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••'

.

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentin

Friday, December 10, 1

In addition to being a pan of the
"Twas The Night Before Christ·
mas" show cast this holiday season,
Wolfe will also be performing in
the Reson Entenainment Chrisunas
Show presented at the Contempo·
rary Resort Hotel's Convenuon
Center called "Jolly Holidays".
Earlier this year, Bruce was
selected to perform in several other
Disney shows in addition to his
performances in the park's daily
Surprise Celebration Parade, the
Spectro'Magic electrical parade,
and in Mickey's Starland Show .
These shows include the castle
show called "DisneyMania" and
"Disney World Is Your World",
which is presented at the Tomor·
rowLand Theater.
Also, in August, soon after his
appearance at the Meigs County
Fair Wolfe was chosen to perform

CHADWICK WOOTEN
Navy Petty .Offieer 2nd Class
Chadwtck Woot.en, a 1986 gradu·
ate of Kyger CrWc High School of
Cheshire, was JeCCndy commended
as a Distinguished Instructor at
Fleet Training Cent.er, Naval Sta·
tion, Norfolk, Va.
Wooten was chosen for sus·
tained arid superior classroom per·
formance.
He joined the Navy in August,
1986.

I

LONG BOTTOM · The Faithful
Gospel Church, Long Bouom will
have a h~mn sing at 7 p.m. Friday.
The Datly Family Smgers and
other local talent will be featured.
LOTIR!DGE · Country music
night wiU be held at the Lottridge
community center Friday at 6 p.m.
A dinner will be held for the bands
who will play from 7 to midnight.
The public is invited. The Center is
located on Athens County Road 52.
POMEROY · Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will meet
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Public Library . The pro·
gram will feature a video by Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds and a talk by a
German exchange student attend·
ing Meigs High School.
CHESTER · Special meeting of
Shade River Lodge 453, F. and A.
M. at Chester Friday, 7:30p.m.
with work in the entered apprentice
degree. Refreshments.
SATURDAY
MILLFIELD · A round and
dance will be held Saturday

from 8 to II p.m. at the Russell
building in Millfield with music by
Out of the Blue Band.
MIDDLEPORT - A craft and
bake sale will be held by the Syra·
cuse Church of the Nazarene from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 188 Walnut
Street in Middlepon Saturday.
POMEROY · The Belles and
Beaus Western Style Square Dance
Club will have an open dance at the
senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy,
Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. Caller
will be Keith Rippeto. All western
style square dancers are invited.
Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY · The Royal Oak
Dance Club will have its annual
Chrisunas dance at Royal Oak Park
Saturday from 8 to II p.m. Punch
and chips wiU be provided.
BURLINGHAM - Modern
Woodinen of America Camp 7230
is sponsoring a potluck Chrisunas
dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the Burling·
ham Modern Woodmen hall. The
camp will be delivering dinners
late afternoon to the elderly, sick
and shutins of the area.

the Meigs County Library will hold
Kidfest Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m.
There will be games with prizes,
balloon s, a clown, and refresh ·
ments. lt's all free.

CHESTER • A live nativity
scene with children and animals
will be featured in the parking lot
by the Chester United Methodist
Church Sunday, 6 to 7 p.m. Sharon
Hausman, pastor, invites the public
to drive by or stop and view the
display.

TUPPERS PLAINS ·Tuppers
Plains Post 9053 or the Veterans or
Foreign Wards and Ladies Auxil·
iary will hold its potluck Christtnas
dinner Saturday. AU members and
families invited. Families to take
covered dish . Santa will be there
with treats for the youngsters.

MONDAY
POMEROY · The Bedford
Township trustees will hold a regu·
Jar meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

HARTFORD · The annual
Christmas dinner for American
Alloys employees and retirees of
Foote Mineral will be held Satur·
day night from II a.m. to 6 p.m. at
the Union hall in Hartford.

POMEROY · Disabled Ameri ·
can Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary
will have a meeting and Chrisunas
dinner, Monday at 7 p.m. at the
hall. There will be a gift exchange
with men to take gifts for men, and
women to take gifts for women.

RUTLAND · A danc e will be
held at the Rutland American
Legion hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to midnight. Music will be by Pure
Country and Then Some. The pub·
lie is invited.

BRADFORD · The Bradford
Church of Christ's children's choir
will present "Not a Creature was
Stirring", the story of the Feline
and McMouse families, Sunday at
7 p.m. at the church located at the
crossroads of State Route 124 and
Bradbury Road.

SUNDAY
RACINE - The Southern High
School choir will present a Christ·
mas coneen Sunday at 3 p.m. at the
high school.

A Mull 1med1a Inc. News paper

SS,408 or S189

per mo.

.
.
DELIVER WREATHs-Alice Thompson, left, and Addillou ·.,
Lewis of the Winding Trail Garden Club Wednesday morning ·:delivered 13 wreaths provided by tb.e club for use at Veterans ;::
Memorial Hospital durmg tbe holiday season.

its annual Christmas dinner at 5
p.m. at the firehouse for all community individuals and families
who helped at the fair booth and at
the ftrehouse in 1993. Meat will be
furnished and those attending arc to
take a covered

NOW OPEN fOQ
CHQI6TMA&lt;!&gt; 6EA&amp;)N
PolnHttl.. &gt;1• &amp; Up
Berried Holly Trees '17"
Live Norway Spruce
6-7ft. - '211"
Cut Treea-Live Wreaths
For the Loved Ones
Grave Blankets &gt;111"
ArtHJclal Sprays, YaH&amp;
and Wreaths
Open Dally 9-5, Sundays 12-5

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992-5776

. - - - - - - -.....;.;.;1

MILL STREET
BOOKS
OPEN SUNDAY
1·5 P.M.
ALL

BIBLES
REDUCED

20%
Free imprinting and
gift wrapping.
On the "T"
Middleport
992-6657

NEW 1994 ROYAL PALM HIGH TOP
CONVERSION VAN

Polo green, P. bucket seat, air, cruise, remote hatch,
P. wind., keyleu entry, 4 spd. auto., 5.71tter, V-8.

Leather seating, power sofa, rear stereo, video
caaHtte, running boards, walnut wood package,
caaoette. Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!

199

NEW 1994 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP
5
bench seat.

NEW 1993 CHEVY EXt CAB DieSEL PICKUP
6.5 turbo diesel eng., Silverado, loaded.

PRE-OWNED CARS
&amp; TRUCKS .

$22

HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:00-8:00;
SAT. 9:0-4:00;
SUN. 1:D0-5:00

. cah~·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
•

I

'

I

Hl30s

LOW
Details on
~==:=~ . page

A-2

Mrddleport·Pomeroy·Ga l lipol rs· PI. Pleasa nt· December 12. 1993

Vol. 28 , No. 42

:Strickland pushes Clinton's health plan in Me.igs

CHESTER · The Chester Vol·
unteer Fire Deparunem will have

NEW 1994 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28
5 speed trana.; air conditioning, cloth Interior.

,_-

'

Community calendar
FRIDAY

' ' .j'·

•
luttS-'

JOSEPHBAME
Navy Seaman Apprentice
Joseph W. Bame, son of Deborah J.
Young of39490 Success Road,
Reedsville, recently reported for
duty at Naval Submarine Base, San
Diego.
The 1989 graduate of Eastern
High School, Reedsville, joined the
Navy in September 1990.

BRUCE WOLFE
for Princess Diana and her children
of Wales.

River Valley wins league opener • Page C3
Pickens .trial opens Tuesday - Page A3

I

-

ln s1d0

poinsettias
PageB1

In the service

Wolfe performs at Disney
Meigs County's Bruce Wolfe.
heading towards his third year as a
performer at the Wall Disney
World Resort's Magic Kingdom,
has recently completed a touring
venue with Disney's "Twas The
Night Before Chrisunas" show that
will be a feature in the Magic
Kingdom park Dec. 3 through Dec.
25.
The show was taken on tour to
Niagara Falls, Canada, where six
shows were perfonned for standing
room only crowds as a part of
Ontario's Winter Festival Of Lights
celebration. The Disney cast, crew,
and directors were flown to Canada
for a four day stinL Among those in
the VIP audience at the Nov. 27
perfonnance were Rhea Perlman,
Jim Belushie, and John Candy as
well as several Canadian govern·
ment officials.

·Nurturing
Al onq lh C' R1vrr

OPEN
SUNDAY

By GEORGE ABATE
nma•S.ntlnal Newa Stall
.POMEROY-Local citizens should supponPresident
Bill Clinton's plan to halt the run-away costs of the health
care system, U.S. Congressman Ted Strickland, D·
l..ucasville,toldabout50peopleFridaynightatthePomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Cent.er.
·
Rural and poor residentS, such as those in Meigs County,
will only be more insecure if the current system continues,
.Strickland said.
He cited key area problems as the shonage of doctors
andunequalsharingofcostsbetweeninsuredanduninsured
:patients. ·
''To not act wiU be devastating," Stricldand said. "If we
don't. lake this opportunity we may not have another
chance." ·
Under the current system, nationwide bealth care spend·

ins is inefficient and unStrickland said. Through
wise, Strickland said.
these alliances, the aver·
Locally, only 35 per- "To not act will be devastatlng... lf we don't age citizen could negoti·
lower insurance pre·
cent of Meigs County's
take this opportunity we may not have an- ·at.e
miums and choose from
residents - 8,190 - are
several different plans.
insured. Strickland said. other chance."
James Witherell, medi·
One·fourth of the resi·
U.S.
Congresilman
cal
director of Veterans
dents are uninsured,
Ted Strickland Memorial Hospital, said
while one-fourth are on
Meditaidandtherentainhas a grasp
of
the fundamental
issues,
ing 15 ·percent are on - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Strickland
especially when the congressma.1 described people who
Medicare.
This breakdown fortes hospitals to charge the insured must choose between medical care and food.
About 70percentofVMH'spatientsare on Medicare or
patien!S more when .the remaining patients pay less or not
Medicaid, withanadditionall().20pertentuninsured,Dr.
at all, Strickland said.
The new system would provide universal care and Witherell said.
'The question is what fonn will it take and how will we
would pool citizens and businesses into health alliances,

pay for it?" Dr. Witherell asked. "On a local level there is
no place to cost-shifL"
Strickland said the health-care plan"COUld be funded by:
• eliminating the Medicaid program;
• diverting money from Medicare and Medicaid;
• cutting wast.e in the current system; '
• placing a 75-cent a pack tobacco tax; and
• taxing large companies that do not join the alliances by
I pc;rcent.
These steps would (exactly) offset the costs with the
new syst.em, Strickland added.
About two-thirds of the annual deficit is due to soaring
medical costs. Strickland said by revamping the health
care system the deficit would drop and the national det!t
would grow -slower.
Under Clinton's plan, employers would pay 80 percent
Contln11ed on page A2

·National Guard cuts:

Rickety
bridges:
Engineer
war~s of crisis;
Some units will dis.band,
.127,000 jobs will be lost seeks $3 million for replacem.ents in '94

By ROBERT BURNS
Auoclated Pra.. Wrlttr
W1\SHINGTON-The Army National Guard and Reserve willloseabout
127,000 jobs over the next six years and sume units will be disbanded as \he
.nation·' s backup combat and disaster
·
relief forces reorganize, the Pentagon
amounced Friday.
_
''We're here to talk about closing
an old chapter in the history of \he
Army and opening a11ew chapter that
will help us meet the~hallenses of the
post-Cold War world," Defense Secretary Les Aspin said in outlining the
changes.
.
.. Aspin said that although the Guard
andReSetiiewillgersmallerthey will .
~ be.!'!~-!t~cx:us¢ ~n .specific ·
watttme "''\' . _ume miSSions
·'wiU•benefil'fromt:Wliat; Anny ,~Cf •
called a new partnership with activeduty :forces. ·
,~iJrsaid his plltlf is su[ipofted by
aU tiic ley players in the military,
Delenle Sei:rllary
although itremaiqs to be seen whether
LaaAapln
the Congress wiU accept iL During
the Bush administration, the Congress kiUed numerous efforts to reduce the
reserve forces, mainly because of the job irl!p&amp;ct in m8JI'Y ccngressional
districts.
",
. Ina sign that Congress maybemorewitungto go along now, however,Rep.
G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery, D-Miss.. chainnan of the House Veterans'
Affairs Committee, said even before Aspin's announcement that he could
accept the plan, in pan because deeper cuts proposed under President Bush
had been avened.
The Bush administration had suggested cutting the Anny Guard and
Reserve to 563,000 by 1999 but met resistance from MontgOmery and other
supponers of the reserves in Congress.
The Clinton plan is to reduce the Guard to 367,000 and the Reserve to
208,000 fora total of575,000by 1999. The Guard currently iS at422,700 and
the Reserve at 279,600. The administration plans to cut the active-duty .force
to 1.4 million from 1.7 million. ·
"I would prefer no cuts ataU, but we don't have that choice,~ Montgomery
said in a statement.
Continued on page A2

By JAMES LONG
Tlme•Sentlnel News Stall
GAUIPOUS -County Engineer
Joseph Leach Thursday asked the
county commissioners for quite a
lot of money - $3 million - and
pressed1hem to bring the region's
highway needs to the attention of
stat.e leaders.
GaUia County is facing at least
two transpOnation emergencies, ac·
cording to Leach, Gallia Chamber
of Commerce President Jay
CaldweUandareabusinessmanBob
Evans.
Highways are being neglected by
lhestateandbridgcsarefallingaparL
Leach said the engineer's offtce,
. wiUneedbetweenSI3andS15inil- '
lion oV.et-..JAecMXI fiyjl·,~ to replllee·the'eo"uncy's rickety bridges.
All of the structures at issue span at
least 40 feet, the county engineer
said.
"Most of the major bridges in our
county are either obsolete, partly
obsolet.eor deficient," he told com·
missioners. ''They're beyond re·
pair."

This means replacing 21 of them
within ftve years. The engineer said
it was critical for commissioners to
help fund the project- while the
county is eligible for 80 percent
federal funding, Leach's office
needs20percentlocalmatchmoney.
In a memo presented to the board,
he wrote: "If a fast track bridge
replacement program is not funded
in 1994 by you, the consequences
would be devastating to Gallia
County. Within a five year period
our emergency vehicles, school

T..S

buses, milk trucks, logging trucks,
utility trucks, etc. will not be able to
cross many of our bridges."
Leach suggested the county could
reduce operating costs and raise taxes
to come up with their pan of the
money, which he said would amount
to about $3 million.
Commissioners said they would be
wiUing to discuss with Leach long
range planning for the funding, but

doubted that they would be able to
make the entire donation.
"We don't see any room in our
budget to fund a $3 million bridge
project out of county general,'' Com·
mission President Harold Montgom·
ery said Saturday. "We 'U have to look
at alternate means of funding."
Leach, along with Caldwell and
Evans, also asked the board to pass a
resolution asking that Stat.e Route 7

UMW officers br·iefed on new coal pact; vote
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associated Pr•n Writer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Local United Mine
Workers presidents today get their first look at a proposed
new contract with the Bituminous Coal Operators Assodation.
Meetings are scheduled throughout the coalfields this
weekend as the union's.topofficers brief local presidents,
who then will hold meetings with rank-and-file miners.
OnTuesday,aftera48-hourwaitingperiod,everybody
affected by the contract can vote on it.

Union offtcials have kept details of the proposed agree·
ment under wraps, saying they would not make public
sta!Cments ·about the agreement until union members get
a chance to see it.
However, the union's top three officers said in a leuer
sentel!flier this week to UMW families that both laid-off
and workilig UMW memberS will have a "guaranteed,
enforceable right" to claim ajobatany new mine owned
by their employer, its parent company or affiliates.
Senioritywilldetenninewhogctsthejobs.accordingto
the)euer, which was mailed alter the union announced

Photo"' ...._lAne

ONE OF SEVERAL- This bridge just off Levers Lane is one of 21 in Gallia County that will need replaced
within five years, engineer Joseph Leac:h said. Leach is seeking county funding to the tune of $3 million to help
in the project
be included in the Access Ohio plan.
Commissioners said they would
send such a leuer Thursday afternoon to Ohio Depanment or Transponation Director Jerry Wray.
A 200·mile section or S.R. 7
through the Ohio River Valley from
Chesapeake to BeUaire was not included in the final dral't oftherepon's
Macro Phase, Leach said. The plan
Continued on page A2

b~gin·s

Tuesday

Tuesday that it had reached a tentati ve agreement with the
The UMW won similar provisions in the 1988 contract,
Bituminous Coal Operators Association. A copy was but dunng the five years it was in force the two sides
obtained by The Associated Press.
argued over whether the agreement covered parent com.
Earlier, sources said the proposed contract would enti~e panies and nonunion subsidiaries. The operators 000 •
UMW members to 60 percent of the new jobs at their tended that the parent companies and subsidiaries were
employer's existing, new or newly acquired coal mines. not mcluded .
The sources said the agreement would cover any ell)~
In the letter to UMW members, the officers said the
player that signs the contract. A separate " memorandum underthepropnp i~e nt , "For the first time, laid-off
of understanding" binds an employer's parent company and acuve UMW A m bers h~ve the guaranteed, enand all subsidiaries and affiliates to the JOb sec urny forccable nght, based on sen•onty, to new jObs at new
provisions of the agreement, the sources said.
Continued on paga A2

Military jury finds Willis guilty;
declines tb impose death penalty

News capsules

SUMTER, S.C. (AP)- A military jury declined to sent.ence former Ohio
airman Jeromy Willis to death in the murder of his estranged wife.

State plans staff cuts at
Athens psychiatric hospital

The six-offrcer jury failed on Friday to reach unanimous agreement in the
death sentence recommendation, but two-thirds agreed he was guilty or
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP) - The state
premeditation in the Jan. 4 shooting at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base.
will cut staff at the Southeast Psychiat·
WiUis' defense argued during the two-week trial that the former Ironton,
ric Hospital in Athens, an Ohio Depan·
Ohio, man was not capable of premeditation because abuse as a child robbed
mentofMental Health spokesman said.
him of the ability to act rationally while under streSS.
·
Up 10 60 of the 180 jobs may be
"He did not have the cool-mind needed for premeditation, •• Maj. Bernard
eliminated,
Sam Hibbs said Friday.
Doyle said in closing arguments or Willis' coun-martlal.
He
said
some
employees may take
''Unwittingly the Air Force and Mary Ann Willis were pushing every button
early r¢tirement and others may get
he had to upset him. He was losing everything, his wife and his career," Doyle
different Slate jobs.
said.
All Slate mental health institutions
Willis pleaded guilty to kiUing of Mary Ann Willis."He faces life in prison
,
are
bei!!f downsized as the state focuses
on that charge.
·
'
on proViding treatment outside hospi·
The court-mahial panel took 3 1/2 hours t6 reach its decision. The coun
tals, he eaid.
martial is being held at Shaw Air Force Base. The Myrtle Beach baso was
The $17 million hospital opened in
closed earlier lhll year.
AthenS
in March with 80 beds.
WiUis faces sentencins Monday on.other charps n;lated 10 attach on his
.Now; the patient population is down
wife. He was fOiind guilty Friday of aggrav&amp;led auault for burning her with ·
to.IIWnd
70. The proposed staff reduction is a responpropane on Aug. 13, l.992, .00 choking her later that month. . '
sible move which will decrease costs, Hibbs said.
He also was found innocent of two counts of obsuuct!ng justice and one
He Slid talks are being ananged with hospital em·
count of communicating a threat.
p!Qyee unions and because of contracts, it will be at least
Mrs. 'WiUis, a Portsmouth, R.I., native, was shot Jan. 4 at the b&amp;1c's legal
4S days before anyone is let go.
affairs office. She was waiting to speak with auomeys about spoUSlll abuse
The ~ital serves residents in Athens, Hocking,
charges she hid filed against Willis.
·
Vinton,
GaUia, Jackson, Meigs and Washington coun·
Just before the shooting, Gabrial said Willis told an airman 011 the base, ''It's
ties.
showtirne." .

GOOD MORNING

Police officer killed in
shootout after traffic stop
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A police
officer who was killed in a shootout
after stopping a car did not say why he
was making the traffic stop.
Another man also died in the gunfrre
Friday near a housing project on the
city's nonheast side.
At least one other man ran from the
scene and was being sought by police
today.
Officer Chris Clites, 26, was shot near
the right eye aboutS a.m. and died about
2 p.m.at Ohio State University Medical
Cent.er.
A tape of his radio broadcast did not
reveal why he stopped the vel\icle. The
carwasrepooe4stolenabouttwohoursaftertheshootings.
Police said Clites exchanged gunfire with Brian E.
Davis, 29, of Columbus.
Davis was shot by anotherofftcer and died at the scene.
Clites was the 48th city police llfficer kiUed on duty.
Police said Davis had been convicted between 1983
and 1991 of possession of criminal tools, two counts of
assaul~ JeCCivins stolen propeny and grand theft.

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections. 224 Pages

Business
Cale11dars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sparts
Along the River
Weather

.

01&amp;8
83&amp;4
D2-7
Insert
A6
AJ
A7&amp;8
Cl-8
Bl
A:Z

Col umns

m•.r.r:

fred Crow

~ .· '

Bob HoeDjcb
lim Sands

-,

�December 12,1993 ·

. I

Local

Strickland pushes Clinto.n's health.plan ·
Continued from fNIIIe A1
of the insumnce premiums and employees would pay the rest, aoca'ding
to one of Strickland's brochures.
The largest employers would pay a
maximum of 7.9 percent of payroll.
On a declining scale. smaller employers would pay down to 3.5 percent,
Suickland said.
Small employers would not be
forced to lay off workers under lhe

Accu-W~

MICH.

•

IToledo I 36' I

new plan, Suickland said. Smaller
employers will benefit from the plan,
because idministrative cosiS would
be-reduced, he said.
Nearly 40 percent of smaller em- ·
ployers' money goes 10 administralive costs, while larger employers
spend only 5.5 percent; Strickland
said.
Under Clinton's plan, individuals

would be split into four types of coverage: two-parent families, singleparent families, couples and singles,
Strickland said.
People would not be ~ejected from
insurance because of pre-existing
health conditions, he added.
"Ailpartiesagree,pre-existingconditions have got to go," Strickland
said.
The insWlllice and pharmaceutical

UMW officers briefed on coal pact
• lcolumbusl43'

Contlnu.cl from page A1
mines of their employer and the
employer's parent company and any
affiliates."
The letter also advises thallhe contmct includes:
•"Changes in the way your health
care is provided and paid for, (and)
preserves your current benefit level,
reduces the costs to the employers
and resuiiS in minimal out-of-pockel
expenses for UMWA families - some
will pay a few dollars more in a given
year, far more will pay a few dollars

I

W. VA.

less.··

iA ir to remain cold
)through Tuesday
..

By The Associated Press
: A push of cold Canadian air pass- today, but temperatures will remain

ing across the relatively warm wa- cold. Highs will be 35 to 40 in the
tcnofLakeEriecrealedheavysnow westempartofOhioand 30 to 35 in the
across Northeast Ohio. The cold air east.
)Yill remain through today before a Sunrise today was at 7:44a.m.
considerable warmup begins on Southern Ohio
Monday.
Today- Mosdy sunny. High in the
: Scaueredflwriescontinuedacross upper 30s.
western Ohio Saturday, while snow .Extended forecast
lquaJiswillpersistacrossthenorth- Monday- Fair. Lows in lhe 20s.
east. Total accumulations will be 3 Highs lower 40s to lower 50s.
106inchesacrossmostofthenorth- Tuesday- Fair. Lows in the 30s.
east, except the main snowbelt ar- Highs in the 50s.
&amp;as of extreme northeastern Ohio Wednesday - A chance of min.
could reach 12 inches.
Lows 40 to 45. Highs 45 to 50.
. Hightemperatureswillmngefrom Around the nation
the mid 20s across most of of the Highs Saturday were forecast in the
state, but soulhwest sections could 30s and 40sacross the upper Midwest,
teachintothelower30s. Winds will and in the 50s in Kansas and Okla!Miain gusty from the northwest at homa.
1510 25 mph.
The high for lhe nation Friday was
: It will be pardy to mosdy sunny 90 at Kingsville, Texas.

,.' I
!

'l

Some·units will disband,
127,000 jobs will be lost
Contlnu.d from 11111111 A1

He saidmostltriiiOrieS will not have
to close if the Cllnron plan is adopttd.
"Every stall: wiU be affected in
some way if tliis reorganization plan
is approved," Monf80merysaid. "But
the bottom linefoqheNationa!Guard
and Reserve is lhat lhe cuiS could
have been much deeper."
Debomh Lee, assistant secrewy of
defense for teserve affairs, said no
decisions have been made on which
individual Guard and Reserve uniiS
will be closed over the next six years.
She stressed that some reductions will
be achieved by not replacing people
who leave on their own, rather than by
fll'ing people.
·
• Gen. J.H. Binford Peay Ill, vice
chiefofstaffoftheArmy, told reporters the main benefit of the changes
wiD be making the Guard and Reserve forces more ready for
warfighting. He acknowledged that it
won't be a smoolh change.
"Thete will be some initial shortJem\ turbulence" within the reserve
forces as personnel cuiS and changes
in specific units are carried out, he

missions, such as providing military
police, transportation and medical
services, during wartime, although it
also will retain some combat mis. sions.
The Reserve, for example, will give
to the Guard 4,400 positions in aviation, but the Reserve will retain about
2,000. Likewise, the Guard will give
to the Reserve some of its combat
engineer, medical and tmnsport positions.
Several Army leaders uied to put
the best face on what clearly was a
painful decision lO give up some manpower they foughtlO preserve.

•Changes in work schedules with
certain limits: "This agreement, while
allowing for change, does not allow
the companies lO impose it except in

City manager affirms
Klan cross permit denial
CINCINNATI (AP) - The city
manager has affmned the public works
direc10r's decision not to let the Ku
Klux Klan erect a Christmas cross on
a down1own square.
Meanwhile, another Klan group in
Muskingum County asked Friday 10
put up a cross outside the courlhouse
in Zanesville during Christmas.
The Knight Riders of the Ku Klux
Klan, based in Buder County, had
applied for a permit to keep across on
Cincinnati's Fountain Square from 3
a.m. Dec. 19 until3 a.m. Dec. 29.
City Manager John Shirey said Friday he agreed with the Dec. 2 decision by John Hamner, the public works
director; that the cross wou!l:tviolate
a city ordinance· banning displays
amounting to "fighting words."

carefully controlled circumstances
that decrease or eliminale mandatory
overtime and increase employment
levels at the mine. Any other scheduling changes must be agreed 10 eilher
by the individual member or by the
local union."

Engineer warns of crisis
Continued from page A1
identifaes major transportation routes
for future planning, funding and federa! attention.
"if we don't get on lhat plan the
entire Ohio Valley is going to be left
out for the next 50 or 60 years," he
said.
Access Ohio has another part-the
Micro Phase- which targeiS smaller
regional routes and is not yet complete. Caldwell said the Southeast
Ohio Regional Developmen't
Commission's highway users committee will meet Tuesday to form ulate a list of these highway needs to
bring to the state's attention.
The noon meeting will be at the

Li~e

Christmas Trees

: SAVED BY THE BELT·- Amy E. Redovlan,
·16, aDd Nicole D. Nelson, 15, new members or
:the Ohio "Saved by the Belt" Club, were pre:Sented certlrlcates Friday at ' Eastern High
&lt;School by Trooper Pat McDoaald or the GalllaMelgs Post or the State Hlgllway Patrol. Accordto a patrol report, on June 15 Redovian was

The

Memory
That L1sts Forever

'"&amp;

Pickens
faces trial
Tuesday

A beautiful Rock of Ages Monument is backed by the strongest
guarantee in the industry. It is the
ideal tribute. Aperlect woy lo P"""""
for aU time a family name and the
memory of those you love. ChooSe
from the largest selections in Central

: GALLIPOLIS A man
cJtarged with participating in the ·
abduction, mpe and attempted murtkr of a Jackson County woman
v.lill be tried this week in Gallia
Oounty Common Pleas Court.
: Gregory S. Pickens, 27. 12283
State Route 160, Vinton, will be
tiled beginning 9 a.m. Tuesday.
Pickens and Vincent H. Varney,
23, Rt. I, Ewingwn- bolh fanner
Gallia County sheriff's auxiliary
deputies - allegedly used an
emergency light to slOp the woman
on U.S. 35 near Rio Grande,
abducted her at gunpoint and raped
her. She was then taken to a site in
Vinton County and shot three
times.
Varney, who was tried in
September, pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to 10 to 25 years in jail
on each charge.

and Southeastern Ohio.

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payments.
Convenienl
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carry our own
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LOGAN
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GoUla County Dllpllly Y•d
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GALLIPOLIS,•OHIO

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882-2588

p:-~.~.l{f",l(t"'J!t"lrt"'~"''!$4P.~H·~"'~"Jrt"'.~"~·'·'J

· · • ·· Invited

•••

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State dep~·rtme.nt offering
t·ree workshops in p.honics

industries along wid! some hospita1s
areresponsibleforthespiraliogcosts;
Strickland Mid.
But, Striekland added all peQplc
shollld begin considering the ethiCal
issues that form the political !lebaa:;
He cited issues from when a persoq
should be temoved from' cosdy life·
support sys1ems 10 who should pa)i
for expensive operations, such as a
risky Siamese twin separation.
.
Also at the 10wn meeting, Stato
Representative Mary Abel, O-Ath~
ens, said plans will be submitled ~
both the state and federal levels 1Q
reform health care.
The slate House will make recom;
men~ns on reform plans tiCgin:
ning in January, Abel said.
"We in rural areas can not be left
out of any- plan," Abel said. "We
know we have to fight so we can hav~
adequate covemge and ... encouragq
health care professionals and main·
lain them."
·

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balance In conve-

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Gallipolis Holiday Inn. 'Caldwell
urged all that are interested to attend.
He said lhe chamber's highway
committee will list several major Iacal routes that need auention in the
Micro Phase: S.R. 850 from Rodney
to Bidwell, S.R. 588 from Rodney to
Gallipolis, the interchange ofS.R.
160 near Holzer Medical CenteriS.R.
325 from Rio Gmnde to S.R. 141 and
a ~.R. 7 bypas~ of Gallipolis.
Loca!Officialshavebeenconcemed
that $6 million in highway improvements for Gallia County slated between 1991 and 1993 have been delayed one to three years. ODOT Dislrict!O officials say the repairs were
never promised.

White Pine, Spruce,
Hemlock, Blue
Spruce•

F. Hawkins,

•1\yr.W llsonl••
aCritlail C.o

The leuer to union members said
1he proposed contract also comains
"significant other benefits," including wage and pension increases.
The Gazette reported that miners
would receive hourly raises of $1.40
during the first three years of the
contract.

Problem?

J

M..tcal Offkt ldlla. v•y Drtva
Point PloaiCIII WV

FoiThe .

Crash victim
is released
(rom hospital
• GALLIPOLIS - One victim of
an accident last week has been
released from the hospital while .
another remains in intensive care at
a:Columbus hospital.
: Connie J. Clarke, 37, 76 Debbie
Drive, Gallipolis was released
thursday from Holzer Medical
(!enter where she was being treated
for multiple uauma, officials said.
; .Her daughter, Sarah Clarke, 4,
~Y,as stilllisled in critical condition
Slnurday at Children's Hospital in
Columbus where she is being treated for head injuries and fmctures. ·
'Die child's condition has not
cjlanged since she was LifeFlighled
tCI the care center late Monday
afternoon.
· The two were hospitalized lifter
their vehicle ran off State Route
1~ 1 on Ingalls Hills and slammed
i~lO a tree.

. lh•lF~'·••.Ijldfat
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:

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Thefts probed
'

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1~

Tri-County Briefs:
Solid Waste Board to meet
WELLSTON - The board of directors of the Alhens, Gallia.
Hocking, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Solid Waste District will meet
Friday at 10 am. in the Wellston City Council chambers to discuss
the final disposition of the AGHJMV Solid Waste Disuict

Commission to hold special meeting
P6MEROY -The Meigs County Board of Commissioners will
meet in special session Monday with Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes lO discuss audit procedures.
The meeting will take place at 3:30 p.m. in the commissioner's .
office on the third floor of the Meigs County Courthouse. The public is free to attend.
Next week's tegular commission meeting will be held Tuesday
at2:45 p.m.

Public Affairs Board to meet
RACINE - The Racine Board of Public Affairs will meet Monday at 10 a.m. at Star Mill Park.

House damaged in blaze .
DEXTER - .Cracks in a chimney were listed as the rrobable
cause of fue which resulled in an estimated $3,000 wonh o damage
10 a Dexter residence Thursday afternoon.
Eight fuefighters with two trucks responded to the Sherri !~des ted residence at33501 Dexter Road shordy after I p.m., accordmg to
a report from lhe Rutland Volunteer Fire Department.
The fire' spread IIi the attic of the two-s lOry structure. Smoke and
" fire damage was contained to the second floor and atuc of the
house. Minimal waler damage was reported.
Firefighters were on scene approximately one hour.

.

; GALLIPOLIS - Local authoriti~s in vestigaled several reports of
theft recendy.
~ Sherrr L. Gibson, 1731 Plass .
RJ!ad, Vmton, told Gallia County
sjleriff' s deputies that someone
wtlked in her unlocked kitchen
dqor Thursday and stole $410
wDrth of guns. Three shotguns and
fo.\11: air~uns were taken.
i" Galhpolis police received two
reports of theft recendy .
;! Mary Springer, 1015 Second
A,ye., Gallipolis, reponed that an
a~uaintance rook $300 cash from
tlit home of Clarence Springer, 56
NemAve.
::Springer 10ld poUce that.she and
the man rook Clarence Spnnger to
tl)e hospital Friday afternoon, but
t~ man soon telurned in Clarence
S~ringer's car without anyone's
W!nission. The key ring had both
house and car keys. According to
tire report, Mary Springer and
pOlice arrived at the house around 3

5:30
to
9:00

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BUSINESS COLLEGE •I

MIDDLEPORT Ervin
Duvall, Hobson Drive, Middleport,
was arrested by deputies of the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department Frida,Y on a warrant char!!ing
domestic vtolence. He is being held
in the Meigs County Jail pending a
hearing in M!ligs County Court.

s

)

ENROLL NOW!
Winter Quarter Starts January 2

446-0090

a~monn: while it was parked in

!lie siOte 's parking lot. The purse ·
contained $96 in food stamps.

Cod Fillets
Prime Rib
Cajun Rice
Baked Potato
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Green Beans
Salad Bar
Dessert Bar

l

SBC CAN HELP!

Financial Aid Available
(for lhose wflo qualify)

Area man arrested

•

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$19 95

Snow Crab Legs
Peal &amp; Eat Shrimp
Breaded Shrimp
Breaded Scallops
Fresh Oysters

rl~'another report, Yvonlle Grifqlb. a Hills Department Store
~loyee, laid police someone
' her wrse from her car Friday
J

WHAT'S IN YOUR

Meigs EMS
answers 4 calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded 10 four calls for
assistance overnight. Units
reSJJ()Ilding included:
Friday - 12:19 p.m. Middleport to Second Street for Doris
Grueser who was taken to Vetemns
Memorial Hospital prior to transport to Holzer Medical Center:
3:35 p.m . Pomeroy to Pomeroy
Pike for Jamie Williamson who
was tmnsported to VMH.
Saturday "- 8:05 a.m. Tuppers
Plains 10 Stale Route 7 for Tony
Jones who was transported 10 Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburj!,
W.Va.: 9 a.m. Scipio Townshop
Volunteer F'ue Department to State
Route 681 West for a barn rue on
the Wyatt propeny.

•

i

teadlers.
:
Fol" more information or to ,
schedule a workshop, conlact :
Thompson at Swanton Local •
Schoofat419-826-7085.
:

ONLY

p.m.

:- She asked police to force the
door so that she could save
Clarence ,Springer's money and
gims. According to the report. she
~nd the'money had already been
'

opportunities no later lhan Jan. f,
1994.
Further, the board recommended
that intensive, systematic phonics
instruction be pan of college and
university preparation programs for

Celebrate New Year's
deliciously with our
New Year's Eve

P·IJI·

.

southbound on New Hope Road when sbe lost
coatrol of ber vehicle, went o" the lert side or
road, dDWD an embankment and struck a tree.
Although the ear sustalnell heavy damage,
Redovlan and Nelson, her passenger, received
only minor Injuries. Here, McDonald gives
Redovlan ller certirlcate while Nelson walcbes.

COLUMBUS - Teachera
across Ohio now have continuous
acceaa 10 flee worbhopl on phonics instruction and a full-time
workshoMrcsenter employed by
the Ohio 1lii bnc:nt of Education.
Louanne Thompson , on leave
from Swanton Local Schools in
Fulton County, will be working
with the department to provide
workshops and information on
phonics to educators statewide.
Ms. Thompson ha&amp; provided
phonics workshops for lhe past five
years as a private consultant, and
has a videotape available that
describes her workshops. The
department also has phonics activity carda available for teachers.
Leadership for this initiative
carne from members of the State
Board of Education, which ip
September passed a resolution to
direct State Superintendent Ted
Sanders to implement a plan for
providing phonics workshop

.

said.
In addition to reducing the Guard
and Reserve, the Clinton plan aims to
· reorganize the reserve forces so lhat
the Guard is more tighdy focused on
preparing for combat and temaining
ready to respond to domestic civil
emergencies. The Reserve will be
more oriented towardcombatsupport

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

1·5

.,...

EVENINGS nL
404 SECOND AVE.
OALUPOUI, OHIO 411131
MEMBER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY

�-

'

December

Nation/World
Weakened .'death doctor'·
f[:fc~s IJ~W Al/i~h~ .cparg~ ·, . ·.

1993

Mll..WAUKEB (AP)- A military tanker jet being serviced for
minor eleclrical ~roblems exploded
and burned Frtday at Mitchell
International Airport, killing 'six
ground crew members.
The rue ~pread 100 fast to give
anyone a chance to rescue the
workers aboard the Air National
Guard KC-135, said Col. Eugene
SchmiiZ, commander of the !28th
RefueUng Group.
The cause of the fue remained
under investigation.
• Pilots and other personnel
scrambled 10 move three jet tankers
away from the burning plane.
"The debris was flying around
and there was smoke and ftre," said
LL Col. Chuck Hardesty, vice commander of the unit, who helped
stan and move one of the planes.
Hardesty said there was an initial explosion about 7 a.m. fol lowed a few minutes later by two
more explosions.
The airport remained closed for
about an hour.
The KC-135, a miUtary version
of the Boeing 707, is used for inflight refueling or other planes.
II was being serviced at a section of the airport where the unit is
based. It had only a fraction of its
normal load of fuel at the time of
the explosion, SchmiiZ said
The plane had last flown Thurs-

BLAST SITE- Investigators and firefighters Inspected tbe
remains of a military tanker jet that caught fire and exploded on
the tarmac Friday at MltcbeU IDternatlonal Airport In Milwaukee,
Wis. Six workers were killed because the fire spread too fast to
give anyone a chance to rescue them aboard the Air National
Guard KC-13$, oiYiclals said. (AP)
day, and had minor electrical and
avionics systems problems that
were being repaired in preparation
for another flight, Schmitz said.
The problems included a burnedout beacon· light and a broken
switch.
"All of a sudden we hear a

boom and the house is shaking.
Then I saw flames and a lot of
black smoke, billowing black
smoke," said Zona Ukasick, who
lives across the street from the Air
National Guard installation. "I
thought it was a bttildin~ with oil
barrels that had exploded. ·

Pentagon faces budget shortfall

.

threats. Part of that suategy IS preserving enough military strength to
contend with the·possible outbre3k
of two regional conflicts at roughly
the same time.
The administration is trying to
. hold the line on military spending
so Clinton can pay for domestic
programs.
Aspin and White House Budfet
Director Leon Panetta have readied
opposing arguments without fmding a solution; CliniOn could well
have to lll8ke the final call; administration officials said Friday,
spellking on condition of anonymi-'
ty.
"We need that m0ney," one
defense offiCial said "We thought
we had a deal. We still think we

have a deal. Now, we'll just have
to work it out."
"It's a matter of coming up with
a plan based on certain baseline
figures, and now the ~nation has
changed," the offiCial atlded. "The
president has indicated his support
for the funding of our plan, and we
expect to address the delails of how
to achieve that funding."
The Washington J&gt;ost reported
Saturday that Aspin warned Clinton about the likely funding shortfall in a Nov. 23 internal memo. In
it, he argued that if the money is
not made available, the administration will have to reconsider key
elements of its defense Slnlte~; the
newspaper said, quoting urudentified sources.

ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) Dr. Jack Kevorkian, unshaven and
appearing weak from a jailhouse
hunger strike, was wheeled into
·court Friday to face a charge of
heJPinjl !172-year-:ald,woman commttswade.
" .
,
·
supporters applauded as the
self-styled right-to-die advocate
entered the ~acked courtroom
"hunched over m his wheelchair and
wrapped in a gray blanket.
The 6S-year-old Kcvorldan dismissed questions from reporters
about his ll-day-old hunger strike
and how he was feeling with a
wave of his hand
·
Chants of "Free Jack now"
from outside the courtroOm nearly
drowned out lawyers as Disll'ict
Judge Daniel Sawicki opened the
hearing to determine if there is
enough evidence to try Kevorldan
in the Oct. 22 death of Merian
Frederick.
The chants quieted after about
10 minutes.
Kevodtian already faces similsr
charges in two cases in Wayne
County.
The Rev. Kenneth Pflfer, testi-

'

'

. ByNEILMacfAJI,QU~ .
Asiocla~ Pres~ W:rlttr .
T ARQUMIY AH, Occupied
West Bank- Three Arab 'WClllcm
were headed Jtome Friday after a
day of building houses · m Israel
when two meq, allegedly Israelis,
stopped their car, slllCk guns in the
wiiidows and shot them to death.
"I didn' t 'recognize them for a
few minutes, there was. so much
blood on their faces,'' said Taysir
Fataftah a cousin of the victims,
who was' first to arrive at the scene.
As the deadUne approaches for
implementing the lsracl-PLO .
autonomy accord extremists on
both sides who hoPe to destroy the
peace process have provoked a
cycle of revenge ki!Ungs.
'
Opposition 10 the accord has led
to the deaths of 41 Palestin~s and

d . ._,

for immunity, told · and Rick and Ola Fre we ..,_
ho~ he, Frederick's SOil and daugh- · brought, the woman-to an ,lll,lBrtnlent..
ter-m-law- alld Kevorkian ·watched : Kevorkian ren~next to hts own.
for the 30'·minu~.it took for Fred- ' Frederick walked up the stain,
crick to "die by breathing carbon went inside and sat plt .a couch,,
monoxide.
_ Pftfer said. Kevorldan supplied a_
Pfifer, a minister at First Unitar- Clll)isler of gas, a .mask and tob~!i;
ian Universalist Church in Ann he said. FredCrick placed them . ·
Arbor, said he had counseled Fred- over IKi- face. lind pulled ~string to
erick wough much of her ordeal rei~ a clltmp on the tobmg, start:
with Lou Gehrig's disease. He also i~g'the flow oflleadllf gas.
, :
auendCc! a videotaped meeting with
. "What happened then?" Sh1fKevorkian at which she expressed man asked.
tak
her desire 10 die.
·
. "We waited for the gas to c
Under questioning from Oa)c- effe~! and he~ suffering to be
land County Assistant Prosecutor over, Pflfer said. .
Errol Shifman, Pflfer told how he
fying in

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-\\~~.~~

Account Executive

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

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OHIO VALLEY TIRE OUTLET

Upper River Rd.•Gallipolls
For reservations
call 446-0090
W•lk4n's Welcome!

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Gallipolis, OH. 45631

received similarclaima.
home on the pot-holed road
After ~ r~ for the Arabs, lhrougb a najrow
lined with
the Islamic ReSIStance Movement. olive groves ~~ey did not
or Hamas, distributed a leaflet have proper work 'lermits for
vowing revenge
Israel Police did not patrol the nor
The victims included two brolh- · mally. quiet road three miles f~
ers, the driver Sandi Abdul Mahdi Israel
'
Fataftah 27 and Mohammed
B~i Tarqumi ah i ·
Abdul M:ihdi Fataftah, 25 u well west of Hebron Jbich ~~~· 1~
as their cousin lshaq Mahmud focus of rece~t clashes between
Fataftah 2S.
settlers !llld Palestinians
Most' Palestinian workers drove ·
·
·
·
·

LOW PRICE!

~·,
·~

Jay Caldwell

u5e!! by the Pales~~ians to train
police. About 10 miJ!III:y Ol!lpOSIS
and refugee ~pi WIU be dismanlied, T&amp;!mes ~d
.
Rabm denied a report m the
daily Jerusalem l'on that _the governmcnt wu sc:cretly drafung plans
for an early withdrawal froni vinuaUy all the oo:upied territories and
tha:t it ~ted a Palestinian stale
as Inevitable.
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
said a delay in implementing the
accord would give extremists a
chance to destroy iL
Israel ':"dio sa!d th~t a phone
caller clrumed Fnday s slaymgs
were "in .revcn~e ~?r Mordechai
and Shalom Lapid, a father and
h1s 19-year-old son gunned down
by Palestinians in Hebron on Toesd a y. Other Israeli reporters
1

BF GOODRICH T/A UDIALS

HEW l'EAR'S EVE ONJ.T!

Contact:

~;4 Israelis since the pact was trytQIICttlcdifferenc;esoveysecuris!gned Sept. 13. People on bo!h ty ~!lgeR_~ents that could delay
SI~es are wou,nded every !lay m the mitial w1th~wal.
·
!'DifUlgs, shootings or stone-throw. Ararat met With reporten along
mg.
with U.S. Secretary of State War.An I!""Y s~tement con~rmed ren "t,:;hris~!'er· who w~ making
Frtday s slaym$S and satd the the frrst VISit by ·a ranking U.S .
attack was being mvestigated. The offtcial to the Palestine Liberation
Muslim militant group Ham as Org_anization 's headquarters.
vowed 10retaUa1e.
~hris!OI!her declared "a new .daY
Under the peace agreement, m relallons between the United
Israel is supposed to start with- States and the PLO.'-'
.
drawing its forces from the Gaza
The Israelis are due to withdraw
Strip and West Bank 10wn of Jeri- from the Palestinian police station
cho on Monday. Autonomy is in downrown Gaza City, which will
scheduled to begin in April and a IJ:e ~en ov_er by u~armed Palesfinal settlement for aU IsracU-occu- timan pohcc, sud Zaqanyeh
pied lands is to be worked out Talm~, a spokesman for the PLO
within five years.
office m G!W'Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
They will also close the Ansar II
and PLO leader Yasser Arafat are prison camp in Gaza, which holds
expected to meet in Cairo today to about 150 prisoners and would be

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' RUBIN
• The Central Bank has tight- Teplukhin of the Finance Ministry cators because of the election camBy JULIA
ened up on cheap credits to faiUng warns, "All statements now will be paign.••
Associated Press-Writer
MOSCOW - If Russians vote state industries. Growth of the slightly biased toward better indiwith their pocketbooks, as conven- money supply - whiCh can fuel
tional wisdom suggests, B.oris inflation - is now about IS perYeltsin's band of young free-mar- cent a month from more than 50
ket reformers could be hammered percent a year ago.
• The annual budget deficit is
in today's parliamentary elections.
Two years into the reforms, expected to be about I 0 percent of
rampant inflation and falling prt&gt;- gross domestic Jll!lduct - down
are
and · are ralaed -In
duction have lowered Uving stan- from 22 percent lD 1992 and within
nurturing, loving families; they eventually become our
dards for most people. The presi- Internationlll Monetary Fund
future leaders.
4ent's opponents are makinJ politi- ·demands.
Other children are not as fortunate. Their potential
Still, as economist Pavel
cal hay out of the corrupbon and
for
a bright future Ia dimmed by poverty, abuse,
the growing gap between rich and
poor that have characterized postneglect or disability. Woodland Centers recognizes
Soviet Russia.
that these children need and deserve a chance for a
. But many voters say they're
more hopeful tomorrow. Our role Ia not to supplant
willing to waiL
the family, but to work together by re-Integrating
"You have to let people finish
children back Into their family ayatem (whenever
what's been started, otherwise it's
crazy," SvetaNovikova, a 21-yearpossible). H Is the belief of Woodland Centers that the
old piano teacher, said with a shrug
family
Ia the alngle moat Important factor In the
Only At
after recountiog her family's strug8 E1at IJrolld StJwl, ·
aucceaaful rehabilitation of emotionally or begles.
. Sulte-100
Ohio
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haviorally troubled children.
· Market reforms are the lieart of
Columbua, OhiD
Yeltsin's vision of a democratic
We are committed to providing quality care to
UOOIIIOLAW
Russia and the driving force behind
children-In-need.
the country's'fust multiparty elecAnd if your sled needs a front end or 4-wheel
tions.
·
alignment call us, we have the most advanced
Yeltsin caUed the vote after disbanding the old parliament, which
computerized alignment system In the Ohio
A Priv~, Not tor Profit Agency
had voted to slow privatization,
Valley...Csll Today!
jncrease stare credits to inefficient
_Working Hard to Serve You in
mdustries and otherwise block his
We Also Specialize in True• Tires
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Counties
reforms.
Top Yeltsin aides, many of~m
GALUA COUNTY
MEIGS COUNTY
JACKSON COUNTY
doubling as P!"o-reform candidalcs,
446-5554
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286-5075
say the lnlDSition from the ComMuGallipolis Ferry, WV
675-5332
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CAISISUNE- 1-IIOG-252-5554
nist regime's moribund command
economy is necessarily painful, but
that patience will soon pay off.
Fmance Minister Boris Fyodorov, running as a candidate with
Russia's.Choice, a pro-Yeltsin
coalition, said this week that the
economy was finally "stabilizing"
and pointed to 'the following government statistics:
i ~ • Inflation has slowed to aliout
; 15 percent a month and could come
Pelonls Disc Furnace
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: • Industrial production is expect17 Court St.
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By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON - Overly
optimistic inflation estimares and
Congress' decision to give the military a pay raise could leave the
Pentagon with a shonfall of $40
billion to $50 billion avec the next
five years, administration officials
say.
The shortfall represents the
defense spending Clinton put into
his fiscal 1994 budget and what the
Pentagon estimates will be necessary to carry out the administra~
00n's military strategy.
: Defense Secretary Les As~;~in
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~ian is the botrom Une necessary to
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Commentary

December 12, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6

111 Court SL, Pomoroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

825 Thlnl An., Glllipoli&lt;l, Ohio
(614) 446-1342

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American

Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'JTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No uns igned leners will be
published . Letters should be in good tasle, addressing issues, not

personalities.

. '

Anti-abortion activist
enters Senate race
By M.R. KROPKO
.
Associated Press Writer
·: CLEVELAND- Lnst summer, the Rev. Joseph Slovenec considered
.jt his duty to direct anti-abortion protests. Now he believes his duty is to
'run for the U.S. Senate.
:; " I see it as a need, duty and responsibility to run to help this nation, to
:see this nation return to its constitutional framework,' ' said Slovenec,
•'who never has held poUtical office. ''It's time for a change. I think it can
•}Iappen.
;. The candidates vying to replace the retiring Sen. Howard Metzenbaurn,
!&gt;·Ohio, say Slovenec- who declared his independent candidacy Thurs·
.sJay - won't make much of a difference in the race.
. " Anybody can announce," said sUite Sen. Gene Watts, R-Columbus.
,' 'That doesn't mean anything. I don't believe you can draw votes if you
not credible. A single-issue candidate is not credible, and Ohioans will
~ot vote that way."
~ Slovenec opposes abortion in all circumstances.
;: Watts said he beUeves abortion should be available only in the case or
:iape, incest and for the health of mother in the nrst trimester.
.' Watts said Slovenec's candidacy could increase the importance of the
abortion issue "marginally at best." He said other issues will be much
:more important in what he views as a high-profile race.
; Slovenec, 41, is the director of Northern Ohio Rescue and the associate
•pastor of Church of the King in South Euclid. He led several anti-abortion
:protests in the Cleveland anea last summer as pan of an Operation Rescue
national campaign.
• "I was very satisfied. It gave a great boost to the movement in this
·area. It got hundreds of people involved,'' he said.
In Congress, he would favor anti-abortion legislation and oppose any
presidential appointment of a person who supports abortion as an option
for women, he said.
He said he will add a conservative voice to the Senate race on many
issues other than abortion.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner Mary Boyle, running for the DemoMalic nomination, said Ohio voters "are concerned aboUt all sorts of fam·
ily issues, but they are most concerned about jobs, safety and the availability or health care...
.
.
.
. .
.:~ Boyle saiw.she has work~&lt;to prov•~e aboruon alternatives; but
·believes abortion ought to remam as an option for women.
' She said thai Slovenec, as an independent, likely would have no effect
Wjxln the primary elections.:
;; Ray Sullivan, campaign secretary for Republican candidate Bernadine
tlealy, said the Senate race "will be focused on probably four issuesiaxes, government spendilig, crime and health. care refonn.
. ~ "We certainly welcome him to the race and believe that the more
tbbust the debate the better lhe voters are served,'' Sullivan said.
• · . LL Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, was not available for comment
·Thursday. Joel Hyatt, a Democrat and Metzenbaum's son-in-law, declined
io comment.
I

01

.

WASHINGTON - President
Clinton's recent olive branch to
China is pan of the death-watch
diplomacy now surrounding 89year-old Deng Xiaoping, the longtime leader of the People's Republic of China.
Recent assessments from the
U.S. Embassr in Beijing and a
November esumate by an analyst
of the Centtal Intelligence Agency
warn that Deng's demise could be
followed by poUtical instability and
even violence.
These reports may have inspired
Clinton's recent two-pronged posture toward China: conciUatory on
the trade front (he approved the
controversial sale of a Cmy super
compuler just before the recent
economic summit in Seattle); and
hawkish on human rights (he
warned that renewal of "mostfavored nation" trading status was
dependent on improvement in
China's human rights record).
Clinton considered it imperative
that he have a constructive meeting
in Seattle with Deng:s chosen sue-

cesser, PreSi~ent Jiang Zemin, That
pnvate meetmg was the nrst SinoU.S. ~ ummit since the 1989
Tiananmen Square cmckdown. The

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Clinton admfnistration's internal
review of China policy, completed
!ast Seprember, noted that U.S . polICY had been ineffectual in improving human rights and other aspects
of the relationship since Tiananmen
Square. The administratiOn felt it
had to take a few steps to show it
did want resulis, regardless of the
Deng situation.
Deng remains the paramount
leader of China, but his health is
failinl! rapidly, sources told our
assoc1ate Dale Van Atta. He has
not been seen publicly since last
January. Aware of Western con·

ttr~W®s NOT AK15U·PRoFILE
ENnJRTA~ER oR SRJR1S RGURf
ANDNOoNE REALLY GI~S
AH~T ABOUT HIS ~CIAL,

SEXUAL oR HEAL'Tlt PROBLEM}...

H~S

PERFECT
TO ENDOFSE

OUR PROOUCT!

:are

·'

..
•

••

,.

•

f1

•
"It might have been suicide . As soon as the
light turned green, he honked his horn at the
car in front of him."

•

•

.·

There will be a formal
announcement in the near future of
a new grave marker which will he
introduced in Meigs County. This
item is what is called a heart and
cross design. The writer has been
the primary mover of this project
and through the aid and assistance
of numerous individuals the product is nnaity ready for display. The
promoters hope that the public will
he interested enough to buy these
units in large quantities. So here
goesRupe.
Way back in 1989 the writer
visited several cemeteries in Meigs
County and was appalled as to how
many graves were decorated with
artincial flowers of extreme colors.
I thought to myself that the cemeteries would look much better with
a high class conservative looking
product Also, I wanted 10 develop
this product to convey a very special meaning of love towards the
person laying underneath the sod. It
would also be nice to have a product which, year in and year out,
would act as a substitute for the
annual giving of artificial flowers
for each grave. In short, the heart
and cross could take the place of
some flowers. So, Rupe, I decided
to do something about it
I had an idea for the design I

wanted but puthng 11 together in a
package was something else. At
about the same time, Roger Stewart
was in the office about his own.

FredW. Crow
invention and I succeeded in getting him interested in this project.
Roger also did a lot of footwork in
getting this project started. So, I
decided that I would get a model
made. The first heart and cross was
constructed out of wood. It was red
in color with a large break in the
middle. Some people insisted that
the break in the center of the heart
looked more like a lightning bolt
than a broken heart and upon further investigation, it was decided
that this was indeed true.
From that time forward there are
many variations of this heart and
cross. Roger contacted Jim Frecker
who is a steel fabricator. Jim
advised against using the steel
since it would rust in years to
come. Jim also made some suggestions which were helpful. My good
friend, Wes Herrick, who is an
expen in wood carving, also made
four or five different models in ·
which to examine and choose one

By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Dec. 12, the 346th day of 1993. There are 19 days
left in lhe year.
· ·
In 1787, Pennsylvania became the second state 10 ratify the U.S. Constiwtion.
In 1870, JDSe~~h H. Rainey of South Carolina became lhe fii'St black
lawmaker sworn mto the U.S. House of Representatives.
.

'C linton drops a bomber on education
', President Clinton has found a
perversely unique way .to ~y trib~e to one of Amenca .s most
tlrt;loved heroes, Joe LouiS. Two
Weeks ag9, Clinton ~~ the
aflpointment of Wllhe Wilson
&lt;'Jtiode, the former mayor of
ptliladelphia, as the Department of
Bilucation. s region m representa-

'

f'with apologies t~ ~~~is, the
e{ficientlr desuucuve Brown
somber ' I had dubbed Goode
\':'Brow~ Bom·b er W' after he
e6dorsed the May 13, 1985, bombitt~. of a Philadelphia row house r1
MOVE radicals. The radic:lls were
W&amp;nted by the police on lieveral
cOunts and refused 10 lea":!: the f?W
tiOuse. Eleven penon'., D,~Ciuding
ftliC .Utile children. wereldlle!l and
~entire city block of 60 middlecliss homes was iiacinerated.
: With that oftic:ialaclicn, Goode
bic:ame lhe only IIIIJOI' in Ameri-

ctD biJ!'IIY 10 Onlet .lhe ~hi!!· r1
· biJ own city. ~Y l)fficill wath a
lliied al decalcy would ha~ been

. ·-Ooodc. .

·c~evastated

by the c.-naae. ~·
•llll:fc lhe delllll of five Utile kidl.
~,
"lfl
$
ot•-·..-~
bad 10 . . . . . . de&lt; iilon all 0\U
II!: dcclatcd twO dayllala

r.
.

without even a quiver of remorse,
"I would make the same decision;/' A rear later on March 10,
1986, ,facmg re-election, Goode

Chuck Stone
went on television and said he was
sorry. His mea culpa resonated
with as much sincerity as Ed
RoUins' apology for trying to suppress New Jersey black votes.
But misplaced ethnic loyalty reelected Goode. Nationally, he
became a pariah. A group of 124
distinguiahed black minislcrs, theologians, artists, scbolm and educators, including th~ late James
Baldwin, Alice Walker, Paul RobelOll Jr., lhe Rev. Benjamin Chavis
(the current NAACP head), New
York Justice Bruce McWright,
Odeua and lhe Rev. Calvin Buus
ru, toot out a half-page ad in the
Philldelphia Tribune to eoildemn
Goode 1s "BIIlonF (the) enemies
of... black people.'
Both Goode and the Depal1ment
of Education refused to eomment
on bis appoinanent f&lt;lr this column.
That's understandable. How does
the ClintOit adrninlstratjon defend

•

picked before his death in 1976.
That's why some U.S. officials
fear poUtical instability following
Deng's death - or worse. They're,
not alone in such an estimate. A,
prominent Chinese dissident, Ma
Shaohua, recently told Agenc e,
France Presse that "relations
between the people ~d the govern-.
ment absolutely must change.
before the death of Deng Xiaoping:·
China's situation is very serious'
and a smalfbreeze could unleash a.
storm throughout the country."
Deng may have been an eco·
nomic reformer, but he has never
been a political one. His recently
released book reveals that he told
President Bush during a ~ebruary
1989 meeting, months before the
Tiananmen square crackdown, that
he believed • if all I billion of us
undertake multipany elections, we
will certainly run into a full scale
civil war in the style of the (Maoist
and bloody) culrural revolution." .
But other U.S. officials beUeve ·
economics will win out over 'poli-·
tics in China. "The only ideology .
(in China) is making a profit and :
creating wealth," says retired Rear
Admiral Eric McVaden, who
served as defense and naval attache ~
at the U.S. Embassy in Beijingdur-·
ing the Bush administration. " The
(Communist) Party is a dead con-.
cept. Right now greed is the pany's•
best weapon in keeping dissent'
down."

1

China may not agree with the '
United Stares on human rights, yet
other issues keep our fates closely
linked. Both countries want more
trade with each olher, and neither'
wants to see a nuclear-armed Nonh
Korea. "There is a real danger of
war in the Korean peninsula," ·
according to one congressional '
China expen. ''If it involves nucle- ·
ar weapons, that's going to put
nuclear fallout in Bejing. Even if
that worst case scenario doesn't
happen ... it pushes Japan Ioward
rearmament. That's what Chinese
really fear."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

A new invention: Heart and cross marker

Today in history

•

cerns about his health, Chinese
officials recently orchestrated a
leak to a Hong Kon~ newspaper
claiming that Deng enjoyed a 2 1{2
hour mini-bus tour of Beijing on
Halloween day. The vice-mayor of
Beijing, who acted as tour guide,
says ~bg was full of vigor and
zest. The lack of photographs or
video from the event suggest the
opposite is probably true.
As if setting the stage for
Deng's departure, the Chinese
recently released a 418-page volume of a decade of Deng s speeches and talks, from 1982 to 1992.
The book reveals, amon!! other
things, that Deng tapped Jtang as
his successor in a private meeting
in 1989. ·
The Imuble is that most Western
experts view Jiang, the former
mayor of Shanghai, as a transition·
a1 figure at best following Deng's
death - not someone who can rule
through strength or charisma. Deng
h1mself had emerged as victor
years ago by overcoming Hua
Guofeng, the successor Mao hand'-

Goode's qillous re~nsibility for
the loss of innocent Uves?
But Goode brings far more bagga$e to his appointment. Two
nauonally prominent black educa·
tors, speaking on the condition of
anonymily, condemned the
appointment as "an affront to edu·
cation" and "a sorrowful day for
black Americans."
At the end of his term, Goode
had brought Philadelphia so close
to the brink of budget chaos that its
bond mting fell to a new low. His
credibility accompanied that
decline, and lhe city council
bypassed him to pass its own budget When he left office, no corpo·
ration would touch him.
Why would President Bubba
appoint such a man? For the same
reason b.e nominated M. /Larry
Lawrence, a San Dleao developer
and~ owner,to ·be ub rrilor
to Swli'Zorland. He wal doing a
poliii~ favor. Lawrence helped
his oy.on polilicll future w.hen he
contributed a total of $80,000 to
. Dernoctatic canllidates since 1989
and $7S,OOO to the Democratic
National Copuniuee.
..
Several foreign service groups
and fmner foreign service off'JCials

..

deemed Lawrence so unqualined
that they testified against him at
Senate hearings. ·
In Goode's appointment, Clinton joins Bush as a cynical manipulator. Bush nominated one of the
least qualified persons ever,
Clarence Thomas, to the Supreme
Coun for only one reason - misguided aflinnative action.
Clinton appointed GQOI!e as pan
of an equally cynical dtal. Goode's
successor, democratic · Mayor Bd
Rendell, wanted to take control of
the patronage-gch, and severely
mismanaged, Pbi=hia Housing
Authority. With
e's appointment, he resigned (rom the agency's b'o8nl of directors and RenCiell
repliiCed him with his' own person.
'ITII&amp;t was Clinton's {avlit to' Rendell, who heads A~'i fourthiilrgcst- and very•Democratic city.
,
·
• None of this should smprjse·us.
As a peerless lelh1ative dcalllllkci, Clinton haS ·denionstra~M a
· remarkable ability. He will aive
away the lillie' at any time, for any
reason. to any&amp;ody. .
Cbck Stolle Ia 1 O'l!dleateil
writer
for Newspaper Enterprile
'
AIIIOdaUon.

of them . Again, the wooden prod- have merit but the majority are not
ucts were exceUent but impractical successful. As stated before, you
can appeal the original decision
for our use.
Finally, we hit upon the idea of ana accoramg to the attorneys
having the heart !nd cross made involved, 50% of them would be
out of altimintim . Roger arid I visit- successful. It was represented that
ed Don Simmons at the Pioneer the true rea·son the patent office
Casting plant in Belpre and were was turning down these patents
advised that if the aluminum were was lhat the patent o(fice wanted to
make cenain that the patent would
oxidi~ed then this marker would
last forever. In shon, it would he a he used. As the reader may imagine
permanent marker which would this matter of obtaining a patent is
expensive. The amomtt of money I
last forever.
In the meantime, there have have spent to date on this project
been changes in the design. Many prio~ to the copyright is less than
people were contacted including $4,000.00. We had previously disDr. Catherine Steiner who is an covered that most patent attorneys
expert in grave markers and Dr. charge at least $10,000.00 for their
Dwight Pugh, both at Ohio Univer- work in obtaining a patent.
Originally, Roger Stewart and
sity along with other professors.
myself
were the only two individu·
Leesa Murphy and Wes Herrick
als
working
on this project. Later,
were also contacted. There were
we
convinced
Tom Reuter to assist
countless olher people who were
us.
This
was,
of course, after he
asked for their impression of the
resigned
from
the post office as
heart and cross. Most of ihem
Since
that time Tom
postmaster.
decided this heart and cross would
he an item most people would like has been very helpful and he has
worked hard on this project. He is
to have for their loved ones graves.
Finally, we arrived at a design. now President of Le Corbeau
On February 9, 1990, we filed an Industries Inc., the name of our
appUcation for a patent. Numerous corporation which was incorporatphotos were taken showing all ed on March II , 1993. Bruce Fishsides of lhis article. I was told that er of Middleport is alsp a sharethis design could bt modified at holder and director. He became:
any time. Later I was advised by interested through his funeral busi·:
·e
the US Patenl office that in order to · ness. He also indicated that h~
would
be
helping
in
getting
othe
make any changes at all, a new
application for a patent would have funeral directors interested. Finally
to be filed. We were turned down there is Bob Gilmore of Middlepo
by the patent office on October 20, Trophies, who is also a sharehold-1
1992. We could have appealed lhis er. Bob's company will carve th~
~
decision as Mr. Phillirs advised we initials on the small hearts.
At
this
moment
we
do
have:
had a 50/50 chance o winning, but
we would have been stuck with a some major problems. Our hear~
design we did not want. In order to and cross is manufactured in Bel-o
protect ourselves we filed an appU- pre, at Pioneer Casting. The tw~
cation for a copyright on May 4, small hearts are manufactured by
1992. We received a copyright with Central Ohio Metal Stamping .
Fred W. Crow as inventor on May owned by Lawrence Davidson, a,
II, 1992. This copyright will at former Meigs County man. Th':S
least protect our interest in this company is run by his son, J ohno
Davidson. The shipping boxes arl
product.
Rupe, you should know that we manufactured by ChiUicothe Pack
have employed three attorneys not aging Company in Chillicothe .
counting myself. Two of lhem were They are sh1pped directly to Tom
associated with the law firm of Reuter. As of this daiC, this corpo~
Baker and McKenzie in Washing- ration has no phone, no omce and
ton, DC. The first attorney was no employees. We have a group o ,
John J. Byrne who was mOSI help- men who will see this project:
ful in ill the early details. Mr. through and in the meantime most'
Byrne had a design novelty. sean:h of the materials are stored either in1
made of the patent re~ords. The Tom Reuter's basement or at the
search was made and pictures of Fisher funeral Home in Middle-~
six different patents were discov- port. We do plan to rent space
ered. They were entirely different before too long and get an 800 telefrom the one we submitted. There phone number. Our advertising wiD
was ·nothing of record that would not start immediately but we do:
indicate the design I submitted have over 100 units ready for sale. :
Rupe, cross your fingers and •
would not be approved.
.·
hope
that this project will be sue-~
· We then received notice that
cessful.
If so, there will be employ-~•
Mr. Byrne left this law fum to go
ment
for
other individuals.
to another city and we employed
In
God
we trust.
Mr. Bltldfonl Kile at the same law
Carryon.
•
rum. We had a problem with·cornEditor's note. - Long-timet
. mimlc!lilriJ wilh Mr. Kill: and so by
mUIUal agreement he no longer rep- · Attorney Fred W. Crow Is tbe ~
resonta·us in lhis matter. We later cootrlbutor or a w~ekly column
engaaed' Mr. Patrick P. Phillips of for Tbe Suaday Times-Sentinel.
Biebel and French Law Firm in Readera wlsbing"to applaud, crlt·
Columbus, to assiSt us in -our pro- lclze or comment·on any subject
ject. Apparently , there are many, (except religion or politics) are
many applications for patents encouraged to write to Mr.
flooding the patent office. Some Crow, Ia care or Ibis
. newspaper. .

'

••

Sunday nmea . SenUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt PleeAnt, WV

------Area deaths__,;,._____
Faye B•.Bales

Clinton seeks new relations with ·China
A Divialoo ol

:December'12, 1993

tel'.

Surviving are five sons, Marvin 4t (Anna) Bales r1 Wellston, Sylvan
E. (Lcccie) Bales and WilliBm Wayne (Nancy) Bales, all of Spencer,
W.Va.,Narval Dean (Edna) Bales of Severn, N.C., and Clarence B. Bales
of Dexter; a daughttz, Mrs. Gene (Charylene) Skaggs of Gallipolis; 26
grandChildren, 38 IJ'C8l·gr&amp;ndchildren, and one areat-great grandchild.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.
Vinton. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call lit the funeral home Monday from 7-9 p.m.

Joyce E. Bartimus
GALLIPOLIS - Services for Joyce E. Bartimus, 52, GaUipolis, who
died Wednesday, Dec. 8, 1993, were conducted Saturday afternoon in the
WilUs Funeral Home, with the Rev. Joseph L: Hefner and the Rev. Gregory Swann offiCiating.
Burial was in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Pallbearers were Jerry Dillon, Chris Shrivers, Mark Shrivers, Craig
Tedrow, Greg Wilson and B.F. Shrivers Jr.

Clyde A. Cox
BAST LIVERPOOL- Clyde A. Cox, 75, 606 McKinnon Ave., East
Liverpool, died Friday, Dec. 10, 1993 in City Hospital, Follansbee;
W.Va., following a lengthy illness.
.
Born Sept. 2, 1918, son of lhe late Clyde A. Cox Sr. and Amr Gosney
Cox, he had lived in East Liverpool since 1957 after movt~g ~ro!'l
Steubenville. He was employed by Thorofare Markets Inc., Gall1pobs, m
1968 and retired in I 977.
A World War II Anny veteran, where he served in the medical baualion and was discharged in January 1946, he was a member of ~t.
Stephen's Episcopal Chun:h, where he served as Sunday School supenntendent He was lilso chairman of the Stained Glass Window Replacement
Commiuee and was a memba' of the East Uverpool Uons Club.
Surviving are his wife, Esther Peach Cox, whl¥n he married June 30,
1941· two daughters Mrs. James (Caroline) Clunk and Mrs. Robert
(Link) Ferello, both of East UvelpoOI; a son, Charles R. Cox of GaiUpolis; a sister, Mrs. Frank (Geraldine) DiCarlo of Mingo Junction; seven
grandchildren and one great-grandchild
Services will be II a.m. Monday in SL Stephen's Episcopal Church,
with the Rev. George Donehoo II offiCiating. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemelery. Friends may call at the Dawson Funeral Home, 215 W. F1fth
St. East Liverpool, Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
The family requests that donations be made in care of the St Stephen's
Window Fund.

Mildred
J.
Elliott
,
GALLIPOLIS - Mildred J. Elliott, 63, 29 Madison Ave., Gallipolis,

shaw.
He is survived by a daughter and aon-in-law, Judr, and Michael Erwin

SPACE CBNTBR, Houston
ofFlon:nce, SC; a son and daughter-in-law, WiUiarn 'BiD" M. and Sharon (AP) - After a dratnalic and arduHanshaw of Gal~ Ftny; four grandchildren, Scott Erwin, Kevin Er- ous week refurlriJhing the Hubble
win. Melissa Erwin Rhodes and Lee AM Hanshaw; and three greal- Space Telaeope, seven astronauiS
pandchildren. .
aboard the abuttle Endeavour got
Service will be held at 2 P·!l'· Monday, December 13, at the Crow-Hus- some refreshina news from Barth.
seU Funefal Home in Point Pleasant wilh Rev. Dale M. Vollman officiat"We don 'I have anything (or
Ing. Buiial wUI follow in Lone Oak Cemetery in Point PleasanL
you to do," Mission Control told
Visiling hours will be held at the funeral home on Sunday from 6-9 p.m. the Hubble mechanics after they
awoke to their reward for much
hard wott: a day off.
The astronauts, spared the wakeup
music traditionally beamed up
POINT PLEASANT - Julia Maxine Sergent, 66, of Henderson, died
by
ground conuollers, slept an
~~ba' 11, 1993, at lhe Pleasant VaUey Nursing Care Center,
extra two hours. 'Ilten they staned
Saturday's schedule, most r1 which
She was a Jetired nurse's aide at Lakin State Hospital.
Born October 19, 1927 in Eleanor, she was a daughter of the late was empty and left plenty of time
Samuel and Ada (Bowles) Halstead. She was also preceded in death by her for sighiSCCina.
"We got up ... just in time to
htllband, B.H. NJohnny" Sergent; two sisters and a brolher.
see
this really spectacular MediterShe is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Patty Jo and Jack Lee of
ranean
pass at night and we· re
Point Pleasant; two sons and daughters-in-law, Michael K. and Shawn
at what looks like the
looking
Sergent of Point Pleasant and Gary and Betty Sergent of Henderson; 10
brightest
morning star you ever
grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
saw
over
here
trailing behind us,
Service wiD be held at 11 a.m. Monday, December 13, at the Crowwhich
is
the
Hubble
Space TeleHusaell Fmreral Home in Point Pleasant with Rev. Louis A. Hussell
scope,"
commander
Richard
officiating. Burial will follow in Concord Cemetery at Henderson.
Covex
said
VISitipg hours wiD be held at the funeral home on Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
The crew transmilled images of
(Continued on A·8)

Deaths elsewhere
FLOURTOWN, Pa. (AP) Matt Guokas Sr., a former professional basketball player and a
Philadelphia Eagles broadcaster for
more than 30 years, died Thursday
ni&amp;hL He
78.
Guokas played for the National
Basketball Association champion
Philadelphia Warriors in the 194647 IICII.!OII, but his career was ended
when he lost his right leg in an
automobile accident in 1947. He
then wmed to broadcasting. •
His son, Matt Jr., plared and
coached for the Philadelphl&amp; 76ers,
coached the expansion Orlando
Magic for its fii'St four seasons and
is a baskethall analyst for NBC.

was

Edwin N. Johnson

TACOMA, Wash. (AP) died Friday, Dec. 10, 1993 at her residence.
Edwin
N. Johnson, a former phoBorn Aug. 25. 1930 in Phelps, Ky., daughter of the late. Bruz and
tographer,
sports writer and newsNancy Allen Gibson, she attended the Chun:h of the Nazarene m Galhpo-'
man for 11te Associated Press, died
lis.Surviving are three sons, Darrell Jenkins and Larry Jenkins, both of in a Tacoma hospital of heart failHuntington, W.Va., and Kennef:h JenJ?ns Jr. o.f Michigan; several grancf- ure Thursday. He was 76.
Johnson joined the AP in 1934
children: six brothers, Grandville G1bson, Stdn~y Gibson and.Vemon
in
Denver as a copy boy. He also
Gibson all of Columbus, Harold Gibson of Gallipotis, Leroy G1bson of
worked
in Associated Press
Cambridge, and R~l Gibson of Rio Grande; and a sister, Betty (Don·
bureaus
in
Pboenix; Albuquerque,
aid) Riffle of GallipoUs.
N.M.;
Korea;
Japan; Helena,
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Anthony Gibson.
Mont.;
and
Seattle
before going
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral _Home
into
private
business
in
1969.
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Alfred Holley offiCIBUng.
Survivors
include
his
wife, FloBurial will be in the Brush Cemetery. Friends may call at the chapel Sunrence
,
sons
George,
Edwin
N.
day from 7-9 p.m.
Johnson Ill and Michael, and
daughters Ellen Johnson and Mary
Goodsel.
POINT PLEASANT. M.D. "D;_.yer" "Pappy" Hanshaw, 71, of.Point
Pleasant, died Friday, December 10, 1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospital'"
' Point PleasanL
.
.
MONESSEN, Pa. (AP) - RayHe was a retired riverboat captain for White Brothers, Inc. and a mem- mood Linders, fonner pubUsher of
ba' r1 the American Legion, Mason County Post No. 23.
The Valley 1ndependent in MooBorn January 29, 1922 in Huntingto;n;;;'lllhllle.w..;as;;.;a.;so.n•o•f•th-e•la•te•E•d.;g;;,ar_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

M. D. .Hanshaw

Raymond Linders

Probation given

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CINCINNATI (AP) - A
woman who admitted she put a
rusty nail in a soft drink can was
sentenced 10 three years' probation.
Marlena K. Wheeler, 21, of
Cincinnati, also must oblain mental
health counseling, U.S. District
Jpdge Herman Weber ruled.
Webel' ordered Ms. Wheeler to
spend the ftrst six months of her
sentence in a halfway house. The
judge ruled she could spen.d the
time in home confinement instead,

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Before becoming publisher in
Iron Mountain. Unders was editor
of The Mining Journal of Marquette, Mich., publisher of the
Hudson Valley News in Newburgh,
N.Y., then of The Valley Independent. He retired in November 1992.
Survivors include his wife, Carole; his daughter, Susan; and a
brother, Ernest Linders.

A. SaDiaOau

C. HIPPY Holiday&amp;/
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LemQuon
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lem
Quon, longtime owner of the Formosa Cafe, a hangout for Hollywood celebrities, died of chronic
heart Irouble Sunday. He was 83.
Until his last days, Quon occupied the cafe's comer booth, surveying lhe scene at the Cantonese
restaurant he operated for about 50
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A7

Shuttle crew gets break
from mission~s duties ·

Hanshaw and Nellie (Price) Hanshaw Bowen. He was also preceded In
dealb by hi&amp; wife, Agnes (SCBJ1)erry) Hanshaw and a bl!llher, Plwl H.lfanv

VINTON- Faye B. Bales, 8S, 1031 White Oat Road, Gallipolis. died
Saturday, Dec. 11, 1993 in llleasant VaUey Hospital.
Born July 11,·1908 in Deer. Trail, eo1o.. dauamr or the 1a1e Ralph and
Della~ Bartoo, she illended the Wellston Cllutth of God
.
ShC married Lestrz Lee Bales on Dec, 20, 1925, and he preceded her in
death in 1968. She was also preceded in death by one brother and ooe sis-

Paf•

OFF

�•

•

Ohio/W.Va.

December 12, 1993

·Along the River

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A8

-- -Area deaths-- Miami to continue debate over nicl&lt;name
(Coatia11ed from A·7)

OXFORD (AP) - The Mianii
University board of trustees Saturday approved President Paul Risser s proposal to to let everyone
decide for themselves whether to
use the nickname Redskins.
The nine-member board voted
5-3 with one abstention in favor of
the poposal Risser outlined on Friday. There was liule debate among
the board today.
Risser said he did not recom·
mend dropping the nickname
because he did not want to dictate
the decision to faculty and students.
He told the board of trustees he
would now refer to the school's

Bertha L. Sheets
GALLIPOLIS - Bertha L. Sheets, 75, Gage Road, Parriot, died Friday, Dec. 10, 1993 in Holzer Medical Center.
. Born May 30, 1918 in Putnam County, W.Va., daughter of the late
:Clarence and LiUie Sowards, she was a homemaker and a member of
Salem Baptist Church.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Clarence Edward
Sheets.
. Surviving are. a son, John Sheets of Palriot; four grandchildren, Maile
:Sheets and Teresa Eastman! bc?th of Gallipolis, Usa ClarKe of Ironton,
·and Jonnette Hazen of Lowsville, Ky.; three great-grandchildren; eight
:sisters, l!loise McCallister, Clara Sovine, Wilma Pauley , Mildred
Sowards, Marjorie Mead. Edna Oswalt, Ruth Borovi and Frances Houchins; and a brother, John Sowards. 1
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home. Burial will be m the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 p.m. and Monday from 6-8 p.m.

