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                  <text>Local Santa ·. ·
brightens
season ·page 81

Up from depression • Page 87

·Mars.hall defeats Delaware - Page C1

Delanson
page A·3

•
tm.es
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URG girls basketball
"

In GallitJ County

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The Galllli County . He~~lth ~nt gave

sh~ at the Gallla County Senior Center In
October. Nearly 300 seniors took advantage of this opportunity to protect themselves against the
Ou tbls year. We thank tbe He~~lth Department for providing this convenience.
·

Doll promotion benefits home delivered meals
The Heritage Doll and
Collectables Sbop; Court Slreet.
bas donated a F~nch Porcelain
Doll to tbe Gallla County Senior
Center as a fundralser for lhelr
Home Delivered .Meals program.
ChrisbJlas .ls ail excellent tlme to
remember those who are in need
of a bot, balanced and nutritious
meal once a day 10 maintain good
health. Donations are $1 and are
available from seniors. The doll

will be presented at noon on COmpany. Dressed in ivory with
Wednesday, December 22. You lace and roses for trim, her
need not be presenl Oo display at garments were made by .Anita
Heritage Dolls and Collectibles Le!(rer, owner of Heritage Dolls
on Court Street, ."Emilie", stands and Collectables. "Emilie" is
24" tall with porcelain bead, made from a reproduction mold
shoulder, arms and legs with a by Virginia LaVornga- an E J.
cloth body made by Pauline Jumeau reproduction circn 1903Adkins, Doll Cast and China 1914. You will want to take part
Painted by Anita Lester. Wigs, in this promotion and support
eyes, etc. are by Monique Trading your Gallia County Senior
Center!

Seniors to make signature
block quilt to give away

·Attention quilters! !!
We are asking those of you
quilters in Gallia County to piece
blocks for this charming
SignatUre Bloclt quilt. While you
are sitting. at home Ibis winter,
keep your bands busy and make
something for the center. If you
have Jmuble with •the name
embroidery, simply put your
name on a piece of paper and pin

bow they will go together.
Everyone will want to have their
name on this quilt for po~terity. It
will make a true, handmade
treasure to have for years to
come. The instructions are in the
newsletter or you may pick them
up.at the center, 1167 State Route
160. For more information, call
446-.7000.
.

it 10 your block. Someone at the
center will do it for you. We are
aslting you to have the bloclts
pieced and turned in by February
1. The quilters.will tben quilt it to
have it ready to give away for
Senior Citizens DIIY· It will be so
exciting to see·all of the differen~
bright colors and patterns and
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Gallw County Senior Center to help flood damaged senior centers

SHOWING 'OHIO CARES" .
Through the Ohio Association donations at the Gallia County
of Senior Centers, lbe Gallla Senior
1167 St. Rt. 160 or
County Senior Center is helping
senior centers in lbe stntes of
Iowa, Illinois and Missouri. ·
Because not only bas the senior ,
center, but also, the whole .
c community · and som~limes
county, been damaged, we are
asldng you 10.help other seniors
replace what their cenf,ers bad;
Wben you thil!k all6ut what YIJ!ll'
. centet means to you, remember
tbatlt•
taken ov!)r
to getbla
It wbete
it Istwenty
today,years:
and

~

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·~~~~::~~~~~;~~~~=~:~~:.:~:;!:C
c

. Hinson
Awardl and
i.t ·the ·

what it wduld take. to replace it drivers!
should a disaster , strike. Needs
. expressed have gone frool '. a
&lt;7Dtral healing systeu), tables and
chairs, wall paneling, to ltitcben
supplia. In most cases, necessary
equipment bas been replaced and
centen are having fund raisers to
pay bill4• Casb,donations will be
accepted! through ·the month of
December at the center. By

t!Jey A;lll put lhe money. back into .
. · ~ ~tlqa.!IJ'«&lt;aomy
.IIJICI buy.
sendiq a ca&amp;b donation,
wew~t
feel
. 1 • • •tl!e; ~ necesaary to repllice, ,

for more information call 4467000.

The University of JUo Gramle
Redwomen, &amp;ilia basketball ~.
recently toQk time from their busy
schedule 10 help del,lver .mealS.to.
homebound seniors. When was
the last tlme you attended a.
basketball game? The team and
their coacbes, David Smalley and _·
Kate Snyder, have invited Ga\lla
County Seniors to attend one ·of
their baskelballgarnes. We would
like to know bow many woilld be
interested in attending a URG
Redwomen basketball game. We
can plan for.a Saturday afternoon
game and possibly work out · ·
•
.•
transportation from the center. If
A ' homebound
unlor
you would be intere.sied in received • ·h11g wjtll bet ml
participating, please ,cnll the I &amp; from Uninnltj of Rio Gn~
R office, (Carolee): We appreciate Womelll! Bll!lko~ball .P.. r•r,
ibe lieljJ .and iriterest of tbe girls. . Colll,l~ Fidll.·The glr~ .(eam
Have a great se8sonll
helped deliver dloala .; d•rl~
tbelr break.

1993 Expo essay contest Area Agency on Aging•
third place-Gallia County
'·

OLD FASHIONED REMEMBRANCES
Ob what pleasure one can fmd
By looting into tbe back or his mind.
In !bose days tbings were so queer·
Compared to tbe days wbicb now are here.
Women dressed differently tben,
Trousers were worn only by tbe men I!
His bat was lipped and she was shy,
As be and she would ea&lt;;Jl other pass by.
A man was always so proud of blii vest,
And while couning a lady, he always wore bis besl
A gift be would always present to her.
True love in those &lt;lays was alwa)'s more sure.
Bathing suits in !bose days Cjii!IC 10 the knee.
And !10 mu~ of tbe back, YQU did not see! .
Her bathing suit in '!bose days alway! bad a skirtWhen she
one, she was called a flinll
Cot1011 stocltings tben satislled the desire ,
And because of tbe shoe bee!, the foot did DOl tire.
Are you alile 10 remember wheal-'·
It w;IS always "Ladies before Gentlemen".
A plain golden ring tilled the tlemand
As it was placed onto one fmger ur ber left band!
Bathtubs then Wllfll metal and nlund,
It was very·ileJdom along tub was found.
Frame homes then were IIIOil: thick,
Only a few were made of brick.
Airplanes new only a·short spalle,
..
Man·considered the road or the boat his traveling ~I
Now, everything is .turned around.
Seasons, have changed until
We don't.know wbicb js Wl)lcb.
Even With snow on the gJJJUnd.We get ille IIIOIQIIIIO itch! .
one no longer oceds, to bake tbc bread; · ·
Just·Pk* l!P dlt phOne and buy ii instead!
Untlliii,!ID wlll'cage bis ways,
·
, i Glvp.baek,lO 11K1 ,lbe "Old Fashioned Days"!!
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W..al)llo.l
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·Adult Day c.e Services PartiPpant

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Mi ddleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- December 5, 1993

. i

:GaUia·Colm~tseutorCemer•..

•h l

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T!mu·Stntlnel Staff ·
tl1eMeigsCountyCbam..
g!Onal Plannmg Dlstnct be accepiCd by the Chamber until Jan. 14. A limited
POMEROY • Plans 10 move ahead with a feasibility ber of Commerce vOted
We are taking a step forward In this long to dec• de 00 needed ac- nun:'ber of the proposals will be heanl on Jan. 2 I, and a
study for. site development of the :JlfOposed Great Bend to hire a consultant to process... we now have state county and ~100 10 move the proJect dec1s1on IS expected 10 be made larerthatday, it was noted.
mdustrialparlcweremadeatameeiingFridayoflocaland conduct the feasibility I
I
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orn;:rrd.
.
The consullam who IS hired will then be expected 10
State officialsattheMeigsCounty Chamber of Commerce study.
· 008 people working together toward the
Weare taking a step present the findings of the feasibilily study in early Mareh
office.
Chamber and other completion ofthis project."
forw~d ~n this long pro· 1994.
. .
The site, owned byCol~mbus SouthemPower,consisis local officials met with
Meigs Commissioner ~ess, said Meigs County
The study 1s bemg funded through a grant from the Ohio
of approximately 1,266 acres in Meigs County along th~ representatives from tbe
Janet H
d
ommiS~JOner Janet Dcpanmem of Development, it was reported.
OhioRiverandwasoriginallypurchasedbythatcompany · Ohio Department of De·
owar
Howard. We now have
The consuham w1U wort under the direction of memas a potenlial"location fj&gt;r a generating station.
velopment, the Ohio Destate, count~ and local bers of the Great Bend industrial site group and Tom
Columbus Soulbeni Power bas o(fered the acreage to partment of Transportation American Electric Power 10 ard th
f th people working together Closson of the Buckeye Hills Regional Planning District
1 .
Melgs County for possible industrial park developmenL Columbus Southern Power 'and tbe Buckeye Hills Re~
ieques~cf~~ppr~pouosan1s rrom
IS proJCCL" I
I
.
The Jan. 21 meeting is scheduled for 10:00 a.m., with
potenua consu lanlS w1 11 the Iocauon to be announced later.
·

°

Church ·project gives
bears ·to officers
for distresseda youth
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Santa Claus

comes to town

POMEROY - Something to cuddle during crls1s situation can sooth a
distressed child,
Something -like a teddy bear.
It was with that in mind that United Methodist Women decided to take on
a project or providing bears for law en·
forcement officers.
Several dozen of
all kinds of bears
contributed by loc&lt;U
church women have
already been given
.out by .the Meigs
County Sheriff' sDe·
partment and the
Pomeroy
and

. .

t.a-8orc:o..--...

~EDDY BEARS FOR TO'I'S ·Law enforcement
•ol'f'JC~rs are finding pifnty or uses ror teddy bears

!them ~~own' ,
·county
James
Friday as
h,e fCCpted several
mQ,IC' of the cuddly
cr~atures
from
Bejnice Carpenter.
Icc~ project chair·

belnR contributed totbeirdepartmentsby the United
Methodist Women or Meigs County. Sheriff J11mes
Silulsliy, pictured ·bere ~th Bernice Carpenter,
UMW project chairman, accepts several more bears man.
which hisclepartment uses to calm children caught in
S?uisby said that
a crisis situation.
w~en going into a
·
· dom,estic or other
uau111atic situation, having a bear to hand to a youngster can help relieve the
child's tension by taking their attention away from some of the unpleasant
things that are going on around them.
·
"It's really worts 10 calm down·the ltids and that's a big.help to us," said
Soulsl/y.
Mrs. Carpenter,asshepherdess of the Meigs County women's units and vice
president {)f the Athens District UMW, says she is now hoping to be able to
.. expand the program.

BACK IN TOWN -It wasn't quite the night before Christmas, but
Santa Claus was back in town anyway for the Gallipolis Christmas
parade that worked its way through the downtown area Saturday. The
parade, co-sponsored by the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association
and the Kiwanis Club, included 59 units.

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Merchant sees break-in .
as symptorr- of hard times~
lack of police protection
By JAMES LONG

Tim•&amp;-Sanllnel Ne.ws Staff
•
GALLIPOLIS- A merchant who lost two high-ticket items wben hiuiOlie
was brolcen in10 last week blames a lack of police protection and said be will
be forced 10 tum his business IRCI'dortress.
Burglars busted out two front wlndows at Brunicardi's,.tnusic srore, 33o
Second Ave .. stealing an elecaiO iuitar and sound mixer. 1litore owner Jolin
Brunicardi is disgruntled ·
·
,
over what he said is the
"It's getting down to where yo~
third break-in at his business in five years.
almost have to have a ciJN block~
"It's getting down to
where you almost have 10 with bars on the wlnddws and
haveacellblock, with bars
on the windows and doors ...lsn't that sad to ~ve thaf
doors," he said. "Isn't that In a nice town like this?"
•
sad to have that in a nice
Store
owner
John
8runlcardt
10wn like this?"
Several other downtown shop-owners re,
ported that intruders had lried to enter their businesses around the t.ime'of tiJe
hit.onJI)e music storf. Gallipolis police sai~ th~ nig~t's criminal qvity..- .
likely an isolated incident.
··
Brunicardi cited several possible reasons for the au.-cks on his stOOl,
including the influx of strangers inJo the area, a rise in unemployment and the
visibility of Brunicardi 's. ln 21 years of operating on Court Street, Brunicanil'
said, the music store was never robbed.
'
But the biggest problem, he said, is the inadequate number of offiCCI's
employed by the police department.
• ·
"If the city commission would put out more money and add 10 the police
force, it could stop-maybe if we had more jobs and pollee, things might get
better," he said. "But I personally think things are going to get·worse.• •
Because of this, the store owner said he will try harder to protect himselfity
increasing security at Brunicardi 's.
Each store on Second Avenue borders 2 l/2alley, which runs from Court to
Slate street; this is where Brunicardi had his burglar alarm installed. But after
last week's robbery, new security measures will include installing bars 011
windows in the front of the store.
- ·
"I'm going to make it so next time they have to get in with a hack saw" lie '
said. "''m going to m~e them wort for it."
' :·
According 10 Gallipolis Police SgL Keith Elliott, the city force has lost six'
men in the last!O years. He said police still try to keep an officer downtOwn
and on the nonh end at all times but when calls mount up it is sometimes 001
Continued on page A2

Lawsuit may determine fate of southeastern Ohio schools~
iaxes on local sources, leading 10 vast disparities between
Tlm..·Stn1Jn81 News Stall
rich and poor districts, said Phillis, director of the Ohio
.· POMEROY- MeigsCount}o Schools can only win if an Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Funding.
Five school districts are seeking a coun order in Perry
·equity'lawsuit in an eastern Ohio county court sue&lt;:eeds,
~superintendents and school officials said recently.
County Common Pleas Court to overturn the slate's sys. · · AS the lawsuit enters its, 30tl) and last week, these tern for fmancing public schools.
. . officials anxiou$Ly await a decision- which could be two · Ohio has slipped in the pQrtion of money it spends on
·months away'- that could d~lne the destiny of south- Schools, according 10 a press release by the equity ooalieast Ohio !ichools, said William Phillis, leader of the fight lion. Ohio ranks 23rd in income, while it only stands at
· 10 equalize school funding.
.
38tb in percent of income spent for public education,
' '"In Ohio,ltids are a prisoner of geography," Phillis told according 10 a press release from tbe coalition.
,T.he Dally Sendnel Ibis week in a telephone interview. "If
As the state's funding of schools has declined in recent
you're in poor property district you 1\utomatically have years, lp taxpayers have had to burden more school
virtually no opportunities." ·
costs, the release stated.
The current. funding of schools places the burden of
Fun~ing from fiscal year 1983 to 1995 rose 95 percent,
By G.EORGE AII:ATE

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Vo l 28, No. 41

2!!!~~1S studyJ;,!!ns for ·Great Bend .industrial park

wore

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MAUWALKER
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A Multimedia Inc ., Newspaper

D_~EMBER,1993

RIVER CURRENTS FOR SENIOR CrriZENS

PAGE EIGIIT

a

Grant will allow for full operation ·
of .county..wide recycling program

.-N-----:.~----___;;_..._

ews capsules
Deer hunter dies of

By JAMES LONG

while other entitlements skyrocketed, the release stated.
Medicaid budgets jumped 246 percent during the same
time span.
Education spending is an investment in the future,
Phillis added.
''People are going to be either tax payers or tax eaters,"
he said. "When you look around tJ!e welfare lines and the
jails you see uneducated people.~
Phillis said the money for tbe increased spending for
schools would come from tbe otber entitlements- wei·
fare and prisons.
"The very institution that can tum the welfare and
prisons around has its funding going down and down," he
said.
The state could change funding of:

• facilities;
• technology;
• increase all school funding;
•
• and formulas for local property tax .
· •
Whichever side wins in coun, an appeal to tbe state
appeals cowt .will ensue, Phillis added.
•
MEIGS-COUNTY SCHOOLS
Meigs Couniy !Ciiools
of the poorest disiri(;is
in the state, county superintendent John Riebel said :
"Adequacy and equity is not available to soudleMi·
Ohio. W,,e need achan~e and we should benefit froin
chal)ge, R1ebel said. We struggle to provide the mini
mum and certainly .not the extras."
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Local people are already Uliled 10 the limit, so m~·
Contlnu·ad on PilOt! A2
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GOOD MORNING

. . - - - - - - - - . Gallipolis man charged ~T-od_a_y-:-'s_T;;;;im;;;;e;;;;s-S;;;;enti::.=,e=,:::

nmeti-Sentllwl News Stall
With attempted murder
apparent heart aturck
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County's offiCe of litter prevention and recycling
recently secured a slate grant that will allow them to fully opera1e the countyGALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man
PORTLAND - A Lorain man in
wide recy~lmg program once mote, Direc10r Terry Hemby said . .
was charged Friday with two counts of
Meigs County to deer hunt died of an
The Oh1o Department of Natural Resources Recycle Ohio grant will provide
auempted murder in the shooting of a
apparent heart a11ack Friday evening.
. , $48,2~ ~ thr liuerpreventi,cm a~d recYCling office 10 be match~ !ly theGallia
Cheshire woman, authorities said.
Jeff D. Adkins, 41, apparently suf·
· .commtss•on and the Galha-Me1gs-Vjnron-Jackson solid waste- ~istrict she
ChristopherL. Rathburn, 21, 1140 1(2
f~ a heart attack while hunting on
·repOrted. This is the fust time the couiuy has applied for a Re&lt;:ycleOhio pt.
Second
Ave., is beillj held in the Cabell
tbeoldCreedJanes propeny nearPon·
, · tie~~tby said !be money will be used totedistributerecycling bins throughout
County Jwl on $25;ll00 bond awaiting
land.
. tbe county/ l'lie b~s were p~hased ~ugh an earlier grant which ian out in
exuadition hearings. Sheriff James D.
At8:10p.m.
the
Meigs
County
Medi·
tbe.fall of 1992. SIDCe tllat ume, recyclers ha~ had 10 bring !heir m81eri81s 10
Taylor said Saturday !hat Rathburn will
cal Emergency Service received a call
quanerly recycling drives at th,e (air grounds.
.
be prosecuted in Gallia County.
lbat a hunter was suffering a heart at·. "We got e:~one e~~i~ about recyclin~ Qnd then pull¢ the rug out from
Rathburn allegedly shot Sandra Scon,
tackln
!be
Portland
areajusloffCounty
~ilder them •. Hemby sa1d. 'The people herem the county wlu1110what's right,
43,
Roush Lane, early Friday morning.
Road
35.
Both
tbe
Racine
and
Syra· ~y care abouphe environment."
.
·
,
OffiCials
at Holzer Medical Center Sat·
cuse squads were dispaiC,hed 10, the
: &amp;mby added tllat she received calls for three months from disappointeil
urday reported that she was in stable
·recyclets after tbe bins were removed.
,
,
scene
but Adkins was dead on arrival. L...:::======~ condition.
~putics of Meigs County Sheriff
·; The new.money will be ~sed to hife .a ~fu$C company 10 ~ick up, sort and
Rathburn, a student at Marshall UniSoulsliY and Coronet Douglas
.J!Wket the trash from the b1na. Hemb&gt;: wd she hopes 10 have the P!OgrBill up James
versity,
wasarrestedat4::30
p.m. Friday by campus police
Hunter, M..D., wete called to the scene. The coroner
~ nmni~ ()y February 1994. .
·.
.·
ordered tbe bQdy ~ 10th~ Franklin County Mcirgue without incident. the Huntington Herald·Displlch re.· · Thesllltealso.,contlnuedaS53,971.grantforlittercontiol,1 ': _.
for
an autl5psy, ·
.
ported.
· . He~t~by said the money will fund roadside cleailups, illegal dump cl~ups,
H.,~: is believed to have been hiding in the shadows near
According 10 the sherlfrs repol'\, the body was found
. ..public•aw~ss C8JI!pai~s. educatiQn and litter law enfortement - the
the
Cheshire home when Scottlll!d a man retwned from
by David Pal1ons of Portland who became·concerned
. off~ will bll't a sheriffs deputy tb work 64 hours a month &amp;vm March fb ·
' wheal Adkins. who had sone out hlilllill8 about 4 p.m., Huntingron arouiull Lrn. Rathburn allegedly fired at the
·. N~ber. • ·
.
,
·
.
did not retum. Parsons told officials that he attempted two as they cnleled tbe house. pursued them inside and
· : The money is part of$-164,000 Gallia and Meigs counties recenUyreceived
shot Scot · in tbe hand and neck before fleeing.
~ but was unable 10 revive Adkins. r
. _, for recycling and litter prevention granl.t Cot 1994.
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ISSectlons-202Pages

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JaCk AnMrson
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�Page A2-Sunday Times ·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

&amp;~ntlnel

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea.a.nt, wv

December 5, 1993

December 5, 1993

Eastern pialled out of the loan fund for lhe first time in programs.

.,

about six ycms- and he'd like the district to stay out, • improve the science laboratories.
MEIGS LOCAL
Minard said. This fund provides bonds for lhe pcxxest
said.
"Even if they would decide to pay a few moce mills it scbools, but ~cts in it may not increase staffs salaries.
Local schools just want to be tteated more equally, not
still doesn't balance out... it doesn't solve the problem
But at current spending -after this year's sur)&gt;lus- anything like Robin Hood, Superintendent Bill Buckley
SOUTHERN LOCAL
because there's not enough taX base," Riebel said.
'
Soulhem Local Schoof District has 30 percent of its
the nexttwo or three years the district will be in debt again, said.
More Ievie.! have failed than passed in the last I0 years he said. The deficits are expected because teachers~ sala·
"The rich get richer, and poor get poorer .. . The bouom stulfents on ADC, while the state average is less than a
in Ibis county·~· bel said. One statistic that shows the ries increase each year and enrollment will drop - so the line is dollars. Money talks," Buclc_ley said. "It's not that fowth of that - 7 percent, Superin~ndent Bobby Ord
uphill battle sc
s mustfaceeach day: about60percent district will get less money- while having to keep up the people in the area don't value schools but there's no way said.
of lhe children r eive free or reduced price lunches, he same programs, Minard said
they can UIX themselves enough to come up with tlte
"BecauSe our district has a low-family income and a
1
difference."
low-wealtll
income, the success of the lawsuit probably
The
greatest
roadblock
is
the
dramatic
increase
in
added.
All the counties' school districts are some of the original hospitalization- which has soared 30 percent this year,
Even if the lawsuitsucceeds, the results will not be seen means everything," Ord said.
he said.
for five years, Buckley said.
High-wealth cjistricts also have higher levels of income
memben of the ~uity coalition.
•
If the lawsuit C "Is, Riebel said, "We'll have to do the
"The solution is to Ul1k to the state and have them fund
"In foor and a half years some schools will cease to and are more likely to pass levies because they have more
best we can witlt what we have and encourage the local us beuer," Minard said.
exist," Buckley said, because now schools just borrow, disposable income, he said.
people to supporti us witlt what they can."
With more funding, Eastern could:
sinking deeper in debt until they are eventually closed.
The money the state gives h.as remained conslant, Ord
EASTERN LOCAL
• update the text books.
Meigs Local has been required to build a sewage treat· said.
.
.
Eastern Superintendent Ronald D. Minard said the • setup a summer school, so students don't have to travel ment for Salisbury Elementary school, which monopo- · "Inflation is not high, but over a period of 4 years that
district earned about S199,000 in equity funding this year to the county's other school districts.
lizes the money.
eats into your budget;" Ord said. "The money you spend
from the state, topping the other two districts because • increase the adult education program and build aGED
The district will probably try to pass a pennanent maintaining the building doesn't go into the classroom."
Eastern spends less per student than the others, Minard program.
improvement levy next spring, Buckley added.Theinoney
The school district has not had success building a new
said.
• pay teachers for working extra hours with the adult would be used to fix roofs at Harrisonville and Pomeroy school, he added.

VINTON- Sadie Miller Cordell, 84, 13984 State Route 554. Bidwell,
died Friday, Dec. 3, l993 in Pinecrest Care Center.
Born Feb. I, 1909 in Green Township, Gallia County, daughter ofthe late
Oliver and Mary Evans Miller, she was a member of the Bethel Baptist
Church.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband,·Owen Kerr Cordell, on
Sept. 23, 1977; by a daughter, Sadie
Marie Cordell Cooper. in 1992; by a
grandson, Slanley Cooper, in !984;·
and by three brothers and live sisters.
Surviving area son and daughter·
in-law, Alfred and Mary Cordell of
Bidwell; a brother, Hollis Miller of
Bidwell; six grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren; special neph·
~ws, Calvin and Buford Minnis; and
special friends, Vada Mayo and Vir,,,
ginia Garnes.
Services will he I p.m. Monday in
the Bethel Baptist Church, with the
Rev. Calvin Minnis and the Rev. '"'··
'\
William Ward officiating. Burial will
be in the Morgan Bethel Cemetery.
'
Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, from 2-4 and
SADIE CORDELL
7-9 p.m. Sunday.
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the services.

·Accu·Weathe,a forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

PA.

IND.

• IColumbusl4ao I

45°

•

Merchant sees break-in as symptom
she said.
Criminal Records owner Jeff
Wamsley said as a merchant he always wollies about tlteft Tenants
above his business at 46 Court Street
reported hearing noises at the back of
tltestore on the night that Brunicardi's
was robbed.
. "It seems like it's happening more
all around in homes and cars and
stores," he said. "It's probably tough
on police to be everywhere at once."
Monday night was the first time
thieves have tried to brealc into Crimi·
nal Records, Wamsley said.

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

AP Economics Writer
·

CHRISTMAS CHEER -Holding an umbrella against the rain for herself and a furry friend, Miss Gallia
County Sally Saunders was still all smiles as she participated in Saturday's Christmas parade in Gallipolis,
which served as the kickoff to the holiday season in the area.
I

\

Administration embraces entitlement
cuts
to f~nd 1994 federal programs
•
iyJOHNKING
lAP Pollllcel Writer'
: WASHING10N(AP)-Afterre'sting deeper spending cuts at the
e~lottofthe congressional session, Ihc
Clinton adminisuation is embracing
~onns in federal entitlement pro·
gramstofinanceits 1994programsin
a tight-budget environment.
The idea or rollbacks in fedeml
benefit programs was raised Friday
by two senior administration officials
-Health and Human Service Secretary Donna Shalala and Deputy Trea·
sury Secretary Roger Altman.
Altman praised the idea after pre· ,
dieting the administration would signif1CB11tly exceed its five-year deficit
reduction goal. In September, the
White House estimated the 1998 an·
nual defiCit would be $181 billion but
Allman predicted the debt would fall
to $100 billion within five years.
''That, my friends, will be a signifi·

cant accomplishment," he said in re·
marks to the Democratic Leadership
Council's annual conference.
Given recent economic improvements, Altman said the only obstacle
to dramatically lower deficits was
growth in federal entitlement programs - spending on Medicare,
Medicaid, Social Security and other
guaranteed benefits.
But he said the administration was
eager for the recommendations of a
panel headed by Nebraska Sen. Bob
Kerrey, which is expected to suggest
entitlement reforms.
Altman said the administration,
could not predict the recommends·
lions, yet said, ''I believe that means
testing in selected areas is an idea
whose time is coming." Means test·
ing would curtail benefits to higher
income Americans; such proposals
usually face stiff opposition from
groups representing older Americans,

a powerful political lobby.
Altman also said Clinton's fiscal
1995 budget wouldfreezediscretionary domestic spending as well as lhe
defense budget, and said Clinton
would fund new initiatives by cutting
elsewhere.
Shalala,considenedoneofthemore
liberal administration llfficials, spoke
to the same conference a short time
after Altman and echoed his conser·
vative Ul1k on spending and entitlement reform.
She said the president's welfare
reform initiative would be expensive
because it would expand child care
and job training programs in exchange
for placing a time limit, lilcely to be
two years, for most welfare benefits.
She said ·an exact pricetag was unclearbecauseCiinton has not reviewed
recommendations of his welfare task
force, but said the ,.Winistration was
in no mood to seek higher UIXes.

Hubble telescope aboard shuttle 'for overhaul
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- After thousands of hours in re·
hearsal, the real task of fiXing t1te
Hubble Space Telescope was final ly
at hand. The telescope was safely
aboard the shuttle Endeavour on Sat·
bent wing and all, ready for
.•overhiiul.
Even before the fiiSt sp;~&lt;:ewalk,
scheduled for lhe wee ho~ of Sunday, NASA confronted a problem.

should inierfere with the first of the mechanism to compensate for shrink·
mission's five spacewalks, however. age and expansion because of drastic
In their six hours in the open cargo temperature changes caused a kink in
bay, astronauts Story Musgmve and the stem and the resulting twist of the
Jeffrey Hoffman intend to replace two solar blankets.
,
pairs of gyroscopes and two elecThe European Space Agency, which
tronic control units. The repair in- made both old and new arrays, said
valved removing some bolts and loos- the repl&amp;~:eme~ts ~&amp;springs that can't
ening others, opening access doors, bind.
disconnecting electrical plugs, installBecause of the misground mirror,
ing ne'w units, and buttoning it all Hubble pictures tended to lump fields
backup.'
of stars into bright clusters. Again, a
The gyroscopes,called mte sensing computer progran1 was developed to
Hubble wu twisted out of
units, are required to point and track filter out the halos. The gyroscopes
Ml~ its Su)!Jl(lrting stem.was l!ent
the telescope. One of each pair have failed and officials wollied that lhe
about the misshapen array failed, probably because of bad elec- backups might, 100.
tronics. The electronic units, located
Hoffman was i!)e fiiSt to sight the
elsewhere, serve as the gyros' brains· telescope lhrough. binoculars in the
and they, too, have two bad units.
fmal moments of the chase that began
The first day's EVAs - the Na." Thursday. He reported the solar panel
tiona! Aeronautics and Space was"hentwayover." AstronautTom
Aelministration's traditional short· Akers reported "a definite kink" in
hand for extravehicular activity, or the tipper edge of tlie ~tern.
spacewalks - were the prelude 10
other work: swapping out the solar
,
arrays Monday, installing a new planetary cameril Tuesday, installing corrcctive·optics for other instruments
Wednesday, and substituting more·
IUIIDAY OIILY
eleclrOOic:s Thunday.
SUISCIIPTION IIA~
IJc.rltr•Mtii•R...t
Hubble·waslaunehedinAprill990,
Weet. ....................................................90f
touted a&amp;.beipg able to see to the edge
Y•-······························'SINOL&amp;torr -··~-10
oftheunivene: But two months later,
PaJCI
an embarrassed NASA had 10 admit
....,................,.... ___ .. ,.... .. --..SI.OO .
•
•
that the 94-inch pri~ mirror was
gt9und 100 sblnow II the edges, making the ira~JWMnt nearsighted;
·
AlthOugh the telescope has been
enonnously productive, it developed
other fl!lws, all of ~hich !R dpc for .
correction on lhe Endeavour flighL
nK: solarpenelsdeveloped an annoyirJfji~ 16liillea a~- wkver
!he ttleetqle lift daylight for dark·
ness and Vice vera .COmputen were·
crommmed!Q
i..,;.7"' :O.Iili"-- \¥0fkMOund
•
• lhe Jli'Qb-

WASHINGTON (AP) - As a
seven-year effort to rewrite the rules
of world trade enters the fmal days,
French farmers are plenty mad. But
they aren't alone.
While they haven'tgonen as much
publicity as their French counterparts,
American farmers aren't happy either. And neilher are a host of otlter
interest groups whose support will be
vital next year for President Clinton
10 win passage of a new global free
trade agreemenL
American producetsofmovies, silicon chips, steel, pharmaceuticals,
computer software, (elecommunications equipment and service indus·
tries such 8!l banking..and ins111111fe
have all .expresseil 'displeasure .w1th
the way the negotiations are going.
While Clinton pulled out all the
stops for a congressional victory on
the NorthAmericanFree Trade AgreemenLo he had the benefit of virtually
unanimous suppon from American
industry in that e(fon.
That is far from the case with the
global trade talks, a 116-nation effon
to lower tariffs and under trade barri·
ers that is being conducted under the
auspices of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade.
At present, powerful interest groups
from the American Farm Bureau Fed·
emtion to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are expressing serious reserva·
tionsabouttheproposedGATiagreemenL
And that doesn't Ulke into account
the coalition of labor unions and environmental groups !hat nearly defeated
NAFT A and are sure to oppose the
GATI~w.ell. ,,
.
That is the dilemma facing the administration and its chief negotiator,
Mickey Kanror, as he heads back to
Brussels on Monday for yet another
effort to resolve differences between
the United States and the 12-nalion
European Community over the trade
pacl
He must give enough ground 10
reach a negotiated &lt;;ompromise with
the EC and the other COWltries involved in the talks but not go so far
that he alienates the groups Clinton
must win over to have any chance of
gettingcon~sional approval for the
GATI agreement next year.
One of the biggest sticking points
throughout the negotiations has been
agriculture where.Europe, .France in
particular, have been resisting U.S.
demands for sharp reductions in trade·
distorting farm subsidies.
The United States thought it had
won an agreement a year ago by which

NOtiCE:

We Can Now Fill Pr,scrl'pt,lons
-~

for'Champ.-s ~r~icrJptlon
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.Eii~ believe that a jam. in the
~

Europe would reduce the volume of
its subsidized farm exports by 21 per·
cent over six years. But the so-called
Blair House agreement encountered
heavy French opposition.
.
Under one possible compromise
scenario, the United States may agree
to slow down the pace of the reduc·
Lions in export subsidies in return for
lower European trade barriers on such
U.S. products as cereal, meat and milk.
But Dean Kleckner, president of
the American Farm Bweau Federation, said his group was concerned
that U.S. negotiators will get too little
increased market access for Ameri·
can products in return for allowing
European farmers to continue to re·
ceive big export subsidies for a longer
period.
---~
"The fact that we have given up
some Qf.!II~Biair House ~me11t is
disheanening," he said; Kleckner said
his group, which was instrumental in
winning farm votes for NAFf A,
would not decide whether 10 support
the GATI agreement until it saw all
the details.
Other U.S. groups are expressing
similar reservations.
American movie and television producers are insisting that negotiators·
bring back a deal that will expand ·
their ability to sell programs in Europe, where a number of countries,
France in particular, have quotas on
foreign-produced shows.
U.S. semiconductor manufacturers
are demanding that Europe's 14 percent tariffs on computer chips be cut
in half to 7percent. But the Europeans
are countering by demanding that
America cut by 50 percent its high
textile tariffs.

C199:3 Accu-Weather. Inc.

By The Associated Press
Today will be dry and cloudy.
The National Weather Service
The western sections of Ohio will posted a wintentorm watch over the
have the best chance for sunshine as northeast mountains of Oregon.
high pressure builds in the Ohio
Rain extended over eastern parts
Valley. Highs on Sunday will be ofthesouthernPiains,thelowerhalfof
mostly in the 40s.
the Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee
Southern Ohio
Valley and the southwest part of the
Today, mostly cloudy. High lower Ohio Valley. Rain also reached
near 50.
over the northern Pacific Coast
ElCtended forecast
Snow and freezing rain fell on the
Monday. a chance of rain or upperMississippiValley,easternNorth
snow showers, mainly north. Lows Dakota and northern Maine.
30 to 35. Highs in the upper 30s to
Sn&lt;.Jwfall during the six hours that
lower 40s. Tuesday and Wedncs· ended at I p.m. EST included an inch at
day. fair,exceptachanceofnurrics Bismarck N.D.
northeast. Lows mid-20s to around
Friday morning's low tempera·
30. Highs mostly in the 30s.
ture for the Lower 48 was 8 degrees
Around the nation
below zero at Farson and South Pass
PartsofOrcgon braced for some City, both in Wyoming.
snow and high winds Friday, and
Temperaturesaroundthenationat
rain and occasional thundershow· 3 p.m. EST ranged from 20 at Bemidji,
ers fell on areas or the Midwest and Minn., to 86 at McAllen, Texas.
South.

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IDGAN
MONUMENT CO.
POMEROY
. Meiga County Dla)lllly Yn NMr
Pomeroy.U..On Bridge
Jam• 14. Buoh, Mgr.
1112·2511
VINTON
Gallia County Dla)lllly Yn
Jay l Joe Moore,lllgrs.
165 Main St. • 311 11803

· We at Woodland
Centers believe that
our children - our
future - are an
Indispensable, natural resource. They
ultimately shape the _
direction for our :;
values; communities,
nation and the world. .,
"
.
and are raised In ::
nu.rturlng, loving familia•;· they eventually become our ::
future lu~re.
,
i
Other children are not as fortunate. l!helr potential ,,
for a bright future Is dimmed by-poverty, abuse,
neg!.ct ~r dlaablllty. Woodland, Centers r~ognlzes :1
that.these children need and de•erve • · chance· for a ::
more hopeful tomorrow. Our role II n9t to supplant 1:
the family, but to work together -by r..lntegratlng ::
children ~ack Into their family system (when~ver :1
poulble).' H Ia the ballet of..W~Iaod Centers ~hat the [j
family !s the . s)~glit most Important .factor In 't"e ,.
auccess'ful ·rehabilitation of emotionally • or ·behavlorai.Y, troubled children.
,
· . We. ar, co_mmltted t~ provl~lng qualitY care to
chlldfen-ln-neH. · · ·
·.
.
·
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Environmental advocates say
reports that will be the basis for
disposal of low-level radioactive
waste .from six states may not
include enough safety measures.
"These reports should not be
relied upon," said Richard Sahli,
executive director of the Ohio
Environmenlal Council. "If !hey
are, we'll start off with an extremely weak bill."
The· reports were issued in
September by the Low Level
Radioactive Waste Advisory Com·
mittee and the Ohio Blue Ribbon
CommissiOn. The studies are to be
used to write legislation for the
construction and operation of the
waste site.
Introduction of the bill is
expected within a month.
Ohio is to be host to the site for
the Midwest Compact, which also
includes Iowa, Wisconsin, Min·
nesota, Missouri and Indiana. The
waste includes protective clothes
and tools used in nuclear J)ower
plants, and hospital and university
laboratory equipment.
Sabli was.joined at a news conference Friday by representatives
of environmental groups that
included tlie Oliio Sierra Club and
PortsmouthPjketon Residents for
Environmental Safety and Security.
He said the licensing process
would provide fewer safeguards for
the radioactive waste than state law
requires for hazardous waste.

..

•

.

GA!rUA,CPUNTY .;,
.
448 1114

'

•

Incomplete
disposal
reports?
By The Associated Press
Environmental advocates say
two reports concerning the disposal of low-level radioactive
waste from six states were hurried
and failed to:
• Provide specific siting criteria.

•Considerthatthefederal management system for low:level
waste is nawed and will be rc·
viewed.
• Consider a reduction in waste
generation.
•Allow meaningful public participation of the site supervision
that the Legislature will create.
• Provide regulations at least as
strong as tlie rules governing hazwdous waste in Ohio:

GALLIPOLIS. _ The Gallia
County Area Chamber of Commerce and the Kiwanis Club have
announced the winners in Satur·
day's Christmas parade.
l
First place winners will receive
$100, second place winners will
receive $50 and third place winners
will receive $2S.
Winning the merchant's award
were Gal1ia Performing Arts, flfSt
place; Super Strutters, second
place, and Rainbow Twirlers, third
place
·

WASHING10N (AP) - President Clinton says Dan Quayle
wasn't all wrong when he raised
questions
too many children
a1 law and proposed amendments being bornabout
out of wedlock in his
to the wasrc agreement among the . memorable speech attaclting televi·
sUites, said Jane Harf, a -state advis- sion
character Murphy Brown.
er to the commission. .
In two interviews this week,
"This is a waste stream that Clinton said the former vice presi·
exists and will continue to exist," dent had "a lot of good things" to
she said. "To not deal with it and say in the speech during the 1992
to put our heads in the sand is totalin which he aiUICked the
ly irresponsible from an environ- campaign
fict1onal Murphy Brown for
mental and a health and safety becoming a single mother.
SUindpoint.''
"I read the whole (Quayle)
The environmental groups said speech," said Clinton in an inter·
the reports also lack requirements view with Tom Brokaw shown Fri·
for public hearings on license day night on NBC . "I thought
applications.
there were a lot of very good things
But Roger Suppes, chief of the in that speech."
bhio Department of Health's
Although Clinton said he
bureau of environmental health,
said the studies have "substantial
requirements for public hearings ...
in terms of trying 10 open up the
process, I think we did propose
that."

l
;;
!

thought Quayle "got too cute" by
aiUICking a popular television character, "it is certainly true that Ibis
country would be much better off if
our babies were born into two parent families."
In a separate interview with
Newsweek, Clinton expressed Sim·
ilar thoughts.
Again recalling the Quayle
speech, which was widely, criticized at the time, Clinton said,
"There were a lot of very good
things in that speech .... Wouldn't
we be a better-off society if the
babies in this country were bom to
married couples? You bet we
would."
The interview will appear in
Newsweek's Dec. 13 issue. which
goes on newsUinds Monday.
Let us copy your old
family photos. Special 25x7's for $14.85. Reg.
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also. do passport photoa,
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By Tbe Associated Press
Here are the winning numbers
drawn in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia loueries:
OHIO
Pick-3: 3-2-1
Pick-4: 2-2-5-3
Cash 25: 12-13-27-32-37
The Super Lotto jackpot for Saturday was $4 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 2-2·3
Daily 4: 6-8-6·6
Cash 25: 6-8·9·13-20-24

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TAWNEY STUDIO

Tawney Studio

424 SECOND AVE.

424 S.C:ond Ave. Gelllpolls

GAWPOUS

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Shorthand II

'

'

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'

be givetl to the first 1000 customers, and if
'

you-ask him hewill proli11bly autograph it for
.
you free or charge. ·

Med. Insurance/Coding

Math I
lntro
Human Reooun:es
Accounting Ill

II

.Morris )las gi~en out these calendars for .

I
I

Lottery numbers

Spreadsheets I
Communications I

dars, These commemorative calendars w~ll·

I

For best theme float, the winn.ers were My Chi!dren's Flo~t.
rust place; The Lmle Bullskln
Raiders, second place, and Good
Newsf!aptjstChurch,lhird plac_e.
Wmners m thj; most ongmal
category were Sp.-:e Age .Pioneers,
rust place; Country Carriage, second place, and Gallia County TAG,
third place. .
.
.
. Trophy wmners were Erme, best
b1ke;_ Cu,b Scout Troop ,~5. best
walking; Galha Perfo!""'"$ Arts,
best baton group; Burlile Oil, best
old car, and River City Rodeo

Clinton: Quayle may have ~~~?~~tc:uep~~~r
been right about values
=~!~~nday at the cham~·:

"The Final Edition"
..

:!

·I

did in \982. Two of the largest,
Comail\ and SkyWest. reported
third-quarter earnings of more !han
double a year earlier.
But the safety of commuter car·
riers is still the subject of a longrunning debate among federal regu·
lators and congressional investip·
10rs.

~~;d~n~~::tp~~· ~~~h Several win in holiday parade

S~mething!

.'
51$ ye:irs. This will 'be the final year for calen-

IWIEIG.s' COUNTY , .!ACKSQN COUNtY .:. :•1
252-5114
• 21H071
.

·CR!SISUNE - ·1-lbNIIZ-el54

lines. Others fly mtlepCm1enUy or
under one of the maJor's names.
Northwest Airlink Aight 5719 that
crashed in bad weather last week
was owned by Atlanta-based
Express Aviation II Inc.
Re~onal carriers boarded nearly
49 million passengers last year,
nearly three times as many as they

1994 0 VB Calendars

l

'

For example, permits to dispose
of hazardous waste expire every .
five years and must be renewed.
Perm.its for radioactive waste
would be reviewed every five
years, but renewal would not be
required, he said.
The environmental advocates
are not taking into account other
safeguards provided through feder·

Give You

l
:!

· A Privl!te, Not for Proftt Agency ·
Worldn1 Hard to Serve You In ,
Gallil, Jackson and .Meigs Counties

WASHINGTON (AP) - Com- es involving the small planes last
muter aircraft are far safer and pop- year, a mte of 0.243 per 100,000
. ular than they used to be, but they departures, according to the
are five times more likely than National Transportation Safety
larger airliners to have a fatal acci · Board.
dent, according to government
The rate for larger airliners statistics.
those that carry more than 30 pasThe small planes, known to sengers- was 0.050.
travelers as "puddle jumpers" and
Twenty-one people died in com·
"white lcnuclders," are the fastest·
f!l"Owing part of the nation's airline ; ; :
mdustry.
fly far more miles and carry far
As major carriers abandon small more passengers than commuier
airports and short-haul routes to flights.
save money, regional airlines are
''None is acceptable. No one
stepping in with turboprops, like thinks we have the safest flight
the one that crashed last week in operation we can possibly have,"
Minnesola, killing all 18 people on said "Walter Coleman, president of
board.
the Regional Airline Association.
"I fly them all the time, being
The regional carriers have expe·
from South Dakota,·· said Sen. rienced explosive growth and
Larry Pressler, senior Republican healthy profits during a period
on the Senate aviation subcommit· when the nation's biggest airlines
tee. "I feel safer in the big planes are failing or struggling to survive.
quite frankly."
Some are owned_ by m_ajo~ air·
Commuter plan·es are a third
,
less likely to be involved in an
accident as they were in the 1970s
when the industry was deregulated.
But there were seven fatal crash-

Morris Wants To

,,i!

Woodla.nd ·Centers, Inc. ,

l

MASON, W.Va.- Roben F. Oliver, 81, Mason, die4 Friday, Dec. 3,
1993 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Oct 5, 1912 in Maggie, W.Va., son of lhe laiCt Olarles Wesley
and Lula LeMasters Oliver, he was a coal miner and IJ member of the
Mason Methodist Church.
·
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Ethel Mae (Peggy) .Oliver,
in 1979, and by a brother.
.
. .
Surviving are two sons daughters-in-law, Robert E. and Rita. A. Oliver
of Mason and James L. and Dottie J. Oliver of West Columblll, W.Va.;
three sisWs, Margaret Clark of Columbus, Beatrice Kennedy of Rutland,
and Phyllis Hargraves of W~st Columb1a; five grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
Services will be 1:30 pm. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Horne,
with the Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating. Burial will be in the IOOF
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 5-9 p.m.

fleports·may produce 'weak' disposa/,bi/1

-?

Children &amp; Family
Services

,

Robert F. Oliver

Small planes have fewer crashes, higher fatality rate

Today's skies
dry and cloudy

The

POMEROY - Trina Ann Moore, 40, Dayton,formerly of the
Pomeroy area. died Saturday, Dec. 4, 199~ . .
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewmg Fune Home.

Commuter ~rew had no warning

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Ice

Trina Ann Moore

\

W.VA

Who's ~ot wild about global trade?
Farmers, movie producers, etc.

Grandsons will serve as pallbearers.
Honorary pallbearers are Calvin Minnis, Buford Minnis, Charles l"cck,
Sammy Davis, Earl Mayo and Joe Lloyd.

Sadie Cordell

elemenUiries, buy new school busses and text books and
new compuiers, ·he said.
The last time a new levy was passed in the dislrict was
in 1972, Bucliley said.

Coatinued from A-1
"This is thefiiSt time and I've never
possible to patrol both plaCes.
really been concerned about it," said
However, Elliou said, break-ins in Jelli Alley, owner of Special Touch, a
Gallipolis have decreased. The florist and gift shop at 336 Second
Brunicardi's incident is still under Ave.
investigation, police said, and is not
According 10 police reports, an air
part of a larger problem with robber- conditioner had been knocked loose
ies in the city.
· from a window frame in the back of
Other merchants had. mixed reac- the store. Steel bars on the window
tions to theft attempts at their stores prevented an entry.
around the time of the Brunicardi's
"I think this was probably the same
break-in.
people that were working the street,"

~

- - , - - - - - - A·rea deaths-------+

,Lawsuit may determine-fate of southeastern Ohio sch·ools
Continued from page A 1
money for schools would have 10 come from the state, he

Sunday nme--s&amp;ntlnel Page

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Secretarial Pro I
Inter Accounling

v

10 lit: ;;l , ... ,.,

Morris E. Haskins ·

. :Qbio Valley Bank.......

•

Word Procellling I
BualneA Psych
Typing I

OlliER CLASSES AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST!

�Nation/World

December 5, 1993

Regional
-Day,ton residents·warned of
:asbestos at i.ndustrial site

Jobless rate dro.ps, economy shows sig_
ns of mending··
WAS KINGTON (AP) - 1D a
sign lhat die~
' 's economy is
steadily meodio • die IIIICIIIploy·
IIICIII!llle pl
10 6.4 pm:enl
in November. he best sins lemonlh improvement in 10 yean
and the lowes! lellel in nearly lhlee
yean.

The size or the decli ne from
October's 6.8 ~~ rare surpri!ed
many economi,su, who said it
reAdied in part born a deaease of
81,000 in the number of people
looking for jo!IJ. They said the
report slill show,s tba1 the nation's
economy is 5leadil y rising from the
doldnuns.
The report Friday from the
Labor Department was accompa-

nied by other economic bright
spou. The ('QmiQI'ICe Depwtman
said its Index of Leadinll Indicators, die na1ion 's chief economic
foncasri011 gauge, surged abead 0.5
percent in October, showing
promile for the coming months. It
was the third straisht monthly

mcmue.

Commerce aho reponed that
orders to U.S. factories rose 1.2
~t in October, boostt:d by bill
gams m a.in:raft and auiDmobilcs.
The big news was on the
employment front, where an elltra
208,000 people round non-farm
jobs and lhe unemployment rate
feU 10 its lowest Jewl since January
1991.

A robust gain of 105,000 jobs in
sucb service industries as health
care, rmance aod Jeal cswe and the
second straight monthly impfovc~ in the beleaguc:n:d mani.r~e­
::~ oomliined 10 push die

that die recovery has picked up
pace and ... is a sustainable economic n:covery."
Other reports bave shown
suenglh in housing and consumer
spending. A big jump in COIISUlDel'
confidence was reponed earlier Ibis

The last 0.4 pe«ent decline was
October 1983, when the country
was pulling out of its worsa ~­
sioa since World War ll.
Labor Secre1ary Roben Reich,
speaking in Orlando, Fla., said the
~ showed thai " we are now in

wed&lt;.

a jcbs recovery."

