order of the Eastern Star,
wUI be held Jan. 6 and dinner
reservations are to be made with
Emma K. Clatworthy, 730 High
St., Middleport, prior to then.
Each reserva tlon is' to be
accompanied with a check for

$5.50.

Vance set
RACINE - A New Year's
Eve dance will be held at the
Racine American Legion Post
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Tickets are
$10 per coople, $6 for a single.
Refreshments wil be served.
1be mUBic will be provided bY
the Circle Country Ramblers.

Evangeline
soczety meets
•

The Evangeline Missionary So·
ciety of the Pomeroy ·c hurch of
Christ held a combined meeting and
Christmas party recently at the
home of Janet Venoy.
Charldine Alkire presided over
the m eeting, and roll call was
answered bY holiday themes.
Helen Miller presented the reading ' 'Christmas," while "Legend of
the Poinsettia' ' was read by
LaDcnna Clark. Mrs. Venoy contributed with "Santa Claus Gives
Gift Certificates." To conclude the
program, Mrs. Andrews, Eva
Dessauer, Eileen Bowers, Gertie
Bass, and Charidine Alkire told of
their favorite Christmases.
Betty Spencer had devotions from
.Philippians 2:2-11 and gave prayer,
followed by her treasurer's report.
Mrs. Venoy reported on the flower
fund, and Mrs. Andrews gave the
offering prayer.
A get well card was signed bY
members of the group to be sent to
Brenda Venoy.
·
The society will meet again · on
January 17 at the home of Mrs.
Andrews, with devotions to be given
by Janet Venoy.
To close the meetlng(Mrs.
Andrews led the group in prayer.
Janet Venoy served refreshments
to those mentioned and toEilzabeth
and Naomi Ohlinger. A gift exchange finished the evening's
festivities.

March of Dimes
•

·'

HolidayFdm
Developing
Special!
~-----112
EXPOSl 'RES . . S1-

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Television host Alan Thicke's "Thicke of the
Night" may (Iicker on- but then, maybe not.
Ten NBC afflliates and S..ven Metromedla stations are interested in
renewing their contracts for the late-night variety show, but publlclst Beth
Herman said Wednesday that Is not enough to guarantee its future.
Production, halted before Christmas, will be restarted only if enough
stations sign up. Ms. Herman declined to say how many that would be.
Ra tlngs for the show, which made its debut in September, have been low.

~~5 EXPOSl''RES ... .. .
1141-~XPOSL

JodleFoster

j,:=:=:=:=:=::::j 136 IOXI'tl~t;: ES ... h).4~
Professional Counseling
and
Family Services

Honor roll
Harrisonville

Woodland Centers

e

The second six weeks grading peri!XI honor
roll of 1he Harrisonville Elemen1ary School
has been announced . Making a gradE' of "B"
or aOOve In all their Sl.lbj ects to be named to
the roll were:
F irst grade Roger Arix, Billie .Jo
Butcher , Bobbl~ J o ~utcher, Beowulf Lleb·
man , Adam Sheets. Melissa Vance.

992·21 92

Stacy Hess, Brooke Howard , Shawn Ingles.
Jamie Kennedy, Ronda Raymond, Jonathan

l

~'

i

'

j

Ke nnedy, Rehecca Napper, Roberta

Flrst grade - Jannifer Dalley, Bridget
Davis, Rebecca Elliot!, Tara F owler, Royden
Hawkins, Mlsry Haye, Eric Jones, Melissa
Kingery, Lori McGhet&gt;, Sherr! Rambsurg,
Ray Russell, Michelle Ward, Tonya Will ,

Valid Dec. 26-30, 1983

86 N. 2ND AVE.

Lorrl Bumem, Meleah
Durham. Amle Elliott , Jason Evans, Kristen
Frederick, Jason Hart , Rachel Hysell , Ronnie
Hysell , Missy Jeffers, Billy Jones. Aimee
Lemley, Ci ndy McGuire, J ason MUJer , Joy
O'Brien. Scott PC'tcrson. Tonya Thornton,
Micah Malden.

•.
H0URS

MIDDLEPORT, OH

•

Third grade - Gary Adams, JennlfCr
Chasteen, Kim Conlin, Melissa Durham, Jodi

"Special Christmas Hours "

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sunday 11:00 to 8:00

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

Imboden, Amy Reynol ds, Marcia Robinson.
Missy Sisson. Sheryl Thoma. Holly Williams.
Fourth Mkanda
grade - Nicholson,
Tammy Mill«.
Musseo".
J aym&lt; l&lt;evl
Tillis.n
Marjorlta Tromm.
F1fihgrade-John Eva os . .JamesKingery.
Ryan Lemley. Derek Mlller. Eric Pelerson.
Stephanie Walker.
Sixth grade - Leah Daniels. Lisa Darsl.
Billy Ooczl. Terra SchoOnover. Natalie
Tromm, Eric Walker. Mike Walls .
Prtm. EMR- Joshua Dunkle .

-------

luncheon meeting of the March of
Dimes executive committee held
recently in the conference room of
Veterans Memortai Hospital.
The radlothon was announced for
Jan. 20 with various speakers to be
presented during kaleidoscope.
Mrs. Rcse Werry, campaign
chairman, announced that the fund
raising campaign for prevention of
birth defects will begin on New
Year's Day and cntlnue throughout
January. She noted that the March
of Dimes loo.ks to the community for
financial help and for new volun·
teers to carry on the work. Anyone
interested in assisting is asked to
contact Mrs. Werry at 992-3576 or
. 992-3219.
The newly elected Ohio State
Field Representative, Kathie
Hayden, Newark, was thereto show·
a tllm entitled "The Same Inside"
about handicapped chlldren. · She
. also brought materials pertaining to
upcomlng Meigs County Mother's
March scheduled for Jan. 28 and 29.

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FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
3&amp;2 E. -Main, Pomeroy

Your "D Florlat

Name Brand Clothing at Discount Prices
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

icdte"

STORE
HOURS
•

STORE HOURS
Monday-Saturday
9:30 A.M.-6:00P.M .

IJ

OF OH 10, INC.

Carrie WUilams.
Second gra de -

hoard of directors
the Rutland
Civic
Center
providingatwholesome
activities
lor youngorpeople
ol"'efCounty
was1npresented
lite center
•t..a D"'
Friday eveulng by the ltomlc Sounds, and the Music UnUmUed Bands.
From the left are Chuck Ewing, ltomlc Sounds; Jerry Black, hoard
member; Rusty Smith, ltomlc Sounds; Jane Wise, hoard member;
Tim Hood, Music Unlbnlted; Dick Felty, hoard member; Danny Hood,
Music Unlimited. At the front Is Mike StarT, ltomlc Sounds.

MIDDLEPORT. OH.

FRUTH PHARMACY

roll were:

CIATION - A plaque of appreciation for the work of the

VILLAGE
1
PHARMACY I

MIDDLEPORT
I--;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::;1
I

roll of the Rutland Elementary SeMel! has
been aM ouncecl. Making a gradr of "B" or
above 1n au thetr subjects to be named to the

• nPRE

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DAN'S BOOT SHOP

N&lt;:~pper.

Rutland

.~

,,., coupot t per envelope

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WESTERN BOOTS
AND WESTERN WEAR

The second six weekS grading period honor

.

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&gt;:l.~

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR

Vance, Sandy Van{l:! , Timmy Vance
Third grade- Shane Hatfield, Christopher
Neal, LessleOsoorne. Courtney Riggs. Becky
Snowden, Sonja Sta nley, Larry Va nce,
Michael Vance.
Fourth grade- Keith Hebner. Paul Sharp.
Tony Slx. Mark Stanley . . Bobby VallN',
Ronald Vance. Heather Glbeaul.
Fifth grade - Steven Martin, Mi cM ll ~
Matth("\.1/s, Aaron Sheets.
Slx1h grade - Kelly Hamilton , Da nny

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C 1 ne ga lrves on1y
1d1ng lo rr· ~n him and Slides

Fr011 •tou r

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Second Crystal
grade - Donohue,
. Megan Carman,
Chad
()('skins.
Misty Frum,

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Pomeroy

Meron Grueser, Dona}d Hall, Beth Haning,

.

:ES . .... ~3.9sl

committee
~~r~~~srr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;~~~~~~~c==~~~~
Plans for the annual fund
raising
activities were discussed at a

Completes
Course
.Pvt. Juan R. Miller, son of Risden
R. and Juanita Miller of Lakin,
W.Va. , has completed a unit and
organization supply special course
at the U.S. Army Quartermaster
School, Fort Lee, Va.
Students were trained In the
Army supply system, unit and
organization supply, fitting of clothing, packaging and storing of
supplies, and organizational main·
tenance of small arms.
He Is a 1981 graduate of Poinf
Pleasant High School, W.Va.

trtf;t

1V show's future dim

Baptist women
have gathering
with residents
The Baptist Women of the First
Southern Baptist Church recently
shared a Christmas party with the
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary.
Janet Needs, program chatrman,
presented a flannelgraph story of
the birth of Jesus. Dcnna Wilson led
In prayer and Jeannie Owen
conducted singing of several Christ·
mas carols. Kathleen Fryar, Janet
Needs, Judy Riley, and Donna
Wilson passed out gifts to each
. resideni. Punch and snacks were
served.
Attending were Josephine Mal·
lory, Betty Will, Helen Crabtree,
LeOna Martin, Etta Ellis, Maggie
Hoy, Virgil Saunders, Charles Bush,
Charles Steele, Arthur Reeves,
Thelma Grueser, Maxine Black,
Janet Needs, Sylvia Zwilling, Rhojean McClure, Jeannie Owen, Judy
Riley, Kathleen Fryar, Donna.
Wllson, Virginia Whitlatch, Denise
Michaels, Troy Zwilling, Susie
Bailey, and Larry Bailey.
The church benovolence commlt ·
tee prior to the holidays prepared
five food basketsand~fruitbaskets
which were delivered before
Christmas.

·~..-

MARGUERITE SHOES
'1he Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"

POMEROY, OHIO

•
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�Page

8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thundoy, Deoember 29, 1983

Middleport, Ohio

1983

Commission's report aids anti-Lebanon critics
WASHINGTON (AP) - A speCial Pentagon
commission's report on the Beirut !ruck bombing that
killed 241 American setvlcemen epuld prove a
Uablllty to Reagan administration attempts to defend
use of U.S. Marines In their "peacekeeping" role in
Lebanon.
The document, prepared by a five-man panel made
up mostly of retired and active--duty senior officers,
provides ammunition for critics who claim the
Marines are In Lebanon on an 111-deflned mission.
It also suggests military superiors in the chain of
command failed to change ground rules by late
summer so the Marines could "cope effectively with
the increasingly hostile environment" that culmi·
nated iri the truck bombing on Oct. 23.
. There are Indications the Issue may turn out to be a
major one In the presidential campaign ahead.
·
"The mission of the U.S. multinational force was
implicitly characterized as a peac,..keeping opera·

tlon, although 'peace--keeping' was not explicit In the
mission statement" prepared by the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, the report said.
The commission members said their Inquiry
"clearly established that perceptions of the l)asic
mission vaned at different levels of command."
The Marine commanders on the ground in Beirut
interpreted their mission to maintain a "presence" as
requiring that the U.S. contingent "be visible but not
to appear to be thl'E'atening to the populace,". the
report said.
"This concern was a factor In most decisions made
by the Marine amphibious unit commanders in the
employment and disposition of their forces," It added.
Another area In which perceptions varied, the
report said, was the Importance of the Beirut
international airport to the Manne mission and
whether the Marines had any responsibility to ensure
its operation.

ESSFUL
BUSINESS·
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!

differences regarding that mission ... shOuld have
been recognized and corrected l)y the chain of

''While aU echelons of the military chain of
command understood that the secutity of the Beirut
International alrpQrt was not a part of the mission,
perceptions of the U.S. multinational force's implicit
responsibility for airport operations varied widely,"
the report said.
·
The panel members said the U.S. ambassador to
Lebanon arid others in the State Department saw a
functioning airport "as an important 'symbolic and
practical demonstration of Lebanese sovereignty."
They also cited the statement made by Pre$ldent
Reagan on Oct. 27, four days after the truck bomb
destroyed a Marine headquarters at the airport, that
''part of their (Marine) task is to guard that airport.''
Surrimlng up the view on this point, the report said:
"The commission concludes that the 'presence'
mission was not Interpreted in the same manner by
all levels ofthechl!ln of command and that perceptual

cornrnand.''

In reviewing the way events developed trom the
time the Marines were commltied in September 1982,
the report said "It was contemplated from the outset
that the U.S. multinational force would operate In a
relatively benign environment."
Syrian forces at the time were not considered a
significant threat to the multinational force including
French, Italian and British contingents as well as the
U.S. Marines, the commission said.
However, the report said that by the end of
September - nearly a month before the truck
bombing - the situation In Lebanon had.changed so
that none of the conditions on whlch the original
Marine mission was based was still valid.
"The environment clearly was hostile," the report
said.