BARBERTON (AP) - At least
five people, including four children, wen: tiDed Sarwday in a fne
at a housing project in this Aleron
suburb.
Firefighter Howard Prager said
the victims had not been identified.
Their bodies were taken to the
Summit County coroner's office.
"It's lilcely to take some time to
identify them because of the extent
to which they were burned," said
Joe Orlando, coroner's spokesman.
Neither the cause of the fii"C nor
the extent of damages has been
determined.
Prager said the frre took 15 to
20 minutes to put out and was limited to two apartments. One of the
apartments was destroyed while the
other suffered moderate to heavy

CARROLL -Roy W. Wolfe, 80, Carron, formerly of Columbus and
Meigs County, died Thursday, Dec. 9, 1993 at his residence.
Retired from Lennox Industries, he was a graduate of Chester High
School.
Survivors include a son and daughter-in-law, Raymond and Judy
Wolfe, and a grandson, Heath, all of CarroU; a sister, Christine "Denna"
, Kessler ofWaUa, Wash.; a. n!ece, Mary Kathryn Rose; and nephews, MiJ.
· ton and Glen Tuu!e and William Sorden Jr., al1 of Meigs County.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Edna G. Fell Wolfe, in 1991;
infant daughter, Anna Louise Wolfe; parents, Fred and Amy Wolfe; and a
sister, Anna Tuu!e.
Services will be Monday at 2 p.m. in the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will be in
Pine Grove Cemetery, near Racine. ·
Friends may call Sunday from 2-4 p.m. at the Dwayne R. Spence
Funeral Home, 650 W. Waterloo St, Canal Winchester, and Monday
from noon until time of services at the Ewing Funeral Home.

EPA orders incinerator shutdown

i

' emergency,

~

The

Sikr. ,

back.I!P·. ~stem P. function·
·~
·'

11al, the comriM&lt;i':Said.
I
r-:z.:v.

.

Officer,
suspect
die after
shootout
.

.

COLUMBUS (AP} - A police
officer who was .killed in a
shootout after stoppmg a car dtd
not say why he was making the
trM!ic stop.

.

.
Another man also dted m the

pfii"C Friday near a housing proJect on the city's ncrtheast side. At
least one other man ran from the
scene and was being sought by
police SaturdaY·.
.
•
Officer Chrts Clites, 26, was
shot near the right eye abou! 5 a.m.
and died about 2 p.m. at Ohio State
University MediCal Center.
A tape of his radio broadcast di~
not reveal why he stopped the veh_tcle. Police spokeswoman Carne
Bartunek said Clites r_e{)Orted that
he was stopping a suspictous car.
The car was reported stolen
about two liourS after tbe shootings.
: Police said Clites exchanged
: gunfii"C with Brian E. Davis,29, of
Columbus. Davis was shot by
·another
officer and died at the
..

scene.

.

' Clites was the 48th city pollee
offiCCI' ldUed on duty. The last such
death occurred when OffiCer Ray·
mond E, Radel was killed in an
auto accident on Apri12S, 1991.

'S

StrikerS cry foul over action_

"
j

the board violated the union's rigtit
to picket.
'
Ms. Francis said there was no
progress made· in talks held Thursday night. She said no breakthrough is anticipated until a new!y
elected board takes office in JBA·
uary.
'
Classes in the 1,150-sllldent district are being held, staffed by
replacement teachers.
'

SALINEVILLE (AP) - Strilcing teachers and staffers in eastern
Ohio have brought an unfair labor
practices charge against the school
board, teachers union president
Gwell Francis said Friday.
The Southern Local school
board previously filed an unfair
Ia bor practices cllarge against the
strikers, who have picketed outside
homes of school board members.
Francis said thel;;li ~~

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KROMER CAPS
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December 12,1993

:L.C?""S?.! poinsettia growers supply region
.,....-.....,~-------.,...~,.,.,..-

flmes-Sentlnel Staff
PORTLAND - Nurturing
-poinsettias from four-inch-tall
.seedling s to radi ant blooms has
challenged Suzanne Bush for 13

-years.
·' "You scream at 'em saying
·."Grow," and scream at 'em saying
"DOn't grow." That's TLC."' said
. Bu sh, a Harris Farm and Green- .
· house employee in Portland.
· Bush compared raising poinset·
·.tias to rearing children, both
demand close daily attention, she
said.
"At least they don' t talk back,"
Bush quipped.
.
·:· But, this may be the last year
Bush and other Harris Farm work. ·ers cultivate poinsettias.
. Since these festive flowers
-require more care than most other
iplants and profits have not expand-~d as originally expected, some
county growers have stopped grow.jng this festive flower.
,. . Poinsettia production had been
closer to 10 percent of all county
.Brcenhouse sales five years ago,
~ut has dipped to about 5 percent,
-~
· aid Greg Erwin, the grower for
·
"sFarms.
. "It's a difficult crop to grow ithe heat, water, liming, fertilizing.
:2¥ou just h;IVe to get it all right,"
!:f:rwin said. "The money is to be
1nade in the spring."
; Harris Farms dropped their pro·
~ uction from 12,000 plants to
5,000 this year. Next year, the farm
·l nay not grow any poinsettias,
i;:rwin said.
~ "This is just not a money crop,
"jt's more of a courtesy crop," he
:said.
·: The half dozen county growers
; ~ow supply most of southeast
;Ohio, sald Hal Kneen, Meigs
County agricultural extension
·.jlgent
:• Floriculture - growing flowers
·.' ,- made up 25 percent of aU coun:ly farming cash receipts in 1991.
·:rhe 250,000 poinsettias grown in
:'the county each year account for
. less than one-tenth of all floricul·
",lure, f'J!een said.
·~ According to the U.S. Depart.ment of Agriculture, poinsettias are
ihe top potted plant, with about 50
million plants sold each year.
Across· the slate, sales rose from
nearly Sllmillion in 1991 to about
"SIP ,tl)j!J,ioll in 1992, according to
:.Ohio Department of Agriculture

,,
.

;i•t~atistics.
The number of poinsettias
'grown·in the county expanded until

ltJI.Itate llllllranee Company

..
J

-:

The Redskins nickname WIIS
coined in 1928 by a publicist for
the school.
•&lt;
Miami has had some type Q'f
American Indian mascot to com·
plement the Redskins nickname
since the 1950s.
~
Current mascot Chief Miami
dates to 1972. Students in the role
wear American Indian garb provided by the Miami tribe and perform
traditional Indian dances.
·

BIBS

By Texas,

:Pick-3: 4·1·3
Piek-4: 24-8-3
Bilckcye 5:.5-9-2,0-23-35-36
The Ohio Louery will pay out
. $1,468,210,50 to winners in Friday's PiCk 3i'(umben daily game.
, Sales in PiCk 3 Numbers totaled
$1,609,453.50.
.
In tbe other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players wagered
$154,800 and will share
$332,462.50
Sale• in B~Jckcye S totaled
$645,565.'
.
Tile jackpot for Saturday's
' Super Lotto drawing· was $4 mil·
lion.
.. WI!SI' VDGJNJA
. Daily 3: 2-9·5
Dllly4: 9-4-l-0 . ' .
c.sJi 25: '7-8-11-15-20-22

sian.

BIBS

By The AIIOCiated Presr
Here are the winning numbers
chosen in Friday's Ohio and West

omo

damage.
The fire started at about 7: 15
a.m. at the Van Buren Homes com·
plex owned by the Akron
MeltOpolitan Housing Authority.
State fire marshal officials from
Cleveland were caUed to lite scene.
Housing authority director Tony ·
O'Leary said the fire caused the
evacuation of four apartments,
where ~ix to 10 people live. He said
the complex is about 25 ·years old
and has 230 units, all with smoke
detectors.

ed a resolution stating it was
" proud to have the name Miami
Redskin carried with honor by the
athletic rep,rcscntation or Miarlli
Universil):. •
The 1nbe issued a statement this
year supporting the ealls for discus·

Two ti'ustees, Harold Paul and
William Gunlock, who voted
against Risser's plan, said they
were disappointed he did not take a
stronger stand.
" I don ' t think we reac hed a
decision,'' said Paul, who favored
keeping the nickname.
Miami University is named for
an American Indian tribe that once
lived in Ohio and now is in -Oklahoma. Risser said the university
treasures its relationship with the
Miami tribe.
Risser read a letter signed by
Floyd E. Leonard , chief of the.
Miami tribe, and other tribe lead·
ers, which supported his recom·
mendations.
In 1912, the Miami tribe adopt-

-

•

DonStanlor

"The Plaee·to...,.op for Worfl.
and Western"
BLUE DENIM
BROWN DUCK

Lottery numbers
Virginia JO!Itries:

are incinerated to test the plant's
ability to safely desti'oy them. In
some test runs in March, the incin·
erator achieved slightly less than
the 99 .99 percent destruction
intended.
Plant spoke~man Raymoad
Wayne had said before the mal·
function that WTI hoped to begin
repeating the !rial burn on Monday.
Wayne said that during the
March teSis , material to be
desti'oyed was injected into both
the main lciln and a secondary eom·
bustion chamber. The material in
the secondary combustion chamber
was not exposed to the same high
temperatures as tbe material in the
main

The operatOr told government
regulators about the problem and
said the equipment would be
repaired. A "small amount" of
combustion gas was emitted from
the incinerator's rotary kiln, WTI
said.
WTI officials did not respond to
a message seeking further commenL
Earlier Friday, the Ohio EPA
approved a plan submitted by WTI
to repeat tests that resulted in hi~h­
er-than-expected emissions dunng
the inilial trial burn in March,
The federal EPA gave its
approval for the retesting in late
October.

WESTERN
BOOTS

•

"While I sincerely believe that
those who continue to use the nickname ' Redskin' use it with no
intent to be disrespectful, for me
the 'Miami Tribe' more appropri·
ately rellects my beliefs and values,
" Risser said.

Complex fire leaves 6 dead

Roy W. ·Wolfe

E.AST LIVERPOOL (AP) Hours after a hazardous-waste
incinerator won government
approval for a trial bum, an equipment failure on Friday caused regulators to order the plant shut down
for repairs.
.
Donald R. Schregardus, director
of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, said he did not want
the Waste Technologies Industries
incinerator running until the system
was fixed.
.The incinerator, which lies
along the Ohio River near the bor·
der with West Virginia and Pennsylvania, Will be allowed to operate
once·the agency verifies that the
sySielll and its backup are working,
Schregardus said.
: A scrubber system valve failed
: to close, triggering an automatic
1shutoff of the incinerator. There
waS .no publiW'I1
'c saft!Y ~ ~ no

athletic teams as tb e "Miam i
Tribe."
Risser said individuals who continue to usc the Redskin name
should consider the concerns raised
at a Nov. 19 campus ! orum. Students, alumni and faculty debated
whether Redskins is a ractst term or
a tribute to Indian tradition.

Section B

about five years ago, when some of
the larger growers shifted away
from this crop, said Dale Hill of
Karen •s Nurseries.in Racine.
·· "This is a growing industry in
_this county but it costs a lot more to
start up than people think,'' Hill
said.
• Most county growers sell their
Poinsettias outside the county, Hill
·said.
Smaller growers - who don '1
llave t'.l pay for expensive outside
·labor and book-keeping - can
·eontinue to provide to local clubs
and Drg&amp;llizations, Hill added. The
smaller growers in the county have
continued to expand but the largest
growers have stopped, he added.
· Hill said he continues to sell the
poinsettias because he can draw ·
customers into his store and greenhtiuseslear-round.
·, Hal of the 5,000 plants Hill
~ells each year are retail. Most of
4he other growers sell only about 5
percent dire ctly 10 customers,
Kneen said.
With a longer growing season
than most plants, poinseltias are
Qne of the rrickiest of all plants to
~w, Hill added.
, Other flowers will revive if dis4ased or lacking water, but poinseiUf!S just die, Hill said.
: "Thev are very' susceptible to
disease .... HiD said.
• The county's growers must
plant the seedlings in August and
~bout two weeks later pinch the
l!uds. If each plant is not pinched it
wiD grow only a single stalk and
will not have thick blooms, Kneen
said.
Until October, special care must
lie taken to shade the plants from
sun.
, " Poinsettias range .from the tradi·
•tional red 10 pink, white and anum·
ber of varieties of flecked plants .and are not poisonous if eaten,
-despite a continuing myth, Kneen
•added.
• Despite a common misconcepCion, the flowers of this plant are
C~e small yeUowish nobs at the center top of the plant, Kneen said.
the festive colors of this native
~exican plant actually are the
k&amp;ves or bracts.
·
! The legend of the poinseltia
Qates back a number of centuries to
a·Christmas Eve in MexicO when a
little girl named Pepita had ·DO gift
tJr the Christ child. She was urged
t9 give a llum.ble gift, so Pepita
•natche~ up some weeds on her
't'IY to church. As she approached
. ~ ~tar. tbe weeds blossomed into
t 6nd_¢ul flowers, according to a
, . .phlet by the Society of Amori·
~ AOrists.
.

FLOWER PREPARATION. Phyllis McMillan, lop center; walen the poinsettias Tuesday
before being sold at ·Karen's Greenhouse in
Racine. Tbe plants, during hot, sunny days must
be watered at least once a day, McMillan said.
Routine Insecticide sprayings must also occur.
Pictured left, Suzanne Bush, lert, and Debbie

Rizerload place poinsettias into boxes ror shipping at Harris Farm and Greenhouse in Port·
land. Janet Sayre, left, and Suzanne Bush in the
above picture wrap tin roil around the base or
tbe pots before they are loaded onto trucks at
Harris Farm.

Care of poinsettias
CARE DURING THE HOLIDAYS
To choose the best poinsettia, look for tigh~y clustered, small, central
flowers with bright foliage.
·
Once a plant has been selected, make sure to:
- keep the soil damp to the touch.
·
- store at about60 degrees at night and just less than 72 degrees during
the day.
.
,
- avoid cold drafts and winds.
SPECIAL CARE TOREBLOOMNEXTYEAR
- .Through March. keep at the same conditions as during the holiday
season, making sure to fertilize about once a month.
- About the ftrsl of April, reh!ove the faded panS of the plant. Store at
about60 degrees.
·
- About the middle ot May, cut back the stems to about four to six inches
tall to promote side-branching. Re-pot in a larger container with newsoil.
The soil should be two. parts soil to one part coarse peat moss. Water
thoroughly after re-potting.
.
- About Memorial Day, place the plants outside f1tst into indirect light,
thendirecLMakesuretheplantisnotsubjectedtonighttemperaturesbelow 60 degrees.
- About Independence Day,'rrim or pincb the newer buds so they will
also 1.-anch out. Slightly increase the amount of fertilizer.
·
- Labor Day, move y9Ufplj1Dt inside so it will have six hours of direct
l ight from a cuttain-free Wl~bw.
'
'
- Tbe first day of autumn, lnake sure the plant gets only a shon-day
ampuntoflight. Place abox overd)eplantorpul it in closet that won' t be
opened from S p.m. to 8 a.m. Continite to water and fenilize.
- Thanksgiving, stop shon &lt;lay/long niP,t treatmenL Place the plant in
an II!C8 with at least six,hours of direct hghL

. L-~------------------------------------~~

IN THE SPIRIT • Debbie Morarlty and her
daughter Brittany buy a poinsettia from Dale

Hll~ owner

or Karen's Greenhouse In Racine.

�Tlmee Sentinel

12,1993

December

!

wv

icholson recognized 'for 65 year membership

lhe News ·H otline
.

RUlLAND - A 65-year mem-

446-2342 .
'

bersbio seal was presented 10 Neva

Nicbolaon at a recent meeting of
Star Grange 11778 held at the
Gnna:e Hall.
.Other membership awards presented were a 60-year seal to Laun
Krebs, a SO-year certificate to
Everet~ Holcomb and a 2S-year
certificate to Frank Colwell.
Janet Morris, women's activities
chairman, announced winners of
the state balring contest as follows:

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF
SOUTHEAST OHIO
:~~dentlal

FamUy Planning Servlca for females &amp; males

• Medleat
exlliiiS
·.
'
}

LAURA SAYRE AND BARRET McQUITHY

Sayre-McQu ithy
RODNEY - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Sayre of Rodney and Mr. and
Mrs. Terry McQuithy of West
Ponsmouth announce the engagment and approaching marriage of
their children, Latm1 Dawn to Barret Alan.
Laura is a registered nurse and
is employed as Directory of Nursing at Scenic HiUs Nursing Center,

j

Stewart-Mannon

( MID.PLgpQRT - Mr. and Mrs.
Hlfold Stewan of Middlepon and
1\;fr. and Mrs. Loren Mannon of
Pic'ot, · annoan~e the engagement
a fonhcomlng marriage of their
c. Idren ~ Kelly Irene and Kevin

r'titlvity scene defined
Chester Garden Clu~

~

CHES TER

- The Christmas
eeting or the Che_st~r Garden
ub w~ held at Trml!y Church
ihe~e dm~er was s~rved by the
1al projeCts commlltee.
,.. Betty Dean, preSident, weime&lt;! the 20 membets and guesiS.
. vouons were presented by Maye
~ reading the old but ever n~w
. 1stmas Story. She read scnp.res from the Old Tes~ament,
icha and Isa•a,h. telhng the
· phecy of the birth of a ruler,
m the New "J:estameQt, Luke
38, telling tl)D story of Annunlion; Luke 1:4(:i,telling the Magtud~ and Luke'~ story of the
Uvlly, the fulfillment of the
phecy.
~' Mrs. Mora explained the usage .
~the words, "he will be wrapped
ii;swaddling clolhs." This was the
ctice of tigh~y wrappin_g the
w born son of kings and pnncess
fine linen _strips of clot!J about
mc.hes ~Ide, she explained. It

J.

MIDDLEPORT - Reports of
PTO fund raising
projc!:ts have heen made.
The winner of the Super Ninlendo sl:t was Davey Boyd of Middleport, with Tiffany Qualls receiving a SIS prize for selling the winning ticket and Cindy Lewis and
John Cleland spliting the $15.00
prize for seUing the most tickets.
Despite the min., the recent tag
day was a success, according to
Connie Bunon and a vote of thanks
was extended to the public for suppon. Out selling tags during the
day were the baskethall players and
~vera] · Bradbury

Leon.
The open church wedding will
take place on Sawrday, Mareh 19,
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy.

i-t

the pine cones in the mixture and
spread on old newspapen 10 dry.
To brighten the mood of your fJre·
place, 10&amp;8 in one or two cones now
and then.
A gift wrap judging committee
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) made up of guests, Sherri Patterson Jan Davis Pat Ferguson Char- Poet and author Maya Angelou told
Iotoo Elberfield, Rosemary Keller, studeniS and educaton that people
Jane Aanestad and linle daughter must become more courageous to
Haley, chose winners from three ensure the survival of humanity.
"We are acting too cowanlly to
categories all using fresh plant
survive.'No one guaranleea that our
material. '
The winners were Maurit.a. species WiU survive unless we ·
Miller, recycle; Macel Barton, relil begin to .develop ·c.o,urage," she·
gious; ~tty Dean, secular. Prizes said Thursday in a speech at Ohio
made by'Edna Wood were present- Dominican College.
She iiiid slie dreamed of a world
ed IOthe winnm.
where people are recognized as
The SIII!Shine repon for November was given by Dorothy Karr and •:•wondi-ously different and mar~eloualy alike."
Clartce Krautter.
The sunshine chairman for . Ms. Angelou wrote and read a
poem for President Clinton's inauDecember will be Eleanor Knight.
Suration
that became a best-selling
The January meeting will be at
book.
Her · a~t~~iog~aphy ,
the home of Betty Dean on Jan. 5.
.. ~
.
~ .
-""'~

SUNDAY

-w;.- .

.:\.

RACINE - The Southern High
School choir will present a Christmas concen Sunday at 3 p.m. at the
high school.

•

CHESTER - A live nativity
scene with children and animals
will be featured in the parking lot
by the Chesler United Methodist
Church Sunday, 6 to 7 p.m. Sharon
Hausman, pastor, invi~s the public
to drive by or stop and view the
display.

'

MR. AND MRS. HAROLD PAYNE

68th anniversary_
celebrated'
.

509 S. Third Street
Middleport
992·5912

. BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
; Harold Payne will celebn~ their
: 68th wedding annivemary Dec. 12.
Harold is a deacon at the Mt.
: Carmel Baptist Church. He is a
retfree from the Gallipolis DevelOPI1lental Center af~ 25 year ~f

'

'

KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive Chrisunas dinner will be held
at the Kyger Creek Club House
Monday at 7 p.m. There will be a
devotional speaker.

• Dolls • Department 56 • Heritag~. ·
&amp; Snowbab,es • Fontanini Nativities f ,
. $antas, Emmett Kelly
.
·Thomas Stahl. Trees· Ornaments:
.. · ' ·Tree Tops· Plus Many More
_.,
:o,coratio~.~. Scented·candles, Nativity ~gyte;s :
·.;. · _,
5-lnch To 5 Feet Tall.

POMEROY - The Bedford
Township trusleea will hold a regular meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

Christ~as Shoppe

SOliD
MAPlE

These solid wood Glider Roct&lt;ers are

•Jngeu Furniture and Jewelry, • Joh ...ons Variety Store,
•Ths Shoe Pl4ce!Loclu!r.219 (til4), ~Mill Stroot Books,
·
•Tro!Wy Slatwn Crafts, *Middleport Department Store,
:··•Dairy Queen, *Radw Shack, •Daru, •Furniture on tlu! 'T '. :·

selection, q4antitles are limited at
these special sale prices!

For
Your
Party
PleasureThe sky's
the limit! ·

.
.
:r,r i lo
! ~

\{"

s.,.~-.a~.

~

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.s2·99

...

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ITU.RE -''
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For more InfOrmation, col

1·S00-662·MIXX .A.oo•i1'''

.&lt; ''
-11
Warehou...

1
Showroo!Yii ·

mas SICII'y.

;
PotlUCk ~freshiiiCIIIS followiJ!l:
the meeting.
• .:
The next meelin&amp; will be thcf.
Chriatmas dinner on Saturday;
Dec.J8 at 6:30p.m. at the Salem:
Cen~r Firehouse. The meat will
be furnished by the Oranp. 'TIIol6

&amp;.- Swimming Pocill•
LAYAWAY IIOW &amp;

t..rawar

_ _11.
.. 1994

p,Wi"P'MI!J~;tW:,&amp;*W.-«'.~41"11.,..-It·'q

i: .

Ill

Lift Cb•lr 1''·1 ··

'i•· .

WAS S750.00

Special

S59900

Fully RICllnH IJid Llfta at the
Trouch of I Button.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections' regular
meeting will be held at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon at the board office,
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

BOWMAN'S

POMEROY - Meigs County
40&amp;8 wil have its annual Christmas dinner at the Pomeroy Legion
haD Tuesday. There will be a social
hour at 6 p.m. following by a dinner. Members may take guests.

•
LARGE SELEcnON OF BATHROOM EQUIPMENT
•tilth Stool• &gt;Grab Blra •Safaly Rail•
Avallabll At:

BOWMAN'S

SyriKise
992·5776

GALLIPOLIS-MIDDLEPORT

•s•
DIAMOND IUCELET
Reg. 499
•;. Ct.

1 Ct. Only
Reg. saee

'From Mig. Sugg. 11«8ll
T.W. laiDIIII dl8mllnd Might.

.9Lcquisitions !Fine !fewe{ry
•

'

\
.

,,

rwo Lo6At1t)Ns
'

I

&gt;'

,•

,•

'

. . 151 Se@nd Ave., Gallipolis
i .
446-2842 .
end .
91 Mill Street, M.lddleport

m-t250 '

.

' Mn. ~-10n aald abO 1114 ber

•

SALE 1499

Hundreds of Beautiful Christmas Ideas- All On Sale!

of

~le it W,ill pending."

$199
REG. '299

PIQUA, Ohio (AP) - A
woman who asked voters 10 let her
keep a potbellied pig as a houscpet
said city offiCials have given ~ a
week to find a new home for the
animal ..
Cynthia Gaston said she and her
husband, Timothy, planned to
move out of this western Ohio city
to avoid giving up Roxie, an SOpound miniature potbellied pjg, .
However; she said Friday the
couple has not yet been able to sen
tbetr house and cannot afford to
move until they do.
,
, In auempt to keep the pig, the .
Gastonl put an i8sue on the blllqt
that would have eiCIIIptcd the animal from a city ordinance that batt.l
~cultural swine within tity lim- ·
itr. However, it wu clefealed Iii the
l'!ov. 2 election. .
·
·:'Mrs~ Gaston said the couple
would lilz to move 10 rural Shelby
C2ounty, where they could keep
ROxie. Sjie aald it il her flll!ily's
clloiee !Omove.
. • ·
·
t. MI. O,lltmfnn llid lhG told Oas·
1Q11 the toullle would have to find a
nillw ~ far the lillmilllid !hat a•
~- slloilld be enooah lim!e.
' ,, "The)\'vc beeD Ui ~
~ ~ all ~lou&amp;" ilald MI.
OUbitiiL ;'They aot It on the ballot.
_. iho City IOilbd.lhe. otlia- way
11 -abanct ~ lhlnkios of hlrins a

..

m::r;,.:r•WI,;

:~rc:~to=th~~~- present- ~-masla:d tobrinsacov; _

rioring anniversary

~ ID ~the cily'I,IIIOYei.
,J

POMEROY - The Bill Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
at 5: lS p.m. at the Carpenter's
Hall. Public is inviled to attend.

Piqua moves
to evict
potbellied pig

TAKE·
YOUR.
· ·-'. CHOICE!

TRI~Statg·:.Mobile 'Df

BRADFORD - The Bradford
Church of Christ's children's choir
will present "Not a Creature was
Stimng", the story of the Feline
and McMouse families, Sunday at
7 p.m. at the church localed at the
crossroads of Stale Route 124 and
Bradbury Road.

a

WRAP- UP
CHRISTMAS!

·-u~llwldil.adi&amp;iar~•~m•~11dl'*iH

.

4

POMEROY - Disabled American Veterans IJid I Mies Auxiliary
will have a meeting ..d Chrisunas
dinner, Monday at 7 p .m. at the
hall. Tbere will be a gift exchange
with men to take gifts far men, and
women to take gifts for women.

Donald and Marla on
their way to the altar _

Glltltr Rocker,
"11~29

Most styles available In choice ol
woods and fabrics. Shop early for best

fi . .. ·.Sul'Port ry'our~clf( ~frcfianu . . . . .... ·• .jj

Wllh the...

'ania

Hubbards Greenh01se

,.

sai(j. The child is left in this
ill&gt;siitio~ from IS minutes to _two
wh1le the parents med1tate
make their vows to God contheir care and tnining of

poicd ..w.

rr-

ROCKERS-; FbR CHRISTMA

wif1 remain open tit 8:00p.m.. Montfa.y- ~ritfay:
- ~ Hea l 1h .......
--~ F'orne~•. . ~·•~··•-·
·
F" J I
•Big Be....
..."'1 ....uwn• me ewe ry,

expreaa their opinion of this pro-

ed a procnm on CbriJimal.
:.:
Joe White save a Chriltmu
recitation of 1111a11
Santa's Toy Bag, waa
w!Jt!·
Rick and Janis Maco111ber beiRf
the winnm. Smith telld tbe CbriAi

Gallia events

Gibbs

·

amokinj ban. He asked memben
10 wri~ their congressman and

the you_n s adull/marrie leni11n
Macomber, deaf chairman,
cookies flnt place was~ ~ reponed where funds do.naled to
and second place was
· 01:; the stale deaf commiuee are used.
In the youth peanut bars ~- P
The Orange then voted 10 give their
went to Chip Macomber ahd ace- usual donation to this fund.
·
ond place to Rachel Aahley. ·
Docember 22 wu Itt for the day
Eldon Barrows, legialative to deliver fruit baskets and go
agent, reponed on the prOposed Christmas caroli~. Members are
to 111eet at Cathenne Colwell's at
3:00 p.m. to make the baskets and

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461 ,
F. and A. M. will have its annual
installation of officets at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Membership
pins will also be presented, one 70
year,
one SO year, and three 25 year
CLOTHING DISTRIBUTED
pins,
by the district deputy .
CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Mei~s Refreshments
will be served.
Community Action Agency will
hold its free clothing day for lowincome persons Dec. 16 from 9
NOW OPEN fOQ
a.m. 10 12 p.m. The agC&lt;ncy clothing bank 1s located in the old
CHQI&amp;TMA&amp; &amp;EMDN
school house building in Cheshire.
PolnMlliM &gt;t• a Up
ENTRANTS SOUGHT
a
an11Ct Holly
"t.,..
GALLIPOI;IS ' The Qhio ValLtv. NGII111f11Y lp 11M
ley Visitm Center 'will be publish&amp;-7 fl • '21"
ing of calendar of events for JanCut
rr--uv.
w...u..
. uary through April, 1994. OrganiAND MRS: RALPH.,GIBBS
·For the Loved OnM
zations in Gall18 County and surGn1ve BIMUie '11"
rounding areas wishing to submit a
non-secular event for inclusion in
AriHiclll Sprlya, VMM
the calendar should co)ltact the
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.- Mr. clughter and son-in-law, Gloria
811dWINihl
Visitors Center at,(614)446-6882 Open O.lly 11-5, sunuya 12-5
and Mrs. Ralph Oiblls, Jr., of New and Larry Comps10n, Middlepon,
Haven; W. Va. will celebnlc their and a son and daughter-in-law, or 1-800-765-6482 by Dec. 20.
Gregg and Robin Gibbs, New
4Sih $iniversary ThDIIday.
DINNER SCHEDULED
· They were married in Pomeroy Haven, W. Va., 10 grandchildren,
GALLIPOLIS - Christ United
on Dec. 16, 1948 . They have a and three great-grandchildren.
Methodist Church will be serving a
Christmas Eve dinner at 5:30 p.m.
with a service beginning at 7 p.m.
Anyone interested can contact
Pastor Mike Smith or the Red
Cross at446-8SS5. Transponation
10 the dinner will be available.
LOG CLASS SET
Trump's affair with Maples led
NEW YORK (AP)- The~­
GALLIPOLIS
- The 0.0. Mcin10 his 1990 split from wife Ivana
aid is fmaiiY. ready to tie the knoL
tyre
Park District will be sponsor' The Daily News or New York and their divorce two years later. ing a Yule Log class at the Senior
reponed today that Donald Trump He's talked of marrying Maples Citizens Center Dec. 14 at I p.m.
and Marla Maples, the IIIOther of before, but even the birth of their The class will be instructed by
!lis newest child, will gel married daughter, Tiffany, two months ago Becky Scou. To register contact the
didn't get him down the aisle. The
Dec. 20 at 1iump's PWia ho~L ·
real
estate mogul made up hls mind park district or the Senior Citizen
The couple's walk to the altar
Center.
has been anything but direct, but after a gunman killed five people
PLAY SCHEDULED
"we never doubted that we'd get on a New Yodc train this week. He
told Maples on Friday, "When I
BIDWELL - Bidwell United
married," Maples said.
saw what happened on the Lonj! Methodist Church will hold its
GOLD
BAR
Island Rail Road, I figured life IS . Christmas play at 7 p.m. Sunday,
short - and I want to do this Dec. 12. Refreshments will be
now,'' she told the News: • .
seryed.

.
STAHL'S

'

CHESTER - The Chester Volunteer Fire Dei'Bfllllent will have
its annual Chnstmas dinner at 5
p.m. at the fJrehouse for aU community individuals and families
who helped at the fair booth and at
the flfChouse in 1993. Meat will be
furnished and those attending are 10
take a covered dish.
~ONDAY

.

FROM STAHL'S

"Wouldn't Take Nothmg tor My
Journey Now," is on the ciirrent
Publishers Weekly list of best sellets.
"Human beings are more alike
than unalike," she said. "Whether
in Paris, Texas, or Paris, France,
we all want to have good jobs
w~ :WJ) are needed and. ~~ted
and paid just a liule more !han we
deserve. We want healthy children,
safe streets, to be loved and have
the unmitigated galliO accept love.

r\irrutxl'slnligh_t This is~ sign that
~ntsfoiw'ard
will.rear
thetrthe
chtld
10
straight'
before
Lord,

service. Ada worked for 10 ye'ars
with the Gallia County board of
education. She is the assi'stant
church cleric and president of the
Missionary Circle of Mt. Carmel
Church.

·..With -au tnerrtmmilrJs ::

cheerleaden. Orhets assisting were
Coach Greg Vining, Bob McClure
of McClure's Restaurant, Penny
and Susie Cox, aU of the businesses
that participaled, and to everyone
who donated money.
The PTO is also heading a
CampbeUs Soup label drive at the
school. The labels will be collecled
all year and the goal is for a TV
and VCR for the school. Each.
room will have a collection bin for
the students to deposit the labels.
The labels will be counted each
month and the room collecting the
most will be given a pizza pany.

such a great value we bought all we
could, lo pass the savings on to you!

.

. "'

• .V

We accept Medicaid and private Insurance

Poet urges courage developrf)ent

wrap~/1u~~:E~ ~~~i:!~tt:~t:=k·-~

God has given them.

'

414 Second Street
Gallipolis
446-0166

Catherine Colwell, fnt plli:e; Role
B&amp;rrow1, eec;nncl place; lnd.Mixine
Dyer thirduC::~r:J: a .: .aple
Cookiea - 1 .
:
.In ·

Meigs commtJnity calendar

•Pap~
• rreaitancy tests &amp; counseling
• rn.ta &amp;,treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•KnOdymous mv teltl &amp; counseling
•Mttl!ods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
: , , Norplant-lmphuit
·
otpoProvera-lnjeetlon
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
SUdlng Fee scale

Fund raisers addressed
at Bradbury PTO meeting · -: CHRISTMAS~~~

KELlY STEWART AND KEVIN MANNON

~

Bidwell.
Barr is a physical therapy assistant and is employed by Total
Rehabilitation of Atlanta Georgia.
The open church wedding will
be held Dec. 18 ~ 1:30 p.IJ!. at
Rodney Uniled Methodist Church
Rodney with music staning at 1
p.m.

pegr
1~
--·--

Sunca.y Tlmee 81'"":1

·.
.,

FREE PARKING
·FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

•Diamond•
oGold .Ch1ina
•Salko Wltchft

oerosaPtna
•Rani Caln1

·

�•

rage

B4-

Pomeroy Middleport Gelllpolla,·OH-Polnt Pleeeant, WV

Sunday T1m11 Sentinel

A,dventists gear up for Ingathering fuTJtl campaign }

Man wrongly accused of rTlolestation

Beat of the Bend...

Dtlr Au Lladen; "Healiul
Stnivor Ia T-· 10e1111 11 fit
DCifec:dy lito proOio of dwJWMis ~
ladividuala
bave beeD
deballlled and abuled _by their
lbcnpiati.ShellidJblltmdlalle

by Bob Hoeflich

Ann

w••

Add Rutland to the communities
having Christmas lighting contests
this holiday season.
The Rutland Friendly Garden
Club will be in charge of the contest, securing the judges. getting
them around to the bright spots,
announcing the winners and so
forth . The file department. emer·
gency squad and businesses arc
providing the prizes. Judging will
take place between 6 and 9 p.m. on
Thursday, Dec. 16.
Members of the Winding Trail
Garden Club indicaled this week
they would have been glad to handle the details of a similar conacst
in Pomeroy but no one picked up
the ball. Too bad, Pomeroy does
have a lot of atlractively decorated
homes this season. A little encouragement goes a long way sometimes.

going welL Thank you!
While you're doing your Christmas shopping you might want to
check out Pomeroy's newest business. It's a gift shop ?\)Cncd by
Rhojcan McClure and ts called
"Rbojean 's Reflections". The business is located in the former
McClure Restaurant building
which is next door to the family's
new restaurant on Pomeroy's East
Main St

And Don Ameche whose star
had shone for some 60 years on
stage, television and radio died this
week at the age of 85. It's always a
bit sad to note the passing of the
great ones. Any of you remember
Don on radio in the early days of
his career? He was on "The LiUle
Theater Off Times Square" Show
and many of us were glued to our
Joe Clark. popular Pomeroy radio sets every Friday to catch the
businessman, was returned to his latest presentation. And remember,
home on Lincoln Hill Road in the "Little Theater" allowed
Pomeroy Saturday morning follow- "smoking in the outc:t lobby only"?
ing a week's confinement at the Now that's been a while.
Holzer Medical Cenacr. Joe will be
recuperating at home for a bit and I
It's amazing that a small county
know many of you join me in wish- like Meigs provided so many pilors
ing him well.
to the effort in World War II. An
-earlier article named four who are
The free Thanksgiving dinner ·. still living and you were invited to
offer in Syracuse was a smash. phone me with any more names.
About 200 dinners were either So, here are some others who were
served or delivered to shut-ins by ~ts and are still perking along:
the community's fire department
il Blackwood of Harrisonville;
and auxil~. Certainly a nice ges- Dr. Ray Pickens of Pomeroy; Del.ture and qutie a few residents gave bert Richardson, now living in
up their holid!ly ro make life a liUle Ironton; Oris Roush of Salem Cenbetter for others. You can't beat acr; Bob Shank who hailed from the
thaL
Letart area, and Burl Ashley also of
the Letan area whom I understand
Wilbur Rowley and his family is now living in Missouri. Any
extend a big thanks to all of you for more?
the cards, flowers and especially
your prayers. All these things
I know it's the Christmas season
helped whcrt Wilbur underwent hip because Ethel Shank's outdoor
replacement surgery at the Holzer goose at the Shank home on Union
Medical Center. He got into some Avenue is sporting its red and
problems _but he's at his hom_e in white holiday attire. · How do you
Bailey Run_~o~ and. things are tell? Do keep smiling.

U.hqa

weal iDID dulp)' •

d

the -ory or belus 1e1t1111y
lllllled by ber UDCie.
nere ue more than s,ooo
lbi +'led-~ pciiOIII, aady
well........!ed, iD Jhelr 20111111 301,
who •ave beea led by their
dlenpilll 10 "reclll" IDaiiOI'iel of
ICllllll abuae iD cady cbjJdhood by
I pallt. tllllllly die fllber,
Ala fllberwbo bu beell 1111juldy
*" rd, I ean lieldfy 111 the ~hock,
paiD llld pie( dial aaulll,from die
*""salion by an ldult ilaught«.
l!stlanam+n.from my cbildlc!l llld
p•.. hllchn followed. A dlliapist
bad c:onYiDced my cJatshla' dial all
her problelu wen~ the result of
••qa m~· ·-.er at me Cor baYing
illlllaecl-ber IOilually 25 yean ago.
A IJOWllll
' 111t11ber of vicdma
IUCb
.
11 myaelf ha.e found help from
the Paise Memory Syncltome
,__""'..,..,.;,..,;, foriDed
ruua~•·•
by 110111e of the moat prominent

IJIYCbolo8illllld Pl)'l:hillritll iD die
eatiou. Tile adclreaa Ia: PMS
IVa rlednD, 3401 Mlrbt SL, SuiiC
130,I'IIIIIdlllphla Pa. 19104; 1-800568 8881- Lrm..B R.OCK, AR.K.
DEAR. ARK.: I've received
hUildreds of letten IUCb II ycxn.
·Read on:
Dar Alia •*IIden: Tbia II iD
laJICIIIIC 10 the leu« froiD "Hn'lnl
SurviYorin r-• wbo~QS aile Wll
~e~•Dy 11M1110d by ber IIICie IIIII
repreaocl Ill memory ol it for
1t1W1111 yean 11ut dial nailed II
wlwllbc WUII iato tbiiijli.
Dlle Ill the biCI'CIIi•t DQIIIher of
lawaulta resultiag tom false
tneiiiOiies IIIII the IICCD"Iiou dtat
follow, d1lt - · · clailll Of tolll
iql !Jiiotl nileiDDC qiiCIIiona in

-.-- .

my mind.
I Wll victlmized by I llwapiJl
wbo CODVinced my wife. Jbll I J-1
JeXIWIIJ ehneed C)UI' denpttr. No
aucb . . !Gat P-,11111 I •IIIII
fiPtinl in altlrt, almolt two ,an
later, to obWn normal vlsltatinn

,¥, tn, wrelr. All .00 aftca. If .,
lito meJiped iadivldDII II a bi&amp;b- ,·
profile Per-aiity, dlo feodfq .•
r.-y bell•. dto ·~ , . , . lie •

. righll,

thoroushly !fiacredited and: Ilia "'

=:r
.·

STA'JE

DEAR tU!ADBR.s: Wbilli -

.....
-...,;:.;.o of cad
"--J-~
. y chikiJiood
CDIICI!JOOG abulc
lie nal,-in.._y ICC'uii!MkJica fllle.
Not· Ill/ dyslitnedoaal ldulta -

sextlllly 1b11sed u l;bildren.
Aaxlrdinlto Dr. EliraJfHb Loftus,
prorea- ·of psychology 11 tbe
Univcnity of WllhlnJIDD, "Falae
IIICIIIorlcs are more prevalent dum
we think and ha.e become a~
problem. Fabc memcxiela a lot
easier to implant than most people
~·
Uubtunaldy. Mlybody Clll say
anytbiug about anyone, llld the
8CCIIIed is dial in the .,:J~iljnn of

•••

School Boys -Gymnasium from 9
a.m. to S p.m.

•••

PARKERSBURG, W.VA.- The
Dixie Melody boys will perform at
the Smoot Theater at 7 p.m. For
more information call (304)2957435.

Saturday, Dec. 11

•••

PATRIOT- Patriot Masonic
Lodge 496 wiU hold a meeting to
install officers and present 25 year
pins at 7:30 p.m. Everyone -welcome.