'

Laura Tyson, chairman of the
Council or Economic Advisers,
called the rqlOit " another in a long
list of reports recently suggesting

ESCOBAR FUNERAL - Bodyguards loyal
to drug lord Pablo Escobar's family keep people
away from tbe veblde carrying bls wife, son and
daughter after they arrive to attend Escobar's
rueral Friday In Medellin. The burial or Esco-

His family was unable to gel out
of the car bringing them to the
funeral because or lhe press of the
crowd, wimesses said. Escobar's
wife, son and daughter had to tum
back and missed the burial. the
radio said.
Army uoops had to help control
crowds so Escobar's body could be
taken to the grave.
An assault 1e11m shQt and killed
Escobar and a bodyguard at a bide·
out in Medellin on Thursday, end·
ing a ruthless career in which he
, waged a decade-long war with the
: ~overnment and funnelled drugs
· mto the United States and Europe.
· His burial Friday was hasty. A
·catholic priest tried saying a few

bar lured thousands or curious onlookers, nower-bearing admirers and even mariachi musl·
cians Friday Into a cemetery so packed his rami·
ly couldn't get oul or the vehicle. (AP)

•

prayers bur gave up as the crowd
pushed and shoved. Escobar's
mother, Hermilda Gaviria, and several or his sisters watched quietly
as the body was lowered into lhe
ground.
Outside the cemetery, a children's march~g band beat drums
and blew horns. A man dressed as
Santa Claus held up a sign,
addressed to Escobar's 9-year-old
daughter, that read "Manuela
Escobar ... we •re w1'th you. ..
Police estimated 20,000 people

came 10 the cemetery on the outof ~dellin . Reporters said
only about 2,000 people were at lhe
cemetery at any one lime.
The world knew Escobar, 44, as
a ruthless drug baron.
He was ~lieved to have O\'dered
bombings that killed hundreds of
ordipary Colombians as weD as lhe
assassinations of presidential candidates, judges, journalists and
police.
But Medellin knew him as a lat·
ter-day Robin Hood ·who lavished

.~

ments.
The n umber or unemployed
Americans fell by 534,00 last
•- - · s3 milli'
1
monlh. ~vans ·
on peop e
still lool&lt;ing for WOrL A separate
survey of.busiriesses showed a gain
in non -farm ·employment of
208,000, the best showing since
Jul ~
Manufacturing comganies.
b · b b d 8 h d 2c6 00 ·
w •c a
e J •
smce
February. added 30,000 people to
November payroUs. Consuuction
employment ina1:ased by 27.000.

markets assessed the reporu.
Investors appeared to take comron from the bond market's calm
reception or lhe strong economic
news. Them had been spc:eulalion
that bonds might go into a free Call
if lhe November employment
report IUmed OUI to be IIDCllpeCted·
ly good.

di::IDII

cemetery.

tends higher inflalion and erodes
lhe value of fixed. income invest-

Stoclt ~ were mixed in cautious trading Friday as die fmancial

Escobar
funeral
heavily
attended

MEDELLIN, Colombia (AP) The cemetery Wlll so pacbd his
wife and children coul6a't gel
through to die coffm. SOllie came
for a glim~ or a dr\lg lord legendary for his ruthlessness, olhm
w pay homasc to a loeal hero.
Pablo Escobar died with both
r tationJ ML While President
congrallllated Colombia on
his slaying, Colombians in
Medellin, lhe industtial cil)' where
he was born and based h11 dru$·
trafficking empire. mourned hu
loss.
People pushed so hard to gel
into the monuary to see Escobar's
coffin they shatlered its windows. ·
Caracol radio said. Yelling "l.onll
live Escobar! " they ttied to break
through a line of police into the

Bood prices lelld 10 fall on good
economic oews because that por·

his immense wealth on its poor,
building schools and playgrounds.
His cartel kept thousands
employed, either as traffickers or
enforcers.
·
A Medellin housewife, Berta
AtehOJtUa. ecljoed..th41 feelings of
many Colombians~when she said
Escobar should not have been
blamed for smuggling cocaine to
the United SlaleS.
"H 1 sell drugs, no one obligates
you to buy them;" she said.

stales will apply for the money,
which would enable them to move
from fiood P.lains.
"This bill is a tremendous step
forward in helping families get
back 0 n their feel," said House
Majority Lader Richard Gephardt.
who sponsored the biD along with
another Missouri Democrat, Rep.
Harold Volkmer.
Larry Zensinger, buyout coordinator for FEMA, said earlier this .
week thai many towns already are
c!esianing proposals to move peo·
pie away rroin rivers.,.More ·than .
200 communities are interested in
the money. be added.
"There's never been anything
of Ibis scope that's been undertak·
en, at least in recent history."
Zensinger said.
The law boosts the amount
available to !&gt;uy out homes alonp;

::;:ee,c;::S~~=~~

lawmakers to warn people to slay Friday, Stare Rep. Tom Roberts, Daway atid ordec the site cleaned up Daywn. said lhe asbestos presents a
potential health hazard. ·
by mooth's 11nd
" People need· to be aware that
. ~pealcing at a news conr~nce
asbestos is lying outside die property and on the grounds," he said.
. Roberts said he ~as especially
concerned about people with respiratory problems or children who
may wander onto lhe site.
.
POMEROY· Two Reedsville men were charged with breaking
Dr. Morlon Nelson, commtsand Clllering Friday in Meigs County Coun and remained in lhe
sionet of die Montgomery County
COUDI)' jail Friday on $5,000 bonds.
·
Combined Health Disttict, said be
Erick Adams and carl Marcum, both 19 and both of State Route
ordered signs posted around lhe
681 , were charged with the Dec. I brealc-in of Barr's Ashland Sla·
property warning or a possible
lion in ReedsviUe.
health hazard.
.
The two will have dleir preliminary hearings Dec. 13.
The 30-acre site housed a printing press Wllil it closed in the early
1980S.
Officials discovered lhe asbestos
POMEROY • An Athens man accidentally shol himself in the
along with cut pieces of melallying
hand while deer huntin~ Friday in a wooded area near tbe Meigsin a 100-yard-long trench near a
Athens County Line_
road and some railroad traCks.
According. to the report from the office of Meigs County Sheriff
Nelson said the asbestoS appar· James Souls by, Dwayne A. Adkins, 38, of Fo~sil Rock Road,
ently
was scraped off pipes and
Athens, was coming out of a tree stand when a limb broke and he
sheer metal by scavengers who
fell. He dropped his 12 gauge shotgun and when it struck the
wanted to sell the metal.
ground it discharged, wounding Adkins in the righl hand.
Both the Syracuse and Pomeroy emergency squads were. called
to the scene about 5 p.m. and Adkins was transported to VeteranS
Memorial Hospital where he was admitted for treatment
Meigs County officials of the Divisio.n of Wildlife assisted in the
investigation of the accident.

. DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - An
asbestos pile at an abaildoned
industrial _siJe on lhe city' s west
side has ~oved l!ealth officials and

Besides the factory job gains,
'd th
the government Slll
e averag~ .
work week for manufacfuring :
employees edged up a renlli of an ,
hour 10 41.7 hours, a po~ si-World :
War II record. Factory overtime- ;
also was up a lallh or a pen:ent to:'
the highest level since the govern-·:
ment began keeping those swistics::
956
•
in I ·
.:
Employers are chOOSinJto work•;
existing crews harder radler than:.
provide health care and other;~
Cllpensive benefits for new_bires. :;

.--fri-county brie.fs---..
Men a"aignedfor B&amp;E

Hunter accidentally shoots self

how it happened. A military source~
said police were asked 10 look into"
the Jewish selllers' behaviot': · :::,
Jn Gaza, meanwhile, gunmen ::
from die PLO's mainsllei!m fatah ":
group opened fire at I~li soldiers ;;
ih at least two locauons, and lhe .·
troops fired back, Palestinian ::
·;
reponernaid.
Secretary of State Warren :
Christopher was due in Israel on ••
Friday for the start of a weeldong :
Middle East tour meant to raUy the ;;
peace process . Prime1 Mimster ·:
Yitzhak Rabin rejected lhe PLO's ;:
suggestion that the United States ·
intervene to help solve disputes ;
concemi011 the autonomy plan.
:
Hebron is not to be handed over ·
to the Palestine Liberaiion Organi· · :
zation under the first phase or the : :
autonomy accord. But th.e city has · ;
long been a flashpoinl for Arab- ·'
Israeli clashes as the site of the : ·
tomb of Abraham, a biblical patri- :
arch revered by Je.,,s and Milslims. ::
There were conllicting reports :
on what set off lhe shooting Friday. ·
Israeli reports .said the. senlers ;
opened fire after Palestinians :
stoned the car of Rabbi Moshe :~
Levinger.
,
Arab willlesses said Levinp;er' s •
followers fired into the air without :
provocation to clear an area for .
their prar.ers. They said some of :
Levinger s foDowers smashed taxi . ·
windows and beat shopkeepers to ·.,
force them to close. ·
;
Levinger is a founder of the ·'
Jewish enclave .tn,,Hebron,,where J;
several hundred settlers live &gt;in a .;:
cluster of stone buildings sunuund- ::
ed by barbed-wire rences·· and an .::
army camp. He was convicted and ''
jailed briefly for killing an Arab ·;
shopkeeper in 1988.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Donald R. FerreU, 38, 33 Henkle Ave., Gallipolis, was cited early Salurday morning for driving under lhe
influence, lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway PaD'OI reponed

Deputies probe theft
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Sheriff's Deputies are investigating lhe theft of several items from a trailer.
Dickie Wolford, 105 Court SL, Gallipolis, told deputies thai two
people who were renting a trailer he owns took a water-heater,
refrigerator and some of his personal clothing when they moved
ouL Wolford said the fonner tenants also did extensive damage to
the property.

Downtown fires rekindle
GALLIPOLIS -:- The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department put
out small frres that rekindled Thursday and Friday at lhe Womeldorff and Thomas and Allhof and Associates sites.
Ten men responded with one tru,e1t each time early Thursday and
early Friday when bot spots blazed up at Womeldorff and Thomas.
The alarms were lhe 25lst and 252nd of lhe year.
Althof and Associates reponed a rekindling of the frre al their
building early Friday. Fifteen firefighters responded with O!lll truck.
No additional damage was reported. II was lhe 253rd alarm of the

..

.Y~ixteen frrefigbters also responded Friday morning ·wilh one
· II'IICk 10 quench an oil ·tank fire a1 Federal Mogul, 2160 Eastern Ave.
No damage was reported.
.
II was the 254th call of the year.

Accidents investigated

POMEROY • Three accidents were investigated by lhe offtee of
Meigs County Sheriff JIIIIICS M. Soulsby Thursday and Friday.
AI 9:30 p.m. Thursday Charles E. Hensley, Bashan. traveling
east on County Road 31 at Bald Knobs went off the rolldway and
sideswiped a GTE telephone buried cable box and also a fence
owned by Homer Parker. The 1982 Ford driven by Hensley was
heavily damaged and be was cited for driving without a valid'opera·
tor's ~cense .
Friday at 2 p.m. William Norton, Reedsville, traveling south on
Pine Grove Road in a 1989 Jeep struck a deer that ran into the roadway. There was moderale damage to the vehicle.
About 5 p.m. Friday, Phyllis I. Currman, Ponland.losl control of
her 1977 Plymouth station wagon as she traveled north. on S!&amp;le
Route 338. The vehicle wenl off lhe roadway on the ngbl srde,
struck a tree and tore down a section ·of renee on die Cleek farm.
.before going over the hill several hundred feet. She was cited for
fictitious tags.

~~4.1J.YM''ff~4.'-'ff-...~4.'-~4.'-,lftft'f.IJ.~'Vil."W,Ift'"4'-lff~

J

. · . Problem?

rivers by increasing the federal
share from 50 percent to 75 percent. Slate and Joe~ governments
would ·provide lhe rest and assign
priority rankings to apPlicants.
' Once the land rs bought, it
would be set aside for parl&lt;s or weilands and large structures would be

.

Man cited for DUI

.

.

:Clinton signs~ flood relocation bill _ . ·• Invited

: WASHINGTON (AP) - Legis·
· lation signed Friday by President
: Clinton will provide $110 million
: to help thousands of people in the
nood-ravaged Midwest move to
higher ground.
''II provides greater assurance
: than perhaps any other measure
: that lhe people helped wiD not have
:to suffer such damage and disrup. tion from flooding again," Clinton
said. .
· "It will be less costly to help
:the flood victims move now and re·eslablish their lives than to bear the
:expense of repealed flooding ."
: The built of lhe mQDCy will be
:spent in Missouri, Illinois and
· Iowa. each hit hard by summer
:floods.
'
: The Federal Emer$ency Man.agemenl Agency esumates that
: 10,000 people in n!ne Midwestern

Industries closely associated
with defense, lib ain:rafi manufac.

City caught in settle.r, ~
Palestinian crossfire· ~
HEBRON, Occupied West Bank
(AP) -:- A sacred city exploded in
violence Friday wben Jewish settlers firing guns battled stone·
throwing Palestinians in Hebron on
the occupied West Bank.
Four Palcslinians were wounded
in the fighting, which took place 10
days befote Israel is tO stan handing over coniJOI of lhe occupied
Gaza Snip and Jericho on lhe West
Bank to the Palestine Liberation
Organization.
Violence by Israeli and Palestinian extremists who oppose the
aUIOnomy plan is liltely to delay lhe
start of lhe handover, though Israeli
officials insist it will go through.
Thirty-four Palestihians and 11
Israelis have died since Israel and
the PLO signed their Sept. 13
peace accord.
"Where is peace?" Palestinian
Wafaa Jweihan asked after Jewish
setllers, standing in V-formation,
frred bullets past her living room
window.
·
Palestinian youths responded
with a barrage of stones and bottles, then fled. One Palestinian was
wounded in the neck by gunrire,
Arab witnesses said. Three other
Palestinians were wounded, though
il was unclear whether by soldiers
or settlers.
Soldiers did not try 10 swp lhe
setllers shooting on Bab Zawiyab
Street, bordering Hebron's outdoor
markelplace. B.w they fanned out in
search of Arab stone-throwers and
. detained 20, SUSJlt:CIS, Arab witnesses said.~.,' . ·
The army maintained that its
forces closed off the area and dispersed lhe demonstrators. It confirmed that three Arabs were
wounded and said it was cbecltinJ

Sunday Times-~ntinel/A5

December 5, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A4

prohibited.~-.-~

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.
IN - Recently-elected Syracuse
Council members were sworn in Tharsday night
by Mayor James Pape. Taking lhe olith were,

and DanieUe Lanham, 21 , were in
fair condition, suffering from
smoke inhalation.
The HukiU children were taken
lo Rainbow Babies and Childrens
Hospital. Ashley. 2. was in fair
condition today in the pediatric
intensive care unit, while Justin, 3,
was in critical condition, a hospital
official said. Both children were
suffering from smoke inhalation.
Greg Moll, a Cleveland Electric
Illuminating Co. employee, who
was working nearby said he saw
the smoke and ran to the scene with
a co-worker.
"We lticll:ed the back door open
and lhe smoke came billowing out,
and I just dropped low. The smoke
lcind of cleared a little and I saw die
girl 's leg\ so I grabbed her leg and
grabbed her and I brought her
out," Mou said.
He said he then beard a moan
and went back inside where he
found the girl's brother and
brought him out.
Fire officials said Ms. Lanham
and Gates, on lhe second floor of
the house, went through a window
onto a porch roof and jumped.
identities of the children until the
family was notified.
Hospital spokeswoman Sue
Kalas said both adults were admitted. She said Richard Gates. 20.

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2
-=:-r:::-r-=-r.:T:::-1

'..EMS

:r esponds .
lo 10 call$

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

c

• .

&lt;

•Physician
Referral
. .

'l;5 t •••.••• •• • 269!

.

'l'. Ct.. ........ 1359!
'l's Ct.. ....... . '479!

•Health' Care Events
·S~Rport. Groups

~ Ct .. .•...... '799!

% Ct........ 'I379!
1 Ct .. ....... 'I949!
You Save 33%

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TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WOIKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TJL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POJNI' PU!:ASo\NT JofEI)ICAL CEN':mRl
, 211m a: JUhRION AVBrroB

p.m:

-HOLZER MEDICI\IJ CENTER

POINT PI.&amp;AIART

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•

· At5:39 a.m. the Middlepon unit
:Went to Overbrook Center on Page
,$treet and transported Ch~rles
-McElroy to Veterans Memorial
:!Jospital.
.• k 5:47 a.m. the RuUand squad
t.Ook ' Basil Cremeans from his
'home on Depol Street to Veterans
Memorial.
AI 4:50 p.m. the Middleport
:qnit went to 302 West Mam,
Pomeroy, for Mary Lang who was
}lllten to Veterans Memorial. The
~meroy squad was called into to
'Assist at 5:12p.m.
.;, At 4:46p.m. lhe Syracuse squad
~ent to 42726 State Route 33 for
pwayne Adltins, and at 5:08 p.m.
t1te Pomeroy unit was called in to
'assist. Adkins was taken 10 Veter·
ins Memorial Hospital where he
Jlas admiued for treatment.
• At 5:06 p.m. the Rutland unit
·Went to Meigs Mine 31, Salem por(,al for Jack Stollings who was
tteated bUt not'transpOrtlid. .
;~ At 5:52 p.m. the TuJ)pers Plains
lquad went to 39483 Sumner
JJold, for_ )aclc Farrar, who was
PIJported to VMH.
.
Rutlartd ·squad
· At 7:19
went to 339IJ6 New Lima Road for
~ Shaili who was taken I!&gt; the
~ModiCa! Center.
,, At 8:10 .p.nl. the Syracuse unit
~ent to 53650 Portland Road for
'letr r;&gt;. Adkinl, )\'hQ was dead on

·ll~ne~s or Injury

SOLITAlftts

Availal)le

·.,(SOt) 875-1875

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy.
Friday Admissions: Dwayne
Friday Discharges: Lena CarAdkins,
and Ivor Sarrar,
and
Russell.

COMPLt'TE YOUQ HOLIDAY
~HOPPING AT

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE
•
Oak &amp; Pine Gun Cabinets, Jelly Cabinets,
Pie Safes. Mirrors, Pictures. Magazine rack,
Floor Lamps, Cedar Chests.... and many
more gift .ideas

Specially sale priced for .
holidny gift giving!

~eeFriday.

Other Qualities

.

RECOGNIZED- Kenny Bucldey, rigbl, who has served on the
Syracuse Council ror eight years, was recognized Thursday ni&amp;bt
by Mayor James Pape, len. Buckley filled the term fJI BiD Arnott
on Aug. 14, 1987. Council has bad 106 meetings since be was elected; Buckley has been at 102.

Big selection of
Recliners

answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser-

ina

Call The

FAMD·Y PRACTICE

1

YOU CAN'T ESCAPE. M GAfAT
81J'I'S N M CLASSFEDS.

j. POMEROY • Ten calls were

¥.' H8LltEY, M.D.

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Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses art printed as they
appear on ofriCial reports.

...

•

RPBERT

.,.H

~·

Four children are
killed; two injured
in Cleveland fire

CLEVELAND (AP) - A child
apparently playing with a cigareue
lighter caused a frre that ltilled him
and three other children and injured
two others, frre officials said.
Two adults also were injured in
the blaze Friday at a two· slory
frame house on lhe city's east side.
"II is believed thatlhe 3-yearold boy wenl over to the couch and
lit the blanket that the baby was
lying on," said Fire Department
spokesman Jonathan Parries.
The boy and his 6-month-old
sister were among those who died.
Their cousins, who were rescued
from the fire by a ,cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. employee,
told investigators how it started.
The cousins. Ashley and Justin
·Hukill, said they saw Raymond
Burnette running around die house
trying to set things on ftte with a
cigarette ligtiter. When lhe fires
kept going out, he Iii 'the blanket.
The cousins, the mother of the
four dead children and a man were
hospitalized with smoke inhalalion.
Friends and relatives at the
scene identified the deceased as
children of Danielle Lanham:
Esther Marie Burnette, 4; Raymond
Burneue, 3; Joseph Alldujar. 2; and
Betty Lanham, 6 months .
Cuyahoga County Coroner Eliz·
abeth Balraj would not confirm

from lef'l, Pape, Katie Crow, Eber Pickens Jr~
Don Shaffer and Larry Lavender.

OPEN EVENINGS Tlli:OO

SUN. H:GO"

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•

�Commentary

December 5, 1993

-

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A6

Priest deni~s ab~se · ~harg~s;
Su l•t cou.ld got to .trl·al ··n M· ay

'·'

Arafat must adjust to peacmaking role
WASHINGTON Yasir ing of the lsraeli-PLO agreeminL ness, and now stand as obstacles to
Arafat may be longing for the good A quarter century of Israeli occupa- self-rule.
old days when he could Sow unrest tion has politicized Palestinians to
"Until tbe {last few decades,
withoui worry. The intifada was a the point where Arafat's peace Palestinian political involvement
cost of war for Israel but is now the
was primarily centered in a small
price
of~ for ArafaL
elite
of approximately 200 PalesU1
Co1111
SL,
Pomeroy,
Oblo
825 Tbird Avi., GaJUpolls, Ohio
As the leader of the Palestine
tinian families, itnown as the nota(614) 991·2156
(614)446-2342
Liberation Organization officially
bles,'" the rqJOrt reads. "The leadswitches from soldier to statesman
ROBERT L. WINGETt'
ers of these families served the
Publisher
- seeking to SUPJX'CSS uprisings he
Ottoman empi!e as go-betweens
once stoked - he is confronted by
with the populace of the Palestinian
MARGARET LEHEW
HOBART WILSON JR.
a harsh new fact of life: the intifada
region."
Executive Editor
Controller
is a roadblock, not a route to selfThe notables, who exercised an
I
rule. Life as a guerrilla may prove agenda may go unheeded. Add to almost feudal hold over their felmuch simpler than life as a gover- that the desperate mischief-making low ·Palestinians, had a flllll grip on
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper PUblishers Association.
I
nor - as the Dec. 13 deadline of the militant Palestinian group power until the partition of Palesapproaches for the stan of Israel's Hamas and Syria and what Arafat tine in 1948. The establishment of
LETTERS OF OPINION arc welcome. They should be less than
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip confronts is a challenge that could an Israeli state, and the burgeoning
300 words . All leners are subject to editing and must be signed with
and Jericho.
engender something like Gaza grid- Arab nationalist movement, set
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
Ruling
newly
liberated
people
lock.
forces in motion that eventually
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
problems
for
someone
who
"He's
been
an
autocrat,"
one
of
poses
eroded
their authority.
personalities.
'
has ruled the PLO by decree, flat Arafat's closest Palestinian-AmeriThe final blow to the notables'
and. an iron-fist. Arafat controls the can advisers told us last week. power base came in the ArabPLO's purse strings, makes most "How do they work out differ- Israeli war in 1967. Stripped of
major decisions by himself and ences and how do they live as mde- much of their land in the Arab
often acts without advising even pendent people, That's the test states' humilialing loss, the Israeli
close allies. Whether Arafat makes rather than the contradiction Arafat occupation of the West Bank and
the transition from diclator to faces.''
Gaza St;rip marlced the end of the
democrat in the newly liberated
The Occupied Territories have notables as a political force, anci
Gaza and Jericho areas is a ques- chan~ed substantially and political- the final emer_gencc of the Palestion on which the peace process ly smce 1967. An unreleased tinian nationalist movement as the
Early last Tuesday afternoon-after thcchaosofamoming thatbroughtafue might tum.
Defense Department study sheds leader of the Palestinian
le.
some
light on the forces that have
Last week marlced the bloodiest
and $1 miUion in damages to downtown Gallipolis . subsided; a disembodied
After the 1967 war, "~tinian
voice heard over the scanner in the Tribune'snewsroom declared, "A good job day of street battles since the sign- shaped the Palestinian conscious- political leadership fit into two
to everyone involved."
I HAT! MAVIN&amp; TO FIRE YOU, 1-!ARJ(Y.
We certainly echo that sentimenL There is little doubt that if it were not for
.. , ANP 'THIS WILL LEAVe YOU ANI&gt;
mECiM.LY ~INC'E I.OVISE'S' SUSINES'S'
the professional and dedicated efforts of the volunteer fue fighting units from
LOUISE WITMOUT AN'( AFFOR~ABI.E
llUrf W!NT BELl-Y UP, .
throughout our region, the cost of the inferno that engulfed one building -and
11EALT~ lt--I~Urw4CE.
damaged half a dozen other strucliii'CS- would have been much greater.
Several other Gallipolis businesses were threatened as the blaze went
airborne and traveled over utility liiles to adjacent buildings. In. each case, fue
fighters were quick to respond; and, halted the lire's attempt to breakout oftbe
boundaries of Coun Street and Third Avenue. .
Bystanders readily expressed their pride in th~ efforts of the volunteer fue
fighters. And, note: we are talking about volunteers. It is rare to find such pride
in paid civil servants. Tha.t may be ·because it is rare to fmd such dedication
among paid government employees.
When ftre sauq;downtown Gallipolis on Tuesday, volunteers from throughout Galli a County, Mason County and Meigs County responded to assis~ This
/I.T LEA~ YOU ANt&gt; LOUI~E WILL HAVE
lllOSE iN~URANCE IHPU$TRY COMMERCir'ILS
was aue when fire engulfed·the Galiia County courthouse in 1981 and when
TME INCOME FROM TtiOSE TELEVISION
~EAL.LV 8A~I'\ TI'\E CL\I'ITON HEAil'k fV.N,
several buildings in Pomeroy w.ere involved in 1986. In fact; this is routinely
COMMelCI~'S 'I'OU'VE ~N N\AI&lt;ING
1 1-\0PE 1'1\EY PAY GOOt&gt;, HARRY.
IM YOUR \oCJTCt\E N•
the case · when called, the volunteers answer.
There is currently a feeling among business, industrial and government
leaders that regional cooperation is necessary if success within individual
communities is ever to be achievedcand sustained.
This is a good'jdea- one that volunteer fue fighting units have practiced for
decades.
A DivUioa of

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

\

'A good job' to
everyone involved

'

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'~~

Sugg~sting

'

m¥lr categories,'' aa:ording to IIIQ~
Pentagon report. ' ' Arafat's PLO
and the local leadership inside the
Occupied Territories. Until rt:eently, those inside the territories
looked to outside leadership to
resolve Pa1estiniarl problems." · ·
That all changed with the 1987
Arab uprising, or intifada, whicll.
spawned a whole new generationof Palestinian revolutionaries. A(
flfSt completely spontaneous, the;
intifada soon became an Organized

ou

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of~ dislenL

Middleport wins 1993 'ghost' game

wASHINGTON - Presidents used to, talk about balancing the federal
budf!eL B~t the deficits only deepened, leading their successors to more
.
cauuous ~s.
So these days, balancing budgets and paying down the national debt
aretopicsforhow-to-do-itbooksonfixingthegovernmenL
Their formulas range from drastic spending cuts and tax increases to a
· nal deb 'th
· 1 bo d and
Ie nauo
plan
to
refinance
the
who
t
wt specta
n s,
pay
themoffwiththeproceedaofanearmarkedtaxoverthenextdecade.
There's never been any shortage of answers ~ J?Cfsistent defi_cits that
have pushed the national debt to more than $3.71rillion and counnng, perhaps $1 trillion to come mthe next fiVe years even with the deficit reduclion plan President Clinton won in his ~geL .
.
.
It is the largest ever approved, to tnm deficits by as much I!S $496 bJI.
lion over the next five years if administration estimates are correct. Con· · nal B dget Office
1 estimates put the reductions at $433 billion
~SIO
u
,
.
·
Either way, defiCits are slowed, not stopped. .
• That's left for the books, like three that have been published lately, ·
each with a plan to drive the defiCit to zero.
· Chari w Stead"' n -• a plan to
One of them, bY financler
es -~ a ' r · - r repay the whole national debt over the next decade.
"The National Debt Conclusion" would ;have the government issue
new debt retirement bonds in exchange for existing government securities, at a nremium so the bondholders would swap. They would pay about
the same1nieresL
1
Once the debt was converted into the new bonds, it would be repaid
over a decade with the revenues of a new laX that could be used onfy to
·
·
ts Steadman s ggests an 8 6 pen:ent
ff bonds d
~~tax at the~!=- c:os · u
·
Steadman
· an of a private bank in Washington and also of the
National Debt ~epayment Foundation, says his bond system would ~'bind
and _,._,_,_,....... to the progmm •• so that the money
~=·tCo::.eS:Se;or 811';Jd';;;:'~"'
'
He doesn't suigeat how to get it done. Selling his book isn' t going to
be easy at $4S a copy, but not IICifiy as difficult. as it would be to sell the
p1ooosal in Conpess.
.
· f&gt;rospects are 110 better for another plan, advanced by former Secretary
of Commerce 1'eter G. Peterson in his book, "Facing Up, •• which proposes to balance the budget by the year 2000..
.
Peterson, aNew York investment banker, would do it with sluup cuts
in entitlementbtnefits for middle- and upper-income Americans including the politically sacrosanct Social Security progmm - and with
laX increases, among them a 5 percent consumption laX and a SO-cent-a.
t·
gallon·gasotheiine taxggi. . ,_,_
the 4 3
Cli to had to
Given
stru e It ...,.... to get
· cen mcrease n n
:f::~' instead of a broader energy taX, that one isn't going to happe~,
Peterson
what he calls an •'afOuence test," to reduce the enu-

Dear Rupe:
. I thought I should d_iscuss
bnefly !II~ events occurnng on
Thanksg~vmg afternoon a week ago
T.h~sday. ~you know, Rupe, l
VISit the Muldleport Football field
each year on Thanksgiving to
shake hands with the "football
ghosts:"
This year I was unable to
maneuver as w~ as I should, but
with the ~istance of Joe Struble,
Scoop Harris and my son, Carson, I
was transported from the hosJli~
to the Middleport ~ld at approxl·
mately
f 1:30 p.m.
d L 1n the
d bcounty
h ld
trans er squa · O ·an e 0 •
there were at least 39 othem there
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
Som_e of th_em were Ike Neal,
T R11 J1 Ci
rth C
om . ey, m atwo y, ar1
Jennmgs, Dor Coates, .John and
Margie ~lake, F~ank a!\d A~bie
Blake, Cinda Harris. Twi1a Childs,
B~b Ashley and Bobby Ashley,
Bnan Swan and Carson and Barb
0ow and Morgan ~ws . alo~g
with several othem. This tnp did
me a world of good ~d made a
very happy Thanksglvmg f~ 1!\e.
The fo~at on t!'e 'J;h~tnksj!JVJng
game was the com toss. This"year
~e tea!" that w~n the toss ihree
limes m a row won the game.
Chalk anothe!' ooe for ~hes Ike
Neal, ~om Riley and Jl!" ~latworthy. Middleport_ won this ~· but
next year we mtend to wm the
game.
This annual pilgrimage to the
Middlepon High S"chool football
fie!d has occurr~d for yem:s. The
wnter has not nussed attending the
ceremony on Thanksgiving since it
began. There-ha~e been at ieast3050 j)C(lple attending ~h year.
I should mention ill of the peo-

;i~r:r=~:.;~araFe:=rs~e~:s:

Today in history

.t=

.

.

.

F•nd W. C•vw
'""

•

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assistance at a lill\e I needed it.
I rt:eeive.d a letter and a newspaper clipping from Rosalind Ebersbach Murray. AI one time the
Ebersbach family was one of the
largest families in this area. The
gmnddaddy of this Ebersbach family was Marti
. ·n Ebersbach an immigrant to the US from Germany.
Martin Ebersbach's brother, Peter
Ebersbach, was the rddfather of
the late Sybil Ebers h, a ·""'-·
, th C
C ....... ~
IJiry •or e row and row Law
flllll for 61 yesrs. Martin's children
were George, Theodore, Fredericlc, ·
Charles, Helen (Kuhns), Katherine
(Schaefer), Sophia (Fisher),
Edward, Albert and William Ebersbach. There were 25 grandchildren
of Martin, none of them living in
Meigs County.
Out of approximately 60 gmndchildren and other !lescendants, the
only ones liVing in Meigs County
are Dor Coates and his two daughters. They !Ire. descendant's of
Katherine Schaefer. Edith Mallory,
a daughter of George Ebersbach
has two grandchildren living in
Meigs County. They ·are Linda
Cozart and Jeff Warner. Howard
Ebersbach has a son, Larry, living
in Syracuse.
Rosalind writes that Ruth and
Richard Ebersbach are in good
health. Esther Grant is now 93 and
very well for her age. She is quite
active and goes out often with
Dorothy Bbeubach who is 78. Ros-

alind sees thein frequently . Jean ·
Mann is doing well. Jean and
George Mann, Ruth, Richard, and
Dorothy are hoping that they can
have a rcpnion in Pomeroy next
memorial Hay and bring some chi!dren and gmndchildren with them.
It would be •un.
· ter, Helen
,, Her siS
Reifel, age 90, is not well. Also,
Katherine Kuhns Bonifield is not
well. She lives with a son in
Ev~lt, wA.

.

as their home and are proud of iL ~
Rosalind's clipping was a full ,
page of the achievements of Ros- ~
alind, the flfSI woman psychiatrist ~
in Tampa, She went to Tampa, .
Florida, 55 years ago, never intend- :
ing to stay. Rosalind was a Vassar ~
gr11 duate an d a Univ.ersity of •
Michigan Medical School graduate t
planning to go to Vienna. She (
remained in Tampa and began a ~
long, distinguished medical career. ~
!tosal_incl, now 85, lives in Tampa :
m renrement and rt:eently received &lt;
the prestigious Cesar Medina :
Award •Or
• outstanding community ;
service in psychiatty. The Friends ~
of Research in Psychiatty at The '
University of South Florida con- ~
• rred th
.e
e honor upon Rosalind at a ~
dinner at the Tampa Convention '
Center.
:
Rupe, one of the things that 1 :
have missed over the years is that I ;
never had the opponunity to go ~
deer hunting. However, at one time •
I ~~:at I had shot a deer and ,
later · vered it was Lafe McK- ·
night's cow. I was squirrel hunting
·at the time,
:
Hopefully, Rupe, I will be able ~
to repon this coming week on an .1
invention in which I am involved, I ..•
am very excited about it but will ~
wait until the proper time to ~\
divulge tbe particulars.
1n God we trust.
,
Carry on.
~
Editor's note. Long-time ~
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the ·•
contributor of a weekly column ::
for Tbe Snnday Times-Sentinel. "
Readen wlshlag to applaud, crlt·
icize or comment on any rob'ect
(
11 1
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Second cousins Helen Schaefer
GibSOJ\, (Carl's daughter) is all
riahL Slle is sched
. uled to visit Rosa!i"nd m· early J•"uary.
He'-n's
""
"' s1'ster, Nancy, age 74, lives in Lake
Worth, FL. These are all the
cousins she keeps up with. Jean
says that. Syb1'l was our last real
family connection in Pomeroy.
Ruth and Rosalind know Edna
Fisher·Schoenleb and Jean knows
Hugh Davis in Pomeroy and they
all bow Fred Crow. Since Pat and
Clara Lochary have also died, Rosalind goes to Beech Grove Cemetery to see many of her friends .
That about brinp us up to date on
the. firit cousms wbo grew up
to."·"ther. and are still liVing. (Rosa!Tnd 1s Edward·' Bbetsbach 's
daughlci'.) . ,
,
Those individuals who are history buffs,can tate a lOOk around and
see many of the nrilina1 Bbersbach
homes· that are still·standing;in the
community. ~twas indeed, a pleasuretoreceivethisletterfromRosalind Heretofore the family kept
in touch with ~ybil Ebenbach, a
cousin of this family. Sybil, of
course, is gone,
.
Rosaliild IOcib back on her history in Meigs 'CouniY as an important event in her life: Many of these e:"::::::e~ ~: o;!i~!it!~'\~~~
individuals look on Meigs County Crow,ln care of this newspaper. "

.j

His 8rgnment is persuasive on paper, but he won't find many politi· ln·l955, the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Indus·
cians to take up his case. Not in a Congress that has just rejecled a fiveBy Tbe Associated Press
trjal Organi2'Jitions merged to form the AFL-CIO under its flfSt president, "
year plan for $90 billion in national debt reductiOIIS.
Today is Sunday, Dec. S, the 339th day of 1993. There are 26 days left Qeorge Meany. .
:1
Then there's "A Call for Revolution," in which a"tho Marvin L. in the year.
In 1978, the American spaee probe Pioneer Venus I, orbiting Venus · ·l
Gross writeS lliat his plan would '.'eliminate the defJCii without taxes or
Today's Highlight in History:
~gan beaming back its fJtSt"informll!lon and picture of the plllliet to sci:
angst," in five years, with·a 10 percent tax cut at the l8jne time. He'd do
Sixty years ago, on Dec. 5, 1933, Prohibition came to an end as Utah enlists in·Mountain View, C8lif.
,
,
it all by =~the size llld spcndin1 of the federll aovernment. which is became the 36th state to ratify the 21st Amendment to the Constitution,
In 1979, feminist Sonia Johnson was formally exco'mmunicaled ~ the
the way
Reapn once said he eould balance the budget in his flfSI thereby repealing tbe 18th AmendmenL
Mormon Church becanse of her outspokCn suPPort for the proposCd .!!qual
terill.lnlleld. the deficit lOlled.
: On this date:
.
Rights Amendment to the Constitution.
• .
How,-10 botlb.IIP't aoinato cNnp h . -. But tbl!y Jaian1 iuue . In 1776, the~ scholastic fraternity i.n America. Phi Beta·ICappa, was
In 1989; Eut Gennany's, former leaders, including ousled Communist
tha&amp; llln!ldY ~a (foU~ c:GIIDIW1I. 1'111t ~bon in the~, ~vole J1oole• otpnized • the Col!ele of William &amp; Mary in Williamsburg, Va,
Patty chief Erich Honeeter, weri!'plaCed under house arrest.
llllrJIIIIIIi• - ~ dill ~. CIPJluii1d, ill the cats y,~,.3 die ftilt n81ive,U.S. preside~¢. Martin Van Buren, was born in
Ten years ago: More than a dozen people were killed wlieh a ear bomb
Conal•11M 'Wiled; lid Ill die
peed election-year tJIOipCl for a -~· ...,....,.,.._,N.Y.
·. ·
shauered a nine-story 8pll'llllent building ill mostly Muslim west Beirut, ·
.ad tiudlellilenilll~lheO wlihMn.
'
In 1791, COIDJIOICI' Wolfgang Amadeus ¥ozan died in Vienna; Aus· Lebanon.
tile
u ri*y ~ limmick. ,
tria. at I&amp;C 35.
·
·· ~ ,
• ·,
'
Five years ago: A federal grand jury in North Carolina indlcled PI'L
1'lle r
fi ._ •
f!_S n ' II!Pfl6rtert, 1rMi ~7 Jellaired to S In 192, Georae Wubington ·was re-e~ted preaidCnt of the United founder Jim Bflcttr and former aide Richard Dortch on fraud and conspir·
a.. 11 di\ ' • • - rtllld,. ~ .....,Ua m Follruary.ll
tatcB,JohnAdlma~rwlccted ~erideJIL
, ,
. acy charaes. Bakker w&amp;~conviCied of all tounts: Dortch pleadedguiity to
cillle,.tdlln IO"~GadiM*O... ~ die~• dlelaltCollpeu.
In 1831, forma}_:!~~ntAdams
~ aeau .amem\lerofthe U.S. fCM!I'eounta ~ coope~ ·with prosecutors in exchange for alig~lel,sen·
. , A4o1Jt1811111&amp;~1iiloaeforitleboob. :'
HouseofR~uwves. I .
.·.
''
c" .
"
•
tenCe.
..
. •'
'
,
__
.
, ,
In 1848, President Polk ll'l~red. the· ~ld RuSh Of '49 by conrmmg
One year ·ago: Russian President Doria Yeltsin narrowly 'kept• the . '
'IDITOR'S NOTE- W..._. R. Man, vice ptaldellt ucl colwn- that gold had been discovered m Califorrua.
.
•·
power 10 IPPOint Cabinet niinistets defealing a constitutional.arncndn\ellt
..., ror ne Amcl1ted Prea, reported on Wasblaatoa aad . In ~932, ~ physicist Albert Einstein was granlcd a visa making 1!111 WOulcf hive put his team of ~formers under' the control of Russia's '
_ _.,_ _. -'~ - ·•••" 111 .,..,..
ltllOSstble for him ~,~vel to the United States.
COn~;~
.
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11

willa•••o

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a $10 l!lillion lawsuit accusing him for Cook, 34, of Philadelphia, said
•nd Roman Catholic Cardinal they want to proceed quickly
Joseph Bernardin of sexually abus- ·becanseCookhasAIDS.
ingas~ntinthe 1970s.
Cook sued Nov.U, accusing
In court papers flied Friday, the Bernardin and Harsham of sexually
Rev. Ellis Harsham "denies that he abusing him between 1975 and
Clver sexually abused or_in any way 1977 when 'he. ~as~ stuc!en~ at S~
liad sexual contact" With plaintiff Gregory Semmary m Cmcmnall.
Steven J. Cook.
Bernardin then was the Cincinnati
Harsham asked U.S . District archbishop and Harsham was an
Judge S. Arthur Spiegel to dismiss instructor at the school.
t!Je complaint
.
·Bernardin, who now lives in
The priest also denied allega- Chicago, has ·denied the ·auegalions that he gave Coolt ~· used lions. He has asked the court to
his priestly authority to JUStify the grant him a separate trial . But
alleged sexual relations or to intim- Cook's lawyers said that would
idate the youth into silence, and unfairly require Cook to testify
delivered Cook to Bernardin so - twice. Spiegel has· not ruled on the
Bemardin could have sex With h\111. requesL
,
Aiso Friday, lawyers said the
Lawyers for ail parties met

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel/A 7

~~~e:!.~~e~o_y'!~!!!to~~!~o~!~! in ..~o~!!'!'~!!emu

;

'--CINCINNATI (AP) - A priest lawsuit could go to trial May 9.

,&gt;

pie at the hospiral who h8ve helped
me through~ problems. I hereby
thank all the trOQps at Veterans
Memorial Hospirai who gave me

.

· ,

8sted a ~ge to dis!'liss him from AttOrneys for the defendants an\1

IP,O~t just as _unprepared as:
the Israelis by the mtifada 's out·
break, Arafat scrambled to ~ain,
some control of the uprising,' the'
report states. "The best he and the'
PLO could rnanage was .to establish'
a Ouid and relatively equal )llldnership with the intifada's leadership."
'
Most of these new leaders are
"more politicized, populist and
independent" than the preceding
generations, according to the'
reptXL "01\e consequence has been
a .generational cleavage aggravated .
by the intifada experience when:
youths in their tuns and 20s played.
the vangilard role, not only as sol-.
diers but as leaders."
This is Arafat' s frusllalion: He
must learn how to democratically
share power with Paleslinians who·;,
rose to prominence toughing it out :
under Israeli rule. Palestinian ' ·
national consciousness has evolved ~
from typical feudal serfdom to ~
mass politicization in the course of :
a quarter-century.
i
"There's more anarchy than '
democracy,'' explained the Arafat ~
adviser. "The intifada was a rebel- ~
lion, not an election. How do you tum that rebellion into a democm- ;
cy? How does he tame them? How ~
does he get the young kids back to ~
school?"
'
Arafat is trying to prevent •
peacemaking efforts from being &lt;
undercut by dissent within the for- ',
merly occupied territories. Some :
Palestinians are irritated by '
Ararat's desire to !rain 30,000 new '
police officers for the streets of ·
Gaza and Jericho.
As Arafat' s adviser observed:
"(Palestinians) know why he's '
doing it. There's going to 'be a lot '
of Palestinian nightsticks cracking
a lot of Palestinian heads."
Jack Anderson and Michael '
Binst~in are writers for United 1
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
· "· •·

ways to
balan·ce the butlget
:l~~~~::=t

Ohio/W.Va.

December 5, 1993

Thursdiy with Spiegel, then met
alone later at Spiegel's request to
work out the earliest trial date pos-

sible.

.
wanted the attorneys to
woctoutascheduletheyeouldlive
with, and we did dJa!: after we had
our conference with him," sa.id
Matk,VanderLaan·:.a lawyer for the
archdiocese, "I think everybody's
on the same wavelength."
"The judge is helping us and all
the lawyers aie cooperating," said
Stephen Rubino, a Vcnmor, NJ.,
lawyer representing Cook.
Coot~s lawyers said they will
take a videotaped ~lion to preserve his testimony m case he dies
before the trial
Other defendants are the Archdiocese of Cincinnati and archdiocese administrators.
·~He

The state's unemployment rate
dipped one-tenth of ·a percentage
point from Octobez, to November,
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said.
The rate for November was 6.5
percent, down from 6.6 percent in
October.
" We are pleased that as we
enter the Christmas season, those
who have entered the job marlcet in
November have found jobs more
plentiful ," Debra R. Bowland,

Friday.
Ohio's November rate was
slightly higher than the national
unemployment rate of 6A percent,
aa:ording to Labor Departn)ent figures. That was down from a 6.8
percent naiional rate in October.
The number of Ohioans with
jobs WliS 5,132,000 in November,
up 36,000 from October. The number of workers unemployed in
November was 359,000, up from
358,000 the previous month.

and employment grew somewhat
over the prior month,'' Ma. Bowland said. "The figures for 1993
show a geneml improvement in the
employment picture as compared to
1992."
Ohio's civilian labor force
included 5,49l,QOO workers in
November, up froljl October's figure of 5,453,000. The share of the
working-age population in the
labor force was 65.3 percent in
November, up from 64.8 percent in
________________.__-_____.;0c;::to;:ber;;.,- - - - - -. . .

1

Regarding··the Womeldorf·Thomas Hardware Fire:

We, .the m·embers of the Gallipolis Vol. Fir.e Dept. would
like to express our.deep appreciation to all of the area fire
depa~tme~ts including the Pt. Pleasant, Middleport, Rio
Grande, Vinton, Guyon, Centerville, Pomeroy, Valley, Flat
Klan can appeal denial of display Rock, and Mason Fire Depts. for their help.
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A director of the Capitol Squ.are
The commission also was to
state official has denied Ku
Review and Advisory Board, said· consider another application from
To the Gallipolis Police Dept., the Gallipolis Street &amp;Water
Klan request to
a cross at the white supremacy group may the Klan to demonstrate at the
the Statehouse dunng Christmas appeal the decision to the full com- Statehouse next month on Martin
season.
mission, which was expected to Luther King Day, a state and feder- Depts., the Gallia Co. EMS, the local utility companies and
However, Ron Keller, executive meet next week.
al holidlly.
An October Klan rally at the the local businesses for their patience and cooperation.
Statehouse drew a crowd of several
- - S-tate bri-----=~-__, hundred
chanting counterAlso to McDonalds, Grace United Methodist Church, The
protesters. Police erected barriprevented all but a few
OSU hopes to raisi $650 miUion
Stowaway, Captain D's, Long John Silvers and many others
mtnOr
mjunes.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State UniverSity ,has started a camLater, the Klan ignored more
paign to raise more than $650 million.
·
who provided food, drink and .moral support as well as
than
$100,000 in bills that the
Jerry A, May, universitr·vice president for development and , tol commission
and
loeai
pohce
president of The OSU Foundation, said the
public kick· said it must pay for the security anyone else who may have helpea in any way,
off will begin next fall. He said bnivemity fund-nusers have begun
needed at the Octobez demonstrasoliciling large leadership gifts to set the tone for the campaign.
tion.
May said one of those gifts was the $20 million
last
WE THANK YOU!
Keller said he made his decision
month to the university's business college by Max M. F1sher, a
retired Detroit executive who
from Ohio State in 1930.
=':~:~lf:J~~:r.:S~
Gallipolis
Vol.
Dept.
ings. He did not elaborate in a pre- i. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _The
___
_____
_ _Fire
___
..:,_ _.
The lllst Ohio S"'te fund drive had a $350 million goal and raised
dis~lay

a

Klux

e~ ~t

c~­

campai~'s

pled~ed

~uated

$460 million before ending in 1990. About $20 million of that
amount remains unspent or uncommitted to endowments.
Stanford, Yale, Michigan and the University of PelUISyivania are
among less than 12 universities that have mised as much, he said.
The money will be used for scholarships, endowed professorships and building maintenance and constrUCtion.

47 guards to be laid off
CIRO..EVll.LE, Ohio (AP) - Pickaway County commissioners
have ordered the sheriff to lay off an unspecified number of the
county jail's 47 guards, effective Jan. 1.
A letter signed Thursday by two of the three commissioners told
Sheriff Dwight E. Radcliff to begin paperwork for the Jajpft:s.
Commissioners Harley Evans and ChaM~~ W-' Pritt:!JN.g .~igne&lt;;l
( ti)e letter, which carries the names of all three.Ocimmissioners. Com.missioner Rudi Neff voted against authoriZing· ltle. muilty·clerk to·
write the letter.
-· ·
·
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The directive carne one day .after U.S. Marshal Robcn Foster
transferred 38 federal prisoners from the year-old jail to the
Franklin COUI!ty jailt Picll:away County. is canceling its contract to
house federal prisoners and has canceled contracts to house prisoners from other jurisdictions.
.
Pritchard said without federal prisoners, the 110-bed jail has too
many guards. It average&lt;;J90 to 100 prisoners daily in recent weeks,
but that number droJ)Jled to 37 on Thursday.
Evans has talked of housing prisoners in one of.Jhe jail's three
. wings and using 30 guards. That means I 7 guards would be laid off.
Another plan recommends 10 layoffs.

pared statement.
Keller said he faxed his decision
to Donnie Carr, a Klan representative 'in Cleveland who applied for
authority to display the cross.
Carr could not be reached for
comment Friday evening. Another
telephone number he gave the commission had a recorded message
that provided information on how
to joiil the KKK.
. However, the national grand
wizard of the Knights .of the Ku
Klux Klan to!~ 1ihe Columbus Dispatch the organization will go to
court over the ~ ac;tion.

FIIE•FREI
-GIFTWRAP
•ENGRAVING
•RING SIZING
.PARKING DOWNTOWN

Adjacent to the
Courthouse, Pomeroy

Car dealer pleads guilty to fraud
COLUMBUS (AP)- A former car dealer pleaded guilty in U.S.
Disuict·coun wdefrauding Huntington National Bank.
Thomas G. Ashley, 43, of Kissimmee, Fla., pleaded guilty Friday
to one count of bank fraUd. He faces up to 30 years in prison and a
$1 million fme. A sentencing date was not set.
Ashley ran University Volkswagen from 1990 to 1991 and
. received a line of credit from the bank to pay for ne-.y cars.
As of June 17, 1991, Ashley sold 38 new~ but did not pay the
' bank $422,255 he owed. He submitted false financial statements to
Huntington so he could use the money for operating expenses, U.S.
Auomey Edmund Sargus said,

Ohio man killed crossing highway
PRUNTYTOWN, W.Va. (AP)- An Ohio man was killed after
he was struck by a pickup as he crossed U.S. 50, the Taylor County
sheriffs department said Friday.
Bennie A. Green, ·48, of Millfield, Ohio, was struck about 6:10
p.m. Thursday by a truck driven by Brian Knotts, 19, of Flemington, said Lt. C. D. Sinclair.
Green had parked his car carrier and was crossing the road to go
to a convenience store when he was hit, Sinclair said
No'chatges have been filed, he said.

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TOWN HALL MEETING
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with · congressrilt~n
Ted Stric~land, a member of
our National Health Care
Reform Committee

WHERE: Pomeroy .Nursing and
Rehabilitati.on Center
' .
WHEN: December 10, 1993
TIME: 5:30·7:00 P.M.
·TOPIC: .Health Care Reform
· Special Giles.t:
.
State Representative Mary Able

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Ab~tff•t will be served following the meeting.

'.

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DUE·TO AN EXJREME CASE OF AGENCY

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the River

1tinu•·•entinel

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·Section B
Dec:etnber

~ocal Santa Claus

gf?fens holiday
. ,....~son fer Gallipolis
PETERSON

lit·Na.... Staff
~~~~:~ - 1\nd laying his finger aside of his nose and giving a nod·
~
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the Night Before Christmas" slrikes a familiar chord with
Pnlevn the reaident Santa Claus for Gallipolis.
switchboard opefli!Or for the 1elephone company Polcyn has been
up as Santa for 20 years.
began
the pan when his oldest son was in kindergarten. He
the
hisson's Christmas program. From !here he made! appear;esat chilclrell1' s parties and demanMor his appearances h.as increased
since.
addition to panie.s Polcyn now appears at McDoilald's; in the
~ris~mll parade and in the,cjowntown &amp;re!l with.his own Santa f!puse.
·;;IIGivimzevc:ry thought to the legacy he supporl$ Polcyn said the only
~ula.tioil onJI,is appearances is·lllat anotl)er S~ma not be pre5C111.
can 'really cause confusion for lhe children;" he-said. •
' Kc:epi1~g the illusion alive in children is the reward of his wo!li:.
"A lot of kids decide they don't
believe (in Santa)·and then they see me
and do. It really makes it Worib it," he
said.
• Not only children enjoy Polcyn's
pastime.
"Some adults will walk by and their
eyes will light up when they see me.~
.he said.
The reactions he receives from
adults and children alike lies in not just
the traditional red·suit and jotliness but
in his authenticity.
··
It talces him an hour to prep~ for
the role of !(ris Kringle. He colors his
beard, hair and eyebrows.
Soon, he admits, he will not,even
Ml~e Po(!:yn
have to do that.
· '~ a.k.a. Santa CIJIUS
His crushed red velvet suit was
~
·
created by his sister-in-taw .
.!':with his natural apjlearance and red suit as the base for his Santa
~!iblme, he makes an addition every year. Last year he and his wife
~i,gned and constructed his cape.
.
,.
• · i took thm two weeks to find the proper material and asseMble the
•
Lined with thick fur, the cape serves two Purposes 10 keep ~olcyn
weon and 10 give him a jolly figure. "With a big coat I don't have to be so
fi,t:~ he said.
,
;:_This year he bought Santa spectacles that he could see through. tn·the
RPt. the glasses he has worn has hindered his vision ..
'\What he would like to add 10 his ever growing Santa props is a white
C~ge with a while horse, but he doubts that will ever,hawC'l· ' .,
~:His s!riking'resem~tance to Saint Nicholas t/IP.i!Jih 11~ at tifU' P,ll~ him ~ ·•
. l!jtJbind.With children. · ·
'~ •J:"1l'~ ,t · .:.. ~- _ ..
• · I get.all kinds ofChris~as lists from children," he said. "And some
tl!.idrel! think I already know what !hey want. They wilt say, 'well I
6dy wrote you. You know what I want.'"
·
· ~fue doesn't make promises to children either unless the parent agrees.
Wf!en a child asks b- a toy he looks at lhe paren1 and if given an affmning
nbll he w~l ~ise the gift.
·- ·
.
tfotcyn begins his visits 1he first Sablrday after Thanksgiving and·
c&amp;ltinues until the first of the year. He IS booked a year m advance and.
pillys the part every night for the three weeks before Christmas. ·,
.: He talces vacation time from work make to his appearances and donaleS
W:money he makes to lhe Calvary Christian Church. .
;~e Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association provides him with candy to
~bute 10 children and Duke Dry Cleaners spruces up his cloak twice a
vi,iek, complimentary.
.
.
:After a month of promising gifts, passing out candy and patung ch1ldren
o,ttlthe head Polcyn said he is ready for a vaeation but leaves no doubt as to
h~deli~t in lhe role of Santa.
.
~"It really is the.best job in the world," he sa1d.
.
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ALTHOF &amp; ASSOCIATES A€CESS TO HUMAN
RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT'NAS BEEN ClO,SED