Ohioans at random by telephone last
October.
When asked about going out alone
during the day in their neighbor·
hoods: 96 percent said they felt "very
safe" or "reasonably safe." About
79 percent responded that they felt
very or reasonably safe when out
alone at night.
The results were roughly the
same as those from a poll of Ohioans
three years earlier, the institute
said.
The poll results also roughly
reflected previous research conducted bythestateofOhio'sOfficeof
Criminal .Justice Services in 19!ll
and 1982.'The office reported that It
found 96 percent ofOhloans felt very
or reasonably safe out alone during
CLEVELAND (AP) -The next threemonths'wilibeagood timetoapplyfor
the day, and between 78 and 83
sales or marketing jobs, because a brighter outlook for the economy has
percent considered themselves safe
companies beefing up their sales staffs, national sUtveys show.
at night.
"The economy has been building momentum for the past eight months,"
The Institute sald there are
said Alan Schonberg, president of Management Recruiters International
differences in howvariousgroupsof
Inc.
·
Ohioans view safety in their
Management Recruiters says job opportunities in sales and marketing
neighborhoods, based upon the
will continue at a strong rate into the first quarter.
latest poll results.
A poll of 943 executives showed that nearly 50 percent planned to increase
Blacks are less likely than whites
their sales or marketing staffs during the next three months. Only about 7 to feel "very safe" In their
percent said they planned to reduce sales staff size, which amounted to half . neighborhoods, particularly at
of last year's projection, Management Recruiters reported.
night, the institute said. Also,
"When the economy shows sigt) of a turnaround, business needs the
women are less likely than men to
personnel to get out and sell product, service ... Consequently, hiring in sales
feel safe alone at night, the poll
and marketing tends to run slightly ahead of other areas," Schonberg said.
found . .
The sutveys were pan of an ongoing series of quarterly polls conducted for
Older people are somewhat more
Management Recruiters by Group Attitudes Corp.
likely than younger people to feel
A sutvey of executives responsible for support staff hiring in companies
unsafe in their neighborhoods, and
across the nation showed most planned to either Increase or maintain the
those with lower faJ)lily Incomes are
size of their staffs In the first quarter of 1984.
less likely to feel saiethan those with
Nearly 25 percent of those polled said they would hire more secretaries
hlgher Incomes, the poll found .
and clerical workers during the coming three months, whlle another 69
percent said they planned to maintain staff size and just 5.7 percent were
considering reductions, according to one of three sutveys done lor
Management Recruiters.
Support staff hiring is best on the West Coast, and it is worst In the North
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohlo
Central region, the recruiting firm sa id. Job opportunities for secretaries
gets
a new law on New Year's Day
and clerical workers are most promising In the lumber and wood products
which
requires motorists to have
Industry, the finn reported.
liabllity
insurance or the equivalent
Another Management recruiters poll of about 2,100 executives
responsible for hiring in companies across the nation showed that in financial assets.
Non-compliance could lead to the
employment opportunities in the middle management rankS should
loss of driver's licenses, tags and
continue to grow in the first quarter of 1984.
Nearly 47 percent of those surveyed said they planned to expand their vehicle registrations untll financial
responsibility can be substantiated.
middle management or professional staff in the next three months,
Ohlo Highway Safety Director
continuing an upward trend that began in the second half ofl983, according
Kenneth
R. Cox said Tuesday he
to Management Recruiters.
hopes
the
statute will have some
Only 8.2 percent of the 2.100 executives polled were considering a cut in
effect
In
reducing
property dammiddle management staff during the first quarter, compared with 11.1
ages
for
which
victinns
are not
percent during the first quarter of 1983.
'
compensated.
The mountain region leads the nation in projected biting in middle
"Each year, more than 70,0CXJ
management positions, while the Midwest showed the lowest projected
motorists
are involved In traffic
Increase. About 34 percent of those sutveyed In the Midwest said they
accidents
and
can't pay for the
planned to increase their middle management or professional staff,
damage,"
Cox
said.
compared with 47 percent nationally.
"However, this (34 percent) is stili a healthy projection. " Schonberg said.
"And with only 7.8 percent in the (Midwest) region projecting staff
reductions and 57.8 percent planning to maintain staff size, it indicates a
very positive employment picture for the region during the first quarter of
1984."
SOLVANG, Call!. (AP) -A toxic
gas byproduct accidentally leaked
Into gas lines of homes In comniunl·
ties northwest of Santa Barbara on
'
Wednesday night, and at least42,00J
people were urged to evacuate,
authorities said.
Residents of rural communities in
the Santa Ynez Valley, a ranching
and resort area 125 miles northwest
of Los Angeles, were warned at
nightfall to turn off pllot lights and
leave their homes for the night , sa !d
Steve Baer, a spokesman lor the
Southern California Gas Co.
Several hours after calling for the
evacuation of Solvang, Buellton,
CINCINNATI (APl- A poll has
found that an overwhelming majority of Ohioans feel safe in their
neighborhoods both during the day
and at night.
An "Ohio Poll" by the Institute for
Policy Research at the University of
Cincinnati shows that 96 percent of
Ohioans feel safe being out alone in
their neighborhoods during the day. ·
About four out of every five people

WELL'S GARAGE

7270

..

''

Boo 113, Old Chlisu Sta., New
York, NY 10ll3. Print N..e,
Address, lip, Pattern Numbtl.

YOUR NEXT CRAFT is in our NEW
1984 NEEOLECRAFT CATALOG.
Over I70 varied designs, 3 tree
patterns. Send $1.50 ·
AU CRAfT BOOf(S• .$2.00 each
All Baolts and Catalol-acld 51N
each lol po&amp;lap and hand~ne.
135-Dols &amp; Ckrthes 01 Pllldt
134-14 Quiet Mathioe Quilb
133-FISIIlon Hamt Quiltiot

"The new law," he said, '•is
designed to get the uninsured,
financially irresponsible driver off
the road.''
While the statute does not say that
motorists are actually required to go
out and buy a liability Insurance
policy, It beefs up Ohio's old and
vague Financial Responsibility Act
by adding SpeCific penalties for .
those who have accidents without
coverage.
Penalties include suspension of
the driver's license for 90 days and
surrender of auto tags and registra·
lions until motorists provide proof,
either with an Insurance policy or
with verified personal assets, that
they are financially responsible.

The new law sets minimum limits
of responsibility. Drivers must have
at least$12,500 to cover bodily injury
or death In any single accident, and a
mlntmumof$7,500tocoverproperty
damages In each accident.
In addition, the statute provides
that when motoriSts renew their
driver's license, they must sigt) a
statement Indicating proper cover·
age is In force and will continue
throughout the coming year.
The statute says that no proof bas
to be provided at the time of initial
registrations. However, neither the
registrations, license plates, nor the
driver's license will be Issued unless .
the applicant signs the sworn
statement, under the new law.

Highway safety officials said the
law will have no effect on the vast
majority of Ohioans who already
comply with financial responsibility
requirements by having a standard
car insuranCe policy.
But owners anddtiverswhodonot
have insurance or who are not sure
should get in touch at once with a
qualitled insurance agent, officials
said.
Cox reiterated hisearlieradmoni·
lion that just ,because the new law
will be In effect Sunday, dtivers
should not be thinking about giving
up their uninsured motoriSt cover·
age. "We have laws .against
murder, butpeoplestlllmurder,"he
said.

•

MEIGS

CAB CO.
WILL OPEN

I

PH. 992-3194
992-2388

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-3383
12·29-1 mo.

~

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid '
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
I¥. M. East of Paceville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only

95

careful e!!ort to truly assess the
causes and extent of hunger In
America and what might be done to
alleviate' It," Greenstein said
Wednesday.
Dr. George G. Graham, professor
of International health and pedlat·
rics at Johns Hopkins University
and a member of the task force, said
there Is not a massive hunger
problem In the United States. There
are categories of people who are
malnourished, he sald, Including
abused and battered chlldren and
"the lonely elderly who are afraid to
Coote out." But, he said, "food Is only
part of the solution.''
. "I don't think anyone In their right
mind believes that there Is a
massive lalngerproblem," Graham
said, addiJig that although there are
malnourished children, "It Is not a
national problem."
He said of lllack children, "Their
problems are not food - they're
probably today the best-nourished

group In the United States." BlackS,
Of Greenstein's criticism, John
he said, "take care of their little Rals!an, executive director of the
children." As proof, he cited the task force, said he had no response
many blacks among athletic stars.
except to stress that some Items
Greenstein said If reports of the proposed by the panel "may get
recommendations contained In the ruled down or discussed away" l)y
draft document are accurate and the time the task Ioree meets Jan. 9
they appear In the final report, "the to fashion a final report.
result would appear to be a
significant reduction In federal food
assistance programs, probably of Must repay board
more than $1 billion over the next
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) -About
five years."
_
100
Columbus teachers will get
A task force member, John
letters this week telling them they
Driggs, chairman of the board of
Western Savings and Loan In 'must pay the Columbus Education
Phoenix and head of a national food Association $776.90 or lace action In
Small Claims Court.
bank network called Second Harv·
Sue Reuter is one teacher who
est, conflnned that the document
says she will go to court.
contained an optlon to put all federal
Starting this school year, the
child·nutrttion programs Into block
union's contract with Columbus
grants to the states. These proPublic SchOOls calls lor an "agency
grams now total $3.7 billion a yea11
shop," whlch llii!IIIIS thoSe of the
and include school lunches and
breakfasts, child-care feeding and district's 4,168 teachers who doo't
join theuntonstWmuatpayaservtce
summer feeding.
lee equal to the annual dues.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

- · 614-992-2181

Name~-------------------Addre~u.--------­

Phane----------

•

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2.-----3. _ _ _ __

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~~otiC&amp;

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JAMES W. SIITTLE. et aL,
Plaintiffl.

•••
MANNING D. WEBSTER, ot

Mall T.h ls Caupan with Remlbnce
Tile Dlllly Sllltlnel

m caurut.

PomtfOY, ~ 457"

Defendantl.
CUe No. 8J.CV·93
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

a ~s.• gns

of LP.Iia Clark:

any. whose name and address

, resui1S. MOIII!V nat refundable.

1.

Publ ir.:

HAROLD E M cG REGOR. ,1

. coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get

( )ForSate
1 )Announcement
( )For Rent

---,----.,--,----- -

llv•ng. whose address 15 unknown: the unknown spouse. tf

· Write vour DWI1 ~ •a and oroer- by mel I with ftli!

miles west of Pre$ident Reagan's
J,Tlountaln ranch complex. The
R.eagans, who are vacationing In
California, were staying at a Los
Angeles hotel.
A Southern California spokesman
said the main concern was fumes,
not the threat of explosiqns.
"We bellevelhesuspectgas Is now
contained In our pipeline system,"
said AI Pizano, the ututty' s dlstrtct
manager.
The toxic gas was identltled l)y
Pizano as hydrogen sulfide, which
normally Is removed from natural
gas before It Is dlstrtlluted to
1
customers.

10/1 9/2 mo.

and /or
dec.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

I
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PH. 992-3466

tees. admtntstrators . e~eecutors

•.--------------------

1
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EACH MOUNT· IS GIYa't THE PEJl .

SOHAL AnENTION IT DESERIJES TO
GIVE YOU A PRIZE TROPHY THAT
LAST FOR YEARS AND YEARS.

Radio D

: to S:OO ·

POiNJ-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt. 33

(304) 773·5710 - 773-51!8

CALl TOOAY FOR CURRENT f'f«CES
DEER

~D

OTH.ER

THE

TAXIDERMY
SHOP RlJTLANO. Olt.
UIIA RD.

GAME

PH . 742. 2225

I~

Mason,

.

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I·
I-

II

I
I.
I'
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1.
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II

~-~-------~--------~-- .

are unknown. d deceased. the
unknown hetrs, devtsees, legatees. admtntstrators. e~&lt;ecuto r s
and /or asstgns of Harald E
McGregor. dec
.
You are hereby not1fted that
you have been named delend·ants •n a legal act•on entttled
Jame s W Suttle, et al . Placntcffs. vs. Manncn g D. webster. et
al. . Defendants Thcs actron has
been asscgned Case No 83 ·
CV·93 and cs pendcng en the
Cammon Plf'!as Court of Mecgs
County. Ohco
The ob1ect ol the Compla cnt
cs a partctuJn ac11on concernc ng
ocl and gas r1gh ts and to qu cet
title to ocl and gas 11gh 1s
underlymg th e followcng descnbed real estate:
Sctuated en th e Town sh cp of
Lebanon. Couqty of Mecgs and
State of Ohco, bounded and
descrcbed as follows:
PARCEL NO. 1: Be1n9. Sectcon
Number Twenty-Sex (26), Town
Number Three (3) . en Range
Number Eleven (11) of the Ohco
Company's Pu rchee and des cnbed as follOW's . to-wrt. Becng
the northwest quarter of rhP.
southeast quarter of sacd secteen number twenty-sex 1261.
contamcng forty !40) acres. be
thA same more or less
PARCEL NO II· Als o the
follflw.ng descnbed property,
to-wet: Becng en sectcon number
twenty (20). town number three
(3). range number eleveri ( 11 ).
of the Ohco Company's Pur chase. and bounded as follows.
to-IMt Begtnntng ecghty rods
north of the southwest corner
of said Seclcor'l; thence north
fifty (50) rods; thence east
etghty (80) rods. thence south
fifty (50) rods; thence west
e•ghty (80) rods to the place of
bcgcnntng. contatn •ng twentvfcvr. f25) acres. more or less.