•••

HENDERSON, W.VA.- Square
GALLIPOLIS • Narcotics
dancing and clogging will be held
at the community building from 8 Anonymous Two Rivers Group
to 11 p.m. Music will be provided will meet at Woodland Centers at
11:30a.m.
by Country Grass.

•••
Sunday,Dec.U
•••

•••

KANAUGA • Fair Haven Unit·
ed Methodist Church will hold a
BIDWELL· Layman's Christsongfest at 7 p.m. with Gabriel
mas
Dinner will be held at Mt.
Quartet, Patty Simpkins and the
Cannel
Chun:h at 2 p.m.
youth choir of the cbun:h.

""'~ il{orrNIIJott 011

dnlg1. ~ltd II #f'«&lt;IW-·jqq, ' '

bllliMu·lht t~~~~elqpe 11111111 check '
or 1110MJ orlkr for $3.65 (tllil Ill·

•••

•••

6p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - 'The Mid Ohio
Valley Society for Human
Resource Mahagemcnt will hold a
meeting at James Rhodes Student
at University of Rio Grande Center
Dec. 15 at noon. Reservations must
be made by Dec . 12 by calling
Phyllis Mason, 245-7228.

•••

•

.,•

Tuesday, Dec. 14

•••

·~

BARBOURSVILLE • Multiple
Sclerosis suppon group will meet
at 6:30. p.m. at Ponderosa , For
more information contact Cathy
Hudson at 697-6603.

•••

_'
.:,
::i

GAlLIPOLIS • New Life Vic-

~ry Center will hold a Christmas

GALLIPOLIS - The Scenic
Hills Nursil!ll Center will hold a
craft and bake sale from 9 am. to S
p.m. at 311 Buck Ridge Rd. For
more information contact Becky
Brown at 446-7150.

•••

for

cards. ·

comand

•••

PORTSMOUI'H - A craft show
will be held at Portsmouth High

High School will present its annual·
Christmas concert at 2:30 p.m. in
the high school auditorium Admission is $3 fcx adults and $1 for students.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics ;
Anonymous will m~t at Woodland .:,
Center multipurpose,toolll at S.p.m. ~)

.Banq1tet at 6 p.m. at the University
of Rio Grande James Rhodes
Building.

•••

••'

•

'

•••

.

.~
.i·
•
,:

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Homemakers Extension,-10 a.m. at
the C. H. McKenzie building, US
35.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA..
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Group will meetat 611 Viand Stat
7:30p.m.

«'

~'

•••

•••

will

PT. PLEASANT
SWEATSHIRTS

'
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-.

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;,

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List Starts At
Bernadine s...
NEW ISOTONER SLIPP.ERS

attended Miami university. Ol)iQ; .
Rio Grande College, Rio Grande,
Ohio; and and the University of
Cincinnati.
1
Her previous work experience
includes senior bookkeeper han- ,
dling bank reconciliations for 26
banks; Jlllynlll/tax clerk for a chain
or restauranrs; and, more recentlY,.•
genera): manager at the -former
SU!waway Restanrant in Gallipotis.
A member of the GallipoliS
BPW. Fowler is.thC,cun'ent Chair- •
person for the Gallipolis BPW
Club's -Finance Committee. Her
civic activities include volunteer
work for United Way, the AmeriYOiuNIG CAREERJST:....RobiD Fowler, center, Is sbcnm after
can Cancer Society, and as ·a volunreeelVIDII a plaque In honor or belllg selected 11!1 the Gallipolis Busi·
teer instructor at the Gallia ·County
ueu aad Professloual WOJDen's Club (BPW) ''l'ouug Careerlsl''
Children's Home, she explains
ror 1993-94. De praeotallou Willi IDide by DoDDS Sanden, left),
insurance law -and regulations to
BPW Young Careerist Committee Chairperson; on the right is
the high school students there. She
Mary Lou Tawney, BPW President.
is the 1993 Midget League Football
Chcerleading Advisor, and a memFowler and her husband, Todd, yearo&lt;Jid DanieUe and four-year old
ber of the Eastern Star organizaare
the parents of two children five- Anthony.
tion.

l

Wildlife Service Director Mollie
Beattie said Friday.
Because or the bird •s strong
recovery in the Jilll#l three ~~··
"9ic're moving quite close'' to ~ing the bitd off•the ·endangetcd !ost.
along with several-other spectes..
she said.

•

~.

..,

Fish and Wildlife officials said
the change will not remove the bird
completely from protection under
the~ Species' Act; il will
be listed tn the less dire "threatened species" category.
.
•'Clearly the da!JI in~cate that it

does warrant rectasstlication in
some parts of the country," said
Jamie Clark, head of Fish and
Wildlife'a . endangered sp~ies
offtce. She said the change is likely
early next year.

~

(1' . 1:-j'~'

\

d
"ft

24

25%

••
a
'f

HOURS

fl

~.

&amp;
·

426 Second Ave.

QaiUPolls

. .· 446"ARTS

..

,
•,

Since medical emergencies don'tschedule appuiniments, we· re here 24 hours a
day, _seven days a · week,
ready and waiting to lend io
your unexpected health cal-c
needs. Any time of the day
or night, on weekends and
. holidays, whether you-live ·in
,tOwn or are simply vosollng:;";

I

0

•

•

',

&lt;

f-1
I. •

t ':

: DOLL BENEnTS SENIORS • ADlla Lester, owner or Tbe Her·
ftage Doll and CoUectablet Sbop, Court Street, displays a 24"
Freucb porcelaiD doD lbe made aDd dOIIated to tbe GaUia C01111t)'
~ulor Ceilter u a fuadn!Mr for the Home DeUveral Meal pro~·· Douadolls are $1 ud are avallablt fiolll seniors. ~
JVIII help pr.ovlde .for the -llalntetlllllce ·of foOd health for Glllla
-j:ouut)&lt; lltlliorl wbo are llomebotmcl uclla need of a bot, well-hal·
IDCed meal·cnk:e 1 day. The doll will·be pre.ated 1111 DODD, Dec. 22.
}VIDDer ueed;DOt be preseat. Coutact a ~~n~lor for your doalltkm.

5eason

-In the Home.
o()etomy Suppllea

•Diabetic Supplies
' 24 HQ_ur E"*rflncy

. Service
.

.

,'

·

FretDel~l

., 0 .OFF.

,.
'

..

'

-

Pethe 4-14

·•

•
~

-

&lt;Holiday
s .I

~

peo1a s

Excellent Choke of LANE Cedar Chests

&gt;'. ,.

"

•

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. ~. ,: l
I

I

:

Endearment Reg. 1125

SILl

Colonial Star Reg. M25

$499
•

TOPE'S CHIISTMIS GIFT SHOPPE

,.

"SOMmn•o FOI EYEIYO.E o• YOUI LIST"

'

WIIIRIIYIII

My Sister's C{oset •-

•ICIO"' ~ ' " " -

Ft-•

ep - - a
•"'*"rw
-tlal.ek • Flonll
47 : Flllve To. CUihlat•

Lafayette Mall
~

ll1iWIIl

4:utloe

Open Eve. til B
Su
1·5

How•rtlailler

GRANDFATHER CLOCKS

STARTING
AT

ssaa

·Train 11011 to boecma oldllod pol ' mat perwnls
• Proutdo 24-hour &lt;Me ..........,... and crtoto lrftrvlntton
• Proutdo tndYioloal end larnti thonpv
'
· I'll!/ $22 per day P£ROIIJ) of NOIHAXABLE lncOIIMI,
Chat'• a poll tax~ of $27-$30 per day, or $10,560
'
peryurporchlld
'lbu IMIJ,,
•
'
- • ~ pre omoulng and 5I!U ltcenslng r•quhwmonts
• PortlclpiP In footer..,_ tratntne
·
·l'lollldo • ~end ltruel\nd ho1111 'oiMrunrnonl . ,
• Commit to ......
troubllci ,uh M A piDhiiiDt~ ,

•w1 ,.,

th.

driven.

llf. $2025SIU '1420
;

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. . . $14SOIAU

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s-nct• Gr8pe
In Glllpoi'-

UI0312

A«;E!! ~ Human

-·

•LAYAWAY

Ol .,_... . .,_.t

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ofREE PARICIIG

P..O:a-910 .
~.~ 45631
(61.) .., ·~·9 ·.

:ill

199

Fill liFT

' \·
\

•

,.

Oak, b1ple chime, Cllble
dllven.
· ,

Cherry, trlpla chime, cable

lnWiwted? eo.... . . . Hurle; M.Ed.
P PI

•

14 DIFFERENT
STYLES

Wowtl·

I

Otll- ................

•299

PIICES STilT II

OFF!

$424

IAU

Chorry wtth · - · doolgn.

.,

~

Regular Slzee 6-16

You can stay at home and do. s&lt;imethlng that makes a world of
difference to troubled youth lrom Gallla, Meigs, 1111d Jackson
· 'CO\II'Itles. We are loOking for dedlcak!d, caring people to enter
, · Into our network of familia who proYide liAble, loving
environments In whlc:h local youth.can develop and grow.

··-oxwerf Service,

Mel now we'll! giving you SOI!Idhlng else to sing eboutl

~ -

"SEASONED"

to make a difference in this world,
we need you too.

n.·s so much to ~t In, this holiday se111011.

•'

..

NEW STIRRUP JEANS

If you have been looking for a way

bur team of medical
professionals is wel11raihed in '·
the most up-to-daie emc~rge:ncy ~,.­
prqc~utes . , Our
. ecjuippe&lt;\ to stal.•l, llizean~lftreai\
even the most serious types of ,
emergencies. And, our gdlll is ,
to provide the best erher$.~11cy ·:
care possible.

80~.

f

(Including leather jackets&amp; coats.)

They Need You

·VeteranJ Memonri'1a~:•,,~\:ifil;~

I

s4900

ALL JACKDS &amp;COATS Y, OFF

...:..,w::,s
1
I
ACTIVE WEAR

delivered

_,_I , -· ..&gt;

HOW

FURNITURE

OPEN'-··

whp ,are

"

Reg. $10.00

'•

•INTERNATIONALE
• •

'

·_ .JJJi.:. ... . ..... .. .'jL
.. . , _-_. - . . ...r.
__.~...' --' ··•·'
_·: ,., ••..,..,-.••..,:f,
•111 • .._;;.;\:.!
.......

BEAUTIFUL (washable)
SILK BLOUSES

-Bald eagle soars back from brink of extinction

' ' , • . .1

,

~

For Chrlstmaa •

:J\.1~~
ESTABliSHED 1895
-

si0REWIIi·siLE
OPEl EvENiiiS ftL I_... . .

'

:
•

1900

goocllieallh.

SAVE

:;
.•

STAmNG IT S

committed to re

opened
orayer.
their f&lt;sl&gt;c:k"
_il used to pur~

bylllellllloftheAUiIn 111011 ~ the ~ 4,000
Seventh_-day Adventllt cbarcbea
aatllll Ncmh America, lllt Ql • u
nity can find ~to mievc llift'tr- '
ing Nearly 4S
meanbtn vokll·
~ tbell' lelVices 4urinJ die ))lilt
year. Seventh-dav Advcnllltc!uadt
memben are aaive COillribulon .ID
the World Service AIIIIC81. Sixty
percent of the $6,179;8)3 donlled
during 1992 wu &amp;ive'l by chun:h
memb~rs. "Contribuiions to the
World Scnicc "Appeal durinJ
the present campa1gn will help
restore the supplies dcpleled by t1Je
1991 and 1992 disasters ." says
Davis, "and build a stockpile of
materials for any future catastrophes."

Hel- Christmas Wish

l'r'odllng Pllorogr.phy
., .{,14) U6 6700

llruryl Do~.Jl51h•l. p~ doier/

.

supplies were dispensed from
churches which served as supply
delioiS during the emergency.
"Pduch of the essential drinking
w_au_r for the mid:America flood
ncums was dehvercd by the
Chun:h's Community Service Volun~.· says Davis.
Other prol"ams provided by
ACS include: twenty-eight Inner~it&gt;; .~jecu bel!lit!J. to relieve the
dist!Jicti~. um.n c:nm found in our
maJor Ctlles and fC?urtcen health
scnoening vans offermf.!'~ pres·
~ure el)ei:~ and other . · scuenmg techniques of wanung the genera! public of preventable health
problems. More than 200.000 indivtdualsweresc:reenedforhypertension and other diseases during 1992
· · - --

ProftHtioM/

Or

GALLIPOLIS
SUNOAY1·5

_.~

-

Good for one Ariel Theatre ~ram, except eyll)phony, GENE·IES cost lllst $5, bli(you'II'!M- th~nked a
mllllonl ., _
,
Give one to postal and news ,eari'Jera, aecretarles,
Juolrdr....r.,,- ' .
cleaning peraonnel, teachwe;'preilehtre and everyone elu on your llet.
Find GENE~IES .In Galllpolla at:
H11klns-Tanner, 332 Secclnd Ave.
That Special Touch, 340 Second Ave.
CeU·,UI-ARTS

AND

'_-

GALLIPOLIS • Robin Fowler
was recently selected by the -Gallipolis Business and Professional
Women's Club (BPW) as its
"Young Careerist" for 1993-94.
As representative for BPW
Region 9, she will compete on
March 6 with nine other regions for
the title of regional winner. The
reponal wimier will then compete
for the state title in Columbus,
Ohio.
Fowler, who was the _suest
speaker at the November Gallipolis
BPW meeting, said "I am very
pleased 10 beselccted "Young
Careerist" and to represent our club
in the regional competition."
An insurance representative
with the Wiseman Insumnce Agency, Fowler handles personal and
commercial lines of insurance. She
is cui'rently taking courses to obtain
the Certified Insurance Counselor ·
certification and expecrs to complete this by fall of 1994. She has

PHOTOGRAPHY

GENE·IE
CARDS

GALLIPOLIS

intcndedtohelp.
Donalionareceivedii'Cdistribut·
"ll..pays to be cautious." Davis ed to t!'e various cburch groups lind
~ys. but .~at- the~oflcs- ~:f' that provide ben~volent,
ong our ability ro care.
"
~and heallh ,IClVtces.
~uri!'&amp; the past three years ,
Adven!llt Com~umty Servic~s
maJor disasters have slrtlck Notth (ACS) 11 the _pnmary domesuc
America. "This has made it nccca- community ~llon ~!"" relief 118ensary for urgent appeals for assis- cy" says DaVIS. "It 11 one of the 21
tance," says Violet Davis. Starting recognized disaster relief agencies
December 4, 1993 the annual in the United States and has a writWorld Service Appeal will be con- ten II"Cement with the Federal
dueled by the memben ~the Point Emergency Management Agency
Pleasant Seventh-Day Adventist (f'EMA).
. .
.
Church.
Recently a sunilar wn1ten agreeThe World Service Appeal is ment was entered into with the
conducled by volotnteen frQm lOcal government of Bermuda and an
churches who go door to door and agreement with Canada. The terri·
distribute the annual report on the tory covered by the Seventh-Day
church's charitable agencies and Adventist Churches in North
accept donations to support the America embraces these three
charitable work sponsored by the countries.
church. While some volunteers
During 1992 and 1993, the 216
make contacts with community ACS centers provided back up for
businesses, others stand in malls, major emergency services for the
subway entrances and locations viclin!S or Hurricane Andrews and
where people congregate, to the nud·~~ floods. . .
receive gifts and look for people
In addttoon to prov1dmg food
needing help.
and water, building and clean-up
- ··

Santa Should
Have

NEW

LAFAYETTE MALL
OPEN EVENINGS nL 8

r ,.-e~u--~

'''

Remembered

Bernadine's presents ...

.

)

•••

The Seventh Day Adventist
Ch~h is aearing UJ! for the 'Yorld
Semcc ~ror~.terrebef.
No IOiicif:Cd money u spent foe
ov~r~cad, smce the '?h_~reb. uses
elUStlllg channels for diJirillutiOD of
the fonda and pays for the report
~out of other accounU;
When someone comes 1o Y9UC
~oor1 do~'t be afraid toast r~r
tdentificat1al. Our vol~ 901ict·
!ors, .arc ~~ly accredtled ,and
tdentifie&lt;).. _Dam says.
Now m ·~85th year, dJ:e ~
World Semce. Appeal will. agam.
benefit. Advenuar welfare, disastt;r.
educational and medical work m
~OS c~untries of tho ,w orld-_
tncludtng the ~ntted S'!'tes and Canada, ~g to Dam. FUnds
are. distrtbu~ed to !ocal, state,
nauon~ and tnternational offu:cs;
accordirtg to need,~ says.
Anothe~ way ~ pve lll!d not.be
de~uded IS ro gtve &gt;:our _ume, says
Dav1s. Many org'!lllzaUons k~p
costs down by usmg volunteers.
That way you know that what you _
give is goin~ to help the people you

FO·wler selected"Young Careerisf'

clude1 polfllgt 111111 11tw1141gJ to: :
l.owdowa, c/o AM LaM.,, P.O. !
Boll 11562, Cloicago, nt. 60611· ·
0562. (/11 Clllltld4, selld $4.45:)
,

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
LECT
A
Rev.
Jaclcie
Clarlc
will
Chamber
of Commerce,
be
GALLIPOLIS - The French
Monday, Dec. 13
be
performing
at
Walnut
Ridge
,
held
at
Holiday
Inn
with
the
Colony Chapter of the Daughters
•••
of the American Revolution will Church at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia SEORC at 12 p.m.
•••
•••
meet at 10 am. at the Grace United
County bOard of Mental RetardaCHESHIRE - Kyger Creek Jr.
CROWN CITY - Rev. Leo tion will hold a regular monthly
Methodist Cl!un:h.
Edwards will present the sermon at meeting at 1- p.m. at 200 Second High boosters will hold a meeting
Good
Hope Chun:h at the II a.m. Ave.
at 7 p.m. in the school c/Ucteria fot
JACKSON - The Adams Counparents children in sports or cheerty Pickers will pedonn at the Star and 6 p.m, service.
•••
.
Night Barn Dance, Wagon WheelGALLIPOLIS - The Girl Scouts leading.
GALLIPOLIS - Joann Welling- will be caroling at lhe park front at
ers Hallliorn 8 to II p.m.
&gt;e
ton will be ~nning with Evangelist Paul
an at ~ White ·~~·!II'""'~
· ·~·~·-.·~·lociii·.• ......,....
-.

,

JCrautter,

campfllgil. Recent scandllls an~
redoitS of:ft:a~ have all h1D1 charitable organiZations, but smaller or
less well•lalown organizations are
having the toughest time." she
says. ."I can understand the caution,
but as donors, we need to be careful that,~ dl)lt't cut off some very
good programs that don •t have
name .re~ognition," says D~vis.
"The east~t way to do that os to
know_what organizations are out
there ind what they do."

Gallia community qalendar

R~A=:;·~;~Iia ~~=~y

officen were
~=~w~~he~n~~~~J;C~irclc met

rl!'se !Jio,ney, says ?IVls, who ts

cJirTclll!&amp; th~, Churchs 85-yearo&lt;Jid

dowllert? 'The I.owdatrm 011 ~· - '

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

•••

' POMEROY •

Se~~th-~y Adv~tistChurch.
- Ey.e~ 1f -f~U re .a reputable
o~. !11 -gewng. ~der ':0

lhertlpilll who "heep" Jhelr ....... ':
recall illcidentl they Ire leld to ~
believe have beell JqJrlllled for '.'
dozcua ~ yean. Alld 10 dJii,!IIIX . :
lawyen who IDC an "'T"IIIIIity 10 :
make I tilling by nailiq I wdJ • .~
ltuowD (or well..Jieded) penan.
."
Ill the name of c:om..- decency,. •
this 1011 of charal:tcr ll8llllinalioa
bu &amp;Otto stop.
.
Wllal'1 the tnlllt about pol, co- · :
caiM, LSD, PCP, crack.1pud tllld , ~

•••

'
' FOOD PANTRY GOODS • Linda Earl dlllptays food collected
the ~eadl Caller Food Panb'J' by Wabinpou Elementary
stad. . for Na~ Food Day.

Pl~asant: volun~r coordin~t~ng

thts Y"!'f ,s chan table .fund-~mg
campatJI!, for the Pomt Pleasant

~="::. ~~lpritl ale the ''

1bele are nal lbusen and real
victlma out there, · Ann, but
waidcaiiCUpii!ICe ~ clliml baled
on r~se ipemorlea, collective
h IIana Or Oillri..... IDIIice doelliOt
y
.
belp lboaowho
lbuiiOd

-T.T.iNWAS

POINT PLEASANT · Repu~le charities are being affec!ed
!"IS'!season by exposed ~on
on '!!'"Y 1100-profit ~·
- ~~pie are '!f&amp;ry of ~tvmg .to
charitieat say_Vtolet Dam. a ~t

fool bJ&amp;b, aad dto TV C0W11110 II ·
rom' By lito lime the truO fll:ll I are mide public, the viclllll Ia r••

•••

Qfflcers seated
at.,_friendly circle

..

J~=:~~.mg_be~.r~,1~2,61~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~P~o~me=r~oy~:l:lld~d~l~~~n~Gm~l~lpo~II•~·~OH:~P~o~lm~~PI~n=:ea~n~t,~WV~~~~====~~~Su~n~~~~!T1m::•:•;:s:•nU~M=~I;P~g~r~·~ll ~

oecember.12, 199i.

.fREE DEUYERY
&gt;FREE DEUYERY DEC. NTH

~,

•Yiaa

·"-

I

'

.___ •••• · ~·· .:.. ..X.:.:_ _t:_ ~' .. L_:_¥~·~- --•" ;;..~-~~·. . . j:·:;_~..:.:..:.:. :.0 :;· ~1~.:.::~:·:;.;.~......./~.:. _ ,:: .._ _ ;' .

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�•

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIpqlla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

12,

Point Pl••nt, WV.

Cold-like illness reported in three states· !

A (AP)
- An illness
thatAn.ANT
resembles
lbe common
cold
has broken out in three states
including Ohio and is like! tO
spread as lhc wiather
federal officials say gets co •
Outbreaks of · ·
illncss
caused by b=~ called
Mycoplasma pncumoniae typically
occur every four 10 seven ears
The U.S. Cenlers for
Con:
troland Prevention said
brcsi:s In Ohio Texas1:~0:!;
York suggest ihe easily spread
infettion will incnessc Ibis winter
'~This type of bacteria
illncss that looks just lite the common cold," said Dr. Jo Hoffman
IIi epidemiologist with the CDC's
childhood and respiratory disease
division.
"Mainly, it makes you feel tired

ktc,

oiseasl

causcsu

·.

1

•

The wammgcomcs only a week
after th~SDC ,reponed that th.e
harsh Beijmg nu has made an carl.'·
er-lban-expected l~ce thts
season. ~?.!:fh the two illnesses
arc not . . some of the symptoms arc SJmolar.

"What mat
-~ means
· ts.
· w~ have
two Illnesses w_e la!ow of IbiS ~
lbat are ()C(:umnltn an cxtraordinary manner," Ms. Hoffman said.
" If people have a mild case of lbe
flu,lhcy might lind it hard to distingwsh· fro':~! Mycoplasma pncumonlae, and of they have a severe case
of Mycoplasma pneumoniac they
might find .It hard to distinguish
from the flu."
The largest outbreak so far this
year was at a medical referral centcr In southern Texas, where 215
peoplejotsict between Aug. I and
Nov. 1 • !he CDC said.
In Oh1o, 47 sl8ff' members and
clients of a workshop for developmentally disabled adults got sick
between June 1Sand Sept. S.
In Upsiate New York, 48 people

• aulisllc
· · JlCO"'::
got so·ck at a cen1er oor
pic from Au~. 1 to OcL 26. '· r&gt;.
In lbe Ohoo and New York out.,..
breaks, the illness slOpped spread-!
ing after those who were sick~
stayed home or were separated~
from th&lt;: otha:s.ln TCJW, ~·
ry CC?nformauon of new cases os;
pending.
·
•
Ms. Hoffman said the outbreaks ~
were unrelated, though they point!
to the higher risk faced by people•
who arc in institutionallleftings. :
"In an office it's probably not:
as much a problem as in, say, a •
school or group home situation :
where the people have close, pro- ;
longed contact," she said. "In an •
office, you're in your own cubicle:
and moving around - you're not : .
in each other's face all day."
•

BEEF
~TORI HOURS

101

Moaday ... SHday
SAM·lO PM
298 S~COND ST.

'·

PoMEROY, OH.

WE~ RESERVE IHE RIGHI TQ Ll.lt .OU411TITIES
. PRICES· GOOD DEC 12-THRU DEC. ···~ 1993

GROUND

•

CHUCK

Feminists adopt·new strategy to resuscitate E'RA : ~

GREG AND DE SELBY

By KIM I. MILLS
AsacK:lated Praa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Hoping to take advantage ot the more
supportive Clinton administration,
a coalition of women •s groups is
trying yet again to pass the 70year-old Equal Rights AmC'ndmcnL
This time, the feminists are
adopting a tactic that at Ieist one
constitutional scholar says might
work. They plan to ask COngress to
nullify the 1982 dQidlinc for ratification that had been imposed the
1970s.
.
"We arc aware that it is wilhin
lhc prerogative of COngress to lift

Selby featured in catalog
POINT PLEASANT· De Selby,
wife of fonner Point Pleasant resident Greg Selby, was recently featured in the October issue of
Land's End mail order catalog. She
designed and produced their first
duplicate stiiCh sweater pattern and
pictured in the catalog.
Duplicate stitch is a needlework
technique used to embellish plain
sweaters.
Selby has been designing and

whb
a drv cough•sore uu""'
·~--· an· d
headac:.;_~.
.
.
nJi~~ICI'il can ca1110 pneumom rare cases can be fatal,
she 18111. ~ inf'!Ctions arc usually
~'!"With ll!)ibiotlcs.
.
M · T~~-~aJOr pro~le'!' Wtlh
. ycop....!"' P~oruae IS when
11 OCCI!rs 1D a Stle where people
=-~ coniBCI. ... A lo~ ~peollo
-=r,.ing to get II, Ms.
o~an 181 • 'It's out there and
e=-~ .'!01 a lot you can do to pre-

publisliin~

needle work cross
stiiCh, qui!Ung, and duplicate stitch
for ten year under her company
name, Hickory Hollow. In the past
year, she hss been featured in three
newsstand needlework magazines,
been taken to France by the DMC
Corporation, taught workshops
across the country, and appeared on
two cable television programs.
Her and her husband reside in
Versailles, Ky. with their two children.

A riverboat voyage relived

de8dJinc:,

••
'

8 y JAMES SANDS

tore loosefrom its fastenings and fell.
Special Correspondent
as the boat heeled over and 1 staned
for the door on the high side, which
"The Convoy had delivered her waslikeclimbingthesidcofahouse.
loaded tow and
The stove hit me and knocked me
had gone to Fleidown and lhmugh the under and
shmann'sdistilloutside bulkhead on lhc low side.
e,.Y landing after ·
The boat was then clear over, with me
two
empty .
on the wrong side; and the water
barges.
gushed on me so suddenly I was
We turned
strangled. I thought I was gone, for I
around
and
realized thatlhe boat had turned over
staned to Haton me, bull struggled and fought my
field's landing. This was about 9:30 way up, having been jammed clean
in the evening and! was asleep in my through ingbeen builtin 1888.1n the
berth. llhadcommenccdrainingand 1890's its pon was Pomeroy as it
lbe rain blew in through the transom pushed coal for the Peacock Coal
on my berlb, which wakened me up. CompanyofPomeroy.Between 1900
Then I closed my back door and just and 1915 it towed coal from the
after that came such a heavy clap
Kanawhaltover valley to Cincinnati.
of thunder, wilb the cinders on the The forst year lhe Convoy came out
roofblowingbysohard,thalllhought (1888) 7 crew members had been
I would get up and takealoolc around. killed when a steam line broke.
When I gOl -into .\he cabin ,;n my .~ ~ 10 Ill§.:~ of d.III,IIIOI'y about ,
underclothes, I called)•the coolc .and Captain Martin's escape, it seems
two cabin boys who were asleep, and that he &lt;was forced up from beneath
staned out 10 the forward end of the the water by a pile of wreckage. As
cabin."
lighllling flashed around him,
"As I passed the second engineer's he could sec CapL Curry and watchdoor he was getting out of lhe ·top manHeibstandinginthewatcrupto
berth, and made the remarlc:'What's lheirknees.AfterMartinjoiiledlhesc
coming off here?' I told him I didn't two,they discovered-that they were
know, that I was going out to invcsti- SIJIRding on lhe hull. When the boat
gate. J ustas Jordan, tile second engi- struck the bouom of the river, it began
necr,and 1gotoneachsideoflhebig, to heel again.
·
heavy stove, I glanced back and saw
At this point the three men jumped
the men I had called stepping out of overboard. Afcer a bit, Martin got
lbeir rooms. It was the lastthing they hold of a mattress. He began drifting
evcr saw. Alibis instant-the tenible down the river and within a few yards
gust thai capsized the boat, struck us. was able to grab a wooden life floaias
The lights l"entout, the heavy stove well .

lha! cxpircll deadline so that 1811fi.
cation of three additional states
may -be seCured," said Allic Corbin
Hixson, spokeswoman for ERA
SummiL
·
Siil9c the measure passed 35 of
the j3 SU!IC legislatures o:equired by
the
only'lhree more states
must pass otto .mate the amendman law; .sbe ssid at a news conference in die Clpitol.
"We thiilt a Cllneurrent resolution ·cQiild be passed that says
puuiilg a deadline on the amendment.wa. in.error;'' she said
The coalitioli does not yet have
sponsors for the proposed rcsolu~&gt;

'

.

.

'

90
PEPSI
PRODUaS

··

&gt;~ HOLIDAY SPECIAISI-

...

oN CARPET CLEANING

~

'

1 Rooln ·and Hall

•39.95
•49.95
3 Room• &amp; Hall

'69.95
4 Room1 &amp; Hall

-. - ~·~'.9!
Quality

)

( ·

·_QUALITY
CARE.
CLEANING
2 Rooms &amp; Hall

, , ~:we .w!lllkll!l~ the,a~ ,,;~~·UJ ~il.l9n. w !o&amp;inglhe
with survivors yelling for help in all 'tipl·of"soiiit ofliiS toes. In regard to

2UTER

FROM

•

theorlginalcapsizing.Martinremcmlieied the noise to have been the loudest. ~e eve!" heard. The boat hit the
WBICr'lf.ith such impac:t that !he cabin
wasmashedoffeniorely. WhenCapL
ManinarrivedbackhomeinGallipolis, there W!IS a joyous homccomirig
on First Avenue.
Meapwhile a tew blocks up where
Sarah Bowen lived, lhere was great
sadiiCss over the lass of her two sons.
·
Jam~ Sands is aspeclalciH'respondentorthe. 'l'lnt~Sendnel His addr~ Is: 6~ WIUoi9 Drive, Springboro OH ~~·.'

was, for women, " lite being
hamster in an exercise· wheel, run,..
ning as hard as we could just tO:
stay even."
:•
"We
arc
going
to
m6bUizc
th~
1
movement once again around what:
has been the Holy Grall of lhe fern:•
inist movemeni once we won lb~
right to vote," she said.
:

rv"'y-r

~
~

directions. r held the mattress to my
face to get over the strangling, for the
warer was flying in the wind. 1suppose I drifted a mile and a half when
twomcncameoutinajohnboatfrom
Ludlow, Ky., and took me aboard.
Then we got the cub pilot and stancd
for Capt CUrry. But we couldn'thear
anything from him and I gave him up
for lost and we started for-the Kentucky shore."
It was later discovered that Curry
and two other men, hanging onto
boat debris, had landed safely on the
Ohio side about I mile downriver.
Mattinrcceivednwnerouslacerations

10 #

&lt;
~

lion, Hixson said.
Mary Cheh, a J!rofcssor of constitutional law at George Washington University, called the strategy
plausible. Congress "put a limita·
lion on it, they can take a limitation
off it," she said.
Patricia Ireland, president of the
Nation&amp; Organization for Women,
5l!id ihe ·t2-year. Reali~~D·Bush
era
.

RCCOLA

MIKE WALLACE

r-------.--.
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JY1orrison says she is haunted by past nobel1a-ureates
By LAURIN» A KEYS
Associated Press Writer
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
- Black American novelist Toni
Morrison was haunted .when she
received her Nobel Prize in literature Friday - by writers whose
work nurtured her own, ind by
"laureates yet to come."
·
"I entered this hall pleasantly
haunted by those who have entered
it before me," Monison, 62, said
five hours after King Cart ·XVJ.
Gustaf had handed her a gold
medal representing the $790,000
prize.

At a glittering banquet in Stock·
holm's City Hall, the child of a
Lorain, Ohio worlcing-class 'amily
''
rose from her seat next to the king
to remember wrilers "whose wo-'has
'"'
made whole worlds available to
me."
,
. She is the forst black woman 10
won a Nobel literature prize. She
started in 1970 - with "The
B_luest Eye" about a· young black
gorl who wanted blue eyes - and
~IC six novels "characterized by
VI~ force and poetic import,"
accordong to the Swedish Academy.

·'In her depictions of the world HaUi ~praised the combination of
of the black people, t'h t1·•c u 1·n "an 'ty d h
.. · h
''
.
els""·••.
an
umor
m er novlegend, Toni Morrison has given
the Afro Ame ·
1 .~ ·
's·h ···
f h
I
•
ncan peop e oueor
e wntes o orrors. n
history back, piece by piece," "Beloved," in 1987, she told of a
Academy secretary Sture Allen slave .woman who kills hei baby
said during the earlier award cere- daughter to tecp her from
·
mony at the S.tockholm Concert
in """"'••0
· growtng
up· ""'-t~ •· . ''

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Plge 88 Sunday

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PEOPLE I
Ross to Jackson: face the charges
NEW YORK (AP) - Diana Ross oiTmd a bit of
advil:e 10 her old friend Michael Ja::kson: speak U&gt;the
sexual mole~lalion allegations
against you.
"I said 10 hiot ... he must
axne and make I stand,~ Ross
said Friday. "AIIybody who's
accused of wrongdoing needs 10."
Jackson is being sued by a
13-year-old boy who says the
singer sexually molested him.
Jackson has not been charged with
any crime.
Rossde~cribed Jaclcson as a
"private, alone person," who is
"already in jail ... the lcind of life he has 10 live. I have
never had to live this way. I can go to lhe markets and
go to lhe schools and things."
The 49-year-old singer and actress said she talked to
Jackson by telephone, but did not know where he was.
Jackson said last month he was seekjng treatment for an
addiction to painkillers.
A Grammy Award winner, Ross hasslaJ'red in several
movies including "The Wiz," "Mahogany" and "Lady
Sings lhe Blues."

Casino squabble has kids upset
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)- You might call it trading pla::es. Gov. Lowell P. Weicker and businessman
Donald Trwnp, who luid a war of words last week, got
a tallcing 10 - from some school children.
Fourth-graders at East Hampton's Center School sent
.leuerstohoth men urging them toputastop to the namecalling.
.
"We came up wilh a solution that name-calling hurts
people'sfeelingsand it should nothappen,"lhey wtOte.
"We thought that the name-calling fight is a bad in flu·
ence on kids."
r
The brouhaha was stirred up when Weicker told
reporters Connecticut diW!'tneed Trump's casino busi·
ness and sized him up as "that dirtbag." Trump, in tum,
called Weicker a "fat slob who couldn'tget elected dog
catcher in Connecticut."
On Friday, Weicller had no argument with the chil4ren 's advice: "They're probably right," he said.

Science writer turns to fiction
1ULSA, Okla. (AP) ~ U truth is slr11Jlger than
Peter Matlhiessen should know.
Mauhiessen has chronicled voyages to obscure and
faraway places for The New Yorker and in several
books, including "Oomingmok: The Expedition U&gt;the
Musk Ox Island in the Bering Sea."
.,
r~ttion;

Now he wants 10 write only fiction.
"FICtion is very energizing to work on," said MaUhiessen, who has won the $20,000 Peggy V. Helmcrich
Distinguished Author A watd.
•
Matthiessen, 66, of Long Island, N.Y., saad Priday
t,hat he began writing non-6ction to support his~
writing. He wrote two novels and two short 111011e11 .
before he penned "Wildlife in America," published in
1959.

N.Y. Governor draws criticism
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Former hostage Terry
Anderson and an assortment of would-be state government reformers found a common target: Oov. Mario
Cuomo.
Cuomo delivmd a short spcecllto the gathering
Friday, beforea~ely 45-minute question-and-wwer
session that was more like a barroom tiff than the
polished debates usually found at the statehouse.
Cuomo seemed undisturbed by the griUing. "I haven't had this much fun sinoe my last college beer party."
he quipped.
Anderson said the goal of the meeting was to bring
togelher disparate groups to find positio~s lhey could
lobby for in a united front.
The former chief Mid&lt;lie East correspondent for The
Associated Press, Anderson was released nearly two
years ago by his captors in Lebanon. He bas formed a
group called New York Renaissance to promote govemme[\t refonn.
'

Star !inds peace off the charts
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Ricky Scaggs slipped off
the country music charts a few years ago after a decade
ofhits, but hedidn '1 fall inU&gt;oblivion.
In.stead, he found peace.
"It used to affect me greatly
when 'someone jumped over me
on the charts, but I know now I am
accepted whether I have a Top I0
record or not," lhe 39-year-old
Skaggs said Friday.
He said the business managerpartof him ached wilhopt the
big hits.
"But I was actuaUy relieved. It gave me time to
recognize what's really important, like my family and
God," he 'said.
While he's still not on lhe charts, Skaggs back on the
airwaves with his own radio Show and back on the road
with 115 appearnnccs this year.
"My fans still believe I'm just as hot as I ever was,"
Skaggs said.

Kids not allowed to watch ·
dad in two TV thrillers ·
.

,

•

r

B;p JACKIE HYMAN
they wen integral to the plot of " A
For 111e AIIOClated Prtu
Kiss to Die For," Mathcsoo plays a
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ When widower who becomes obacued
Tim Matheson and Mimi Rogers wilh a sensuous WOIJIIIll Who might
have steamy love scenes in the he a murderer.
NBC thri1lra- "A Klas to Die For"
"The character's sexualitY was
Monday, Matheson knows at least . a very important par! of the story
three people who won't be watch- and I fllld that intriguing," he said.
1
" My character was an innocent
ng.His kids.
swent u~ ~s all this.''
· on
,fA · to DIC' For," also ,,'eaThey also won't see h1m
Dec. 14. when he plays an anesthe- turing William Forsythj: and Carsiologist falsely COI!victed of mur- roll Baker, was filmed nearly a
der in the CBS film ''Harmful year qo, but it airs only eif!t days
lnleDL"
before ''Harmful Intent,' which
h' th •
Matheson recently finished shootI
Th
" tliat
e on
YIdone
mg was
ey 'Yours,
ve ever mg
.
seen
I've
~ased on the I]Ovel by Robin
. Mine and Ours,'" says Matheson,
a former child actor. He was 20 Cook, "Harmful Intent" also stars
when he appeared in that 1968 l!mma Samms, Robert Pastorelli
flimily oriented film with Henry and
Roceo. The sereenp~ by
J ames
· ·Sadw1'th was d'1rec·te bY
Foncia an'd Luc1·ne Ball.
Does that mean they haven't John Ii'altMson.
seen ''Animal House,'' the
Matlieson plays.an anesthesiolo- ·
raunchy 1978 comedv that gist who flees to clear himself after
launched Malheson to prominence? _ he is convicted of killing a patient
"'Animal House' would not be with a lethal injection.·
,
appropriate at this age, .. said the
The-riot is re'miitiscent of last
actor. who has two daughters, 5 ', summers hit fdm "The Fugitive"
..
f' the I 1. 1. ' I
·'
and 7, and a 3-month-old son. Let • a remake 0
. te ev ~ 2~ §Fr!.es_,,
them be lcids."
about a doctor on the ruri, t/Ymg 10
did
the
prove he.didn,'t·lcilf his wife. .
dy ~~ueFred~n vi~::;
The similaritY is a coincidence
a friend's house and were surprised Madieson said.
,
to see Daddy lcissing Phoebe Cates-:," 'Harmful Intent' is based on a
book that was written
. hefore (lhe
h
d th
h
co~I~~'te~J!:UU:d ~t a~e nor::J remue··of) ~The fugitive,"' he
"I said it was just acting 'and I said. "Bullet me tell you the
barely knew the girl."
. .;
niltule of television: If they could
The easygoing Matheson, who get a dinosaur In ·there,lhey would
during a break at his publicist's have."
offiCe took time to admire avisitThat, in case anyone missed it,
ing baby, said that ftlming sex i.s a reference to last summer's
scenes such as those in "A .Kiss 1D biggest hit "Jutassic Patk."
Die For·~ can be awkward'
- To prepare for the dQCtor's role,
''It's embarrassing," he said. ~atheson observed a couple of
"It's· like,' invite 70. peor.Ie into aneslhesiologists.
•
yOur bedroom go ahead It sa very · ''Two times I got queasy and
personal . , o~_somebody's life · · both,times _ha~. io i!Q :'l'ith. neethat they're tlposmg.
:
dies;· he said. , B'!'ii_,!lflles ·It was
".I uy to he very professiOnal pte-op (pre-operative) proce·
about it and I try t6 lcid around a lot
•·
.- so we jlailligh~n the !"ood·" . ·,
However,.:he sa1d he d1dn t
object to the sex .scenes hecause

'

Sports

~mus- ~entin:tl

Alex

I

..