FOR FOUR BUSINESS DAYS.
"·

AND ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE WILL BE OPEN .
FOR SERVICES AT OUR NEW LOCATION,
1456 JACKSON PI·KE, GALLIPOLIS

MONDAl DECEMBEI'· ·om,•··~·' '&amp;·30 ·A·M· 1
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t~s~as trad~tion expl9red
~encan hohday celebrations
: :;

Everyone

steeped m h1story

kn~ws that

Snow says, "In his Encyclopedia of
Americ;anFactsandDaleS,"Canuth
'
gives us an account of Chris~ in
Virginia in 1613."
groun
9
mpnyo
·
"The extreme winde,
in die obserVance, however, are
well 'known. .
·"
rayne, froste and snow caused us to
~ •.
Tim Snow, Reference Likeepe Cluistmas among the sav~an at the 'University of Rio .
ages," Carruth writes. "We were
~e. cites, as an example of some
never more merry, nor fed on more
oflbelostfactsabouttheholiday, that
plenty of good oysters, fish, flesh,
Chris~ has been historically eelwildefowlandgoodbread,nornever
PN..ied on various daleS and months,
had better fii'CS in England."
;:.-r;iudi J
March d A 'I
Snow compares this din~~
ng
anuarr
•
an
pn
.
ner
to
the
"Kingdome
Christmas
:..
''Th,e da~ of ~ber 25. ,
.
• stohavebeengenerally accepted
Party" lhrown by the Boeing Com~the · ~ 354," Snow says, "al,
pany in 1979.
lli\igh theeontroversy,continued for
"Oiliness mtes this as one
C!)J!turieS afler that."
of the biggest blowouts in history,"
.•· . In 1660, he.says, a law was
Snow explains. "It consisted of an
eilicled iii Massachusetts forbidding
audienCe of 103,152;acastof2,506;
iiJcelebmtion of Cluisunas in May.
1,000 Christmas trees, each with
Vibtators were fined five shillings
IOOiights; 150,000snow-white bata&amp;but 70 cents.
loons; and, three ice ponds."
/ ?~
Inananiclepreparedforthe
Snow cites Edwin
hO,~dlly entitled "Ciuistmas in the Li.
Radford's "Encyclopedia of Superb!jry." Snow presents an historical
stitions," as he describes some old
P.!(si&gt;ective on ~ popwar celebr11- except the Christmas holidays.
EuroJle&amp;l!. bel_iefs. .
·
~-· ·
.. A!.thesametime,SirRoger
· .
Bemga2meofgoodlu~k
~~ · "The exchange of gifts, of deCovertymadeitapracticeofsend- and good fo~. Snow says. 1t
~· js a ·D'B!lition· star1ed by the ing "a string of' hog's pudding. ~d r was. believed that a person born ~
t1ife kin,gs w~o brought gold, fnuik- pack ofcards" to·every poor f~1ly m Cluis!Jllas would never be hanged.
i~nse and myrrh to the manger," he his parish.
"Another commonly h~ld
~s. "Sending Chrisunas cards to
Snow DOleS that in 1975, superstitionwasthat.agreenChnstfritndsan4(amilyisavariationofthe WarnerErhard,theCalifomiafounder mas would bring a heavy harvest
* English custom
· • ·
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of EST, made the next year."
. .
of;,playing a few Tim Snnw. Retenince Llbl8rlan the "Guinness
- Notallane1entbehefswere
pQies pf calds at ·
..,. '
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Book of W.orld quite so positive, however.
tllls time of !he ·
Unw.r.lty of RI!J G,.nde, Records" when
"Another old European
war."
~
cltn eump~n of_,.,of the he sent · out belief was that people should pay
·' tr
c i 11 n g
.
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62,824 Ctvist- ~lbseiitention 10 the shadows cast
~rt ciwnber•s /oflfactubouttiHI,holkllly,,
mlll"'~!rds. :" .. when the 'Yule los' was bwning,"
·• w~~rk . "Bool; of
, : .
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, GhJ.tst, he· sayS'; .''Those shadows which
~~· Sl'low. DOteS I!Jal 'dUring. the masdinneridormanyofus~.'\~the appeared Without heads were be·
~of Henry VIla p!ohibitory sw- best partS of the holiday acu\'lues," lieved .to beiOIII to penons who
. , ~~~. f;play~~g .atall times
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were to die within the year."

Gbnstmas inhe celebmtion of the
bltih of Jesus ChrisL The historical
·
d f'
fthetraditions

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RESCHEDULE APPOINTMENTS,
BUT P.tEASE CONTACT OUR O,FFIEES iT
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41t~8289oR I~800·416·:8"81
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82-sunday Times Sentinel

.. December 5, 1993

wv

OH-Polnt

RC.COLA
PRODUCTS
I

STORE HOURS

Monday ,.,_ Stlll!lay
8AM·10PM

c

298 SECOND ST.
POMERO'fOH.
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIJ QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD. DEC s 'THRU DEC.
11, 1993 .

COCA
P.R

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MR. AND MRS. ERIC WILCOX

Reiber-Wilcox
MR. AND MRS. JASON DYKSTRA

Halley-Dykstra

MR: AND MRS. KE!TH WHITE

Carter-White
POMEROY - Vicki Carter and
Keith White exchanged· wedding
vows in a ceremony at the Enter·
prise United Methodist Church in
Pomeroy on OcL 2.
·
The ceremony, officiated by the
Rev. Keith Rader, was preceded by1
a half hour of music by Becky
Baer. A1l the ceremony began, the
mothers of the bride and groom
lighted candles representing their
respeclive families. During the ceremony, a Wlity candle was lighted
by the bride ·llld .gzpom to signify
joiriing ~ the two f&amp;milies. AS this
was !lone "Thel,ord's PrayerH was
sung by PJ'IIJICCS Hunnell.
The bride was given in marriage
by her falh~. :r'he maid of honor
was Cathy Sauval'e, sister of the
bride. and the ·bndesmaids were

GALLIPOLIS • Melissa Dawn
Halley and Jason Bryan Dykstra
were united in marriage OcL 2 at
Grace United Methodist Church.
Melissa is the daughter of Allen
and Carolyn f;lalley of Gallipolis.
Jason is the son of Terry and Jackie
Dykslrll of Solon.
The ceremony was performed
' by Rev. Josl!ph Heffner with music
provided by Ruth Ann Fellure. The
bride was escorted by her'father.
Maid of honor was Tricia K.
Puckett Cousin of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Patricia Cini,
Lisa Sari and EDen Sb'Oiher. Carrie
Swain, cousin of the bride, registered guests. Jamison Saunders,
cousin of the bride, distributed programs.
Corey Dykstra, brother of the
groom, served as best' man.
Groomsmen were Scott Dykstra
brother of the groom, Jay Perez,
and Paul Moore. Ushers for the

Frances Hoffman and Kelley
Sawldns. The best man was Kevin
White. brother of the groom and
th~ groomsmen were Jimmy Wolfe
and Rodney Klein. The ringbearer
was Christopher Neece and the
flower girl was Nikki Tucker, niece
of the groom. The train carrier was
Kadyn Sauvage, niece of the bride,
while the guests were registered by
Terry Neece, friend of the bride.
A reception followed the ceremony at the ·church. A staircase
cake decorated in the bride's colors
of burgundy and mauve was served
to guests by Deanna Tucker and
Darla Tucker, sisters of the groom,
and Pam Wolfe, friend of the bride.
The couple resides on ' Manuel
Road in Racine,

'
ceremony were Heath
Halley
brother of the bFide and Nick
Jezierney,
The reception was held at the
Elks Lod~e in Gallipolis with a
buffet dmner served by the
Emblem Club of Gallipolis,
Meliss11' is a 1987 graduate of
Hannan 'Frace High school and a
1991 graduate of Ohio University
with a B.S. in Journalism.· She is
employed by Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., Nashville, Tenn. as Edi·
wr in Public Affairs DepL '
. Jason is' a 1987 graduate of
Solon High School and a 1991
graduate of Ohio University with a
!I.A. in Sociology and Crirninolgy,
He is employed by Bradley Inc.
Nashville, Tenn.
The couple traveled to Gadin·
burg, Tenn·. for their honeymoon.
They now reside in Nashville,
Tenn.
•

RACINE - Laura Rachel Reiber,
daughter -of Robyn Reiber and
Randy Reiber, both of Racine, was
married 10 Eric E. Wilcox, son of
Karen Wilcox of Fort Myers, Aa.,
and !!II Wilcox, Akron, on OcL 2.
· The ceremony was performed
by Dr. Joel Baer at Maple Grove
United Methodist Church in
Columbus. The bride was escorted
by her brothers, Robert and Russell.
Bridal attendants were Lori
Swartz, Kim Adams, Missy Wible,
Becky Conn, and Mary Ann Heft.
Groomsmen were Todd Wilcox,
Brett Wilcox, Adam Hinton, Dave
Cromleigh,-and Scott Maxey.
. The bride is a graduate of
Southern High School and jlas a
degree in electrical engineering
from Ohio University. The groom
is a graduate of ~on Firestone
High School and has a degree in

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in elecirical engineering. Both a:ie
empJoyed by the American Electric
Power Service Corporation ip
Columbus.
•
The couple spent their honeJImoon at Lake Tahoe, Nev. Thd'y
reside in Columbus.
•

BOWMAN'

FAR~

IIOIECAH IIEDICAt sumy

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• Aoopinlory Thenplolt On Stolr,
• 24 tii.E...geilcy lltrYioe
•
• Dhcl Billilg: llidii:ora'llo~
IIICIAim;

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Steak or Roasts •••••••:

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ECKRICH SUCED

JUST AJUilVDJ

U.S~D.A CH. OICE BONELESS BEEF

CHRISTMAS
BARS
ONLY

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Chuck Roast ••••••••••••••
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····~···········•·..
1
MARIAH JOWL
.
(
Bacon ••••••••••••••••• !~.. 69
LB.

The Sunday Times-Se11'ti~el

· ARMOUR BREADED _

happy to publish 'wedding stories
and photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must ha~e
taken place within.60 days prior 10
the publication, and may be up 10
600
words in length. · Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior lO the date
of publication.
Those not mating the 60 day
1
m1Jinc will be published during
die daily~ as space allows. .
l'tiolognpbs of eilber the bride

•

MR. AND MRS. HARRY GORRELL

Conley-Gorrell

Patti s••••••;:·••

...

.'

~~·:.4!~~

·m ytbydlt

havci be4lll ~

Tho pro1ram will gontlnut
tbrouah Dec. 24. C!IIIOmen can
Jellllel' In diD pirtlclpadnl IIOfCI.
To be ellllble ahoppen mutt fill
oul new 11ubl e.ch Week with one
of tho 20 motdlinU becauae ~
will be iwardld baaed pn only
~ dtkeiiiUbmltled &amp;hal week.
· Tho flral week winner• wore
VJcti Smhh for o.iry Queen, Betty
Puidl for """llle'a Reltaulant; Tim
sefby tor Jnael.• Carpet; Donie
S~a~borry, for Fruth l'ha~~~cy;

ARGO
PEAS
HEAD

' OF BATHROOM EQUIPMENT
LAROE SELECnON
•"'lh Stoala •Grab

Lettuce••••••••••••••••••• 2/1.00

•Safety Ralls

.

'·

'

Totlfrae

...... ...
'

'

./

~

2°/o Milk ••~ •••••••••••::~••

715 E. lllln St

.t.ckeon, Oh.
2111-74114
:·
. . . .. .

for 1ohillon'l var~~~y, ~!;:,-:,
field for Mlddletlotl' I
Store, Ralph Sliwln fCII' lns.la
Furniture, Dllllll Bacbtel for "II&amp;
Bond' Hcallh and Pillleu, L:illlan ·'
Demoskey for Acquisition~ Fine
Jewelry, Becky Baer for Farmers
Bank, and Lll Kennedy for SellS.

$ 189

Medium Eggs ••••••:2~••• 2/1.00
SUNSHINE

$299
·$319 KEMPS
.Dog Food................... . · Ice Cream ...........~:~••••
.
$3-99 BANQUO
-- MAXWELL HOUSE
$199
(C)ffee••••••••••••••••!~~.....
Fried Chicken.~:~~•••••
.

'

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17 oz.

100

GROUND

FLAVORITE GRADE A

BEEF
lOLl

~·

.

•••
•

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tl.ac. •; · Jac~ .....,.,
1ft
Ciolluw. "*- ,..., r.1
B'ld Pabrief, ............
ln,.le Bllanlllol, ~ HadW4

'

BROUGHTON

'

.

BONUS 90Z.

79(

lherc's so INidl to rejoice~ thll holiday season.
And rtt:NI we're sMns ~ •omdhlns dsc to sing eboutl

MfOOUftM:J ~ .
lilt lirA (I( ~tWit .
•

COFFEE

StBAG

' HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY ·
(-t.fj .f46.6700

INSTANT

GOLD
MEDAL
FLOUR

$ ]19

•44•6-•234-2.,...__.__..,.

ProfeltionM ~1(1 Plto~y

MAXWELL HOUSE

i-rt1lJ..I.jj

"Songs of the
Season"

Winners named In promotion
,

or the bride and groom may be
published witll wedding S!!Jries is
desired. Photo~hs may be either
black and whne· or good quality
color, billfoid·size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. .Generally, snapshots or instant-developi~g pholO~
are not of acceptable quality.
All material submitted for publication is subject IIi edilin$.
Questions may be duected to
the ediwrial department fr!lm 1-5
p.m. Monday through Fnday at

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

.

WeddinQ policy

_regards weddillgs or Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is

7UP
PRODUOS

$ 49.

12oz.pkg. '

446-2842
OHIO

89

·

.

How safe
is your
bathroom?

FRESH WHO~E FRYING

Ch1ckens •••••••••••••••~•• 69

•
•

Ohio
!COdy

Laudermilt- McKnight .
RU1LAND - The Rutland Free
, ' .· Will Baptist Chun:h was the setting
"' for the Nov. 26 wedding of Loretta
Mae Laudermilt of Rutland, and •
Nich'olas Jay McKnight, both of
Rutland.
- :.-....-......... -.. ~
' · The bride is the daughter of
Judy and Edward-Laudermilt of ·
Pumeroy, and the groom is the son ·
,. of Betty and Carlos McKnight.
Pastor Paul Taylor performed ·
the double ring ceremony at 4 p.m.
following a program of music by
Mis. Paul Taylor. The bride was .·
given in marriage by ber stepfalh~,
Edward Laudermi!L For her wed·
) ding she wore a pale blue dress
. ,• with matching flowers and wore
,, ·pearl jewelry, · .
A ~ was held at the Rut·
land Fire DepartmenL The wedding
table was ck:corale!l 'with bells and
• . •lrelllilers. Doves tppPed the wed·
ding cake.
'

12 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

•

:

"'...
..c
~

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~

•

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CARNATION

I:

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:r
I:

l:lNV.

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99·.&lt;
. .

Good Only AI Powell's Super Vlilu
otfarGoodDtc.SihniDIC..II, 1113

UmH 4 Per CuttC1""r

•

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:• I

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Joan of Arc Lt. Red

Kidney Beans·

l• .

::1 :I ,JS.S OZ. 3
1

II I I
:I 1 :
11· I 1
1

Good On

1:00

1

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Offer~. 11hn1Dtc.11, 1113

UmH 1 Per c . . -

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9 LIVES

:11 '• 1

CAT FOOD

!: : 5.5 0%. 4/ 1'00

'I 1
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Good Only AI Powell 'a Super V.lu
OfltrGoociDtc.51hruDIC.11 , 1913
Umlt 1 Ptr Cu8torner

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BETTY CROCKER

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Good Only At Pawelra Super Yllu
OfltrQoodDec,, Sthru Dec. 11, 11113
Umlt 1 Ptr Cullomel

::

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GROUND
CHUCK
lOLl

�Page B2......Sunday Times

Sentinel

wDec:ember 5, 11193

~oint Pl••nt. wv

RC.COLA
PR·ODUCTS
I

STORE HOURS'

Monday thru Sullday

c

8AM~10PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMERO'fOH.

.

•

WE RE~ERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT 'QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC 5 THRU DEC. II, 1993 ·

COCA OLA
P.lOD as
12 PK., 12 OL CANS

MR. AND MRS. ERIC WILCOX

s

Reiber-Wilcox
MR. AND MRS. JASON DYKSTRA

Halley-Dykstra

MR. AND MRS. KE!TH WHITE

Carter-White
POMEROY · Vicki Carter and
Keith White exchanged wedding
vows in a ceremony at the Enterprise United Methodist Church in
Pomeroy on Oct 2.
·
The ceremony, officiated by the
Rev. Keith Rader, was preceded by1
a half hour of m11sic by Becky
Baer. As the cen:mony began, the
mothers of the bride and groom
lighted candles representing their
respective families. During the ceremony, a unity candle was lighted
by the bride Wid groom to signify
joining Of the two families. As this
was done "The Lord's Prayer" was
sung by Frances Hunnell.
The bride was given in marriage
by her father. The maid of honor
was Cathy Sauva11e, sister of the
bride, and the bndesmaids were

GALUPOLIS • Melissa Dawn
Halley andJason Bryan Dykstra
were united in marriage Oct 2 at
Grace United Methodist Church.
Melissa is the daughter of Allen
and Carolyn ij:alley of Gallipolis.
Jason is the son of Terry and Jackie
Dykstra of Solon.
The ceremony was performed
by Rev. Joseph Heffner with music
provided by Ruth Ann Fellure. The
bride was escOrted by her father.
Maid of honor was Tricia K.
Puckett Cousin of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Patricia Cini,
Lisa Sari and Ellen Stroth.er. Carrie
Swain, cousin of the bride, registered guests. Jamison Saunders,
cousin of the bride, distributed programs.
Corey Dykstra, brother of the
groom, served as best' man.
Groomsmen were Scott Dykstra
brother of the groom, Jay Perez,
and Paul Moore. Ushers for the

Frances Hoffman and Kelley
Hawkins. The best nian was Kevin
White, brother of the groom and
the groomsmen were Jimmy Wolfe
wtd Rodney Klein. The ringbean:r
was Christopher Neece and the
flower girl was Nikki Tucker, niece
of the groom. The train carrier was
Katlyn Sauvage, niece of the bride,
while the guests were regislued by
Terry Neece, friend of the bride.
li reception followed the ceremony at the 'church. A staircase
cake decorated in the bride's com
of.burgundy and mauve was served
to guests by Deanna Tucker and
Darla Tucker, sisters of the groom,
and Pam Wolfe, friend of the bride.
The couple resides on ·Manuel
Road in Racine. ,

ceremor.y were Heath Halley
brother of the br-ide and Nick
Jezierney.
The reception was held at the
Elks Lod~e in Gallipolis with a
buffet dtnner served by the
Emblem Club of Gallipolis.
Melissa· is a 1987 graduate of
Hannan 'Frace High school and a
1991 graduate of Ohio University
with a B.S. In Journalism. She is
employed by Bridges tone/Fire- ·
stone, Inc., Nashville, Tenn. as EdilOr in Public Affairs Dept. ·
. Jason is' a 1987 graduate of
Solon High School and a 1991
111'8duate of Ohio University with a
B.A. in Sociology and Criminolgy.
He is employed by Bradley Inc.
Nashville, Tenn.
The couple traveled to Gatlinburg, Tenn. for their honeymoon.
They now reside in Nashville,
Tenn.

.
in electrical engineering. Both ale
empJoyed by the American Elocttlc
Power Service Corporation tn
Columbus.
Tbe.couple spent their l)oneymoon at Lake Tahoe, Nev. They
reside in Columbus.
•

RACINE· Laura Rachel Reiber,
daughter ·or Robyn Reiber and
Randy Reiber, both of Racine, was
married to Eric E. Wilcox, son of
Karen Wilcox of Fort Myers, F1a.,
and~ Wilcox, Akron, on Oct 2.
· The ceremony was performe&lt;)
by Dr. Joel Baer at Maple Grove
United Methodist Church in
Columbus. The bride was escorted
by her brothers, Roben and Russell.
Bridal attendants were Lori
Swartz, Kim Adams, Missy Wible,
Becky Conn, and Mary Ann Heft.
Groomsmen were Todd Wilcox,
Brett Wilcox, Adam Hinton, Dave
Cromleigh, Wid Scott Maxey.
The bride is a graduate of
Southern High School and has a
degree in electrical engineering
from Ohio University. The groom
is a graduate of Akron Firestone
High School and has a degree in
electrical engineering from the
Ohio State University. He is cur. rently
a mil••;..• .. "~n~

BOWMAN'~

. .

_.,,.~-· -

' f\{f¥- it '-;&lt;

•'

SPE~SJJIN:

OXYCEN &amp; RESPIRATOft
EQUIPMENT &amp;SUPPLIES
On

u ..":

• Olrod liNing;
.,dAIIInu-

••

LB

Steak or Roasts ••••••• ~

·,•
.,

'•.

ECKRICH ~LICED

.

Bologna ••••••••••••••••~...

$ 129

.••

18

'•

MARIAH JOWL

.JUST AR.RIVED

CHRISTMAS
BARS
.

_

LB.

I OZ. SOUD SILVER .
15 Differe•t SIJies

7UP
PRODUOS
24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

$ 49.

1
(
Bacon •••••••••••••••••!":~.. 69

•

I

.(

POR~ BUTT

•
•

••.

ONLY

FRESH WHO~E FRYING

Ch1ckens •••••••••••••••~••• 69

· IIOM[CM£ IDIICAtSUPPLY '"(

Laudermilt- McKnight .
RUTLAND • The Rutland Free
-: 'Will Baptist Chun:h was the setting
for the Nov. 26 wedding of Loretta
M~ Lauctormilt of Rutla!ld, and 1
Nie~olas Jay Mc~ight,'both of
Rutland.
. - -.. ~- ~ , ...;,;.._
The bride is the daughter
Judy and Edward Laudermilt of
Po!DeroY, and the groom is the son
. of Betty and Callos McKnight.
Pastor Paul Taylor perfonned ·
the double ring ceremony at 4 p.m.
following a program of music by
. Mis. Paul Taylor. The bride was
·~· given in marriage by her stepfather,
· Edward Laudermilt For her wedJ ding she wore a pale blue dress
iY1th matching Dowers and wore
pearl jewelry. .
A ~n wis'held at the Rut- •
land Fire DeparlmenL The wedding
table was decorated With bellS and
•lfCBIIICrs. Doves topped the wed·
ding cake.

FAR~

89

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT
COFFEE
BONUS9 OZ.

s·9· oo
:

.91.CQV.ISI'l109{S !JI9{'J, JEWEL$!)",
MIJ'S Coin Con~Dal'lU

151

GOLD
MEDAL
FLOUR

446-2142

111

OHIO

p~~~.~~~~"4'?$4'~4'.?$·jj
.•. · How sate
· ;' ·
··
isyour
··
bathroom?
__J.

st# BAG

lA-1

W.eddinQ poljcy

MR. AND MRS. HARRY GORRELL

Conley-Gorrell'
TUPPERS PLAINS - Donna
The reception twas held in the
Bahr Conley wtd C. Harry Gorrell Fellowship Hall at' the church. The
were united in marriage at the St reception. was hosted by Sonny wtd
Paul Methodist Church Oct. 2. The Judy Lemil)g, friends or the bride
double ring ceremony was per · and groom. Hostesses serving the
formed by Rev. Sharon Hausman. . reception were Susan and Lynn
Donna is the daughter of Nor- Conley, Jackie Gorrell, Mary
mwt Bahr of Chester. Harry is the James, Sandra Keith; and Norma
son of Mr. wtd Mrs. Chester Gor- Williams.
rell or Tuppers Plains.
The bride is employed lit BuckRegistering the guests were eye Hil!s Career Center in Rio
Christi Keith and Jessica James Grwtde as a vocational instructor
cousins or !he groom.
and·at the Holzer Medicm Center in
The altar ewtdelabras were iUu- Gallipolis as a register nurse. The
minated by Jack and Mike Gorrell, groom is employed at the EJ.
brothers of the groom.
Dupont Washington works facility ·
The bride was escorted by as a research analyst
daughters, Lynn and Susan Conley.
The cou_Pie traveled to Atlwttic
During the wedding ceremony city for theu honeymoon and reside
"The Lord's Prayer" was sung by in their new home at Tuppers
the bride's daughter Lynn.
Plains.

The Sunday Tiines-SeJ1.tinel
.regards weddings ol' Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is
happy to publish w,edding stories
and pholOgraphs withoUt charge.
However, wedding aews must
meet general standatds of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon ·as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. · Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
of publication.
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs or either the bride

Winners- named in promotion
. MIDDLEPORT · Winners in
the first of several holiday giveaways by the Middleport Community AssociatiO!I to total over the
· 'season more th8n $1;300 in prizes
have been announced.
The p'rogram will continue
through Dec:. 24. Customers can
register in the participating stores.
ro be eligible shoppers must fill
Ollt new. stubs each week with one
of the 2.0 merchants because prizes
will be· awarded based on only
;.Jiose tickets subnliaed that week.
The fint week winners were
'vicki Smitli for Dairy Queen, Be!tY
' Pu&amp;b foi' Millie's ReatiUJIDt; T'!f'
Selby for Ingels Carpet; Dottte
ScarberrY, fqr Fruth Pharmacy;
~'

'

..

Jilsie Kfng ·for Dan's, Melissa
Lumbads for Valley Lumber, Amy,;
Krautter•for Mill. Street Books, Jim
Hysell .for Trolley Slllion Crafts,.
A. J. ,Thoirnas fOI' Vaujllan.'a Catdillal.
\•
.
.
Pat Noel for Ldcker 219/Sboe
Place; ·Jaclde Hoover for Bahr
Clothier; I{ojer Wattina· for Mill·
End, Fabrics, Laun Harrison for ·
Inpli Elecironii:a, Debl Hatfield
for Johnlon'a Variety, Jliollry Rumfield for Middlepon Depaftlllent
Store, R•lph Stewart for Ingels•
Furniture, Diane Bachtel (or Big .
Bend Health and Fitriess, L:illlan :
Denioskey for Acquisitions .Fine ·
Jewelry, Bec~y Baer for Farmers
Bank, Wid Lil Kennedy for Sean.

'

•

'

or the bride and groom may be
published witll wedding s19ries is
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or lprger.
Poor quality photOgraphs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
·
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject ui editing.
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from 1-5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

ARGO
PEAS
LARGE SELECTION OF BATHROOM EQUIPMENT

:,

Lettuce••••••••••••••••••• 2/1.00

•Grab Bare •Safety Rella
Available' AI:

!S.Ih Stoola

BOWMAN'S .
1

c. •

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Ptofel~ 'i(«&lt;dng Photography

~14)

4411-1700

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BROUGHTON

HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY·

· :· 70 l'lne St. · '·
O.lllpalle, Oh.
~ :. . 446.7283

Toll Free

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Jocklon, 011.
: .
286-7414 ·~

N:fii;j.-iJttllti~U.MfJ!titi._...

"Songs of the
Season"

~

..t

SUNSHINE

•

-..
•

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SAVE
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OPEN mNINGS nL I A.M.

~~

KEMPS

MAXWELL HOUSE

Coffee
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•
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1,:· 10&lt;ENV•
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•
1

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Ice Cream •••••••••••~:~.... ·

·

•

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SIOREWIDE 'SAl'E

Medium Eggs •••••• :~;••• 2/1.00

·
s
319
.og Foo
. · .d••••••••••••••••••• ·
.. D
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99
-••

naw we're gMng you something elst to sing about!

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FLAVORITE GRADE A
•

~·s so much to rejoice In, this holiday SCliSOn.

And

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Kidney Beans·

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P-11'1 Super Vllu
Ollor Clood11ec. 5 thnl Oec.U, Ull:l
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Chicken.~:~~•••••
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$.5 01.

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I
COUPON
I
BmY CROCKER
1
•
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Cake Mixes

4/1'00 :::

Good Only At Powell'• Super Wu
Offer Good O.C..Sihru Oec. 11, 11113

Umlt 1 Per c..tomet

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GROUND
CHUCK
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•

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�5,1993

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Gallia County community events c~lendar ·
SOJI to present ~.~on.

Sunday, Dec. S
ilelist Paul Chapman and special officer nominations and ·upcoming
•••
smging by Sandra Keyser at 7 p.m. business will be discussed
CROWN CITY - The River
•••
Tuesday, Dec. 7
City Quartet wiD perform at LillerMonday, Dec. 6
•••
ty Chapel Church at 7 p.m.
***
•
GALLIPOLIS • The Lions
***
GALLIPOLIS - Community · Club will meet at the Presbyterian
CENTENARY - Centenary Cancer Suppon Group will meet at Church a"t 6:30 p.m.
United Christian Church will host 2 p.m. at NewLife Lutheran
•••
Rev. Jake Frye to present. the ser· Church. For more information call
Revivals
mon at 7 p.m. with L.T. Preston 446-3538, 446-489S or446-86S7,
CROWN CITY- A revival .will
and the Manna sinaersto perform.
•••
be held at Mt. Zion Missionary
•••
GALLIPOLIS • Candlelight Dec. 6 through I I with special
. ,CHESHIRE - Old Kyger Free Christmas will be held at Our singinil and Rev. Bob Thompson
W1U Baptist Church will "host the House at 7 p.m. after the the tree;, presenttng the sermon. ·
New Vision Trio to sing at 7 p.m. lighting with refreshments and $1
•••
Public invited.
charge.
BULAVILLE - Faith Valley
•••
•••
Church is holding a revival until
GALLIPOLIS - Fridens of the Dec. 4 at 'I p.m. nightly with speGALLIPOLIS , White Road
Church of Goad will feature Evan· Library will meet at 7 p.m. New cial singing and Rev. Bob Thomp·

CROWN CITY • A revival will
be held at Kings Chapel Chttrch .
Nov. 28-Dec. 5 through II. Services 7 p,m. Rev. Tom Jeffrey.

...

•••

GALLIPOLIS - A Deer Creek
Church will hold a revival from
Nov. 28 to Dec. 5 with special
speaker Rev. Richard Garrett and
special singing ni!hdy.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Garden Club will have its
ROCK SPRINGS - Annual annual Christmas dinner, program
Christmas concert of the Mei$.S and gift cxchanf: Mondat at 6:30
Junior and Senior High School will p.mPo.at Seyler's ouse of reasures
be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the m meroy.
high school. David Spencer is
director and accompanists are
LETART - The Leta11 Township
' Will
' meet Monday at 6
Keith Ashley and Daniel Russell. Trustees
The concert is free.
p.m. at the office building. -

SONYA

AND TREVOR SMALL

Cardwell-Small
CROWN CITY - Sonya Ou'dwell and Trevor Small announce
their engagement and upcoming
wedding.
Sonya is the daughter of Janet
CardweU of Crown City and a 1990
graduate of Hanpan Trace High
School. She is a court reporter for
Oallia County Common Pleas

Trevor is the son of Mr ..and
Mrs. Charles Small of Crown City.
He is a I «;!87 graduate of Hannan
Trace High School and a screed
operator for West Virginia Paving
Company.
The wedding will be at 1:30
p.m. Saturday, Dec. II at Mercervi1le Missionary Baptist Church.

SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT- Missionary
Society will met at the Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, Pearl
Stree~ Middleport, Sunday at 7:30
p.m . The Rev. Kenneth Nichols
wiD be the speak.cr. The Rev. John
Neville, pastor, invites the public.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT _ '!'he Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM
will meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
Masonic Temple. Officers will be
installed. Refreshments will be
served.

~·

LETART - Mrs. Dollie Linger,'felt of Lelart, W.Va. ~'!nees the
: engagement and r~m_g mar.· jiage of her daugbt«, Mikki Casto
;::10 Fred Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' lfarold Baker of Leon, W.Va
;; The open church wedding will

,..

·-

be held Saturday, Dec. 18 at 2 p.m.
at Main Street "Baptist Church,
1100 Main St. Point Pleasant,
W.Va. with Rev. David Allan
Washington officiating.
A reception will follow the wedding in the social room of the
church.

;:Lamberts
to note anniversary
·.
·

GALLIPOLIS' - Jerry L. Lam ; bert and Car(llyn K. Harrison-Lam:.bert will celebrate their 22nd
:anniversary Dec. ,6.
. They were married Dec. 6. 1971

in Virginia and are the parents of
one son Jerry L. Lambert II, a
juniorat ~ver ':alley High Sch"'!l.
Jerry IS a hneman for Oh10
Power Company.
•

·Police car license tags exp1re
; . TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Oops!
· Someone forgot to renew expired
~ •license tags on more than 100
. police cars- including the chiers.
:· Other law .enforcement asen':Cies, such as the Florida Highway
:,Pawl and the Hillsborough County
~Sherlfrs offu:e, have noticed. So
: far, they've issued three tickets,
•'One warning ciralion and four ver·
"'bal
. • s.
,.. ,'ljarrung
: Most or the expired tags are on
~jtnmarked vehicles. They are usual·
~ly driven by detectives. Unlike
;martcd pawl cars, which display
~ow cuy liP.• the unmarked cars
~-CID')' standanllicense rags.
~ . The rags ellpired at the end of

·Oc:tober. \
:: A Flcrida Highway Pauol troop-

·~

stoPPed Detective Scott Wofff
; on Weiln~day in a city-issued
;,Dod,e Dy~asty and gave biOI a

•warruns IIOCic:e.-

.

_;:· "It waa embarrassins," Wolff
:aid. "I'd done: n6t1Jins wrong. I'm
i jlllt J)ad he didn't-sJve me a ticlt-

{et."

Cbief

\

Holder's
;QIIIII8fted Chevy was IIOJIIlcd last
{lwe4.- Holdet wasn ·~ the car. The
'

I

Bennie

officer driving it got a verbal warning.
.
.
"We were late m gewng some
information to the state," said Bob
Minton: the police vehicle coordi·
nator. "Not everybody is happy
around here."

by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

FAMILY HOMES INC.
M_.

-~-~'f!t4i"itl¥W"'W,W"~~
..

£ · .- ~
Lift. Cball·SAL ··-~

''

fJi

..,'AS
... *750.00
•

$59 900

if·,

Special

m
·
.:·

Fully Reclln" and l.lfta at the
Trouc. h ol a Button.
·

ft·. if

BOWMAN'S .

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rtrearm

HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY&gt;.

;.

.

70 Plno St

Toll F,..

785 E. MMII St

.

.

L- i~e-. Christmas

SYRACUSE - "Chris tmas
Around the World" wiD be present·
ed at Carleton School Tuesday at 7
p.m. The public is invited to attend.
OLIVE TOWNSHIP - The

COLUMBUS
(AP)
Researchers said they have identified factors that can . impact
whether a toddler will be develop·
mentally slow.
A child's birth ord,er in the family, birth defects and parents' educa·
tion can be indicators research at
Ohio State University showed. ·
Male members of large familiC(S ·8$ well as those who were part ot
complicated births - also statisti·
' cally are slower to develop than
others the research said.
Th~ study reinforced theories .
· that biology and the environment
can impact developm~nt, said ·
Johannes Rojahn academic unit
director at Ohio State's Nisonger
Center for Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities, and
pail of the research team.
Early identification of slow:

Princess pl~ns
to reduce .her
role in public
LONDON (AP) - Princess
Diana, complaining of media intru·
sions into her private life,
announced in an emotional speech
Friday that she is reducins her public commitments.
Diana told a charity lunch in
London she knew sJte would be the
focus of media attention when she
entered public life 12 years ago.
"I was not aware of how overwhelming that ·attention would
become nor the extent to which it
would affect both my public duties
and my personal life in a manner
thai's been hard to bear," the 32year-old priileess said.
"At the end of this year when
I've completed my diary C)f official
engagements I will be reducing the
extent of the public life I've led so
far.

deveioplJtg children is im)iortant 5o
tJ.ley can ~ helped as soon as posSible, he Slld.
He called Ohio State's effort
one of the first to d~vel~p. on a
lru:ge seale•. ways to 1denufy such
children while toddlers.
The research team randomly
sel_ec:ted birth certificates of 1,601
children 2 1/2 to 3 years old. The
findings w_ere published recently in
the Amencan Journal on Mental
Retardation.
Rojahn said nearly 8 percent of
the ~hil~ studied were i~entifie;d
as s1gmficantly delayed m the1r
development In the general ~u­
lation, about 3 percent of children
are believed to have developmental
delays.
The difference is proba~ly
because of false results wh1ch
would identify some children as
delayed when they are not, said
Daniel Coury, director of the
behavior and learning disabilifi,es
clink: at.Children's Hospital.
· ,.
The research could get more
children into remedial programs
earlier, which could save money as
they do better in school, have fewer
social problems and decrease the
need for special education classes,
Coury said.

624 JACKSON PIKE

'

SMAO ADDtllQVAL CHARGE FtlR SAME MY SEIMcE

Welt

,·,

WALL TO W..\I,J,
CHRISTMAS S.,I,E•••

. ,.. lliag..,.

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· 181

The Qljl_allty Goe.s ,
. . 11n,·:Before
Th~.
Name Goes On!

1031 QUARRIER STREET

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ristmas
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Credit Terms •
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(614) 992·2635 • TO~L FREE 800-426·5581

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R•ad ............ • .......... lllalllaada • Pear Sllaped Dl•manda
Oval Dlamaads • Prlpci,
!IB. Cat DIMiaada •lm•ald lll.aped Diamonds
-·

tu·MII's

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~

.

Toe-Sit. ar bJ appollltmftt Call nt-,1-1471

Cantata to be presented
POMEROY - A Christmas
cantata will be presented at the
HiUside Baptist Church on Dec. 19
at 11 a.m. and again at 6 p.m. Pastor James R. Acree, Sr. invites the
public to attend.

E ~. JEWELRY;
INC.
..

.,

,.

Model H - Vlewi.. HIIUI l:to-5:00 p.-.

Chapter to meet
POMEROY. - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Belli S1gma Phi
Sorority will meet 'Fbursday at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Donna Jones
for its annual Christmas party.
Members are to take canned goods.

' 20" Receiver/Monitor TV

.

DENT~ sTART AT $143 PER DENTURE!

FAMILY HOMES
INC.
.

31/2 miles past Southern Hlgb !)chool
St. Rt. 124, Racine, Oh.
· 61.._;949-2682 •

mrs
T-SHiRTS

Our Regula~: Serufce Is Available At AU Offices. ,
BAD DAY sERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!

.

•

TrusiHS to meet
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
special session Thursday at 6 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Station to discuss State Issue II application.

For All Appointment or IDformatloa.

.

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

· KAREN'S .GREENHOUSE

ASSORTED ,COLORSI

• tiTS Stereo with db!l

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-0025
. Evening Appointments Available

HANDMADE BASKETS

Wool Blazers with
C~ordin~ting City Shorts

•25'!&gt;agMol

Cuatom Flttftl Dentures In One Pay l\t Our Teaytl Valley Office
By Our Professlonala And Trained Stalf.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory" BY Quallftcd Technicians.

• 2xl 0 Floor Joist. 16 ln. On Center
• S2 Gallon Water Hearet
• Carriage Carpets
• Mutic T-lock V"Uiyl Siding Witli Lifcrime Wamnty
• 2S Year Wammy As,lwt Shingles
.
• 10 Ycat S~ Wlltlllly On The Home

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

·c;

- Remote Control Color TV

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

• 8 FOOl Ceiling

BRING A FRIEND AND SAVEl
Poinsettias, Bulk Candy', Crafts,
Amish Jelly, Candy &amp; Jelly Gifts.

CHRIST.MAS
SWEATSHIRTS

S8N"'T"AV •

Stereo with Multi-Brand Remote

• Kitchen ComJ,.ct CabinetS

.CHRISTMAS TREES
1 19°0 or 2 FOR s35 srJC

· New Shipment Just Arrived!

-·

......

Trees

Balled and Burlapped
Plant Out$ide After
· Christmas

INGELS

·--·

• 2x6 Eatericlr Walls, 16 ln. On Center
·• Armsirong Solarian Floor Ttle

White Pine, Spruce,
Hemlock, Blue
Spruce.

Researchers target
factors behind cause
of slo~ development ·

Casto-Baker ,

piovicJing guns to the homeless the weapons would be available to
would haVe the oppo&amp;ite effCCL
anyone who might come across
COLUMBUS - The head of a
"Wbat he ii proposins would them.
group that WIIIUIIO provide J1U11S to endanser the oommunit~," said
"This stupid rpinll would cause
some home. ~ people Slid Friday Beitd, who Ita worked Wltb bome- people with 1iomes 10 be more fear·
his plail would build their sell-con- less people for 25 years. ·'In lui Of tbe bomclea than they may
fidence and help JBUieCt them from Columbus, weapons are forbidden ·be now," he said. "Anyone who
the dangers of the street.
in all homeless shelt«s. People might want 10 help a homeless per"The homoleas population in with JIUIIS would lur;e to hide them son would think twice if there was
America is the most abused and in areas around shelters so they a possibility that person was carryvictimized in America right now. could Coote inside, in which case ing a weapon."
Who more needi 10 exen:ise their
constitutional riJht to have a
weapon for prot.ecllOn?" said Jack
Kilni"er, direc:tor of the Arm the
Homeless Coelition.
He said -the group, which has
five members, wants to raise
Holle '.eated at
m&lt;liiCy to provide guns and ammultllerledloatlltb.71133
nition and the training to use·them
P ll'eJ, OH · '14-tf2.2471
to homclcas people woo sllccessfully oomplete a ~ning process.
"They would undergo rigorous
examination based on &lt;liiC·to-one
interviews aJJjl a character evaluation," Kilmer said. "We're still
working out the details oonceming
the interviews. We might have
them done by licensed experts in
the fteld of psychology or that sort
of thing."
''The situation in most homeless
shelters is tenible,'' he said. "It's
elltremely difficult for the homeless
to keep pezsonal possessions. Ownin$ a
woqld give a homeless person more respect and it
could change the envrronment in
shelters and provide a greater sense
• AndeneD Wllldows
of law and order."
Kent Beitel, direc:tor of the
• oCorgia Plcific Doon
'•
Open Shelter near downtown, said
~PraiWrlter

EAST MEIGS • Eastern Athlet· , : .F,.. o.tlwry
GoiHflallo, Oh. . ""'L
,
Jackoon, Oh•.~
. ..:: , :
· meet Tuesda
- ·, .
,-•••7283 1 """'411 • 144 211o7414 .. ·
ic Boosters w1U
· y at g ~
;~~1~~~~~~~~R1C~e~~~:i?, p.m. in the high school cafeleria.
MUWU~•uu•~
B. Church, located just off Texas
MIDDLEPORT . Christmas
Road, Pomeroy.
bazaar and luncheon will be held
Tuesday from I 1 am. to 7 p.m. in
the basement of the Heath United
MONDAY
Methodist
Church. Pies•. candies,
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
and. more will be for
craft
items
,Township Trustees will meet Mon- · sale. The event
is sponsored by
day at 7:30 p.m . at the Syracuse Eleanor Circle.
Municipal Building.
COOL VILLE - A Christmas
Cantata will be presented by the

POMEROY -. The Meigs Band
Boosters will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in the high school band room.
All band parents are encouraged to
attend the meeting.

FRED BAKER AND MIKKI CASTO

ByTIMJIUET

Road~Tu;;e;;;sd;aa~y~.lftlj!MI!nlii!M~i!811S8!1!1Jll:llftlt0:1~ilii!M

t ·._,_, .