REFERENCE DEED: Volume

286. Page 809. Me1gs Coun ty
Deed Re cords.
The prayer of sacd complacnt
is that the above descrcbed oil
and gas rcghts be partctconed.
that the in ter ~sts be set off or
ordered sold 11 n cannot be
partctJoned. and for allowance
of anornev fees and costs
herecn .
You are req ucred to answer
the compla1n t w1thcn tvoentyecght days after the last publcca tcon of th1s notcce wh cc h well be
published once each week for
sex consecutcve weeks. The fast
pubhcatcon well be made on
January 19, 1984, and the
twenty-eJgh·t daYs for answer
well commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwcse respond
as required by the Ohco Rules of
Ccvil Procedure. rudgment by
default Will be rendered aga1nst
you for the relief demanded en
the Complacnt
Larry E. Spencer.
Clerk of Courts
Mecgs County
Common Pleas Court

112)15. 22. 29.itl5. 12. 19.

6tc

Harper's Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
residant. elderly person, cell

304-675-1293 .

M.L.
CONTRACTINGRECAMATION
'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL

..

949·28~0

949-2293

B A BEAUTY SHOP

No
8-l ·tlt

'

GRAVEL
HAULED

"Holiday Special"
Shampoo • Haircut
Blow Dry

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful. Custom
Buiit Garages"
Call for free siding es·
timates~ 949-2801 or

or

address IS unknown; the unknown spouse. tf any, whose
name a'n d addrP.SS are unkn own; d deceased . the unknown he1rs. de\llsees. lega-

STARTING AT

Q,.,_

When You Need Glass You Need Us ... We Can Hand.le
Your Every Glass Need!
uweWantAnd
Your Business"

$7.00
Call 949-2320
Ask for Tina Pierce

Sunday Calls
3-ll -tlc

Bauer Barber Shop will be
open all day Thursday . Dec .
29th . Happy New . Year .
Chris and John .

Giveaway

4

% Beagle &amp; % Hound, 5
weeks . old . Call 614 -266-

AL TROMM

1690 .

742-2328

6 mo . old female

10/20/t.t .n.

Thurs. -Fri.-Sat.

Collie~

Labrador miK; good with
children , great watchdog;
must give, moving . Call

446-9465 .
To a good home tan long hair
mele cat. very friendl.y . Call

446-3211 or 446 ·1422 .

CHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE
1 Mile Off Rt. 7
On St. Rt. 143
1211/1 mo. pd.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport. Ohio
1·13-tfc

Discover En11111e-A-Car. the
modem answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive ttre vehicle of your choice ... any
make and model. No down
payment Lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for Free Booklet L·l6.
Bob Blackston, an authorized independent Enpg&amp;A-Car Broker. Box 326, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614·992-6737

BUYING
BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS
DEER HIDES,

I mile below 2nd Kaiser
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr., Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney

273-3407

11 /2/lln -

Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off
Any Service
Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992·2725

17 ducks to give away.61 4-

"CUT OUT

FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
'•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS

and

4·5·tiC

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-htensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
CustQ.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gar~ges
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re -wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

15 Years Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
ll· l·tfc

985-3818 .

.

Pups to give away. Black
mixed breed . 10 ·weeks old .

614-992 -6 '/49 .
Puppies -V~
r·a br., Y2 Irish
Settler. Jwo black female
and one red m~le . 614-992·

2616.
Free to good home . Rex

rabbit . 614-985 -4134 .

SERVICE

Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
I t: 15·1 mo. pd.

Half Beagle and Registered
Bassett hound , male, 18
months old. 304-773-5540
after 4 :30 .

6

Lost and Found

LOST 6 yr. old brown , white
Collie. Clay Chapel Rd.
childrens pet . C.a11614~266 -

9393or 614·256-1317.
Losl-Sp.a ce Heater.between
Chester and Tuppers Plains.

Reward ., 614-986·3988 .
Lost beegle dog in Chester
area . 614·985-3988.
LOST red and white Beagle
with red nose. Answers to
name of Red ~ a11304-675-

2867.

LELIA CLARK . 1f liv1ng. whose

MICROWAVE
OVENS .

$289

'

'

Racine, OH.

Owner

TO ·

HOTPOINT

Task force member says hunger doesn't exist

CRASH SURVIVOR - Fourteen·yeal'&lt;)ld Brian Mink lA wdoaded
from a heUropter Wednesday at an Albuquerque hospital after rescuers
loUDd him and bJa lather aUve at the site where thlllr plane crashed
Frlda.Y niiiJI. 'lbe boy's mother, Cbarlene, died the nllht of the cruh,
au&amp;llortdes sa)', Ofllclala say Tony Mlllk and bltl-llllrVIved more lban
ftve days of sub-zero temperatures, (AP Laaerphoto).

ROGER MANLEY

al.,

DEC .. 30th

Gas leak forces community evacuation
Ballard and Los Olivos, the utility
There had been no official order
expanded the order to Vandenberg 'for people to leave their homes late
Air Force Base and Lompoc,
Wednesday night, but Santa Bar·
meaning at least 42,0CXJ people were bara County shetiff's deputies were ·
being urged to evacuate the area, prepatilng to go house--to-house,
Baer said.
urging residents to flee.
The evacuation was called after
The Incident began about noon,
.hydrogen .sulf!ae was accidentally when workers fired up the natural
dumped into a natural gas pipeline gas plant In Las Flores Canyon,
setvlng the area duting testing of a along the Pacific Coast about 25
new gas·treatment plant, the utility miles norihwest of Santa Barbara.
said.
The accident occurred at the Las
County administrative officer Flores treatment plant owned l)y
Larry Partishsaldhewas "strongly Pacific Interstate Co., a Sou!hern
urging" residents to leave their California Gas Co. supplier, Baer
homes for the night, based on the gas said.
company's recommendation.
The plant is located about eight

128-En....... PitthwtR Quilts
127·Af......... Dailies
126-Thriltr Crii!J Fkrwon
' .J25-Ptlll ~jib
124-EIIJ Grits 'n' Dmlmonts
123-Siilth 'n' Plldl Quilts
122-Stuff 'n' Puff Quilts
120-Crodlll Your Wardrebo
119-(IIJ Art al Flower Crothet
ll6-liltr Fillr Quilts
115-(IIJ Art of llipDit Crtc:hll
ll:J.Camjlltll Gilt Ileol
109-Sew+KnH llllsit tissue int~
105-lnsllnl Crothtt
101-Qullt W Collttetian I

54 Mi,c. Merchandise i

Drivers' must have insurance coverage

·-

(Formerly Lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

m?::'
·rra~s
·
130r...iant-SiliSlB-56

Cherish baby with this lux·
uriously warm, light bunting.

"~"
"'""

~

OUR SPECIAL TYt"
'

Business or Residential

The Daily Sentinel

aftemoon hitting a tree. There were no maJor
Injuries, with the driver receiving a broken ankle.
(AP Laserphoto ).

.. .,.

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport

'

-~ "AUTO GLASS

.. ---1

~~

Clifton, W .V . 304 · 773·
6873.

L ~_.

•Body &amp;Fender Repairs
•Expe~ Refinishing
*Insurance Claims
Welcome
•Free Estimates
12/15/ 1 mo.

Unlace it and bunting turn.s in·
to a carriage blanket. Mom and
baby will appreciate this prac·
tical gift. Crochet in bubbly shell
stitches of synthetic worsted.
Pattern 7270: easy directions.
$2.50 lor each pattern. Add
501 each pattern lor postage
and handling. So"' to:
Alice llrOGb Crafts · 1 ..
Roatltr Mall

'

DUPONT
UICIIE·-·-..

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

Bunting to Blanket!

BUS ACCIDENT - Rescue workers remove an
injured p"""'nger from a transit bus that skidded on
slick streets in Ft. Thomas, Ky., Wednesday

~-,

mt~IIT

AUTO

SHOP LOCALLY

Surveys predict
brighter outlook

WASHINGTON (AP) -Critics of
President Reagan's task force on
hunger say the panel appears to be
prepating a political document
"designed to exonerate Reagan
administration policies" rather
than truly assess the causes and
extent of hunger.
According to one member of the
task force, hunger is not a major
. problem In the United States and
black children may be the best
nourished In the country.
However Robert Greenstein, di·
rector of the Center on Budget and
Polley Priorttles, said the testimony
heard by the task force from around
the country was largely Ignored.
Reports of what Is contained In a
draft document prepared l)y the
task force staff "suggest that the
task force report .Is more a political
document designed to exonerate
Reagan administration policies In
the hunger area and promote
administration programs than a

..

,/ Point • Mason
r
Auto Glass

Rt. 681 West at Darwin

rr==

Vacancy: Julie's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 yean e~eperiance .

•'--

PH. 992-7844

II

3 Annolincementa :

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

Route 1
Shade, OH. 45776

Byehopplna In your home •rea you Hve on
111, the wear 1nd te1r on your Clr 1nd avoid
the .. haurda of hlchway 1nd · freew1y
tr1vellna. II PIJI to lhop where you Jive!

lntetviewed said they felt safe being
out alone at night in their
neighborhoods.
"While feelings of safety during
the day are somewhat higher than
for those at night, there does not
appear to be a great deal of fear
among Ohioans about being out
alone in their neighborhoods at
night," the institute said.
The Institute intetviewed8ffiadult

Business ·s eMces·.

'

IIM'f

Poll finds Ohioans feel safe

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

DEER
PROCESSED

$2500

CUT &amp; WRAPPED

$5.00 EXTRA
FOR SKINNING

PH. 949-2734

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

-Dozers
- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy
-Trencher

If

-Water

&amp; Scottie Smi1h

-Gas tines
-Septic Systems

All Makes and Models

LARGE or SMALL JOBS

Maplewood Lake

Ph. 986-4269
No Answer, Call 985-4382
Dewayne Williams

-Sewer

PH. 992·2478

Antenna Installat ion
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

12 9-1 mo pd

1112-1 mG -pd.

BOGGS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•Lirv1ESTONE

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

•WATER , GAS end
SEWER LINES

•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK

•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

BONDED &amp; WORK GUARANIEED

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992·7201 3·7·11

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

MINE RUN

·STRIP
COAL

$3000

PH. 992-2280

Ports &amp; Service

2·23./fc

1-3 -llc

~oger

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

Hysell

GARAGE .
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Also Transmission
· PH. 992-5682

SKATE-A-WAY

Chester, o'tl.
Open Wed .. Fri., Sat. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available for private parties Mon .. Tues., Thurs .
Nite•. Sat. or Sun. Alternoon.

THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI .. NOV. 18

or 992-7121

Or 992·5875

NOW IN

•

SALES &amp; SERVICE

3-24-tfc

§AVE

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Pomeroy, Oh.
·PARCEL SERVICE

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
U.P.S. - PUROLATOR

~DOlOR TO

DELIVERY

6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12

Gauge Shotguns
Only

YOUNG'S

S&amp;W TV ·

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Tri-County
General Welding
Salem Twp. Rd . 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew
PH. 742-2456
Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
"Your Place or Mine"
10/ 12/2 mo. rxt.

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addont and remodeling
Roofing and guner work
Conqrete work
Plumbing and electriclll
work

IFree Estimates)

Auct ion every 'tuesday
night . Pt . Pleasant. WVa .
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg ., Camden St.

61 4 ·367 · 7101 '

REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy , Ohio

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

•• f

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole

Barns.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
Long Bottom, OH . 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067
12·20·tfc

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
White's Hill Road
Rutland, OH.
(lsi Ad. left up
New Lima)

742-2789 or
742-2515
12/9/1 mo.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, Anrique &amp; liquidation sales.
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVa . 304 -773 -5785 or
304-773 -9185 .

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads o1 neW
merchandise every week.
Consigments of new and
used merchandise afw8yS
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304-27fiJ~

3069.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for lttte modal
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev .- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

446 · 3672
Wanted to buy used coat &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furniture, 446 -3159 , 3rd . &amp;..
Olive St., Gallipolis, Oh. -.
Used mobile honies and
truck campers. Call 446-

0175 .
Standing timer. will pay tOp~
· prices for red &amp; white oak.
Call 614-38 8 -990 6 after 5 ••
or anytime weekends .
•

..

Wanted to buy . New, used&amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete households . Also complete Aucti·
oneering service. Call Osby
A. Martin 614-992 ·6370 .
Buying dait;v gold. sif'Ver
coins. rings,J8welry. sterling
ware, old coins, large currency . Top prices . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Avq. •
Middleport , oh. 61 4 · 992-

3476 .

.

Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
Hides -Gi nseng, Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,
At . 2, Athens, Oh. PhonEf'

614 ·664·476t. 1 ·9 Daily .
BEDS · IRON,

BRASS

old

Furniture . gold. silver dol.
Iars, wood ice bous. stone
jars, antiques , etc . Complete
households . Write M.D.
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Oh

45769 or 614·992·7760 .

ALL STEEL &amp;

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVIC~
618 Main St.

Pomeroy,

0~.

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start Frotl) 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
' Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rltine:'Oh.
Ph. 614-143-5191
10·6·tlc .

Witt pay $160.00 and

BISSELL FLOORS
PROFESSIONAL
FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING
Keep That Natural

Look In Your Home.

CALL

378-6349

11·17 I mo.

SWEEPER end tawing me~
chine repair. perta, end
suppliet.
Pick· up end
delivery, Devil Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georgee Creek Rd .
Call

446 -0294 .