I

•

B;p RICK WAllNEit
NEW YORK (AP) - Charlie
Ward, who nn' away from defendera all seaton, nn away ·with the

I

" He is phenomenal - the
greatest coUege CJ.uarterback that I
have ever aeen, ' Miami coach
Dennis Ericbon said after the Hurricanes 1o1t to Florida Stale 28-10.
Afia' Ward lhrew for 446 y.-ds
and four toucbdowns against Flori·
da, Oators coach Steve SpiiiTier
said: "You can' t catch him. He's
the best acrambler •.• I've teen in
college f~I." ·
·
Ward swept all aix voting
region~. receiving 740 first-place
Votes alid 2,310 pointa in balloting
· by tile media .00 former Reisman
winncn. Shuler ~t 10 flrSI•place
Votes ,00 688 po_utts, while AJaba018 aii-JIUIPOIII sw David Palmer
finished third witb 16 firsts and 292

m~t choose the NBA.

:".:ationat

w::.·

't;n,

dilers.to,host. Br·o wns in division l)out~ •

By Mic:;fiAitL ,o\. LlJrZ
HOUS.10N (AP)- Bach ~fJek
IIIIOtherJIIcceOftlieHoustoii,Oilers
defe~~~e seems to cllc!t into focus.
"We'wl!een gewng beaereach
w~:· ~fensiveendSean~on~
said. It s been one guy figuring II
:out one week and' another
die
IICJlt week. Now we're all ~ng a
' good Idea.of how to_ pia~ iL '.
- Learnm~ th~ mtncac1es ~f
BQddy Ryan s 4l! defense cot¥n t
axne at a better ume for the Oilers,
who face a crucial AFC Central
Division test against Cleveland in
. the·Astrodome.
ViCIOrics·o&gt;er the Browns tod!IY
"""' Piusburlh Dec. 19 woul~ give
~ OiiCrl (8-4) thelt' ~Dd divi-

I

JOHN TRAVO~TA, KIRSTIE AUEY

IN'

sur

LOOK WHO'S TALKING NOW
P013
ONE EVENING SHbW 7:30 ·
'
ADIII~ ta.OO
1
441 0123

it championship.

1

COLON Y THEATRE

'

DeOember 12, 111:f

~ with btuiled ribl and aat oui
'llulven't mado up my mind the fourth quarter of ·s ix other
yet,'' Ward aai4 recendy. "I'miust games.
lucky to be in !his posillon." '\.
"Them is nobody who CUI ~Y·
Heiaman 'I'Iqlby SIIIUnlay.
Lllrgetr because of Ward, Flori- the ·game the way he plays It," :
The elusive Florida State quarda State 11 in position to win the Bowden said.
·
tcrbeclt woa college football' a most
national dde against No. 2 NebrasWild al10 is admired for his off.:
prealiaious awaril by the second1
the-field activities. He worked with·
ka .0 th Oran Bo I H
largest margin ever. Ward beat
~
r
!boot~
AC£ -~ ~ disabled petients at a hospital last:
0
Tepnessee quarterback Heath
the Seminoles went 11-1, including summer, became a big brother to
Shuler by 1,622·points, ' ualling
six victories over .bowl !elmS. They freshman Warrick Dunn after
only 0.1. SimptOn'a 1,7.50-paint
loat 31-24 at Notre Dame. but Dilllit's mother WJS killed, served'
··
over I...eroy ~ ill1968.
W-t lhrew duee toUchdown pesS- as vice .Pfesiden! of the student, .
~~ Simplon ~by more
es ';&amp;t nearly nllied his team fi'om body an4 carped a degree in four·
pob;'~~ ~\'H the higliest
a 17-pointdeficiL
,
Y~
.
:
pen:eiii88C of fiilt;.pllce VOliN and
If Florida State beats Nebraska.
·"He's the ·most bumble per1011:
pointa !n ~ Hoilmm'a :19-year.
Ward-·ubecome ·thefi""'player I've ever seen,'' team' chaplain·
llillllry. w~ sot 91 pm:eat of~
to wind;"Reisman ind
Clint ·Purvis said. "He keeps it all.
fl$.pmce vote~, toppflll ,~ prev~­
championship in the Iaiiie seuon in penpective."
·
olll record of 85 pen:eot by 1991
since
Pittsburgh's
Tony
Dorsett
in
Shuler
!brew
a
scliQot~
2S
• IS..
'
=i:r Desmond Howll!d of
1976. . •
·· touchdown puses at Tennessee.:
~ard. Shuler .00 Palmtt att.clld- Ward wasn't an instant success The 6-3, 212-pound Junior com-~
leader of the nat!dn's ed the ceremony - the ~town in college football. Cominj out of pleted 6S jlaCCnt of h1a ~ ~ :
\
.
hi~t scOring offen~e and top- Alhletic Oub.
high school, he lacked the required 2,3S4 ~
.
.
.
raiilced team, is tllc rm Reisman . Siln Diego State running back test scores 10 enler Florida Stale 10
Shuler' a second-place finish ..
winner from Florida State or the Marshall Faulk. who was runner-up he attended junior college to matched. the highest by ·a Tenlast year to. He~ winner Gino
·Alllntic Coast~ '
his academic standing.
nes!ee player, Hank ~ in
, 'rbe.Moot-2.• 190-powid ~enior Torretta, fl!liShed fourtb.·He was improve
State, he spent one 'eacl9Sh1wereand ~
. :J. Majors ~}.1 9956 ·.
from Thomasville, Ga., completed foRowed by Bollen College quar- yearAtasFlorida
a punter, another as a redIICII'Iy ·70 percent of•his paaes fer terb8ck Olenll Poley, Nortliern Illi- shirt and a third as a bmchwarmer Palmer set Alabama records ·
3,032 y~lls and 27 touchdowns nois nmniilf! bac;k LeSI)oo Jflhnson, before becomin~ a atarter last sea· with 61 rerqllions for t,OOO yards :
with only fO!If interceptions. He · UCLA II!OClvcr I'J. Stotes, MiChi- son. He threw e1ght interceptions in and avezaFj1163 a1111111poe yard&amp;
also ran for 339 yards and four gan running back Tyrone Wlreat- his fii'St two games as a junior, but per game . .The S-9. 170-pound
•touchdowns.
ley, Fresl)o State q~ T(ellt blossomed when coac ho,{lobby Junior was usi:d as a 1111111el', receiirBut Waid isn't a player wbo can Dilfer and Georgia quarterback Bowden switched to a no-huddle, kiC!c· ~retii31'JUback.umcr
.
•
punt returner.and.
be me~~~ured merely by statisd~'' Eric~; ·. ,, .
shotgun offense that heuer milized
..
His amazlilg abilitY to CIOdge taCk·
Despite hi• Reisman victory, his talents as a scrambler and
Palmer's third-place fiDUh was:
·mike llig plays and keep eoot Ward miJht not play P1Q football. improviser.
the highest ever ·by an Alabama:
under pressure left opponents He also ts a star point guard for
This year, Ward set a school player. Johnny Mollo was fOIJ1lb in·
bewildered •nd brought Florida Florida Slate's 'besJcetball team,l!ld record for total offense (3,371 1971.
·
State to die brink of its f!lst nationyards) even though he missed one

•

FRL THRU THURS.

Section C!

Ward captures Heismari Trophy

-

dpres."
Although he once briefly considered becoming a dnctor, Mathe- ·
son began stud~ acdng at age I0
and made his
guest appearance·
on televiSion at 13.
He doesn't regret starting his
career early.
"It was perfect for me," Matheson said. ''My parents were ge~g
divorced and we. were movmg
around a lot and II was a way _to ,
release my feelinfs.l still find that.·
it's ~s}ea~C:UePfiYil·m' debut 'carne in .
His f, ~
1964 with "Divorce, American ··
Style." While. continuing to work,
in television, Matheson performed ,
onstagewiththeSan 'DiegoShake- '
speare Festiv!l1 and a.repertor(
compal!diy. b'
If · · .·dated b '
F'md' ng
mum•
Y;
comedy
, he upse
tool: the·
bull by the;
horns and joined an improvisation-.
aGI comdl~lly trHo!lpe ~a.lled h,the,
roun mgs. -..IS trammg t .ere ·
~e~ ~ijn land hi~,watershed role &gt;
10 Anunal HDI!se.
He .sullcons1ders comedy hard-I
er than dretna.
.
,. .
.
-''If soliletbing' ii·70~rcent:.
h . . dram th d'
'
t er~ m a " a~ e uec,10r cat·"r·
put llt~re•. the a::tor S81d. Bu 1 't
some!"mg IS only 6~-70 pe~ce~t;
there 10 .~comedy, I lhink,you re 10 ;
trouble. .' .
.
.
;
D~lte ~IS success.'n thrillers,:
he still ~nJ9YS makm~ peopJ~~
lau¥,h;
_
. ,
•
I d)o':~ to dq I! sene~, Mat!'- ::.
eson said. ln .a perfect world, I 11:
IOVe'IQ do C(lRJedfi·"' .
~
!he 4~-year-1! ll actm ~ ~n\, ly In Pans ,SbooiJ!'g llmQVIe, •Presumed G'!'hy," for the USA ~et-work .. He .s also ~gun prod~cmg
and drrecung, and IS developmg ~
project at Universat.
'
·

1

••

'

•

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'

defense at1ts best ,

•.

.

"Each wcet..~ ve~ g~g

more co!lfident. Jones wd. · Its
been slo~: Even whe~ we beat
~ Cuy (23-0) we JUSl ~g~t
them on a bad day. We d1dn t
understand too much what we were
doing."
•
Last week, the Oilers got seven
turnovers. from ~e Atlants Falcons
and much mal11!n~d .cornerback
Steve.Jaclcs&lt;!", v1~Um1zed. all sea·
son, turned uger w1th two mterceplions.
.
''After the Buffalo·game (a 315-4-7)
loss that-c!ropped Housron to
Buddy simplified things,'' safety
Marcus Robertson $lid. "We knew
vie '~ lhe' ialh WejliSt' needed

• 11

' •

won any thin~ that wasn't physical," Ryan wd. "We're still making mistakes but we're playing
more physical now."
The Oilers' defensive line ·has
beengettingmuchofthepraiscfor
~ling pressure on the quarter1:, whlcb helped the secondary
· make more plays.
. "They are sc.ting to respect lhe
defensive line so much they're
putting more people on them and
turning the secoodary loose ·• Ryan
'd.
'
S8l The Oilers' turnover ratio

'

'

•'

remains· a minus.s with 37 give;
aways and 32 tatcaways. B.. !hat~ a
started to change also. The Oileri
had 16 Uikeawaya in the fUBt ~ games lind they've had 16 in the last wee~.
The .point IS not lost on Oeve&gt;
land coach Bill Belichict.'
• 'They're getting a lot of
turnovers,'' B~lichick said;.
"That's been a b1g 111us fo~ them,
They really emphasize talcmg the
ball away and a lot of tbeir:
tumovers have been when the otheiteam is behind.

.

;
I

. . . ~ ~~~~ }'CirL ~~.t.. ,,M:!.~ .!he !~ID ,~!&lt;IJat
.-_.~ran. the Oilers have vJon seven m we
doirig;''
, · .

row for the first time~ 1~1. ,

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.· YES! - As Mlchlcan's Bobby Crawford walks off the court In
.the distance, Duke's Cbrls Collins (left) celebrates tbe tourtbrankecl. Blue Devlis' 73-63 upset win over the third-ranked WolverInes as time expires ~turday In Ann·Arbor, Mich. (AP)

'

,......~---=----,

Author visits
.· a~ . mt:L
her homeland' !£ ..,.E~ABLISHED
1895

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Marshall,.VSU.advance
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u.,

PERJORMl\NCE • K..;. Pahlter, as
chlld..ud
~Ill; prletfce tor !be pertonn- of '
"A
C.-o1" HI for &amp;· p.m. Dee. 17 and 18 111 the Morris
and Dorothy,HlilkiDf Ariel Theatr.e: 'J'Icltets are avaUable at Hasi&lt;1u T1111111r 8lld That Special Touc!t ud .~tt the door prior to taj:b
ptrf'01'111811Ce, For more IDI'omiaUon,'C!JI446-ARTS.
' '

BEUING (AP) - NoveliSt
Maxine Hong Kingston didn't visit
her ancestral homeland until she
finished several books about China
and the Chinese-American tlperience.
"I believe there is a mythic
China that exisls in the imagination
of all people,'' she tOld a group of
Chinese writers on Friday. "A
suong imagination imagines the
truth. When I arrived in China, sure
enough, it was the same as my
imagination.''
·.
The writer of "Tripmaster Monkey," --woman Warrior" and
"China Men" is on her third visit
ID China. She asked one of China's
most prolific writers, former .culture minister Wang Meng,, how he
managed to produce so much. •
His advice: Slay happy, slay out
of government and drink Chinese

TOP 10 (QUIITRYAlBUM)
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- Testaverde is getting liac1t into
actiOn juSt in pme 10 face ·the Oilers

I

.
~

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Duke upsets Michigan;
Temple beats Villanova

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r ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Third-ranked Duke used ita ballinced scoring 8nd ilepth to tate a

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pointer by Killles at 9:37 and a Kittles dunk 27 SC!;Oilds later.
Temple led 23-16 at the half,
despite shooting 22 percent from
the freld.
.
Olio Northern 7&amp;

.
John &lt;;arroll73
·viC!IJP' Saturday,
At
Ada,
Obio, ~let Bertke
lt was the fourth time over the
.scored
22
points
and pulled down
last tJuce · SOifOI'IS· the' Blue Devils

Morrt8 end Dorolly HMidna
Arlol-. ·

were

'"It ViiS fnistraling knowin~ tliat
we could m&amp;;t~ the _plays 1f we
could.just get mto pos1tion to make
.them.
.
.
Geuing aggressive and gettmg
turnovers have been cornerstones
of the Oilers' defensive improvemenL
.
"I've never seen a defense that

'

•
\

•

.

'

nine rebounda as Oh1p Northern
used a second-half ,.Uy Saturday
to beat John Cmqll 78-73.
John Carroll (4,3, 1-1 in the
bhio Conference) led by seven at
tbe half. But wilh nine mmutes left,
Wysoclci scored six points during a
10-2 run that gave the Polar Bears
the lead.
Four other players scored in
·double fi~ for the Polar Beats
(3-4, 2-1). D'artis Jones had 20,
Kevin Wysoclci sctX-ed 13 and Jon
~ski and Brent McKenna
. 10 apiece.
John Buford had 26 points for
the territts.
Heldelberl92. Marietta 73
At Tiffin, Ohio, Matt Adams
scored 21 points, including 17 in
the first half, as Heidelherg beat
Marietta 92-73 Saturday.
-.
Adams hit ihree three-pointers
in tile first half as the 'student
Prince&amp; pulled aWl)' early.
.
Heidelberg (3-4, 1-2m the Ohio
Conference) was also led by Dontao Edmonson ' with · 17 points.
Adam Smith had IS and Kris Foster added 14. .·
· Marietta (2-4, 0-2) led until a
Smith three-pointer gave Heidelberg the lead for good at U:4S In
the lint half.
.
· The 'Pioneers were led by Dave
thev.P.
. ,.,
- The Wildcats earlier narrowed Watts with 18.poibts and Joey Ferthe icore to 38-37 after a three- ris with 13.

(S-0) hive beaiCII the Wolverines
(S-1).
:
The Blue bevits had pletlt}' of
players step up BJ center ,Chc;rokee
Parks finished wid\. 23 .points ·and
nine rebounds. Gnnt Hill, who has
talcen over runnins the Qff~. had
18 points on 7-for-11 shooti~g,
including 3-for-3 froni three-pomt
range. Antonio Lang and reserve
guard Marty Clark had 10 points
each.
'Michigan got ai!DOSt all its
·offense from Jalen Roso and Juwan .
Howard. Rose finished with 31
points and Howald' had 20.
No. 5 Temple 54, VIDanov!l 49
At Philadelphia; Pa., Eddie
Jones made 12 of his 18 points in
the second half &amp;J No. STemple
held off a late rally, to defeat Villanova S44.9 on Saturday. ·
Aaron McKie added 17 points
and Derrick· Battle hit a crucial
layup With 31 seconds left to raise
.the Owls' record to 3-0; The Wildcats fell to 2-2.
After trailing since six minutes
into the first half, tho Wildcats
closed to 50-49 with 52 seconds
left on a trey bY Keny Kittles. But
Battit:'s layup with widened Tetnple's lead 10 52-49, and Rick Brunson added two free throws to seal

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) ..... Chris Parker rushed for 142
yards·and a touchdown as defending champion Marshall beat
upsl8rt Troy State 24-21 Saninlay to set up its third straight meeting
wilh Yatmgstown State in the NCAA DiVISion I-AA title game.
Youngstown Stale (IZ-2) beat Idaho 35-16 in ~e o~r semifin~
Saturday to advance to next Saturday's champ1onsh1p game m
Huntington. It beatManhall25-17 in the 1991title game and lost to
the Thundering Herd il1-281ast season.
Marshall (fl -3) saw a 17-point' lead melt in the second quarter
apinst Troy State (12-l-1) as lhe teams combined for all 45 points
il\ the first half. Temperatures fallinll into the 20s and a strong
breeze helped keep the game scoreless m the second half.
The ·Herd's first two touchdowns were set up by defense and
special teams.
'
.
On the game's first series, Marshall defensive end Chns
Hamilron recovered a Kelvin Simmons fwnble at the Troy Stale 27.
Five pial'S later, Parker ran it in from.the two.
,
After David Merrick's 37-yard field goal made. 11 10-0,
Marshall's Albert Barber blocked a Brad Stevens punt and LcRon
Chapman returned it five yards for a 17-0 lead wilh 1:491eft in the
fii'St quarter. .
· But Simmons threw second-quarter touchdown passes of 16
yards to Stan Davis, a baclcup quarterbal::k lined up at receiver, and
three yards to Robert Kilow a1 Troy State cut the deficit to 24-21 at
halftime.
.
Troy State's Ollie ~s missed a 30-y~ field goat w1de left
apinst a strong.cross wind that would have ued lhe game 17-17 m
the second quarter.
Jimmy Godwin, who led Troy Slate with 33 yards rushi~g.
scored from one yard O\lt in the second quarter. The TrOJan
averaged 216 yards on the JIIOOIId this season but were held to 101
yards Saturday.
Marshall~ Todd Donnan completed 11 of 19 passes
for 162 yards, while Simmons lUt 13 of 21 passes for 172 yards.
Yooncstown St. 35, Idaho 16- At Youngstown, Ohio,
TIDIIUII Smith scored twice for YoJUigSIOWn State as the Penguins
advanoed 10 the NCAA Divlsioo I-AA championship game for the
third straight year Saturday with a 35-16 semifinal victory over
Idaho.
.
Smith's touchdowns cime on runs of two and seven yards m a
game played in a wind chil factor of two degree~ below zero. Also
ICOriug for Youngstown State (12-2), the 1991 division champions,
were Leon Jones on a 42-yard fUIIIble recovery, Mark Brungard on
a pass play that covered 3S yards fr9m Don Zwisler, and DarneD
a.1t on a 15-yard run.
.
.
.
sheniden May of the Vandals (11-3) opened lhe scoring w1th a
one-yard run. Teammate Mike Rolli~ lcicked field goals of 43, 21
and ~ y.-ds.
.
. th
d
·· Idaho led 16-14 at halftime. but was held scoreless 1n . e secon
half, in pan hecausc personal foll;l penalties against the Van~als
kept Youngstown State from tummg the ball over on: two drives
which led to IOuchdowns.
·
,
Brungard was Youngstown State's rushing leader with 91/ards
in 13 attempts. Smith bad 88 yarda in 24 carries. Brungar was
limited ld two pass completions for S I yards, but one was to
Zwisler for a touchdown.
.
May ran for 87 yards in 19 attempts for Idaho.

Friday, Dec.17

• tas Vegas Bowl, Las Vegas, Nev.: Ball Slate (8-2-1) vs. Utah
State (6-5), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Friday, Dec. 24
• John Hancock Bowl, E1 Paso, Texas: Texas Tech (6-5) vs. Oklahoma (8- 3), 2:30 p.m. (CBS)
Saturday, Dec. 25
&lt;Blue-Gray Classic, Montgomery, Ala.: Blue vs. Gray, noon
(ABC)
• Aloha Bowl, Honolulu: Fresno Slate (8·3) vs. Colorado (7-3-1).
3:30 p.m. (ABC)
Tuesday, Dec. 28
• Uberty Bowl, Memphis, Tenn.: Michigan State (6-5) vs.

Louisville (8-3), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Wednesday, Dec. 29
• Copper Bowl, Tucson, Ariz.: Wyoming (8· 3) vs. Kansas State
(8-2-1), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Thursday, Dec. 30
• Holiday Bowl, San Diego, Calif: Brigham Young (6-5) vs. Ohio
State (9-1-1). 8 p.m. (BSPN)
• Freedom Bowl, Allaheim, Calif.: Southern Cal (7-5) vs. Utah
(7-S), 9 p.m. (Raycom)
Friday, Dec. 31
• Independence Bowl, Shrevepon, La.: Virginia Tech (8·3) vs.
Indiana (8-3), 12:30 p.m. (ESPN)
• Peach Bowl, Atlanta, Ga.: Cletnson (8-3) vs. Kentucky (6-S), 6
p.m. (ESPN)
• Gator Bowl, Jacksonville, Fla.: Alabama (8-3-1) vs. North Carolina (10-2), 7 p.m. (TBS)
• Alamo Bowl, San Alltonio, Texas: Iowa (6-5) vs. California (84), 9:30p.m. (ESPN)
Saturday, Jan. 1
• Hall of Fame Bowl, Tampa, Fla.: Michigan (7-4) vs. North Car-

olina State (7-4), 11 a.m. (ESPN)
• Citrus Bowl, Orlando, Fla.: Penn State (9·2) vs. Tennessee (91-1), 1 p.m. (ABC)
• Fiesta Bowl, Tempe, Ariz.: Miami (9-2) vs. Ari zona (9·2), 1
p.m. (NBC)
• Carquest Bowl, Miami~Fia. : Boston College (8 ·3) vs. Virginia
(7-4), 1:30 p.m. (CBS)
• Couon Bowl, DaUas, Texas: Texas A&amp;M (10-1) vs. Notre
Dame (10-1), 4:30p.m. (NBC)
• Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif.: UCLA (8·3) vs. Wisconsin (9-11), 4:30p.m. (ABC)
• Heritage Bowl, Atlanta, Ga.: Southern Univ. (9· 1) vs. South
Carolina Stale (8-3), 4:30p.m.
• Orange Bow~ Miami, Fla.: Nebraska (11 ·0) vs. Florida State
(11-1), 8 p.m . (NBC)
• Sugar Bowl, New Orleans, La.: Florida (10-2) vs. West Virginia (11-0), 8:30p.m. (ABC)

--

Saturday, Jan. 15
• East-West Shrine Classic, Stanford, Calif.: East vs. West, 4
p.m.(BSPN)
Saturday, Jan. 22
• Senior Bowl, Mobile, Ala.: ~orlh vs. South, 2 p.m. (ESPN)
• Hula Bowl, Honolulu, Hawaii: College All-Stars vs. Hawail

L-----------------------~ ,

�C2 Sun«My nm• Sentinel

PIG•

In team•' SEOAL opener,

Pomeroy-Middi8DOrt-GIIIIpolle, OH Point Pl. . .nt, wv

December 12, 1993·

.

O.C.mber

wv

OH Point

•

Gallipolis notches 74-49 victory over Warren Local .

VINCENT - For one and 1
balf qull1m. it - I !!4l:llld·tuck
bubotJwll pme ~ Priday aJaht.

''Then we bepn playlna dol'-.•
lllid Gallipolis cOIICb lim Osborne
u his Blue Dcvila opened South·

Ohio Leaauo play with an
impressive 74-49 romp over a
young
Locll quinld.
During the nrst 1l minutes of
action, the lead chlnged bands
se.en u.nefllld the 8COie wu tied
once before Terry Qualls' driving
layup with 4:46.mnainlng in the
second IWIZI put tbe Galllans
easiCI'II

w.,_

ahead for keeps.

Chad Barnes chipped in with 20 als.
Marleaa. Friday they will travel to
marktn and seven rebounds. Mike
9 AHS was credited with 19 1aCboa. ~ nlgh~ GAHS played
Donnallyhad 14.
.
IISSISIS,lObyCiwdBneufldfour atC'tt IF a&amp;.
12-0 Blue Devil spun which erased
Cllad Welilz PIICed the.Wamon each by DonnaDy llld Qualls. GalJeff Strictleu's Warriors played
a one point GAHS deficit Before with IS points. C.bad Canfield lia Academy bad 17 steals, four For.t Frye last ni~ht. Friday
the Warrio1s could score again added nine points and picked off each by Qualls ·and Chris Sam· WLHS plays 81 Marieira.
'
(2:24) the GaJiiana enjoyed a 36-25 seven rebounds for the Warriors, mcrviUe. Gallipolis picIced off 36
Raervslo&amp;e
. .
advantage. that wu the game's now 0-3 on the BejiSOII.
rebOunds and bad J6 bjmOYers.
In Friday's JI(Climinl!l'Y game,
turning point
. . Statlltks
W~ Local ~ted on 20 Lynn Sheetl' Blue J:mps feD behind
Gallipolis Jed at all the whistle
Gallipolis, 2-0 overall, connect- of 56 f1cl!l goal trtes, had 24 30-.J3 at ba1ftime, but bau!ed back
SIOjJS, 16-15,43-29 and 60-42.
eel on .31 rl SS field.&amp;oal.attcmpts rebou!l.da and .committed 16 in the 8CI:Ond half to l!iiD within 10
QuaJJs JIIICed the Gallians 81111Ck_ for 56 pen:cnt. The Gallian.a ~ad turnovers.
.
points of the Ulllc Wanton in .thc
with 22 points and 10 rebounds anothcroffnigbt81th!IUnc,sinking
The Blue. Devils w.l ll see finllpcriodbefore=~4!1-37
he sat out the nnal 12 only 10 of 2~ ,for 50 rerccnt. SEOAl- action twice thj~ week.
The game was• . . by fo~ls
with four
fouls. OAHS 'f11Swh••ledfor2 penon~ Tuasday, th!:l Blue Dev~la host andtumoven. 'lbeBiuelmpswere
whistled for 20 penonals, losing
s~r:.;Bri~c· HIIIIIPitRys and 1osh
Cj '
inlhellnaiiiiiiiZI.
..m=••led 144,30-13 ~ 35·
quiitcnnailcs.
· . .
~ iib~ Clallt jllced the GaJiiana
,points. Wes Saunde~s
Steve B~ pumped m
winners. Bnc Reusser

Tunlba' JJOial
In fact, Qualll fiuctet started I

· GALUPOUS
&lt;i6·27·17·1-':74)
Greg 1ames 0-0-1•1: C~ad·
Barnes 5·1·7a20: Chris Roettkcr 1·.
1.,o;.s. M'tke nOnnally 7-0-0=14;
R
Barnes 3-0-0-6· Troy DunJ:l-0-0.:.2; Brie RQderick 1-0-,
0.2; Richard Kuhn ()..().2-2; Terry:
Qualls ll·O-Oo22; Brett Baker,·
Chris Sotiuiierville Chuck Millet
ancl Bretl Cremeeu did not score.
Totals: Zll-2-10:74
·
'
. WARREN'LOC,o\1.
(15-14-13-7=49)
Scott Hcll(!ricks 1-0-Q;-2; 1!&gt;Sh
WalsOII 3..().().6; Otad Canfield 3·
0·3•9: Chad Wentz S·l-2-15;
Chip.Ro)linson 1·0·1•3: .Gary
Whcelcl' 1-0-1•3; 1emny Gaul 2o-t•S: 1ustin Frye- 3-0-0=6: Mat
Dickcn,Stcve£1derand1oe0recn• .
walt·did not score. Totala: 19-1 ~
8::49
··

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" Ye&gt;ur Dionu&gt;ruJ
HetuJqU1111ei'J in Callipollo"

BACK IN ACTION - Drlbbllug wltb the
baud 81lll bandaged after IUfl'erlng a sprain tbat
kept blm out for his team's nrst three games,
River Valley pard Jbumy Massie ~Qes tbe biiiJ
toward the baseUne wllle Jackson's Brad llowe
(:U) oft'en defeBilive pMure In tbe fourtb qllll'·

hardwood game at Warren Loeal High School, where tbe Blue DevUs WOD 74-49,

$lips past Logan in other SEOAt action

River
making its rust
appearance u league member,
scored 1 S8-SO triumph over the
, .
~irA
.....~dinp
1993 ·:- cage ""!""! , 11,
(SEOAL,oppo!leDII)

(~D)L ,.j;

!ream
GJw;n'ield .............2
, Marielta.................2
j Gallipolis...............2
j Athcni ..................l
, I'IIJtsm!)uth ............1
I RiverVallcy ......... .3
I Wllcelenburg ....... .2
1~ ..,............... 1
.• Logan ..............'.....!
, ChCsapelke ...........o
Southeim .........~......o
Vinton County ......0

l

I

'!

1 Fairland .................0

wancn Locll ........o

I1..,...._

0
0
0
0
0

OP
134 ' !7 141 118
152 112
6S 51
81 71

TOTALS

(SEOAL .R eser-&gt;
w L TJ&gt; OP
Marlcaa............... l o 6S ~~
Warrell Local ......! 0 49
1acbon................ 1 0 45 29
Lop1i .:.................0 I ~~ 6S
GallipOlis.............o t
4~·
Rivei'Valley ........ 1 29 4
, ••.._.
.0 0 · 0 · 0

o

T'OO:ii:s-"""""' 3

3 270 270
SEOAL resalll:

Varsity
Gallipolis 74 Warrell Local49
Matietta 70 Lopn 6S
• River Valley S8 Jacbo11 SO
,
,

Reten'll

: wancn Local

(17-17·17·14=65) ·
.
Coy Lindsey 2·.010:=4: Chad
Zilllmerm&amp;n 0-2·3-9: Dustin Dcn~0-4-2-14; Chris Starner 2-0: 'elY t.&gt;Jailback 1~0-0.2; Kris
B~gley I0-0·6a26. Talala: 21·0·
· ·
·

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WaneD Local a! Marietta
! AdleallllAJDII .
• 01'0' nfleH·• "MMIInt 'nice

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catltoWI81 Pt. Pleailnt
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power door locks, rear .
defroster, cut alumlnuni whHls~ · ·

Wellston 72 Vinlllll County S6
! Valley 61 Wheelenbml60
i Trimble 69 Southern.6f
4
Llllt nlaht's pmes:
. Gallipolis at' Cliesapeake
l Warrell Loella! Fort Frye
! . AJex8ndei81 Athens
:Paint Vallcy II Greenfield
.
~y'spmes:
. Matietta ll Gallipolis
Lopn at Jacklon
I RiverVallg:'Athens

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49 Olllipolis 37
; Marieaa 65 Lop114S
: JackPI 4S River Val1cy 29
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In The A~ea. ·

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3 196 227

'I Team

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·

2 '1111 228
1 64 . 65 .
2 134 159
2 102 133 ·
l 1~ 148

1

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P"'fbe~erstooka2t-17first

"SINCE 1933"

2 189 t97

3 3 366 366 ·

.
II

·Marietta 70, ~ 65

At Marietta, the Ttgers had to
ov~ a26-polnt 6X)IIosioll by
I..Qaan'sKri~~egleyllltdpery
close. s~eond half to rua thetr
record to 2·0 and 1-0 In league

,and led 39-34 at inter·
mission before the .Chieftains
closed the pp to·S3-S'l entering the
fourth quarter. The C()ld-shooting
Chiefs could not catch up u their
1 262 241 ~ rec0014ips to 1•2. .
t 221 160
··

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.
( SEOAL V.anlty) · . .
WL 7POP
·
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Gallipolis ............. l 0 ,74 .' 49
River Valley ........! 0 S8 SO
Marielta ............... l 0 70 6S
Athens .................0 0
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Jacklon ................o t. so ~
Logan ..................o 1 6S
Local ......o 1 . 49 74

· wamn

trsveled to Vini:ent and whipped
the Warriors 74-49, and host Marletta edged the Login Chicflliins 7065. Athens was idle, hut faced
Alexander in a non-league tussle
Saturday nighL .

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Ryan Robinson , notched 20 17=65
points, and Greg Theiss hod 11,
wllile Stephen Amolll got 10 for
MARIETIA
the winners, who alsci shot SO'Ai on
(21;11-14-17=70)
a 26-:f0(·~2 effor1,1.be Tigen IIUide
Stephen Arnold 2-Z..O.IO; Tim
seven of l·~t shots and Heslop 1·1.0.S; Brad Kn;lft 2·1·
grabbed~.
•
'
. l.S; Ry&amp;l) Robinaoii4-U.20; 1ay
. In addtbon to B~gl~fs gam~- . Ruff'ms 1:1..0..5; DanelS~uss' 4..().
htgh 26 po1'\ts, D"•un Denn1s t-9.: Greg 'J'beiu 4-0-3•11: Ry811
.drilkii1 four lrifectaS en route to a WIR 1~l.t~ Jt·7·lho70
l4'·JIOiptnigiiHiJr,UIPD,'!fiil*~ ."' ,. ' ._. '"
· ;.',
.
also ,~bed ~0 ieboundsl but htt
Reser
. ve score - Marietta 65,
only f1'Ail'n5m tl\efl~.
l.ogan44
·
.

Jackson Ironmcn. GaJlis Aca&amp;emy .

422 SECOID AVE.

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• Anilstrong Solariin Fl'oor Tt.le
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• 52 Gallon WlUer Heater
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• Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding Wttb Lifetime Warranty
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'
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. LOOKS. FOR TEAMMATE- GaDll ~y'a Troy~
(30) loOks tor an 'open teliliimate wbl.le Wlllftn LoW's Chid Wentz
(;1) appllea p~ darlq eecond bait aeticia ilt Friday's SEO.U.

BLOCKS SHOT A1TEMPI'- WIII'ND L!Jral's Chad Canllel.d
(20) bloeb sbot att:l!tol GaDia
. Acad-y's Chock Miller (51)
dariq aeconcl U1f
ol Friday's .SEO.U. hardwood aame at
Vblceot, where GAHS Wlta 74-49.

Tawney Jewelers

ter of Friday night's coolest at River Valley High
School, where the Raiders, behind by two going
Into tbe fourth quarter, ra!Ued to win 58-50 in
part because of Massie's 11 points. (Times-Sen·
tine! photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Brlnl aD )'our·bed dut on\a New.Car or Tr~ck and we
WIII tr)' to m~t or Beat the DeaL
1
FqR A. 0901) DE!\L••
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Our Serylce Depanment l.a Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. &amp;.12
Muffler
Mo,.-Frl. A; Sat. 8·12
Houra In
Mon•.Prl. 8·7; s... 8-3 p.m. ·

~

TO ACCOMMQDATE THOSE WORKING PEOpLE.
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL !I P.M. ON TUESDAYS
IPOINI: PLEASANI' MEDICAL CENI'ER)

25TJi &amp;: JEII'I'ERSON AVENUE
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�Page

With help from Gall brothers,

December 12, 1993

December 12, 1993'

Pomeroy--Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wV

C4 Sunday TlmH Sentinel

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Nelsonville-York (2-1, 1-0) locker room_wilh IS points in the
came out of the blocks fast and rust half. tyim ~ther Jason added
jumped out to a 29-14 lead after four to g1ve h1.111 10 at the half.
one period. Justin Gail led the Gary Stanley tried to keep the
Buckeyes to the big first period Marauders in the game by scoring
lead by pourin~ in 11 points, Jeff ~ven second period points. giving
Warix added e~ht and Jason Gail him 11 for the half.
added sill. Trav1s Grate led Meigs
In the third period, it was Jason
with five,
.
!Jail who_gOt !he hot~. pouring
In the second penod the Buck- 1n 10 pomts m the penod as the
eyes used a-balanced scoring attack Buckeyes opened up a 76-44
by placing sill players in the scor- advantage after three periods.
ing column and increased their-lead T~avis Grate led Meigs with six
to 49-28 at the half. Justin_ Gail third-IJ:Cliod points.
added four more poiJIIS to go m the
Me1gs outacored the Buckeyes

18-11 in the ~nal period. Tra.vis
Grate poured m 12 fourth penod
points' fo power Meip, but it was
100 little too late.
"Our effon was better, ·w~ were
more aggressive on offense, •
Marauder coach Jeff Slcinner said
after the game. "Nelsonville came
. outand:~'1Dt the ball real well in~
fltSt J!Mod• and we just dug a big
·hole.
.
.
·Jason Gail, wbo led the Buckeyes with 20 points, was joined in
double r~ by Jasti~ Gail's .1~,
Jeff Wanx s 14 and Mike LewiS s

Raiders beat /ronmen ..._&lt;c_on_tinu_edfro_m_c-_3&gt;---~--Jackson didn 'I score while
Raider forward Chris Crace, who
finished with 20 points gained
mostly on 9-for-23 field-goal
shooting to lead all marksmen,
canned a jumper inside the threepoint arc and a three-pointer in line
with the paint in the fitS! two minutes of the third quarter before
sinking a baseline jumper with 5:42
left in the quarter to cut Jackson's
lead to 24-23. That set the stage for
.Iamie Graham's layup - it was the
~ophomore guard's first basket of
lhe game - 40 seconds later that
gave the Gallians a 25-24 lead.
: Crace, who picked up two fouls
in the fltSI half but mol'll than made
up for it by having the assist on
~raham 's pivotal basket and getting·twO more points - he finished
the quarter with nille - to pad the
I,taiders' lead to 27-24, picked up
two more in the frame, at which
point both teams traded leads until
senior forward Dennis Crabtree's
·layup with seven seconds left gave
Jackson a 40-381ead.
Prime time
. Massie took a Paul Covey pass
along the left ~baselipe and sank a
jumper 12 seconds. into the final
quarter to tie the game at 40. But
senior guard David Kight, forgetling his team's two previous misses
·at the bucket, sank a point-blank
jumper in the lane to put Jackson
ahead 42-40 with 7:04 left.
Three missed field goals - a
three-point try 'by River Valley and
two two-point tries by Jacksonpreoeded Howe's foul (his second)
against Massie 33 seconds later. ·
Massie made both ends of the oneand-One to lie the game at 42.
.'I'Jie minute following the creatioo llf lhe game's ftnal deadlock
saw CiaCe put in a layup (6:08) and
Mw'r dial long distance from the
right wing (5:46) to begin River
Valley's rise to victory.
The Raiders made seven of 17
fietd ·goals in the final quarter,
compar¢ with the Ironmen's 5for-16 showing.
' MlertbOUI!Its
The Raiders found themselves
in a gilmc with a team that made
extensive usc of halfcourt and
threC•CJ.Uarter court .passes and
eashed m on wide.ppen layups on
rnany occasiotls.
It was no toe-to-toe batde in the

Fouls-24
Reserve contest - Jackson 45
River Valley 29
'
Scoring leaders - 'Andy Y~a­
ger (J) - 11; Jason Slli~l (R V) , 9 .

paint, which could have worked to Howe 10 each)
Assists- 7 (Kij!ht 4)
.
the lronmen's advantage, considerSteals
5
(Ktght
&amp;
Travis
2
ing that they have a height advan.
tage in the backcourt and are fairly each)
~1'ui'Jiovers '- 25
even with River Valley on the front
line. But Jackson plays an openpost offense, which is more conducive to a running offense.
"We shot 31% (sic) from the
field," said Jackson's first-year
boss. "You're ·not going to beat
many teams with that.
"We had three kids out (Howe,
Kight and junior forward Tom
McNerlin suffered bouts with the
flu earlier in the week) who missed
some practices this week, all
starters," he added. "But we can't
make excuses. We missed too
many easy shots."
Though River Valley did better
from the field in the second half
(17-39, 43.6%) than in the frrst, as
did Jackson (12-30, 40%), the
Raiders also did their share of
missing shots, making only three
out of eight free throws in the final
two minutes.
Jackson made no trips to the
foul line in the fourth quarter.
This week's agenda will have
River Valley playing Athens at lhe
Plains Tuesday and at hoine against
Chesapeakoe Saturday. Jackson will
host Logan Tuesday.
·
RIVER VALLEY
(9-7-22-20=58)
Crace 8-1-113=20; Massie 3-12/2= 11; Ashworth 4-0-1/2=9;
' Covey 2-0-010=4; Cox G-1-1!2=4;
Graham 2-0-0/2=4; Mullen 0-10/0=3; Mabe 1-0-0ft)=2; BOothe 00-112=1. Totals: 20-4-6/13=58
Total FG- 24-72 (33.3%)
Three-pointers- 4-21 (19%)
Rebounds- 39 (Crace 8)
Assists-16 (Graham4)
Steals- 13 (Crace 3)
Turnovers- 14
Fouls-15
Fouled out- Crabtree

a&gt; ~

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By SCOTF WOLFE
Tlmn-Sentinel CorrCfPGIIdent
· 'RACINE - Rusty Richards'
v~ exchanges wilh the sOuthern
crowd didn't detract from the S·
foot-8 senior's concentration, as he

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ALBANY - Outracing Eastern
in the last few minutes of lhe first
quarter and an 18-6 spurt in the
third, the host Alexander Spanans
defeated Eastern 83-54 Friday
night in a Tri-Valley Conference
contest
Alexander (2-0), a favorite to
win the conference's Hocking
Division, used its entire aresenai to
overcome the Eagles (1-3, 0-1).
Twelve Spartans hit the scoring
column.
The game featured the first
meeting between two former
Southern basketball stars, Jay Rees
at Alexander and Tony Deem at
Eastern. Both were students of the
game under former Southern coach
Carl Wolfe, a career winner of
more than 400 games.
Deem said, "We _P.layed with
them for much of t.h6 fltSI quarter,
but again we missed some shots
earl~ and just eventually ran out of
gas.
Scott Chapman led Alexander
with 21 points and four rebounds ln
about two and half quarters of play,
as he sat out much of the game in
foul trouble. Senior guard Jamey
Vincent added 16 points, and
Travis Rice had 12.
At his point of exit, Travis Waggoner was believed to have set a
new school record for most assists
as a Spartan with 1S; however,
according to team sources that
marie. fell shon the record believed
io be set at 18.
Waggoner had a great passing
and floor game and played a hand
in 36 of the Spartans' points.
·
· Eastern W&amp;S·ied !by Charlie Bis-

1992.
Hampton, 21, was 1-3 with a
9.53 ERA in 13 games durin~ two;
stints with Seatde, and also p1tched;
for Double-A Jacksonville of theSouthern League~
•
Felder, 31, hit .211 with one·
home run and 20 RBis in 1Q9:
games for the Marine_rs.
MEMORIAL DEDICATION- COiich Howle CaldweU, current
' players 111d 01embers or the 1991 SHS hasketbaU team joined with
~the admlnlstratioll or Soutbern High Scilool to retire tbe jersey or
?the late Todd Grindstaff, a member of the 1981·!11 Soutbern High
i-School teams, who lost his llle early this IICbool year In a boating
1accldenL Grindstaff's number 20 jersey wu retired lQid monnted
·1on tbe wall with a memorial plaque alonplde tbe Sonth.ern victory
! banners. Shown dedicating the jersey are 19!11 team members
•
Codner, John Hoback, Andy Baer, Michael Kincaid and
Rose (L·R).
·
·

gave Trimble the ball on tile
rebound with 23 seconds left in the
game.
What appeared 10 be a big steal.'
by ~ass Cleland and an ensuins ..
'{See TORNADOES on C-6) •

sell with 10 points and I 0
ALEXANDER
rebounds, while ever-improving
(29:l3-18-1.3=13)
sophomore Eric Hill tossed in 12
TraviJ Wasgonet 1-0-3=5, Eric
points.
. Wagner 3-0-U:6, Bill Hart 2-0Alex led 29-17 after a blitzing 0=4, Jamey Vincent 0-5-1=16,
ftrst quarter offensive display, then Corey Wingett 1-0-1•3. Mike
led 52-34 at the half. -Eastern came
out frigid in the third quarter and
.
only mustered six points en route to
a 71-40 offset EHS outscored Alex
14-13 down the stretch, but it
wasn't enough.
Eastern hit 16 of 60 shots for
26.9%, hit4-8 treys and was 10-22
at the line. Alex hit 27-58 for
46.5% from the field, hit 6-9 threes
for 66.7% and was 9-18 at the line.
Eastern had only 24 rebounds
(just seven offensive), led by Bissell's 10 and Brian Bowen's four.
Eastern had eight ·steals (Newland,
Micah Otto and Arbaugh two
each), 21 turnovers and 19 fouls.
Alex had 31 rebounds, led by
Rice's eight and Chapman's four,
had 10 steals, 10 turnovers, 18
assists and 21 fouls.
Alex won the reserve game 4927. Kenny Waggoner led Alex with
10, and Josh Mace had nine. Chris
Bailey led Eastern with 10. while
Jeff Rankin and Jason Sheets each
had four.
Eastern hosts Belpre Tuesday.