15

5unc1ay nmea Sentinel P&amp;ga
•

Arm the homeless and give
them security, group says

**

Olive Township TrusteeS will '!'eet
at 7:30 p.m , atbthedShade flve~
State Forestry u1 1 mg on opp

P·

Sermon
caused
church
creation

MASON, w'.VA. - Liberty
Assembly of God wiD hold revival
2S· throughDec.l.
nieetingsNov.
Rev.
James L. Dennis
will be the
evangelist and there will be special
singing each serviCe. Sun. services
·begin at 6 p.m. with Mon. through
Wed. services beginning at7 p.m.

.

-

'

CROWN CITY • A revival will
be held at Crown City Canaan Missionary Baptist Church 7:30 p.m.
nightly.

Mel'gs commun1'ty calendar

·

.

Pomeroy-Middleport GempoUa, OH Point Pleuant, wv

,Decem,ber 5, 1893

TWO LOCATIONS:
151 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS
· and 91 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT

446-2842
992-6250

Member.._~,. Bollrd of Trade

FREE PARKING
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
·
~ ·.
~

&lt;.

'...

N:uuuuU.Uti*'._*li••&amp;· ¥:t~a&amp;atta~~•~'•liaUt~aMA'e·I

"

'

'

'

�I

~P:ag~a~:as~~SI~un~da~y~n~m:es:;;;s.~n~tl~nai~~=====::::;:::!~~~=~~~~~~OH~~P~olnt Pleasant, wv

' ====~~~~=~==m~~~r~1~~=

HMC wins joint a
itation
from heath care .organization

GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer
Medical Center has been awarded a
Certificate of Accreditation by the
_ Joint Commission on the Accredi·
tation of Healthcare Organizations
. (IC AHO) for the maximum three
. year period. This co ntinuing
accreditation of the Hospttal by
JCAHO was based on a two day
on·site visit by three surveyors,
July I and 2, 1993.
In making the announcement,
Charles I. Adkins, Jr., President
and Chief Executive Officer of the
Holzer Medical Center said, ''The
significance of a three year accreditation is a reflection of our staff's
attention to and compliance with
the Joint Commission's standards
for high quality health care. We
chose to be reviewed by the
JCAHO because they stand for
quality health care, and so do we."
He added, "Our continuing
· acc redi tation for the maximum

three year period reflects the efforts
of every person in lhe Holzer Med-

ical Center Family ... the Medical
Staff, the Hospital Staff, the Board
of Trustees and the VolunleCI'5...in
fact everyone involved in the daL
to day operation of the Hospita .
They are to be congratulated
because this achievement reflects a
uue teaDI effort; all for the benefit
of our patients."
To become accredited, the Holzer Medical Center voluntarily
requested an on-site eValuation by
three hil{hly trained JCAHO surveyors, mcluding a physician, a
hospital administrator and a regis·
tered nurse. As highly qualified
health care professionals, th.ey
applied standards_designed to further the objectives of quality
patient care and the safety of the
envU'Qrm'1ent in whic!l that care is

3WASHINGTON
win awards
(AR) - Tele-

Working up from depress-ion

vision inrerviewcr Barbal'll W'!lters
and Des Moines Register editor
Geneva Overbolscr were named lhe
outstanding broadcast and print
journalists of year Friday by the
National Press Foundation.
Arthur "Cbip" Bot of t6e
Akron Beacon JouriiiJl-will receive
the foundation's editorial ~nist
award. ··
.
Godfrey Sperling of the Christian ScieiiCe Monitor
receive -a
special citation for b.ringing newsmakers and reportcJs toget!Jcr·at llis
. legendary "Sperling breakfasts.'' :·
. , The a)Yards will be ~nted 41
the foundation's lith annu81'black;
tie clinner Feb. 23 in Washington; :This is the fust year that the two
top awards have both gone to
women,

sent a consensus among health care
professionals and are periodically
updared to reflect changes in health
c~~~e delive'1'·
JCAHO IS an independent organization established nearly 40 years
ag(l to improve the quality or care
in·organized healthcare settings. Its ·
main functions include developing
healthcare .stllldards, survey ins
healthcare orJiiDizations and
awarding acaeditation decisions,
.Adkins commented, "We have a·
moniiOrinj! and evaluation puess
that prov1des for ongoing assess·
ment and improvement of care and
services for our patients. A customer-focused environment of
cooperation aqd continuous 1
imJ?rovement wiD result in better
paUent outcomes and a more satis·
lied customer. A satisfied; bealthier
patient will be the truest measure of
our success in quality. improvement
at the Holzer Medical Center.

Da.- R"' n: I ~!ave jult read I

•

PRESENTING COLLECTION - Karen Jennings and Mary
Elliott displa1, their Santa Claus and doll collections rur their
upcoming exh1bit.
•
..__

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Cancer Institute i$ no
longer advising women between
ages 40 and 49 to get mammograms on a regular basis if !hey do
not otherwise have symptoms of
breast cancer, a published report
said Saturday,
The institute cited studies saying
that routine .mammography ~ces
the death rate for women over age
50 but the research does notsbow a
drop in mortality for younger
women, The Washington Post
reported.
"The factual statement we will
be making is that mammopaphy

Doll, Santa collection to ~~:e:~:k~~~t~~;;
be displayed at ·Pinecrest~FiE~E~:~2~
GALLIPOLIS - A Sanl8 collection spanning 10 ye!lf&amp; and doll
exhib1t wtll be dtSPlllyed at
• Pinecrest Care Center.
.
.
The Christmas exhibit will tie
· Friday, Dec, I0, 2 IQ 4 r,·m·. at the
· facility . The doll col ecUQn.of
Mary Elliott and ' tbe ·.s anta
Claus/St. Nicholas collecuon_of
Karen Jennings will·be shOwn.
Elliott's collection includes Litlie Women and f.a,urie made by
Robin Woods anl1 dolls made'by
Lee Middleton of Belpre, Madam ·
Alexander, and Vogue. ·' ..
.
Jennings' 10-year colleCuon .rea.- •
tures over 100 Santas made ofYari-ous materials: wood, ~c; fabric, and metal. RepreaeR!Cdlii her
collection are many han&amp; made
Santas from different limo' periods
and countries ..The Jl!.lb}ic; is invi~
to this free holid&amp;y ShoW: Refreshmems wiD be senoed. ; · · · :

'"' '

~

.
~··

;

every one to two years will reduce
the mortality by approximately
one-third."
The Posr said a number of outside groups, including the National
Cancer Society and the American
Colle'e of Obsletricians and GynecologiStS, have ~ticized the stud·
ies on which the cancer institute's

422 SECOND AVE.

·

,

IJolida~ Sale!
.

B.eautiful
Grandfath.er
-~- Clock$ ,.

.1992 PONTIAC ·
GUND

·.r.lgl-savinl~
From

30o/o·5·0o/o Off
Great
Selection
in
.
' '
Oak arid Ch'erryl

CIIEVROIEI'

DOG SHOW HELD - The Right Paw
: ~ Training Center of GallipoUs and Fisb Tank or
. Poiltt Pleasant recently sponsored a dog show
. · realu'l'ing. Qbedlence commands,_tbe ·c anine
obstacle course and dog tricks. Those participat. ing In tbe sbow were, Front, rrom left, Lind5ay
· M'cCoy ; 'Brandl and Mattbew; back row,
· Natban,lel McCumber and Marilyn Grimm with

SPECIAL HOLIDAY
SALE PRICES

SUIT NOM!
'
•

FROM

1956

$27eS

J

. context until Friday.

$588

Detail carving In oak,
cable · driven, 3 weight
grandfather clock. ·
R8g.
Sala S

1618 EASTERN AVE. • GAWPOLIS; OH.
they didn't put the proposalmto • _ _ __J(6~1~4~)~4~4~6-=36~7~.2~o~r~1;:~;~~;..___

.

.

.

'

~-

-

Shown Above

Pedlma_nt top, cheny, cable
driven, lunar ph81e gotci
dial.

.

.

Tate, a golden
.
setter mix; Marshall McCoy with Blironess, • Doberman; Linda
McCoy wltb Chubby, a Norwegian eltbound;
Belinda Vance witb Gracie, a bearded collie;
and Sherry Roberti, owner and trainer or tbe
Right Paw Training Center. For more InFormation about tbis show or training, caD 446-1864.

'i

~

.

.

Loo•inl J'of'. SotnetJainf, Different??? ·

, _

,.

Blued~ranber'l. or .Hunter G)'M)':-

S

1·

..
lANE CEDAR .CHESTS

Phony pilot
was
smooth,
.
.
woman says

992-5776

·

DIABETICS
You CAN protect your eyesight!
HAVE YOUR EYES EXAMINED BY AN
OPUTHALMOLOGIST
at the

HOLZER CLINIC
OPHTHALMOLOGY DEPARTMENT
for the special price of just

$39.00
now through January 31, 1994.
For an appointment call 446, 5421

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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$299 ·

We've put Charlie in our Toy Donation Box and soon he'll be going h~ with a VPJif special child.
You can help too by dropping off a new toy for distriblJti?n 10 needy Children in our community.

(Shown Left)

. DISTRESSED PINE

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"Bountiful" Distressed. pine finish with awardwinning front design. 45K18'hX24' H.
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Receive a "thank you" gift from JCPenney Catalog when you malcia • donllllon and anter our
FREE Holiday Drawing. You might just lind a new t3' Color TV or$75 Shopping Spree
•
untler your !reel

SALE

Drop _ofyourtoy ~~or enter our ~wi!lget 1MM1oca~o: .,

· · 28 OHIO RIVER PLAZA ·
GA,tbPOLIS, OH. 46831

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PtJONE 446-3525

FURNITURE ·
GALLERIES
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JCPenney

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FREE DELIVERY
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''DECEMBER
' . 24
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9-5 DAILY

9-8 FRip,r..'(

CATALOG

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'=Church notes anniversary

SIARTi~G·ON SALE

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SMAIL GIFT ITEM
LIFT CHAIR/POWER
RECLINER

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF
SOUTHEAST OHIO

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Hubbards Greenhouse
Syraatse

November is National Diabetes Month

SALE

II Old World Santa's
II Shiny Brass Accessories
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. POMEROY - The Hillside
;Baptis(Ch~h recendy observed
.Its fourth anmversary. .
-: · Features of the celebration
' which got underwa~ at 11 a.m.
Y,.ere special' Singtng by t~e
'}.tedeemed Quarliet and The Cbil:,dren of God. Pastor ]ames R.
·Acree, Sr., ·spoke on the topic,
.''How to Stand for Christ."
· ; RefreSlunelil,$ were lierVlid in the
i.ew fellowship hall following the
~rvice.
. , ; ,' , '
'.
~ · On Nov. 21, ~everal guest
singcrs \)&amp;rtici~lo/ in an eveillng
llymn stng. - ~mong the_singers
&lt;were Dan Wblte and lhe Partakers,
a group of cbureb women, a moibe'r·daughter duet fenturiiiJ ~leather
· Hood and a junior chou quartet
' ·j;ompOsed of Colt Justus, Caleb
•JoneS', Joshua Jones and Peter
Jones.
,
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Conftdentlal Family Planning Services for remales &amp; males
• M~icll exams
;Pap tests
• Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
llins-tesru:L.ovtl Me, accolilpanie.\f .
&amp; trutments for sexually transmitted diseases
br t4isi JIIJ)Iie Hum)1hr~y 111 die '·
p1ano. Oiber groups Slflgmg wete, · • AiiOnymoJIS IDV tests &amp; counseling
· The Children Of God, God's Little
•&lt;Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
' Larn~s, Blood Covenan
_ t, and Th_e
NC!fplut·lmplant
·-Redeemed Quartet. A solo wa-s
sang bY Elicit Mc:Cbristian, Davill '
DepoProvera·lnjectlon
JOhrillon and Ryjln Clonch sang
Blrtb coPtrol pill
Excus~. .
..
ConciOmiSpeimldde
A B1g Buck Contest w~ slar)Sliding Fee Kale
ed the 'ms. ~Y of deer ~n con:
cl~des ·.tOday. There will be~ •
· We accept Medicaid and private Insurance
phlCS gtven to each of IIi&amp; twO. WIDners. One will ~o lhe worrlai\ ~ho
5419 S. Third Street
414 Second Street
has killed the biggest buck and the
other will go lhe man who got the
Middleport
Gallipolis
biggest buck. The trophies will be
992-S912
446-0166
presented on Dec. 12.
April Large, GeOrgiana Spears,
san~ with a group called the Young
·Believers, Kandis Humpllrey, Valorie Clonch, and Heather Hood

••n.ts

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(Cand .. stlcka. Coaster Sets, Trivets, Candle Hooks,
Old Fashion Mateh Boxe s, Bells, Bookends)

Christmas Ornaments
Potpourri
I] lovely Pewter Accessories

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t'JI.!J

(Candlesticks,

Trivels, Napkin Rings,

Christmas Omamenta, Stocking Holders)

BOWMAN'S

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•Chrlslll'las Tree urltall'lents..~;·i~··~··..·······~.....starting at
•Gre~i Silectlon ·~~ ll'anlli'nili~ ·a'IIand Painted •antasl·~
•Dinbig Roo• ·•lacen~ats, Napkins, and Seat ·cushl~ns

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CLEVELAND (AP) " A man
For That Added
charged with im~ting a Navy
Feeling of Self·
officer carried hunself lite the Top
Gun pilot he claimed to be, his
•Variety of Colora
• ftancee and an ex-girlfriend said.
•In Stock
Michael J. Jacobus was tall,
' dark and handsome and had the . •Fru Delivery
requ'isite unifor111s and pa~ort
•3 Yur Complete Warranty
to support his claim, satd Ruth
•FrM Demonatratlon
Pavilonis and Kate Kassouf.
•Salas &amp; Rental
Jacobus, 38, was arrested Oct.
29 on a charge of impersonating an
offi~r: He lias been held without
· bond. at the Escambia County Jail
HOMEC..tRE MEDICAL
in Pensacola, Fla.
Ms. Pavilonis, 30, of WilloughGAWPOUS 446-7213
by, said she met Jacobus at a FloriToll Frea1-1100 458 1844
da. air show in 1987. They became .__.;J.;.;A;;;C;.oKS-ON~2:;88-~7,;;;48::;;4;.......1
engaged !hi$ year.

•Galllpolls"land.Sta'l.~~ ~h'tows ............. $59.95 •39~5

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PolnHttln "1• • Up
Ben1ld Holly Treu .,.,..
Live Norway Spruce
6-7 ft - "211"
Cui Tr111 Uve WI'Niha
For the Loved OMI
Grave BIMirMa "1r
ArtHiclal Spray•, vandWrnth•
Open Dally 11-5, Sunday•12-5

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NOW OPEN fOQ
Ct1QI8TMA8 8r:A&amp;::&gt;N

INDEPENDENCE

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;:~b~~~~~g~~1!~~

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or 1ft11MY order for $3.65 (thi.s in·
cl~s pollflge flrtd hartdling) to :
Lowdown, c/o Ann l.mtders, P.O.
Boll l/562, Chic~,o. /11, 6()611 0562. (In CIJIIIJdiJ, sertd $4.45.)

Julia Them: inlrn'iews dozens of
people who describe their bouts with
depression. Her readers · are told
exacdy how 10 get help. She gives
the names. addresses and telephone
numbers of support groups,
thenlpists and organizations.
Sbe ldlJ us, "This book sbooJd be
read aver and over, revisited lite a
tnlllcd &amp;imd. It will remind you of
wbo you Ire, where )'Oil haYC been,
wbal you can do and where you Cllt
ge. You will dilcover that you are
not llonc, you
were alone llld
you never need be l1one lpin.•
The tide is •you Are Not Alone.'
The publisber is HarptiCol1ina. It is
1 paperback priced 11 SI 0. The
lUther insisted that production costs
be kept as low u possible 10 m01e
people could afford iL

Potluck to be observed
BURLINGHAM - The annual
Christmas potluck of Modern
Woodmen of ·American, Canlp
7230 will be held Saturday at 6:30
'p.m . at the Burlin~ham Modern
Woodmen Hall. Dmners will be
delivered to the elderly, sicl: ·and
shutins at 4:30 p.m. The turkey,
ham, dressing, mashed potatoes,
rolis and drinks will be provided
and each family attending is asked
to take a potlucl: dish to share.

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LOS ANGELES~ (AP)-" It's ·
_true Roseanne and T~m ~old
will "marry" a· female employee.
: It'll be a mock ceremony, hoWever
poking fun at rumQrS that ,'l'om
Arnold !tad an pfair with' the
woman.
. · .,
"It's not a Jegat· mamage,.tt s
not an in-the~es-of-God.~e
... it's for f~.: ~o!~ said Fnday.
' 'It was RoSie s 1dea.
·
.
The Arnolds earlier thi~ week
issued a statement c~finnmg the

lbc- not llone. An ........ 21
million Amerli:au expaienceform of ~uion eacb year.
Womea, e~pecially young lllllll!en,
suffer twice as frequently as - ·
One out of every lwq AlnericiDa has
faniBy mCmbcn who II'C. •Micled
by dqJrasion. AmerlciDIIIiday are
10 limea more deiJr · d tban their
pllldpupti. Many will commit
snicidp if not lrelltd ~y.
. Sllicl:*.-lncidenlllly, il die second
leading cause of death amon11
cbildreo llld .adole8centi.
Dqacwd people lie eapecially
vulnerable aroanc1 holiday time.
They ba_ve alelldelq 10 spend more
than they~ a!fon1 on gifti. It givea
them a lift. They sbou1d be aware
lhlt wbeli lilC bills come due, if there

Dope.• Sertd fl sef/rtlddruwl, wng,
bruilltu-liu en~~C/,ope IJIId fl check

e-.

What lbe did not know Will dill

}larade in
·
·Rouse, musiC
teacher, was joiDed by teacbenl Carolyn Smith
.!'I'd B~ky ~u~ber ror tbe musl~l procram.

QTC

qiiUiiofu abola df'll81. )1011/lttd Ann
Ltwlerl' booklet. "The Lowdowll 011

ia not enough money on band, it
eouJd !rip 1 major depession
Anotber bit of advice: Avoid
alcdlolllld drvp. You may think
they will mate you fed bellcr, llld
~ they will, bul the t'l!pboria
won~ last long, llld wben it Wc8rt
orr, you wiD be mm dcpiewd tban

IOIIone. •

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Make it a·thr~asom~
.

Tawney Jewelers ·-•

• Tope's Furniture Gallerias
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nwkins ~a

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everywhere. They're
euy to Itt, ecuy to use IJIId even
e~r to Jtl lrooUd 011. If'JOil /tmle
Dn111

c-s~~

teen• "-'""""·

15 DESIGNS
:1 oz. Pure Silver
Chrl!ltmas Coins
. AND ALSO SILVER &amp;
GOLD COINS

u-. thJouBb.

n-.s,...u....

7

sgoo

decision is ba$ed and advise
women in their 40s to continue getting regular screening.
The cancer instililte's decision
has no legal effect but is likely to
influence individual decisions on
when to start getting routine mammogram$.

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yOUI'ICif or Dlleq!e

today,
dlil Jiale boc* eouJd be a lifeavc:r
IIIII die'- SlO you will CMttpend.
Ge11! of die Day: Rdlert Frolllllid
it ~ ~ tifully: Tile belt way out is

ANN LANDERS

Step &lt;by ttep, die IUthor adt
depr :1·people 10 tbe J'lllliutjna
lbat ~ 11e IM\l IIOI!Ied, they 11e
not Mprl_qt !IIIII bdp is IVIillble if
they would but teet it.
The IUtbor, Julia Tborne, bad a
privileaed ll()llriDsing and tpentbls
early yean In Europe. Sbe was
married 10 a U.S •. !!C'I!I!or llld bas
two
Sbe wma.
~Our familiel, friends llld bulincss
asaoclates, lporant of the true
1111Ure of thillllnea, lieU us, 'Come
oa. try to be llappy. You have
10 much to be tbantful Cor, Cheec
up.'·
Sbe continues. 'Five months after
my 3tich binhclay, my mind mvagcd
by corroding voices, my body
defeated by ~rltlling panic, I sat
on the qe of my bed, minutes from
latili. my life. For W«b, I bad
sllentlr flanned my suicide. I
~ wu a flilure, no longer ·
lble 10 pretend lhlt I was of any use
10 my !luallend or my childrc:n.l was
tireCI. I ncCdcd to lie down. curl up,
80 to sleep ltld never wake up again.
Qac:e I - IOIIC• my flmi1y llld
friends would be relieved of the
burden of my inoompelency. I fell

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you~ lbcut in die column

"1!193, Lao Aateleo

::,:-~...:.c:rnv;!!t:er:
IOBiilcnlllo.

If you

Ann
Landers

!mew lbout it.
The l!o9k is ..,_ deprasion,
wriu. ~n::- wbo IUffered
'Nitb lbll ·
for a Joaa time IIIII

will

Institute recommends,new
mammography guide-lines_

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· bool.lblt CGIJjl be I pal bdp fO
m(Ujo!ll •of people - if only dley

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Ill
Ill
II

Needlepoint Stockings ond
Coaster Sets
Christmas Throws
Table Runners
Unique Picture Frames
Holiday Coke Candles
Amish Musical Miniatures
Country Crocks

STOREWIDE SALE
BVERYftiNG 21J1/, AND MORE

OFF REG. RE'I'AIL

Lifestvle
FURNIT
URE
---- - - SHOWCASE
856 3rd Ave., Gallipolis, Qh.
Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5
Friday 9 til 8 p.m.
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Entertainment

December 5, 1993

ashions from Jupiter can't beat blue light specials
Down in the editorial office we
sometimes keep the television lUlled
toCNN. Theolherday,I looked up
just in time to catch the houest story
·of the day.
·
No, not the Brady bill, not
:P!esident Hillary "Hot Rod" Clin:ton and her heallh care plan. Not
even a Bun and loni update.
·
What was filling the CNN airspace was real news; we're talking
1: n2~a-c:ore journalism. lhe type of
·stuff us small town reponers dream
:or someday ctring - a Paris
fashion show.
There on
screen (usually
filled by images of imponant heads
of state or Joey Buuafuoco). slinking down a long runway, were
anorexic models wearing fashions
which made me wonder if lhe other
end of lhc stage was atmched 10
Jupllcr.
Every year it' s lhe same ole
pomp and circumstance- highly
paid models srrut before lhe eyes of
lhe world wearing sizzling hot
wardrobes such as Hefty garbage
bags. combat boots and hats made
out of beach umbrellas. (Everyone
is fascinated by the high salaries
models pull down just for walking
and posing, but considering the
world-wide humiliation they must
endure. models cam every cent)

Four times a year, fashion designers - mostly Jupiter. exchange
students - hold lhese bashes to
unveil !heir latest creations, most of
which resemble "The Jetsons meet
Liberace."
The press nuns out in droves, as
if covering a wanime press conference at lhe White House.
The latest fashions are then
broadcast and published for lhe
anxious public, whof)lsh home after
work to see lhe latest creations and
make shopping plans to keep up wi lh
the latest Jrends.
'·
yeah, right.
.
No one in the world, except for
a small population of weirdoes Jo.
cated in soulhern California, will
ever wear lhese clown suiiS. But
every year, lhe media stand up and
take notice as if these lunatics are an·
nouncing a solution for world peace.
I believe fashion's true purpose
is for lhe benefit of the younger
generation.
It helps level lhe playing field
when one can drag out Mom a·~d
Dad's high school yearbooks and
usc the photographs for his or her
own defense.
MOlliER (to teenager): You 're
not going out dressed like that are
you?
'TEENAGER (fiokliJJg up year-

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by KEVIN PI
book): Why not? You went out dressed
like this.
Allhough lhe most embarrassing
Cashton staterneniS usually never make it
out of sou!hem Cali-weird-ia, a lax border
patrol occasionally lets one slip by and
mvade the rest of lhe country.
The border patrol was evidently on
vacation during the late '60s and early
'70s, as any sitcom from that era will
attest.
The Brady Bunch afone made enough
good taste violations to qualify all six kids
and both pareniS for life sentences.
. Although most of the jo!fes are so
dated they are not even funny ·anymore ,
!hose old television comedies have taken
on a whole new level of humor. Just
watching the actors strut around in bell
bottoms,leisure sui IS and sideburns down
to their
makes it
wonh

wau:hing.
I believe '70s television is
responsible for making m~ lhe
fashion plate I am today.
Rather !han risk being blackmailed by someone who pos·
sesses photos of me wearing what
was once considered high fashion and is now worn at corny
costume par!.ies, I avoid trends
like lhe plague.
!just stick wilh lhe basicsjeans, t·shins an&lt;! sneakers never
go out of style. Fashion decisions
are not complicated -1 ji!St pick
out whatever's cheapest under
the flashing blue light.
Kevin Pinson, when not,on
tbe cover ofGQ, is astaffwtiter
for Ohio

re
NASHVtLLB, Tenn. (AP) Actor John Schneider didn't have
to act distressed in a TV movie
about a srulboat that capsizes in a
hurricane. He really was.
Schneider appears with Mel
Harris and Dana Ashbrook in Desperate Jour11ey tonight on ABC.

CHESHIRE - The River Valley High School Drama Club has
scheduled its annual dinner !heater
for Saturday, Dec. 11.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m ..
wilh the performance set for 7.
Two one-¥ct plays will be pre·
scnted· by the upper level theater
class. Senior Jeremy Thompson
will be the mild scientist Dr. Moreau in The Crazy, Mixed-Up Island
of Dr. Moreau, a 25-minute spoof
of the H.G, Wells classic The
Island ofDr. Moreau.
. The !!lot focus on Moreau and
his experiments to change jungle
animals into people. When a group
of show people are shipwrecked on
the island, Moreau decides to test
human reactions to his experiments.
Tbe ~d play is an old· fashioned melodrama complete with
viUains and damsels in disJress.
Beautiful Beulah Belle pits the
heroine, beautiful Beulah Belle,
returning on a bitter winter's night
from one of her habitual errands of
mercy to find that the dastardly
Lucifer Lowdown demands her
hand in marriage if the old homestead is to be saved. ·
The play features a wise granny,
an all-but-deaf aunt and an adenoidal hero, Adonis Adrenalin.
Tickets are on sale this week
until Dec. 10 jll the school or from
any drama club member. Tickets
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SPRING VAlLE~ CI.NEMA
446-4524

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News shows
By The AssocL\Ited Press
Lineup for today's. TV news
shows:
' ABC's T-his Wuk With David
Brinkley - Topic: Welfare, heallh .
care and other reforms.
Guests: ·Health and Human Ser· ·
vices Secretary Donna Shalala; ·
Michigan Republican -Gbv. John ·
Engler; Democratic Colorado Gov.
Roy Romer.
IAAOAIN MAT1,.U SAt. a SUN.
UIIGAIN NtGHT TWSDAY
Gll"' CDTiriCAftl AYAILUI.al

o

Morrie ..,.. DOfOVIJ Hoaklri.
l_)• .tt,·' ~~
.a.&amp;...I,JII ' ' . '·~· ~.• 1&lt;U_I.
~ 4li2NI ........., ••., Oil: .....

Tanner and That Special Touch and at the door prior to each performance. For more information, call
the Morris..-and Dorothy Haskins
Ariel Theatre tit 446-ARTS.

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)- President Alan
Aida is declaring war on Canada.
It's lhe vision of off·beat filmmaker Michael Moore,
who created lhe humorous General Motors-bashing
documentary "Roger &amp; Me."
The movie "Canadian Bacon" was inspired by tclcvisian coverage of the Persian Gulr War, Moore said
during filming !his week ncar Niagara Falls.
"!saw how easy it was for politicians and the media
to join forces 10 present tile 'Gulf War Miniseries,'" he
said.
AldaplaysaU.S.prcsidcntdespemtetoraisesagging
approval ratings. John Clindy, Rhea Perlman and Dan
Ackroyd co-star.
: The plot is far-fcu:hed, considering lhc two countries
have been at peace for nearly 200years. But Moore said
the war with Iraq also was absurd.

"I'm not saying Saddam Hussein's a good guy, but
one day we're giving him $4 billion and lhe next day
he's lhe worst thing since Hitler," Moore said. "It got
me lhinking, how gullible are we as a people?

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TOUOi5jDNE Plc:!ruREs'

·SISTER ACT 2:

IN -THE HABIT
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DECEMBER 10 -JANUARY 6

answer the scoring challenge and incre&amp;$C the

lead to 34-7 on an eigbt-yard touchdown pass
·from Brungard to Jon Quintana
Georgia Southern SC&lt;Xed the only points in
the fourth quarter when q1!811erback Charles
Bostick hit a four-yard run.
The loss wu Georgia Southern's third in
playoff history. The Eagles are 21-3 in postseason play. YOiiJiistown Swe has won nine
· of its last 10 Di~ion 1-AA playoff games.
Bostick led the Eagles, rushing 22 times for
77 yards and sccnng 12 of Georgia Southern's
14 points for the daly.
Youn$510wn State advances to the semifinals agBinst the winner of the Idaho-Boston
University gpme.
Army 1,, NayY 14 - At East Rutherford,
N.J .. Navy freshman Ryan Bucchianeri missed
a 18-yard field goal attempt wilh two seconds
to play Saturda)', allowing Army to escape
with a 16-14 vtctory in the annual classic
between the service academies.
Navy (4-7) appeared ready to match Army's
great comeback win of a year 1180 when it rallied from a 16-0 deficit early in the founh quarter, then drove 79 yards 10 the Army one for
Bucchianeri's chip shot
The snap was good. The hold was good. The
kick from a slight angle wu wide right, sending the corps o1 Cadets and Army (6-S) into a
celebration.
It also deprived Navy of a liule revenge.
The Middies blew a 17-point lead last season
and lost 25-24 on a 49-yard field goal by Patman Malcom with 12 seconds to play.
.
An unsportsmanlike penalty after the kick
cost Army 10 yards and Navy tried to take
advantage by lining up for another field goal.
But it was Army's ball and Army's game.
Besides the last-second miss, the Middies

't966 game that was won by the
Browns 49-40, according to the
Los Angeles-based Gold Sheet, a
handicapping publication.
San Franctsco tight end Jamie
Williams said even thpugh the
49ers are on a roll, ouiSCcring their
last five opponeniS 190-69, they are
dead serious about their approach
to the Cincinnati game.
"We look at their team and see
that hey, this guy on their team can·
play, he can play, and he can play.
Why are they losing?'' WiUtams
said. "You know that if you don't
$how up to play.•_&gt;:ou can get beat
...by anybo!W,•., .,. . '"'"·.tt=:'"'.#
. .- "SQ, it) easy f'! ~ not .!g ioQit
ahead. I don't lhirik we ~y
look at Cincinnali and start laugh·
ing. We say, 'Hey, here's a,nother
one and we have to take 'em ouL'
We can't afford to lose, because
it's not like we're three or four
gamesaheadofeverybodyelse."
The game is just the eighth
between the teams, who have met
twice .in the .super Bowl •. wilh San
FranCISCO wmmng both umes. The
49erS beat the Bengals 26-21 in the
1982 Super Bowl and 20-16 in the

march.

Army safety Jim Cantelupe forced a fumble
by Navy captain Jason Van Matre at the Army
29 on lhe next series. That got the CadeiS going
again. A 14-yard run by Kevin Vaughn, a 12yard pass by Roper and a 12-yard run by Lane
eventually set up Wicks for a 20-yard field
goal 24 seconds before halftime.

know any other word to say it.
(Ricky) Wauers is running !he ball
like a warrior. Jerry Rice and John
Taylor are making tremendous
plays. They're playing real well, so
it will be a great challenge for us. I
think the other players are excited
too, to have a chance to play a team
this good."
Defensively, the 49ers have
some injury problems. but can lhe
Bengals exploit the weakened.unit?
Kevin Fagan, San Francisco's
best run defender, ·suffered a season-ending knee injury during last
week's 35-10 win over the Los
Angelea.Ram• AUG, clofeuiY.I!
tackle Ted Washington (shoulder)
and reserve defensive end Larry
Robens (lmee) are recovering from
injuries and will miss a second
straight game.
Fifth-round pick Artie Smith
was expected to swt in place of
Washington. He's lhe second rook·
ie on the 49ers' remade defensive
line, joining defensive taclcle Dana
Stubblefield. Second -year pro
Mark Thomas is expected to stan
in place of Fagan.

1989 Super Bowl, the most recent
encounter between them.
Krumrie, one of four players left
on the roster from the Bengals' last
Super Bowl team, said the 49ers,
panicularly on offense, remind him
of the team Cincinnati faced in the
title game.
~
"! think it's very comparable,
maybe a little bit better," said
Krumrie, who has come back from
the broken leg he suffered during
the f~st quarter of the '89 Super
Bowl.
San Francisco, which has a onegame lead over New Orleans in lhe

' NFC'' We«t&gt;&lt;-'eetel' Coliigbt's
nwa.up·JIIllbd.fiilt iii otT~ and
·scqrin!l, and quarterback Steve
Y01J11S IS on a pace to win a third
stralglll passing tide, something no
NFL quarterback has done.
Receiver Jerry Rice, meanwhile,
has 14 touchdowns, three more
than the 28th-ranked Bengals
offense has scored all season. Rice
now ha5 122 career touchdowns,
just four shy of matching Jim
Brown's all-time record.
"They are playing tremen·
deus," Krumrie said_. "! don't

Hilgenberg to face former club today

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND
(AP)
Betraye"? Absolutely, says Jay
Hilgenberg, who was cut by the
Cleveland Browns in August after
they had lured him to town with
promises they didn't keep.
"When they say one thing to
you and do something else, yeah, it
frustrates you a little bit," said
Hilgenberg, who renuns today as a
mC~Dber of the New Orleans Saints
p-4). :'But that's the business, and
. that's the way they handle it. Noth·

ing a player can do about it."
Hilgenberg was a contract holdout with the Chicago Bears in 1992
when the Browns (S-6); desperate
for help on their offensive line,
convinced him to accept a trade by
offering him a two-year deal. This
would have been the second year of
the contract, and Hilgenberg's
salary for 1993 would have been
$1.1 million.
But after starting all 16 games
for Cleveland at center last year, he

was cut in August this year. The
Browns decided to use rookie firSt·
round pick Steve Everiu as their
staning center, and Hilgenberg was.
too expensive to keep on the bench.
"When we signed Jay, we had
no idea we'd draft a center,"
owner Art Modell said after
Hilgenberg was cut. "Everitt won
the job, and we were not about to
pay $1.1 million for a backup cen·
ter. I know that Jay is upset and
thought his spot on this team was
guaranteed. But we stopped giving

guaranteed contracts years ago."
The Browns talked of letting
Hilgenberg come back at a vastly
reduced salary - about half, he
says - but he declined, instead
joining his brother Joel on the
Saints. Jay filled in at center for the
first five games !his season while
Joel recovered from a knee injuey;
Joel has started the six games
since.
"It's been a lot of fun being on
lhe same team with my brother,"
Jay srud. "It's been a nice move."

1111'

1- ,

--

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Gary
Trent scored 19 points and pabhed
19 rebounds as Ohio Umversity
pulled away from cold-shooting
Navy in the second half to take a

No. 5 Midligall 97
UT·Chauanoop "'
.
At Ann Arbor,- Mich., reshiiWI
Bobby Crawford scared 22 points
as No. S Midlipn he\d oft a !ale
rally foe· 1
6ji-5Q ...j _c &amp;qry .iJL~ .COQIP.Il!UOD . :I«!D' a
game of the Amentas Classtc Sat- 97-86 victory Saturday.
Michigan (4-0) had a 17-point
urday.
Trent's 19 boards tied his career lead with 14:04 left in the game.
best and set a tournament record
But with Maurie Hanson scorThe Bobcats (2-I) led by as ing seven of his 17 points in a 21-7
many as nine the first half, but burst, the Moccasins (2·1) cut the
Navy took advantage of 16 first· deficit to 72.@ with 7:30 remainhalf turnovers by Ohio University ing.
to trail just 31-29 at halftime.
• The Wolverines responded with
Navy's Victor Mickel hit a a 17 · 7 run, sparked by Crawford,
three-point field goal to open the who had two three-pointers and a
second half, and T J. Hall added a pair of free throws in the spurt.
free lhrow to give the Midshipmen That gave Michigan an 89-76 lead
a 33-31lead.
and the Wolverines were in comGus Johnson hit a 22-foot mand the rest of the way.
jumper to nou:h the fust of his 12
Crawford, seeing extra playing
second-half points 10 put Ohio Uni- time because Dugan Fife was in
versity back: on top 34-31 with foul trouble, hit seven of nine
shots, including five of Michigan's
15:40 remaining.
The Bobcats continued to tum II from three-point range.
the ball over, losing the ball 14
No. 11 Louisville 77
more times in the second half. ·But
Mk:blcan St. 68
Navy (2·2) hit just 26 percent of iiS
At Louisville, Ky., Greg Minor
shoiS for !he game; and the BobcaiS
were able to build a comfortable scored 25 poiniS, including five in
a late 12-0 run to carry No. I 1
lead.
Most of lhat scoring came at the LouisviUe to a 77-68 victory Sarurfree throw line where Ohio hit 17 day over Michigan State.
Louisville (1 -1), which shot
of 20 second-half shots.
Chad Estis added 17 poiniS for 39% from the field, relied on its
Ohio University. Hall led the Mid- three experienced players down the
sttetth to take the lead and hold off
shipmen with 8 points.
Michigan State (2·2).
In other action:

Murphy to accert

Harvard footbal post
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati football coach Tim Murphy
has accepteil the head coaching job
at Harvard, newspapers reported
Saturday.
.
. rile .CbiciMalt Enqulrtr quOied
imidentified lources as min8 Murphy d0Ci~ ~against 1Cincinnati's
bffet a.five-~ 'COlllillet ~ten­
.Jir;~n:· ~~hed :G~in~ IP ,a en'
mark,
1'7·31'&lt;~ 1 ~infi~~·· .
.
co'acll
·
· · · Tit~ Cliii:I11111JII Post reported
that sourteS it did not Identify said
Sdlool. The boollers ~ve
Muiphy would be announced as Ga1Ila Academy
reached
011t-flltb
their
goal or $40,000 for the
S.Vard's cilach· Monday in Cam·
new
RJIIl
'"'Is.
Tile
dub
).Opes
to reich Its pi by
bridge, Mass.
Mardi.
Contributions
are
belnf
accepted in tbe
.A mesSage seeking comment on
foUowllla
catqorles:
BOOIIer,
$
-99;
White, $100
tbe repons was left Saturday at
to
4!1!1;
lllue,
$500
to
999
aad
Gold,
$1,000 or
UC' s ath1eCic ort'ices.
·
above.
Donations
are
tax
decuclable.
Contact
one
Murphy has said he will
olthe
followial
booster
omcen
for
m~
lnforma·
announce his decision Monday.

of'

(114} ·UH7tJII

mental piece; as Yuletide Show·

case; Ctlebratloll 111 Da11ce and

After eiaht moilt'M and ftl71Dt penoda of U.e lCI llllft .lean

,. rrom ille lfldlrOD to tile hardwood, · ~· buketlllllls !lick 011 the .

r couri throughout Otilo ~d West Vlra!ttla. Friday nlaht's sea111u

the Palrland-GaUia Academy pme sllOWII bere,
will two and klle tine. For more detallJ or local
'. .-.es and other action thrOII&amp;bout Ohio, lllart on C·l. ~SellilDel ,.pjo) ..
opeaen, •cb

11

Uw local twn1

••

.....

.

.

b

OU quintet sinks Navy;
Michigan, Louisville win

NEW YORK (AP) - Patrick
Ewing scored 31 points, and
Anthony Bonner matched his sea.son-high with 17 against his former
teammates as the New York
'Kniclcs beat Sacramento 123-1()1
Saturday - handing the Kings
their sixlh straight loss.
Ewing, guarded by the overmatched Mike Peplowski and
Randy Breuer, scored all his points
on layups, dunks and short
jumpers. He had 16 poiniS in the
firSt qua11er, 22 at halftime and left
the game early in lhe founh quarter
with New York ahead by 19.

Senior Pottrslt· ~

.

TO THE HOOP - That's the destiDation ol LouisvWe' Gr~
(I'm A Man ADd A) Minor (left), wbo finds Mil:hipn State's Dliimon Beathea In a matdl•p of No. l3 players in Saturday's pme 1111
Louisville, Ky., wllere the Cardinals won 77-'8 in part behind
Minor's 25-polnt efYort. (AP)

GAHS.
BLFACilER FUND

N.Y. Knlcks beat
Sacramento 123·101

. PI~IY

''

turned the ball over three times inside the
Army 30 in lhe first hall and lost it once on
downs at the CadeU' 32 in the second.
Army took a 9-0 halftime lead on a twoyard touchdown run by John Lane and a 20yard field goal by Rocco Wicks.
Quarkibaclc Rick Roper extended the lead
to 16-0 late in the third quarter with a nine-yard
touchdown run.
The Middies were seemingly out of the
game at that point, but they came back. ·
Quarterback Jim Kubiak began connecting
on the Middies' next series, hitting Damon
. Dixof! '?'I passes of 36, 19 and 16 yards, the
last gtvmg Navy a firSt and goal at the Army
two. ~ee runs lost a yard, before Kubiak
scored on a rollout, then hit Dixon wilh a twopoint conversion, cutting the lead to 16-8.
Dondra Jolly fumbled the ensuing k:ick:off
and Kubiak got Navy wilhin 16-14 on an eight·
yard scoring pass to tight end Jim MilL The
Middies went for two points again, and
appeared to have it made on a reverse to wide
,receiver Michael Jefferson. But he dropped the
handoff and Navy ended up dropping the
game.
The Middies' final drive staned at their 20.
Billy James led the way by carrying six times
for 60 yards.
James cost Navy poiniS Jate in the farst quarter when he fumbled at lhe Army one.
Roper lhen led Army on a 14-play. 98-yard

Niners' Sapolu not taking Bengals lightly

'EM~ ,

concert wiU include selections fiom
Hook, i!l lddition 10 such. instru-

5, 1. . ..

·,

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Arnold Schwarzenegger
thri lied Republicans when he campaigned for President
Bush. But his fan appeal among
conservative Cuban eiiles may
be terminated now that he's met
wilh Cuba's foreign minis!i:r.
Theactorarrivedin&gt;Havana
aboardaprivatejettoa.uendafestival of new Latin American ftlrns.
He was accompanied by his wife,
television journalist Maria
Shriver.
.
The twoonFridaymetwith
Arnold
ForeigJJ Minister Robeno Roba·
ina,acconlingtoreponminCuba.
The substance of lhe meeting wilh lhe Communist
official was not disclosed.
,.._
Schwarzenegger also indulged his folldness for cigars with a visit to lhe Partagas tobacco faCtory, wheie
· workers greeted him in tile street with chaniS of" Ar·
nold! Arnold!"

Crow11 Ct,lltMry, as as well as a
number of other holiday·related
compositions.
·
.
The
concen
is
free.
For
more
Arts eent«.
".
Tho btlid ii under'the diiection ' information, conlaet the Fine and
o( David Phillips and lneluclea Performing Arts Center at ·(614)
24S-7364. The lOU-free number in
~ly 4Q muiiciMI' from
Ohio
is 1-800-282-7201.
die upus and community. The

com.m,

,

Actor meets with Cuba official

RG Symphonic Band plans
Winter concert for Thursday
RIO-GRANDB .:_ The Commu·
mvenity Symphonic Band at the'
JJ!Ii~lty of Rio Grande and Rio
G~ Community College will
preiCIIJ its ,winter cohcen ThursDeC. 9 .• 8 p.m. in the Chris·
teMen 'l1lelter of the F'me and Per-

.

·tn Saints-Browns game,

NBC to sell Letterman videos

.