Balloons for Chrlstm11, Get
Well. Annlvernryt, · Birth·
days ponloo. Colt Botloono &amp;

Co .. 446 · 431 3 .

up lor

Meigs County stone jars and
jugs. Good condition. Coal
Ridge Salt Co.Pomeroy, W
R Dye. Harri!IOn'Vile, John
Geyer. Pomeroy, TM Hoi ~
mea,Syrecuse, H.W.Sayre.
letart Falls, Henry Seyfried.
Middleport, Micheals. Mid·
dfeport . · Any jug or jar
marked. Portland, Dexter.
langsville, Pagetown , An tiquity or Reedsville, Ohio,
All other Meigs County jara
and jugs wanted. 614-992-

2692.

�'.

Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel
9

Wanted To Buy

U

42

They'll Do It Every Time

Cash for 'uns. Shotguns,
ri flea and p1stols. All makes.
614-9"\9-2"185 .

.ntNIOR CA!lRIES
71/E. E.66S 7HE iiAflt:'
WAY'· ··· i.OOSE · •• •

Ca.ih for old books . No texts
books . Also old letters,diariaa.Ohio Ri \ier &amp; old Histori·cal materials,Hock -Hocking
books. Box 114 Athana,O hio 45701 or phone 614 593-8916 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile nome for rent . Coun.trv location. Add on room
with wood burner. 614992-2272.

51

Tho

,,, Ohio

· 0•

rK_Ir._, '_
N_'c_A_R_L_YL_E_·_·----~--b.:..y_L_ar_ry;_w_rl:.,ght

Household Goods

GOODUSED A!'PLI ANCES
Washers. dryers, refrigara ~
tors, ranges. Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446-7398 .

79

44

Apartment
for Rent

''
•

•

'

CAPTAIN EASY
"f'L. J16UNDO"
IS GOII&gt;JG TO

&amp;LOW
TOP
WITHIN I

Home
Improvements'

~=========::1==::=======1:!;.:'4;;;:;;;-;;;;;i;;';,;;;.;;d-;;;~
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.

Wanted
Will care fort he elderly in mv
home. Lots of references.
Men or women . Call 6673402 .

~~~1~ies paid , adults only. no

32 Mobile Homes
for ,S ale'

,... ~ ... Call 446i-3437.

JACKS 0 N ESTATE
A PA AT MEN TS ( E q·u a I
Housing Opportunity) has
oneandtwobedrooms, rent
starling at 8157 for one
bedroom and 8193 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
a11 ey Plaza, pool an d TV
ant. Call 446-2745 or leave
message .

Fully carpeted·, air cond: ,
dishwasher. wood burner ,
drapes , stero, refrig, &amp;
stove.otherextras. Cioseto
town on rented lot . Call
446 _3933 .
1981 14 • 70 . Shultz limited
.mobile home. microwave,
dishwasher. central air. underpenning, three bed roOms, 1% baths, excellent
condition, $16,600. Call
304-675-8049 aher 6 p.m .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Business
.Opportunity

Cigarette Oistributonhip .
Instant caah flowl We are a
Bonded national firm expanding into the area. If you
•r• seeking a secure busi-ness opportuinty. We provide all retail locations and
all necessary training. Full or
P1rt time. Investment from
82,000.00. WlnstonSalem-Koolo. 1· 800-241 · ·
2288.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED· CARS .
TRUCKS ; GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7572 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 446-7274.
1976, 12x70, total electric,
3 BR. 2 baths, ex. cond.
t6900. Call 446-0175.
1980 14x70 Fairmont Bayview. 2 bdr., 1 bath, den,
partially turn., super nlcel
C•ll446· 1018 oft..- &amp;PM.
1977 12x80 mobile hom•, 2
bdr·.• furnished, good cond.,
t7.600. Call 814- 258 ·
8818.
1975 12x80 total electric,
11&gt;1 botho, Sponloh otyle, 2
bedroom •7,000. Cell 814·
388·9837 or 448-4204.
1978 1 4x70 troll•. 3 bed;
, 2 bath1, 11rgekltchen,
:•
304·773-5023.

Full · size mattress &amp;, box
springs. 120.00 for both.
Also baby furniture . 614992-2420.

Mobile Home Moving, Li censed and Insured, Free
Estimates 81 00. per hookup minimum . Phone 304·
576-2711 or 576- 2866 .

6

New wood burning stove
with firebrick &amp;326. each.
304·676 - 1578 or 676 ·
7896. •

1 bdr. apt . Call 446·0390.

Used waaher. dryer. stoves,
refrigerator. 30 day warranty. One Baldwin organ.
double keyboard. J&amp;S Pawn
Shop. 314 Main St . Pt.
Pleasant.
Mana brown .leather coat,
london Fog. liner, 44 reg.,
coat $200 .00 sell for
$66.00, like new. Polaroid
camera with bag $10.00.
Baby playpen $10 .00. 304675-34S6.
Wood or coal bur'ning
stoves. War(ll Morning stove
with fire brick $300.00,
Heatrola small _'ls~~:
$100.00. 304· ~·o·_~•a~
after 5 :00 or weekends.
55 Building Supplies
Building materials
block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
D. Call 814-246-6121.

·IC - .
Old Colt rifle -1887. 22
caliber pump. $150. No
Sunday calls . 614 -949 ·
2801 . S150 .

Why wait? Build your own
24fh:32ft. garage or workshop, &amp;1.596. Call 1· 61 .4 ·.
886-7311.

Old coins-Indian head pen·
nies. Wheat and a'tc . No
Sunday calls . 614 -9492801 - .

Apartments . 304-6755548 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
Two story house. 4 bdr.. and Gallipolis . 614- 446 ·
$250 per mo. S260 dep . 8221 ·
req. Cell 446-4222, 9 :30- I·T-W-IN--R-IV_E_R_S_T_O_W_E_R- .
5:00 .
A partments now.ava1'Iabl eto

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12" -22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery . 614· 266 6245 .

41

LUI\IIBER- Rough cut, oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2x8 , 2x8, 1 x4,
1 x6;1 x8,1ength available. 8
foot through 14 foot. Hogg
l!o Zuspan, 304· 773-5554
daytime.

Houses for Rent

1 2x60 2 bdr. modern furniShed trailer, converihtnt
locat'ion, Upper River Rd,
deposit req . Call 614-4468668 .
Nicly furniShed modern mobile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only. Call 448-0338 .
2 bdr. mobile home panielly
furnished. C•ll 448·4292.

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Avo .. Gallipolis, 448-1899.
Spin washers, gas 8t electric
dryers, auto V'flahera, gas &amp;
electric ranges, refrigerators, TV seta.

56

Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
l!o Son. Call 446-7785.

H'ILLCREST KEI\INELS
Barding all breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446-7796.

Oak tables &amp; chairs. corner
cupboards, bl'Jffets &amp; etc.
Wood World , 2506 Grand
C8ntral Ave., Vienna, WV.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-387-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming ,
lndQor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614-388·
9790.
.

limestone delivered. 610 a
ton. Call 61 4·256-1427.
Firewood ~elivered . $35
pickup load, 10 loads $300.
Cell814-266- 1427.

Dragonwynd CatteryKennels. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan. Persian and Siamese kittens.
Call 446-3844 after 6 .

ADD -ON Woodburning furnace, auto . ·controls. water
heater included . Navar used .
$590. Ph. 6,.4· 256-1216.

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
Smith
model used can.
BUick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis. 4482282.
1980 PLYMOUTH HORIZON: 4 dr. 4 cyl. front
wheel drive, auto. trans .. air
cond. 68.480 miles, one
owner. $2960. If interested,
contlict Marold George at
the .H olzer MediCal Center,
between 8:30 a·.m . and 6
p.m . woelcdays. 446-6345 .
1987 Chysler convertible
new paint, runs perfect. Call
614-246-9278.

Solid pine twin bed com plete, axe. cond., $50. Musical potty chair $5 ·. Call
446-0066 after 6 .
Marble top coffee table, 3
table lamps, $100. Call
614· 266-6244.
1979 Hond• XR 75. Call
614· 245·5095.
Firewood cut up slabs $15
pickup load . Call 81 4-246 ·
6804.

1--------...,.-------------l

Livestock

For Ale gentile donkey
excellent Chrfltmaa preunt:
42 h. vanity &amp; dr111to. Coli
448-7331 .

.._~_;,;:..:::...J

1.

RINGLE ' S SERVICE oxpe·
rienced toofin9. including
hot tar application. carpen ter. electrician, mason . .Call
304-676-2088 or 675 ·
4660.
Water Walls. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pump• Salas 1nd Service.
304-896-3802.

20 hHd moody Cllorololo
conlo, 850 btloo hoy, loc aud Ill o Grand • ·
304·1111·4114
, 1or 304-727· 2148.

u,uo.oo.

.,
l

i

MORN IN~ MR.
RUNE I 15ti'T
NICHOLAS

YET?

YOU 'LL SE CATCHINI:i UP WITH
HIM IN OUE TIME, MISS ANNIE.

NICHOLAS? OH, NOIT'5 ALL RIGHT FOR
HIM TO HELP YOU WITH

T017AY WE WILL SEq(l'j
OUR STWY

YOUFI STUDIES ANI7
HOMEWOFIK liFTER
~7 _,--y.-,. 5CHOOL -

OF QIIRNTIJM
PI1Y6/C6,

SEAMLESS GUTIERS, One
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·
tar. (Dey 614·592-4066.1
(night 614-698-82116.)
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal,
furniture cleaning, free estimates. 304-875-2296.

JIM'S PLUMBING l!o HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Coli 814-3870576.

1981 VW Rabbit ex. cond.
Call 446· 1 266.

83

1976 AM Gremlin st1ndard
shift, good condition, $800.
o' will trade for pickup. Call
448· 2429.

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds. ditches,
baaements. etc. Call 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

1971 VW Super Beetle. Exc.
condition. $1 ,650.00. 614·
446·8064 or 446·1 387.
1975 Olds Delta 88,
$750.00. PO, PS , AM· FM 8
tr•c~ . 8760.00. 304-875·
4092.
72

Trucks for Sale

Vans

&amp;

ll.· l.'!

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 676- 1331.

76 .M ercury Qobcat wagon
loaded $760. 81 Hondo
200. 3 wh,.lor 8826. C•ll
388-9906 after 5, or any.
time wfiekenda.

78

63

!

I

Excavating

SOMI'ONE'S COMING UP
BEHIND US! MIWBE WE
CAN SIGNA.L THEM!

-

Cat.216 hoe, dozers, crane.
loaders. dump truck. Call
814-448·1 142 between
7:00AM &amp; 6 :00PM.
Good·1 Excavating, boat"
menta. footera. driveways.
septic tanka. landscaping.
Call •nvtime 446-4637,
Jama• L. Oaviaon. Jr.
owner.

2 AKC Registered male 1979 black Ford Courier
Cocker ipaniels- blonde 6 pickup, 4 apd., radio. apare J .A .R. Construction Co.
yra. old, red 3 yra., good tire, new benery. $2,695. Wa~er Linea. Fo~)tiars.
blood line, good tempera- John's Auto Sales. Bulaville Dr1ina. All kinds of Ditching.
ment. Excellent for breed • Rd. Gallipolis, Oh 46631, Rutland, Oh . 81"1-7422903.
ing . .Cell 446-9372 after 446·4782.
'
5 :30PM.
1- - - - - ' - -- - - ~~::;::::=::;::=====
1980 F 160. 302. 4x4 ohort I ·
2 registered Coon dogs. Sale bod . 49,000 mileo. Good 84
Electrical
or trade. 614-742-2304.
running condition . ·*4400. _., &amp; Refrigeration
773·5157.
------~
- ·lc57
Musical
1 974 V. ton Pick-up. 8600. P1aquale Electric Co. all
814-949- 2801 .
Instruments
phases of electric work, all
work guaranteed . Aerial
1976 Ford 'h ton truck truck rental. 814 · 446 81200. 1972-318 Dodge 4086.
1 965 Fender Mustang alec.
guitar with 3 Dimarzio pick- engine f100. 304- 675·
Home ap.,liance or electrical
ups, priced to sell, $260. 4090.
repair. Call 446-7402 after
C811 814246-9378.
1963 Ford truck with 36ft. &amp;PM.
V•iler. new anglni.
~ondo .11 banjo great for
f3.1lOO.OO. 304-578-2321 SEWING Machine repairs.
beginners, exc. cond. $76.
or
304-675·3753 oftor6:00 .6Nice. Authorized Singer
304-675-3249.
or on weekend•.
Sales a. Service Sharpen
Sciuorli . Fabric Shop,
'83 Ford R~nger, only4.000 Pomeroy . 992-2284.
59 For Sale or· Trade
mlleo, muot Mil. 304-875- I :;;:=:;==:;::::;::::::;=
1036 or 875-4568.
I·
85 General Hauling
'68 Camero for sale or trade.

2 bedroom mobile ·home.
Adults only . 61 4 · 992 ·
2698 .

!

.I

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith end
Motorola. Quazar, and
house collo. Call 676-2398
or 4"16· 2464.

R,

&amp; 4

Auto Parte
Accessories

Chevy Muncie 4 opd. trono.
1173 &amp; up Chevy truck
porto, "\x4 Chevy Luv w~h
J - front IXIO &amp; 111·38.515 mu-on 10 ln. rlmo.
no. . tNOml!ly. Coli 81"1388-1184.

,. .,.

"""· • -:.~.~-"!"!.end Bonory
e:~·
·~a uiOCI tlroo,
~·;·,;;,;;,, 11103 Jof..
•n
Ploooant.

Ave.:!!!••

.•

WINNIE
)OU CAN SEE NOW WHY

I DIDN'T .MAKE A GENEAAL

ANNOUNCeMENT OF MY
WEDDII'IG PLANS DOWNSTAIRS.

BARNEY

TWO O'CLOCK
IN TH' MORNIN'
AN' I'M STILL
WIDE AWAKE
AS A HOOTY
OWL ·

WHY DON'T

11

Water hauling, flat Service,
· lqw re1H. Coli 614-266·
1743.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim ~nler, 304-67&amp;·
'7397.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPI!OLSTERY SHOP
, 1163 Bee. An., Golllpollo.
4441·7833 or 448·1833.
\

CIJ

· News

oo m

® 111 (12)

CIJ

Eddie
llllurphy
Delirious
,
(I) MOVIE: 'The Next Man'
(]) Another life
([] All In 1he Family
!]) ·Dr. Who
•·
illJ Cloaer Look: Drunk
Driving
fl) Bon!!}' Hill Show
11 :30 D CIJ C1J Tonight Show
I]) Doble Gillis
® SportoCenter
([] Cotllno
([)Soap
8Cil Newo
(I) Lotenlght "merica

JONES BOYSWATERSER·
VICE. Call 814· 367-7471
or 614·387-0591 ,
Need aomethlng heuled
away or aomething moved1
We'll do ~ - Coli 448-3169
bttwoen 9 end 6.

6:00 . . CIJ ([) CZl fiJ ([)liD Ill
(12) Newo
(]) New Trea1ure Hi.lnt
())Caesar's Tahoe Billiards
Claoolc
(]) Little Houae on the
Prelrlo
I]) Spoces
illJ Spocoa
fll Banleotor Ooloctlc•
6 :30 0 CIJ CZl NBC Nawo .
(]) Riflemen
.,.. · ([) Ill (12) ABC News
fiJ (JJ ® CBS News
. (I) Buolneos Report
llll Over. Eeoy
7:00 D CIJ PM Megezlne
CIJ Arnorico'o Flg~re
Skaters; . Sighte. on Sara·
jevo Barry Tompkins and
Jo Jo St8rbuck host this
pr&amp;-OIYmpic exhibition .
(}) Pop Spolo: &amp;est of '83
(]) Alias Smith end Jones
Cil SportsCenter
([] Carol Burnen
(JJ Entortainment Tonight
CZl Chorllo'o Angola
1iJ (JJ Wheel of Fortune
(I) llll MacNeil/lehrer
NewahoUr
®News
II) (12) People's Court
f1l Jefferaons
7:30 D Cil Tic Toe Dough
CIJ Album Flash
([]
NBA
Basketball:
Atlanta at Cleveland ,
([) liJ Cil. Family Feud
.liD Wheel of Fortuna
II)
ilJJ Entertainment
Tonighi
@I One Day at a Tlmo
· 8:00 '0 Cil aJ Gimme a Break
The Chief finds Julie in a
rock star's hotel room and
suspects the worst. (A)
CIJ MOVIE: 'Craapshow'
(}) MOVIE: 'Crisis
at
Conlral High'
I]) I Spy
Cil NFL'a Greates1 Mo·
menta NFL'S Greatest· Moments presents 'Mighty
Men and Magic Moments .'
(JJII) ilJJ Automan
liJ Cil Pre-Game Show
CIJ Good Neighbors
® Simon &amp; Simon The Si·
mon brothers must undergo an official inquiry
n,
into one of tl'leir first cases
involving
an insurance
fraud . IRII2 hrs .)
(fil Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey lyons take a look at
what's . happening at the
moVies.
fl) MOVIE: 'The Glass
Slipper'
8:30 0 Cil aJ Memo's Family
When the punk rack band
fails to show up at the
sch qol
dance,
Mama
comes to tl'le rescue with a
stack of records from the
40's. {R)
liJ (JJ liberty Bowl: Notre
Dame vs. Boston College
CIJ Wild America
(j]) Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
9:00 U Cil aJ Cheers Sam and
Diane announce to their
friends that their romance
is on at !ast. (R)
I]) 700 Club _
® Top Rank Boxing
(]) Ill (12) Masquerade
CIJ Roundtoble
[I) Tania Maria Brazilian
jazz pianist Tania Maria,
winner of the Jazz Woman
of the Year award , is profiled .
,9:30 D ell CD Buffalo Bill
(]])New Tech Times
9:45 ([] TBS Evening News
10:00 0 Cil CZl Hill Street Blues
Capt Furillo becomes determined to capture those
responsible for an attack
on a nun and Hill and
Renko discover a man
trapped
by
bathroom
plumbing . (R) (60 min .)
CIJ Inside The I\IFL
Cil SCT'I # 3 Set at a
slightly seedy television
station in mythical Melonvilla, the outrageous co·
medy series continues with
former cast member Dave
Thomas returning in this
episode . Starring Joe Flaherty, Andrea Martin, Martin
Short. Eugene Levy.
([)Ill ilJJ 20/20
(I) Avengers
® Knots ~ndlng_ Encouraged by Abby, Cathy's attempt to lure Gary into an
affair fails when Gary rebuffs her. (60 min-t_
_IJ)l News
fi)INN News
10:30 (]) Blondle
(fi) Tony Brown's Journal
'Red Tails and Bleck Aces.'
@I Christian Children's
Fund
·

:oo o

'IOU GIT UP AN'
GO FISHIN'?

W.O.

1977 dodge von. Fully corpted &amp; cuotomod. 318,1wo
barrell, •uto,aun- roof, very
ohorp. Coll814-992·3187.

Two bedroom mobile home
12x60.near Pomeroy and
Mlddlepol'! erH. 614-992 5858.

1----------

R. G . Mayea a'n d Son, Diesel
1981 2 dr., black Chevy Service and major overChevme, 4 spd., AC, lug- hauls. Experienced in all
gage rQck. wire rims typei, diesel and gasoline
$3,196. 1980 blue Renault engines. Industrial or· auto.
LeCar 2 dr., 4 · spd .. full hydraulic and etectrial sers,u nroof.. AC, AM-FM spare vice. Located at Mason Co.
tire, $2,496. 1979 4 dr. Industrial Park, Point Pllllabrown VW Rabbitt, auto. unt . 304-676-7422.
auto.. AC, AM, sunroof. I : ; ; = = ; : = : ; = = = =
~w
baHery, new tires,
82,796. 1978 4 dr. white
Plumbing .
Chevy Nova auto. AM-FM - o. H
'
82,295. John's Auto Sales,
"' eattng
Bulaville Rd. Gallipolis, Oh
46631, 446-4782.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
1983 Honda prelude, 1981
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Honda prelude. both cars
loaded. Will consider trade. Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477
Call814-387-7486 .

73

'Furniehed, nice mobile
home. 3 bedrooms. All
electric-central air. Good
location, 1cro•• from pool in
SvrecuH. *2!10 per month ·
plue utlllti11. Deposit required. Coli 992-2859 .

Appliance Service all makes
&amp; mod'e ls refrigertors.
washers. dryers. _ ranges.
compactors, dishwashers,
microwaves. Heating &amp;
Cooling. Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia Refrigeration Co.
6, 4-448-4066.

1----------

Repossessed sewing machines by White free-arm,
zig -zag, etc . balanCe $98 or
$8 per week. Call 4469301 .

Antiq·ues, oak furniture reproduction, misc. items. Use
our Christmas layaway plan.
Conkel•. Tuppers Plains.

Pets for Sale

2 bdr. 12x60 mobile home,
furnished. $260 mo •• gaa &amp;
water paid. t 100 dep .. Call
446-8583.

Two bedroom mobile home
1 axeO,nur Pomeroy end
Middleport oru: 1114·1192·
5858.

Ground ear corn 16 .60 per
100. Sring own container.
304-676·3308 . No Sunday
sales.

New bra•• and glass fire- · --------~=
screen
28V.forx sale.
32. $300.
866. Hay, ore har d gra sa, 81 ·76
Woodburner
Call 614 • 992 • 3830 _
·
~~~ ~2 . 00 bole. 304-675·