Shemian 0-0-2=2, Jimmy Nicholson 2-0-1•5, Scott Chapman 9-03• 21. Ted Bach-Davis G-0-1=1 ,'
Matt Rosier 3-0-0=6, Travis Rice ·
6-0-0al2, Darin Martin 1-0-0=2.
Totals: 21-6-9118=13

-R ED IT IS!!

The SPOITY lEW LOOK you'v• lteen
waitl•l for. Co•• drive tile all Hw•••

1994 GMC SONOMA

Convenience, Co•fort and Qoallty Ill
In One Stylish Package.

EASTERN
(17-17-6-14=54)
Brian Bowen 1-0-0=2, Ryan
Buckley 0-0-2..2, Pat Newland 12-2=8, Jeff Stethem 2-0-l .. s,
Micah Otto 2-0-0=4, Wes Albaugh
2-0-0a4, Charlie Bissell 4-0-2=10,
Eric Hill4-04=12, Robert Reed 02-2=']. Totals 16-4-10122=54

Air Foret Max CB.

THE SHOE CAFE
'

Lafayette Mall
Gallll)&lt;)lls,
. . Ob'

-

Iiiii '-

'

JACKSON
,
(5-19-16-10=50) '
Howe 4-2-2/2=16; Crabtree ·4-02/2=10; Travis 2-2-0/1='10; McNerlin 2-0-3/4;-7; Kight 3-0-0/0=6;
Matthews 0-0-1/2=1. Totals: 15-48/11=50=50
"
Total FG- 19-58 (32.8%)
Three-pointers- xx
Rebounds - 42 (Crabtree &amp;

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- V C:ARIIOH EXTREME XLA ILL CAMO
For '93. you Clift hbe lut · rou can have accurate . you
can hive QtMIIhOoling • and you can hive an aesthet•·

Sonic XL"'

~~,,,,
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- - ~"""'"-'

I

JENNINGS

NEW
JENNINGS

50 CAL.

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sinlle-handedly.convc:rted a IOillC- GynuwiiiD.
what comfortable Southern lead
Tile flnilh
into a 69~ Tri-Valley O!nference
Southern had a 68-6S lead and
victory over the Southern Toma- the ball with 41 seconds left in the
does Friday ni&amp;ht at Southern High game, but the second atraight,
School's Charles W. Hayman missed first-shot of a ~-one

'

Alexander hands Eastern 83-54 loss

Sports briefs

-·-·.

c

11. Unofficially the ,Buckeyes hit
Hanson led. Meig_s with 17
35 of 47 from the floor including _ points, and TraVIS Curus ailded 13,
six of seven from 11we ~trange while Yost had 12. Jason Waite led
for 75%. The Buckeyes hit 11 of2i the Buckeyes with 17. Teammate
from the line for 53% and grabbed Jason Wickman added 12.
26 rebounds with the Gail brothers
getting .six eich.
Meigs will travel to Stewan to
Grate who led the Marauders play Federal Hocking Tuesday
with a ~-high 23 points, was evening. The Lancers defeated
joined in double flgl!TCS by sopho- Miller 69-65 in double overtime
more Gary Stanley with 16 .The Friday evening. Nelsonville-York
Marauders hit 23 of 65 from the will travel to Hemlock to face
floor including five of 14 from Miller.
three 'point range for 36%. Meigs
was II of23 from the line for 48%.
MEIGS
(14-14-16-18=,2)
Meigs grabbed 30 rebounds with ·
Gary Stanley 4-2-2=16, Brett
Reggie Pratt grabbing 10~ Brett
Newsome 3-G-1=7, Travis Grate 6Newsome added five.
'
2-5=23, Jason Han 1-1-2=7, RegMarauder reserves win
gie
Pratt 3-0.1=7, Scott Peterson 1In the· reserve game Meigs
0-0=2.
Totals: 18-5-11=62
outscored Nelsonville 17-11 in the
fourth period-to fotce the overtime
'
NELSONVILLE-YORK
and outscored the Buckeyes·12-6 in
. (29-20-27-11=87)
the extra period to post a 56-50 vicRyan
Sullivan 0-0-2=2, Jeffl
tory. Brett Hanson led the MaraudWarix
2-3-1=14,
Mike Lewis 3-1- ~
ers comeback with 10 fourth period
2=11,
Jeremy
Polley
3-0-0=6, •
points and four more in the overJason
Gaii!O-G-0=20,
Adam
Nolan :
time. Donald Yost added six in the
overtime to power the Little 2-0-4=8, Richard Coe 0-1 -0=3, ;
Marauders 10 their rust win in two Justin Gail 6-1-0=15, Tony Meyer ·
1-0-0=2, Matt Call 2-0-2=6. ;
tries this season.
Totals: 29-6-11=87
BasebaU
SEA TILE (AP) - The ijouston Astros traded outfielder Eric
Anthony to the Seattle Mariners for
outfielder Mike Felder and pitcher
Mike Hampton.
Anthony, 26, batted ,249 with
15 home runs and 66 RB!s in 145
games for the Astros last season.
He had 19 homers and 80 RBis in

.,
'

5. Trim~le slips past Southe.rn 69-68

· GElliNG JtEADY.to make his move on Jacltson forward Geott'
Matthews (42) In the second quarter of Friday night's game is River
V11Uey front-liner Chris Crace, who surviVed a 2-ror-10 field-goal
shooting effort in the first ~II to help push the Raiders to a 58-50
win with his game-hlgb 20 points. (Times-Sentinel photo by G •.

Spence~ Osborne)

With Richards' clutch heroics,

..

Nelsonville-York notches 87-62 win over Meigs quintet
B:yDAVEHARRlS
Times-Seatinel Correspoadent
BUCHTEL - Twin brothers
Jason and Justin Gail combined for
35 points to lead Nelsonville to a
87-62 victory over the Meigs
Marauders in Tri-Valley Conference basketball action Friday
eveninjl.
.
Me1gs (0-2 overall, 0-1 m the
TVC) played without the services
of starting point guard .Benny
Ewing, who is out indefinitely with
a neck injury suffered in last
week's lost to Alexander.

Sunday llmee-sentlnet Pege C5

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleuent, WV

'

·~ -

__,

I

One of 27 Ohio E{ectrlc Cooperatives

l'

•

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..,. •

~

'-

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.,

•

�~~~~ge~06~~&amp;~un~da~y~n~m~e~e~Se~~~M~I==============~Po~me~,~o~y~M~Id~d~l~~~rt~G~a~ll~l~~lls~,~O~H~P~o~.ln~t!P~Iea~u:n~t~,wv~==========================~~~~m~~~r~1~~1~~~~
In theNBA,

Bucks l'rf:Uedge Pistons; Bulls, Timberwolves post victories

By Tbe ~lated
short of a V-8.
~ Detton,Pistons eontlllue to
The Milwaukee Bucks, who lost
play like !hey rea few cylinders 14 of their fust 17 games, handed

Tornadoes fall..
I

pass 10 M8SOII ~&lt;asner resullcd in an
empty possession for the Tornadoes.
Following a time-out, Richards
brought the ball down-court and
dipped off to Travis Campbell on
the left wing. Richards, who had
already nailed three three-pointers,
received the pass on the interchsnge at the top of the key, where
he shot the ball vinually unguarded
10 tie the game at68-68.
With 16 seconds len, Southern
set up for a last shot, but in lbe

&lt;;ontinuedfromC-S)

scranible to get open, a Southern
picker was called for the foul wilh
a moving screen violation . The
untimely foul sent none other !han
!he hot-handed Richards to the line,
where he hit lbe ftrst of two free
throws to give THS a 69-68 lead
with six seconds remaining.
Soulhern got the rebound, but
lost !he ball off !he dribble amid a
collision of players, while coming
down court. Trimble held on for
the win berore a very subdued
Racine-Southern crowd, who has

Basketball
EASTERN CONFERENCE

NBA standings
Allanlle Olvldon
W L Pet.

New Ycx!r. .............. 12
Orlando ...............•• .IO
801tcn ................... .IO

4
7
9

Miomi ......................6 9
Now Joncy ..............6 ll
w~ ..............6 12
PhlladclpUo .............! 12

.750
.588
.!26
.400
.333
. 333
.294

4

.765

9
10

.!00

a .529

10

.412
.412

12 .294
14

.222

In thefinall:46.

team sonly standoutwilh 2Spoints

PIUladolp.U ...... 1712 I

2.S

Fbida ....""""" 12 14 3
Wuhlnataa ...... 12
2

3.5
5j

1
1

7.!

N.Y.~-...

t•

9U 3
Tampa Bay ....... 9 17 2

Northeul Dtvll:lon
Pillll&gt;lllJh ......... l3 I 7 33 102 98
B011a1. .............. 13 9 6 32 92 13
Bufflllo.............. 14 13 2
Monuul ........... 13 II 4

'lO 106 92
30 87 79

4.l

Qu-.............. 11 12 !
lfanfard ............ 9 17 2

6

Onawa .............. 6 20 3

:zo

4

6
•
9 ..5

77 100 96
83104
IS

87142

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t DIYIIIon

Team

W L

PeL

Houoton ................. II I .947
Ulah ....................... l3 6 .614
Son Antooio...........12 7 .632
Dranv. ..................- .9 I .S29
Minnc:IGIIo .. -............ 7 10 A12
Oollu .......................l 17 .OS6
,·

GB
!

6
I
10
16.5

Podllc BINion
Sclula .................... 16

+"

1 .941

-

..................12 3
Podlond .... - .......... 11
I
.• Goldon s....;...........9 a
L.A. Ciwm ...........7 10
L.A. Loi0n .............7 12
Slc::ramedO ........__ _, 13

.100
.579
.!29
.412
.361
.271

3
6

T....

42 113 84
36 113103
33 92 90

Dcvvit .............. l-4 12 2
Winnlpoa .......... l2 16 4
Chieaao ............ 12 10 3

28 1091:14
'l1 12 10

N . . .. . . . . .

v..""""" ........

1

1 ......,

,

Jndi.lalu lwJew YOlk, 7:30p.m.
~tt n . W•lhinJton •t Baltimore.

,

lluiCard .. - . 7&lt;!!

": Major college scores
East

~II,MarJ,.SL39

•
Sooolb
OcorJ:ia Soudlem 9"', BreW\On_-Paltcr
14

LIS.U.I9,1..,.-..IS

U!a'T '10, --~-57
MW!UI:I,B~S4

,...
1\.
,;.

• 75

Midwest

IWctue 114, HoaRoa 90

Far West
5I. M.try'o, Cat 71, Cal SL·Iilll"""'

(21-17-12-18::68)

Jeremy Hill 1-0-0=2, Ryan
Wil.liams 6-1-5=20, Cass Cleland
1-0-2=4, Tren10n Cleland 3-0.0=6,
Aaron Drummer 0.-0-2=2, Robert
Reiber 7·1·5=22, Mason Fisher 6·
0-0=12. Totals: 24-2-14120::611

9.5

EYES ON THE PRIZE - Trimble fOI'Wlll'd Nalb1111 Anile (00)
keeps Ills eyes locked .on tbe rim while sbootlneln front of teammate
Cbrls Crala (30) 1nd Soulbern's Mason Flsber (left) ud Robert
Reiber (30) duriD&amp; Friday nJ&amp;bt's TVC pme Ia Racine, whert the
vlsldng Tomcats
trom behind to win 69-68.

c•me

p.m.

Baseball

544 RICHLAND AVENUE, 593-8697

ATLANTA BRAVES : Promutcd
Chuck LaMtt, dinetor of aeouting and
plarcr davoloprumt, to UliatmiJCI'ICral
m•uacr for pla7ar panonncl; Donnie
Mi1c:bal, acout. to 111iatant scoulina 4i.rec:IOI; lnd Scott Paoefnodc, IAiltant di·
ftiCUII' d JOOUtin&amp;. to Uliaaat diroctCI' of

.......,....s.,..,...........,.....

CHICAOO CUBS: Traded Chuck
McElroy, pitcher, to the Ciru;innal.i. RaclJ
for Larry 'L..ucbbera 1nd Mike Anderson,
'tchcra, 1nd Darmn Cox, c1tcher. Roeucsd Bill Brennan, piiChCI'.
HOUSTON ASTROS : Traded Eric
Anthony , outfielder, to the Scatl!e

r.

Marincn for Mike Fr.l.dcr, mtficldcr, 1nd

Mib Hampwn. pik:hcr.
PITTSBURGH P.IRATBS : Siancd
D1vc Clad::, outfielder, lO 1 cne-yeu ton·

......SAN DIEOO PADRES: T"dcd FnN&lt;

Se:minna, pih:hor, Tr1~y S1ndar1, out·
fielder, .nd • player to bo ntmod later lo
the New Yodt Mm forR.Indy Curiis, OJI·
fielder, and a player lObe named later.

Basketball
National BuketiNII AJIOclatiOII
NBA: ........... John 11-, vice pa;.
dant and pncnl counllll d NBA ProperliM. Inc., to 1enioa- vice~ Of play•
or rd1tiona and admtniltration, and
William ltoenia, uailtant aenenl counoel. 10 amonl """R'C! or NBA l'luoonico.
N1mcd W-illi•m Nix vice pte~idDnt of
buaiftat aff•in few NBA Piopcrtica and
Ridlud B~anan auillant aancnl coun-

oel.

CHARLOTTE HORNETS : Traded
Johnny Newm1n , rorwud, to the New
J....y N011 forRwn..tRoblnaon, JI&gt;Wd.

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES :

Placed Dooa Wea, pard, on the injured
Activated Madan Mnio, forw1rd,
rrum tho injured lia.

li".

Football
National Football Leaaut
DETROIT LIONS: Activated Mack
Travil, dd'cn~ivc Unaman, from tl)e practice squacl. Waived Danyl Ford, lineback-

...INDIANAPOUS COLTS:

P~cod Will
Wolford, ofTcndve uci.le, on injured re1&amp;'\/e., Activatad John Ray, ofJcnaivc tina--

man, rn:rn the ~ctkc ~quad .
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Signed

Bruce Picken~, comcrbaek. to • 'two-year
contnct and Frad Mm'lomcry, wide receiver, to the pnctico *'~*·

HOCkey
NalloniiH..U)I.aJIM

BOSTON BRUINS: Aui,ncd Dmilri
X:vanalnov, lllfl •ina. to Priwidcnce or
lho Amoobnllocby Lap
MON'IUAL CANADIENS' a...u..t
Doolld Bruholr,left~-- fmlor.

-~~~~t"&amp;.u..

Jamie Mcl..ennafto aoalcandar, from Sall
Lake Cit)' ~f lhe lntemalional H~hy
~.u.,... Allli!Mil
liillicu, , ....
~Mdcr, rn.n. lidnond of the Eul CoaSI

Mil••

- o y ........_14 Sill Loke Chy.

VANCO\IVER CANUCKS' Sm1 NoB

Bi.. nhpl, ecnttr, to H~milton of the

.._....,lf&lt;!ol&lt;cy Lcilauelnd Mike Peel,
.nne. tO \be ou.nn d lha Onurio
HOck 1M
.

'rilht

w':I'SIIImTON CAPITALS : Rc·

wmed·Jalf Neilan, OlnW, to Portland of

lhoAmoobnllc&gt;ckoyl.apo~

· Soccer

•

I II aoec.IAIItut
NPSL:· AnnoonoN dult Mich•of an.d
Mlrilo Bird! ~f: l111d owntnhlp
llaJola 141ho- od!OII.
•

ALASII:A·A~~AOB:
nounced tho l'Oiianation of
•

-·

I

PorMroy-..Middleport-Galllpoll., OH-Polnt Pleeunt, WV

For his part In on-court brawl

Sunctey nmea Sentinel flag• r:t

'

Young. Kni.gh_t..}oins father on sidelines in tourney opener
CJCCted from Friday night's Indi·
ana-Tennessee Teeh game for •
brawllna with an opposing player.
~h Bob Knipt '91111 alreldy sit·
Ung out the game as he served a
one-game suspension .for thro~
a lt.!"~ tanlrum agam.st !he Irish
earlier 10 !he 'fleck.
. The Hoosiers hll'd no trouble
wtlh Tenncsscc Tech, winning 117-

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Knl APiostSJIOI:UWrlter
ght
his temper. Indiana
won the~·
No, thia is n~ a repeat of the
Notre Da":le-Indt~na story from
Tuesda&gt;: n~ht. It ~ a whole new
chapter m . e ongomg saga of the
Kntght fM,~tly temper.
Pat Ktngh~ the coach's son, was

73 i!lthe first round of the Indiana
Classic.
Norm Ellenberger coached the
team Friday, but Bob Knight was
scheduled to return to the bench
Satu~y night in the 12th-ranked
HOOSiers' game (3-1) against undefeated Washington State.
In other Top 2S g&amp;(lles Friday,
No. 11 Purdue defeated Houston

114-90, No. 16 Illinois llllltbcd
Morehead State IJ0-7S, No. 20
Cincinnati beat Cleveland State 9270, No. 24 George Washington
downed Long Island 76-60 and
California beat Maryland-Baltimore Couiuy 80-48.
Knight was susP.ended by the
university ror his •unsporumanlike conduct" in !he Notre Dame

pn.ae. Indiana Wll liP by 28 pointl
mthatgame·whenPitKitiglllmade
a bad ~ tlw Notre Dame eonverted 1010 a layup. !Ming 1 timeou~ Knight screamed It his son and
apparently kicked at something.
Soine thotlght his son was !he tar·
get.
.
An apoloay from Knight was
read 10 the crowd before Friday

8

t!Y/~. !'!!'.!! '!..:.:.;::;'"'':.:~"· ........... _....... "'""'"'.... """"!.,_

Redwomen topple
~~1!:~1~~~!~~ ~.t~:~;~~n!~lrtE ~~1:-::p:;::r::~ :~:~rJ~~Etq~n:~r~ Wilmington on road

for-7 and 3-for-10 from the field,
respectively.
In Milwaukee' s rour wins this
season, Norman has won lhrcc wilh
three:-JlOinters in the fmal minute.
"I m just
I'm doing something productive to belp this team
win," said Nortnan, who led the
Bucks with 16 points. "They left
me open, and I really didn't have a
choice."
Elsewhere in the NBA Friday
night, it was Chicago 109, New
·Jersey 105; Sacramento 109,

LosAngelesLakers99.
Trail Bluen 117,'Laken 99
POrtland's reserves, led by Rod
Strickland, Jerome Kersey and
Clifford Robinson, outscored !he
Los Angeles substitutes S9-35.
Strickland scored 21 points,
Kersey had 12 of his season-high
18 in the fmal period and Robinson
finished with 15 ror lbe Blazers,
wbo led just 90-84 early in the
fourth quarter before finishing with
a: 27-15 spun.
. Kersey, who made eight of 10

'lad

- - - - - - Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE _ Here is the

Tharaday-11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

schedule for the rest of !he week of
Dec. 12-17 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lync Center.
Gymllltllum
Todal-1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
~:!J:"-:
f ·pmm
y- · ··
· ·
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Thursday-S a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-S p.m.

Home atblellc events
Tuesday -Women's basketball vs. Central Slate, 1 p.m.
balsl atuiUPUirday Women's basket·
vs.
• p.m.

:-:::·1

2

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is fequired to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and adminPool
• istraiOrs are admitted wilh !heir lD
Today-1-3 and6-9 p.m.
cards.
Monday- closed
Racquetball court reservations
Tuesday-6-9p.m.
can now be made one day in
Wednesday-6-9p.m.
advance by calling RichFabri at
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
24S-749S loeally· or•.toll-frcc at 1Fridly- closed
800-282-7201, extension 749S. .
The free-weight room, which
Fllnell Center
will be closed &lt;Jqring home basket· ·
Today -1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
ball .gamcs, is open upstatrs m
Monday - 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Lyne Center Room ~3 durin~
Tuesday - 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
following hours: Sun.-Thurs.
Weditelday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
6-11 p.m.; Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Tbundly- 8 a.m.-n p.m
and Saturday from 4 to 8~.m.
lt'l'will
Friday- 8 a.m.-S p.m.
All facilities in Lyne
be closed.from S. p.m. Friday u~til
/
Sunday, Jan. 2, 199Hor 111e Christ. Racquetball c011rts
Today- 1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
mas holiday -seaSon. A new scbed· ule will be available when classes
Mond1y - 8 a.m.- II p.m.
resume on Monda.y, Jan. 3, 1994.
Tuesday - 8 a.m.-II p.m.
Wednesday-::- 8 a.m::ll p.m.

pointsandDougOuisticlsrorlhe
Lakers.
Tlmberwolves 109, Clippers 108
Rookie Isaiah Rider, subbing ror
the injured ·Doug West, scored 27
points in the fourth quarter as Minnesota S1lapped a three-pme home
losing streak by defeating Los
Angeles•• who has S ·
ts ,·n hiS'
7
Rider
two starts in place o West, hit a
pair of three-pointers during a 17-7
run in the middle of the rourth
quarter, but the game wasn't decided until !he final seconds.
Danny Manning scored 23
points and Mark Aguirre 22' ror lhe
Clippers, who made just 14 of 30
free throws and have lost four of
five games. Thurl Bailey had 20
points and Micheal Williams tied a
Timberwolves' record with 17
assists.
N
107 J 98
uggets
• azz
Mahmoud Abdui-Rauf and
LaPhonso Ellis each scored five
points during a IS-O fourth-quarter
flurry that carried Denver past
Utah.
Abdui-Rauf scored 2S points
and Ellis 18 for the Nuggets, while
Dikembe Mutombo had 13 points,
10 blocked shots and nine
rebounds. II was the fourth time
this season that Mutombo blocked
nine or more shots.
Denver led just 83-80 before !he
'
N
IS-O lillrJe gave the host uggets
an 18-pomtlead with S:l3 remain·
ing
The Jazz, who had their five~ winning streak end, were led
Mal
'•L
·
d
y Karl
one Wlu• 21 pomts an
14 rebounds.•
. Ma'~c 117, Celtlcs 102
Shaqutlle O'Neal, lbe NBA' s
leading scorer, had 30 points, 12
rebounds and eight blocks for

r:e·

After a SO-SO halftime tie the
Magic took conttol with a d~fensive surge led by O'Neal, who
blocked two shots and knocked !he
ball away on two olbcr occasions,
helping the Magic go on a 114 run
late in the third period and early in
the rounb.
. The Cel.tics ~ere led by rookie
Dtno RadJa wnh 22 points and
Sherman Douglas with 19 points
and 13 assists.
Killgs 109, 76era 103
Sacramento won its first road
game of the season and snapped an.
eight-game losing srreak, c!Cfeaung
Philadelphia with the help of Spud
Webb's 1~ fourth-quarter points.
The Kings, who lost ·Letr
' ftr' st
nine road games of thtseason,
were led by Mitch Richmond wilh
26 points and Lionel Simmons with
23 points and 16 rebounds.
Trailing 8S·73 at ihe beginning
of the fourth quarter, the Kings
outscored the 76ers 22 10 1 .
the game 9S-95 with 4:4 ie'ft ~~~
pair of free throws by Webb. Wilh
!he score 97.97, Richmond made a
roul shot 10 give Sacramento the
lead rorgood.
Rookie Shawn Bradley led the
76erswith 17poin1S.
Bulls 109,Nel5 105
Scottie Pippen scored 28 points,
including a key three-point play

9

tare in the game, as Chicago woo at
New Jersey.
The BuDs, winners of five of six
games, led by IS points in !he third
,
5
periodKbe,C?reEdthe Nedsts' cJosed 10 ~til93 on evm war Jumper wt
4:48 left in !he game.
Pippen and Pete M..... . respond,-ed withp.cons~cutive thtrethe-p oi nt
1
Pays.
lppen s came a e 4:03
mark and Myers' 24 seconds larer,
giving the Bulls a 101-93 advantage.

ByKELLYROBINSON
Student Correspondent
WILMINGTON - The University of Rio Grande Red women
improved their overall record to 72 with a 73-59 victory over Wilmington Thursday;
In a game of numerous
turnovers at Hermann Coun, the
Red women lost possession 35
times, but Wilmington collected 36
of its own in !hal category.
Rio Grande outsbot Wilmington
55 percent (33-60) to the Lady
Quakers' 37 (25-61) from !he field.
Neither team recorded a strong
three-point percentage, as Wilmington shot 17 ~nt (three of 11)
compared 10 Rio Grande's 21 per
cent. However, the bosts came ou~
on top with in tree throws, notch·
ing 75 pereenl (six of eight) to the
Redwomen's SO percent (lhree of
six).
Rio Grande's Lori Hamil&amp;on led
all scoring wilh 20 points, in addilion 10 contributing six rebounds.
Tricia Collins pulled down 12
boards 10 lead the team, and dished
out three assists.
Freshman guard Stacy Riley
added 18 points 10 the seoteboard
for the Redwomen. Riley also
snatc~ed seven steals. Michelle

An·
Harry

1.aftabte. nwn'• .....ball COftdl. Nltnld

Qadie INna inLCrim men'• buiF:etball

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Loaded, low mlleage ................................................................ *7 ,824
1881 NISSAN SENTRA
2 Door, air, rear wheel drive, AM/FM cassette .......................... '2,775
19110 GEO.PRIZM
4 Door, automatic, air, AM/FM cassette ..............................:.....*5,923
19110.CHEVY CAMARO AS
Red, loaded, 24,000 miles................................................... '9, 713 .
1988 NISSAN PULSAR
Hops, automatic. air ............... ............................................... '6,475
19110 CHEVY CORSICA
Automatic. air, rear wheel drive, AMIFM cassette .................... '6,298
1881 PONTIAC SUNBIRO SE
Coupe, automatic, air, sporty ........... .
...............................'5,478
1988 SUZUKI SAMURAI, 4X4
Winter's coming .....:....... ................... ..................................*5,288
1881 UNCOLN TOWN CAR
Loaded, white wHh wt1He leather interior
.......................... '9,995
1881 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
Silver whh black carriage roof. ...... .... .
.. ..................... *11,995
111811 BUICK PARK AVENOE
·
Blue with white carriage top ................ ........................ ..............'9,995
19110 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7
Supercharged, loaded .................................... ......................*11,440
1881 FORD THUNDERBIRD
AutomaHc, Power wlndows,door locks &amp; seats .......................'9,995
19110 CHEVY CAVAUER
2 Door, automatic transmlssion ................................................ '5,805
19110 UNCOLN TOWN CAR
Signature Series, loaded ................................................ *14,495
1881 NISSAN PICKUP
,
Long bed, Clean .. ,..................................................................... '5,978
1881 PONTIAC GRANO AM
.
LE, 4 Door...................... ...... . ... . .... ... .. .... .. ... ........... *8,178. '
1. . DODGE CHARGER
. ·
Thii'Week'l SpeCial ............... ... ..... ...... .. .................... '2,195
1. . FORD AEROSTAR
Whhe, loaded ..........................................................................*3,495
1881 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER
.
SE, white, loaded ................................ ......................................'8,995
19110 FORD PROBE GL ·
_
.
Air. 5 apeed, AMJFM casaene, crulie control ........................... *7,595
19110J'ORI) PROBE GL

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89 EAGLE MEDALION.~..............584.77 110.
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ATHENS HONDA

'

"THE HAF'PY HONDA .PEOPLE"
'
810 E. State St. • Athens; .Ohio ·

,·

.

HOURS: MON •..fRI. 9:11NiOQ;
sAT. 9:CI-4:00; ' .
SUN. 1:110-6:00

\

I

••

OPEN
SUNDAY

·OLDS.
'

'

Crouse produced 12 points, four
assists and three steal~, while Gena
Norris was responsible for three
assists~
For Wilmington, Tara Richard~
son collected 18 points and five
rebounds. Jenny Eagan put in 12'
points and gave out six assistS.
Cindi Neanen and Stacey WiUiams
made double figures with II and
10 points, respectively: Neanen :
also had four assiSts in !he game. ·
The Red women opened the ·
defense of their Mid-Ohio Conference championship Saturday afternoon at Walsh, and host Central
State Tuesday at 1 p.m.
Box score:
WILMINGTON (59)
Melanie Mabry, 1-0-2; Cindi Nea-:
nen, 1-2-3-11; Stacey Williams, 5- ·
0-10; Carolyn Deneke, 1· 0-2;.
Jenny Eagen, 6-0-12; Katrina
Butcher, 0-1-0-3; Tara Richardson,
8-2-18; Beth Miller, 0-1 - 1.
TOTALS 22-3-6-59.
RIO GRANDE (73)- Kim :
Sowers, 2-2-6; Gena Norris, 1-1-0S; Michelle Crouse, 6-0-12; Megan
Winters, 1-0-2; Connie Fuio, 2-04; Tricia Collins, 3-0-6; Stacy
Riley, 4-3-1-18; Lori Hamilton, 100-20. TOTALSl!l-4-3-73.
Halltlme score: Rio Grande :
38 Wllmln...,. ••
'
• - ....,,

4 Dr., auto., stereo,air.

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.

nipt'l$11t Blcxwiapn .
Pat · Willi rJecled wilb Iilii
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Fridey w11C11J be 11111 ~~~,·
Eaalt• player, .Greu Bib!!, grap- .
pledonlbe!loor.
·
"The offensive player !brew
tome elbows. Jlalriclt wmded him
to the ground. A few other players
got into it, and there was a melee
(See HOOPS 011 C-1)

4 Dr., white, auto:, stereo, air.

Natlonal Luau•

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is one of the most closely guarded assets.
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BEST VALUE FOR YOUR ~ONEY HERE.:
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92 TOYOTA COROLLA •••••••••••• 5160.14 MO.

Transactions

NatlouiPa et

.

December 12, 1993

.
0

p.m.
Flodda .. OtUM. .1"15 p.m.
TCiftdG at Winnipci.I:OS p.m.
San Jwa It Olk:ap,l:35 p.m.
St. Louif II: AMbeim,lO:O:S p.m.
,

TonJcbt'a r.mes

-·'p.m.

n

Edmomoaa\~,7:05

SeaUiell - · Ul p.m.
Drartw.atSm AntGftilt.l:30p.m.
Jlhlb.t.t:' 11 MilW'I~ 9 p.m.
u~ ~den state. 10:30 p.m.
Odando • Paftlmd. p.m.
L.A. Ciwm ..
Oolden ~to at LA. l.Akan. 10 p.m.

SOUTHERN
..

IS 80110

TonJcbt'a games

Bollon at Miami. 7:30p.m.
: ~~ 'Deaait at~. I p.m..
CLIM!IAND II ca...,.. 8:30p.m.
- I I DIIJu.l:30 p.m.

• .

20

Oaawa at Queb«:, 7:35p.m.
Edmon&amp;oa ll New Jtney, 7:~ p.m.
Pitt.~~ at T!f!~pa B1y, 7;3.5 p.m.
WuhinJIOilal Montntal, 1:05 p.m.
CalaatY at Tmunro, 8:OS p.m.
SL [aUu ll 1M Anpla, 10:35 p.m

7:l0p.m.

·

:

22 104117

2
2
!

Philad.Jphia at N.Y. Illanden, 7:05
p.m.
llulfalo oiJWtfard, 7,]~ p.m.

played Saturday

'

(15-12-19-23::69)

Rusty Richards 3-4-4=22, ·
Travis Campbell 2-0-1=5, J .J.
Azbell 2-0-1•5, Chris Craig 2-23= 13, Nathan Angle 3·0.0=6, Josh
McClellan 2-1-2=9, Adam Irwin 3·
0-1=7, Adam Curry 1-0-0=2,
Totals: 18-7-12/22=69

Tbey played Saturday

Jeney at Chedotta_ 1:30 p.m.

~

5

following a Trimble time out a
Richards three and pair of McCiel- !
Ian f~ throws cut the score to S6- 1
53.
.
Southern pulled away 10 leads
or 62-SS and 66-60, but just could
not shake !he Tomcats, who came .
back 10 68-65 on RQals by Richards .
and Campbell.
That led 10 the dramatic fmish.
Southern hit 21-53 for 45%, hit ,
2-5 threes and was 14-20, at the '
line. SHS had 23 rebounds, led by •
Drwnmer's six and Williams' five;
had eight steals, eight turnovers, ·
six assists and 19 fouls .
Trimble hit 17-34 for 50%, was
7- 17 from .three-p 0 int range and ~
was 12-22 at !he line. They had 30 '
rebounds led by Craig's six and :
Abzell's five while having two •
steals, IS turnovers and 20 fouls. 1
Southern won the reserve game
51-26 led by Jamie Evans's 14 •
points, Jesse Maynard's 12 and ·.
John Harmon's II. Heath Arm·
hrustpr had 12 for Trimble. •
Southern hosts Vinton County
Tuesday.
TRIMBLE
;

San Ja.eatDetroil. 1:05 p.m.
au...... - . 7&lt;!! p.m.

ma1ll09....u • ..,..phi•103

•, ,

39 113 1'2
32 94 19
'r1 73 88

land goal and ensuing steal that
saw Fisher score the fast break
bucket gave SHS a 38-27 lead, a
lead they held to !he half. ·
In !he third frame, Trimble continued 10 J;JOCk away allhe Southern
lead, cutting the score to 42-39 at
the 2:30 matlc:. Reiber put SHS 4639, but Chris Craig hit a three- '
pointer to pull Trimble to wilhin
rour at4644.
Angle hit a goal to pull Trimble
to a 4644 score then after a missed
SHS shot, Craig lied lhe score with
a pair of free throws with 1:16lefl
in the frame.
A SHS turnover gave Trimble a
shot at the lead, but Aaron Drummer came up with the reboUnd and
Ryan Williilms hit a three-pointer
to give SHS a 49-46 lead. A missed
Trimble free throw gave SHS
another shoL
Roben Reiber was fouled on a
three-point attempt in the closing
seconds. and given three rree
throws; but only hitting one or the
lhree at !he line. This gave SHS a
S0-46 lead at the end of the frame
and also sparked a string of cool
foul shooting that may have very
well have cost lhe hos1S the game.
In !he stretCh, Southern missed six
free throws, includin~ t~o first
shots of a bonus, posstbly laking
eight points from the hosts' tally.
Just one of those eight could have
meant a win.
Hitting 4-6 at the line, SHS
started the fourth round with a 5446 advantage. One of those fouls
was an· intentional roul in which
• SHS hi~ one of two and regained
possess1on.
Southern took a 56-48 lead
when Reiber hit a field goal, bul

Buffllo 6,. ~II)' 2
floDdo !, w..,.;p., 2

Fi'lday'sscores

~

~

o

Dettoit, which barely made lbe
NBA playoffs last season after
winning &amp;hamplonships in 1989
(See NBA on C·7)
,

Friday's scores

9
10
ll..5

Od-117.-102
Mll-9Q.·Iloualu
.. J'
dot, LA. Cippn 101
-t07,Uioh91
-117,L.A. LWn99

30 122101

Paclrk Dlti.tlon
Colpry ............. l7 I
16 13
SIIIJON.~- ...- ... 11 1..
1M Anploo...... 10 IS
Anahllim ........... 9 11
l!dmoman.- ..... S :ZO

OU..,.I09,N"""-7 lOS
S

Cenlral Dhi1toa
W L T PI&amp;. GFGA

Torcn10 ••
19 7 4
Dallu.....-......... 15 10 6
SL Low. ........... 14 9 !

and IS rebounds. "We have more
talent than die teams that an: beat·
ing us: It's just a esse of mass confusion."