1

'

HUNTINGTON; W.Va. (A1) - Cl)ris
Parker scored four touchdowns and David
Merrick kicked a 38-yanffield JlC8l with du:oo
. seconds left to give Marshall a !4-31 win over
Delaware in a Di~ion 1-AA quarterlinal game
Saturdily.
Marshall (10-3) advanced to the 1-AA semifmals Dec. I r to play the winner of the game
later Saturday between Troy State and
McNeese State.
Senior quarterbaCk Dale Fry came off the
bench with 12:19 left in the game to rally
Delaware (9.4) from a 31·17 deficit, throwing
touchdown tosses of 20 and II yards to Dan
COCIPI&lt;r and Keita Malloy, ~lively.
Palker, who rushed for 144 yards on 33 carries, had touchdown runs of.three, five, three
and two yaids. Merrick also had a 36-yard field
goal for Marshall.
DeJaw.are 's Daryl Brown, who rushed for
120 yards on 20 canies,.had a 31-yard rpuchdown run and caught a 22-yard scoring pass
from leo Hamlett in the fust half. Steve leo
also kicked a 36-yard field goal as Delaware
led 17-14 at halftime.
·
Younestowu St. 34, Georiia Southern 14
- At Youngstown, Ohio, Marie Brungard went
'14·20 for 154 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead Youngstown State to a 34-14
victory over Georgia Southern in a NCAA
Division 1-AA qUarterfinal game· Saturday.
Youngstown State (11-2) jwnped on top of
the Eagles (I(). 3) to build a lead of I0-0 in the
fust quaner. The Penguins pushed as high as
27-0 by the end of the second quarter. The
halftime score was 27-0.
Georgia Southern opened the half with a
7:47 drive to score the Eagles' first points of
the game and make it 27-7. From there,
Youngstown State would turn around to

By DENNIS GEORGATOS
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Jesse Sapolu doesn't see tonight's
game between the San Francisco
49ers and Cincinnati Bengals as a
mismatch.
•'I know a lot of people are
thinking we're trying to rest up
some of our players who are
hanged up a little bit. But I've got a
good player in front of me," said
SapOlu, ~e San Francisco center
who will be bloeking Cincinnati's
two-time Pro Bowl nose tackle Tim
Krumrie.
. "And I've $Ot to.approach it
•wtth' the
. -same·.,ntenstty·-and concentration as I would, $8y, 'Ne!V
· Orleans." '
·· '
· The 49ers (8·3), riding an
im~sive 01Iensive bilrst that bas
carried them to five .straight wins,
are listed as 24-point favorites over
the Bengals (1-10), who beat the
Los Angeles Raiders 16-10 last
week to end a club-record 11-game
losin~ streak dating to last year.
It ts the biggest point spread. not
involving an expansion team smce
the New York Giants were. 26P9int underdogs to Cleveland in a

H•ldna-T~t~~n•,
Thai S,_..I Touch
.
,l

Section
C'
.Dlei""*

Marsh.all beats Delaware - · 34-31

In todsy's interconference mstchup,

ncbtl avaM•Ne at

Aida plays president in war film

'

~~~~ ~~:~~~~:~f

8,....-

LOS ANGELES_(AP)- David Letterman no longer
draws his paycheck from NBC, but the network is still
making money off its former employee.
A 10-year deal for worldwide video and laserdisc
rights to "Late Night with David Letterman" has been
reached between NBC Enterprises and GoodTimes
Home Video, the New York-based video company said
Friday . .
As pan of lhe agreement, GoodTimes will market
videos from among NBC's 11-yearcollectionofLetter·
man's late-night talk shows. He defected to CBS last
summer and now competes wilh NBC's Jay Lena and
"The Tonight Show."
A release date for the videos was not announced.

••'

day, Dec. 12 a~ 2:30 p.m. in the
GA.HS auditorium.
The con~;en features the seventh '
and eigll!h grade symphonic bal)d, '
the high sehool concen band and !
the high school symphonic band ;
playing a varied program of holi-day season music. The .concert will ;
last approximately an hour and 15 '
minutes.
Admission is $3 for aduliS and
Sl for students.

Decelllller10, 11, 17, 18

WESTHOLLYWOOD,Calif. (AP)-OiiverStone,
writer, is getting a career achievement award .
"Oliver Stone is foremost
among the new breed of
fllmml!kers whose writing talent
came first and opened lhe way to
directing and producing lheirown
works," said Melville Shavelson,
president of the Writers Guild
Foundation.
Stone will get tile foundation award on Dec. 15 at a tribute
and previewof"Heaven &amp; Eanh,"
the lhird installation ill his study
of Vietnam. The film opens in somecitieson Chrisunas
Day.
"Heaven &amp; Earth," a Vietnamese woman 's perspective of the war, was adapted for tbe screen by Stone,
who directed and produced it. He wrote ''Platoon" and
co-wrote "Bam on lhe Fourth of July."
The Writers Guild of America West established the
foundation in !966toackn9wledge writing in film and
television.

•

GALLIPOLIS~ The Instru- ,
mental Music Department of Gallia :

•AChristmas Carol•

,,THIS IS ~()UR LIFE, SCROOPE.- ~rcioce ,(Qoug Adklas,
left) .recoils ()'om the sudden appearance o.r the G~ost of Pttlstinas
Present (Tim Sn.ow) in the Ariel Theater Players'. produetion of "A
Christmas Carol" sel for Dec. 10-lland 17-18.

1!:inus- ~enti.W

Sports

,

Christmas concert ;

The Ariel PIGyen pre•en&amp;

' '\

'•

which include the price of the din-:
ner and the show an: $6 for adults·
and $3 forc'bildren 10 and Under;
For the play only, the price is' $2. •
For more information, contacb
Cynlhia Grallam at 446-7424 cir the~
school at 367-7377.
·

1895

Writing leads Stone to film fame

"

Comedic one-act
plays· te highlighf:.
RV dinner theater

A·ruEL
JC:~ASllSHtD

Epling, Renee Wilson, Kim
Painter. Pam Mathews and Tim
Snow.
Tickets for A Christmas Carol
are $5 and are available at Haskins

;

Sunday Times-Sentinel/88

.,..

Dickens'
holiday
classic set
tor Ariel
GALLIPOLIS - The Ariel
Players will present the quintessential holiday story of Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol two weekends in December. The perfor·
inances will be Friday and Saturday evenings Dec. 10, II, 17 and
18 at 8 p.m.
The classic tale features a miserly old man, Ebenezer Scrooge, who
begrudges the least peMy to anyone and his transfonnation into a
. loving. caring human being via the
vjsiiS of'several ghosts that show
~im the error of his ways. This
adaptation by Michael Paller pilrlrays Charles Dickens and how he
might have developed the StorY· ·
A Christmas Carol.cast mem·
bers include Doug A~ns as Dickens and Scrooge, Kelly Painter as
Dickens' muse, Philip luckeydoo,
Mark: Schlosser, Jeff lwd, Holly

.

••

Cheq,,.,..

�\

f»omeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~P-8111 C2-Sunday llmes Sentinel

jn Runnln' Rockets Tipoff Classic,

:River Valley

han~s

.. :

L

\

opening contest of the Runnin'
Roctea Tipoff Oassic II Wellston
Higb School, where t!lo Raiders
wiiiChcd the Lancers slub a 23point halftime lead to six at the
third quarter's conclusion. before
outscoring lhe east Athens crew
indleoppt•Mt'sC!ft~P..
19-lfiin.thefinalquartertoclaima
River Valley's Raiders Mfilled 75-66 wm. •
the ICII)IW!I! part oftbal in their 9C8· . The d~tsion muted the rust
SClll opeDill' qlinst FcdcrBI Hoclt- tune a River Valley v&amp;r$ity team
ing's 1 •ncen Friday night in the has won a season DpcllCII'. ·

Senior forward Chris Crace,
who led all scorers with 26 points
on 10-for-20 fiil!:f.:' shooting,
was part of the ·
' avoidance
or a total second-half meltdown
after fellow senior Paul Covey,
who had 19 on 6-for-13 fteld-goal
shooting, paced the Gallians' fusthalf runaway with 12 of those
points. Crace had nine in the fust
half, and junior Doug Lloyd, who
finished with 11, also helped over-

=·

Ohio H.S. boys' basketball scores
NGllb....,.l9,BolhoiS4
Norwaync41, Black Rivu 29
au HiD 12. s,_.. Vol 52
' Oberlin 57. Owlol41
Obootod F.U. 54, Broabido 45
o...rlo 76, a.u Fod. 60
Ooluia 76, Clou Fod. 60
0...... O!r. 6l,l.lto Ridp 60

OuviDe 57, c.m.o s. 56

o.tanl Tola.....S. 62. Mlamilbul&amp; 58
.,..... 70, ....... 66 (2 &lt;11')
Pauidt"""' 62, ltalido 60
l'auldma 71,lJncoUmow 44

-..'77.Fa,.....;u.62

Philo 62, Sh..I,Iaa 49

J&gt;ldr"'a'l):j41,11i11Wd 45 (2 OT)
• Libooty O!r, 39
Pl)mOUih $5, M fWd Qr, 31)

Partcu- 69, N-66
"""""-h B. Sl,l'aalllinl'omO&lt;Oo-&gt; 50
Pnblo Slu...., 75,lltooivillo 67
l')ma..... VII. 61, B..... 5I
R.avlll&amp;l SE 79, Field 61
11; I
'DolaSE90,b:iaoSouthom66
!Wipwood 65, T,._wu Vol !0
Riv011ido 9l, Cin. Cluiltiao 32
Rocky Rivor 84, WeiJmalaa 48
llocu1DW11106,0anaiYillo63 .
. _.... 63,0.0-$3
RUIIi.a 66.Jacbon Cotter .51
S. R$;74, Poland 63
S&lt;nd
St. ~66, TdlinC.J&gt;MS6
Shad
63, Umon Local .51
Sluk.. Hu. 95. El,U 73
Shaw 95. Adminl. Xin.J 82
Sholby 72, Modilon 49
SMnon4aoh 16, Conauan Vol46
Smi!llvillo 71,l.olldanvilli&gt; 76
SfrinJ. Cath. 67, SJ&gt;ina. NMhOULOm 64
Sp&lt;iaa. Loool9l, 1!. PWtino 51
Sprina. N&lt;mh 66, Km100 Rid&amp;• 64
Sprina. Sau!h75, T~ 1i
SfrinJbaov 72. O.y. C.Wlo 62
Spr!nafidd 61, Swanlarl SO
Sl Blwant 49, I..tbwood 45
St. M&amp;m 66, Timn Colvat S6
Stow tOI,Akml Gufiold 61
SbubwJ 79, SODdy Vol 58
--..66,Waadsid&amp;e60
Su)bt73, MtXJJpelior 55
SummitC""""Yboy !OI,Cin. Wiloon 62
~ylvania NOdhvinr 61, Cardinal Scxitch 46

nonw WOJ1biu\an 60. Dcrlawuo S6

Tal. Uhbey 84, i!onbwy 55
Tol.-70,Poay,borJS4
-Tol. St. "PmncU 15, Sytvama Sau!hview 46
Tol Waite 70. ToL WbilmCIIr6!5
Tri-V~J 74, N"" Luin&amp;IOO 52
TMity 62, B...U.W. 54
T~ 76. Lu!hor B. BoD 57
Upper sd0c4'Vtl.5.5, Cronvicw 42
Van B~~~a~ 76. N. Ballimcn 70
Vm WM 62. Coldwater .58
Vemrilion 65, Fireland1 55
W, Bnnoh 71,0Uud 6S
W. !off....., 66, BOJJey 61
W. Liberty Salem 65, S. Charleston SE S8
Wuhinaton C.ll64, Jwathm Alder 56

Waterford 63, Vincent Wuren 59
Wellston 73, Reedsville Eutan 51
Watlake 66, Beret 52
Wh~ 78, I'&lt;INma~~tb W. SO
Wickliffe. 60, Kirtland 46
W\llo-Hlll SB,IIowhrul a;.. 47
Windlwft 75, C!atwaod 69
Woodridp60, Suoou- 56
Woocter 57. LWngtm 55

Wa:thioaton 0.. il, Col. Nanhhnd S4

Wynford 14. Bucyn&gt;a Sl

xeru. 84. Day. Belmont 66

Youn1- Boardman 73, Young. Chaney 'J7
YounJ- But 70, Calvuy O!.r. 62
Youna. Uberty 66, S!Nihon 51
Yooma. W'abon6S,C-bo1160
Zanenillo 45, Otvvq&gt;art 4l

Athens Honda's ·
~ ·"' ~r'1~lr\~.~."'~l"~~
I

I

see that runaway with ei&amp;bt points
before halftime.

·

Federal Hocking, piloted by former North GaDia skippec Paul Pet·
tit and assisted by former Eastern
reserve coach Roger Bissell, only
made four field goals in 26 tries in
a first half thill got started with
both teams combining for 12
missed shots before Crace got the
game's fll'St points on a layup with
4:47 left in act one. The Lancers
made eight of 14 free throws to
account for the rest of their fu:st·
half scoring.
Judging from the scoring pro·
duction, one may think that at fu:st
glance River Valley grabbed a pillow and blank:e.t and went to sleep
after halftime. But despite Crace's
l 0 third-quarter points, foul trouble
was a tougher opponent for the
Raiders than complacency, as
shown by the fact that River Valley, which star1ed the lhinl quarter
with only one player - senior
fronunan BiD Mullen - with three
fouls, ended it with three more
players - senior guard Shawn
Cox, sophomore guard Jamie Graham and Uor,d- witb that manr.
Meanwhtle, Federal got mne
points from sophomore ~uard
Nathan Gilders, seven from· Janior
forward Chad Nelson and six from
junior center Mark Whiting that
proved crucial in outscoring River
Valley 33-16 in a frame marked by
the painful exit of sophomore
guard Tim Warga.
During a mad dash for a
rebound with 56.1 seconds left in
the period. he hit his head against
the unpadded ponion of the wall
behind the northern basket Federal
was using as its target at the lime.
He suffered a concussion and was
fiued with a neck brace on the spot.
but he was conscious and had control of all his voluntary muscles
before being transported by ambulance to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens, wbere he was treated and released.
After a pause of approximately
25 minutes, both teams were
allowed four minutes to wann up,
and after that, Federal put up six
unanswered points - four of those
came on field goals - to cut the
Raiders' lead to 56-50 heading into
prime time.
HangiDg tough
The final quarter saw Rivec Val· '
ley get its lead back to 13 with help
from Crace, who had seven in the
frame and used the threat of his

liJlAil;:~

PASS - River Valley
Chris
a
Doug Lloyd halfcourt pass early in the third quarter
night's season opener against Federal Hoeklaa In the Ruimill
Roekets Tipoff Cluslc at Wenston High School,·where Crace's
game-high Ui points helped the Raiders W!lrd of! a late L!!ncer
charge to win 75-66. Crace scored moments after thiS ~tch. (TIDles·
Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Choo~' and cu~

aour lru

( DT Jilt 'II

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1992 Chev. S1 0 Pickup..............59,499
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apprecillled 'Tbe !'it.' ThCir suP.

port was fantastic."

Waggoner led a triq of Alexander players in double fisures with
18. Wagner and Roller added 10
points each. The Spartans hit 26 of
58 from the noor, including only
four of 18 from three-point range.
for 45%. Alexander, which hit 10
or 16 from the line for 63%, pulled
in 25 rebounds, with Travis Rice
and Rosier getting five each.
Alexander oally tume4 the ball over
three limes and had eight steals led
by Waggoner's four.
The Marauders hit l S of 54
(fOur of 15 from three-point ranJe)
for 28%. Meigs cashed in on rune
of 19 from the line for 47%. The
Marauders pulled in 26 rebounds,
with Grate grabbing eight and
Peterson getting five. The Marauders committed 24 turnovers and
had seven steals, led by Ewing's
three .

ALEXANDER
(25-16-1.8-9=68)
Waggoner 3-2-5-17, Wagner 21·3•10, Han 1-0-1•3, Vincent 1-10=5, Shennan 2..()..()=4, Nickolson
140=2, Chapman 4-0-0=8, Rosier
5-0-0=10, Mania 1-0-0=2, Rice 20·1=5, Bach·Davis l-0-0=2.
TOTALS: 23-4-10=611

•

MEIGS

(11-4-4-22=41)
Stanley 1-0-0=2, Newsome 0-20=6, Grate 1·0-4=6, Russell 2-0l=S, Ewing 2-2-4=14, Hart 2-00=4, Prall 1-0·0=2, Peterson 1-00=2. TOTALS: 10-4-9=41

Ross SE gets 90-66 win over·Southern

By SCOTI WOLFE
Tinies-Seatiael CorrespondeDt
RICHMONDALE - Blitzing
Southern 22-9 in the final frame,
the Division m Ross-Southeastern
Panthers repelled il third-quarter
comeback and opened up a close
game ell route to defe3ting the
.Southern Tornadoes 90-66 Friday
nigbt·in the season opener for both
·clubs.
Southeastern was led by Jason
Weaver's 25 points and a nearly
impressive effon from Josh Bennett, who notched 24. Weaver
canned I 0 field goals and nailed
five three pointers, while Bennett
notched nme field goals and one
~point&amp;.

· . Southern was led by dual 18-

point efforts from veterims Roben
Reiber and Ryan Williams.
Southern head coach Howie
Caldwen said, "We just didn 'I play
very well at all. We went one
stretch.in the fourth ·quaner, where
we didn't score for four minutes.
We played a good ball dub tonight,
but we must get better as a ream."
Both clubs 'came out in traditional upbeat tempo's with Ross
taking the early edge 21-15 at the
end of the first frame. Despite a
couple three-pointers fro_m ~uard
RyBD Williams, Southern~~ not
consistently match Ross s potent
inside outside play.
Bennett and Weaver complement¢ each other very well, then

whe SHS would seal off the mid· the win.
Southern hit 25-S5 from 1he
die, Weaver would drive home a
field,
hit 2-5 three PQinters and was
three-pointer. The res!llt was that
10-18
at the line. The Tornadoes
Ross built up a 44-33 lead at the
had
26
rebounds, led by Trenton
half.
Cleland's
six, while the 1ea111 had
Southern made several success14
steals,
21 turnovers and 23
ful halftime adjustments ·and made
a strong run at the more burly Pan· fouls.
Ross hit a blistering 30-46 from
thers in the third frame. Southern
the
floor, was 7-13 from three point
cut the score to four points by midrange
and 9·21 at the line. They
quarter, but the effort feU short and
grabbed
34 rebounds, led by BenSHS never got over the hump, trailnett's
II,
had eight steals, 26
ing a'ain by 11 at 68-57 by the
turnovers
and
20 fouls.
frame send.
Ross
also
won
the reserve conSouthern's scoreless streak in
test
39'.33.
Rod
Jones
led the winthe fourth frame fired another 20.
ners
with
15,
while
John
Harmon
plus frame by the Panthers. and
Larry Jordan's club put the last paced Southern with nine.
Southern is idle until next Frinails in the Tornado roffm to claim
day's home opener against Trim-

Weil;ic;k~S doW~;~ Eastern 73-51

at Federal Hocking in a tournament
. By SCOTI WOLFE
praised for his hard play and scor- of their own.
Tlmes-Seatinel Correspondellt
ing.
Wellston hit 29-64 for 35.3%
WELLSTON - Slow starts in
Wellston was led by Jamey while connecting on 10 of!S at the
the first and dtird quarters took tbe Lambert's 14 points and line. WHS had 28 rebounds, led by
.Eastern Eagles out of the hunt early . Cheatham's 13. Eastern (0-1) was Brett Fink's nine, had five blocks,
·as the Wellston Golden Rockets led by Eric Hill's 14 points.
17 assists, led by Stevison's six;
claimed a 73-Sl victory over the
Eastern had the misfortune of had IS steals. five turnovers and 15
Eastern Eagles Friday night in the sllicking up a~sl one of the more ~ uls
:rll'St-round nightcap of the Runnin • experienced. if not the best club of 0 E~stern hit 19-49 for 38.9%,
.Rockets Tipoif Oassic.
the tou.r;!l.~ent. prompting Deem was 11-15 at the line for 73.3% and
River Valley defeated Federal to say,, tl sa tough ~ay to start, collected 33 rebounds. Bissen led
Hocking in the opener, thus setting but we re g01ng to wm some ball with 13 caroms.' The team had
·~\t.~~ck.r..-R_ocl!ict .DI!IIC~'!IP, in
~;·• chainpiioShil) giime .at 8 .
;p.m. SIIIUI'IIiy nighl Fedelal Hock- ~ 8-0 run ~~-Eislcrp notched fouls.
'
~ng · and ·Eastem 'played in Saturtts ·first bucket at around,the S:45
This week's schedule has East·
1tay•s 6:30p.m. consoW:ion game.
mark. ~ellston ".JJk' advantage '!f em going to Albany Friday to face
: Wellston is 1-0 and Eastern 0-l.
the outside shooung lanes and htt Alexander
Eastern head COIICh Tony Deem the early threes to take a 19-8 lead
·
said, "Our young kids were after just one frame.
WELLSTON
'extremely nervous and we just got
In the second canto, Eastern
(19-16-19-1~73)
off to a slow start. We had the fought back hard and had pulled to
David Riepenhoff 1-0·0=2,
ihots, but our nerves got to us. We within seven, but despite taldng the Steve Fink 0-2-2=8, Thad Smith !llid a gOod job defensively on the quarter 18-16, still trailed 35-26 at 1·2=7, Chad Stevison 2-1-4=11,
inside, especially on Cheatham, but- the half.
Jamey Lambert S-1-1=14, Brett
a result we didn't get out and
Eastern adjusted well at the half, Fink 5-0-0=10, Jason Ira 2-0-0=4,
liefend the three-pointer Vf7Y well." but again came out tight, missing Scott Cheatham 6-0·1=13, Dan
· Charlie Bissell was credited several early buckets to begin the · Hendershot 2-0-0=4. Totals: 24-5·
i.vith doing a good job against 6- second half. The Eagles's second
10115=73
foot-7 postman Scou Cheatham, half start duplicated the gamewhile Eric Hill, a sophomore was opening P.erfonnance (19-8) and
EASTERN
EHS tratled S4-34 after three
(8-18-8-17=51)
frames.
Roben Reed 1-0-0=2, Pat New·
'
Wellston added to its laurels in
land 4-0.0=8, Wes Arbaugh 2-0:
(Continued from C-2)
the fourth round and went on to
3=7, Charlie Bissell 1-1-3=8, Jeff
~;50 left in the game, Nelson sank win the game 73-51.
•
Stethern O.Q-2=2, Micah Otto 3-0.
~ive of the Lancers' next eight
Due to the tournament format,
0=6, Brian Bowen 2-0-0=4. Eric
;Dnanswered points that trimmed the there was no reserve contest. The
Hill 4-1·3=14. Totals: 17·2·
'Raiders' lead to 70-6S with 1:39 reserve teams of the four schools
1U15=51
hft.'' That was as close as they were to play Saturday and Monday
:Would get.
~ FJQm then on, the Raiders, who
)flaw Uoyd, Covey and Graham foul
:J!u~ while Crace srayed on the floor
&gt;One foul away from joining them,
:inade five trips 10 the charity stripe
)nd sank four of, seven free lhrtiws
~~He . reviving the defense that
uowed them to dominate the first
~ with sieais and the fast break.
r Whiting ~ the Lancers with 17
Stoints partiaily gleaned from 6-for'2 field-goal shooting.
•
~ This week's agenda has the
Jt,aiders, who played Well,ston e Golden Rockets beat Eastern
3-51 in Friday's second glune- ·
aturday night, facing Fairland in
their borne opener Tuesday befOre
playing theu first Southeastern •
Ohio Athletic League game Friday
3 STOCK
lu home against Jackson.
SEDANS. Air, aUto., V-8 engine, These family sized
~
,IUVER VALLEY
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1
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• Crace ·8-2-4/5=26, Covey 3-34/6=19, Llo)'d 1·1·6n=ll, AshBUY IIOWFOI
lvorth ·3-0-010=6, Cox 1-0-3/5=5.
Mabe 1·0-1/2=3 , Mullen 0·1Q/1=3, Boothe '1-0.0/0=2. Totals:
PERMONTH

PICKUP

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•.,.&gt;..........
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ana · .

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18/41-7/U-181~=75
: Total FG·~ 25-56 (44.6%)

: Rebounds -:-- 36 (Lloyd 11)
• Assists- 12 (Cox 4)
: Steals - 22 (Crace 6)
· Tu1'11overs- 32
: Fouls-28
: Fouled out - Covey, Grahani,

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&lt;

-·-·FEDERAL
HOCKING

•

.DON..TATE.c
HqUfl': 'fe'on.-Fi1 • .9:004:00
Sat. 9lOG-4:00; Sun. 1:00-lS:OO

INSIDE BUCKET - Meigs froutmau Scoa Peter.n (44) splits:
tbe seam between Alexander defenders Scott Chapman (left) llld
Eric WaJ!!er (14) for the layup during Friday niPt's TVC pme at
Meigs Htgh School, ehere the Spartaus woa 68-41.
ble.

ROSS SOUTHEASTERN

SOUTHERN
(15-18-24-9=66)
Jeremy Hill 2-0-0=4 , Ryan
Williams 4·2-4=18, Cass Cleland
4-0·0=8, Trenton Cleland 3-0-2=8,
Aaron Drummer l-0-0=2, ·Robert
Reiber 8.()-2=18, Mason Fisher 30·1=7, Tucker Williams 0-0-1=1.
Totals: 25·2·10/18=fifi

(ll-23-24-ll-"90)

Tad Carrico 1..0.0.2, Rod Jones
0-0·2=2, Jason Weaver 5-S-0=25
Ed Gilbert 1-1-2=11. Derrick
Frances 1-0-0=2, Chad Ragland 50-2=12, Craig Simpson l-O-Oe2
Josh Stooly 5-0-0= 10, Bob Kalu:
mondire 1-0-0=2, Josh Bennett 9•
1·3=24. Totals: 30-7-9/11:.90
:

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You'll save plenty with thb loan &amp;pedal compared to
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December 31, 1993.

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:Raiders win •.•

~loyd

CARS

Alexander won the reserve
game 60-31 o"er the Little
Marauders. J. Grubb led the winners with14 points, and Josh
Withenllled Meigs with 12.
Meigs will travel to Nelsonvilley crt next Friday, whil~ Alexander
will host Eastern.

as

_.t:~ 1993

2500
OFF
AccorJ Door

2500
OFF
·
Hoada Prelude

tage. The more experienced Spartans held Meigs to eight points in
the second and third periods.
In the third period, the Spartans
used a balanced atli!Ck to outscore
Meigs 18-8 heading into the fmal
eight minutes. In that third period,
eight different Alexander players
hit the scorins column,
The Marauden seltled down in
the fourth period outscoring
Alexander 22-9. Benny Ewing
scored II of his team-high 14
points in the period, while Ray
Rossen added all five of hjs.points
then. Travis Grare also had·four in
theperiod.
.
UI was pleased with our effort,
we were defeated by a more experienced 1ea111", Maraude.r head coach
Jeff Sldnner said after the game.
"Their pressure forced us to play
their type of game. Skinner was
also pleased with the crowd support. "Our fans were great. We (the
team and coaching stafO really

gam~itswn· ~ ~~~lit ': ~:S~·~~!:~~ !:t'fk

1994

4

cut

J.•d mjo~

&gt;

1400
• 4DoorDemo

By DAVE HAlUUS
Timet-Seatillel Correipoodent
ROCK SPRINGS - Alexander
jumped out to a 25-1 1- lead at the
end of the fli'St period and roBed to
a 68-41 victory over the Meigs
Marauders in non conference biiSketball action Friday evening at
Larry R. Morrison GymJl!ISium. .
The same was the st'a9on opener
for both schools, BDd ihe cont.est
will· count as a non-c.onference
game since both teams arc in separate ·divisions of tbe Tri-Valley
Conference.
Eric Wagner helped the Spartans to the big first period lead
again~l his former teammates.
wagne.. scored eight points, while
TraviS· W&amp;gg9nei' added seven and ·
Scott Ch11pman and Matt Rosier
added four each.
In the se·cond period, it was
Waggoner who got the hot hand
with seven points, as the Spartans
built up a 41-15 halftime advan-

In clubs' season opener, ·

$181995

00.1

wv

OH Point

Alexander downs Meigs in 68-41 rout

canDed a free throw to
, 70-57 with
• C.3)

threc-poi{lt CBJ!llliility to open up
the inside 1'or senior centrz Trevor
AshWU!b ~ I.loyd. But .from .the.
'

December 5, 1993

In Afa~uders' season &amp; home opener,

Federal Hocking 75-66 loss)t• o ,ener

' By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
n.es S tlwl Slalr
. WELLSION- O-for-11 sbootlna in tile fnt quarter gencnlly
lneiDS cwo
a loftS night
fordle.-&amp;Y
ofsuchasbow·
in&amp; llld a briBbt
fer I!Ziness

I

December 5, 1993

•

OPEN SUND~ \
I

. ,

;

&gt;

(2-15-33-16=66)
. Whiting 6-0-S/10=17, Nelson 31·6/10=15, Gilders 3-1-4/5=13,
Mollohan 3·0-0/0=6, Warga 0-0619~'11. Dotson 2-0-lf2=S, Tolson ,
'&gt;-0-0/0•4. Totals: 19/42-2/9W36=66 ',
·
. Tolal FG -21-51 (41.2%)
· Rellollnds- 36
: Fcit!ls -19
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OPEN
EVENINGS

nLI:OO

·,·

,.
'·

',
~

�.'

Gallipolis defeats Fairland _ 78-~3 in s~ason opener
GALLIPOLIS _ Gaii!Jiolis
placed thiee men·in doOOie figureS
tn scorinll as the Blue Devils
defeated VJSi!ina Fairlsnd 78-63 in
the 1993-94 basketball opener for
both schools on the Gallipolis hard·
wo&lt;X!Friday night.
Seniot guard Chad Barnes
tossed in 28points andjuniorcc:nter Terry Qualls idded 22. while

junior {orward Ryan Barnes finished wtth 11.
Former Hannan Trace student
Paul Dillon. a 6-5 ~ cen1er, paced the Dragons wttb 18
points.
'
Devo!i Scri~er ~ 13, and
Jared Bailey finished wtth 10.
The Blue D~vils trailed 4-0
early in the contest followin~t back-

to-back turnovers. After knotting
the co~nt at 8-all (4:26), Chad
Barnes three-pomt goal put the
G~ ahead to stay.
Gallia Academy led 21· 12 after
one period. The Blue Devils were
!In top. 4~-31 during the ~alftime
mterm1$SlOn and 62-50 gmng mto
theftnalquarter.
Gallipolis coMCCted on 30 of 59

fiel~ goal illtempts ror 52%. The

&lt;;lallians were 12 of 22 ill the foul
lme ror 54%. GAHS had 17 per50!1B1 fouls, 39 rebounds (eight ~Y
Mike Donnally and Qualls) and SIX
each by Chad and Ryan Barnes.
GAHS ~ad nine turnovers.
Galha Academy was credited
with 21 assists, seven by Chad
Barnes and s~ by Chris ~oeukcr;

Other SEOAL clubs
2-2 in season openers

•

GALLIPOLIS- Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League teams pried
. · the lid off of th~ 1993-94 basket·
·: -:.ball season Fri~y night, wiMing
• :-:four of six non-le,ague contests.
Only the Athens Bulldogt!ilid
:
-. not play Friday, but opened with a
; :: Saturday night game at Ncl• · • sonville-York.
: · : Posting opening-game vil;tories
·:· were Gallipolis over Fairland 18-: 63 Marietta over Cambridge 71: •53: River Valley ove,r Federal
: Hocking 75~ and 1lK:kson defeat·
·
. : : ing Piketon 58-55.
- . - The two losers were Warren
: : Local losing to Waterford 63' 59
: : and Logan losing to NelsQnville.. • York 83-58.
· · Marietta 71, Cambridce 53
At Marlena, Ryan Robinson and
: Jay Ruffmg each tallied 13 points
for the winning ·Tjgers, with Brad
Kroft and Greg Theiss each adding
10 points in the victory.
The Tigers jumped to a 24-17
fust peri&lt;Xllead and posted quarter
scores of 40-25 and 55·35. In addi• . tion to his 13 points, Robinson also
: led his team wilh eight assists and
• three steals while Darrell Shuss
: puUcd down 10 rebounds.
:. Dustin Ford's 12 points topped
•: ibe Cambridge scoring.
:· ,
Jacksoli 58, Piketon 55
;: ; At Jackson, Brad Howe and
•:·Dave Kight combined ror 45 points
: .-and scored 16 of the team's 19

field goals in leading the win.
Howe bagged 27 points, and
Kight had 18, as the lronmen bat·
tied from a 37-31 halftime deficit
to outsCore Piketon 28-18 in the
second half.
Piketon was led by Andy
Roberts' 21 points and Terry 1ordan's 16.
Nelscm¥ille-York 83, Lopn 58
At Logan, the Buckiyes shot SO
percent from the floor (34-68), and
all five swters scored in double
figures as they led by quarter
scores of 20-18, 44-29, and 59-42
enroute to ,tlie triumph. ·
'Jeff Warix led the offense with
20 points, wbile Logan's Coy Lindsey topped all scorers . with 25
points.Thc: Chieftains lee) in
rebounding 28-25 but canned only
38 percent of their shots.
·
. Waterford 63, Warren Local 59
At Vincent, Tyson Powers
poured in 26 points for the winners
m a second half comeback, even
though they shot only 30 percent
from the field.
The host Warriors had led
through three quarters by scores of
17-15, 34-27, and 45-42, but were
outscored 21-14 in the last period.
Scott Hendricks was the top gun
for Warren with 16 points and Chip
Robinson added 11. The Warriors
also committed 25 turnovers and
hit 21 of 55 shots from the field.

~~~:;~;m~ba~r~s;,1~~~~========================:!P~o:me~roy~~·=JI~d:d~le~po~rt~~G~a~lll~po~t~I~~O~H~P~o~ln~t~~~-~-~n~t~,wv~==============~s~u:n~~~~n~m:•:;~s~·~nu~n~•~-~~=a~·~·;ca~
; In the NBA,
.

DecemberS, 1193

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaaant, WV

Page C4 SUnday Times SenUnel

·
·
.
connected

:.Hawk$ shoot down Rockets 133-111 to snuff win strea·k

il Sleals, rour by Ollld Barnes, and
Fairlaltd
on 24 of 60
three t&gt;Jocktrl shots, two by Qualls field goal attempts for 40%. The
and one by Ryan Barnes.
GAHS.IIIl C-5)

1992 FORD
•.

.

.
(SEOAL, opponents)
(OveraU )
,
Team
W L TP OP
'"reenfi ld
· 1 0 73 41
"'
Je .............
1&lt;farietta................ .l 00 ~~ ~~
G~ ...............l
:wheelrSburg ......... .l 0 78 50
:J,Uver Valley .......... l 0 ~~ ~
Jackson ......;........... ! 0 59 63
:Warren Locai ........O 11 58 83
Logan ....................O
63 78
Fairland .................O 1
90
66
1
~Po
· outhern.:~.............o0 o o o
rtsmouuo.... ........
Point Pleasant........O 0
0 0
Chesapeake ...........0 0
0 0
.
Coun ty .... ..0 0
0 0
Vmton
Athens ...................0 0
0 0
( SEOAL Varsity)
Team
W L. 7P OP
Gallipolis.............0 0
0
0
RiverValley ........o 0
0
0
0
0
· )acltson ................O 0
Logan ..................0 0
0
0
Mariena...............O 0
0
0
Alhens ............;....O 0
0
0
warren Locai ......O 0
0
0
TOTALS
0 0
0
0
(SEOAL Reserves)
Team
W L TP OP
Gallipolis.............o o
o
o
River Valley ........0 0
0
0
Jackson ................O o
o o
Logan ............... ~ ..o o
o
oo
Mariena'...............o o
o.

'

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BOUNCE PASS· Fairland's Damian
(22) bounces a
pass past Gallia's Chad Barnes (14) during Friday nl&amp;bt's bard,
wood opener on the GABS boards. GaiUpolis won, 78-63.
, .

1616 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLl$, OH.
. ((;14) 446-3672
. '

;Efl.rnh&amp;rdt rakes in $4.1 million at NASCAR banquet

Sa~ u:cludel Aquarium
set Upa &amp; 10 gel.
Aquarluma.

1

lAYAWAY

bale Earnhardt' collected the
bulk of the .big money, a ~ecord
$4.7 million paid out at
NASCAR's annulil Winston Cup
awards banqueL
Bill France Jr., president of the
sanctioning body, paid tribute to

Davey Allison, saying, "The losses
of Alan Kulwicki and Davey Aliison were losses to our ruture, but,
more important, they were losses to
our heart.
"We'll never forget them, but
I'm proud of the way the people in

with Ford, the top STP Award of
$20,000 to Kyle Petty, the $25,000
Rookie of the Year award to Jeff
Gordon, the $50,000 Racer Award
to Bill Elliott and the top Winning
Finish Award of $25,000 to Daytona 500 winner Dale 1arretL

., tory.

1992 champion Alan;Kulwiclti
and
.

our
series
picked themselves
up,
dusted
themselves
off and kept

•--------------------------------.

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.

:
(Continued from C-4)
•Dragoos canned-tO of 13 charity
:ittempts for 76%. Fairlsnd had 19
; personal fouls, losing RYl!" 'Wilgus
•ynth rour ,minule!l remaming in the
:1ame. Fairtand hall 31 rebounds,
:10 by Dillon 1114 seven by Scribn·er. FHS had 15 turnovers.
:. Gallipolis will play at Warren
•Local Friday. Fairland will play at
:Ri~ Valley Tuesday nighL
;; • In the reserve game, Oallip&lt;?lis
·tallied rrom a 12-11 first period
.deficit to dereat the Fatrland
ieserves 51-30.
~ : Gallipolis led 23-16 during lhe
]talftlme intermission, and 42-23
..oing into the ftnal peri&lt;Xl.
:: Josh CbOit led the' winilers with
'15 points. Moose Clark added 10
'while Gory Wilson and 1850!1 Dai·
ley cacti bad six.
'· Nathan 1avins paced the losers
With seven points.

Koda~ multl-sesaion Photo CD
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FAIRLAND

·' .
(12-19-19~13=63)
' Michael' Black O-l -la4; J.D .
Smith 0-0-2-2; Damian SouthaRt
0-1-0:a3; Bill Cummings 0-I-O:a3;
Devon Scribner 5-0·3=13; Willie
Mills 2-0-0oo4; Jared Bailey 1-212-10; Paul Dillon 8.().:2-18; Rran
:Wilgus 3-0-0=6. Nathan Javms,
Clark and Ryan Haaer did
score. TOTALS. 19·5·10~
'

'

.

,

m~g.tl.;:ar-oldEambardt,who
~t.:::t:c;orino::.:::
pionsbip and now trails Richard

Nelsonville hit 23 or 69 from Petty's record of seven series
Meigs outscored Nelsonville·the
floor for 33%, including an ice championships by just one, came
. Yark 8· 5 in overtime and went to
· post a 60-SJ.viCtay ovtt the Lad.fi cold 'three or 26 frQm three-point away rrom the banquet with
nnge for 12%. The Lady Buckeyes $1,745,049 in checks, including
:OJiuckeyes 'in girls' TVC bastetba
. :action ThUrsday eve!Ung ill Larry hit eight of 14 rrom the line fot $1,423,049 from the point fund of
:·:R. Morrison Gymnasium, accord- 57%.' The Buckeyes grabbed 29 series s~onsor .Winston and
..,.ing to a ~ l'r'lelised after dead- 'rebounds, with Shafer .and Craw- NASCAR s speedways.
ford getting fi~ each. 1 .
:- line Frida . '
"Things have really changed
y
. m
.
·J..indsay Shumway led the Lady since we first came to New' York
. ..•, The con1e1t
was held up twtce
.
•' fi
30 . tes Backe with 19 · l'mwford. for this banqueHn,.1981,".- Earn;
-~·-~yes
- ..,w .Sl.-rf:fJO.1!9-·.i...
i&lt;.;:'i- .. _• &lt;.,
-~~r·sol:*I!IIDU
. ........
15, and•
ltJIO UJII::l '
WIS'
ng.
hardt said. ''Back then, nobody
Meigs won l)le ~ game.19- seemed to know much about
: The win wu the first in as.JII!IIIy
::tries for Roit LOgan's Marauders 13. Jenny Clifford and Taryn NASCAR or care. But now every,· while the Buckeyes lost their first Doidge led Meigs w,jth six e~~Ch. body seems to know we're here
Amanda Hill led Nelionville with and the spon just keeps growing
• galile in three trieS.
.
: Sus an Craw rord ·bit a three- four:
8nd growing."
. pointer Willi 10 seconds left in reg- · Meigs will traveliO Soitthem on
Andy Petree, Earnhardt's rirst:' nlarinn to lie the game ill 52. After Monday evening, and there will be year crew chier, pic!&gt;ed up lhe
: a Mlnuder turnover, the Buckeyes no reserve game.
$25,000 Mechanic of the Year
• missed a last second shot to force
Award, as well as another $20,000
Nelsonville-York (57) -.~gg award, while GM Goodwrench
: , the overtime. Amber Blackwell and .
; · Melissa &lt;;:!ifford scored (our points 1-1-0•5, Crawford 6-1-0;0.15, team engine builder Eddie Lanier
· ·each in tile overtime to lead the Shafer 1-1-5=10, C&amp;gg 1-0-)'•3, was given the $47,000 Engine
Shumway 9:0-1=19, White 2·0- Buildec ol the Year Award.
: maroon and ,ld.
·
; Joy O'l¥ien 1¢ four Marauders 1=5. Totals: 20·3·8=57
Other awards at the' banquet
Melp (60}- Heriderson· 1-0- included the $25,000 Gillette Rac• in double figures with 15 points,
:•while Blackwell added f4 and 0=2, O'Brien 6-0-3iol5, Hudson 3- ing Cballenge Award to Mark Mar·
0-3-9, Blackwe113-2-2=14, Comp- tin, the Manufacturers' cbampi·
· .Vanessa Compston added 10.
: Meigs ''hut 24 of 51 from the ston 5:.0.0=10, Clifford 4-0-:Z,.,to. onship trophy to Chevrolet, whtch
: floor for 4 7%, including two of Totals: 22-2-18--'0
recl8Jmed it after .a tough bailie
.. five from three-point range. The
'.Marauders cashed in on 10 of 15
.from the line ror' 68%. Mei$.S
:.pulled in 35 rebounds, with Clif: ford grabbing seven, Hudson and
.. compston· getting six each and
: BlackweU getting fi~.
North·America's Best
,.•

SAVE

FOR

Aquarium
Center

By MIKE HARRIS
: NEW YORK (AP) ·- After a
·. season in which two or its sws
;: were killed in aviation accidents,
: ·NASCAR's sws mourned their
'losses, then celebrated one of the
most competitive seasons in its his-

~· Meigs girls post 60~57 win
~- over Nelsonville-York in OT

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

20%

to qualify for the nationals on the
The Redmen had qualified for
stren~th of their times within the
the nationals after Benson, Smith,
Distnct 22 Championships Nov. 6 Wenger and Richardson finishes
in Canton. Evans was second and among the top 10 in the district
Harris fourth in that nee.
competition, with Benson and
The women's race ·drew 341 Smith taking first and seco11d
runners. The oatioilal winner was places. Throughout the regular sea·
Lubbock Christian (Texas) with 24 son, Rio Grande was ranked among
points, wbile Biola (Calif.)'.s Eliza- the top 20 NAIA cross country
beth Onyambu was· the individual teams, earning eighth place in lhe
final
rt.
.
fust place winner in 17:35.
.
Lu~
Christian
was
the
team
The Redmen finished with a
score of 427 points . Following winner of the nationals with 24
Benson.'s lead were Hidemitsu points and its James Bun$ei was
Maeda; 97th, 26:28; Chris Smith, the individual fust place wtnner in
133rd, 26:50; Condy Richardson, 23:37.
!49th, 26:59; SCQU Wenger, 153rd,
Rio Grande's indoor track sea27:01; Danny Hayes, 1801h, 27:15; son opened Saturday at West Virand Mark Bennett, 246th, 27:59. ginia University.
The nee drew 349 runners.

Bonnie
:Evans, a senior runner on the Uni~versity of Rio Grande women's
~ flOSS country team, was named an
jiN.AlA Scholar-Athlete and All~American, and Redmen athlete
:Chad Benson was chosen an All·
:American in the wake ol the NAJA
~Natl?nal Cross ~ountry Cb~pi•JODShlJ!S Nov. 20m ICenosha;Wts.
Th.e Rio Grande men's team
oacbe,il b).' Bob Willey finished
~41h o~j!U~ of 40 teams in the
"'ttv.ent- the Redmen~s Highest
~J yet· in all of their trips to

Reg. aep~rateltama 14tl:ee 125·162414091

SAVE ·

letes completing the race entitled
the sports and exen:ise physiology
major from· Kingston, Ohio, to her
second consecutive All-American
ranking from the national touma·
menL
Benson, a senior from Glenford ~
Ohio, who bas also nou:hed a successful career at Rio Grande, was
18th in tile men's race in 2S:20..He
was awarded All-American honors
rrom the NAJA ror being among
the top 30 in his mce.
Adrianne Harris, a freshman
from Rushsylvania, Ohio, w~· the
~me !'lliQnats:;
, .
.
only other Redwomen runner to
~ . E~. who bas been one of Rio · com~ in the nationals, finishing
·Grande's lOP runners for the past I 34th in 20:04. Evans and Harris
.;.rour years, ·finished the course in were the two Rio Grande athletes
:•18:24. Being among the top 30 ath-

1 - RIO GRANDE -

.

· Thlt tharp, couP,t hat ·~nly 12,oop low, low !"Ilea. ··
Flnlah 111 aterllng · all~r with. all the ppwei' option•.
you would expect. See lt'a beauty now! P~ced
accordingly. Balance of FactOry Warranty atm

·

Athens .................0 0
0
0
Warren Local ......O 0
0
0
TOTALS
0 0
0
0
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 78 Fairlsnd 63
Waterford 63 Warren Local 59
Mariellil71 Cambridge 53
Jackson 58 Piketon 55
Greenfield 73 Greenview 41
River Valley 75 Fed-Hocking 66
Nelscnville-York 83 Logan 58
Wheelersburg 78 Ports. West 50
Ross-Southeastern 90 Southern 66
Lllll
, nilbt's games:
f.W
River Valley Ill ellston tny
Chesapeake at West Union
Frontier at Warren Local
NelsonviUe-York at Athens
Greenfield vs. Vinton County at
OUC
Wheelersburg vs. Huntington Ross
atOUC
Brookhaven at Portsmouth
New Lexington at Logan
Tuesday's1ames:
Jackson at Trimble
Fairland at River Valley
Ashland at Portsmouth
Friday's Kimes:
Gallipc)lis at Warren Local
Logan at ~tta all
Jackson at River V ey
Vinton County at 'j;eUston
~6'1eillrs:t::a urg

The Spurs reached that llllrk on
Halteem Olajuwon, avenging
the
strength of a triple-double by
26.1 pOints and 13.5 rebo!mds, was
held to 17 points and 7 rebounds. David RObinson, who left the team
He sat out the fmal quarter after the Thursday after his wife had a miscarri&amp;Je. Robinson returned to the
ouiCome was already certain . .
The Hawks will try to make it team 1D Orlando Friday afternoon,
11 in a row on W e~nesday at about six boon before the game.
"I wanted to stay home to be
DetroiL
with
my wife," he said. "She was
1n other gameS Friday night, San .
devastated
by this, but she kicked
Antonio beat Orlando 94-84, DenmeOUloftheboule.
She was deler·
- beat CbariQUe 102-94, Milwaumined
thai
I
play.
"
S
be's a strong
kee beat Dallu 107·106. Phoenix
woman.''
beat New Jersey 104-103, Oticago
Robinson bad 23 points, 11
beat Miami 104-99 and Boston
rebounds
and 10 assists. He made
beai"Portland 114-108.
six
free
throws
in the £inal two
Spurs !14, Mqk 84
minures
after
San
Antonio blew a
The second-longest winning
streak in the NBA - seven games 17 -point lead in the second half.
- belongs to San Antonio.
The Spurs have allowed 100 points

fi=fioy rllnilis;-rSreceive. honors at nationals

1993-94 cage standings----

· !· ·

"I'm not mildng ai1y excuses; We
t~ a real good team and they
our butts in all phases of the
game."
Atlanta bas not lost since Nov.
13, when it fmished a four-game
road trip witliout a win.
•'Houston is such a good team
that what we wanted to do was
come out and jump on them right
away," Hawks coac.h Lenny
Wilkens said.
Atlanta did just that, opening a
19-point lead in lhe !!'CORd quiuter
and increasing it to as·much as 34
i,n the third period.
Mookie Blaylock scored 28
points an(\ Dominique Wilkins

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sporta Writer
i The NBA 1111011igbt now shines
:!011 the Atlanta Hawki. ·
} Atlanta ended Houston's sea, :;son-openin1 15-game winning
~streak Friday night and took over
!possession of the longest victory
· streak i,nJhe league with a·133-111
' rout of the Rockets - tlle Hawks'
' lOih straight win.
~~ loss kept Houston from
· l the record b most victo'Ties at· the SWI Of the IICIISOII. The
~mark was set by the Washington
~Capitols in 1948.
• "In 16 games, we are going to
~have a night like this," Houston

I j ,-

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Upper Route 7
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Open Evenings
till P.M:

�\

-

Page C6 Sunday Tlmas SenUnal

DeCember 5,118:t

Pomaroy.....Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaunl, WV

In Division Ill, V state football finals,

·:

Wauseon's clutch FG tops Ironton; SteubenvUie
ce
wins
~

By RUSTY MILLER
. MASSILLON, ~ (AP) - lf
thiS keeps .up, they mi&amp;bt have 10
Starl; siOCidng Maalox at the c.oncess';On srands at l'lwl Brown Tiger
Stadium.
AbSUll;l plays and heart-~ing
d~ama h1ghhghted thll openmg
naght of the 22nd annual OHSAA

state f«Xlball finals at lbc stadjogn,

a roughing-the-

. In =oeer,

ldclclr .
gave WIUieOII ticker Co. aa. Lane a second crack at
the wmna~g field goal. He CI!IDC
through w1th a 28-~ back-break·
er in the Indians 13·1 o victory
o-:e! _top-ra~ked Ironton in the
Di~on mtitle ume.

95 II
83 79
70 14

fumbl
B-L--and ..... Cru
"said W
·
e 10 save "'""'
""'
• good ,~11 team,
IIIIICOII
saders, 17-14, in the Division V coacb Mark Emaas. "But where
clu!!D~onship.
we're at. we don't even think about
auseool3, lrollton 10
the fllayoft's .... That's why our lint
For the second year in a row and concern. is winning the league
the fifth time overall, the Fighting every year."
Tigers of Ironton proved they were
Wauseon ncver llailed, despite a
one of the elite teams in the state sbaky swt. On their first play of
by maldng it to the Division Ill the game, the Indians gave the ball
championship game - but then up on a fumble at their own 29 by
losL
Pat MJine.
·
This time, it took a miracle finBut Milne came back to score
ish. Wauseon's Lane missed a 38- on a 33-yard run. Ironton matched
yard field-goal attempt as time ran that when Division III offensive
out But in the midst of anguishing player of the year Jermon Jackson
over the miss, lean!IDate grabbed scored on a 23-yard
Wauseon
him and pointed 10 the flag on the added a 28-y. ard Lane field goal
ground nearby.
after a 71-Iard pass play from Cory
Lane then got up and convened Griggs to TySClll Ullgenderfer.
That made it 10-7 at the half. It
a 28-yardcr after bme had expired
to seal the Tigers' fate and give ~d tbat way until the teams
Wauseon a state title in its fustfield goals in the final3:33.
Griggs, the ftrSt-tearn All-Ohio
ever trip to the playoffs.
"It's just a hell or a way 10 end quarterbacl&lt;, hit on 11 of 20 passes
the game," said Ironton coach Bob for 146 yards with one interception.
Lutz.
Jackson had 96 yards on 21 carries.
Wauseon (13-0) was ranked
"That's the way the game
fourth in the final regular-season goes," Emans said. "Turnovers
poD, while Ironton (12-1) was the and penalties. They decide a lot of
No. 1 team in the state.
big games."
''I knew we had a very, very
SCC 17, West Liberty 14

95106
73 88
72101

- - - Lyne Center slate----

In 1bc nigbt,...;, ahead 14-7 with
43 seconds le~ fourth-and-one
on his own 19• a weird fake
1
almost cost Steubenville caurol?c
Central and .coach Gre"" BabeR a
win But then Mike K~ k sld
ldcked his only field oij ~rthe
year in overtime and Larryg Cham·
bers recovered a Liberty Center

NOI1ll_lll_
66 328869
Pilllbwll&gt; ......... 12 7 7 31 93 19

s..... .............. l l

NBAstandings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlan'l" lli.Uioo
TWLPcLGB
Now)'adl ................9 3 .7~
B - . .....................9 7 -'63
2
Qdaodo .................... 7 6 -'31
2,j
6 a .429
•
Miomi ..................... .l I .315
4.S
Nowlaooy ............. .5 II .313
6
Philadolphia .. ............ 10 .:U6
6

CI.EVEU.N0 .........6

DeuoiL .....................5
lndiuaa .................... .S

Milwaukee ............... ]

~.S

9

3..5

.357

11 .200

P..tlk Dld&amp;loo
S..ulo ....................12 I .923

Ph...,;. ................!O

3 .769

l'mt1&amp;nd .................1
Ool4lca Swo ............7
L.A. Qippaa _ ,_.....6

1

7 .533

.462
.400
S.cnm-.............4 10 .216

L.A.

r.w-...... _....,6

7
9

..500

Ottaw1 .............. 6 16 3

IS 83121

29 83 12
26 78 6!

I&gt;oooil .............. 12 11 2
w;,;pc1 .... ...... 10 14 4

3
3.5
4

26 109 91
:14 94107

Padfk IH•lllon
ColJuy ............. 15 7 4
34
Vancouver ........ 14 II 0
2S
SanJa.o ............ lOIJ S
2S
l.ooAn&amp;doo ...... 10 13 2
22
Anaheim ........... 9 16 2 20
Edmon\01'1 •.•.. .... 5 19 3
l3

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MLdw•l DIYIIIon
Tum
W L PeL
Hounon ................. lS 1 .931
San Antonio ...........ll
5 .611
Utoh ......................! 0 S .667
Denver .....................? 1 .500
Mmnoo... ................S I .315
Dollu ...................... I 14 .067

22 90 19
II 70 92

St. I...ouil .....•...•. 12 I S
0Uujl0 ...... ...... 12 9 2

.533
.500
7 .462
9 ,3j7
7

Quoboc.............. 9 12 4

C..trool Dhllloo

.733

7

lladcml ............ 8 15 2

a

Tu•
W L T Pb. GFGA
Tcnallo ............. 19 5 4 42 107 75
Dollu................ 12 9 6
10 97 93

Central Dl•lllon
~

26 73 71
24 94 18

WESTERN CONFERENCE

w........._. . . . . . .

Adanu .................. .1 1
Ol&amp;doao .................. l
a.;.qo....................7

Mmtma1. ....•...... 11 lO 4
Bulfllo.............. 11 l3 Z

Ohio men's
coUege scores

Friday's scores
Detroit 8, Ottawa l

Gl

Queboc 3, N.Y. blondcn 2
Mmlre&amp;l:l, Wllhill- 2 (ue)
Winnipec 3, San Joae 3 (tic)

4

4.5

7

They played Saturday

I..S

Mormalat BCIIton, 7:0S p.m.

13.5

Pi.UI!NrJh It Hut(ord, 7:3ji p.m.