1 room $60 week for 1
person . $70 week for 2
persona. 1 room with water bed $30 e night. Call 4462601 .

31 . Homes for Sale
4 bdr. ranc.h home, large LR,
full basement, with garage ,
wood burner included , city
schopls. 2 miles from town .
Cell 446-0276.

Bull calves, Call 304-676·
Carpet Special 25 rolls of 4308.
heavy commerical for $3.96 I-:::====;=;;==;==
sq. yd . 992 -6206 . 614· 992· I·
6113.
64 Hay &amp; Grain

v

Anvil band is now booking
Ranch on 6 acres, beautiful
parties and dances . 304· · setting with tall pineS
675-5370 .
around the houSe. Spacious Duplex. S260 plus utilities
elderly &amp; disabled Yfith an
income of less than·
livingroom which overlooks
House cleaning any type the pond. 4 bedrooms, util- Avail. now, 2 bdr .• LR, new $12.300 . Renting for 30
remod.
kit.,
&amp;
bath
.
large
Point Pleasant and vicinity
.ity' room and kitchen has a fenced yard, ne.w carpet, . percent of adjusted income·
Reasonable rate~ . Referen · built-in range. Assume pay558 3rd . Ave .. G•lllpolis. ,_
.P_h_o_n•_J_o_4_·6_7_s_._e_6_7_9_
.~
CBS . Call 304-675-3908 .
ments with a small down Call 446-2467 or 448 - , .
One bedroom partially fur·
payment . S58 ,900. Call 0332 .
nished , all Utilities paid.
446-3175 .
13
Insurance
304-675-71 12.
3bdr. house, 1Y:tbath, Rt. 7 , I-:::::========
3 BR. new brick home, land Cheshire.
$200 mo . Call lcontract. 446-0722 .
614-446-9786 8AM ·4PM.
45 Furnished Rooms
SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co . has offered
Owner Must Sell Homel Very nice 2 bdr. mobile 1- - - - - - - - - services for fire insurance Your Gainl Our Loss! One home good location near For rent Sleeping Rooms
coverage in Gallia CountY floor plan , Middleport . Call Green School. Kitchen , and light houae keeping
for almost a century . Farm, 614-992-6941 .
range , refrigerator. washer rooms. Park Central Hotel.
home and personal property
&amp; dryer, gas-heat. cen.t. air. Call446 -0766 .
,
coverages are available to · 3 bedroom ranch styled
meet individual needs . Con· home. Call 446 · 0109 after $200 mo . Call eve's 446· ' I -=;;:;:==:;=:::;;===
0254.
1tact Harry Pitchford, agent . 5 :30 .
46 Space for Rent
Phone 446-1427.
6 br, 3 fulll baths, must have
Located in Syracuse-Near ex . references. Call 614school &amp; •wimming pool. 3 294 - 8637. In Gallipolis COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
bedroom situated on one- arail .
18 Wanted to Do
Park, Route 33, North of
third acre lot . PriCe reduced
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
$23.600 . or will rent for 3 bdr. house 8186 mo .. 992-7479 .
$240 mo. 304-855-3934.
8100 dep. Call 446 -3817.
General HaUling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
House and lot for sale. Four
For Lease
and dependable. Call 446- roo-ms andd bath, enclosed Nice 2 bedroom house near 49
Eastern School district .
3159 between 9 and 5.
porch, $11 ,000.00. 2602 $160 month plus utilities.
Lincoln Avenue. 304- 676DepoSit 6160. No pets. No For Ieese, Chevron Station,
Light dozer work &amp;: lands·
5034 or 676 -4389 .
Sunday calls . 61 4 · 949 - Mason area. Good location.
caping. Kotalic L~nds c ap ­
ing . Call448-31 00 .
For · sale by owner. Four ::2;8;0::1;.;=;::::;;=
· = = = 304·676·2982 after 6pm.
bedroom home in Mason,
1
Cleaning houses, offices, W.Va. Setting on extr'alarge
~~
etc. Fee negotiable. Call lot for more information call 42 Mobile Hom9s
for
Rent
==:!l!!!!H!I!IB
•nvtime , 614· 256· 1134.
304-773·9147.

----------!

'

Furnished apts. 1-4 rm . &amp;
b8th up. Clean , no pets.
adults only. Ref . req . Call
446-1519.