•

not grown too accustomed 10 such missed on its possessions as well.
defeats over the past several years.
A few SHS defensive breakTrimble (1-0 overaU and in lbe downs allowed Trimble to peck
TVC) was led by Richards' 22 away at the score and a Josh
points, Craig's 13 and McClellan's McClellan three-pointer at the
nine. Southern (0-2, 0-1) was led buzzer pulled Trjrnble to within
by Roben Reiber's 22 points, Ryan one at 16· 15.
Williams' 20 and Mason Fisher's
Southern dominated lli'e second
12.
quarter, but again did not put the
The start
pesky Tomcats away. Trimble conSoulhem took an early 2-0 lead tinued to hustle well and two
at the start when, Ryan Williams Williams' free lhi'ows gave SHS a
drove in for the score. Richards 28·22 lead. Williams, Reiber and
!hen popped his first three-pointer Fisher put up a 6-2 Soulbern run as
for a 3-2 Trimble lead. The lead SHS led 34-24, its biggest lead of
see-sawed until Sl-1S took an 8-7 the game 10 that point at !he I: 11
lead on a Robert Reiber jumper. mark. SHS had several other
Jeremy Hill and Aaron Drummer opportunities to build on !hat lead,
goals pushed the score to 12-7. but failed 10 do so.
During this streak, missed Trimble
Azbell and Adam Curry added a
goals gave Southern the opportuni- free throw and field goal to cut the
ty to open the gap, but Southern score to 34-27, then a Trenton Cle-

36 97 12
3! 12.4111
'r1 10 16
26 84 91
21 94100
20 61 8ji

NewJertey ....... l6 I 4
GB

Central Dlvldoa

Atllnta ...- ..........- .. 13
OBaao..-..........-....9
Chorl.- .................9
CLI!VELAND .........7
ladiau .............._.....1
Dolnoh. ....................!
Mllw•utee ...............4

"I played with the Clippers, so I
know all about losing," said Pis·
tons ,center Olden Polynice, the

• ADulle Dlvlla.
Team
WL T I'll. GFGA
N.Y. R........... 20 6 3 43 107 73

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Team

!he Pistons !heir.eiglilb consecutive
loss, 90-88, Fnday night behind
!Cen Noonan's IWO three-pointers

'

�•

•

•

Outdoors

'

· around~ free
1

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

Gun foes rally 'round
rai I car massacre

•

Sports deadline~
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel, the Point
Pleasant Register and the Sunday
Times-Sentind value the contributions their readers make to the

spans sections of these papers. and

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C8

•
· ··....:..&lt;Co--ntinu.......:ed.::..::.fro:.::.:..mc:...:.;-7):____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _::----::-·
• 'I Aust fire~ our s.ho~ting
MaryJand-Baltlmore County 48
mat~e ~~fd~=!"{3!i;· sh·~

1Jhn.es - ~ttttinel

adventure of death began) are
already workers' paradises where
the government has made it illegal
to carry or (in the case of the city)
to even own a handgim.
.
In addition. Ferguson successfully hurdled oppressive anti-handgun measures in California by
waiting out a IS-day waiting period
when he originally purchased the
pistol (Making the Brady Bill and
Its five-day waiting period seem
pretty worthless;
This leaves the average citizen
in a pretty defenseless position.
The U.~. Supreme Court has
already determined that law
enforcement officers are not obligated to prorect the citizenry, now
some people are making a concerted effort .to take away people's
inalienable rights of self protection,
making everyone sheep for the
·slaughter like the passengers on the
5:33.
There was apparently no uniformed officer on the 5:33 that
fateful day, and the rotten apple's
Draconian gun contrOl laws further
assured Ferguson that none of the
law-abiding passengers would be
able to defend themselves. So
therefOre it was with complete confidence that Ferguson stood up,
drew a semi-automatic pistol and
coolly, methodically fired, even
pausing to reloa4, for about three
minures until disarmed by several
passengers.
If only one handgun-proficient,
armed passenger had been aboard,
Ferguson's odyssey of destruction
may have been much shooer... and
infmitely less deadly. There are
many ifs, but the cold fact is that,
gun control notwithstanding, five
people are dead and 18 wounded .
thanks to a government that. in the
interest of "doing something",
finds it easier and quicker to disarm
and slowly steal power from Jawabiding citizens than to punish lawbreakers.

Sports ~rlefs
Golf
DORADO BEACH, Puerto
Rico (AP) - Simon Hobday shot a
bogey-free 8-under-par 64 and took
a two-shot lead in the first round of
the season-ending Senior Tour
Championship.
.
Dave Stockton, who leads the
seniors with five victories and
$1,115,944 in earnings, shot a 66
·and was tied for second with Larry
Gilbert and Bob Murphy. Lee
Trevino and Jim Albus were next at

throw line," Indiana assistant coach Ron Felling
said.
Alan Henderson led the
Hoosiers with 21 points and
Damon Bailey added 20. Indiana
bwied the Eagles (1-3) early, epening an 18-5 lead S: 15 into the
game.
No. 11 Pllrdue 114, Houston 90
At Indianapolis, Glenn Robinson scored 33 points on 13-of-18
shooting before sitting down with
6:20 to play.
"He is the best player in the
game," Houston coach Alvin
Brooks said.
Purdue (6-0) shot 59 percent,
12-of-24 on 3-poinrers, and used a
IS-O run lale in the first half to pull
away. Cuonzo Martin added 21
points and Justin Jennings had a
career~high 18. "Houston didn' t
know about him. He is a young kid
with a lot of talent," coach gene
Keady said of Jennin~s.
Anthony Goldw1re scored 35
points for Houston (2-4).
No. lO Cindnnllti 92
Cleveland State 70
In Cincinnati, the Bean:ats kept
alive their perfect record in the
Bearcat Classic. Cincinnati, which
plays Rutgers tonight in the final,
has won the tournament in each of
the three years it has been played.
Dantonio Wingfield had 18
points, Damon Flintoand Darnell
Burton each had 16 points. John
Jacobs 14 and Keith Gregor 10 for
Cincinnati (5-1).
"We played the best we've
played all year," coach Bob Huggins said.
Sam Mitchell led Cleveland
Stare (1-4) with 21 points.
No. 24 George Washington 76
L011g Island 60
AI Washington, the Colonials
(3-1) were 1-of-24 from 3-point
range and had their worst shooting
night of the season, yet still got the
vic10ry.

coach, coach Mike Jarvis joked.
"I guess you could callit rust. with
us not having played iii a week and
getting ready for exams."
UU (1-2) didn't fare much better ~making just 28 perccht (18for-65) from the floor.
No.l5 Cal80

At Oakland, Calif., Jason Kidd
had the first triple-double of his
collegiate career.wiJ!II7 points, II
rebounds and 11 8SSISIS.
"I think I playejl. pretty well,
but I still have to make decisions
and cut down on my turnovers,"
Kidd said. "I~ three tonight, and

ORGANIZATION CREATED- The Gallipolis 14-and-under travelingiiOCcer team finished Its
season with a 2-l record before the players' parents and otbers came together to create the Gallia
Soccer Association, a member of the Ohio South
Yoath Soccer Association. Head coach Doug
Cowles was elected president, and Diane Bruce
was elected secremry/treasarer, while Ellen Gibson was nam!d registrar. In the front row are (L-

:Big companies are redefining everything

down the Retrievers (1-3) at tlj•

~

outset Qf the second half, outseor•
ing them 32-2.
'

Wl'thLam
22 of:ntMts,urrawh~el~~~'/:.i:O

,...
By DAN BLAKE
,
AP Business Writer
: .. Big companies have slashed
payrolls and closed factories to cut
overhead in hopes of catching up
.,jolith leaner fore1gn competitors.
~· Now they're looking at the next
· ~tep: geuing a leg up and cutting
iosts even when profits are riaing
:•nd the economy is improving.
·They're adopting the larest catch:word to roll off the lips of manage:ment consultants - re-engineering.
: What they're doing is redefming
·everything about their business,
-particularly fat.
·~ Xerox .Corp. this past week took
:a pre-emptive step, looking past a
·ilouble-digit profit rise and decid!vg there w~ more room to cut.

u•

added I and Monty
eight for Cal.

uckley had
;

Jason Elkins, Brent Elkins, Jerrod B~l~ Jess&amp;
McCloud, John Lawbom, Steve Roderick, Jeremr
Ball, Michael Cowie~ and Chris Cassanon.
Standlnll teammates are Levi King, Eric Donovs.
kl, PatriCk Lawrence, AJ. Johnson, John Flel~
Maxwell Bruce, Alex Bruce and Henry Sloal\'
Standing ~hind them are Dou1 Cow lea and assistant COI!Ches Wayne Rose and Gibson.
~
R)

~

Sports briefs
Baskelball
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) Retired basJcetboll star Magic Johnson and a woman who accused him
of giving her the AIDS virus
reached a private apment that
brought the dism1ssal of the
woman's lawsuit.
U.S . District Court Jud,11e
Richard Enslen signed the diSmissal order, saying only that both
sides requested it.
There was !10 indication whether
a financial settlement had been

The company announced its second
restructuring in two years, a dramatic effort to eliminate at least
10,000 jobs and close fac10ries.
"They said, 'We' re on a firm
footing here, now what can we do
to slam the door on the Japanese,"'
said Curt Rohrman, a securities
analyst at First BasiOn Corp. who
follows Xerox.
The restructuring of corporate
America has meant hot careers for
so-called turnaround experts and
made heros out of cost-Cuuers who
cut the fat and made sluggish, trOubled companies nimbler and able 10
develop new products more quickly
with lower overhead.
Those cuts have helped U.S.
productivity soar. In the third quar-

ter of this year, output per hours
woril:ed rose at a 4.3 percent annual
rare, its biggest increase in more
than six years, the labor Department said this past weelc.
The cost cutting this past wasn't
just by Xerox. U.S. Surgical accelerated its shrinkage with another
500 job eliminations. RJR Nabisco
announced 6,000 job cuts resulting
partly from a cigarene price war.
Published reports at the end of
the week said Nynex, the large
Northeast regional phone company,
could cut up to a third of iis 66,000
jobs.
Xerox went through its own
run-of-the-mill restructuring last
year by eliminating 2,500 jobs.
But beyond downsizing, right-

sizing or whateversizing, the new
effort makes a fundamental decision that ~xpenses are a problem if
they detract from efficiency. even
if the company happens 10 be making money despire wasre.
Paul Allaire, Xerox chairman
said the company decided it could
make the cuts and had to cut the
payroll 1o be competitive.
Xerox's latest res1ructuring,
des1gned by new chief financial
officer Barry Romeril, is supposed
10 make the company more productive and realize some of the benefits that personal computers were
supposed to bring.
. Some of the productivity
Improvement SUJ!J!estions. which
Xerox sought from employees,

ASC committee
election results
are ann,ounced

Madge Boggs, OVB's first
female vice president, to retire

By LISA COLLINS,
Gallia ASCS,
County Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - On December
9, results of the ASC community
commiuee elections for Greenfield,
Guyan, Harrison, Ohio, and Walnut
townships were announced by
James Burleson, Gallia County
ASC Committee Chairperson.
Guyan Township : Ross C.
Fulks, chairperson; Garret E.
Campbell, vice chairperson; Cody
Boothe, member Deborah S.
Belville, ftrst alternate and Scott
Bailey, second alternare.
~arrlso~ Township: Margaret
.. ~
SmRTS A.VAILABLE - New Gallipolis sweatshirts and T- Adkins,
chairperson; Kim Deckard,
:: shirts featuring more buinesses and landmarks fro!D Gallipolis
vice-chairperson;
Roqald Slone,
', have arrived at Fruth Pharmacy on Jackson Pike. According to
member;
H.
Kathryn
Massie, frrst
:; .Millie K. Tabor, manager ot the Fruth's Jackson Pike location,this alremate and Dale Lamphier,
sec:•· marks IJ!elr second version of the shirts with some new additions, ond alternate.
:: includin(lhe old Ohio Valley Bank building, built in 1896, on the
Obio Townsbip: Oavid A.
~ corner or Second Avenue and State Street. Mrs. Tabor and OVB
Mills, chairperson; Thomas E.
,• Jackson Pik:e manager and assistant casbler Molly K. Tarbell (left) Jones, vice-chairperson; Everett
! model thl!' new sbb'ts In f'ront orthe display at Fruth's.
Lee Johnson, member; Brenda K.
SanderS, first alternate and Robert
L. Candee, second alremate.
Greenfield-Walnat Townships: Paul G. Pope, chairperson;
Nolan Thornton, vice-chairperson;
Lois Cade, member; Paul C. Godr'
dard, first alternate and Richard
By PATrY DYER,
year, but from legislative efforts Innis, second alternare.
Information Coordinator,
made through the Ohio Farm
First duty of the newly elected
Ga~ASCS
Bureau.
· committee
·
All farmers benefit from these · comm 0 nuy
mem bers
&lt; GALLIPOLIS,: ....:there.Js..stlll
will .be to serve as delegates to
lime 10 join Farro Blireau and take activities and when farmers are· elect new anc)/or alteniate,members
advantige of the many member helped, the community and con- of the county ASC committee. The
benefits offered, according to Paul somers are helped, too." Shoemak- farmer-chosen team of ASC com~hoemaker, president of the Gallia er encourages anyone inrerested in munity committee members will
~ounty Farm Bureau.
finding out more about the member meet at.the·county conventiQn to be
· "We've talked to a number of benefits of Farm Bureau to contact held on Thursday, December 16, at
people in this year's membership the Gallia County Farm llureau 10 a. m. in the C.H. McKenzie
effon and have found the attitude office at I -80Q.771-9226. "We're Agricultural Center.
io be more positive than we've more than happy to answer ques~een for some time", said Shoe- tions and prove w ~eryone that a
maker. "The victory over Issue 5 membership in the' !lldlia County
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) i!nd the changes to CAUV are just Farm Bureau is th~ibest bargain
Paramount
Communications Inc.
~
a couple of examples of why peo- around.
in its plans to
suffered
a
setback
A
new
product
bePig
·offered
by
ple have confidence in the organimerge
·with
Viacom
Inc. as the
the local .Fann B~~ is the green
~n.·•
Delaware
Supreme
Court
upheld a
.
:· "One of the biggest concerns reflective house nullltjer signs. You
ruling
dismantling
defenses
among Gallia County farmers is can purchase a sign i/.;ith two sets
a~r population control. Another of your house number for $6. You Paramount hoped to use against
10ajor concern is getting the 9 I I can pick the sign up\at the Gallia hostile suitor QVC Network Inc.
Analysts said the decision
~ystem implemented," he said. "Of Soil &amp; Water Conservation District
coiuse, Farm Bureau is continually Office in the C.H. McKenzie Agri- · Thursday meant Viacom would
likely be forced to increase its $9.4
j\.orlcing to meet farmers needs and cultural Cenrer.
You
might
want
to
consider
billion
bid to match or surpass
find solutions to problems such as
picking
up
two
or
three
and
using
QVC's
$10.1
billion offer.
lliese facing Ohi.o agriculture
,;,....a
"
them
for
Christmas
presents.
When
·.,._..-y.
NEW YORK (AP) - Several
. •:. "Membership in Farm Bureau posred by your mail box or driveway;
they
gready
enhance
the
visilarge
retailers said holiday sales are
c.an mean real dollars in your pockat
expectations
or higher. There arc
bility
of
your
address
for
emergenet." said Shoemaker. "Not just
cy
vehicles
·and
who
knows
it
few
signs
that
merchants are panfrom the many member programs
might
help
to
'
s
ave
your
life.
icking
and
slashing
prices as they
~vailable tofamilies throug~.out the
did in years past when the early
December lull came.
So far, business apPCars to be
uneven- as it was durmg November - with sales surging for some
retailers and rising modestly for
others, retailers said Thursday.
By CONNIE WIDTE
The purpose of the meetlng is to
,''
Gallia SWCD
discuss priorities of the district and
;, GALLIPOLIS - The annual review suggestions from the public
J)Janning meeting for the Gallia as to natural resources concerns
~il and Water Conservation Dis- that need attention. and ways to
!Qct will take place on Thursday, address these concerns. This planDecember 16, at the C. H. MeKen- ning session assists the district in
zie Agricultural Center, at 8 am., putting together their .annual woril:
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
pla.n and review of the ·long range
. l.th a light'---uasL
W
.
u•.......,; .
GALLIPOLIS - It looks like
: We would like to invite plan to see if goals are being met.
another wet weekend. Farmers are
hindowners, agricultural organizaIf you plan.IO attend. or if you
currently faced with mud problems
~fn repre.~~ntati~es. todwnship P~:~~ ~~~~c~~~~ ~~m~ms'Wcti that some years are delayed until
..~stees, VI age, City an county
the spring thaw. Despite inuddy
officials, and anyone interested in office at 446-8687.
cOnservation in Gallia County.
topsoil conditions, tke m·onthly
..••
.
O.D.N.R .. Division of Water,

...

farm Burea.u has .roany
l:&gt;enefits- Shoemaker

reached. ·

Johnson acknowledged one sexual encounrer, in June 1990, with
Waymer Moore. He said he was
unaware he carried HIV until shortly before annooncing his retirement
in November 1991.
Moore, who discovered she had
the virus in June 1991, conrended
that Johnson either knew he was
infected or should have known he
was at risk because of his adminedly promiscaouslifestyle.

they will continue to be published
However, certain deadlines for 68.
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
other fall sports is the Saturday
before the Super Bowl.
The deadline for photos and
retared articles for basketball (summer basketball and relaled camps
fall under the spring and summer
sports deadline) and other winter
sports is the last day of the NBA
fmals. The deadline for submissions of local baseball- and softball-related photos and relaled articles, from 1'-tiaii to the majors, as
well as other spring and summer
Roek of Agn offers you a choice of 6 different eolored 11111sports, is the day of the last game,
nhes. Wllllavar your reqult'Mients may be, complete eatllfacof the World Senes.
These deadlines are in place to
tlon Ia •aauted with Roc:k of Agu.
allow contributors the lime they
Hours: 9:~:00 M-T-Til-F. Others by appolntmem.
need to get their photos back from
59H586 ar 446-2327
the photograp~y studio/developer
of choice and to give the staffs the
chanCe to publish these items in the
Ph. 446·2327
hll,.ala, CHI.
352111~ ,,•• '
aWlopl ia!f' season for those sports.

Section D

December-.12, Ul83

College hoops.

In the Open

Passengers aboanl the 5:33 p.m.
Long Island Rail Road train out of
Penn Station Tuesdsy had no way
of knowing an angry man, seething
with pent up hatred, would soon
tum the otherwise ordinary commuter rail car in10 a charnel house,
killing five people and wounding .
18 others.
Apparendy fed up with what he
perceived as racism by Ca•IC8$ians,
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Chinese and
"Uncle Tom Negroes", Colin Ferguson, a 35-year-old black man
from Jamaica, boarded the rail car
in New York City and waited until
reaching the suburbs before beginning his brief but exceedingly violent and bloody career as a multiple
murderer.
According .to the Associated
Press, Ferguson waited until the
train reached. the suburbs becnuse
he didn't want to embarrass New
York City's black Mayor David
Dinkins.
.
Before the echo from the shots
.died down, gun contrOl advocates
swooped aown lilce vultures, using
the tragedy to strengthen their emotional appeal.
Gun control advocates and the
national networks immediately
upped their already-considerable
hype for handt~un control. President Clinton S81d he is COIISidering
a plan to license and rest gun buyers, Jik:e .car buyers, to "slow the
surge of violent crime."
Well, Bill, creating another government bureaucracy is not 1he
answer.
While this writer also believes
handgun owners should be proficient in shooting and handling of
sidearms, I think the president and
the handgun control advocares are
way off wget; particularly when
one realizes how already-existing
gun contrOl Jaws simply failed 10
prevent the tragic shooting.
What citizens and especially the
vorers of this country need to consider is that, by the anti-gunners'
own twisted logic, the massacre
could have never happened. You
see, New York stare (and especially
New York City where Ferguson's

~Farm/llusiness

•
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Business briefs

1

LARIE SILICfiOI

j

GALLIPOLIS - Madge E.
Boggs, Ohio Valley Bank's first
female vice president, wiD retire at
the end of the year.
The announcement was made at
the bank's employee Christmas
dinner last week by president and
chief executive officer James L.
Dailey. Her career at OVB began
in 1961. She beca:me the first
female vice president in the history
of the 121-year-old institution in
I978 afrer having been promoted 10
contrOller in 1973.
Dailey said: "as our long time
controller, Madge has been instrumental in the growth and success of
OVB. On a personal note, as
youngsrers, we went through high
school together, so her career
advancement over three decades
came as no surprise to me.
Madge's career has been punctuated by a dedication, skill and aptitude to do quality work in a
demanding job. I'm sure there will
be many times in the futw:e where
we' Uneed to tap her vast reservoir

Farm Flashes

banking industry's effon to recapture savers and investors .... Falling
oil prices held wholesale inflation
flat and kept retail price increases
to ~.2 percent in November. ... A
maJOr msurance ratmg agency 1S
reviewing Prudential Insurance
Co. or America following a huge
settlement of claims its securiues
brokerage fraudulently sold limired
partnerships .... Borden Inc. 's
chairman was replaced in a shakeup of the food company's management. ... liT Corp. plans to spin
off its forest products business to
shareholders.... AMR Corp. profits in the current &lt;JUarler will be
reduced $160 milhon because of
the night attendants strike just
before Thanksgiving.

as president of the OhiG-KenWCI:y
Chapter of the Bank Administration Institure. In addition, she has
served (or 20 years as the stallltory
agent with the Gallia County 4-H
Advisors and served two terms as
president of the Gallipolis Business
and Professional Women's Club. In
1981, she was named Woman of
the Year. She also is active in the
Northup Missionary Baptist
Church, serving as Sunday School
treasurer and pianist.
Upon the announcement of her
retirement, she said: "I consider
myself to be very fortunare 10 have
been permiued 10 become a part of
OVB back in 1961.... They gave
me the opportunity to do things
that, in that day and time, weren't
entrusted to women in general. It
was the best education anyone
could ever get "
MADGE E. BOGGS
Madge has two . daughters:
Cindy Thomas and Cathy Waller
of knowledge."
, and four grandchildren and lives
Madge also holds the distinction with her molher Janet Pettus on .
of being the only woman to servo Lincoln Pike in Gallipolis.

Gallipolis native addresses
state banker's convention
GALLIPOLIS - David Thomas,
administrator of supervision for the
stale's banking regula10ry division
and a native of Gallipolis, was featured in an anicle in the Columbus
Dispatch's business section on Friday, Dec. 3.
.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Thomas, Gallipolis, Thomas presented a program at this year's
Stare Banker's Day Convention in
Columbus.
Written by Christopher A.
Amatos, the Dispatch's assistant
business editor, the article reads:
"For the first time in years,
Ohio's stare-charrered banks were
outperformed by their peers
throughout the rest of the country
in one measure of profitability during the first half of the year.
"Senior officers of Ohio's starechartered banks were told yestcr-

day (Dec. 2) that Ohio· s banks on
average earned 1.24 percent return
on assets through June, vs. 1.25
percent for banks throughout the
rest of the country,
" 'For years, Ohio banks have performed beucr than the U.S. average,' acknowledged David W.
Thomas, administrator of supervision for the stale's banking regulatory division. But far from being
bad news, it shows that the industry
overall is healthy. Thomas said.
" 'I think it's showing a real
strength on the part of U.S. banks,'
Thomas said after his presentation
during the division· s annual State
Bankers Day Conference. held at
the Holiday Inn Wonhingoon, 175
Hutchinson Ave. He note!) that,
while the national average surpassed Ohio's, both were up from ·
1992 and are at high levels.

•• 'Declining interest rates
which help bank profits, plus fewa ·'
. bad loans are the reasons for the
improvements , 'Thomas said.
'Asset quality has really improved
·throughout the natiun,' he added.
" 'Those fac10rs were less likely
to help Ohio's performance
because the state's banks were less
hurt by bad loans than hanks elsewhere,' Thomas said.
"Overall, Thomas presented a
healthy picture for the mdustry-the
number of strongly capitalized
institutions has increased significan~y in Ohio; the number of trou·
bled banks has fallen dramatically
nationwide; and the amount of
assets controlled by those compa·
nics also has fallen.
"Ohio continues to do better
than the nation in terms of loan
Continued on D-8

Abate joins Daily Sentinel news staff

Gallia ASCS planning
$ession slated Dec. 16

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

mean using personal computers in
one cenlral location 1o fix software
problems in copiers anywhere in
the world.
"To have no one in the field
except for a few mechanical fixes
.. . is real~y mind boggling," said
Rohrman, the First BasiOn analyst.
TICKER
The Delaware Supreme Court
ruled Paramount Communications Inc. has to dismantle defenses against hostile IBkeover bids a
victory for spumed suitor QVC
Network Inc .... Southwestern
BeD Corp. and Cox Cable plan 10
form a partnership for inleractive
communications. ... Mellon Bank
Corp. is buying mutual fund company Dreyfus Corp. as pan of the

GEOREGE ABATE

POMEROY - Ohio Valley Publishing Co. announces the addition
of George ,&lt;\bate to The Daily Sentinel reporting Staff in Pomeroy.
Abate, pronounced (uh baw
lA '). graduated froni Ohio University in June 1993 with a degree in
journalism and a minor in business.
He has worked as a reporter at
newspapers including: The Parkersburg News, The (Youngstown)
Vindicator and The (Hamilton)
Journal-News.

"I chose this professio(\ because
I wan led 10 learn about government
and business and then translare that
information so the average person
can understand," the 22·year-old ·
said.
Priding himself on fairness and
accuracy, Abate will gladly accept
suggestions and ideas from com.
munity members.
. A Pittsburgh native, his special
Interests mclude playing spo rts
music and fiShing.
'

Despite recent rains, precipitation still below normal

•

GET

CELLULA'RONE®
@

Nqw is time to prepare

' ~E:~~:.~:!;:~ion of Ohio ~ri~~~~~k~ ~ee~~~r~·e~~
0
il,a rm matl)inery fo, r winter was
endar=i~ligr~re~~to}~U:;
~~~:~~~:c~rc:~d
!c~~l::
S.·F inches below normal. The . been sold. The season average seU-

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.
•

in tires and under or over 'inflared ·"Palmer Drought Se~rity .Index" ing price at that ~int was $182.52
tires could be hazardous;
which takes into consideration p:e- per hllndred w1th 33.6 percent
• Keep the fuel tank at least half cipitation during the past 24 going to the "pool".
full on vehicles being used in the months rares our area still in the
Ohio had the highest average
winter in case you are stranded. "mild dro!lght" categOry.
price in the burley belt stares just
Stored equipment should either
The Naticnal Cattlemen's Asso- passing Kenwcky by eight cents on
have the fuel drained or should ciation does a monthly.survey of
· the hundred. Individual sale locahave a fuel stabilizer added to the · average supermar~e~ price of six · lions in Kentucky varied greatly
tank.
'
•
. Cuts or~ in 19 ~1:11 in thC U.S, but locations where much of out
• Exhaust sysiems shou~d be . The SIX-cut a~e. on.November . production is m~eted were in the
checked and repaired; if~. on ll WM $3J8. 1be SIX;cq~ ·thll~ are top ren prices average fbr the butall equipment uSed ill die winter. If surveyed are: regulllr. gniiind titef; ley .bel~ I gtiess what 1 am trying IP
stra~d, !I faulty. eJiha~it (~~(Fm~ . .Jean ~ad beef;· bc?nel~ TQUnd . ·511y is that even though this years
can cause ~n monoliide llb!SOD' ·, • ·. boneleas ~ sirloin; T-borie: . ma:rket .may lack. a Jot of exciteing. , .&lt; · ·
. . · : :· · "· ,_.. Sll:lkind hmeless eliocli:JU!l rout. me"t, our farmers are producing
Re111ember, . safety is
~who folio,~ these nuin.· the quality of tobacco that is comproac
' tive .than reactive. Fix eq
· uip
' • bers dunng the I~Q~a. rem.ember .manding the top pnc' e in.the burley
ment now for the safety of your · that $2;50 __ a a~ pnce bar- belt..
·
·
family; friends and emplpyees. •
rier fo~ many years. &amp;ef.supply
The local association has
' .

mote .· .

~

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'

_,

By.PAirY.DYER, ' . .
Information Coordinator,
l·
'
Gallla ASCS ·
~ GALLIPOLIS- Now is the time
oo prepare mEhinery and vehicles
(or. the liazards of severe winter
~eather. The Gallia County Farm
tlureau offers the following tips to
pjq~ for the cold ahead:
: . Tune-up, change the oil and
ter. and check the antifre~;re in
, equiplllent; Antifree~C'. ·w!&gt;rks
-rouild ~;~eaken~with . age
condeliialiQD'may caose·water
collecliri.tt!O oil and the filler. A
• nt•up 'l)lalce••equipment s.·tart
uch easi.cf'.fn winret wCBJhJ!r;
,: • OlieCt '~ lilfl.aiion and treadwear tletiire ,snow .and ice hits.
Cold weit1Jer'c;!Jailges the pressure
.
'I"

·call . 1!"80G-29~8U..A to sign upl
Don't Dela I 'Call Toda I .

has been seasonally larger in recent
months and wholesale beef prices
have been down from levels seen in
the spring and summer but the
ave~ retail price has r¢mained
bas' y unchanged.
The average six-cut retail price
on October II was $3.17. At the

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.·~-'' --,--

,,."
~

~

I

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worked hard to suppon the prodoction of a quality product that will ·
grade well at the market At many
mee1ings with "company" representatives present the "quality"
concept has been given. Maybe a
linle bit of reward is in this year's
check. I have plans to attend a class
·at the University ef kentocky ori
Tuesday, perhaps l will pick up
some ideas on what's ahead for
next year.
In an effort to learn more about
video cattle aoctions we have
been offering viewing via sarellire
at the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
Center. We will be offerina an
opponunity for persons inrerested
in leaming more about this concept
to watch the preview of sale catde
this Thursday.. December 16 at 9
p:m.
The v.iewers may lllne to Galaxy
7, Channel '22. The late lime is
caused by time zone difference
between the 'broadcast location·and
· us. The preview will show inost of
the ctitde in one and a half or two
boors that it will lake mucli of the
day on Saturday to sell. The 1993
Ohio. Farm Science Review total
. auendancC dido 't set a new record

but the thirty-first review came in '
second. A ,record number, 45.410
cars and p1ckups were handled (I
wonder who coumed?). The 1994
review is scheduled for September
20, 21, 22.
A special thanks to the local
farmers who are.mmng the special
"soil sampling" effort a success.
During the past couple weeks some
75 sarnrles have been submitted.
We wil be continuing that special
effort this week . Todd Boothe
part-time program assistant will ~
available to come to your faim to
assist with this task. Your only cost
is the lab fee of $6.50 for each agricultural sample or S10.50 for lawn
and garden .samples. Your call
(446-7007) early in the week will
help us with scheduling
mini·
.mize travel cOs!. ·
Gallia COunty haS ~tionally
submitted.more than ~e as ·rilany
samples as I~ aver~e"ili the 16
county Sout~ Extei\SIOll District.
When we looked at the 1993 numbers we were illsappqillted. With
another "good" weeli. ·~ .; will be
back up to ~ or above.
.
Ed VoDborn Is Gallia County's extension agent, agr.icalture.

and

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P~e-l-4&gt;2.;...sunday Tlmes

p,omeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Sentinel

Market's
rally fails
to.prqmpt
optimism

,.

By MARYBETH NIBLEY
'AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - The stock:
marlcet appears to be staging an
annual event: a year-end rally.
This year's coda is coming
with little fanfare; though, and
the blaSe attitude on Wall Street
toward a string of new highs in
the Dow Jones average shows
investors arc worried about
wheie the marlcet will head in
1994.
.. "Even though the market' s
up and reaching new highs,
th(ri 's not a lot of widespread
happiness," said Hujlh A. Johnsbn,' l:hief economtst at First
Albany Corp. "No one's giddy,
th~ 's not any euphoria. It's a
timid, unconvincing move
upward in stocks."
:A cautious mood prevails
despite a spate of recent statistics z.linting to beUcr economic
con 'lions lhat could ~La ~oundation on whteh to boo d bogger
cPi'porate profits.
One reason for the wariness
cooild. be a spreading belief that
interest rates have nowhere to
go:but up. Low_ rates have Cf!Xled•:ri:tums on mterest-beanng
inVestments and !hereby helped
steet money into stocks, proIQog!ng the marlcet's advance. It
is fellred that a rebound m rates
collld halt the flow of funds into
eqyilies.
, .· 'By and large, lhe message
of ·the market has been that
tbfugs are looking upbeat," ~d
John$on, "But there are skeptics
.VHa· think the Fed will raise
s ~Ort-tenn interest rates."
. Fear of rising rares has been
a:roqsed by sp~culation th.at
f~s~r economoc f,rowth wtll
S!'l!C. ·inflation. So ar, however,
•nfl31lon looks lame. A 0.2 percclltincrease in November's
Ccl'rl~umer Price Index and an
~lianged reading in its wholeSllli:''pnce counterpaJt suppon.ed
that view.
· n ·ut that pair of inflation
reJ)Qrts released Thursday and
FridJiy may not have been as
beiugn as they seemed after
exf liiding the effect of sharply
lo'l"ei- crude oil costs. And
J ~es R. Solloway, director of
re earch at Argus Research
Ciirp.. said the Federal Reserve
Bfed might not ~eel c~mfortabe wilh current mflatoon leveJs, which are running at around
3 ~nt on an annual basis.
;' 'What's bothering the folies
a! the Fed is lhat we haven't had
prQgress lately in getting inflation :down toward zero," Solloo/liY said. "Three percent or
so :seems to be lhe bottom in lhe
(inftation) rate and that's not
good enough as far as the Fed's
oa~s · are concerned."
.
g 'Friday, a rise in crude oil
prlces sparked a rally in
peii'Qieum stocks 8lld helped lhe
Do\01 .industtials reach its third
new•high for the week, but the
broaller market !litished mostly
lowc:r,
·
~he blue-ch;&amp; gau~e rose
I 0,8,9 to 3,740. , wh1ch was
36160 higher than a week before.
N'ew highs were also ·hit Tuesda and wdclnesdAy.
. !the --New York: Stock
E icl!an~e '' co~osite index
sliP-ped .07 to • . .93, finishing
t~~e: week: 0.).9 hogl\U,
.
·; :.:rile N~daq CC1!DJX1Site m.,..
age.4. to 13-ro ~· .II) the late
_gbj,ria·buts clolcd' widu loss
.of,P 75 at :~r74'.1l ended the,
weell11.4!1. wer.
.· 1
' t, J l\e Wt slli.rg ~hoci11tes. ·
~\IllY Index, t¥J·matkel value
o tf,Y'SE, .A'IIcncan, aa~ O'rC
i~.Ues e ... ~d the week at
$4~1~. 342 billion, off $10.999
blliioo from laSt week. A year
~d.!P-~ l!o'li $4;244.681.
( .

Case Squad comes in, chasing l&lt;illcrs who slip away there.

a.rt slipped away and lllmed himself into State)' Griffm. He married,
had children, paid taxes, held jobs and even served ume in state and federal prisons under his fake name.
Clarlt had every reason to believe he would never be caught
Before he picked up the trail, Murray had no particular knowledge of
this cue.
The day Carrelhers dice!, Feb. 22, 1969, Murray celebrated his lith
birthday. The son of a hard-working Boston police officer, Munay graduated m1979 with a pre-med degree, the forst in his Irish Catholic family to
g0 thal 'far in school. But after stints as a eaneer researcher, a bartender,
aci!X mid stand-up comedian, he decided to become a police officer.
' Last September, Murray was assigned a new panner, Lt. DeL Ste~hen
Murphy, a stoeky detective with 30 years on the force. Murray outlined
lhe squad's current cases.
When Murphy beard the details about Clark, he gave a start: "Does
this Involve some socks7 I remember lhe eall! ''
Murphy desaibed how a week before the killing, Carrcthers' apartment bUrned. The night of lhe slaying, Carrelhers was proudly displaying
lite clothes the Red Cross had given him- and he accused Oarlc of stealing· some, including socks. The two fought and Clarl&lt; left, coming back
later with a rifle. Slanding in lhe alley, Clarl&lt; aimed at Carrethers through
a window and shot him, witnesses told police.
But ihere was little in Clarl&lt;'s file. No picrure. No fingerprints. Just old
interviews with a fanner wife in 'Georgia who had borne Clarlc two children. Even lhe crime scene was missing. The house where Carrethers was

killed is now a vacant lot.
-.
Murray sat down at his .c~puter and started ent,e~ng combinatic;ms of .
names. KnoWinjl most.fUjllbVeS try !0 keep an umb!lieaJ COrd to theor f"f•
mer lives by usmg vanalions of theor .real names, mcknames, or _mother s
maiden name, Murray focused on combinations using Clark's ntckname:
Slaeey.
- h'
Then he narrowed the search to the possibility Clarlc was usmg os .
mother's maiden name: Griffin.
Murray narrowed his working list to 2~ Stacey Griffins across the
United States. He entered lhe names mto naiJOnal and regoonal databases,, .
sorting by eye color, age range, scars, height and race. From that list he
began eliminating names.
Murray knew Clarlc had gone from Boston to Brunswick, Ga. where
he hid out wilh relatives. There lhe trail turned cold.
·
Warming it up again was long, inu:nse ':"orlc - th~ kind lhat oceupied
Murray 70 til 90 boors a week, keepmg htm from hos 14-monlh-old son
DoMy and his wife, Doreen.
.
"How do you get it out of your head?" he asks. "You can't. I think:
about lhe cases all the time..Like while I'm rocking the kid to sleep, cutting the gntSS, I think: about munler cases.''
But Munay is patient. And be lil&lt;es ch115ing long shots.
Finally, one panned out. Murray traeed a paper trail for a Stacey Griffin who had wandered across lhe Midwest and the South.
.
,
Griffin was an itinerant worker who got a Social Security card in :
Chicago in 1969 when he was 27 - a liule old to be applying for a work •
card, Murray thought Griffin shared lhe same blnhday as Clarlc, though •
Griffin was two years older.
'

Compulsive confessor naUed for hotel blaz.e
By MITCH WEISS
A!soelated Preu Writer
..
NAPOLEON - William Mohr
thought he could get away with it,
The 32-year-old Grabill, Ind.,
man had confessed to dozens pf
crimes be didn't commiL Confessing, he said, was sexually exciting.
Police would always questi1&gt;n
him, then let him go.
But when he told investigators
he set a fore in January 1992 that
killed lhree residents of a bote! for
low-income families, they took it
seriousiHe
' wasy. · ~WJ~
·th
v···-'
"""'
murder with a
ty specification and arson. Prosecutors
found a woman who claimed ,to
have seen Mohr at the New
Wellington Hotel that night; she
even picked his photograph from a
collection of mug shots.
.
When Mohr was arrested, he
immediately recanted. He said he
was home wilh his wife when lhe
fore was set.
But Henry County Prosecutor
Jay Hanna was convmced he had
the arsonist and disregarded
Mohr's claims of innocence.
:
Hanna' s case fell apart earlier
this year after Mohr's lawyfl!l produced phone records and witness
statements that proved he was at
his Grabill home, 60 miles west of
this oorlhwestem Ohio communi!&gt;',

from confessing.
" When lhey pull you over in a
car and they pull out the rifles and
pistols and shotguns and say, 'You
make one false move and we 'II kill
you,' it is one of the greatest thrills
that you will ever come across,'' he
said
"I was addicted to that thrill.
It's a msh better than sex."
When Mohr was arraigned, he
made jokes, even though relatives
of lhe victims were in court.
When Henry County Common
Pleas Court Judge KeMeth Rohrs
set bond at $1.5 million, Mohr

tl!at ni11h1. And the hotel resident
who clllimed she saw him in a hotel
l!iUway law admitted she had left
~~lasses she must wear in her

the

room.
1 ·Silt :days before his

trial was to

~ ~t month, a judge dismissed
· die dilse.
, ·MOiir acknowledges he implica,ted himself but blames lhe legal
system for failing to investigate
lhOI'Illljhly.
"My family and I went lhrough
hell," Said Mohr, who was reunited
with hiS wife, Sandy, and their 3year-old daugluer, Muriel, afler he
was·relcased from jail last monlh.
·· . "I said all along that if I did
something, I don't mind going to
jail for it. But don't put me in the
electiiOchairforsomethingldidn't

an accounlant. "Why did they keeP. ;
him in jail for so long if he didn 1 :
do it?'~

"I think he did it. I think he :
conned everybody and got away •
with murder," swd Thomas Ans- :
ley, a farmer.
Mohr, who is in lherapy for his ·
compulsion to confess , said his ·
time in jail changed him.
.
"I have nightmares about being .
strapped in the electric clutir, see- ·
ing my wife and little girl crying. ...
I wake up just about every night in
a cQid .sweat. Those night111ares
will be with me forever," he s;Ud. •
'

'

do."
Hanna would not discuss Mohr

Crossword Puzzle Answers on Page D-8

or lhe way his office handled lhe
case.

ACROU

He said only that the new evidence •'was very detrimental to a
major )lllrt of our case," and lhat he
would· continue to search for the
arsonist.
Mohr said he made an anonymoos call to Napoleon police after
he beard about the fore on the news.
He tOld police a man named
William Mohr set the ftre.
He said he couldn't stop himself
,

82 Mualcal
lnatrument
84 Clan
85 Temporary ruler
86 811..,..,..
87 IJquefled

1 Earthquake

7 Lean-toe
12 Vlrnllh
Ingredient
17 """' lk*et
21 -control
22 Santa's relnd23 MUM of poetry
24 Mental Image
26 At home
26 Baub.. lelm
28Metet.tut*

89 Ooaan

100 Turkllh nag
101 Poema
102 Tumble
103- rummy
105 Dleagree
·,

30 NFL MVP of 1981
32 -Puo

33 Foot: comb. form
35 !JMI.up
37 Clvlllnjurleo
38
or Haywortb
40 Friend: Fr.
41 Prepoeltlon
43 Marrlea

a.,.,

I

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
bolster the U.S. forces after an .Oct.
AP MD!tary Writer
3 batilc in which 18 American soldiers
died and 75 were wounded in
WASHINGTON - A battalion
.s .. _of
a
raid
against Gen. Mohammed
of U.S. Army soldiers from the
Endearment"
lOth MOIDitain Division is expected Farah Ndid But he also set March
47
W~h: prefix
to begin heading home this week 31 as the deadline for pulling QJit
46 UnlOCk
from Somalia, the forst wave of a alllhe American trOOpS.
49 Panamalengthy troop pullout that will
"All he had to do was say lhe
52 ,._ In Africa
extend duoullh March.
date, aad the logisticians started
54 Retinae
About 1,000 soldiers from the figuring it out all backwards to find
56
StOCkholm native
Fort DEUm, N.Y., base - which ·th'e point when they'd have to -- 57 Seml..preclous
was among lhe font to send trOOpS start ' removing the forces , their
atonee
into the starving nation last year weaponry and supj&gt;ort structure,
5I
Vila
are expected to be among the font said a seeond military officer.
81
Cotogutete
flying borne at lhe end of the week:,
Sonlalia's lack of an infrastruc82 Connery role
said military officials who spoke ture'basn't changed much since lhe
83 'Evlluate
on condition of anonymity.
military's initial humanitarian mis84 Llllghl.Last week, Defense Secretary sion began last year. Thus, the
88 Decay
Lcs Aspin pl~ged that a "fairly wilhdrawll openllon could stretch
87 Hyson
significant" number ofthe approx- more than three months, lhe officer
88Taverna
imately 8,000 troops in Somalia sald. •
89Woncler lD
should begin leaving before~­ . ·~
71 Expire
·
's still only one uirpon in
mas, but he did not a;ive an exact ~ " u, and only one pM," he
72 Diplomacy
figure.
. sai , nptin~ that the pipeline
74 Ethiopian.title
"Some of these soldt,•rs have through whoch troops and their
78icecreembeen away from home for Christ- ~uipmcnt may move is extremely
77 Title 01 reapect
mases ad nauseam. It's wonderful U~L
78 Tin aymllot
·
thai they're going to be able to get
79Paramciun
"There's only so moch you can
81~ ·
hack for Ibis one," one senior offi- move in or out on any given day,' '
82Em~
.casaid.
be said. .
83
Blbllcel Mild
.·President Clinton decided ta
,,
1

84 "-Fear"

Questions prompt
reopening Qf probe
into rocker's death
By KARIN DAVIES
of Jiin'i Hendrix," Scotland Yard
Aslloclated Press Writer
si)Qkcswoman Carol Bewick said
LONDON- Scotland Yard has S'BIU!llay. "It is not known at lhe
reopened the investi.JatiOn of the moment how long that is going to
death of rock guitariSt 1imi Hen- take."
drix, 23 years after.he died of an
'fbo Daily Mail Slid lhe plea fer
apparent dzug o11erdose.
a new inquest came from one of
The auorncy ~encral's office Hendrix's former girlfriends, Kathy
said it sought the tnquiry following Etcbin&amp;IJant, who commissioned a
a request from an individual, wborit priv,tte investigation. Etchingham
it would not identify, for a new told the:newspapcr the evidence in
inquest.
·
lhe death was unreliable.
The original inquest recorded an
"I don't think it should have
open verdict, meanin&amp; there wu happe!led. He was in the wrong
inauflic:tent evidence of lhe cause place at the wrona time with the
o f = .in Seattle on Nov. 27, =;~le,'' She was.quated as
1942, Hendrix died In London on
:· Hendrix was widely regarded as
Sept. 18, 1970, after leaving the the mbs.t innovative rock guitarist
message "I need help bad, man" of bis geaaation. He died at ~ 27
.on his manager Chas Chandler's at the ~enl_af his girlfneild,
answering IIIIIChine. ·
former. ikating champion Monika
A pathologist concluded that Dlnliem'an.
·
•
Hendrix choted to death alltz tat"I DCVa' cxpeer.ed it at all and I
ing an ovadoa!: of barbiturates. He . .was cbn!Pletei,Y, and utterly shocked
also had been drinking.'
., . wheu be dilld, ' Nod Redding, basS
"Scotland Ylrd so far has been i)IMei:·ICirdlo 1imi Hendrix Experirequested by the Crown l'rose6l• '' ·cricc, iDid 'BBC Radi6 4. "We took
lion Service to conduct inquiriea__ ·dfl!p-bbt who lllces nine downers
into the circttnulanCCS of the death indclrinU a bottle Of wine?' •

85 SU~Ible
87 Flrthllr away
88 Heaps
80 Long-legged
blrdl

107~lniD

· 109 Footllka pert
110 Strokes
111 Longalor
113 .Memorandum
114 Til115 Therefore
118 Moccaalns
117 Series of games
118 SOik up
120 Exist
121 Discharged a gun
122 FuUng period
123 Jill 124 Twlat
128 Compllln
128 Sharp pain
130 Warnl~ devtoea
132 Berd
134 T~lea
135 Cowl
138 Article
137 Realaatate map
139 Arrow
141
Kanawa
142 Hoetelry
143 Plamlrea
145 Declare
147 Hind part
148 Cui de152 Actor Mlll'lhati
153 TV's Dll) 155 Wear away
157 Crav111
151 Sun god
180 Entice
182 Uncanny
(J 184 Flnllhed
188 Chlel
188 Act
189 Baamlrch
170 Futenallghlly
17 1 CraHieat

01*•'•-

DOWN
1 JoUrney
2 u.s. Anorney
a-aiJanet'3 Prlnt.-'s meuure
4 FOIIOWI Sun.
5 Auricular
6 Renovate
1 Palmetto St.
8 Jump
8 Send lorth
10 Rllllroad atalton
11 Cubic . . . .
12 11 Uftforgtv.'l'"

atar: lntts.
13 Morael
14 Couple
15 Garrets
18 Numbert game
11
product
18 Paid notice
18 AP11881'*1
20 Salty
27 Plradlae
29 Bulklfnga
31 "Nu...-" liar:
In Ita.
34Give
38 Redact
38 Allen Funl
requeata
40 Imitated
42 Doom
44 Calumniate
46 Portico

Bak•'•

48 POU!IIU

49 Lay one'a - on
IIMitlble
50 Once more
51 French article
53 Black
55 Latin conjunction
56 PainfUl
58 Cull olf (beard)
50 Stalk
82 Wedding ring
85 High c:ard
eaventuraaome
89 ~llurlng woman
10 Take from
72 Drlnka heavily
73 "Gulliver's -"
75 Idle c~~ener
78 Hold
77 Oregon'• capilli
78 Piths
80 Ovwftow

82 Deelrwd grMIIy

83- lly
84 Walking atlck8
88 Small child
88 Amrma1~ve
88 Mlrllnlque
volcano

POMEROY ..:._ The following- Rutland.• seat belt, $25 .JIIUI costs;

cases were resolved Wednesday in Robert Day, Fredertcl&lt;, Md.,
the Meigs Counlf Court of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
.
F'med were: Paul A. Davis, Mid-

dleport, speed, S30 plus cosu; Beverlee Houdashelt, Gallipolis, speed,
$30 plus costs; Clyde E. Sayre n,
Racine, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
th A Francis, Lana Boitom,
s · , $30 plus cosll; Johnny L.
uot, $outh Shore, Ky., hunting
without PflJDission, S2S plUs costs;
Steven E. Spack:&amp;, South Shore,
Ky., hunting deer with .30-06 rifle,
$90 plus costs; Larry R. Thomas,
Pomeroy, hunting wtthout pennission, $2S plus costs; Michael A.
Thomas, Coni ville, hunting without
permission, $2S plus costs;
David R. Arnold, Pomeroy,
hunting without permission, $25
plus costs; Jeffrey Day, Coolville,
failure to check deer, $25 plus
costs; Robert L. Riucrbeck Sr.,
Dexter, failure to tag deer, $90 plus
costs; Edward D. Dill, Syracuse,
hunting after tag detached from
permit, $25 plus costs; Todd A.
Dill, Syracuse, aided another in
shootirig at deer from. vehicle, $90
plus costs; Diane Caldwell,
Pomeroy, knowing transport a
loaded. 'f~ in a motor vehicle,
$40 pins costs;
James A. Duncan, Pomeroy.
possessing untagged deer, $90 plus
costs; hunting after tag detached
from permit, 52S plus costs; failure
to lag deer, $60 plus costs; James
S. J?rqwri, Langsville, hunting deer
on lands of another wilhout first
obtaining a valid 1993 Ohio Spccia! Deer Permit, $25 plus costs;
Charles Cullison, l'dcArthur, speed,
$24 plus costs; Carlto~ DrummeE,

fr:{.

ASTRO-GRAPH

'

9S"Rool~'·

.• 87 am.tl ruga'&gt;•

"o¥ithout special permit, $90 plus
costs;
,
Wesley S. Gilkey, Middleport,
seat belt, $2S plua casu; ~ J.
Stringer, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
speed,- $30 plus costs; Bernard L.
Caruthers, Lexington, ~t belt, $15
plus costs; Phillip W. Sherrod,
Columbia Station, ~. $30 plus
costs; James. E. Nicely, Atwater,
speed, $30 plus costs; John W.
Ohlinger, Lona Bottom, f8ilure to
tag dec%, $60 plus costs; Kci!h M,
Krautter, Pomeroy, hunting wilhout
permission, $25 plus costS; Vernon
A. Norris, SomerviUe, possession
of untagged deer, 525 plus costs;
Darrell L. Krautter, Racine, hunting without permission, $25 plus
costs;
Dale Williamson, St. Albans,
speed, $30 plus costs; Rob~n
Moodispaugh, Middleport, failure
to tag deer, $60 plus costs; Gerald
M. Watson, Reedsville, hunting
deer on the lands of another wilh·
out first obtaining a valid special
deer permit, $25 plus costs; attempt
to lak:c more lhan one deer wilhout
special permit, $110 plus costs;
EdWltl'd BeD, Middleport,,improper
handling of a ftrearm in a motor
vehicle, $7S plus costs, lhree days
jail suspended, one year probation;
speed, $21 plus costs; SaQiuel L.
McCarteE, St. Augustine, Fla.,
speed, $22 plas costs;.Donald May,
Pomeroy, speed, $42 plus costs;
Joyce Sinclair, Shade, $20 plus
costs; Tony Powers, Cold Water,
Miss., driving under suspension,
$100 plus costs, five days jail sus. pended if valid operator's license

BERNICE
'' BEDE OSOL

·,

98 Nollie

102 Datum
104 Slrd'l liome
108 WatOh pocket c.
107 Qllatened
108 Small emounta
110 S!luP Plln ,
111 Geml
112- de )Our
114 Bella
118 A- Mt...,_t
117 Strike
118 Urge on
121 Quarrel
122 Detroit 'toott&gt;mler
123 Mr. PIC! no
125 Approach
127- gwde
128 ProteG!MI dftlce
129 Speech; langulige
130 Natlonel hymn
131 t.oolca ftxedly
133 Allowenoe for
waate
138 Poker llakaa
138 Filmdom'•

-'

Sundry,Dec. 12,1983

Try. to involve yourself in endeavors in the
year ahead that permit you to use a substantial portion or your own ideas .
Arrangements where you are free to think
and express yourself could be the ones

wllere you'll be more successful.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
will receive greater gratification today in
try\ng to advance your personal interests

Dale E. Taylor, MarY A. Taylor,
Lotll400, to Freddie E. Boggc~.
Dorothy Boggess, Pomeroy, V.
Chades W. Miller, Marcell
Miller, parcel, to Marie Rhonemus,
Terri Rbonemus, Deford.
Bane One Mortgage Corp, pareel, to George W. Hackett, Jr, Phyllis S. Hackett, Midd. Viii.
Gregory A. O'Brien, Lola
Donna kaye O' Brein , R/W, to

PIDIIc Notice
NOTICE BY PIIBUCA110N
· CIM No. I3C\'124

COURT OP COMIION
PUAI

GAWPOIJ8, OHIO
NA110NWtpl! 11\ITUAL

Sagittarius , treat yourself to a birthday

envelope to Astro-Graph, cia this news-

181 ca-ning
183 Teu1onlc deity
185 Suutdnd ID
187 Down: prefix
•

..
,,
•

..
J

'

t .,

.;

,,'
,,'
,,
J

'
"

MaryKay

'&amp;"'

Sandy Honderoon 892-38ol7
Bever1y Adklna 742-3200

lnventoty In Stoekl

Wanted to Buy
84 or newer
Caprice Classics,
Broughams or LS.
4 Door, V-8,
Loaded.
614-7 42-3802

TowuetJp,

frelitltn C..U!'\Y, Ohio, ond
rou ltlt the ectne of tiMI
occident lmmacllatoly lifter
colliding with lht vthlclt
operated by lit. Nedlnt
Homllton: and 11M Pl'll)'tr of
tht plaintiff, Nationwide
llutuallniUIWICI
Ia to demond
egolnot you In
of .10,788.83
from lloy
1111 ond
collt, Inti the prayer of the
plolnllll, Nadine Hamilton, It
to domond judgment
og1lnot you In tho amount
of $250.00 with lnltrtal
from llay 2t, 1tt1 ond

.-y-.lghl •

..,. .,...;
lie
on
, ttt and IIMI
twenty-elghl (21) ...,. lor

the lui

publloe!lon -

--·