Vanc:ouYCII' at~ 7:3.5 p.m.
Chi.CIJO at New Jcny, 7:35 p.m.
w~" Ouaw•.
p.m.
Pl\il&amp;deiPti&amp; 11 ColJuy,I 'Ol p.m.
N.Y . lt,anaca at !O!Onto. 8:05 p.m.
Dalla• ·I t ~t. louil,
TampaB1yatL:.An
,10:15p.m

a,o5

2

s

s.s

l::,&amp;..m.

6
7
1.5

Today's eames

Florida at S~r~J~ S:QS p.m.
BOICcn .. Buffalo, 7:05p.m.

Pool
Today- closed
Monday- closed
Tuesday - closed
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
Saturday -1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 12- 1-3 and 6-9
p.m.

New Ieney at N.Y. Ranaen, 7:15p.m.
Edmoraon 11 Dallu, 1:05 p.m.
O.O.k 11 WiMipcr. I ,OS p.m.

T.emptBi.J ~tAiw.&amp;dm , 10:05 p.m.

Transactions

Baseban
Antukl• IAIIIII

CLEVEI..AND INDIANS: OeaipatM
Sam Hom and 'Randy Milliaan, f~t~t bue-

..,.,for ...........L

OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Nomed
Bra4 FiJcber wial&amp;Dt ~ of player

dcorelopmcnt; Bob Cluck rovin&amp; minor

Fitness Center
Today-1-3 and6-ll p.m.
Monday - 8 a.m'.-11 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday-8a.m.-11 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-8 p.m.
·
Sunday, Dec. 1l - 1-3 and 611 p.m.

,.."" pildUpa
""""""'
DWiaJa:
n TICCIIU
of lhoc.,.,
PKifio""'""'
Cout

lelaue; Guy Jon. manaaer ll HwnMllo
of lho S.Uihem Lc&amp;aue; &amp;nd Dick S.ou
manatcr at Modcato ol tho California
loop

N1llon1l Lnpe
CIDCAOO CUBS: Named Rick
Knn111 minor .....,. pit&lt;hina - ur. Bm Eadcy pi.tdWt,i coach at Iowa «
.... Alood&amp;llia; Bo M&lt;lA•&amp;h·
c~Cil" Orl•ndo or ihe

t.elai•l

~

""'-. Stn&gt;clo •.....,

,; fO'oll'll ·D•jloU Ofdai PtoriJ: Slat:
LeapA; Alan Diul.n ~na coach 11
Peoiia of tbo
a..- ...-..-.. Wl
o(
lbollo•rYadt-P.,. Leo- R&amp;y decii

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
CantOil HoritiJO 4S, Eut Liverpool
Ov. 31
CantGo NcEDo1oJ S9, C..... T 22
om· lha 51. U,. Adinpa SS
CloY. Eut 66, Cov. A - 44
CloY. Eut Toclt St, CloY. Rhocloo 43
CoY. Jby64, Cle¥. W"' Tech 22
CloY. Muobo1J66, 0... Lincoln-Weot
6! (01)
CJoy, ....... 49, Clov.ltamody 40
Columbia 51, Rid1moncl Hu. 46
Ddowuo 61, W..U.loloa&gt;clrl&amp;l44
l!di&amp;UN.15,L&amp;ItoC&amp;1h.23
OUoon&amp; 62, Col. Wllllluld 41
(Jiea,;Jio 62, Clov. c.ltinwooci4S
a...cl Vol 60, ,._.a!oiWVey 46
lliW.ud
&lt;lly 29
kd'fT1motSI,AutOa 32
Jackaoa· Milton 59, Columbiana 55

""·a-.

(01)

I..

14Q.~34

-..v..... s5,Fanklinllb.n
w........,..
Malor SS, l!uoliAI41

Noalaal&amp;3S,M&amp;plollu.29
()nap c.r.45, L&amp;lro Jtidp 34
lbom&amp;o
61. Wcacrvillc
5. 47
VkfmyC... ~.AbanChr.I4

Waren Hudina36, Ywn&amp;- Raycn 28
Wutaville N. Sl, Wcmhln- Kil·
bow'no44

.

. Whildull50, Reynoldlbwa 42

----

COicb at Port 81 •. Lucie of ~ ll.ookie

........ a..., Roady v ..... jjDdoco, to •

COLORADO ROCKIES: Siped. Jim

Cujro1rlki IDil Bruce Walton, pilchen;
Trn1 Hubbt.rd, Mike kinscry_, Andy

•

Basketball

..

NalkHtal Bublhall Allodation

MILWAUKEE BUCKS ' Woivocl 0,..
PoiLCr, forward. A~d.ntod Prank Brlek·
-

FootbaD

~

New!tney .......
IV........ .... ..

l'1ooido .............
N.Y . - . .. 9
T-Boy ....... 6

22
21
20
14

u......_if-eel

IIARI'RlRD WIWJ!RS:

lotilte ~..,.-,to SJ&gt;IUl&amp;·
field fi the Aa t •ru Hockey l.apc.

omn

~

Some homes tty to separate

you from the envuaunent
Our homes make you a

1a ·

. -

""'

·· Athletic Booster• oraanlzation, and Red men
Celllcb Job L•wbom, left, accepts the ftrm 's
d.onall'on from Brian Decker, store m1111ager at
Gallipolis. Dr. Clyde Evans, Rio Grande athletic
direttor, Is at right.

available at the McDonald's restau·
rants in Gallipolis an!l1Henderson.
Halftime activities planned by
McDonald's include a three-onthree playoff, with trophies award·
. ed to the -winners, and•a promotion
for two color television sets. ·
McDonatd' s is a member of lite
Rio Grande Athletic Boosters Club.
Its annual donation to the club
assiSt§
un' '{.er~i~y ~ s athletes

......:-5

't2GEOT....

1-·- 1

....,

'
'fl , ... s n•w l£
_ *1491'· -.- .......... ""!'mllol
'19PirautUld' .,.._
••• -

H.ow-4511

51PMC1.2-.IIr.

·-·4"'.

'91Chewy 5-10,.u.._... · 5 ........ ' "'" ohort bod

'19 flri Escort GT_ .,..._
2 - · Sopoed, Clll. - .lir,Ill!, O'UIIO

'II Iuick Skp.wk_____

sar-

2-.ouiO.,fk.cau. .-.MII.c:nioe

·-.-..........-.""'·a
'90 Fn , .... GL*11s-Fn Ftst~~~t

'62"-

.____.,._

z-........... gao • •

IION1II.y
UI'OII
'1 ,000.00 DOWNOA EClUN.. VAUE II
TIWlE-11 Mil tw.N«:E FIW«)EE
1IRJ tsaiG IISTI'MDIB.

IUTI 'AIM

A

INIUUNCI

•

Sme Farm

Life Insurance Company

__

District, MOC ·recognizes :.~.·- ~~~~beald'sfhas
been a longtilDe mcm r o
RiO soccer team:'players ~=?.':es~E~~~!!~universlly
~-

' 0 G
'
·
"The booster night not only
· RI
RANDE - Three mcm- _,.
Walsh g•ves
·
J - by both organ'~ft"ons.
~
some exposure to the fine
bers of the University of Rio wo-n the ·regular season at 18-2' people at McDonald's, but is our
Qnindc 110ecer team were named to .
rail 8-0 · .L. distric' and 6-0 ·
f · •LB-'the second team of the NAIA'' s :::~ M:oc.In UK&gt; &lt; I
way 0 SI!YIRg uoano. you for their
District 22 in postseason voting by
continued support," be said.
t~Je coaches.
· The district coaches selected
Winston O'Connor, a senior from
I!idwell, and Kristan Morgan· .
Jones, a freshman from Holyhead, .
,
If you ·have been lookihg for a way
Wales, as the team's backs, while
to make
a.aifference in·-this world,
Dwain Allahar, a freshman from ·
' . '
Oiego Martin, Trinidad, was cho-~ we need you too .
sen as a midfielder. ,
You can stay at home -~ do IIOilll!thlng that makes a world of
All three were selected on the
Strength' of their perfonnances In
dill~ to irouliled'Yc&gt;uth ~m .qanta,Melgs, and Jackson
Rio Grlnile's .8•Hl·2 season this
counties. We ll'lllooklng for dl!dlcated, caring people to enter
f~. the fifth for Coach Scott MorInto ciur rietwork of famdles who provide stable, loving
riSsey. The Redmen finished iifth
environments In which local youth can develop and grow.
ill the district at4-4 and third in the
Mid-Ohio conterenc:e at 4-2.
We u.11f,
·Train you to become skilled pmfeos!onal porents
, ~-~ Rio Oranc!e P.layers
• Pn:wlde 24-hour c:aoe management and crlsll lnteJwntiM
were s¢Jeclel\, to ~ district s hon.
~~and family therapy
orable' mentiOru.list - Mike Bush,
Pay
$22 per clay PER Olii..D of NON-TAXABI..E In&lt;orne,
a.junior;JrOm SL i\lb.an8, W.Va.,
!hot's
a post tax ~I ol $27·$30 por cloy, or $10,560
J .C. Circle, a junior from Cross
per.ytor
per chlkl
Lanes,"W.v-.; and Josh Mauer, a
You
wilh
.
.
freshrnan from Jackson.
•
Meet
pre-screening
and
Stale
licensing
requirements
In voti_ng by coache~ of the ·
~
.P'Iit!CJpOI'
In
foster.,.,,..
training
MOC, O'Conn'or was nall)ed. a
- Pl'illllde a supportive and structured home en&lt;.ironment
back on the Ali-CoRrerence Mt .
» · Commtt ID porenllng troubled youth at a prof...aonal
team, while Bush was selected as a·
back on the second team. Joining
lnWiwted1 Contact
Bush on the second team were
Robin Hania, M.Ed.
Allahar as one of the midfrelders
8
A~toHuman
l",-,~
and MIIUer as a forward.
,
Receiving honorable mention
~rce l;)evelopment
from 'the conference were Circle ·
P.O. Box 910
\ .,
and Morg&amp;n-Jones.
.
GaiJipolla, OH 45631
, .....
Mario Giganti of Walsh' was
(614)-446-82~9
·named the district and MOC player
of the
and his coach 'Fim

Cordiall~

~~

, . fl.$. CfNm6tr J. 1101 I

- - -·)Mttwl
~rff111il e;,Jorn NIF

..·:
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Invites You To Our

()pen Rouse

They .~~e.d You

I .. llaoci.Hun...,._,WV25705,

•

Cowboys' Bennie Kosar, the
Cleveland Browna' Vinny Tea·
tavcrde the Miami Dolphins' Dan
Marino', the Philadelpbia Eqles'
Jlandall Cunningham aad the Saa
FrMci100 49eta' Jollll Tayler
·
•
~-..

Home Offil-c: Bloomington, lllin4 Ji!'l
through special activities,
explained Dr. Clyde M. Evaris, Rio
Grande's athletic director.
Uke a good neighbor, Slate Farm is there.
"One of the keys to a successful
athletic program is the suppon it
receives from its booSiels" Evans
said. "The boosterS express more • ::;:::;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:::=====================~~~"""""....,.
than their generosity through their
donations - they provide the link
between the campus aad communily that is essential to our winning

the boosters

I

,.......41612
,,ell..

McDonald's N'i ght.set Monday

~

RIPLEY, WV. 26271
1-8110-458·111190

WOU
SIIOWDlN
M2s...IA"'

. 'I

'BOOSTER NIGHT SET - McDonald's
restaurants af Gallipolis and Henderson will
spoosor the men's basketball game between the
Universily of Rio Grande and West VIrginia
State Monday at 7:30 p.m. In Lyne Center.
McQonald's is a member of the Rio Grande

RIO GRANDE - The first of
seven-Booster Nights at the Uni' versity of Rio Grande has been
~ scheduled .for .Mondar. Dec. 6,
• when M~DQnald's .oJ Gallipolis,
~~ftthe!l~.l!lid tl~iferson, W.Va.,
sponsors the men's basketball
game-between the Rio Gmnde Redmen arid West Virginia State in
Lyne Center at 7:30p.m.
·
Free tic.kets for the game are

Mort eholces lltllU f'* b.lur Uving.
P.O. BOX 614 ..

Preferred. Will provide factory training.

Thursday, December 9, 1993 through
December 11, 1993.
Featuring
THE ALL NEW

1994 FORD MUSTANG
ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOM

...........

cc.e
1 ..... ·'

·==

Mead,

.

.

LOT AnENDANT!pETAIL- Schedule cle~n up operations of new

CELLULARONE®

-

~
~
~

In e.

SERVICE TECH'S - Flat rate positions. Ford Experience

1·

••'
•

App~
· ia "'1turt:a,
.

.

GET

~

Call today for more Information

PARTS COUNTER SAtES - Responsible for Retail and Wholesale
Accounts ordets, Ford Experience
Preferred.
·
.
.

U.S; SPI!I!DSifA= NameciJ.._
0... ........... ClOd Nidt n .... ,__loaalndtoooc:beofor
the I \194 U.S. Olympic:"Tam.

•
~
I

U.S. Chamber
Of Commerce

-

••

~

part of it

For The Following Positions:

DALLAS ~TARS: Recilled Troy
J&lt;W'lt. .der1 fftm l"1lemnm of

~.::::

J·

Due To Rapid -Growth ·ot Business,
We Will Be Accepting.Applications

DBnOITUONS' S $
' Lyn&lt;ll,
- the
· &amp;nd
N&amp;ny IC(UI • Waived
.Uf)n
pnctice
Toby C.10n. li
kw.

.

~

1-800 Ill OLAW

NolloaaiF-ttAaoue

.... ~lioa&amp;llloc:by

~
~

Columbue, Ohio

NlllouiH..a,.:-...

GFGA
100 6a
122107
II 63
73 12
6! 7S
90 96
56 71

.

. SufteiOO

, ......... lnm .... ill)cuod lliL

Hod:ey

Pb.
31
3S
33

,,}
•
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• '•

8 E11t llroM .......

NHW JJ!RSEY NJml, Acdv•IOd Rick
Mahom, !orw1td, aad David Wetley,
auard, from the injured till. Placed
DwiJ'DI Sdri•tpjue o.da Dlllbo in)nd
lilt. Waivod Rem • i'Jn«J' ,......,,
PmLAOBLPmA 76BRS : Placed
Micblcl Curry, («Ward, OD the iajllfed
llJt. Alillintecf Sem 0..., Juud, from
dlo kljalod !ill.

Olmble.

~

THINK BIG.

• Can•!Nt,.,9S

,'

~

This rewardill# and demandillll JIOiition includes: .
• Complet&amp; training In the field;
• ~c:ellent be~ts package. including life insurance, health
tnsuranc:e, .etirement plan and vacation bonus;
~ Hi... urhiftiiJ potential, based on commission and bonuses.
For alocalinl&lt;rview, send your resume/letter to: Mr.
w.,.. O..eaa, Dlatrlot Manaler, V.S. Clwnber of

........

''Confused about
life insurance?
R~ly on me to help you
make the right
choices.''

••=

1·3 and 6-

lhC

'19 Pill. Gntttll AlllL..,.._

.,...

,,

At the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, you'll develop your own contact&lt;
tal~ to ~ion makers, and rNCh a whole new level of Sllccess in sal~s.
.. ~~ ~etookinQ for a few outstanding sales people in GALLIPOLIS AND
9011TIIIWI'n:IN OHIO to coli on loa! businesses, make pr...nllltions
and uplain our sel\lk:u.