2 SA Apt., 8129 mo .
USED MOBILE HOME . Utilities partially furnished .·
PHONE 304-576 -2711 .
---···· 3 bdr . hOuse for sale
bilities . Car necessary .
Leading
snack
company
sa.ooo to s1o.ooo to start . · looking for salesperson to 1970 ELCONA, 66x12. two on land contract. 675 -5104
or 675-5386. Carol Yeager
Send resume. portfolio se- ·
bedroom furnished .
lections : Planned Parent - take over distributorship in $6,495 .00 . 1969 CHAM· Realtor .
hood of Southeast Ohio. 8 immediate area . Must have
North Court Street. Athens, own truck or able to pur· PION, 60x12 two bedroom, Attic Apartment, furnished ,
chase one. Send complete 85 ,995.00. 1973 DOU · $175 utilities pd . Men only .
Ohio 45701 . Deadline : 1·
resume to Box 112, in care GLAS. 66x14 three bed· Share bath. 919 2nd Ave .,
20-84. EOE-AA .
of Gallipolis D!i'X. ~r~!&gt;u'!l!· . rooms. $7,295 .00. 1972 Gallipolis. 4 46-4416 ofter7
ELCONA double wide.
825 3rd . Ave .,
)Oils, un
Reliable person to care for 2
SHA~P. three bedrooms, p.m.
45631
.
small children in our home. ·
two batho only 812,900.00 F
· •
A
1 8R 8236
Start Jan . 3rd. Call 446 ·
delivered. Other uaedhomes
urms,ied pt .,
'
'
utilities
pd,
Adults.
243
3896 .
22 Money to Loan
on display. Must sell over Jackson Pike, Gallipolis .
stocked. D . and W . Homes,
4_4_1_6_e_fl_e_r_7_P_-_
AVON Pay your Christmas
in foot of Shodle Bridge, · _4_4_6_·_
m_.__
1
make
money
2
ways.
bills,
Phone 304-676- 4424.
Furnished
3'
rooms.
With
HOME
LOANS
FIXED
Call 446-3358 .
private: b8th. Ref. proffered.
RATES 12 V:z% purchase or
C•ll446-2215.
Babysitting in my home . refinance, 11 1A% adjustable 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
ra'le. leader Mortgage ,
$25 week, per child . Call
1 bed room Apt. S196 . mo.
Athons, 1-800-341 . 6554
446 -7402 .
includin-g utilities . Equal
36 acres at Rodney on W.T. housing oppot1unitv . ConLocal lady wanted to care for
Watson Rd. Owner financ· tact Village Manor Apts.
23
Professional
eldery lady part time. Call
ing available. CaU 446-8221 614-992-7787.
after 6 . 446-4537 or 446·
Services
after 6 weekdays':' ·
2158 .
Riverside Apts. Middleport .
36 Acres, 1f.l mila from Special rates for Senior
Excellent opportunity look·
PIANO TUNING lower hospital. Farm land or devel· Citizens. $130. Equal Housing for someone to take over
prices-regular tunings- opment , level . 637,500 . ing Opportunities . 614·
clothing business . IncludeS discounts to Senior Citizens, Call 446-0603 .
992-7721 .
inventory, fi.11. tures and supp·
Churches S. schools. Ward's
lies . 304-675-1317 or 876 Keyboard, 304-675-3824.
1f2 acre lot on Mitchell Rd . ;,1 New one bedrOom apart3217 .
mi . from hosp .. rural water, ments in Middleport. Furcity school. Cell 446 -3933 . nished and unfurnished .
Ava! lacall
614-992 -5304.
12
Situations

Stripping Furniture S. Met1l.
lnl'tant Cllh flow! Firat time
in thia area. Our expen steff
hat many veara of expa.
rience .and hat Ht up relto·
ration centers throughout
the U.S. and Europe. We
fumithed equipment. cham·
ic••· auppliea, and an .xtenaivt training courte 11 one of
our aucceteful centers near·
e1t you . Total co•t :
U2,500.00 'Bond•d' Call
Toll FrM: 1800) 241 · 2269
or write for more Info: U.S.
StrlppiOfl, 1775 Tho Exohongo, Suite 800. Allonto,
GA 30338.
'

81

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these fou r Jumbles,
one letter ·to eiich square, to form
four ordinary words.
·

12/29/83
"'

Motors
&amp; Campers

ftfi\INf~ft ~THATSCR-EDWORDOAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

THURSDAY

I~

Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets . Call
446-0338 .
.

proven
communi
cat ion initiative,
skills . ability
to· 1
21
Business
analyze-utilize data as management tool. Close cooper·
J~tive work with Director .
Opportunity
Demonstrated personnel
skill s. Supervise 7 sites, paid
and volunteer staff s8rving
I NOTICE I
5 , 000 clients : Athens ." THE OHIO VALLEY PUBbased . C1r required : Some
LISHING CO . recommends
evenings and weekend
that you do business ~ith
work . S 16,000 pl~;~s benet-· people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
ita. Send resume, name two
professional references. Kay
mail until you have investi.
Atkins, Executive Director..
gate d t he oIf ermg.
ptanned Parenthood of So.utheast Ohio. 8 North Court
Street , Atl'lens. Oh i o
45701 . Deadline: 1 -20 -84. Cigarette or VIDEO Distrib· .
EO'E· AA:
utorshipS. Routes available.
We provide money for ex· ·
pension. ~til locations, train·
Development Y2- time. Work
&amp; a BONDED staff to
ing
load fluctuates;. Work with.
volUnteers in 8 SO\ftheast assist yQu in s8tting up.your
Ohio counties . DeVelop - own part or full time busi·
ment experience. 'eXCellent ne•s . From $3 , 950 to
$50 .00 . Winston-Salem comm'u nicatioli skills re quired . Team member capa- · Kools . 1-800-241 -2268 .

21

Television
Viewing

Auto Repair

1972 . Mountain ceJnping
trailer. · 19V2 ft . Self con~
.. talned, ahower. good .condi- .
tion. 81700 . 773· 6167.

·- - - - - Cha llen ·ging Posi tio n ·
Di\'e.r ae Responsibilit ies.
Assistant Directar for Prograin. Private. non -profit,
t:omp,ehensive family plan ning agency .serving 8 SOU '
theiSt Ohio counties . B. S.
degree and health back·
ground; minimurri 2 years
superviso-ry · experience.
Demonstrated management
~bility in services delivery .
Energetic person with

n

The

EVENING

Tw o bedrt' ) Ill mobile home.
comp' te ! y fu r nished .
washn _,n .,.•. ryer , air-cond .,
C8rpeteri . Adults only, Mason, W . Va., 304-773- 5751
or 773-9520.

Help Wanted

Ohio

December 29, 1983

Persona Body Shop.Chelter
11 offering paint jobs one
color only •184.00. Body
work •1 0:00 por hour.
Jan.and Feb. only. 2-0 years
exp. 614-98&amp;-4174.

3 bedroom all electric. unfurnished IS 200 monthly.
plus electricity . Glenwood
304-576-2441 . • .

1111~1

11

..LJI_

ill M'.e.•s•!-1

PEANUTS
IZ-- 2"1

,

IF YOO DON'T HAVE A

LOVE LETTER IN
Tl-IERE FOR ME TODAY,
__

I'M GOING
IHTO

TO KICK '(OU

TilE NEXT COUNTY!!

011183llnh«tFMtln 8~ , Inc.

TllAT'S THE ONLY KINP
OF LAN6liA6E A
MAILBOX UNDERSTANDS!

.,

e ilJI Nlghtllno
. Ill Twilight ilono
11:45 Cil NFL'o Gruteot

Momento N FL'a Grenast Mo·
ments presents highlights
of Super Bowl 'XI' featur·
1,!!9 Oakland vs. Minnesota.
12:00 CIJ MOVIE: 'Six Woks'
(]) Buml &amp; Allan
(]) MOVIE: 'Doyo of W.lne
end ROHI'
Cil Nlghdlno
fiJ (JJ Program JIP
(JJ MOVIE: 'On o Cloer Day,
You Con See Forever'
.., Thlcko ol !he Night

. . ,. _

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

0

I UPCOE
f
tDUSARI

IJ I

I t1

t

WHA"TTH05E O"C'TIME V(:.TERINA~IAN5
USED TO MAKE.

IELGANT
I I I 1 J. gesled
canoon.
AnMr: "[I I I I J" r I I XX)
Now arrange tl'lit drd~ letters to
rorm lhe surprise answer. as sugby the abOve

(An~ers

· -Ye~terday · s

I

lomorrowl

JumbiOs: JOUST HENNA MALTED BUTTON
An5 wer': That blonde sure has something that'll
knock yo1..1r eye out - - -A HUSBAND

I 1M P"U, .lumblt BOok .No. 23, oont•"*'f110 I)I.IZMI, I' l¥illblt torS, .95 ptul
tlgund~ndllngtromJIIITible,cJoth6tne.-..-, lloJI34,Norwood,N..I.07848 .

~~

1\11-, •ddtua, dp cod!! •nd 11111lr.e check• ~ylbte to Newapepefboob . '

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

The defense was resting
. NORTH
+K 10 9 7

l2-2t-n

1r K 7 3
t7
+K106;4
WEST
EAST
+62
+A43
1PA!09
1rJ862
tJIOBt
tQ6~2
+AQ93
+J8

SOUTH
• QJ 8 ·~
• .Q ~4
t A K93
+7 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pass

2+

Pass

Pass

4t

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +s

By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby

II)istake. He took his ace of
trull!ps at trick one in order
to lead a second trump. Had
be ducked, ··be would have
been able to play a third
round of trumps later.
South won the second
spade in hs hand and led a
club. West made the second
mistake when he rushed to
take his ace. Then he Jed the
jack of diamonds to South's
king and South was in
control. He led a club to the
king, ruffed a club and led a
heart toward dummy .
If East held the ace of that
suit; the hand was doome~ to
defeat since he (East) would
get to lead his last trump,
but tpe good fortune made
possible by the defenders'
early errors in grabbing the
black aces too quickly was
continuing. West ducked this
time , but it made no differ·
ence.
South was in dummy with
the heart king . He ruffed
another club with his last
trump, discarded one of
dummy's hearts .on the diamond ace, ruffed a diamond

North bid too much , as
North players o(ten do, and
South found himself in a
four-spade contract that
required good breaks plus
friendly defense.
East made lhe fir st

with dummy's next-to-last
trump, used dummy 's last
trump to pick up East's last
one and made his tenth trick
with dummy's fifth club.
Then he conceded the last
!tick to West's heart ace.
(NEWSPA.PEk ENTERPRISE ASSN .) •

~
l&gt;v·THOMAS JOSEPH

2 Mine roof
3Wouk
5 Gleam; shine bestseller
4 Pronoun
10 Pale
5 Knack
12 Gaii)bling
6 Man 's
game
nickname
13 Cubic meter
7 Gordon
14 Familiar
Prange
legalism
bestseller
15 Cutdown
8 Safekeeping
1$ Prefix
space
for cycle
9 Roman poet
18 Altar
n Irritate
constel17 Caddoan
lation
Indian
19 Noted Eng.
20 Measure
surgeon
21 Distaff G.!. 23 First-rate

A(:ROSS

I Maine city

Yesterday's Answer
~4 Sky highway
30 Wife of
25 Tom of footAbraham
ball fame
34 Insect
26 Bellowed
sense
on Detroit
organ
36 Go wrong
export
29 Actor Philip 38 Blue grass

22 African

river
23 Angel (Fr. )
24 Curved tool
· 25 Julia or
Elias
26 Acclivity
27 Bastinado
28 Gold (Sp.)
29 Fondle
31 Nickname
of 1936
32 Weapon
33 Drink up
35 More coarse
37 Soap . 39 Finnish
lake
40 Cactus
41 N.H.town
42 On tiptoes
DOWN
1 Party (sl.)
12· 29

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Ia

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ia .

.·

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Singl.e lettersr , ·

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
day the code leiters are different

hinlll. Each

CRYPTOQUOTES

SOB

UHR

GHXB

I;'GHP

SPtfBEV

JGHP

ISFDPV

PGB

SYYSEPFD .LPLBV : ,

ws
LV

LDW .LXLWFHT

DSP .

0 F P·

JGBPGBE .
FVBW

JGHP

IGHDIBV GB GHW . - EL.IGHEW DLQSD
Yeslerday's Cryploquole: IT'S A GOOD ANSWER THAT
KNOWS WHEN TO STOP,-ITAlJAN PROVERB

�J

Page

Pomemy

12- The Daily Sentinel

Middle port, Ohio

Thursday, December 29, 1983

Beach Boys' drummer drowns while surfing
MARINA DELREY,Callf. (AP)

- Dennis Wilson, the druriuner for
the Beach Boys who rode the
Southern CaUfomia rock group's
wave of popularity for two decades,
drowned Wednesday whlle diving.
Hewas39.
Wi!.sQn did not resurface after
diving into the water In this seaside
LQs Angeles suburb, said sheriff's
Sgt. Leroy Chastain.
1
'He and some friends were on a
boa:t," he said. "About 4:25p.m., he
dove off the slip in a bout 12 feet of
water and he failed to com e out."
The Ha rbor Patrol was called.
and the body was recovered a t 5: 15
p.m., Chastian said. An autopsy was
scheduled for Thursday, said Bill
Gold, a spokesman for the Los

Angeles County coroner's office.
The group, which recorded such
hits as "Good Vibrations," " Calllor-.
nlaGiris" and "Surfln' U.S.A.,"wa &gt;
m ade up of WUson, his brother;
Brian and Carl, cousin Mike Love.
and Al Jardine. They turned out 35
album s,15 of them gold .
Earlier this year, Interior Secre·
tary James Watttouchedoffastorm
of . protest from their .fans including first lady Nancy Reagan
and Vice President George Bushw hen he banned the Beach Boys and
other rock groups from Washington.
D.C.'s J uly 4th celebration. The
group played in Atla ntic City, N .. J.,
on Independence Day.
Wilson had spent Wednesday day
with the owner of the saUboat,

Winton Oster, and two women, said
sheriff's Lt. Lee Davenport.
"There had been some drinking
on board the boat," Davenport said,
but added that he didn't know how
much.
"They were in good spirits ," he
said, adding that there had been no
dove into
or argument
the water, be(ore
something
wuson
he
fight
had done three times earlier In the
day without any problems.
Nicky Morris, who lives on a
nearby houseboat, Said Wi15oil
walked over to her boat a few hours
before he died and had told her he
was diving for old chairs and chains.
Wilson. whosang as well as played
the drums, was theoniy surfer in the
group in 1961 when they recorded

"Surfin' ," and talked his b rothers, Girls," then moved on to more
Love and Jardine, into changing sophisticated tunes such as "Good
their name to the Beach Boys to Vibrations" and "I Can Hear
capitalize on to the Callfornla Music."
Other songs like "Uttle Deuce
surfing craze.
Coup,"
UJ Get Around" and "Fun
Wilson's older brother, Brian.
·
Fun
Fun,"
gave the Beach Boys a
now 42, wrote the early "Surfln' ,"
Image. Although
young,
playful
"Surfin' Safari" and "Calllornla

they have recorded several albums
In recent years, none sold Uke theirs
of the 1960s.
Their most recent .releases.
"Endless Summer" and "15 Big
Ones," were both gold albums,
selling over 2 mJlllon and 1 million
copies respectively.