•

RYAN PERDUE

Pass .t Kick compeciliou are

Buffalo Bills' Jim x.euy. tbe Dallas

4door,4ql. -

~~~

AND WIN!

FLORIDA MAJUJNS: Aaipecl the
cantnct of Iohn IdlniiGII.c. piu:hor, ootri&amp;ht 1o Edmont&lt;WI of the P1cific C01at

JOEY DARNBROUGH

MAJliEW BUSH

&lt;I

WORK HARD. MOVE FAST.

..-

year-old age group with a combined distance of 263 feet 7 inches
(70-foot. 6 ~1. 60-foot ldck and
133-foot, l-inch pass).
Ryan Perdue, son of Rick Perdue of Gallipolis and Unda Perdue
of Athens, placed third in the 14lion.
year-old division with a total of
Mathew Bush, aon of Marlo and 283 feet 4 inches (45-foot. S-inch
Sharyl Bush of Gallipolis, captUred punt, 112-foot, 3-inch Ieick and
fint place in the state's 10-year-old 125-foot, 8-inch pass).
competition, )lettering th_e sta~'s
F?f their accomplishments each
five other regiooal ~prons With received a fuU Cincinnati Bengals
a total disiiiiiCC of 212 feet S inches uniform and plaques for their top(60-foot, 9-inch punt, 69-foot, 3· three fmishes.
inch kick, and 82-foot, S-inch
The National Football Leagues
pass). His distances will now be Punt, Pass, and Kick competition's
compared to the other 28 NFL corporate sponsors are Gatorade
champions, with the top four win- Sears and Skybox sports cards. n..;
ners to compete. ~n t~e 1993-94 local sponsors are the Gallipolis
Pro-Bowl compet111on m Honolulu, Parks &amp;: Recreation Department
Hawaii. All expenses will be paid.
and the 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park Dis·
Joey Dambrough. son of Willie tricL
and Sandy Dambroogh of GallipoSome current National FOOiball
lis, won second place in the 13- League sws that won their Punt.

;

L

Notes: A L)-ne Center membership is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and ildministrators are admiued with their ID
cards.
Racquetball coun reservations
can now be made one day in
advance by·calling Rich Fabri at
245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1800-282-7201, extension 7495.
The free-weight room, which
wiD be closed during h.ome basketball games, is open upstairs in
Lyne Center Room 203 during the
following hours: Sun.-ThUrs. from ·
6-11 p.m.; Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.
and Saturday from 4 to 8 p.m.

Moll, Mike Be.ma and Kevin Belcher.
nor-~_p caniDClL

.

Five plays later, with 13 seconds'
left, first-team All-Ohioan Charlie
Bostelman puUed in a pass fron{
Rex Miller on a crossing pattern
and scored untouched. Keith Kern
added the point-afttz kick to force
the overtime.
In the overtime, the Crusaders
went fii'St and took over for their
possession at the 20. Three~ put
the ball Oii the three, but then Kern
tackled Donnie Thorn for a fouryard loss and sec had to settle for
a field-goal attempt. Kuczykowski's Ieick was never in doubt to put
the Crusaders ahead

Sunday

CINCINNATI - Galhpohs
routbs re~rnted ~be area at
Ri~f.tool. . um_during the L.A.
Raiders-Cmcmnau ~n~ football game, eompeuns tn tbe
Nlllional Footbal~ Lea~
Punt, Pass &amp; Kick state compeU-

~

Home athletic events
Monday- Men's basketball
vs . W.Va. State, 7:30 p.m .
(McDonald's Booster Night)
Tuesd11y ...;.. Men's. basketball
vs. Mercyhurt, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday - Men's basketball
vs. Walsh, 7:30 p.m. (O'Dell Lumber Booster Night)

oudieldcrt; Ty Van. Bumleo, inficlderoudialdcr and Joqe Brito, e~tdlet, to mi·

b

T,.m

Sunday, Dec. 11 11 p.m.

Racquetball courts
Today- 1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
Monday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Thursday-S a.m.-11 p.m.
- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.

Midwre.at Lo;;r..::r:cb
Jlil&lt;hina ......, • Hun......., or .... AJ&gt;"
polodrlan._ &amp;nd R&amp;y Kom pltclUft&amp;

call."

wv

Tt,ree Galli_
a_
y ouths state PP~~ champs

~:

' .
·
First Steubenville ('athnlic Cen-..·
tral almost gave the gime away;;
Then lbc Crusaders took it b!lck. ~
Baben"l :~ E~ oft
.he.•L~~!=;:·
...... ...., ",..
fake punt in the ·final minute. "ll
was a bonehead call. I saw 1(,~
chance to put the game away, but f
didn't use my head in maldngl!w';·_

run.

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the rest of the week of
Dec. 5-12 at the.University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
GymDISium
Today-1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
Monday- 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday -1·8 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 12 - 1-3 and 6llp.m.

OH-Polnt

_and used vehicles.'General care of lot
..

ASST. ~ERVICI MAN~GEI· -.Responsible for all phases of

MEMBER VALUE PLAN

Providing Security &amp; Safety Fo~ Y~ur Loved Ones...
·-:. /
Auto or Hea"h Emergencies- Seniors &amp; Spouses.Travellng AloneStudents... makes •n Ideal Christmas Giftl .
AAA Members Savel
•Transportable,Phone only $79.00 (SAVE $acll)
•Mobile. Phone (lnstarled)
only $129.00 (SAVE $80)
· '
J
•First ~th's Accesa Fee ~I (save from $29.99 to $288.001)
•FR~E CALLS for Emergency Road Service Oust dial •AAA)
'
•TOLL-FREE
long,OlstaRce
Within
614 Area .Code
'
' . .
.
.,
eQSY·
Guarantee
.
'

to sign upl ·

,
.

•

•

s·erv~ce.

.

CustQmer Relations.
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UI'IICARO.IWIU If ACCiniJ JIC. ·Jff Jllfl lfC~ JP; .
, AU I'OIIJJOa ro II IIUIJir JIC. IP• .
, . ,. . IAfl.ft&amp;
IH4 OlllfOif.

Financing available at 5.9"/a to qualified customers on any new vehicle In stock.
Comerln and register for Door Prizes to be given away. Drawing to
be held at noon December 11 , 1993.

'

'

Brlnlln your best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will try to meet or Beat the DeaL
FOR 4 COOD DEAL••
' '

S£E TOM MILS'I'E4D • 808 ROSS
Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.-Fri. M; Set. B-12

. 244 SOUTH
CHURCH STREET
'
.

1~

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.

Muffler Shop Mon.•Frl. 8-6; Sat. •12
New
In Sllea Mon.-Fri. •7; S,.t. W p.m •

•&lt;

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Outdoors

December 5, 1993

~·

Sunday Times-Senti.nel /CS
'

Wild animals not good ·Yule presen~s, DOW says .
to do and become burdensome to
people who generally lack the
knowlcdse and ability to adeQuate·
ly care fir the animal," said bave
Watts, a state wildlife biologist.
Local, state and federal la~s
limit the sale and possession of
wild animals. More imponantly,
some animals such as skunks, rab-bits and raccoons may become
severely injured in a home or hun

HALLEY'S COMET - or more accurately, the rouud from
Gallipolis resident Terry Halley' s ll·IBURe shotguu - brousht
c1ow11 this 11-polut buck oo Dec. 1 iu Guyan TOWDship. (Times-Sen·
tlnel pboto)

_to mSlire two cars? ·_

Sports briefs
Colle~te tootball

the~ strai.llht

NOBODY BEATS OUR SELECTION

REAL PRICES!' REAL DEALS!

.s Month/6,000 Mile Um~ed Warranty On Most Un~s
-*All Our Prices Have Been Slashed!! .

90GEOSTORM
Air, 5 sp., sharp.

88 RED BEREnA
Auto., air, nice car.

87GRAHDAM

88CORSICA
70K miles. Special, Cash.

Price $35$0.00.

ThiS car is

auto: and air. i
89BE~EnA

Auto., air, laded, 52K
miles.

86 OLDS CALAIS
V-6. aulo .• air, 2 Dr.
$2995.00

87 TAURUS 4 DOOR
Auto., air, runs great!

·(2) 88 GRANQ,AMS
Both ·red and sharp. .

· 89 NISSAN _SEM:tRA

·Ociot! ·a~to:'; .. 'air, .'69K
0

~:=!!.~dC:~ue

~775

!=~~=.. ..

5

'

'

..:: But don't go tOO far, siilce many ·anal
_.ysts expect
this new-eConomic vigor to wane in early 1994. .
/ On the emplo)'!IICilt front, this past week's num·

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JOod cen:ter planned for region

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FREE VCR

WASHINGTON (AP)- Auid
milk processors have voted to
implement a national program for
promotion and consumer education.
Lon Hatamiya, administra10r of

USDA's Agricultural Marketing
Service, said 71.7 percent qf the
fluid milk processors voting in a
referendum favored implementing
the program.
These processors represented
76.7 percent of the volume of fluid
milk products marketed by all pro- .
cessors during May . That is the
representalive period set for the
referendum.
Fluid milk products include
such items as whole milk, skim
milk and buttermilk.
The Auid Milk Promotion Program is authorized by the 1990
Farm Bill and is based on a proposal presented last year by a large
portion of U.S . portion of U.S.
fluid milk processors.
The program will be funded by
a mandatory assessment on all fluid
111ilk products processed and marketed commercially in consumer
packages in the 48 contiguous
states.
The assessment will be 20 cents
per hundredweight, and will apply
only for the months of February
through July 1994 during the fllSt
30 months of the program.
Processors who distribute
500,000 pounds or less of fluid
milk products per month will be
exempt.

U.S. mills used 10.25 million
bales of.cotton in the 1992-93 crop
year, up 600,000 from the previous
season and the largest mill con·
.1UiD~IiiK:!D'I950: ~
•. "'
Cotton mill use is projected to
rise to 10.3 million bales this season.
"Continued consumer preference for naCW'lll fibers, demand for
textile expons and competitive cot·
ton prices are lilcely to push consumption higher," the repon said.
U.S. cotton ex.pons this season
are forecast at 5.9 million bales, up
700,000 from 1992-93.
"Foreign competition and a
slight increase in foreign coosumption is expected to keep U.S.
expons under 6 million bales in
1993-94," it said. " At current levels of trade, the U.S. share of world
expons is projected at 22 percent,
below the five-year average of 23

percent
Ending s10eks for 1993·94 are
projected at 4.9 million bales, 5
percent above beBinJ,Ung stocks.
. ' : ·~ ib!J riJe, IIIIi llocb-10use ratio is estimated to remain
near the 30 percent target estab·
lished for upland couon in the
Food, Agriculture, Conservation
and Trade Act of 1990,·' the repon
said.
Foreign cotton area is estimated
at 64.9 million acres, down 6.8 per·
cent, while yield is projected at 491
pounds per acre , up 7.2 percent
from a year earlier.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cattle
and calves on feed for the slaughter
market last month in the seven
states preparing monthly estimates
totaled 9.08 million head; up 6 percent from 1992.

Established in July, 1991,
Workendcrs is an international
home cleaning services fmnchise
based upon the unique cleaning
methods developed by Jeff Camp·
bell, renowned home cleaning
expen and DeU Publishing author.
Smith has operated the Work·
enders franchise in the GallipolisPoint Pleasant area f&lt;r the past 18
months.

.,. . By USA COLUNS
program. Gallia county liad over 70
::·· GALLIPOI:.IS • Eligible yoters applicalions flied f&lt;r Ibis program.
Harrisop, Guyan, .Ohio, 9~n- • 1t:U approved producers are
~i~ld, an.d Walnut·10wosh1ps are reminilcd that they 111ust complele
:!\!min~ that ·Monday, Dec:ember . tl)ei[ praciJ.c¢5 within 601~YS of Bob Evans Farms net
-6, is the final date to return balloiS approvlil by the county comm1~.
,
:Cor ·the community commiaee elec~
Burley tobacco producers ate sales show Increase
'lioncurreutlyunck:rway.
reminded thattheirmarketinacaids
COLUMBUS • Bob . Evans
·.. The final date to apply for the should be returned 'to the ASCS Farms' net sales for the second
l 993 LivestoC:Jt.&lt;Feecl 'Program is off!C¢ once their marketings are
quaner ending OcL 29, 1993, were
:.rt.ursday, December 30, 1993. Eli· completed.
$177.0 million, an 8 percent
j ible livestock producers must
For information on any of the increase over $163.7 million a year
:llllve suffered at least a 40% loss in above programs coni&amp;Ct the ASCS ago. Net income for the second
-feed due to drought. Additional office at446-8686.
quarter ~as $12.4 million, a 13 per;"iletails are a):!lil~le· in the ASCS.
,Llia Cob II Gall~~~ County,'• • .. cent ·jnc:rease over $11.0 milli~n a
:jlffiCC. t
·· ~ .
'
A1rlcultural Stablllzatlo• and ' vear ago.,
·' Sisnup ·en.dcd on December 3, •, 'Coascrvation Ser.vlce executive ' Earnings per share were $.30 for
~{or the C:~scncy ]ivesi.IJ!:k watq l&lt;clli'eetcir. · .
' , ' ·.
the quarter compared with $.26 a
""'
.·
..
· · •
,
·
year ago, with all of the increase
coming from the resLaurant seg~

n\enl

TOP HONORS • Champion Hill Farms,
Gallipolis and Whitestone Farm, Aldie, Va.,
together displayed botb the get-of-sire and
junior get-or.slre entries at tbe 1993 ~~rt,b
Americau Iuternatloual .Livestock El&lt;Jiosatiou s
Angus Sbow In Louisville, Ky., recently. Tbe

sbow was the 1994 National Roll or Victory
(ROV) ADBUS Sbow wbere 233 head competed
ror awards and ROV poiDts. Tbe cattle are sired ,
by Century Touchstooe 131 (Photo by American
Augus Association)

s 0·I1sam p1e.s be1·ng taken by Gall1"a farmers
.

:::-:
GALLiPoLIS-KamyS
Hood- daughtcr-in·l.•w
Atllens,Tod4Hood(SandraHood·
~;;Ormerly
special clcitlt in Co~um:
and srandson
·
: bus Southern l'oWa'.Co.'s Galli.,O:. B~) of Middlepon.
"Iii area office, has been: ~Oie4 ·
;,to offlCC st~perviaor for the com- ·
,
ByEDWARD VOLLBORN
tl1ined ·operations of Co~umbus • ·
GALLIPOLIS • ~ remmder of
::Southern Power Co .. ·@nd Ohio
the offer to help wllh farm sotl
1
·PoWerCo. inQI!l!~U., ,
·'sampling
.
.1 ,u ..-.l." li.l'"'"-''C lunibus,Shlitb· ',., '.
, OUriJi8 the next couple of weeks
,- """"~""
,
.
.
h . f
' qn :!"oW in 19n Ill tellel: Clelk. . '·
, we will ~tmue e1pmg armers
. ~he •Also served as ) l meter ' '
pulllll!l .~repare sml samples _for
. realter/collector,' .
lab analys~~. _Todd Boothe, JIIII1U~e
clerk, intamedlale
prosram ,ISSlStanl at the Cll~DSIOn
offl!)e1 ~be. available during the
next couple of _wee~s to.come to
your &amp;rni to 8SS!Jl WI!h thiS task.{'&lt;
schedule was pnnted m last week s
ar\icle, but we still have some
aVIillllle times PleaSe coni&amp;CI us at
446r 7007 if · ould .like some
..
· ·
you w . ·
h
• helb. Tllci only cos~ will be I e
·· $6.~ ~fee for each sample.

•

0

. .

. , . ... ·:

•

0

0

through, coun.tlies that the USDA
considers to be affected with AHS .
A 60-day quarantine at the USDA
animal import facility at Newburgh
costs imponers about $4 ,700 per
horse.
"By allowing horses from Portugal to enter the United States
through a variety of ports and
requiring shoner, less cx.pensive
quarantine periods, we antici~te
the proposal may have a positive
economic impact by making imporllltion of horses from Ponugal more
practical," Johnson said.
But the department said the
overall economic impact of PortugueS!' horses imponed permanently would be minimal to the
U.S. horse industry with the proposed change.
During 1991 and 1992, it said,
the overall number of horses
impone4 into the country com-,
prisod 0.2 percent to 0.3 percent of
the total number of U.S. horses. In
the same two-year period, only one
horse was imponed specifically
from Ponugal.

Fla.

1

.~=u~~-.~~-~.!:•:.. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . :. ,. . . . . . . . e2soo.

CS

Bad weather wUI cut average cotton yield

:.H_
o·Qd r.a.c·e•"ves 'p. rom
·. o·tl"on·

. :. . . . . . . :. . . . . . . .

B~ m ~t po1111Cd to the Federal Reserve Board
and t!t~· Alan.G::':rth. , bee
ued
"arua m~ 5I!RI..-hlwa t,~U n ~id
for almost dJn!e
11 ~..... on,
U!JIIII
Cha!les H. B
Jr., d4'cctor offmancial nwteu
~Y'!J at Brown B~ Harriman &amp;: Co ..• s_ays
while ~taesll8tes fiB!" m~ the 0~ equataon,
he aedits 31!!0 IXoduciiOII wuh boosting the reports,
panicularly mdie rnanu6lcturing IICC!Or.
Blood is cautious about 1994, sayinB he believes
the founh quarter ~~.won't be repeated early
next yeat, and SO he S SUCidn
. g by a b o for OVerall growth of3.1 ~L
.

USDA easing barriers to a low
Portuguese horses into U.S.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department is proposing to declare Portugal free of
African horse sickness, a fatal viral
disease not found in the United
States.
Department
veterinarians
reviewed the documentation suppaning Ponugal' s application and
conducted an on-sile evaluatioo of
Ponugal 's ve1erinary services, Jab.
omtory and diagnostic procedures
.,
and vaccination practices.
The European Community rec,.
ognized
Ponugal as being free of
•
AHS in 1992.
ceuter, to be located ia ~oglin's Ohio Industrial
"The change in disease status
.
ARTIST CONCEPT • Tbls.is aa artist's
Park.
,
would allow for safer, easier and
:·;: concept or the new $1.6 million regional rood
less expensive temporary imponations of Ponuguese horses for U.S :
· shows, competitions and sporting
events," said Billy G. Johnson,
deputy administrator of veterinary
services in the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
He said all horses from Ponu:: A1'HE.NS • Tri-County COI!IIllu- Stait and Day Care ~lei'S, and to ~y.
.
glil, whether temporarily or perma:;Dty Action will build/a $1.6 inil· the elderly aQiJ homebQ!!nd lhrpUgh
The 14,000 square-foot Foot!· nently imported, currently are
•:lion Regional Food C~lei to scrye the Meals-on-Wheels Program. bank meets the storage needs of allowed to enter the United States
.,nne counties in soutlieastem Ohio: · TbO!!S'! the program serv¢ over ·both t~e· Foodbank and Kitchen only at the USDA's Animal Import
:).;thens Hocking P,erry, Jackson 201,ooQ .mells to some.2,000 peo- operat1ons. Ample freezer and Center in Newburgh, N.Y., where
. .;Vintoh: Gallia; Melfls, 'Wastriilgton pie last year, manoc moie .c.ould refrigeration s~ace is planned. A they are quarantined for AHS for at
abd Morgan. .The f~Uity will be JiavC' ~n helped had ll!ldiUonal . salvage area w1th a modem con- least60 days.
··lpcaled.-in the inllustrial Park in i~~d stol'll8e space~ veyor ·system will allow the FoodThese 1mport and quarantine
O
Logan.
·. ' . '·
.. ; }
·available. :
· ·c
bank to tecover thousands of requirements also apply to horses
· •· The project, Sllli¢..W: begin in · The ~gional Food .Center will pounds of food 8nd personal ilems that have s_topped in, or traveled
· micl-1~. ~:~'"blne two facili- meet ~ nCecls or botll ~ ~ would be thrown 11way other, :ties the S~tl!ea$~ -Ohiq Food· . · an(! alloW fQr growth: '~ curi'e!lt wtse.
· .'
.-~and tlieCeaiDJ'!Gwllcn. Foodl1 ~ l ~()()().:meil per day·c8pBI:it)' r:l. tlie
tn _addition to program _benefits,
and Nuttition Direc!Ol'. Palri Hod· Kitchen j:811 expand to 5.000 meals staffmg n·eeds arc expected to
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
.;JI!lll, said, "Demand f&lt;r our services pet day-if needed. The 5,000 square . increase from the . current 16
national
average cotton yield for
·exceeds the capacity of 01!1 current foot kitchen, e\uipped ,with ~te- employees to 55 employee~ over
this
crop
year is forecast aJ 594
:facilities. We have no choice but to ·of·tbe-art ovens, ftee~ tefu~- ·the first three years, according to
pou11ds
per
harveste4 acre, the }OW·
·;·seck ·~w14~iliUu~fqs;~.ih,,~"" · ,torsJ',cq:.;; wur bri!!g lllffici~ncy.l•~:Roger Patton; Executjv~Director
ea.li!lee:l~dl!!lll;;.
''•.• ~
·~ii:ams. BccaUICQf'ilie"~Piifl' " They· wm mate: wpossilJJcmto Ot'Tri-County Conirn'unity Action.
on
unfavorable
weather.
Ir:al requirements, such as stoi-agc reduce the cost-of a meal subslan·
The Regional Food Center will
Based on Nov. 1 conditions,
'"'illld loading docks, it is logical to
· ·
.
. '
be built through a private/public production
is expected to total16.3
~-lc;x:ate the two operations for .
e· SS b•ie6S
partnership. Funds will come from
million bales, slightly above the
:.efliaency
r '' 10
the people, corpora!ions, and other 16.2 million tons in 1992, said a
:. ·· The Soulhe&amp;!itern. Ohio Food·
BRUSSELS B 1 .
(AP) _
private organizations in the nine- situation and outlook summary pre' bank currently scmces 83,foocl
e gtum
county~. as well as l'rpm federby the Agriculture Depan·
·:distribution outlets _in the nine· , The =u!.tatyte~:~~o!~~ al, state and local government pared
ment's
Economic Research Ser:l:ounty area. These mclude food pean
.
grants.
vice.
't?lmtries, soup kitchens and lunch world l;l'&amp;de accord b~ re~olvmg ·
''Although planted area
•sites. Last year, over 2,300,000 some c!ifferences over. ~gnculture
by 3 percent, harvested
increased
.jiOuncls of food were disttili91edto llfl!ltarn:rcu~,but~ slalled
acreage rose 18 percent (2.1 mil:mo~ than 80,000 needy people: ·dlljl·iitherkeyillsues. !L . .
. :• . .,.
•
lion acres) above last season," the
jiad adequate _freezer and storage
•' :
. ·~·
summary said. "Offseuing the
·~been available, some 700,000 .·
M' h &lt;~
'
Kl'n · ·
jump in harvested area is a dramat~dditional pounds of food could :'. TRo-r. . 1c ·
.: ...-.. an
1
'have been delivered 10 26,000 more CIJrll. Slld 1 ~greed. 111 • . !IS PayBIDWELL - Rick and Reda ic decline in yields. The national
·!p_eopJe, many of those children. ·
. Less .Pru~~~r~ di~ !O.TC~ Smith, WorkEnders home cleaning average yield is forecast at 594
-'"' The Central Kitchen, serving Coi'p. of
~ roc,,J~ b~o~ m franchise owners from Bidwell, pounds per harvested acre, the low.Hoclring, Athens and Perry Coun- cash _and securmes, ~onf1rmma returned recently from the first est since 1986."
.Jies, serves 1,000 hot meals pet day long1_1me rumors that the sale was -&gt; annual Weekenders International
1'1 Senior "Diri,i ns Centers, Head pending.
Convention at Deerfield Beach ,

:lit

!::~:.=~-~";"
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!:::!::=~-~~-~-~ -~:
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55288
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.. -~

-92.- GtO*JRO·:. i:"-.

&gt;21K miles;

'

December 5, 1113

UJISWi!li ~~i David L. Littmann at Comcrica

u.s.

J\II' Q:nd,~y is deadline
Jor~·
:J
tscs ballots
.. .
&gt; ' '.

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

Auto., air, Xtra sharp.

••• •

rcir

v
....

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

..,

m• e~. . . ...·:- .····.. . .-

All Slate·

~lo 1--Compay

DaniiMiey ·.
Tho McGtnilo. .SIInloy .
Agent
417S.C.Aw•• ~UpoUo.O ,.
4441-1781 • 1 •

ByROB·WELLS
AP Bq!!l-• Writer
;;t NEW YORK - If the most recent economic
::reports bear any resemblanco to "reaHty, many of us
-~lrt eami!ig more fllllli1ll jobs more easily and' gcner·Jally have a beaa:'OillloOf on the economy.
'':! Wbat's mivlllg this~ view? ,
·
~;'/;: Thank the automobile industry
Cranking up
' l)roduction Midwesteillen for ~buildinB after the
:~J)IIIImcr's flOod- and while you're at it don't foro·llet-Aian Greenspan

•

~offered JOOd ntw1.. 'lbe Labot Departmeni said
Industry was upbeat as well, with the National
208,000 jobs were created in Navembet' while the • Association of Purchasing t.1anagement saying its
nation'i jobless'18te fell to 6.4 percent, down sharply
monthly index showe4 an increase in No~ber, an .
from 6.8 - ~ in Oc:IOber, the biggesi one-month
indicatton that manufacturins was expandins. The
improvement in a decade.
'
Commerce Department said factory orders rose 1.2
Earlier, lbe Milwautee..bascd ~mporary employ·
perocnt in Oc:~.
.
.
ment ~. Manpower Inc., releued a survey of
The surse m I!Utomobil~ P:D4uctaon al the end «?f
15.000
"'•tinesae• that showed 18 percent plan the year is !I matn ~mrung .or these econom!c
to hiJe wodtcll, 1;, percent plan to aim payrolls and
numbers, Slid Roben Giordano, director of cconom1c
66 percent will remain the same.
·
research at Goldman Sachs &amp;: Co. Automobile proConsunicr IICIItiment imJXOved sharply last month,
duction this quarter will add 2 percentage poinCS to
?surve _by the Conference Board show~. while
the~ domestic product. a measure of goods and
IIICOIDes rose a strong 0.6 percent m OctoserviCes lR ~ eco_nomy.
.
.
.
Asked to adcntifv a common denommator for the

·

·.

.On Luxury Cars, SpOrts Cars and Trucks

.

,

HAINES CITY, Fla. (AP) - St.
Louis club pro Bill HaU birdied
two ·of his last three holes to overtake Graham Marsh ,of Australia
and earn top honors at the .Senior
PGA Tour National Qualifying
ToumamcnL
Hall shot a 69 after starting the
final round one shot back of Marsh,
George Shortridge and Dick Goetz.

save you money.

.:::i•
o•• ·

Section D

don't expect good econo,mi~ figures _
to last

0

=.-=~~~~ ~1 ........................................................... '7974
!w~..:1.=11!!tt.aulo.~~: . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57855
57824
==~-~~-~ ~-~:

,

Sports
briefs
·Golf

~~n-alysts

,.e."

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Ted ToUner returned to San Diego State and
signed a five-year contract as foot·
ball COIIch.
Tollner will remain quarle!back
coach of the Los Anaeles Rams
through the end of the NFL season,
fo'hilc at the same time putting
toacther a coaching staff and
bcpnning to recruit at San Diego
State.
He replaces AI Luginbill, who
was fired
lhrec days after
a loss
eliminated the
Aztecs
contention for

..

: u:

Are_y~u paying to~ mu~b

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
· The Dally Sentinel, tbe Point
Pleasant Register and the Sunday
Tlmes-SemiMI vBlue the contributions their readers make to the
sports sections of these pa~. and
they will continue to be published.
However, certaili deadlines for
• submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and
· related articles for football and
other fall s.,Ons is the Saturday
before the Super Bowl.
The de11dline for photos and
related articles for basketball (summer basketball and related camps
fall under the spring and summer
spons deadline) and other winter
~ is the last day of the NBA
fmals. The deadline for submissions of !ileal baseball- and soft·
ball-relaled photils and related articles, from 1-ballto the majors, as
well as other sprinf and summer
sports, is the day o the lilst game
of the World Senes.
·
.
• These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
CROSSBOW BUCK - Mate Deule, 35, of Gallipolis, claimed need to get their photos back from
dais 10.~ 100-)M11111d bu~ ciu·Nov, 13 1t1 Green TeiWDSbip on
the ph~togrilphy ~tqdio/developer
prlvde pl'tiMl'tY with a Tlnmclerbolt crossbow with a 150-pound of choiCC llid !0-IPVC ~ ~s.the
clnlw;.,. ~ - ,;.rdl! away., Til~ b•~·, opera !lave a.,,!?,.7;s,.~h .., cbap~WbUBh thelo.!leml m the
spread with four llve-IDeli tiDes".
. appropriate season for those sports.

'I·

t

""

the

u

·.:.

i

.
met. Wild game animals
can not be;
:.~.:mma1s and wild animal bo!laht. iiO)d or pos1e11ed ill Ohiohybrids are unpredictable regard· without cenain penni~ ISsUed b~
less .of how much inbreeding toOk the Divisjon of Wildlife or U. ~
plac9 to produce a tame animal or Fish and Wildlife Service. The.~
one with .domestic traits. Wild ani- coon is die most common 111~
mals typically resist attempts to be . for which a pennit is rcq~ ~,
restrained or trained domesticaUy 0 "It's just a ~ery bl!!l ~ «'
likc"cats and dogs.
.
house any wild. 11n1mal m a(l:
Cqed animals such as reptiles. atlempt to makd' II a pet, even tt
spiders and certain birds often do regulations are followed. Our ag~
not provide the kind of. entertain- cy sttongly advises against giv~
mcnt and supPon a child is expect· wild animals as ChristmaS gifts,'..:
ing for Christmas or other holiday Watts w"d.
~West Virginia muzzleloading deer
occasion. Some of Ohio's county
a pet is cenain to fmd its~
and city health depanments, for under the Ouisllllas tree as a gill;·
season to begin December 13example, have banned the posses- the Division of Wildlife
of ferrets because of health selcciing r
'" !
Jcet pet"
.as. :c
all ·other counties that have a re~, sion
CHARLESTON, W.Va. risks.
parakeet,
· , hamster or ~
West Virginia's six-day muzzle- lar season for hunting deer wi a · Many jurisdictions and political pig. Heal departments Qften u'sa
leading deer season will run from firearm,
subdivisions prohibit the posses- the term "pocket pet" to.deieribc.(
Dec. 13 to l;)ec. 18 in cciunties open
Only single-shot muzzlcloading sion or imy _wild animill even when non-nuis111ce animal requiril,'(l
to buck-only firearms season, ruflcs and muzzleloading pistols state ot federal requirements are minimal daily care.
·~
according to Bob Miles, chief of with iron sighiS using .38 caliber or
. 0,.
tl!.e West Virginia Depanment of larger may be used. A bow nlay be
• -:
Natural Resources' Wildlife substituted for a muzzleloadcr dur·
ing the muzzleloading deer season,
Resources Section.
Dw or either sex. may be taken but archer huntin,. subject to all
in counties or portions of counties archery regulations, extends
open for antlerless deer (Class N) through the muzzleloading .~. ·
season. Hunters are·reminded thqt
Hunters should .COIIBUit die 1993
only antlered deer lnay be taken in hunting and trapping replations
If you insure more than one car,
brochure for additional inform~­
our Multi-car Discount could
tion.
Sports deadlines

By JOHN WISSE
Division fA Wlldllre
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) -,Keep toys, game5 and clothing on
Christmas shopping !isiS, but don't
include wild animals, the Division
of Wildlife said.
"Wild animals do not make
aood holisebold pets and should
not be given as holiday gifts, especially 10 young children. The animals don't do what kids want them

'I

.~·'

:~Fa...WIIusiness
...

· ,

• "

0

Farm
Flashes ·
Keeping Farm 'Business records

drawing hlld ilcently• .

. ~ArJ]:IY HOO~ .

•

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0

on a computer wiD be the focus of

a three day (December 9, 16, and

30) workshop in Chillicothe. The
"Hands OnE
.
,. .th com ·
xpenen~ w1·u
puter record kee8mg WI use
Quicken Version 6. for DOS soft·
ware wiih IBM compatible com puters Prior ·computer experience
Ill hcl.;,.ul, but not
uired. Class
pertlclPants should ~amiliar with
• keyboard. Tile worlc:shop will be
taught be Mr. Bryson Carter,
E tensi0 n farm Management Spe·
~ .
E k
Ctihst and ~· Dave tz orn,
O.S.U. Elllenslon Computer Man·
agement Spccialist. To enroll
please call Jhe Ross County Eltension Office at (6140 775-3200.
These classes are usually limiled to
10 plwticipants. If thtte is enough
interest we would be glad to host

such a class in the Gallia/Meigs
County area. Call with your suggestions.
A Farm~ncome Tax school is
be'
Ia eel~ F 'da Dec
mlg0pl99nn3 froor9 n y,
em·
ber ,
m a.m. to noon m
Meigs County at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, comer of Second
and Sycamore Streets in Pomeroy,
Ohio. Several topiCS are to be COV·
ered. One program segment will
foc:us on how the 1993 tax law
chanJes affect your farm business.
F ~ detail5 call Hal Kneen
&lt;r
c
at
: .
The OffiCial Tob~cco Market
News reported th.e f1rst week of
sales as "no! quite as sii'DIIg* as the
opening week las I season. They
estimated that ~tl6 percent of
the 1993 crop was sold in the firs!

three days. At the end of sales on
Wednesday, December 1_. the average pn~e for the first s1x days of
market!ng was $182 .58 per hundred w1th 34.05 percent of Gross
sales goins to the "pool" Wemes
·
•
d D
be
ay, ecem r 1 sa 1es ~veraaed
$182 .70 ~er hundr~d Wl~h 31 .0S
percent 10mg to the 'pool.
~ark your calendars for t~e
evcmng of December 22. Vf.e WI~
be feat~nng the "!Onthly Agn.
Trends Economtc.s Facts and
Forecasts on a satellite brQadcuto ,
Blid Carter, Farm Management
Specialist, will be on hand Ill ICaci
'nl' ed d'
. foll WI
an 1 0~
ISCUSSion
o .nc
t!'e satel\lle broadcast. Watch foi:
tune details next week. .
Edw~rd Voll.bon Is Gama
Coaaty s extens10a •••t, Bpi·
culture.
.~
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Times-Sentinel

~

• • • . , ,w ••

wv

OH-Polnt

Reagan, Bush unde.r·fire
in final Iran-Contra report
By PETE YOST
Associated Prt!Qi Writer
WASHINGTON - In a sharp
attack on two former presidents,
the Iran-Contra prosecutor's final
report concludes lhat Ronald Reagan " set the slllge" for the scandal's illegal activities and George
Bush failed to tell the truth about
his role, according to sources
familiar with the document.
Lawyers for Reagan and Bush
have read lhe report by Iran-Contra
prosecutor Lawrence Walsh and
were quick to dispute its conclusions. Reagan's lawyer called lhcm
"utterly irresponsible" while
Bush' s attorney called on Walsh to
" fold up his tent. "
The soon-to-be-released report
says Reagan created an atnlosphere
in which top aides felt free to
maneuver outside the Jaw, according to lhe notes of several individuals who read portions of lhe document
Comments Reagan made to a
top adviser left White House aide
Oliver North feeling as !hough he
had an "invitation to break the
law," according to the sources'
notes.
There is "no credible evidence
that President Reagan violated any
criminal statute. Nevertheless, he
set the stage for lhc illegal activities wbicb .ensued," the sources'
nou:s quote the repon as saying.
Theodore Olson,. Reagan's
lawyer, said he was forbidden by
court order from commenting on
the report but Walsh's conclusions
"would be completely unwarranted
and utterly irresponsible. •'
"Alllhc evidence ·.:. $bows that

.ed !ale in 1986 that lhe arms sales
were linked to lhe release of American lloslages held in Lebanon.
"Conlnlly IQ public pronouncemcniS, Bush was fully aware of the
Iran iniiiative," lhe soun:es' notes
qUOIC the report as saying.
The sources said the report also
Slates !here are seven unanswered
questions about Bush's knowledge
of the scandal that Iran-Contra
prosecutor Lawrence Walsh intended to raise by questioning Bush at
lhe trial this year of former Defense
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
SecreJary Caspar Weinberger.
That !ria!. however, was scuttled
Comp1ny r...lrv• u,.·
PUBUC NOT\CE
wholl faat known addreaa
last Christmas Eve when Bush parto accep,t to reJect any
FOR SALE
w11 Route 1, lox 5U 81,
~oned Weinberger and five other
The Ohio Valley Bank all blclo, and to wltltdr•w tile Golllpollt, Ohio 45831; you
Iran-Conlnl figures.
Company, 420 Third vehlc.lta from aale prior to IN lltreby nou.d that you
In an interview, Bush's lawyer, Avenue; Galllpofla, OH the uta. Terma of Sale: llave been narnocf dlftndent
Griffin Bell, said lhat Bush did not 45631, will oHer lor ••t• the Oaah or Certified C.heck. In a legal ••tton entftltd
deacrlbed December 5, 8,10,1993
Nationwide
Mutual
mislead lhc American public·about following
property:
.
Company
and ·
tnaurance
his role in Iran-Contra.
111811 Pontiac ; Sunblrd· 1.• •.,........_ _ _ _, _ _ Nitdlnt Htmlllon, ,platnllf!a;
.
,,
''Judge Walsh has seven unan- Serial
va. .lam•• A. .McCormlck,
Public Notice
sweted questions, but he had seven 11 G2JB11K4K7818106
Dofandant. Thla octlon haa
bton aaalgnttd Ci11 No. 113years to loot into them," Bell, a 11187 Ford Tempo· Serio!
12FABP31
XAHtl100622
CVI-24
and 11 pending In the
former attorney general in the
1880 Olda Cutlat~-Serlol
NOTICE
BY
PUBUCAnON
Court
of
Common Pltaa of
Carter' administJation, said Friday.
131147AA2450308
CaH
No.
83CV124
Gellla
County,
·oolllpolla,
Told of the commenls by Rea- 111a. Bu.lck Rap!- Serial
COURT
OF COMMON
'OhtO 45831.
gan's and Bush's lawyers, Walsh 11G4A.U7A7EH21181
lpt.!As ·
Tho object of the
said he would decline commenting 11181 Ford Mualtong-Strlol
GJ.LUPOLJI, QHIO ' complain! It to recovar
11 FABPAOA7KF145546 .
until after his report is issued.
NATIONWIDE ltllmiAL
judflment qalnat you •• •
11186 Pontiac Rero-Serlfl - fNSUIIAIICI COMPANY
rttult of a tralllo accident
Public defender to quit 11 G2PM37R4GP21$664
Box 111011
that occurred on MllJ 21,
Th11e vehlcl'' ;will be
Columbua, 'QIIIo 431111
1H1, 'wit en you ~lgentty ·
COLUMBUS (AP) -The state sold at 1 public ealo at
, ' .llld
operated your vahlcll near
public defender said he will resign Brunka Garoge, · 138
NADINE HAIIIt.TON
the lnttrllcilon .of U.S.
Jan. 31 to return to private law Northup Road, Northup, OH
9120 w. Illroad SlrHt, . Rotlta .40 and.lnterettote 210
at fO:OO am on Soturday,
Lot21
·
In Franklin Townehlp,
practice.
11, 1893.
Galloway, Ohio 431111
'Franklin County, Olllo, and
James Kura has ·directed the December
Tho vohlcfea will bo aold
PLAI!fli~FS,
yilu 1~11 lila •oorit of the
state office for about a year.
to the hlgb•t bidder "aa.le"
vs.
accident Immediately alter
The office oversees 60 state without ony upr.. aed or . JAMES A. McCORitiiC~
colliding wltll' tlla vahlclt ·
public defenders, 300 county pub- Implied warranty. Tho
Box su 81
operated by Ma. Nadine
·be aeen _at
lic defenders and 6,000 anomeys vehicl••
pllllntlff,
Nationwide
:~~:!=~=~::~:ll~kj tilt
Hamilton;
and lht
prayer Of
who are assigned to clieniS who Brunka Gorap up to the
date and Umo ollht aofo.
Mutull lnauranee Company,
cannot afford a lawyer.
The Ohio V•II•Y Bank

President Reagan complied with all
laws and at all times directed his
subordinates to do likewise,"
Olson said in a statement.
The scandal involved the sale of
arms to·lran in exchinge for the
release of hostages and the diver·
sion of some of the profits froin
those sales to a clandesiine netWOik
run bf -North to funnel military
supplies to Contra rebels in
Nicaragua. At the time, Congress
. had forbidden U.S. miliJary aid to
the rebels, who were fighting the
leftist government of-Nicaragua.
Walsh. 's report was completed
in August but has been sealed from
public scrutiny by a special panel
of federal appeals judges to give
those named in it time to submit
responses.
That
three-judge
panel
announced Friday it would release
the report soon, possibly with
minot deletions.
For now, the report is only
available to !hose named in it, and
their .lawyers. Those who read it
are prohibited by the court from
discussing its contents.publicly.
A number of sources provided
The Associated Press 'With a
description of )Is conteniS, including notes from sections of· the
report. The sources insisted on
anonymity.
The sources said the report concludes Bush was not telling the
truth when be declared publicly
that he was "out of the loop" unaware of important aspe'&lt;ls of
Iran-Contra when he served as
~ ·
Reagan's vice president.
Bush has said that he dido 't
know until after the scandlil erupt-

••Y

i

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PubliC Notice
.
It to damand judgment
aaalnat you In t~t -.ui\1
of $10,7U.83 plue tntartat
from May 29, 199! tl\11
coelto, and lilt preyer Of the
plaintiff, Nadine Haml!ton. Iii •
10 demand J~dgmen't
agalnat yo'u ln th' ·l!'loufil ·
of uso.oo "'"h . lntar..t
from May; ~8, 1 .8~1 'aniJ
cotta.
'&lt;;.{,
You are required : lil.
enewer 1ha comptttlnt ~In
twenty-eight (21) ~llJI, lf\I!E
the r•a1 pubflc~_on wllt .l!,f
made ori · , 199 lind 11\i
.twenty-:fiDt\t · ~ ' dayf · ff?f.
anawer wilt com")•••• on
that date. •
·
In .,... ol yo.ur failure
anawtr ·or olherwlat
,..pond 11,1 required bY lila
Ohio Rultl of Civil
Procedu,.. wttllln ·the time'
atatad, judgment- ~Y ~atau11:
wilt bt ltndtie(f agalnll y~
lor tht relief dema~dtd .li'l
the complain!. ,
."
Louin Buratit
Cltrk Qf C:,Urte

WASHINGTON (AP) -

The

Energy Department, slipping on ils
timetable to develop a nuclear
waste storage site. is trying to help
utility companies pay for storage of
their \)SCfJ reactoi:[uei,.Energy
rciary Hazel O'J.;eary says.
"There definitely exists some
moral obligation," to help utilities
that Y'ill run out of on-site storage
space, she said Friday.
!Cimeiltly, most reactors store
u~ fuel in J)OOlS of__
water, but by

Sec-

·1998, 20 of those w111 exceed ,their
capacity, according to the Energy
Department. That is the year by
which the federal government
promised to have a temporary
national storage sight for lhe highly
radioactive fuel.
Ratepayers subsidize a federal
fund that is collecting $600 million
a year toward construction of the
permanent site.
O'Leary said it would be unfair
to ex~.t ~~paye~ ~o.shoulder lhe

-

'

BRIDGE

could miss opportunities it you wait lor
additional CQf'lformation.

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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Avoid
mvotvamants with friends today that have,

. BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

heavy overtones ot commercialism .

Everyone might come out poorly if business objectives dominate.

Monday, Dec. 6, 1993

lui in an area where you met failure previ-

Sunday,Dec.5, 1993

In the ye,ar ahead make it a point

10

increase the ·number of acquaintances in

your field of endeavor. Friends you make in
~, bllsiness wortd could be key factors in
yoqr auccess.
SAC)irTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 211 Don't be
too'prQud tOday to ride in on 1M coattailS of
a pe1900 you racently went 0111 of your way
to help. Your friend haS been looking lor a
way .,to express his/her gratitude .
S!Igillarius. treat yourse~ to a birthday gift.
Send for your Aatro-Graph predictions lor
the year ahead by mailing $1 .25 and a
tong, sell·addrtsHd, stampe&lt;Unvetope to
Astra--Graph. rlo th~ ~r. P.O. Box
4•65. New York. N'(·1t;l163. Be sure to
state your zodiac •ts~n·
.
CAPiltcORN (O.C. ~-JIIil, 19111 a confi·
danl whose judgment you, trust off~rs you
special adViCe today. don't let it go in one
ear and out the other. What ihls person ·
telll you could be for your oWn gOOd.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Don't stir up
the waters today in a pertN[Sitip arrangement. II your counterpart has conditions
undo&lt;control. be sure yOu don't do any thing to dlsruptthis lf'Od&lt;!· ·
PISCES (Ftb. 20-Marell 20) II your mate
is striving to do something t~at will be of
mutual benefit, be s.upportive of him/her
today. Your encouragem~nt is a critical lac·
tor mat could spell success.
ARIES (March 21•Aprll 11il Something In
whiCh you've recently been involved didn't
work out too well because the benefits
were not equally distributed. Today you
"'"Y nave to contend with a similar situa· ·
lion. Be lair.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20) Guard against
inclinations today to overly reward the
undeserving white barely acknowledging
persons wonhy ot credit Don't use erro~a· judgment.
GE•Nt (May 21-June 20111 you have to
make an important concession or agree,;..~, today. don't attempt it tile first thing
out .of the box. You lunction ·better when
you'v.' llad a,chance to 11\ink about things.
CANCER (June 21-July ~)You're a ere•
atillt tninker·today, but you might not use
this marvelOus as.set until you're pushed
intb ' comer II you want to be ahead ot
the Jlllrne retY upo/t it aarty.
LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) "Eaay come. easy
00" Is not a~ IIJdom by which you want 10
iva IOday. Your poliibilitlea tor acqulaillon
are•IJtMld. ~ever. your probabil~;,o tor
. . . Ill" tilltO Q!llle 1\iQh.

VIRG'O (Au,. :l3-lapt. 22) Something
ab(lul wni, .• 10u are hopel\il c.an be
~'IIIli ., you enm;on lodly. provided
. , , jllfl!lil...-md thlnlc8rl 10 Cluae

:lbiiiikllNiw'-'··

·

..

...,

tn the year ahead you might be success·

c~

UIIIIA (ltpl.,za:io.t.~),Foltow your tntu·

ACROSS
1. Develops
6 Clever person
11 Stamp
• '
16 Tomes
21 "- Without a
CB;Uae"

that events are running in-your favor. You

ously . Th ings are changing and the l.n.,..
EAST
changes could make this a whole new
JU
ball game lor you.
.K76
JH
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Be
QJ IU 6
tAU
mindful of your sell-interests today, but
KJ
t7&amp;SZ
not overly so. If you behave in ways that
SOUTH
took too self-serving, it could harm your
tAKQ102
image and reputation. Major changee.are

•Qe

ahead for Sagittarius in the coming year.

• '2
Sand lor your Astro-Graph predictions
+AQ84
today . Mail $1.25 and a long. salfVulaerable: Both
addressed stamped, envelope to Astro· Dealer: South
Graph . clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
4465. New York. N.Y. 10163 Be sure to S.lll
Well N.,.lll Eu1
state your zodiac sign.
p . . INT
p. .
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-JIQ. 19) Strive to
p. .
p. .
distinguish today between genuine flashp..
AU pall
es ol intuition and feelings of apprerien·
Openln1lead: t Q
slon. Hunches should not be co~tused
with purely "'""'live thoughts.
, '
AOUI,RIUS (Jan. 20-flb. 18) There's a
chance you migltt be laken in again tD&lt;jay
by a friend who never seems to hpve
money on his/her person when to 'comes
time to p•y the check.
.. .
PISCES (Fib. 2G-March 201 To be sue'
.
cesstul today you must operate wil~in the
realm ol ·y'our own perceptions. If you By.r.uBp Alder
believe what you 're doing is right and
honorable, don't be unduly influenced by. .•Do JOU thiDit there's Be~UJI disothers.
erlmlnatloa ill briqe?" 101De011e
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Even i'fhen ubd IIIISellior Life Muter. , ·
merely doing routine tasks, let nothing ~i.
a;'j~=tloa~i::
disrupt your concen.tration . Mistakes -for o1 - . Y we " ...,_.1
could occur il you permit your mind to gal· ~ bill DO llii1HIIIIy -~~- Hotr·
livant.
·ever If
read the Uteratare of the
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Don't be
· ' youwill fiDel- p!jr lbat Ia il·
drawn 1nto an arrangement today whore ~~~·J':e 111 a woman ~ b 1
you hav&amp; lo take a position that directly
the uillllteatloaal briuJancy.• Y
opposes a close lrtend. This could davel·
Tile SLM liUied al-Oomd ·the dla·
op Into something sertous.
l!'ain aftd•coatlDued: ·
, .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Usually you're
Tbla dell really bappened tbe way I
a pretty good arbitrator. because you ara ··tiUII relli&amp;e. sittiDI Welt wu Portia
ob~ctive and lair minded . However, Rowt.Bently. Apinst the flaal eontoday the decisions you make might be a tract of four IIPidea. 111e led tbe dla·
bit biased.
.
moad ~~-- Decllrer nffed tile tb1rd
CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 Be grateful ftllllld ,of dl•monda, drew trum.. ID
today to persons whO go out of their way three tGUJda aad ran the lleart q-.
to help you. lf·you belittle or are critical of Eut- with tbe kiD&amp; and retu1'lled a
their efforts, this might be the last time low club.
they'll aulst you.
·
PIAI"''"I Wbaal&lt; CYel'flhiDI on lbe
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Subdue inclina- lleartialt,Southputuptheclubacetiona to change ,things today without just!· 11111 •Portia dtopped tbe ltlq!
lieatioit or· raas011. There's a chanc~ you . !ladilenly tllllltuatiGii bad cllaqed.
may undo somelhing good you have Foar 1cliill 'trlcb ~ .apparenttr
going tor you.
·
tlrc!Diliillat.O South's lap. He ~,.,t a
VIRCiO (A~. :i3-Sept. 22) In order to ba lleaH todlmmJ'aaee 11111fb I ~tile
aucceulul today you must have an acute em. 10. 'w.,a PorUI! ~ tile
S.nu of tlrnlng and know when to act artd Jadl to 4!8felt tbe ilolltftct, ~ ~
whiln to Jlack off. lithia faC\Ihy Isn't opor- ~ ~ wltll
of
atlvt, faHure ta pouoble.
lleartiT/b: uUd lfiNIII.-1
LIBRA (lepl. 23-0ct. 23) If YD11 attempt
"Ual,
I
I dlci,.J~
something. and fail to succeed. that'o one •Portia. ,....
thing, IIUI ff your failure to succeed Ia d~ , "11lcc
drop the elab ~by aeel·
to 11\elact you're at'* to even try; thats dial?
lllpoatofyour IIUil?' dianother. · •
m•~ ~
ICORPI0(~~- 22)
PJti8pi'OduellhnenJimatlcllll!le
IToday H you are req.ulred to manage that plllcild ber aloaplde the Moai
, reoourcea other than your own, treat them lJaa 11111 the Splllu DO quellloaa
aa a eacredh
. truhet. Makehevery effort to uted.
....
• _,.
1rve up to I e 1ail others avo in you.
C ) - -ANI! INCw= ....

,.••••

.

,s•

Deflect the course
of 'tbe'. contract

i::':.:::..

Ito COUnty Mttlnll,.noof't-.

:=.:. ,'\~

:.~~~
peitehc:e. And Pc I E
.I

Italian seaport
Kind o( beer
Oreaa protector
Stender finial
26 Advao\ture
stories: ~olloq.
28 H~~d warmer
30 Landed .
32 Three-toed sloth
33 EXIst .
34 L&amp;t8Sil.COmb. ·
form
35 ~ -(light stllnd ·
36 Fireplace part
37 High m011ntaln
38 Cloth "-ure
40 Encount8fll
42 In addition
43 Pa9 attent1011
44 Wine .cups
45 ,Large bird
47 Colonize
~9 Ward oil
50 Bother
51-tawmaklng body
54 Go by water
55 Chair
56 Gets up
59. Dine
60Goai
62 Impaired; marred
64 Sand
65 Army oil.
66 Stac~ 10
67 SChOOl of whales
69 .Pitchers
70 Ser,rant
71 Apj)te or pecan 72 Obtain.
74 Discharged
76 Diocese

n

~~- ~~hreef'

78- Gracia
79 Primary
82 Slttld
84 smooth In
manner
85 Boundary

68 Shade · ·
89 .!'~~treaty '·
90 Niagara92 Rooming hO!JH
94 Unnll!*sarlly
98 Wllk unsteadily
99 Pro-be
100 Gave food to
102 Evaporated
103 Water )n Parts '"
104 Go lel~:~y

105 flying )l!~m...a&gt;-,
108 .SccirCittli -.'
.
1080ceen . .
109 A·P linkup
110 Agave pllrlt
111 Tooth crowns
112 R~IIIC
114 Plgptl\
1111 FabuiOUI bird

2 .Rtlj)ul88

.
3 Klritono.aaah
4 "-, ttre People"
5 Cratty
II Cont:urs
7 Stan!ttes
8 AbStract being
il Rl- fn Italy

inerclol Drmr'• u-.. &lt;Ctou
·a1 Or a. Witting To OIIIAin A

coL

-·

l!ltabel, -

I

.

t f'

11 !-\ght-c:otored
1

12

"-nt

13 •IUra

:,
!4 ~eon '&gt;:'"bOt

' .. .._~lieD

AIIDitcront• ""'· ALL Pollttona

~17Choote

,18 All'!lfnilllve word
19 Australian •
marauplat
20 Cull
27 Sue - langdon,
29 Solitary
3H:over

117bt~ •.
119,Gary- ·

120 Profit ·
122 Matron In Madrid
124 Flnllfl
·125 Strong wind
.u8 Jumpect

38 Dllpatclled
.. 37 HebreW prophet

39 Falling period
AO Speechless

128 11 Salem'a -"

41 Pltrce
42 Permits

\29 Light rain ·
131 Wheal132 Smatt' rqll
133 Unmoving
135 D.C. VIP
138 Morae!
139 Wedding nng
140 Study
141 Three: prefix
142 trYing ID
143 Tantalum 1ymb01.
144 Orient
'
145CiUIIflea
147 Slumbered
149 Urge on
150 Not the ..,..
152 Renter's
document
1~4 Heads ,ol Catholic

43 'Ch~.

44 Mine entrance
4e Mother
· 48 Bilked clay
' 49 Toita
50 Dry
51 Kind of cloth
52 Artist's stand
53 Motot
55 "Seiaame -~ ·
56 $!ltd cOaling
57 Chcilce part
56Cutolmeet
61 Arrr1W

83 'Goller's n.octa
64 Strong wind
88 TV'a AltCe
Kramdin •
70 "Fam!IY :.... "
71 Gratify
73 Bank employee
74MarUte8
75 FrOCk · .
77 Decreued
'78 SudtSY brews
60 Small factory
81 Still

Ch~rch

156 Otci·wornlllllll ,
158 Hu a attong,'
ollanalve arnett
159 Senda fOrth
160 Bread Ingredient
· 181 Clearer

DOWN

.

111 Per ...

441-18114. Tho DaadNne For Ac4:30 ·

;r.,'~lc•to..

.- ..•
•

.
....'•
.
••

.•
•

••
.

••

....•••

.

.

fortlng wQrds.

•

Shout
Decays

....•
.- ..

Walatcoel
"Die_ ..

121 trr11atea
123 Negative
125 Tamed; docile
128 "Mad Abou1 You"
star
.127 Mo-t terrible
129. Engine
130 Angry
131 Aeriform fluid
132. Wearylhg

Public Sale

&amp;Auction .

peraona

134 Brlrn
138 Philadelphia
player' .

137 Alric:ln river
139Ta1AO ExpenM_
144 Shrieking IOund
145Capuctun·montcey
148 Stcf8l egint
147 Health rt110r1
11\8 SI,)IQOI .
148 Gbcldel8 of
''" nMiing -151 That man
153 Printer' a mteaure
155 Faroe Ialande
whirlwind
157 Greek letter

.
-.
..,.

-.

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was

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88~

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.

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experience ·
·req"Lilred. Call

toll
free for
. ,
,

.

~ecordl. ng

F

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B

roc

a·nd
h

~re.

'

Personal Touch
Hair &amp; Tanning Salon
State St. &amp; SR 160

American Legion Post 27
C.J. and Country Gentleman
Sat. Dec. 4th 8-12
American Legion Post 27
Public Welcome

1

A~C Bloodhound
(like Children's booli-Ciillord) Big
Christmas Present. Beautilut,
gentle-natured.
To lOVing home.
l
Naeds room to exercise. Male, Red,
81mos. old $350 614·446-0910

.I!•·

We are very thankful
to Dale and Charlene
Darst and Mr. and
Mra. Mark Darat and
family for their ex·
tended care and
concern aver the
yaara ·and attleclall~~ ··l
during his lllnesa.
Alaa ' a ·special
thanks to Rev. Mllea
l'rout and Rev. Bob
Thompson far their
conaollng worda, Del·
bert Clay end Delo rea
Miller for their
beautiful songa, Susie
Sigman .for her loy.ely
plano pl11ylng, the
cas,kat btarera and
Gay and Andrea
Creeme~ns for thalr
efficient .. rvica and
thoughlfulneaa.
May God bte.. each Of
you.
The Fife Slatars
Lucille, Bonnl• and
Paulin•

Country Roads
A GREAT GIFT IDEAl!
Audio Driving Tour of Gallia
County Available at Ohio
Valley Vls~ors Center, Bob
Evans Restaurants, Chamber,
and Historical Society.
$15 plus tax

Empire"LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Burlile Oil Co.
446-4119

Nintendo for Christmas
Complete system Includes Turbo
Controler, 2 reg. controlers, power
pad, gun, U-force, and 10 games
(instructions, cases and rack)
446-8039

LAYNE FURNITURE
Large Selection

Birthday

Happy
40th
Birthday!.

"To My
Greatest Gift "

Love,

'

Mary Kay Cosmetics
Christmas Open House
11-4 p.m. Friday Dec. 10th
at the Best W~tern Motel
918 Second Avo: Gallipolis
Mary Ann Young and Kim
Christopher Beauty
Consultant's
614--446·2845 or

·441-1700
Mary Kay

'WE CAN HELP WITH GIFT IDEAS"
P~ Beauty Consultants

lane Action Recliners
Wall Huggers- Rocker
Recliners 1250"" to 42500
Children's Recliners 6500
Glide Rockers &amp; Swivel

to 26500
LAYNE FURNITURE
Rockers 19500

Mon. thru Sat. 9·5 p.m. 446-0322
3 miles out Bulaville Pike
FREE DELIVERY

carofYn.McCoy 992-5082
Sandy Hero&lt;lerson 992-3647
Beverly Adkins 742-3200

Inventory In Stocld
Cathy's Gifts &amp; Specialty Shop
located at Seyler's House
of Treasures.
Open dally tor business
Mort. ·Sat. 10:00-5:00
Sunday 12:00-4:00

like to e~~ess bur

•

. _ , llrlldloo lor .....
~
ltd ., aoml-lnvalld, 114-14..
3014.
'•
-

..... ..... liad ...-

Holiday Special
Check Us Out!
We will meet or beat any
advertised price .
Must present ad ..

THANK YOU

To ·:all .wh~ celebrat·
ad our 50th wedding
annlver~arv With
It
so great to
see each of .you and
reminisce;
· ' ·
For all the nearly
200 beautiful cards
with each so very
special. The flowers
a net gifts to brighten
our day.
To Horace Karr for
getting the building
addition completed
a'nd all his faithful .
worker-s, working so
hard to get It fin·
ish.ed ,ln time for our
familY tci do a great
job of decorating. ·
To e1;1ch and .a ll of
our many, many
Thanks · and J-4ay
Goc! Blesa you all.
· We Love You,
M. and Mildred
· Gaul

.a, d - No
•nou-.

IC~o•

446-4247 &amp; 446-4450
Open Sunday 1-5

Ft~neral-H_ome.

•

·c
Train
arou!'ld work

'

·

Our AJ~PrtC~tlon,
Mra. i,4ary 1;. J~a
Mrs. AIJ!N U. Homes
Mra. Bessie.W. Grlhlm
Mrs.'Shlrjiy $IIOCidiY
· M11. Helan H•lhlw
Mrs. Palrlela Rlppay
Mrs. Ylllllllt
Alves-Newetl

at local radio

·"':~atllorl8.

'

all

.

·1

BULLETIN BOARD

Special thankl to
Rev. Arlus Hurt. Mrs.
Roll MarJe Stonty, Dr.
fl. T.. Sugumaran, the
Catalpa Minor Nursing
Ctnltr and Its stiff on
shifts, and tht
Watlg~alley-Woad

..

31 Homes for Sale

on ttl. e Jot)traln-

1·800-858-4241

To lite neighbors and
friends . through the
the · ·family of
Cloradean M. Shockley
gralefully thank "ch
and every dDt In the
cammun!ty for you~
concern, the upre..sloil, of floral ·lrflllll~
intnll, ·food; car~•·
donal!,oni, ' a'nd ·com·

•

J

·"

r

1

..

112 - sPrtnae
113 Gra11!1ttea·

115
116
118
. 118

=lona-on

..

HWellk101 Mythical mmor-lllerw
105 Poet
108 Wllhtled
107 Break IIUdllenly

" ·1~ Arranged Infolds
· 16 Sadger'

lnou,_ Corder. 11111,...
ted tndl•kluala ..., Pick up ApAt W-ond C.ntoro,
• 111o111 R011to110, aatltP111t•r
oti.fo
1:00· A.M. Ana
4:30 P.M. llonday . Frtd.,. For
Addftlonal .,formation, C.tt 114Flool

•

·'.

·

ll'* Hive A Yatkl Drfvw't
Ltconot AIJd A Cloan Drlvlnlf
R - To 11. . .Tho R"'
q u t - 01 Tl!o Progr....·o

..

63 Nqjle
84 Winter vehicle
87 Loa
89'Folda.
90 trrttaiee; - •
·91 Eagte'a neet '
·92 Ch!lll • .
93 Graeay fields ·
95 -lrM .
96- Oily
97 S1att fiower Of

A~

Real Esldte

.

.

Common ' - • Caurt

_,

....

• • A,'l onMiqllll
CIIIIJQIIIdy .....

BE. ARADIO
ANNOUNCER

MAINTENANCa PilliON •

Dacembtr5,,12,111 H, 1M:f
J1nuary 2, t, 1994
u
n•

C~osswprd Puz~le Answers..orfPage A-5

22
23
24
25

ii!Ve perceptions today if they signal you

-·

Announcements

-•-•
,.
..

~or.-

low. OUr- . . """"'
llltolmldthllll 1 . . . .
. . . . . dlnlhiiM ; f

GaltlaCou~

v

cost o,t bullelmg alllhtiOnal on-site
storage for used fuel ~ was des· tined f~r the f~ral facility. .
Jan~c~ Owens, of lhe Nauo~al
Assocll!llon .of Reg~lato~ Uuh~y
CommiSSIOners, s&amp;Jd 0 Leary s
pledge was "a positive step" but
~at she was waiting to see a spec1fic proposal before commenting
further.

-·ln-111..

.........

to

Feds·will aid storage payment
. '

TNt ... . _ .....
linD~ . . . .

•

.

!" ..

jack-Wr.J

.., •.•
-·..••.~

belle..

'

'

I

'

Pooh.IJear
Lqok qt ,,. difference l&gt;et-n

•

••
' ,•

••

•

'
II•

~

I

Hal!py·~eet 16th..: December 6, 1977
Ch..Utiancl Marie W'dliama

..•

oa':t

.

.

.;o•

Paoi &amp;

,.

'

1 CorllltlaiaiU 1 3 rl!l

"You Are W.,.d"

Call446·2342
or 992·2156

FOR MORIINFOUUTION

l'NI••"'·

'

.

\

• V'

�'

December 5, 1993

Plnnnt, wv
54 l .. callaiuaoua ·

'

A y~ lady at work was complaining that she didn't have enough
time on file weekends let get every.thing done. •I've got the ~at solution,• a colleag11e j)()Ofided. "You'll
have more time If you just tum off the
TELEVISION set."

.

Saturday, December 11 , 1993 • 10:00 a.m.
Located at 416 Mulberry Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
To setUe the estate ot Helen A. Murphy (Probate case no.
931123 the foUowtng will be sold:
Many, Many dolls of all siz&lt;~e~s ~&amp;; ~~~e;~
table w/6 chairs, china Cl
dresser w/oval mirror,
R.
humidifier, lamps, oak bookshelf,
wooden bed, sewing SUpPiies . ...~r,~~s~
drawers, 2-2 Drawer file cabmets, ;,;.
&amp; chair, Antique wooden boxes, oil IAnini!
McGuffy readers, carbide
aprons, salt cellar, 2 "''"'"""
room suit, electric
dryer, antique jars, old
·.
ladder, cracker cans, hoover vacumn,
broom, shop vac, several kitchen
pots &amp; pans, silver trays, 1 lot of books,
of dishes, (some Collector's), buttons, """'"
doll making supplies, kitchen table w/4 chairs,
and many olher collector's and misiCelllaneoLrs
items.
·

=·

·

simple warda. Print letleB of
eoch In Ill line of IQIIOrat..

801,

Real Estate General

•

Apartment ·

51

for Rent
Nrw 2 80&lt;1,_. Apoot)llonl, 814·

448.03110;

45 .

Furnished

Rooms ·

S500 Crtl After I P.M. IM·ae.
107.
eca_n M,
new, t75,

Hou.s ehokl

GQodt
YI:RA FUfiHiniiiE '

..

OUTIIDI

.

Frn Book

R~ Chair

-Arch Wly'l1121.00

PI;

IJiiiiM!L ·

.

B E. R l T .Ei

,

Willi: a: - ·.4

.

.

.

.

.

. .

NOW
HIRING
GRADUAT·ES

........._......

-··---

.

RACINE• Sixlh SliM!· A ·2 aiDry home

8 pc. ·Nortlou Chino llill,
~

• MklcllefiOrt, OH

~

MaiOO

- •·;;::====:::::':==
•ooo

.

IIDDL.EPOAT· Powell SliM!• A aacluded 1 31&lt;1 acra t.an.
Iilii with pubic ....... ~. ~DlO

RAC?INE- Main SliM!". L"'*fna for comfo.-.. 1vtng In
Racine? ....,. II Ill A daublscolil. ~ on a 72X72 1o1.

~ hal \'8\lltod ceilings In lhe living """" lltd "*"3 bedroomo end 2 bell!t. I :SCED TO' BELL S21,5C10

RUTLAND- S..C~ Grove

Road- Approx. ,140 ..,.. with

older home. Perfect pi- 1o hunt flu IIOfiMi timber lind.

,

I

-

...,

~

,

,;

,

"L

~

l

'

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~.1erch an dt se

,

•

..........
........
--·=bod......

.. .
'
QOm~= that stMt didn't
7
· have
tlmeonthewaalc'
8nds.to get everything dOne.
"I've got the best solution," .a
cOlleague confided. "You'll
have more time i{you just tum
off the- - --- •.••• set•

ONLY,S71,DOD

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'

I I I I I I I I I I ·I

.,.........

Unla,

FR£E
----~-·
ea:z,
0

'

'

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.
·'.
· ·WIN·TER QUARTER BEGINS
.::JANUARY 3, 1994,-.'

•

'

••

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

Get Your College.Education ·
. ~outh,astern ·Busine~$ College
·To Answer
Ads Uke This.
'·
'

...

.·.

.... c