Inside today
By the Bend ............ Pages 1&gt;-7
ClaloUleda ............ Pages 8-fHO
Corrlle~t-TV

........ .... .....Pap 11

Deaiha ................ ....... Page 12
Editorial ..................... Page 2
Sports ................... Pages a-4-8

fr;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=~~~~~;;;;;;;;:~;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;W

Weather
Clear tonlght . Lows between 5
and 10. Mostly sunny Satu~ay.
Highs between 25 and 30. The
chance of snow Is near zero
tonight and Saturday.

e

•

' Voi.32,No.183
Copyrighted t 913

car used illegally tor spotlighting
deer.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled

Area deaths
Robert E. Reed
Unintentiona lly omitted from the
list of survivors of· Robert E. Reed.
formerly of Pomeroy, who died
Monday at the Irving Community
Hospital a t Irving, Tex., was a
sister, Mrs. Lillian R Daniels of
Vera Beach, Fla . Will iam Curtis
Reed, Sarasota, Fla., who is also
among the survivors, is a brother to
the late Mr. Reed.
·

Norma Pullins
Norma Pullins, 87, Green Acres
Nursing Hom e, Washington. C.H.,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Wednesday at the Greenfield Hospital a t Greenfield.
She was born in MeigsCountyOct .
14, 1896, a daughter of the late
Jeffrey B. and E lla Bailey Pullins.
Surviving are a sister, E thel
Smith. Toledo, five nephews and
four nieces.
Preceding her in death besides
her parents were three sisters,
Gertrude Charles, Hazel Hartung
and Marsha DeLay and a brother,
Dewey Pullins.
The body will be brought here for
burial in the Mount Hermon
Cemeterv . The Ewing Funeral
Hom e is'in charge. There will be no

visitation or funeral service here.

George M. Zu!!pan
George Martin Zuspan , 75, Mason, died Wednesday in P leasant
Valley Hospital.
BOrn Nov. 1. 19ffi in Harrison
County, he was the son of the late
George William and E mma Frances Martin Zuspa n.
He was a local businessm an.
Surviving are his wile, E rnestine;
one son. George H. of Mason; five
daughters, Mrs. Gordon (Susan )
Wine brenner of Syracuse, Mrs.
Darrell (Carolyn) Mitchell and
Mrs.Herbert (Alice) Harmon, both
of Point P leasant, Mrs. Thom as

(Ca lljerine) Mayes and Mrs. Duane
(Vera) Johnson. both of Mason: one
brother. Willlarn F . of Mason; a
s ister, Mrs. Sarah Foster of Mason;
several neices and nephews.
Funeral serv ices will be held at
the Chr istian Brethem Church at
Mason Saturday a t 1 p.m . with the
Rev. Rankin Roach and the Rev.
James Lewis officiating. )3urial will
follow in Zuspan Cem etery near
West Columbia.
Friends may ca ll at Foglesong
Funeral Home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m. Fr iday a nd one hour prior to
services at the church .

Jerry E. Nelson
Jerry Edward Nelson, 39, Rt. I ,
Bidwell (Ever green), died at 10:10
a .m. Wednesday in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born Dec. 28. 1944, at Gaillpolis,
son of the late James F. Nelson, and
Garnet Williams Nelson, who survives at Rt. 1, Bidwell , he was a
fonner employee of Huntington
Publishing Co., a ttended Ohio
Chapel Church, and was a member
of Ohio Bowhunters Association,
Jacksonville Hunters Club a nd
National Rifle Association.
He married Betty Henderson,'
who survives, on Dec. 19, 1964, a t
Gallipolis.
Also surviv ing are a da ughter ,
Kathryn, a t home; a son, J ames
E dward, at home; a ha lf-brother .
J immy of Chester; and a ha lf-sister,
Mrs . J anet Shepherd of Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at1
p.m . Saturday in Wa ugh-Halley·
Wood Funera l Home, with the Rev.
James P atterson officiating. Burial
will be in Vinton Mem orial Pa r k.
F liends m ay call at the fune ral
hom e from 6-9p.m. F riday.
Pallbearers will be Keith Miller.
Jerry Miller, Larry Arthur, Mark
Casey. Roger McBride, Don Kingery, J ack Neal and J ohnny
Simmons.

that an automobile used for "spa·
tllght!ng" deer can be ordered
forfeited to the state.
Mlchaef R. Bar ker, a resident of
West Virginia, drove an automoblle
to Ohio to hunt deer in July, 1980. A
spotlight attached to the car was
used to shine Into the eyes of the
deer, freezing them and making
them an easy tar get for the hunters.
The car , owned by Barker's
employer, J oe Holland Chevrolet,
was used without their permission.
The Court of Common Pleas for
Meigs County found Barker gu ilty
of UlegaUy killing deer and ordered
the car forfeited to the state. The
Fourth District Couli of Appeals
reversed the decis ion on the
forfeiture of the car.
The Ohio Supreme Court, In a
decision writte n by Jus tice Ra lph S.
Locher, reversed the court of
appeals' decision. The question of
law dealt with the interpretation of
the revised code which allows for
the forfeiture of any boat, net, seine,
tra p, fer ret, gun or other device
used in the unlawful taking of wild
animals .. .'' The Court ruled that
since a boat could be forfeited under
law, a car, used in much the same
ca pacity ln lllegal hunting as a boat,
could also be forfeited under the
term "other ·device." The Court
also ruled tha t the forfeiture does
not violate Joe Holland Chevrolet's
due p rocess of law. Holland argued
that the car was used for criminal
purposes without their knowledge
and consent and, thus, the forfeiture
violated their constitutional rights.
But the Court cited a 1961 case
which a llows for a municipality to
seize an aut omobile used in a
vlolation of law, even though the
owner had no knowledge of the
illegal use l;ly the diivrr.

Squadmns

Ten calls were answered by local
units Wednesday and Thursday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Serv ices reports.
At 7: 48 a .m. Thursday, the
Syracuse unit took John Harrison
from the Pomeroy Health Care
Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Wednesday ca lls included: Pomeroy, 9:30a .m., to TownshipRoad 231
for John White, to Veterans MemorIal; Pomeroy at 12:45 p.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Saturday meeting
Maude Ross, to Veterans Memor- ,
Ia!; Mlddleport,10:27 a.m .. to Route
The Olive Township Trustees w ill
124 tor Phyllis Clay, to Veter ans
have an end of the year meeting
Mem orial; Racine at 9:34a.m . to
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Reedsville
the Racine bank for Joyce Manuel,
fire station.
to Ve terans Memorial; Racine, 4:35
The OUve trustees organizational
p.m ., to Vine St., Randy Lee, to
meetingfor 1984willbeheldMonday
Veterans Memorial; Rutland, 9:58
atlOa.m . a tthe flrestation.
• a .m . to Swick Road for Jerry
Ohio lottery winners
Runyon, to Veterans Memoria l;
Rutland to College St. at 4:44 p.m.
for Adeline France, to Holzer
CLEVELAND (AP ) _ The
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at
winning number drawn Wednesday
night in the Ohio J,ottery's ' dally
10:02 a.m. to Reedsville for Nellie
gam e, "The Number, " was 273. In
Wilson, to Camden-Clark Hospital,
the " Pick 4" game, played Monday
Parkersburg, and at 2:55p.m. Ada
through Friday, the winning
Herald from ·Tuppers Plains to
Pleasant Valley Hospital_.
number Was 5349

Meigs County happenings ...
Marriage license
Todd Raymond King, 22, Va n
Wert, and J oy Lynn Compton, 28,
Pom eroy, have been issued a
m arriage license by the Meigs
County Probate Court.

Divorce granted
June Opal Johnson, Pomeroy, has
been granted a divorce from Henry
Leo J ohnson, also of Pomeroy, In the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
on grounds of gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

Veterans Memorial
royAdmitted--Paul
; Mary Ross, Michael,
Pomeroy; PomeRuth
Swartwout, Racine; Jeffrey McKinney, Racine.
Discharged-Debora White, Lawrence Ritchie.

rr::~==·:::::::::::::::·===~

Meets Tuesday

P a rtly cloudy tonight. Lows
between zero and 5 above . Mostly
sunny Fliday. Highs between 15 and
ro.The chance of SnO\'{ is 20 percent
tonight and 10 percent Friday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Fair and not as ooldSaturday and
Sunday. A ~ ol rain or 8IIOW
MomJaYI ~ghs betl&gt;eea SO and 311
Saturday• between 311 and 43Sunday
and betl&gt;een 311 and to Monday.
Lows 8I'OIIJid 10 Satunlay, betl&gt;een

IIOandZIISundayandbetw-•ZIIand
81Maatlay.

Men's Winter Jackets

PRICES ON:

Good selection of regular and extra large
sizes. Waist length and longer length style.

-Children's Knit Accessone.:.
-Junior Hang Ten
-Ladies' Cords
- Ladies' Dresses
-Junior Sportswear
&amp; Preteen
- Teens and Ladies' Leg Warmers

12131/83

POMEROY HOME ·&amp; AUTO

600 East Main Street
Phone (614) 992,2094
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

After Christmas Sale!

S29.95
SJ9.95
S49.95
ss9.95

Jackets ........ S23.95
Jackets ...... ~. s31.95
Jackets ........ '39.95
Jackets ........ S47.95
t

CHILDREN'S TOPS
Blouses, flann elshirts, knit tops, sweaters and
dress shirts. Complete range of children's sizes.

REG. S3.50 ................ SALE S2.79
REG. S5.75 ............. SALE S4.59
REG. '7.00 ................ SALE S5.59
REG. '12.00 .. :........... SALE S9.59
After Christmas Sale

CHILDREN'S ..

JUNIOR

Blouses and Sweaters

Coats ·&amp; Snowsuits

Junior sweaters include crew necks, turtle
necks, vests and V-necks in solids and designs.
Junior blouses include quality brands like Third
Generation, Underground Shirts and Stuffed
Shirts.
Dressy, casual and sporty styles.

After Christmas Sale prices on all children's
winter coats and snowsuits. Quilted styles,
fur looks, corduroys, hooded styles and
many more.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

'10.00 .............. SALE '7.99
s12.00 .............. SALE '9.59
S17.00 ............ SALE S13.59
S24.00 ............ SALE S19.19
SALE!

Complete range of sizes for little boys and
girls.
REG. 116.00 to 163.00

$}279. to $5Q39

Sa_le

Pr~cecl

After Christmas Sale!

Boys' Winter.Jackets

Men's Dress Slacks

Sizes 8 to 20. Excellent styles and colors.

Regular sizes 30 to 42. Extra large 44 to 50.
Lots of solid fashion colors.

S22.95 JACKETS .... Sl8.35
SJ4.95 JACKETS ...... S27.95
SJ9.95 JACKETS ...... SJ1.95
S49.95 JACKETS .... $39.95
After Christmas Sale

LADIES'

Winter Sleepwear
Gowns, robes, loungers, nite shirts and pajamas
Qual ity Lorra ine, Katz and Texsheen in brushed tri cot, thermal knit, flanne l and bru sh ed nylon. ·
Sizes: S to XXL and 32 to 48:

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

s8.00 .. .................SALE '6.39
su.oo ................. SALE '8.79
'18.00 ............... SALE Sl4.39
S24.00 .. .............SALE '19.19
S32.00 ............... SALE S25.59

Sale Priced
From Or11v

FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8:00
SATURDAY

9:30 TO 5:00

~ated Press Writer

After Christmas Sale

Alter Christmas Sale

Fancy blouses, tailored blouses, oxford
cloth, prints and florals.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
EXtra Sizes 38 to 46

· GOOD THRU
SAT.

- ~idlVest
By CYNTIOA GREEN

Take Advantage of Our
After Christmas Sale

Sl5.95
S19.95
S22.95
S29.95

SLACKS .......... Sll.96
SLACKS .......... S14.96
SLACKS .......... Sl7.21
SLACKS .......... S22.46

Alter Christmas Sole!

Men's and Boys' Wear
Men's Flannel Work Shirts
Van Heusen Dress Shirts
Boys' Lee Blue Denim Jeans
Men's Sport Shirts
Boys' Shirts
Men's and Boys' Tube Socks
Men's Corduroy Jeans
Men's Knit Shirts
SALE I
BOYS' WRANGLER

DENIM JEANS
Student sizes 26 to 30 waist. Boys' sizes 8 to
16 in slims and regulars. Pre·washed 14%
ounce blue denim.