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

.._ ....... Coli
NEW Color CMoJot,

..A young lady at work was

~-

• bedrool)\ aild 2 batlt. Hu cenu.l Sir and a newer-lac!. low

FURNISHINGs:

W""'t'hl Iron T - W/4 Cholra;

,,

205 North Second Ave.

•

8M-441.3158 Or 1114-148o44B
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT.Z.owrt (NO OEPOSn)

I

~-:-.,~I..,...1-r-l--r.ls:--11--l
· ~ .~~;.,..

F1»l l!&gt;f, 2.1 Y.e, Enalno t1711, 18 HP· WGOd Sollttor
1VIf GM

'

''

Rt10rrange the 6 ~~m~mbled
0 words
below to -"a 6

o :RIVEA

'

~

Te,.

1~ Dodge Cctft NM, f2110;
Wddi!IO gown, ·Mil, IIU 7, NO;
nowCOI..,...PrMklentloiE..
oon furriece, ._qr, blo.lr; sso;
814-182-ti!O. .
.

Concession Stand

''
•

I -

2

ClAY I. POU.N - - - - - -

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Parking a~allable at Gallia Academy High !)chool
Tenns:

Help Wanted

• -=n bod

II . f
_..ttt

a

S©~c4llA-l&amp;£tfs·
That Intriguing W orcl Game with a Chudle
--- --- loiiiH.,

•

1 9

•

11

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--.
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'14:

•

ESTATE A

...
...
. . . ··=-.. .
-""crwr
,,_
...... 12 ... . . . . , : : , :

54 IIJC I u•·
lllidiW·u

1117.

~

FOR SALE
615UISIWI
POIIT 1U1SA11, WV
Three sury brick r 1' Nnct on l*t of LDt 11 ::t,
PDint Pia ant. WV, (Tax Map 4, 1'1Re147).
Details and bid inlorrnalion arc? Hi
(304) 348-8466, Teresa Yutzy.
S8aled bids wil be apenecj Decsrnbar 15, 1993,
a.t 3:00p.m., at lie Main Street Oflice.
of Bank One, Point Plasse nt, WV, ·
by Unitsd Nalional Bank, Co-Ex?CW~r of the
Esb!!• of ltilihd R.•laQson;
~

.The right II I la'VIMI 10 ,...... 11PJ llld II bids.

, -.L

·S.o,utheastern:·
' ··ausiness·•·
c:olleg-

Beeolt QIIM iloelt- Applw. ~ witila s
2 balh
.with- attached 2 cer ganoge. Haa
kitchen lncludjng . tha., dlah~
with
aflo. ~ living ...,.. "' ·

hom.

·'

HARAtsONVILU·A v•ry

....U main~inad

Com••
,..,1011

44~7101

or 1-800-585-7101

'

1884. thr"

~~==:G'~1!.":•~~~2,DOD

Russell D. Wood, Brok11'.." ......446 4618

(614) 446·4367

..

dlli4i

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
.,,,uSECOND AVENUE, GAll IPOUS 45631

. ,

Phyllis Mlllll'......- ...- ..........258-1138
J. u.tlll Carter..................3'71-2184
TIIMIIe o.wttt ...................&lt;l41·1514
Jildy Dewitt ••••••••.•••••••••••••••441-0262

'

COlli ERQAL
BUILDINQI
SUPER
L.OCA110N1 Building approx. 38'x56'. two bay
garage, parkfng lot. Immediate ~cmn'on..
1113

oomE TtAIEfl. Brokw.-......- - ..•-•-- .....ti2.BRENOA JEFFERS..- ............... _ ......................1112.al
SANOY BUTCHER- ........_ ......- ....·-·-·- .. -·--1112.al1
.JERAY.~G --....- ........._ .... ,.... (3CM) .-z.a.11

OFRCE'- -- - ·- -··-- --·- - -:..........- ........11124111

NEW LISfiNOI LOOK'I HIRE! "' 41

Ptuo~~cra~

and r~~~m:h'zrt 3 badnun, 1'/t balh horne.
LMng ruom. dining room, kitchen &amp; lamlly room.
pes me14, Land IIMliiD rollng appro~(, ~ IICI8I
pasture, pond. bam willt bm"""'. $40't . .,...Z

"'

Real Eatate Gineral

,.,

.. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY!! ..

is .p.os~ible to enjoy Christmas.in yQur new home! .
•
Jb·e·l;e out-of~state owners are very anxious to sell!
one or both of these
homes!

WHAT A LOCATION! 184 DD8it ORIVE.
Quality bric:k ranch. Large rooms COl liltk ~ of 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, dining ..,., tilling room, tutl

•

. -PUBliC AUOION

basement. 2 car ll"rage with electric: door
opener. Immediate ~S! !l!'o-•1 Level lot approx.
100'i&lt;150. $70's.

11104

Satwclay, Dec. 11, 1993 at 10:00 A.M.
'
~IliOn!·

Go

180

north

10

miles

to

TtiOmpef:!ll Rd., twn right, go to top of hill
· left on F111nk Rd. 1.5 mile, tum right first
to left. Watch
·
. tor signs.
'

1~5' gal ~lll .pump, log chains, chain finllers, caW
bucktll, Rubbatmald tuba and !lu¢kels, · 5 . gal.
,hydrauliC oil, gear oU, 5 gal. Thompson water seal,
ahove!J, reke8; 111flllocks, sledge hammers, picks,
feed .Coop, Wuh tub, ropes, pitchforks, wire stretchera, p&lt;ill hole 'diiiiJ8rt, mjse. alec. wire, roll 119 wire,
large wheelbarrow, M. &amp; D. 12 horae power 38 inch
cut riding mower, dump utll~y wagon for mower,
Homelite 1 inch chili In saw, Crallman chain saw,
chain comaalong,.
38' pipe wrench, hydraulic
jack, grea...· guns, vile, 12 volt elac. wiring assort·
ment of 12V hulls, 2 metal shelves,. metal 2 drawer
banch table, 1 bolt roll ·pina assort., 1 both metal
acrews asst., 1 box metric nuts &amp;bohs assort., grind·
ing diac: k~chen tabl•. ·
AN1JQUES: 2 corrl shellerS, German scythe, rocker,
snare sled, red wagcln, big acooler red, wheat cradle
with eXIra blade, hay knives, hay fork, assortment of
hoes, lanterns, ash sill&amp;r, wooden rake, large casl
Iron bean pot, cast Iron oblong kettle, cast Iron bean
pot, baby high chair, rustic Je.lly cupboard small, drop·
:a leaf table, 1 man and 2 man croi&amp;Cut saws, wood
~
vilet, blacksmith vise, R.R. can, carbide lights,
~
hatc:hets, broad axe, asst. of ~aws, misc. tools, flat .
~ top lrunk,. whhe pantry cabinets, old alum. pieces.
"" coll.&lt;:tor beer stains, atone grinding wheels, wash·
·~ boards. piano stool whh ·glass ball and claw leet, lid·
tile leg library, table, boudoir chest or dressing che3t
with mirror, chairs, period piece doll buggy large.
. fM'Illel clock with keys, glassware, kitchen ,utensils,
. butCher block, llant back chast ol drawer with wesi·
~rn mot~ catvinga, miac. antiques.
,
HOUSEHOLD: GIU.were, table w/4 chaloi, like new
coueh and chtllr • country pink, knick knt~~=kj, 'llulfed
aniinela, brass plecea usonment, exercise bike,
riill•ial plac~, music boxes, wan deCorations. ·
Q.UHS: (1) Remington model 12122 Field Master
r)Urq,, (2) Ruger model 10 automatic 22 with·
Buehnell 4 pwr. ecope, (3) old Andrew Meyrbury and
SoMa tr-~ 12 gauge ehotgun, lingle barrel
Norwich maN. Plue much, m,ICII more.
Auc:tloft11r David Boggs

e

lev•'-·

TIRED OF IIUIQ ~FOR~
but you Wlll'lllo be ...,.. to - . IDol This
horne Ia for you,~ 1 ml. floom new golf
COUIM, 3 BRI, bath, LR. DR. kitchen.
in)agine sitting in this beautiful home and enjoying the O!ltStanding
river view from several rooms. Newly remodeled chef'I'Y kitchen;
combination living/dining room, cozy den and the 11)aStef bedroom,
_ all boast a view. Home also offers 2 fuJi- baths &amp; a 2 car ca.rpOn
tucked away on a dead end street close to town. Call tOday to see
this special home at $89,000. #500

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·
i

GIIIIDOIIa. Ohio

'

1114_..77. Lie. 4 - - Aelreahmenll
Ttmil:
or cltaclc with poeltlva f. D.
Not
rlclcllnllorlouofp._rty.
In . . . ol Ohio

HASTE MAKES WASTEI 00n1 put all looking 111
this home today. Super location, 3 bed-s. 2
balha, ranch 1JY1e home, NIIUrat gas heat/central
air, basement, attached 2 car garage, spacious
lawn well landscaped. Make an appointment
lodayl.
IIW7

2 PLUS ACRES SITUATED AT EDGE OF
GALUPOLISI City utiiHies, 2 bedroom home
with kitchen, dining, bath, living room FA gas
heatl
1100

70 ~CAES lnll, S.C. 12. Madison Twp.·
• Appnnc. 20 ac~• tillable, · 50 W90(ls, old
hold ticuN on property "':lee~. LR,, .,
, ldtchan. O.iat houN and .
•so on
property..
.• '

117 ACRES, Mt.L, fiRM IN Gt,JYAN: _ .·
TWP., qlder home ~ -~ w/3 BRa,
LA, kitchen, bath, OR, ~arm bulldngo are ·

1bam,
. silo, ari'-.

.

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INVESTMENT PAOPEAlv· M1 CrMk Ad.
3. BRa, LR, kllelian, balh, unattach;d
Qllilgt, 122,000

NEW USTIHGI BE THE FIRST 10 LNE HEREI
Brand new home. 2 baths, living room, aat-fn
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 car garage attached.
Brick exterior. E~ held pump.
18011

$21,000. Five mlnutH to tOwn. Cll!i Cod
style home w/3 BAs. bath, LR, k~chen, g'l'
heat, lull basement.
.

3 BRa, LA, kitchlln,
,
garage w/ooncrelll ftoor. .

COillldef lj&gt;lll. (578).

4.45 ACRES, M/L, Huntington l\vp. corner of
SR 325-and Piper-Road. Call for more' details.

......

I

a pin home .but h11d '"· Tiley
enjoyed the ~ bedrooms, fonnalliving room, large covered deck
. fenced yard. They liked the convenience of a 2 car garage imd
effidency of a ·heat pump. They especiiUiy loved the quiet, family
oriented neighl&gt;orhood located only minutes from town in· G~en
Towl)shp. For $69,900, you can stan enjoying this very nice home.
•
Call today. #210 .
.

•,

lUll ~ FOR SALE·.Applac. 11,800 sq . .

ft. located on Uncciln Plb •11 Oanlrnllly.

I

JOHNBON RIDGE . ROAD - ADDISON
TWP. - 3M IICI'I farm, 3 ponds, tobaCco
base, 44x100 bam With concrnlloonl. May

'

OumP.·r• hat~ to leave this neat as

Oil lor detdt.

OLD ctEVY~LDIIIUI~ ~20' front
on s-nd Ave. ftl rJ! l!anllgt on G111p1,

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REALFSIAIE trc

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS· FiestaGrande on St. At. 35. Welt establfahed
laun&lt;lromi\ also goes wllh bualneaa.
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t ACRES, MIL, DAVIS ROAD, Ohio Twp.,
county water available.

.

-

2t EVANS HEIGHTS, 2 BR1, LR, kitchen, b8tf1,
fp, gas heat,
•

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l

OVER 31 ACRES (OWNER WILL OMOE INTO
LOlS) with minutes from town. Lew! trailer pad
exists with water and electricity &amp; sewage on
site, lots of nice building sites. Call today tor

4.2 ACRES - Uving room, kitchen and dining
room , bath, central air conditioning. 24'x24'
garage, two barns.
ISle

MOBILE HOME PLUSII:ots of extras, 14'•70' 3
bedroom mobile home. 2 story 14'•22' unfin·
lshed swelling. Twu extra outbuildings. Over 1
acre lawn. $20's.
11111

Nice

113 KINEON ORIVE- Living room , klchen, 2-3
bedrooma, bath, family room, ptlllty. Partial
fenceO.In lawn. 1 car attached garage.
Mil

THIS MAN MEANS BUSINESS! LOWERED
PRICE TO t24,100.00. What a great dealll Just
· per1ec1 home for ltartlng out or wanting _ ,
lng smaller. 2·3 bedrooms, large 101, living room,
kHchen, bath, partial basement. Storeae bulldlngl
Home In good repalrii .MAI&lt;E m OFFERI 111M
FARMt Appro• . 52 acres and a 3 Dedroom
home. Living room, kitchen, bath. laundry &amp;
more. Nice locationl
11011
14ll70 MOilLE HOllE AND LOT - Poiced In
lOwer $20's. Call for more details! Wo.n't last
longl

-

complete listing!

OWNERS RELOCATED! REDUCED PRICEitl
WANTS SOLD tMMEDfATELYIII - Ideal
location. Roomy 3 bedroom ranch style home.
LMge family room. dining area, kitchen. bath .
laundry. Nice sized leliellawn. Wrthin seconds of
New 35 by-pass.
-7
VINYL SIOED, 4 IEOROOM HOllE - Large liv·
lng room, dining room &amp; kitchen, 1'/o baths. Nice
leVel lot. Panial basement, back porch &amp; mora.
Priced $30's.

1112

IDEAL FOR THE FIRST HOME BUYER! Is this
well decorated 3 bedroom ranch style home.
Living room. kHchen, blttt, lull baaerMnt. Newer
eleCtric heat pump. Attached one caoport. Must
see to appraclatel Just minUtes from town! 1103
RANCH a A UTTLE BIT OF LANDI Home conlilts or 3 bedrooms, lrilna room, 1'/o baths,
basement, tront poi'Ch, ,..., porch , 2.494 acte tot.
Won, belieVe this price $311.800.
ISM
LOOKING FOR·' SO.oJi! INVESTMENT
PROPIRTY? UKE SOME IEX11IA INCOME?
Home with 4
room, family room,
kHchen, bath and mora. Ptua 2 garage apell·
,_tsiLocated att42 Por1lmOU1h Road. ca• for

- ..living

more delalls.

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ATTENTION! DEER HUNTERS! Over 119 acres just waiting tor you. Lots of wooded &amp; pasture land. Septic &amp; water on property.
1511

HOllE a 80 ACRES - Salem liVing room, din·
lng room , kitchen. Barn &amp; misc. othe: build·
ings. S40's.

1510

WILL CONSIDER ANY REASONABLE '
OFFER I Come and see lhls ranch home with 2
bedrooms, living room, dining room, k~chen ,
bath, one car attached garage. Newer carpet.
lngl Nice loti
1M3

RIGGS CREST - This has had lots of caret
Three bedroom ranch wilh lull basement 50%
finished. Oetoiched 24'J&lt;24' garage and base·
mont garage also. A must seel Aalilng
$85;000.00.

1102

................ ~ . . . . 1..........

1575

Meigs County

~·
· ' ~D""!'is_t_o_v-er-=
. T=b=-e-=P=-o_w_e_r-::O~f;;N~u--:m::::.:;:-b-:::er~l:t.n~'lll-

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Large
newer brick ranch with full basement. 3
bedfooms, living room, 4 batlts, nice kitchen ,
dining area. Family room, 2 car attached garage
and carport. Ffencl1 doors. Approx. 5 acres and
pondf Nicie wooded setting. Come and seel.
11573

ISle

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�nmes Sentinel
7t

Autos tor Sale

7t

Autos lor Sale

72 Trucks for Sale ..

7t ·Autosror Sale

,;~· -· ~;,~-

wv

OH-Pollit

December
81

Home
Improvements

tmP&lt;OWoi••••· liD
Job Too Ita Or · Y11ro &amp;.porto- . l)n Otdot I N ' - . Addltlone, F-lone,
lloolllltl, KltchoM i8otJro. lr&gt;Culllo Homo

..

Canaday

ourod, riM EIIIINtH. 8~
Dill.

Realty.

AND WOOLY- 22 acnot ol VOCIII'It iand owner
land contract.

~D\.1\Ci.inll
m.,._..... ..

IVAC:AHTr

excellent price

IRUTUINO AREA· 3.30 acnoo ol vacont lalld, gas
walar -••· Ma1ur an offer $8,000.

.

.

.UPPER· 4 bedroom, 2 bath, LA, Family room
dining room, pertial basement ONLY $12,500.00
oould be the placo you •lw-vo
*•amedol.

Give , . a aU, Thllr

.

S.IIIAG-1
614-84$-2540
(ollleo)

comm~lal

.or:

Corner of 2nd &amp; Mill St. All brick. Can be sold wrth
busi ness or ~eparately. Also haa rental apartment .
and rental business. Excellent building - Business · :
Location. Possibly some owner financing. Ca ll us tor
an appointment.
Call Jack at Hayes Real Eotate
992-2403

SHERRY RIFFLE

84 · Eleelrlcal &amp;
Refrlg.ratlon
RNidll'lllal

BEST BUSINESS LOCATION IN
MIDDLEPORT FOR SALE

wiring, new eervtce or ~1,...
Mllllr. UCIIIMd · oloct~cton.
Rl-r Eloctrlcol, WV00030t,
304~75-1118 .'

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Real Estate General
Services

81

AKC Roglstorod Dalmotlon PUIIploo boin Sept. 20, dopool! wlll

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE ON THIS
OFFICE BLDG. LOCATED AT 250 SEC. AVE. Office down, apartment and storage upstairs. Call
.for more inlormation.

hold until Chrlotmoo, lt4-H28784.
.

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'Chow Chow Pup• For Stle $715,
'111~323.

.

Real Eatata

' Real Estate

.

POIIEROY- Nice brld( ranch home locat.d on s-11 St.
ntiar elem. sc:hool. .Eiio living room, eat·ln kitchen, 3
be&lt;toomo w/llardwood «oors, full beth, full b11se. wlpar1ial
·bath. FA gas, garage, appliances. Thit brick home Ia a
real buy.

Musical·
lnstrumems

Colldhlon,
$'100 ~-~
.
.
,!lplnol Conoolt plono. Wlntocl
to ·lllilloloilr
Iundy Cllrfnot'Good

...,;=X•. .s.o.-n,.
~r

:Citllll

' '3348. .
~ 1111! ott At.143,- milo
~h of Clrpo-. Rod and
Goldin Doflctouo ...,..... Opon
. .-

. . only.

You've Waited' Long Enough move ahead tohQmeownet'llhip and build equity for ,your
luture wHh this 3 bedroom, 1112 bath ranch
with family room, rear deck and fenced back
yard. Priced to sell at $43,900.
11501

Income Producing Property on 10 Acresi ·
bedroom,
story
Buy for Investment and buildil)g lot wfth llling
family room, dining room, and
potential. Close to town. Small pond. . 2 car datached ga(age, all setting on a .754
Duplex type unit provides goo~ income.
ac:re, mil,, lot. Owners reedy to sell at $25,50D.'
$29,900
#~
Call for more information. #302

PRAm FORK- Localod on 3 acres mn, Lr, Dr, Kl~
combo, 5 BRa, 2 baths, FA, dan, uti. mr, cellar, garage.
Now 24x48 metal bldgin 1ha 60'i.

I

32.Locust

',

Street, Gauipolis

44J·106.

Allen C: Wood, Rea•Qr/Bro~er-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReaMim13roker-448-o97t
Moae CantarbUty, Reahor-446·3408
• Jeanette Moore, Ra!lhor-2Sa·t745
Tim Watson, Realtor-448-2027

Llvfttock

11811.
Brod Holotoln HIHoro, 304-112·
28$4.

Haulllla:

Ally!lme,

PIA A l l - Ohio,
~vory MondiY. Chuck Wlllomo,
~ Croill Tnrclllng, l14-241o
Anywhon.

Hototoln Bull CIH No SUnday
Collo, 814-SN-1124.

fiHIII- .

· ~
heltoro, Yll~lna and

.OWo, 2 rr. old bullo,I144N-Z!U:

8.4

Hay &amp; G~ln

u Round loloo Hor, Orchard

Qrou I Clovw, FlrOt Cutting,

114o441-7m.

lransportatton

J92t EDGE OF TOWN JEWEL • Exceptionally
smart 3 bedim. Splitlewt home, neat living rm .,
wlfweplace. eat-in kitchen ,
balt1s, one with a sauna.
large 2 cat

1111 REDUCED - 148,000 - O...er Is anxious to sell
this 3 bedrm. ranch. very nice home and location. Large
LR w/dlinlng area. Full b(lsamenr, an ellfra large garage
2 lois, oily water &amp; .a sci'OOis.
·

H21.

- Very

home

OLDER HOlliE· 4 Bedlooms. living room, dining 100m,
kitchen, family 1001)'), located on 1.8 acres. PRICE IS
~EO!.JCEO. CALL SOONI
LOG HOIIIE-I~Ied on Brumlield Road 3 bedroom, bath,
on 2 acr.. mono or leBS. Call to aee.
I
Oli WATSON ROAD· 2 bedrooms, 1 ~th.
100m, dining 100m, kitchen, approx. 1 t/2 aoros.
FOR APPOINTMENT.

HOME

QARFIELQ AVENUE- 3 bedrooms, living room, kltchon
and bath, within walking distanoe of slllrea and achoolo.
'CalitOSH. '

3

bedrms., 2 baths, nice entry,
fam ily rm., 3 car
garage. Located on SA 160. This can be a goOO P'ace to
sell cars &amp; wort&lt; at home. 2 lOtS .

mo"'

LOCATED .IN GREEN TWP.· on State Route 141-~~~. 2 bathe, Nvjllg lOOm, diniiJG 100m; kitchen,
ut11tv 100111, 22tc14 garage; H~ ia lix y~. 91d, hal ni941
ilrwiiOl CALL FOR APPOINTMENTII
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'

IB

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 1RY
OUR TOLL FR!I! NU!IeER
1...aN-1088

~
liiil

Full Basement for Storage or olav .area.llor
the chiidien. This 3 bedroom.
ranch ·featurlls a 1 new family
replacement windows . and some new
carpeting as well. Don't delay, eall today I
'
#502

~~.:;~~~~~~ Step up to
ho
spotless 2·3
beclroclill-ho.rnei Middlepoll. You'll enjoy
the large corner lot and 2 Cilr garage. Take
a look today. Priced at $55,ooo.
#507

BEAUTIFUL HOllE

WITH A 4000 oq h

OWNER.
Price Reduced. College Hill Motel w~h great
maka this Racooon
location in Rio Grande. Next to Bob Evans
lake a ·breather front ·Work
Farms &amp; Rio Granda Univel'llity. Investment
swim·ln Raccoon' Creek hom
oppolluni!y or perfect for retired persons not
.Older, ~ICaly reriiOdaled ,home ·
on satisfied w~h doing nothing. 12 un~s plus
1~ .11C1'81. ll)ll.' :~vith 4 bedrooms, 2 .ll.Bths, residence. Large lot .with semi . pai'l\ing.
living .ruom, k~chen. silting room and extra -Good Income. Call · Dave for more
·I'O!Im to lit your needs. You ~ hike In tho • . information.
· • · #21 a
woods.or flah ln·lhl Cflek, but be sura to call
•
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Carolyn .!or datalls IO&lt;? many .tO : rrtantiOn. Bulding lot in Spring Valley. 100 2oo s~e
Priced at $64,900.
·11102 ". on t.lapla Street. Near and of street; Gas,
.
. ,• '
· •· • electric,' water. Great neighbor ·hood.
Something Ventured, Something Gained I $9,500. Can Dave for' more information.
Own your own body shop and towing
'
1220
businHI plus family rental units. Body shop
offers 28 x 34 bay, t8 x 34 bay and t2 x 26 . Commercial Property. Located corner of Rt.
office/lobby whh b~th, plus 6 car carpOII. 7 &amp;'Rt. 554 in Cheshire. This property has
OWner statea .AAA towing contract will go lots of potential, with an office, two bay
w~h the ptOperty. t4 x 60 family rental unHs garage, large parking area, heavy traffic
include 1985 Redman offering 2 bedrooms, flow. Can be purchased with or without
t1/2 bathe, nice kftchen and living room. mobile home. Call Pat for more details.
Another 14x70 1985 Raman offering 2
#303
bedrooms, 2 balh (master bath has· whirlpool
tub), lllt'ge fully equipped kitchen wHh ·island, Weak-end Retre11ti You don~ have to drive
double oven'! dishwasher•.range, central air. for miles to getaway. You da~ ,hava your
47 WOo(l8d ac:res overlooktng the rllier just 2 own camping spot among tall trees .in a
miles SC!I!Ih of lhe dam. The posSibilhles for · peacelul setting and have ·access , to
this property aralimftless. Priced at $74,900. Rac:too~ Creak for boating and llShing. This
Call Carolyn lor addhionalinformation. ~00 ·lot In a private campground ' is prk:8d at
"

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$6,000.

:

Go Fishll Anytime you wantf t4.77 acres,
mn, with stocked pond. There ;I; also a 1992,
3 bedroom mobile home to live in while
building your dream home. Call today. Priced
at $32,500.
#504

Everything You Could Want, At a' Price You
Can Afford ... 3 bedrooms, 1 bath vinyl sided
ranch on a large lot. Offers large living room &amp;
k~chen . Full unfinished basement with .a 2nd
bath that ~ou can finish to auH your needs.
Freshly painted on the inside. Just listed at
$49,000: don't miss out I Call Carolyn.
#605
Business or Residence or Bothll Located
·&amp;long Bulaville Pika, this home can be used as
both a· business and residence. Plus, there Is
a rental un~ wfth separate utilities. Buy as an
investment or use as residence w~h help on
payments. Good location for eHhar. Residenqe
has 2-3 bedrooms, living room, eat-in kitchen.
Easy to heat
#21 0

POMEROY· Union Terrace· I lloor Frame
home with 3 bedroom, I bath, FA electric
heal, ' central air. 1.86 + acres. part
basement. Large front porch. IMMEI)IATE
POSSESSION I
ASKING $2e,500.00
NEW LISTING I Located in Langsville· I
story frame home, with 2 bedrooms. lull
basement, with utility hook-ups, 12+ acres,
storage building, lanced back yard, lront
porch stone cellar, home includes, newer
gas 'furnance. newer shingle roof,

7.5 Acres on the Riverll With a small woods
for a screen from both Rt~ 7, this is an ideal
building sfte. Located 6 miles below town: Call
David for more Information.
#219

appliances, washer &amp; dryer, newer

cerpeting Leading Creek Water.
'
ASKING I $38,000

Invest In Income. Supplement your income
with·these two already rented mobile homes.
One 2 bedroom with woodburner, range a.nd
refrig4!rator and one 3 bedroom wtt~
·woodburner. Each has hs own ~optic, water
. tap and electric. located on .92 acre on
blacktop road. Pric&amp;~~ at $25,400.
#100

ROCKSPRINGS RD. POMEROY· Frame I
112 story home with 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms. I
bath basement, large rear patio, front
porch large barn 'on 4+ acres. Tuppera
Ptairi.ichoster water, circular driiiOWay. Uust
pest the Pomeroy Nuralng Home.
..
ASKiNG I $38,500. NEW UST1NG
COIIIIIIERCIAL BUILDING IN POMEROY·
Large office/Showroom with h"'!e display
windOw. Lots of storage apace, ntc:e'niOiha
upatalra lor possible mooting room or ·offic;e
1pa"": Moy be converted to an apartment.
Main St\ acce'u River view. Many
plioaibilltinl
.
ASKING $12,000·

RE.AL: ·EStfA~.E, ~ . ~NC. _

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'

POIIIERQ\'· Condor St., 3 bedrobr!t ~
Style hOme on tmelllot nnr wn. lncludea
full ba..menl, Central air, WOodbuming
llrepfiiCt, 1car gllfBiie. · ASKINOIIH,OOO
SR. t38 Approxlmaltl)l 87.6172 + acnoa of
Vacent Ground] Grtlt view , of the Ohio
Rlv.r. Could bt' uatll ila building aile,
aubdiYidtd or Oted 11 Hunting Ground. All
mln•r•tt ourrtntly with the property go with
the P9fPfi'IY.
ASKING I $23,000,

.

• DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER ·- 446-9555

'

TR. 130-' (IOLO RIDGE RD.· 54.25+ aaes
of VICJint·iandllncludei old 30 • 40, house,
· 'l'oaily ~mbar, Electric available, r,.llneral '
:_rights with tho property. Asking I $24.~.

...

'

1817. 841 THIRD AVE. - Uve In one and rem the other
or use boeh as rental property. Two story frame with 3
BAs. 2 baths, gas heat, refrigerator, range, LA. OR.
kitchen, utH. rm. Also mobHe hOme on rear or lot. CheQ;
this out as a money maker. Call Eunice Nlehm 446-1897.

1900. NICE 2 IR, 1 BATII wldlnlng 11r911, ulll. room. gas furnace.
C811ol08-1897.

IIIIDDLEPORT- 2 uory com'mercial
apaJtment building. Patio, deck, refrigeretor
range, Extra 24x30 apt. building with 2
efficiency apts . And 1·2 bedroom lrpl This
unit includes several 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
a partm en Is .
G R.EAT RENTAL
INVESTMENTII MAKE AN OFFER
$49,500

.' '

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,,

2

story home wtenclosed porch, fenced lot. 3 carpot1s. 2
buildings, onlce or sales building, blacktop &amp; cement
driveways. Best garden spot In VInton $47,700.

124 liU'fLA,ND. 0Hf4:J.with 2 room additions, Added on
&amp; bedrOom. 3 bedrooms in all. 2
closet space. large Iron! porch/deck, gas
heating, large lot. denached one car garage
with cor.crat&amp;r floor ond electric. Cement
sidewalk.
ASKING! 11&amp;. 000

' ' . . :·, '44,6~3: 644 . '

~.::::=::..~

Itt e. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE - 6

Carpoit, basement. 3-4 acres of ground.
MAKE AN OFFER I S2V,VOO

11505

'

WIS· EMA:~

$65,000.

central air, storm doors and windows,

WE N'EEP 'LI·SI.IN·Gl!J,·
.

cabinets, dishwasher, range and ret. anached garage,
outbuilding. Beautiful landscape. Ready to move in.

POMEROY· SR.7 2 Story Frame Home,
with 3 bedrooms. bath, double hung
windows , panel walls, carpet llooring,

\.

,OR IN,ORIIIA'TION ON OUR IN'nRE Utl'INQI PICK UP
THE FREE OU.ALITY HOMEi BROCHURE AT IOIIIE OF
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETI,
IIIOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.
,.

&gt;he
comfan a spaciou! 3 bedroom ranc;:h
1t/2
baths one with a jaa.cz:zie, 36 x 32 great room and a
~oodburnin g fireplace . Cherry cabine ts in the
kitct\en. 2 car garage. 1 ac, mil . Virginia 388-8826.

1817. SPACE FDR REAL UYING - Immaculate 4
bedroom home, new carpet, paint, new kitchen with oa~

FEllMAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK· 8 yeara .
3 badraom, 2 baths~ ~ving room, dining 10om, kltch41n
utiity room: Pljced at $29,9QO.OO
VACANT LAND· :ffcroximalaly 10 acros localod on Bob
Mc:Cotm~k.Rd. Cal ,, or
info"l"'don.

rm., wtfi replace , 2
pool, extra
Call tor

BUILDIHO, lor that bulineq at home, 3 bed~
...,.,_ tJrlct ltome wilh 2 car garage. Nice are a
dose ro rawn can today ror a view. 24.5-9070.
•

x

3 Holr.. And 2 SIMrO, tt4-317-

Cotllo

bednna., 2 bal:hs, nice entry, LA &amp; family rm ., 3 car
garage. located on SR 160. Thi! can be a good
place to tell cars &amp; work at home. 21ota.

1841

Wooa ~a(iy, Inc.

63

1921 NEW USTING · Very clean home offering 3

SHADE- Co. Rei 44· 1 milli east of Rl 33- Ranch homo·
riawty nome dalad-PJice just nodu"!"!.SS.OOO·Call us todey.

.

lloclo, p.100, 11+441o7m.
oU,IIO pi 1121. - ..
Eq1f"i~ ltondotl.... WV.
304 75-'rom, 01' 1~..

lt1t, $25,1100 will buy lhis kwe~ hom e. 3 bedrm .
LR, kit, 1~ baths, corner lot &amp; garage . Virginia L.

RACINE· )45714 SR 331. Olclor type home hao 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, eat-ln kltchel\ LR. Llicaled in quia~
good neighborhood. Extra 'lot. ~uld ba an oxcellont
bf!llding lol Soma applia11C811. Onl)l $30,000 .

MINERIVIu.E· Block commen:lel bulking .wUh 4,000 tq.
rt. co~ cancrote ftoor, axtnolloragt bldg., 10'mlnutea ,
from P~. Prtcacl to...
. .

~ydrorilo

MU

POIIEAOY-IIIulbar~ Hgta., 1 ftoor plan, 2 BR, LR,
ba..ment, eat-in kit. wlbln:h cabinots, l.arga gara,ge.
lnoo~ 11 d Loi.W. io -145" """'-d. Low &amp;&lt;l'f:. •
t,

MIDDLEPORT· Low maintenance atone home. Good
ccindilon, 3 BR, t 112 beth, clpse to lown. $22,000. ·'

Fonl 1 ' - Good 1"-Siclllo .... - . - a'!'I:

~~(]!. Q/J
23 LOCUST ST. ~ ~.J/o/e
............__ __
.;;.; 446-6806

1821 BR 141 · Close to !own 10Ao. MIL
.18,000.00. Coli VIrginia 388-8828 .

Real Estate General

. HENRY E. CLELAND.--992-6191
. TRACY BRINAGER-;..-••
949·2439
...
SHERR I HART..........-.742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 ••992·6191
CLELAND ..........992-6191

NEW U~MiddleP,Ort -4
,bedroom, bath, LR, kit.'llum
olding, Make a gnoot nontal
or home. F!rtcad far a quick
IIIIa. Don't min thl1 one
Owner wants to Mil bafolll
Christmas.

Real Estate General

Smith 3118-8826 .

Real Estate Gene.._l

~

Co. RON EVANs ENrERPRISES,
Joc"-r, OH 1-100~374528.

RUTH GOODY, ASSOC~ 378-2684

PROfESSIONAl. SUVKE MAKES THE Dlffaota

Home

Sopite Tank Pumping 180, Golllo

RANNY BLACKBURN, BROKER ~46 0006

Real Estate General

'

'

•

TUPPERS PLAINS· 4,400 sq. ~. block &amp;
brick building approximately 20 years old,
one floor with 3 baths, ·3 unit air
conditioners, kitchen &amp; bedroom areas.
App10ximately H 112 acres of ground on
paved street with cement driveway.
ASKING $65,000
ftOII JUST REDUCED Dec. 1, t mile !rom tho

IIIIDDLEPORT- Grant St. 2 story frame
home with 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath, new
wiring, new bath, newer kitchen. and new
electric heat pump. Dishwasher, fireplace,
new disposal, central air. Anic space with
drop stairs, cable hook-up. Apptox. 1 acre.
Nice home in very good location.
ASKINGI $45,900
Tuppera Pl•lna - 6+ acres with one floor
frame home, 2 bedrooms, 1 112. baths,
large front porch ~ enclosed back porch,
new shingle roof, fireplace with insert. B.G.
heating with newer heater, TPC water,
:varage and barn.·. Unit air conditioner,
paved street. IMMEOIATE POSSESSION!
ASKING $29,500.
.
.
~INE · . 1111~ Hill Rd.·' 2.72 ac:res.-;wttl!
.older frame hoille, 3 bedrooms, bath;
atti.o apace, encloae~ front por~. alao
includel 2 older mobile homes aet up ""'
lo~ one In poorer condition, one nioer With
unit air and built on enclosed frOnt pon:h.
Manr fruit · tree• and be~ vlnea, TPC
.... Outbuildings. MAKI:' AN OFFER!
ASKING $45,000.
.
.

.

.

'~

.RACINE - 1+ acre with 2 llety frame hoJNi,

lnclucloa 4-6 ·bacrr-ira, 2 batllo, ~n
area, Alto lnclucloallam, Q81BG8, ~
shop and 1971 12 • Ill Shalutpear , _
home. Trailer rents for S225/mOnth.
Apartinent ,_fOr $150+/month. A Home,
A llualnesa a rentallnoome all in one Deal I
ASKING I $46,000.

WINTER IS UPON USU

THAT
HOME FOR THE

COME FIND

COZV

18114 NEEO LOTS
home tor you! ~ bedroom. 2 ! lOry has new
.
fumace and .,dmg. Close to the Gavin Plan t 245·
9070.
'

•

UnivetliiY 3 year old ranch ,. bedrOOm on 2 acres,

won't tall long oo call Wlma ai24S.II070.

recendy remolded, great space
beauti ful trees, call Wi lma at 245-

H38. LMEVIEW SUBDIVISION • A CHOICE

PlACE TO BUR.O - 2 to 5 aaes more or less driw
to White Rd ., to CharoMs. Lake Dr. ro lakeview Ct.
Offtfing 2 Flal to rolling loll, a variety of tres and

baautiful ~w of the lake. All amenities available.
Rural water, underground electricity , aerator
sy!Uema acceptable . Restrictive convenants apply. 1
Close to Holzet and lhopping.

1111. POINT 0, PIR,!CTION SURROUNDS Jhls
gracloul home. Located In an exclusive area. Eleven
total roome with three bathrooms. Foyer with open
stairway, large living ruom with WOOdbumlng flroplace,
fermat dining room, ~ kHchen, family room onc1
game rooms- an_,~ . Solar1um will lei you
erjoy lour 11411110111. F..., OV8rSize&lt;l bedrOoms. Master

1813 NICE BUILDING LOT IN TOWN, old house
on the property In need ol alor of repair. 245-9070
1141 - REDUCED SUBURBAN BEAUTV - The
remarkable spaciOu!: hOme with view or the county. Italian
tile foyer, cathedral ceiling with balcony, 3 BR, 2'/, baths.
living room with WOOdburnlng fireplace . equip. kitche n.
breakfast room has a lg. -Mndow. stereo speakers
throughout , brass light fixtures and much more. 2 car
Bttacnecl garage, attiC storage , 2 acres mil. This house Is
maintenance free of best quality. Make your appointment

and

agree.

bedroom hu. cathedral ceiling, whirlpool bath and
booi.Cifl.j lithod · Flnlt 1toor laundry. Anaohed 2
C11 JIOIIOO. Two pumflll wttl1 backup. 5.o4-41 ac. m/1.
wyou like lndiYicllalty your nome con be on the maltbox.
Oiralltled Buywo only. VIrgilia 388-8826.

1172.1TATE ROUTE 110- 3 ac. lol m/1, $15,000.00.
Cl\o"""ls - · Mob an ollor.

.lri3. 'PBiilll DIYILOPillt:ti LAND - Land lays '""'"

'Older 2 otory ' homo Willi • bedrooms and bulldlngo.
Htlmo In nooct
117 ac. m/1. Call lor location.

to'""""·

'::.,!-r~=:.=:~~·~ei
OWnor • -to a ~1*11-

W!tm; DAI( RD. looatlon, 30 acres m11 vacant
lind with Hmbor. mlnorel ilghtl, good rood ~onlago.

, -

SOme~ land. 128,000.

1171. HAVE A IIAUTlPVL C:OUH1'RY ESTATE • Build
lfOUI' ~ hc!me -~~~ • lo91 iolioo. 73 ..... ml1
ol """tit lfnd, ctoan l h d - . oOih I bit o l - 8
...~-~. Thla~ ... -~. ito
Ia a pold 1111t1ng lake. Groat for • chun:ll

, grourida or
·'

aub~vlde.

Long Road

1923 PATRIOT AREA, niCe llarter homo wllh 3

1912. NEW un.G- • BR, 21&gt;athS, ll9llamlly room
with firaplaco, large IIYing room with gas ftraplltco, dining

1924 BEAUTIFUL TRAILER WITH ALL THE

room, kitChen, utility room , basement, front porch,
acree ned 201110 side porch, patio and t CIT garage
•iluated on 1 acre i'nll app. 1 mne from town. 1lH home
'"it designed tor living space ancl in hOme business. ca ll
tor price and location.

bedroom, NEW heat pump Mlh central air, new hor
wa10r lank. exto IIDrago building . nicotoveJ Jot
RJANJSHINQS, on a rtntal lot, priced rig ht 111

•13.500.00 calllllday at 245-9070.

1122 Q.OSE IN. Clllrt 3 BR trome- 5 oaoo m.I, LR,

011-ln kli&lt;:tten, I ballt, ,Ytl'f lg. FR. I 04' o-'11110, Tltlo
homo Ia Jull right for 1 young huntly or • CXII.I&gt;II.
- · lrtlt!Jill. to-. CIIE- NI0..... -111117

~LL BRICK ~ bt&lt;tma 2 11ory
home lull baserMnt 1 car garage. Just like a new

H82 ELEGANT

homo . Appointmllnt ontr. V&gt;rginla 368-8826.

�.

.

Pomeroy-Middlepo~~lllpolla,

Page DB Sunday nmee Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

December 5, 1113

American scientists :usi~g genetic .
·e ngineering to produce better ~atfish

/

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil aud Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere Ia
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate Ia the weekly ton test may do so by guessing
the farm's owuer. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Dally Seutinel,lll . Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may wil! a ~S prize from the

Ohio Valley PubHshlng t:o. Leave your uame,
address aud telepboae uumber with your card
· or letter. No teleDhoae calbJ wiiJ be ~~t:Cepted. AD
coolest eutrles should be turued Ia to tile ue'llllpaper ofr~ee by 4 p.m. each Wednaday. In case
of a tie, the wiuuer will be ehoseu by lottery.
Next week, a GaiDa County farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Cooservatlou
·
District.

:U. S. share of commercial wheat
·market declining in Latin America
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department ·says the
U.S. share~ the commercial wheat
market in Latin America is declining, while the overall size of the
market has almost doubled in the
past five years.
• The United States enjoyed a 75
}lercent market share in 198283,
but this fell steadily to SO percent
In 198990.
· Now, the United States has only
23 percent of the commercial market for wheat in Latin America,
according to a report by the Foreign Agricultural Service on Export
)iarkets for U.S. Grain and Products.
"The eight lar~est importing
countries (cxcludmg embargoed
Cuba) now porchase more wheat
:than during the easy credit climate
of the c.ly 1980s," said the report.
. The Jargest markets, Brazil,
Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, Colom. bia, Chile, Ecuador, ~o.livia, co.l. 1eciively imported 9 million tons m
. , ·199293. compared to only five mil·
. :lion tons in 198889.
''Brazil accounts for one-half ot

this incr~. but wheat ilnports by
Mexico and Chile have grown dramatically as well," the report said.
The increase in commercial
wheat imports is accounted for
parlly by reduced producer supporters and the dismantling of gov-,
emment-controlled suwly and pur·
chasing organizations, 1t said. .
"Wheal imports grew in some
countries despite 'price band' rariff
structures, regarded by many as
trade ~trictive," the report said.
As to why the U.S. has lost market share, the report said,
''Argentina has benefited from
ttade arrangements with Brazil
(and) Canada has priced its wheat
aggressively into this rnarke~ at the
expense of U.S . market share.
Also, the Latin market has drawn
the attention of the European Community as well in recent years.''

Council requested new standards to
. reflect changes in harvesting and
marketing practices.
Presently, the standard applies
to seleeted and hybrid varieties of
the highbush blueberry produced
under cultivation. Tbe proposal
recomm~nds that the staJidilrd
inchide the rabbiteye species, since
it is grown in sufficient quaniiiies.
·It is also proposed that siZe no
longer be part of the grade requirements.
·
''Fresh blueberries are generally
not sized by packen anct the sizes
of blueberries vary from viuiety to
variety,'' said the announcement.
"For these reasons blueberries
would be able to meet a U.S. grade
without having to meet a specific
size.''
Another proposed revision to
the standard would base tolerances
on a percentage of defects and not
a set number, the procedure' which
is used in the current standard .
There would also be a scplll'llte tolerance for blueberries that stm

WASHINGTON (AP} ...:. &lt;JOv-:ernment scientists are using aenetic
engineering to produce a superior
breed of catfish.
·
.
The proceu. known u gyno·
genesis, produce$ catfish with
greater tolerance to poor water
qualil)', IIIOle resistance to disease,
more efficient f~ cooveraion and
improved grilwrJI rates and body
compositiOI\. ,
Scientists at the Agriculture
Research Service's CatfiSh Genetic
Research Unit in Stoneville, Miss.,
have even solved what had been a
maj&lt;X" problem with the process that the superior.race included. only
female offspring, :axpc:pments with
sex-conttol mechanisms have
developed females who can ptoduce male and female fish..
The offspring have a lower survival nue but are used to clone certain desired uaits. Generations of
these fiSh are brild with other catfish strains to add varietion. reduc·
ing their vulnerability to disease
and other probletlls.
The gynoge_netically-produced
males, when mated with· norm111
females, produce only male off-

dro~ in

!

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department is seeking
comments on a proposal to revise
the U.S. standards for fresh bluebenies.
.~ve~stems.
The Nonb American Blueberry
Brottn skins and scars are considered defects when readily
noticeable. "The proposal would
add definitions for broken skins
and scars to give graders and interOTTAWA (AP)- Canada's ested parties a better distinction for
prime minister dropped his opposi- judging their criteria," the
·
tion to the North· American Free announcenlent said.
Trade Agreement, a~reeing to a
Jan. 1 signing that will eliminate
the final obstacle to the pact's
implementation.
The announcement Thursday by
Prime Minister Jean Chretien,
DAYTON - Jeremiah Johnson,
hailed by a "delighted" President
Vinton,
has enrolled in the ElecClinton, came after the Canadian
leader failed to wiD concessions he ttonics En,~nrring Technology
Technical Institute,
promiSed to gel during his election program at
Dayton.
campaign.

·.:1JilE JEA$QIJ.~S .
BEST BUYS
.

AREAl

Johnson to

-

i

'93.' T,RANS. SPORT SE.

They're rounding 1he far 111m and beading into the back stretclL••
•

'92' GUND AMS
a.to.,l/~ tit, en..., OS.

7 Pa~ie...et, lillolltely lollllll.

FROM

$13900

9

FROM ·

-the leaders In the Peoples Bank Discount Brokerage S~ Picking Contest are:

0

••
••
•

'

'

~

\

'

I

I

I I

I

I

I

I 11 I

I

I

I

~

341"

Ill%

I

As of November 26, lbe!e ~the top 5 perfonnlng portfoUos out of the hundreds In our contest. Om1ll, 346 ponililos

baYe Increased In value! ED COilteslalt chose 5publicly tr.lded stocks from a list of I 00 selected COIIIpanles.l'erf!mnance
1s based upon clwJaeinportrolioYIIIuc from the dose of business friday, October 8, 19,93 dlrougb Friday, NcMmber 26.
111e percentage pW!Ossof.Uftllrteswlll be ttaclred through 1993. Peoples BankwllliWIId $500 to die toppedormer~
$250 ~r second pla:e ul $100 lor tblrd place.

111e Peoples ll&lt;lnk lllialuM Bloi!e~~BC Service Is ida1 for meslors wbo do J1« ~.lhe benefit of research or
reoommeodatlons, but wl!o sdlllnllll on service llld per50IIII beneftts. ~Bank dlscouot brokerage seaytc:es are
o&amp;red thlOugh Olde D1Koon1 Corponllon, MemberSIPC, NYSI!, NASD. Discoulllbroiriritgellnds are DOIPDlC iDI,uml:

As/1for" t:l1lfiJilemmlt tlbeotml ,..,.,f.e st'Wflh
Mar1e1t1

Athens

Belpre

m-3155

593-7761

423-7516

LoM'll
896-2369

Middleport

m-6661

Ill,

opb offWI/IIa lltiM.

N~

Nmrk

75H9S5

7811-8820

mJc:

tbe Plllns
791-4517

TOO qnly

376-7123

"

'i ' .....

~9·3! , BUI~K ~REGALS
mt, Cl'lll~,, OliN..., rHr,lllfDIItr;. '
'

t

'

•

Fli. $l"2,

•

\

Pkk3:
573
Pick 4:
8635

Super Lotto :
2-7-37-38-39-44
Kicker:
9'32331

PageS

'

.

'93~.

.

~

SUNBIRDS -

Alto., .1/C, Wflf,;,I.

FROM$

·Vol. 44, NO. 156
Multimodlalnc.

..

,..fCIIttr,

Strickland still
reform-minded
after year on hill

:serious crime
is declining

' WASHINGTON (AP) .....; FBI
statistics show violent crime is
declining a little this year, but law
enforcement officials say neither
ihey nor the public take much comfort in the numbers.
. Violent crime during the first
$ix months of 1993 decreased 3
percent from .the same period in
1992, while the number of property
crimes dropped by 5 percent,
according to preliminary finding or
t!Je FBI's Uniform Crime Report-

Jly JAMES LONG (OVP Staff)
and wire reports
Ohio's freshman Congressman
Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, said
a frustrating year on capitol hill
will neither stop his fight to reduce
government waste nor end his
efforts to identify with the people
of the districL
The Associated Press reported
today that some members of the
freshman class - the biggest in
half a century - were disappointed
with the progress of legjslative
reform.
Sttickland said he shares that
sentiment "Yes I'm frustrated." he
admitted. "It would not be accurate
to say that a while lot of progress
was made in the area of congressional reform. •
However, be plans next session
to continue pushing a bill he has
introduced thai would prohibit
house legislators from sending

ing~.

STOCKING • MagKie Biggs, coordiuator or
tbe food pantry of the Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport, bas been busy stoeklug the pantry

By LEIGH ANjiiE REDOVIAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of about 30 churches

, ar

(AP) -Grady Lee Nelson Jr. was

for the holiday season. Biggs says she is looking
forward to the benefits that tbe new Regional
Food Center wlll bring to tbe conuty's pantries.

Meigs church members raise
$3,000 for regional food center

pf~; ~ewf·~;:kAII_1:~~~~~~a~~~.t:;
ntrl UU I sponsored br 1/Je Tri-Counr:y~Coml rsar
·y with
~::r~~:o~J~':;;::ir~~~~:
ann • v·e
.
.
the consttuction of a new

· day
.·
1iues

1 Section, 10 Page• 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 6, 1993

~----s-h~o-w--~====~~r=

' The small. reported declines
inay be positive, but I ·doubt most
Americans will draw much comfort
from them because the levels of
violent crime and drug trafficking
.remain so staggering,',' t:BI Direc·
.(l&gt;r Louis J. Frech S81d m a state·ment Sunday.
· The number of murders
(emained stable while all other
icported violent crimes went down:
Robberies by 5 percent, forcible
r&lt;~pes, 4 percent, and aggravated
·~saults, I percenL
.
~ Reported property cnmes,
meanwhile, were down across the
lloard, with burglary declining 8
percent, motor vehicle theft, 5 per~nt, and larceny-tlleft, 4 percent.
Arsons. which decreased by 15 percent, are not included in the FBI's
·determination of the overall crime
index.
· · In Cincinnati, ~keswoman Lt.
·.Cindy Johns sa1d police have
·noticed crimes are more severe

Low tonJcht In upper lOs,
cloudy. Tuesday cloudy, hlp In
lowtr 40s.

•

•

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii

Smith a·uick-Pontiac!

attend ITT

ow

'.

exports sparked a rmancili! and poultry product exports, with
ciis1s for U.S. agriculture.
export value forecast at $8.5 biiBulk exports hit a record in lion," Eu11ene Moos, undersecre·
1981, when the combined vlliue of tary of agnculture f(l' international
shipments to China, Eastern affairs and commodity programs,
Europe and the Soviet Union told an o~qoolt forum T~y. l
tolaled tpOre than $5.5 billion, · Those· sales renect greater
compared with $2.5 billion in demand for beef, pork and variety
1993.
.
·
meats in such countr:Jes as Ja~.
If ,it weren't for increased So.utbKoreaandMexico,hewd. ·
exports of rice to Japan and coaon
·Another high-value category,
to MeXico, along with otber cooo- horticultural products, is ~oolting
tries, the piCture far bulk commodi- up: That term re~ers ~ fruits, vegties could be even worse.
etables and detlvauves such as
Because of the drop in buUc . jui~. Sales of those products ~
commodities the ovemll volume of also m for a record, up $300 mil'exportS- is pWjected at 130 million !ion from 1993 to reach $7.5 billion
tons, compared with 147 million in m 1994 ·beca.use of exports to
1993.
.
Canada. Europe and Japan.
But increased"exports of so·
"Market p~omotion actiyities
called high-value products will hav~ ~ pu:Uc~y ~ffeclive_ m ·
lceep the value of exports froin slip- capua~ on the~ fOlCign
ping. ''Another record year IS demand for more fruits. ~ v"~;
expected for U.S. lives)OCk, ~ . ~~asr._~f a healthier diet,

Business briefs
· STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
· -Volvo canceled plans to merge
· with French' carmaker Renault and
fon:cd out the man who made the
deal, Chairman Pehr G. Gyllenhammar.
. The moves Thursday carne in
· response to opposition from the
' auto and truck maker's Swedish
. shareholders, who feared French
- dominance. Tbe merger would
· have created the world's sixth·
: largest automaker.

''

sen-

Volume of u. s. farm exports
expected to drop in 1994
WASHINGTON (AP) ExporterS of com and other coarse
' grains, soybeans and wheat face
grim prospects in 1994, while the
year holds out hope for exp!ll'len of
mea~ milk products, fruits and veg- ·
etables. the Agriculture Dejlartment
says.
A repQrt issued Tuesday project·
ed fann exportS at $42.~ billion in
the fiscal year that started OcL I,
no change from the previous year.
But exports of coarse grains,
soybeans and wheat will d~line
$800 million in value because of
sma,ller demand, higher U.S. prices
and increased competition, the
report said. '
.
What's worse, it said, the volwne of so-&lt;:al1ed bulk exports will
drop to 94 million tons. That's 15
percent below fiSCII11993's level of
110.5 million tons and the lowest
volume since 1986, when a sharp

.

spring. USiug lheic "s~" · the spflni weevil infeswion by,
for breedina would aivc catfish ==n~~o~~:;~
firms
an economic advanllle over ..... ~..- R--..... Service's'
other f!lrmcrs, the Agriculture u"'
-v .,.......
,...__.__
_ t said.
,
Boll eevil' Research Unit ip;
~;;~·
· ved calfisb lines will Suutsville, MiJs:
i•
"The tubel don 'tlllniCt t.....ft.
be availab to com~~~C~tial,produc....._
ers sooner t]la 0 anY. produced cia! inseciS and are al!lfe lltem!ltbrousll convenliooal bretding. .
live to spraying, especially ncar•
"But we're still talking years townships or en~S,.
down the ~" said rqroductive :?.dfi~r:;:..~~-;:!~
r pbysiologjst Cheryl Goudie.
· For besuesults, one tube sboulil.
WASHINGTON (AP) -'- Bait· be ~laced every 100 feet around the
il\g the )loll w~vil just got a bit · penmeter of the field, two to four
easier f!ll' c:ouon fanners.
. times every growing seMOD.
·.
New, effective flail tubes to con.Thomas Plato, of Plato In!lus- ·
trol the pest are· now available triCs, said tile tubes are elfe;Ciive 1Q ·
tbroush a HoUSton company, Plato to 14 times lpnger than a single'
Industries, Inc. '
insecticide spray.
'
Much lik.e roach traps, the
Te5ts were conducted in ~992 m,
biodegmdablo paper tubes use only Tel!BS. Oklal)oma, l..ouisi,ana, Mis·
5 percent to 10 percent of the sissippi, Altansas, Alsbama, Geor; ·
amount of malath1on, the insecti. gia and :renne:s5ee•
. •.
cide usually sprayed on colton.
The tubes, which are available·
They anract the pests with in boxes of 60, including ,
pheromone, a synthetic version of pheromone dispensers, dowels to;
boll weevils' scent, and have an hold the tubes and two pairs of ·
insec~cide coatilig.
gloves, will also be sold in Mexico,:
When plaCed atound test fields Central America and South 1\meri~
in eight states, the tu!Jes reduced. ca.
· ''

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
defeats
Lancers

•

Regional Food C~ter in Logan.
The $1.6 million Regional Food
Center will handle food distribution ·
in Athens, Hocking, Perry, Jackson, Vinton, Galli&amp;, Meil!S, Washington and Morgan Counues.
According to Paul Reed, chairman of the campaign in Meigs
County, the ftrst offerin~ made by
the congregations raue&lt;l over
$3,000.
Additional offerings for the new
center will be taken throughout the
next four years.
Construction on the center is 10

setting up chairs for a Sunday religious service on the USS Arizona
when the Japanese dropped their
liombs. He escaped death a few
minutes later by diving overboard
as the ship sank.
Fifty-1wo years after his escape,
Nelson will be returned to the ship
Tuesday - to be buried beside his
Arizona shipma1es who died in the
attack on Pearl Harbor.
'Nelson's wife; Loralee, of
Houston will hand over his ashes to
a National Park Service diver, who
will place tliem inside the rusted
hulk 1hat remains on lhe harbor
floor beneath the USS Arizona
Memorial.
Nelson, who was 18 at the time
SPACE CENTER, Houston
of the attack, went on to spend the (AP)- Astronaut Kathryn Thornnext 30 years in the Navy. He died ton, lifted high by a shuttle crane,
June 14 at the age of 69.
held a 400-pound twisted solar
Nelson will be the ninth Arizona panel from the Hubble Space Telesurvivor to be buried with his ship- scope over her head, let go and
mates, who remain entombed in the watched it slowly drift away as
battleship.
·
space debris .
. · One of the 1,177 shipmates was
Thornton and her spacewalking
Gtady's uncle, Jack Nelson, who partner, Tom Akers, then installed
died when the Arizona was hit with new solar wings on Hubble today.
a -1,760-pound bomb on the morn- . The discarded wing - a thin
ing of Dec. 7,1941.
blanket of plastic - began flipping
The public ceremony, "Remem- as space shuttle Endeavour backed
ber World War II," will include away. Sunlight glinted off die goldHawaii National GUard planes fly· en surface of the panel as it floated
i~g over in the "missing man" for·
like a lost kite, dramatic with the
mation. The guest speaker will be blue ball of Earth in the backR:ichard Best, a Navy captain who ground.
was a pilot alioatd the aircraft carri"It looks like a bird," Thornton
er Enterprise the day of the attack.
said as the shuttle moved farther
· The Navy will conduct a private and farther away.
&amp;ervice aboaid the memorial. It will
Installing new electricity~gener­
include prayers, wreath presenta- ating solar panels was the purpose
tions, a 21-gun salute and the play- of today's spacewalk, the second of
ing of taps.
five to correct Hubble's bad vision,
jilters.and other problems. The $1.6
billion telescope got two new pairs
of gyroScopes and new fuses dur·
ing Sunday's spacewalk by two
other Ell(leavour astronauts.
Both excursions required extra,
unexpected work: tossing the solar
panel today and fussing over a misaligned telescope door on Sunday.
Tht discarded panel joined
6, 700 other pieces of space junk
being tracked by the U.S. Space
Comr~Jand and was expected to
star in orbit for a year before
fallmg through the aanosphere and
burning up.
·
.
Hubble's old solar wings shook
every time the telescope moved In
and out of daylight The one that
was scrapped was badly twisted
and could not b!l rolled up for
trali5port horne. It retraCted about a
· third of its 40-foot length and then
stopped. ·

begin in mid-1994 and is expected
to be in operation at the start of
1995.
The Southeastern Ohio Food.bank:.Jo~at.ed in Nelsonville cure
rently serYJces ·83· food disttibuiion
outlets in the nine-county area.
These include food, pantries, soup
kitchens and lunch sites.
The new 14,000 square-foot
foodbank will meet the storage
needs of both the current foodbank
and kitchen operations and will
allow for growth in both programs.
According to Bob Garbo,
deputy direciOr of Tri-County
Community Action, the building of
the new center will allow the six
food pantries located in the county
to purchase larger quantities and a
wider variety of foods.
"The improvements of the new
facility will have a large impact on
the working families whose depen-

·

"There are lots or people up
there who think this is a bad idea
and don't wanl to see i1 passed
because it works for them," he said.
Members of congress are able to
send three mailings to constituents
each year at taxpayer expense.
Strickland said ibis often
amounts to free political propaganda for legislator'S. He said he spent
less on his entire campaign last
year 1han former congressman
Robert McEwen spent on these
mailings.
"Some senior members of my
pany are frightened for me,"
Suickland said. "I've had some
members ask me 'Can~t you justify
just one?'"

Meigs Commissioners
accept water project bid

dence on our services is growing,"
Garbo said. "The program will
also provide benefiiS to the Senior
Citizel\ .programs by allowing the
~s to ·stretch their 4oll!its="·
Last lear, over. 2,300,000
pounds o food were distributed to
more than 80,000 needy people,
with 101,681 pounds being distributed to 5,581 needy in Meigs
County.
Had adequate freezer and storage space been available, some
700,000 additional pounds of food
could have been delivered to
26,000 more people in the nine·
county area, many of those children, il was reponed.
A salvage area with a modem
conveyor system will allow the
new foodbank to recover thousands
of pounds of food and personal
items that in the past would be
thrown away, the food bank official
said.

Meigs County Commission
unanimously approved a $33.352
bid to complete the Rutland water
projecl duting last Wednesday's
meeting. ~:··!Oxca¥1tin« Inc., of
Racine, will install 1,285 feet of
six-inch pipe.
Durin~ the meeting, commissioners wd they did not expect the
project to be completed by the end
of this year.
The bid increased $3,892 from
the original offer because the company had to re-calculate the prevailing wage, Commissioner Janet
Howard said . Commission had
tabled the bid during the Nov. 30
meeting.
In other business. commission:
• Meigs Litter Control will
receive two state grants totaling,
$62,000.
.
• reappointed Nora Rice and
Jean Weaver to four-year terms to
the Meigs Counly Board of Menial
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities.
• approved an unidentified size
bond for a new county coun
employee - Kelly Milam. Milam
will work in . Judge Patrick
O'Brien's office.
Commission approved with one
And early this morning, it also
had the new solar wings. They will vote the following appropriations:
not be unfurled until Friday.
The astronauts "bave definitely
earned their Dr. Goodwrench certificate, and service station Endeavour has qualified for a triple A rating," said David Leckrone, Hubble's senior project scientist ,
A candlelight vigil will be held
Musgrave and Hoffman were to on the upper parking lot in
replace Hubble's wide field-plane- Pomeroy Friday evening at 7 p.m.
tary camera and magnetometers by the Meigs Chapter of Mothers
duiing spacewalk No. 3, beginning Against Drunk Driving (MADD).
late tonight. The new camera conThe local group is joining other
tains corrective minors to compen- chapters around the state in vigils
sate for the error in Hubbl~'s pri- being held in remembrance of
loved ones los1 in alcohol-related
mary mirror.
accidents.
Ellen Jane Rought, alternate
state representative from the chapter, and Jerry Rought, victim advocate, are chairmen of 1he vigil.
They will be assisted by Pat
Thoma, state representative.
Reggie Robinson, known locally
as "Rockin' Reggie" will be Ruest

Spacewalking astronauts
install new solar wings
While Thornton and Akers were
detaching the deformed panel late
Sunday, the panel flexed with the
slightest mouon and flapped like a
sheet on a clothesline on a windy
day.
The European Space Agency
made both the old and new panels.
Story Musgrave and Jeff Hoffman spent nearIy eighl hours in the
open cargo bay Sunday, held up by
the misaligned door to the gyro·
scope compartmenl. When they
were through, the Hubble had six
working gyroscopes again to guide
i~ three electronics units to run the
gyros and a new set or eight fuses.

unsoliciled mailings. Sttickland
said the reform measure could save
millions - and he is not overly
confident il will be approved.

• $13,544.54 to Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Districl's
equipmem fund.
• $5,000 to the Common Pleas
Court.
.
• $1,500 to the Common Pleas
Court.
• $500 10 the Common Pleas
Court.
• $2,542.25 to the Communily
Corrections Program.
• $1,000 to the Community Corrections Program.
• $1,500 to the Community Corrections Program.
• S2S,OOO to the Mental Retardation/Developmental Disabilities'
capital improvemeniS fund.
Commission also approved with
one vote the following transfers:
• $240 from probate supplies to
juvenile supplies.
• $180 from other supplies to
juvenile supplies.
• $4 30 from additional help to
juvenile supplies.
• $200 from juvenile per diem to
juvenile supplies.
• $1,000 from juvenile mileage
to juvenile supplies.
• $200 from juvenile witness
fees 10 juvenile supplies.
• $500 from juvenile guardian
ad item to juvenile supplies.

Meigs MADD Chapter
to hold candlelight vigil
speaker. He is ·a counselor for
Health Recovery in AlhensJRobinson performs regularly at dances
for teenagers. and at drug and alcohol free gathers where he gives lectures on abuse. After the vigil
Robinson will present a program of
music on the parlcing loL
The program will consist of the
Rev. James Acree, Hillside Baptist
Church pastor, giving th e invocation and benediction, special music
by Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clonch and
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hood, Beth
Mayer singing "America, the Beau·
tiful", and James Soulsby closing
with "God Bless America".

Mason voters approve levy
.

naut
work

vised

.

Mason County vo1ers passed a programs are also ineluded in the
$3.8 million excess levy for schools levy.
Additional items are supplemenby a 482-vot.e margin in a special
election Slllw'day. The unofficial tal salaries to ali regularly
tally was 2,419 for the levy, 1,937 employed professional and service
pelSOnnel employees and supagainst.
Thiny·two percent of the regis- plements to the regular budget for
tered voters cast their ballots, and building improvements, utilities,
officials felt the weather conditions operation of plant, and funds for
may have kept many from going to · new facilities.
The levy will also provide for
the polls. A steady down~ur of
rain hit the county the enure day, community suppon of the Mason
County Public Library. Health
up into the evening.
The five-year excess levy will Deparanent and Wes1 Virginia
provide for flee textbooks, instruc- Cooperative Extension Services.
Excess collectioos annually are
tional materials, library books,
for capital imreference materials and general desipaled
ot1ice opc:qiing expenses. Co-cor- provements.
The levy will take effect July I,
ricular and extra-curricular trips,
vocational and early childhOod 1994.

..

1\

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