Sl4.95 JEANS ......... SI0.38
Sl6.95 JEANS ..... :... $}1.68
$}8.95 JEANS ......... S}J.28

1 Sec:tiom, 1 '2 Pages

COLD IN PENSACOlA, FLA. - The weather
dropped Into the teens along the Gull Coast Friday
morning.. The wind chill factor registered 13 below

20 Centt

A M ultimedia Inc. Newspaper

temperatures hit

SAVE ON QUALITY WINTER MERCHANDISE

-Ladies' Winter Coats
-Little Girls' Sleepwear

enttne

Record subzero

'l/•'--,L

-Little Girls' Dresses
-Junior Coats
-Ladies' Coordinates
-Little Boys' Coordinates

•

y

•

LADIES' BLOUSES

Weather forecast

at

•

Alter Christmas Salel

P omeroy Village Council will
meet Tuesday, January 3, at 7: 30
p.m., rather than Monday, January
2, due to the New Year's holiday.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 30, 1983

High Court upholds car forfeiture
The Ohio Supreme Court has
upheld a Meigs County Common
P leas Court ruling which forfeited a

SUS risks perfect mar ..Page 3

and some people ke@ water running outside to create

a winter wonderland effect, as shown In picture. ( t\P
Laserphoto ).

A windy snowstorm building
drifts high enough to stop a
snowplow stranded travelers in
emergency shelters In the Pacific
Northwest today while more cold
weather records fell from the
Midwest deep into the Texas citrus
belt.
.The death toll from the big chill of
the past two weeks climbed past 430,
and the damage to fruit and
vegetable crops In Florida, Texas
and Louisiana topped S400 mllllon.
Record subzero lows were posted
this morning across the Midwest
from Indiana polis, where It was 14
below zero, to Toledo, Ohio, which
registered 10 below , and southward
into Texas, Louisiana , Mississippi
and Alabama, where the wind chill
m ade it feel like 20 below at
Huntsville with snow in the air.
Another freeze settled , on the
citrus groves and vegetable fields of
southern Texas, where damage to
crops from .an earlier freeze had
been estimated at $100 mUllan.

states

The mercury fell to 10 degrees at
San Antonio to set a new all -tlme low
m ark for December that was set
only this past Christmas Day. A
reading of 8 in Dallas broke a
66-year-old record for the date by six
degrees.
In other Texas cities this m orning,
it was Bdegrees In San Angelo, 9 in
Amarillo, 10 in Abilene, 13 1n Lufkin,
19 In Austin, 20 in Houston, 15 In
Victor ia, and 17 in El P aso.
Other cities in the Southern states
reporting bitter cold were Okla·
homa City, 3; Nashville, Tenn., 4;
and Shreveport, La., 11.
The mercury also plunged below
zero again today from the Great
Plains, were it was 14 below zero at
North Platte, Neb .. to the Great
Lakes, and freezing rain and snow
prompted w·inter storm warnings or
travel ad\'lsories across m uch of
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, northem Utah and north central
Monta na.
Authorities have placed a 10-day
embargo on the shipment of citrus
from Texas and Florida, wher.e

freeze damage to crops was
est imated at about
million .
While tha t probably will mean an
increase in the prices of produce at
the supermarket, the deep freeze
also is cost ing the consumer in other
ways. The Edison Elf'C tric Institute,
a trade organization of investor.
owned electric utilities, said consumption of electricity between
Dec. 18 and Dec. 25 increased 23
percent over the same period last
year.
ln Texas. insurance officials said
the cold spell has caused more tllan
$00 million in damage to property,
mainly from broken water pipes.
In northeastern Oregon. stretches
of the state's ma jor cast-west
hi ghway, Interstate 84. were closed
overnight because snowslides
blocked lanes in the Columbia River
Gorge and blowing snow reduced
visibility to zero along a 40-mUe
stretch from La Grande to Baker.
Stranded motorists packed into
motels, chu rches and a National
Guard armory in the two towns at
either end of !he closed portion.

s:m

Federal workers start paying Social Sec~rity
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan, members of Congress, judges and other top federal
officials will start paying Social
Security taxes Sunday as pari of the
plan enacted last year to shore up
the system's sagging finances.
Vice President George Bush and
all top political appointees will also
be required to pay the payroll tax,

along with all new federal workers
last chunk of the Reagan adminishired starting Sunday. Coverage
tration's fou r-step cut in federal
also becomes manda(ory for all
Income taxes. The fin al5 percent cut
non-profit organizations and their . leaves the typical American with a
~mployees , including -hospital and
23 percent lower tax bite than when
sehool workers.
the program began on Oct. I, 1981.
The tax rate an employee pays is
But the cut' won't show up in the
6. 7 percent on the first S37. ~ of
amount withheld from your payincome.
check . The third and final reduction
Also taking effect Sunday is the
in withholding - 10 percent - carne

Jackson leaves Germany on
,final leg for journey to Syria
By KENNETil: JAU'l'Z
As!loclaled Press Writer ..
~T. WestG&amp;many
(AP ) - Democratic presidential
contender Jesse JackSon set out
today on thefinallegofhisjourneyto
Syria, saying he was hopeful of
arranging the release of captured
U.S. Navy airman Robert 0 .
Goodman Jr.
"We certainly are hopeful,"
JackSon said when asked during his
six-hour stopover at Frankfurt
airport whether he expected to bring
Goodman back to the United States.
"The point is, If we do nothing,
nothing w1ll happen ," he told The
Associated Press. Jackson spent the
stopover resting In a VIP lounge
from his overnlght flight from New
York.
JackSon, accompanied by a
delegation ofU.S. clergymen, lertat
2 p.m. for Damascus, the SyriiiJI
capital, aboard a commercial !light.
The black civil rights leader told
reporters that neither race nor
politics played a role in his dectslon
to fly to Damascus. Goodman Is also
black.
"This ts a truly Amerl!:an matter.
I have been involved in humanlta,r·
tan missions In the past," he said.
Dllring an ABC television network
interview at the airport, Jackson
said it was "really unfair to inject
Into this dlmeruilon. If Lt.
Goodman were white, or Hispanic
or Indian or Aslan, lt would have the
same moral imperative .. . his
presencetheretsagrlmremlnderof
the low level of relations between
Syria and the u.s."

race

Pres~t Reagan has given a
cold$houldertoJackson'sinltlative,
and Syria'sdetensemlntstersaldno
release was possible while a ''state
of war" extsts:
Goodman's mother has ilven her
blessing to the trip, but his father
said Jacksoo "lhuuld be held
reaponslble" if the effort prolonged
the detentloo.
Goodman; a bombadler·

•

navigator, was wounded and captured Dec. 4when hisattackjetwas
downed during a raid on Syrian gun
positions in · Lebanon's central
mountains. The pilot of his plane
was killed.
Jackson's spokeswoman, Florence Tate, said the delegation would
be met In Damascus by someone
from the U.S. Embassy, possibly
Ambassador Robert Paganelli.
"We don't know what the program there is yet," she told The
Associated Press at the airport.
JackSon, before leaving New
York, said he had "virtual assurance" from the Syriangovenunent
that he would at least be able to meet
with Goodman, as have Paganelli,
the Red Cross, and others.
JackSon said he bad a telegram of
welcome from the Syrian govem ment,andsaldhehopedtomeetwlth
Syrian President Hafez al-Assad :
But he conceded he had . -no
assurance Goodman would be
freed, and In Damascus, Syrian
Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass
appeared to reject the possibility.
Tlass said Thursday, In an
interview with The Associated .
that a "state of war" exists
between the United States and Syria
and tbat "mllltary traditions are
thatprisonersofwarareexchanged
after tbewarends;''
At a Kennedy Airport news
conference, Jackson said, "We have
a moral obUgatlon to do something
other than stand Idly by."
Marilyn Goodman of New York,
theOler'smother,attendedthenews
conference but said she would not
accompany Jackson because "I
don't think It's my business to go,"..
She said Jackson was carryb)g a
personal letter from her to her son.
The airman's father, Robert 0 .
Goodman; ·objected ·earlier this
week to "ad hoc efforts to conduct
1ore1an policy." Jackson said the
elder Goodman called Thursday
and "offered us hJI prayers,"
In. .a telepllone
. conversatiOn
. .. . ...from
..

PresS)

~

--

his borne in York, Pa., the elder
Goodman said of J ackson's mis·
sion: "Should he be successful, he
will deserve full credit. If the
cOnsequences of his actions are that
Rob's captivity I~ prolonged, he
should be held r esponsible."
Reagan refused to return four
telephone calls from Jackson. An
aide, declining to be identified, said
Reagan did not want to lend official
approval to J ackSon's m ission.
Jackson has charged that the
Reagan administration has put too
low a priority on winning Goodman's release.
At a Washington news conference
earlier Thursda~ Jackson said he
hoped Reagan would "at least make
himself available for a debriefing
upon our return."
J ackson , sitting before a huge
"Jesse J ackSon for President 1981"
banner, said of his decision to make
the trip, "Citizens have the right to
do something or do nothing. We
choose to do something."
JackSon said 15 to 18 people were
accompanying him.

last July 1; and that mid-year to70.
Other Matters
adjustment ilCCOUnted for both last
1n other matters, Senior Reagan
January's cut as well as the
administration officials say UNupcoming drop in actual tax rates.
Other changes are in store in 1984 · ESCO is so " fa lally flawed," so
for m illions of Americans who politicized and anti-Western. that
they see vi rtually no chance it can
contribute to Social Security or draw
benefits from the $170 billion m ake the changes essential to
per suade the United States to
retirement and disability pro=arn.
Starting with benefi ts rece1ved in reverse its decision to wit hdraw.
Delegates to the United Nation s
19Sl, some retirees will have to pay
Scientific and Cultural
Educational
incom e tax on half their Social
in Par is predict the
Organiza
tion
Security for the first time. They will
expected
loss
of the large annual
be hit by the tax If their adjusted
U.S.
contribution,
now about one
gross Income, plus half their
quarter
of
UNESCO's
$200 million
benefits, plus any tax-exempt
budget,
will
force
the
agency
to trim
interest from m unicipal bonds or
Its staff. and to cut back and
other sources, exceeds $25,(0) for an
re-examine programs.
individua l or $32,(0) for a married
Som e key Reagan administra tion
couple fil ing jointly.
offi cials , complain ing of a llegedly
The 36 million beneficiaries will
runaway UNESCO budgets, say
get a 3.5 percent cost-of-living
such steps would provide at least one
increase in their Jan. 3 checks, their
dose of the strong medicine they say
first increase in 18 months. It was
is essential if UNESCO is to be
delayed six months as part of the
rescued from its own "mis managecompromise plan · to rescue the
m ent " and domination by radical
·
system .
Reagan could be both Social eleme nts led by the Soviet Union.
Jean-Pierre Cot, French delegate
Security taxpayer and beneficiary.
to the UNESCO Execut ive Council,
The law allows those 70 and older to
draw benefits regardless of incom e. said some of the U.S. complaints
Reagan, 72, became eligible last were " well founded," and "some of
January when the age at which no the criticisms are shared by
income test applies dropped from 72 France." However, the F rench

government had asked the United
States not to withdraw, offic ials in
Paris said.
"If the Americans leave , UNESCO will only be able to function
poorly," sa id Cot.
UNESCO Secretary-Gen eral
Amadou Mahtar M'Bow of Senegal
said last November that UNESCO ·
would a pply for an international
loan if the Uni ted States pulled out.
He did not_glve details of how such a
loan would be solicited or who the
lenders might be.
The Soviet Union reacted sharply
to L'le U.S. annou ncement, saying
through the official news agency
Tass that the U.S. withdrawal
displayed "imperial haughtiness."
J ean Gerard, the U.S. ambassador to UNESCO, sairlthe organization "seems to be so skewed, so far
off cotu·se, so fata.Uy flawed, that if
we stayed we would become
accomplices to something that it Is
not accomplishing the high purposes for which it was founded ."
Unless the United States acts in
the next 12 months to rescind th~
withdrawal notice it announced
Thursday, J7 years of American
participatiQn in the 161-member
agency will end officially on Dec. 31 ,
1981.

Telltale card
jails suspect
MOUNT HEALTHY, Ohio (AP)
- When pollee arrived at a
suburban Cincinnati hom e to investigate a burglary, they found a
driver's liCense, laying on the bed in
the master bedroom.
Pollce-1lave charged J ohn W.
~It, 25, of Mount Healthy - the
·owner of the driver's license - with .
aggravated burglary, a first-degree
·felony .
Pollee believe Beck used the
driver's license to force a lock on the
house's front door, then lett it on the

bed.
Beck turned himself In to Springfield Towllshlp pollee Wednesday
evenlDg In connection with the Dec.
22 burgla!y.

Jc., i

TALliS TO NEWSMEN - U.S. Presidential
candidate, Rev. J - Jackaon, lalks to newwnen at
Frankfort airport Friday during a llopover enroute to
Syria to &amp;eel&lt; releaae of captured American mer

Robert 0. GoodmjUt Jr. On left is Dr. Thebna Adair,
chairwoman of the National Church of Women
United. (AP Wirephoto).

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