~~~-· will · - - oft

In anawar

PHILLIP
ALDER

We love you lots
Penny and Ashley

NOR'111

IVYDALE COUNTRY
Presents
Driftwood Santas
Hours 1O·7
446-4530
Sunday 1-5
2 miles North of Silver Brid e on SR

1!-U-tl

. , S2

• KJ54
.783

7

.5 42

Q7

MUG

EAST
.76

QJtOH

s

•tun

At

Now, at Sanders Sunoco

.108542

KH

Service 560 Sec. Ave.

• to s

saum

Gallipolis, You can get a

.... ,

.AK4

22 oz. hot-cold drink mug

.KQJ

for only $1 .00 with a fill

.... Q 76 3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

up of any of our fine

Soalll

W..l

Norlh

Dbl.
SNT

1•
Pill
Pass

Pus
2•
Pass

gasoline products. Just

Eut
Pill
Pill
Pau

our way of saying Happy

all of your possibilities, look for new down the doubleton kin&amp;.
Oj)I)Ortunitles today. There rnlght'be a law here that doesn't work: too
right under your noae.
wins lriel&lt; three with tbe club jack
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A partnerehlp drives out South's S(llld,e"'ace'rlv.dT,,hen"rtedl
arrangement In wllich you are presently tract is u dead u the a&lt;
involved looks like it will continue to be dodo.
at~englhened as time licks on. Slgger
Someone more In the mold of Edlbentflta are poaajble.
_
,
, 1011 himself, thoo~ , sees that Well
VIRGO (Aug. 2S.IePj. 22) i', .altu~t!on uraleltbetoclubab:n~
. Sobueathr!.~ua~.!' 'ftll
wh1re you were not fairly compenH•ed
"' """".:ili ti,
or acknowledged might be -lfted SOon. nine triclul: two S(llldes, three "'
two diamonds aod two clubl. Afl:er 1
In lact, you may 188 some Indication ol -'w•••• tbe first trick, be 'eadlllle
thla today.
•
•
UBRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 23) Af1 endeavor I1IIOIId kin&amp;- ut'l uaume West
In which you'll be Involved tdday ahould with 'the liCe and plays another SPII•de I
tum out aucceaalul, provldacl you contln- honor. SOuth wins, cubes his
mood wlllllen llld plays off the bur·t 1
ue to mastennlnd an of the moves. Don't ace. Next be fiDIIIII dUDIIII)''I ...,.,,
delegate too much authority.
jack 11111 cubesllle bel,rt kin&amp;·
BCOIIPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) An oppootu- · be cull adrift witb dimully'1
niiJ might cleyelop at t~is I'M that will ll(lllde. Welt may cub ~aen~ I
enable you to attar a negative •~uatlon but tbea lie muat lead awe)" from
Into eomethlng rewarding.IOI' you and a clUb kin&amp; Into Soutb'a A-Q lenlce.
IOylllllpponer.
·

w........

"'

C&gt;---••=• • '.

ar

Ohio Rul.. of CJvll
Procedure -In the tiN

-·.=t "'

will be
1111 detao.li
... ""'
for the relief •IMMdld In

tht complolnt. ·

Loulee ......

Cleltlaf c-..

-County
01Cember5, 12, 11, 28,1113
cooiL
You ar• required to January 2, t , 1..,.

eom... ,....c-~

Real Estate Classes
Being Offered
December 17, 18, 19
Call 446-4367
For More Information
Case Racing Series
Collector Knives just in time
for Christmas!
$19.99
O'Dell Lumber
Vine St. &amp; 3rd Ave .
Gallipolis, Oh .
446-1276
Card Headquarters
Baseball, Football,
Baskelball
Carl's Shoe Store
DWT-Gailipolis
Santa Claus will come to
your home personally
Cost $20
Call 446-0671 for details

Holidays from the full

"'·.

service station with the
self service prices .

Santas Special
2 pc living roam suites
Starting at $599
Open til 6 pm-Monday thru
Thursday Dec. 13-16
Open til Bpm Dec. 20-23 lor
your shopping convenience.
' From our House Io Yours"
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
955 Second Ave . Gallipolis
446-1171
Sew Creative
Fabric &amp; Craft Outlet
Christmas Print Fat:?ric
$2.00 yd. All satin Fabric
$2.99 yd Lots &amp; Lots of
Lace 25¢ yd and up.
Located 2 1/2 miles from
Gallipolis on Mill Creek

Rd. 614-446-1407
Lost on S11ruce ,SI. Ext.
White Female 1 1/2 yr. old
dog. mixed shepherd.
Answers to Bridgett. No
Collar? Reward 614-446-7054

•

Call 446·2342
or 992•2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

to.
otlterwlae

of your ,....,.

reapond .. requtrwd tty . .

Empire"LP Gas Venlless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Bu~ile Oil Co.
446-4119

·Rick!

than your own .

..

In ..franldln

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

Happy 28th Birthday

self·addressed, stamped envelope to

,;

'

Prolosalonal Beauty 'Conaut1anls
Carolyn McCoy 992-5082

tion .

conaclouan·eal 'with numerous Ideas .

Notlonwldo · Mutuel

lneur1nce Co~npanr and

'WE CAN HELP WITH GIFT IDEAS"

a GEMINI (MIIy 21-June 201 Today II your can
be generated at this time from more sp~~de king and~Er:~:~;~~:;~l
mate oHere you some suggestions per- then one source, so Wyou heven't tapped a~ aod another club,
they are better titan yours, don't lot your
ego bar lhem lrom ••pression.
CANCEl! (June 21-July 22) Strive to be
methodical today where your work is concemsd. If you follow a detailed list regard·
lng whit .you hope to accomplish, It will
enhance: yo~r productivity and induatrl•
ousneu.·
LEO (~uly 23-Aug.' ~) Your perceptions
regardjng Involvements that have atrong
elements of c~ance could .be rather accurate today. Oon1 bet your bu(lget, but you
might ~ant to play a dollar on the ~ery.
VIIICIO (Aug. 23·8ept. 22) If thara Is a
lsmlly 'Pil~nHiloday regarding a manor
that aHW everyone. be sure to put your
two cento"worth ln. You might havl Ideas
that are more conotructlve then thllrt.
UBRA ,( lept. 23-0ct. 23) Thlo Ia one of
those 'da~ \ovhen your mental procenaa
might be working overtime and flood your

...
IMIYeiiMn_do,.,_
- · .-....-r.::::..
In e logll ectlon enlllled

.,

paper, P.O. Box 4465, New York, N.Y. AOUARIUS (Jon. 211-feb. 19) lllhere is
Opening lead: • Q
1Ot63. Be sure to state your zodiac sign. something Important in which you're
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Persons presently Involved that requires the help
with whom you'll be involved Ieday will of others, go to your old friend s first
sen se you can be frusted with secrets . before talking about it to anyone else.
They might tell you things they wouldn't PISCES (Fab. 20-Uarch 20) Don't be
dare lillk about to others.
afraid of a little competKion today, espe·
AQUAIIIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) Small talk cially where your work or career is con·
might be more pleasing Ia your ear today earned. When conditions get critical,
than weighty conversations. Try to do you're the one who'll rise to the chal· By Pldlllp Alder
something with friend s who don 't take life lange.
too seriously.
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll19) You're
Thomas Edison said, "There Is
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Wetgh your quick study today and what you leam8 e&gt;:pedient to which a man will not
wprds carefully today, so what you say to from either books or personal experi- to avoid !belabor of t.binkin&amp;·" We
oihers can't be distorted or taken out of ences will be retained end used to your charitably assume tbat he meant
context and make you look bad when advantage al a later date.
add a phrase excludlttg
However, not only does a
repeated.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Stan plan- TAURUS (April 211-MIJ 201 Sometimes · er have to think, but also
ning carefully ahead al this time so that in order to accomplish our purpose, a lit· imagine the end-position that allctwsl
tie bravado is required In areas or sHua- blm to bring borne _ or defeat _
you can extend your present efforts com fortably and effectively Into your future tlons In wllich we feel a bK sheky. Today contract.
your bluffs should be eftective.
. In today's deal, at first glance
hopes and obje.ctives.
GEMINI
(May
21-June
201
Today
If you seems to be only one chance to
TAURUS (April 20-llay 20) Your abilities
have a problem you can't work out on three no-trump, but there is actually a
to research . probe and detect are very your
own, go to a lrlend who always better Une available.
astute today. This is a good time to talk to
seems
to offer you wise counsel. Your
From his opeaing bid, clearly
an associate about a matter on which you
,pal
has
not
1061 his/her touch.
will
the club king. So one of
reel he/s_he has been wllhholding inlorma- CANCER (June 21-July 22) Earnings SOil'sbold
men wiM the first trick with
taining to a matter of mutual interests and

Public Notice · .
JOu Routt 40- ~ 270 .,.acrtheoom,IMIIwlllllll
Public

BULLETIN BOARD

Thinking
and imagining

·151 11YOU Don't-"

Public Notice
GoUipolla, ohio 41131;

BRIDGE

thought were not achievable can be

probabilities for financial or maJerial grati-

another in hunting a deer with a
rifle, $6S; Johnny Hunt, South
Sbore, Ky., huntina deer without 1
valid Obio non-resident license,

Nadine Hamilton, Plllnutla,
vo. Jomoa A. McCormick,
llox 1101
PelendanL Tltl1 action hu
Columbua, Ohio 43218
liMn 1e1lgMCI CIM No. 13and
C\11-24 Inti Ia pending In the
NADINE HAMILTON
Court l&gt;f Common Piau 01
11120 w. llroaclltreet,
G11ll1 County, Gllllpollo,
Lal21
Oillool8831.
O.lloway, Ohio 43111
Tha object of lha
PLAINTIFI'S,
CoRiplalnt
Ia to racovar
VI.
judgment ag1lnot you •• a
JAIIES A. llcCORIIICK
raauH ot • trofftc eccldant
llouta 1, Box 843 81
)hat occurred on Moy 2t,
Golllpolta, Ohio 41131
1te1, whttn you negligently
DEFENDANT
To Jamoa A. llcCormlck, operated your vehlclt near
whou tell known addraaa lht lnteratctlon of U.S.
1. Box 843 81.

Buckeye RUral Electric Corp, Inc,
Bedford.
Charles Pickett, Sr, Anna Pickeu, R/W, Buckeye Rural Elect.
Coop, Inc. Bedford.
Ernest Swindell, Sharon
Swindell, R{W, Buckeye Rural
Elect. Coop, Inc., Bedford.
Grancis Leo Taylor, Linnie M.
Taylor, 50A, to Donald Collins,
Gilda M. Collins, Sutton.

Consistency and tenacity are the qualities
required for lu~illing your objectives In the
year ahead. Goals you previously

gift . Send lor your Aslro-Graph predic- llcallon look very good today. However,
tions lor tho ysar ahead by mailing St .25 when the dust settles, your gains are likeand a tong , self-addressed stamped , ly to be due to lhe efforts of others rather

deer without spec:illi deer peonit,

$6S; Bri8ll Pope, Porumouth, aid

lNSURAHCI COMPANY

Donald Steinmetz, Pomeroy,
driving under FRA suspension,
$100 plus costs, 90 days jail suspended to 10 days, one~)'ear OL

you may lind something you've been
wanting to get at a big discount.

Astra-Graph . c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 4485, New Vorl&lt;, N.Y. 10163 Be sure

with 7mm rifle, $130; Steven

s'parb, South Sbore, Ky.,_huming

$130; Rick W. tdolris, PD
~
hunting without ~i~- S6 •'
Leslie Frank. Pomeroy1 CMnriclb;.
S40; John Van R~lt. Po11eroyj
Sliced, $70; Paal Davit, Middle=
port, seat belt, $4S; 1obn We41c,
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., speed, $(();
Kathy Francis, Long Baaom, lejll
belt, $45; Judith Glasgow, Athens,
speeo, $70.
.

DUI;

usual. Jot them doWI1
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You have a
rather good eye for bargains today and
this could be a big asset. If you search

attained In a methodical manner.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-CH.c. 21) Just
being busy won't cut the mustard today.
In order to truly gratlly your Industrious
inclinations, you must do something tllat
Is uselul. as well as productive. Major
changes are aheed for Sagittarius in the
coming year. Send for your Astra-Graph
predictions today. Mail $1.25 and along,

Forfeitina bonds were: James

Y.WOUah. Ru~. hunting~

r----------- ------.....----------r---------

Your conceplions may be batter than

inslead of spending tima half-heartedly to state your zodiac stgn.
promoting the posillons of others . CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jan. 19) Your

140 Formal143 Cooled144 Wltflered
148 lcelarldlc writing
1:U Walk unll-.llly
150 Wergod
151 VM!Icle
153 Crlmaon
154 Inlet
156 Morey

U:!tlll

alondoy,CH.c. 13,1983

@=.

81Nir9"-

presented wilhin 30 days; no registration, $20 plus COlli;
Robert Capehart, Middleport,
failure to check deer, $25 plus
costs; failure to tag deer, $40 plus
costs; Charles C'rislip, Rac.tne,
bunting deer upon the lands of
another without ftrst obtaining a
special Pfllllil, costs only; Mamie
u.mion, Dexter, seat belt, $25 plus
coslS; Willard Norman Jr., Vinton,
speed, $30 plus costs; Madge E.
Boggs, Galhpolis, speed, $30 plus
costs; Gladys A. Bowles, Heath,
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Edward R.
Bowen, Heath, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Wayne E. Saunders, Crown
City, speed, $30 plus costs;
Everett R. Abels, Ravenswood,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Raymond W. Stevens, Toledo, speed,
$30 plus costs; Dennis R. Gosney,
Lebanon, attempting 10 lak:e second
deer without permit, $90 plus costs;
hunting with permit in another's
name, $25 plus costs; Tony E.
Gilkcr, Pomeroy, hunting without
permit, $25 plus costs; Ervin P.
Wurgelbacher, Hamilton, failure to
tag deer, $60 plus costs; .Roger
Seeber, Nelsonville, driving under
the influence, $750 plus costs, oneyear OL suspension, 90-day vehicle immobilization, one-year probation, HRS counseling, 30-days
jail suspended to 10 days; driving
under financial responsibility
action suspension, 5100 plus costs,
30 days jail suspended to 10 days,
one-year probation, one-year OL
suspension, all concurrent with

suspension, HRS COUIIICiing, oneyea' probelion, vehicle forfeited lP
sl$e; bil/tkip, S
c:O.b; 90
days jail auapen
to 10 dayl,
one-yea.- OL IUJPCIISion, anc-year
probation, HRS COUIIICling, all to
I11JI concurrent with drivin.i under
auspension; left of center, S20 plus
casu; invalid ieglstnldon, S20 plus
costs.

Meigs County property transfers

Cutaup
81 Cowboy
.
competllloli- .~"' . , ,
83 Genuine ': ' . '
80

aaempt to take more than one deer

; Charles Lewis Tenn~nl, Jr.,
•Doris Mass TeMant, Lot 1162 S. 3
&amp; 9, R-11, T-4, to Kevin L. Barber,
:Oiive.
: Ronald W. Vance, Virginia L.
. w . vance,
Vancc, parceI, to Dton
Sherry L. Vance, Olive.
Tamara M. Phillips, aka Tamara
M. Lorubbio, Carl James Lorubbio,
3.01 A., to Donald Williamson,
Janet r\.1. Williamson, Columbia.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

First wav~of ~troops"
set to leave Somalia

t,)

tltrned to' his wife and said, "We
didn'thit the lottery this weekenil,
did we dear'!"
"I'D ailmit it, I said a few things
I shoitldn't have," he said.
While in jail, 'he was threatened
and taunted by inmates who wanted revenge for the deaths. Mohr
was treated for minor bead injuries
in June after two inmates atlacked
him.
Residents of this fanning community about 50 miles west of
Toledo followed lhe case closely.
- " They s~y he didn't do it, but
then who' did?" said John:Kramer,

SundJy

Meigs County CQurt news

patabase, pat·ierlce cracks murder case
.
By CHERYL L. REED
··
Dayton Dally News
:. No one remembers Carl Camdlers in the Boston neijlhbortlood wll=
lie was shot down nearly 25 years ago. No one knew hiS k:iller had been
on the run all thai time.
_ Then agai.D, no one seemed to care.
- And that's the way Earl James Clarl&lt;, the man who may have pulled
iiie triggeE .on Curl Carrcthers, wanted to keep it.
• But one Boston detective remcmbeEed. And his partner thumbed
~rough Clad:'s yellowed case me, decided it "had a pulse," and decided
~ revive the investigation.
' ' Two months later, the cleverly crafted world of Stacey Griffin came
fumbling down. Clarlc, who had been living in Dayton for years under the
~ias Stacey Griffin, was arrested last month outside the tire company
where he worlced.
; , He admitted to k:illing Carrcthers. Boston police had always believed a
15-yeat-&lt;lld man named Earl James Clark: shot Carrethers in 1969. They
R:new hehlld 1led Boston and headed soulh.
" U not for t.echnology and a new breed of detectives who rely on conl~uler databases as moch as snitches and shoe lealher, Clark might be hjd!1'8 still
.., "Carrethers was a victim who apparently had no local advocate here.
NO one calling the police department once a week or once a month _or
IInce a·year to find out what was happening with the case," explains
!loston Lt. Det. Tim Murray, the man who tracked Clarlc to Dayton.
t Though most killers are caught and brought to trial, 40 percent of all
lnurders nationwide are never solved. In Boston, that's where the Cold

1893

December 12, 1893 -

Florida Property For Sale
5 rooms, 1 1/2 baths, 2
bedrooms CarpM,
Lo1 size 50'•150 ft . Gulf side
Bradenton, Fl. Exc. cond.
More infer. 614-372-2184
Gallia County Health Dept.
offers
Free Childhood immunizalions
Tuesday
Courthouse Lobby 4-6 pm
Wednesday
University of Rio Grande
Childcare 8:30-11 :30
Rio Grande Estates 1-3
Sorry, flu vaccine no longer
available

�1993

OH

44

........,

Mlw 1 , ladroom NNr Holzer

=~~Dopoolt

: "i. !
· c ~r.·l

''
I

: ·.: &gt;tl~
• ' • ;)11 ;..

.....

'

,,.

I

_,

I

.
~

. ...

).:
·.. : ~

KIT 'N.' CARLYLE® by Larry

0

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
wards below to make 6
simple words. Print letters of
eoch In Its line of squares.

I I' I 1 I
2

IPirtmenta,

S225/mo1 lncl!lda UIIIHIH, $100
-~ d-H; no pills; 11411124 I.
,.

Wright

Ot&lt;~rgea Portllble sAwtnm don't

haUl yout · - to
c.lll 304-f'15·1N7.
Holiday

tho mfll tuot

Cl11nlng,

HouHCieanlng

I

Do
OfOce,

Will

Rohrroncoo Avail~" Dopondablo. l Honeo~ 11+..11-11121.
Ml11 Paula'• Dey Cl,. Center
U.F I A.ll. -4:30 P.ll. OualbJ

Lovlna Care For All Chlldran
Our It GooL Part·llmo, Full·
llmo.Fod. Aulotonco Avalloblo.
COli 1'01' lnlomuiiiOn Or Vloll. Intoni /Todclor 114-440-6227. p,.
SchoOl,
Schoologe,
HA
School, 114-441-4224:

Sl"'ilo P-....1 llolo, 40'o

NIS, NIDI WHh Wldl Ronglng
lFine
nt-10 lncludl"'l Arta, SDOrto,
Dining, Loaking For Single

Forllalo 35-50, For Holiday
~. Raooond: CLA 300, cia
Oalllpollo Dolly T~buno, 825

T &amp; T Ll.wn S.ntlce, lawn,
l•ndectDing, atump rtmo¥11,

Thlid Avenue, G1llpoll1, OH

and IHI ciMnup. 304·773-11102

451J1.

4 '

or 1-80Q.S38-1~.

....

Giveaway

4 QorOMn Shepherd Lab Puppt:M, e WMka Otd,I14.Z4s.t154.

Will 01r1 far your child In \ : '
hOlM, Pl. PINIInt IJM.

f75.3e31.

ewl
old puppln'- parent• Ool· 7
Yard Sale
9
don Rllrlo- a •lk Lab pupe .;__ _...;:;..:;_:.:;__ _ _ 1
ho'!ll holr, It by Chrl.lmoa
thoV do nol """ llomH they
will: be -royod. 304-175-1845
after 4pm.
Chilat1'\/pploo
To
Otwlwoy: llolhor Ful Blooded
EntUoh Satter, 81445f.1'"'5.
-~ ........, count~ homo

wanted to Buy

W.ntod To Buy;
Wllh Or WHhaut

8
AUioo

.~ I I

Furnished
Rooms
Roome lor r.nt-• wHk or month.
.Stortlna ot $1201mo. Clatllo Hotol.
114-44e'V58D.
Slaoplng ro0mo wHh cooking.
Aloo traDer opooo. An hook·upo.
con after 2:00 p.m., 3G4·Tf3.
5851, llaaon WV.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

5152 • •

~ADIE E. MILLER
Cotdell·wlshea to
lhank Morgan
Mlnlo1111ry
Baptlat Church.
...... '. " . '
MQOre

84ihel

· fkqb)«j

F.t.irllral Home,

~r'~iCII
c.ftii'l. plilecraat

In Loving Memory of

myDnrSon
STEPHEN DEAN
MITCHELL
May 12, 1948
Dec. 12, 1989
BeUlah Belle Mitchell

~Canter and all
chllrclles , people &amp;

everyone who

thlltd In.our torrow.

i51·lblnkl
~ II
.lltiCI nul'ltl
Mtdlcal Ctnttr,
Wdltf, tht

IIIII Iliff

Nurtlng

lteln, 304-I~~HMB.

RHidonl manager Modod tor

In Mtmory 01
MICHAEL A. (Tony)

DAVJS
who departed thla
tne Dec. 12, 1H2.

Itt bHiliiOng,,ud

year far'tho"lttt
' behind. No tongar
bound by the bond•
· olllteh, now hB

travels with the wind,

onea aoullm alwtyt
fRt with mutlc.
Sedly ml ..ed by
Mom, Dtd, Brother
Other I emily end
frfendt.

v

EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER 11/FIH
NOH.suoKING AND DRUO
FREE ENVIRONMENT

t-

of Ltdt
to·

tor Rent
141110 2 Br, 1 mila South ot
Eurolul, on St. Rt.7. Na poll,
,.flrtncea. 014·25e-e089.
2 badroom trallw, tot &amp; dop, Rt.
12 N. Locuot Ra on right, no
plio. 304-878otOl'll.
llobllo Homo Fiomlohod 2 Br,
820 Fourth Avenue, OalliDG118,
t3201Mo., 114-441-4416 Ator 7
P.M.

4"!, lg dlnlngroom.
41u or '304-671-'Witl.
Earn .Jionoy At Home WHh A Pt Pleaaant IfNI 3 bedroom, 1
Computer. No Exp Roq'd full bath, ga• hilt, ca~, conProcea
Ha1hh lnturance vlnent to echOOit · 1 . ahODDina.
Clolmo. Exc lncomo Potontlal priced below S50,000. CaU Barill
ComJ!any Trwlnlna. From A,4ta: Ono Trull Dopll, Pt. 'PII, WV 304Flnc g AvaH. tiOOIIIJ.tiH Ell!. 175-4480.
142, (24 Hra) NotiOnal Clolmo
Sarvlco,lnc.
O..._y Store, oamo -lion
Fumlohodh nory clean 2 BR.
SSyra. 4f10!10&lt;1, ft. ptuo 4000oa.
W1t1rAraa peld; In Poner II'H,
S30D.oo month. DopoaH. 614·
ft.
..
ry nlcio " " - · llllck
taco- bull&lt;lna, po¥0d peott.
thootto~ng.

lot.-··

lng
1201200tt., fullY
llockod, f!2.!:.._000 nag. 304-112'·
3300 or a....., I.

TWo Hdroom mobile homM for
,.~, llao epacn for rent at•n·
lng • $85/mo., 614-882-2167.
Twv bedroom, total electric,
$225/mo., _ Pom1roy .,.., 814·

PubllcSale

m.z:l12.

Co1Sigt1111111t A1Ktlo1
Sal. Dec. 18, 1993 10:00 A.M.
NAIOOI-~In

'*"

tta
I"''J* •uubild to
IIIII F_, Flllr.HouolngAd
al·11118 which- llaglll

Da1 Sml' - A~rtiOtteer I 1344
Rhett Milhoan- Appre1tke #5 92 6

10-"'lnypral-.

-·-...··lmhtlon ot cllco ~·· iiiiOn

bliNd on

Cash Pos"ive I. D.
Refreshments by Bashan Fire Auxiliary

Thlo nowap- wll not
knowingly....,.
adlle~s foi' real aatala
whlctlloln-ollho

tow.

mlnl,...or•ge

Unite

It

Five

,.,nta, Pomero,, IM.et2-52S'I

or 304-122·7887.
•
ShiDOing l Rocolvlng ~
COL 'llcOnoo Pratorrtot, Apply lri
~....
At;
Bu~li
on
&lt;c;-~11) 14!&gt;ndlr -,:.-Frklliy,
U0-4:30.

Terms: Cash or Check w/posHive 1.0. Out of elate
buyers need bank letter for check acceptance. Non·
11110king, clean reatroomi, and lood available.
. Aucllolatr Mork Hulchli101 614-698-6706

lktnllllmtdlaadld II Ohio.
B~n.ss Parlner Frank Hurclll111011 614-592~4349

OUr--

hotoby
lnformld Ihill .. dt:lllngl
DMIMCI In tia new PI¢¥

lnd~lo •typo ;ot

". ~ ~!,

~11=·::He:;:l::p:::W::an;:ted~::;- :.~ ~:
..
'.

.

~,' I

or..!' •• :

Learn to

,r' . , :

.-: ··'

··. ~ " I

. drive now.
USA

'

. .-..

llpollo Upotalra; S:MSIMo. $150
Ae~entor,

....... _

Wiler Fumlllhed, 81wq;387o.

2 Largo Bod""'mo, 2 Floors,
t 112 Both; Z Poole, Pallo,
Mlo. No Plio; lNH Pluo
oo.wlty DopooH Roqulrad,
Dayo 114-441-:1411. E..nlngo; 810 P.ll.114-3tl7-71!10.
2 Bodrooma, AC In OaiiiDGIIo,

1:

$27&amp;/Uo., W1ter

P'1kf, Ref1rance

I Dopoob Rtqulrod&gt; &amp;t4·:Z.C5589:1.
2bdrm. 1pt1., t0111 eleclric, ap-

pllanc.. tumiiMd, 11undry
room f.cllhl•, ciON to achool

In town. Applle~Uona available
1t: VilliD•
Apt•. 149 or

·a,..,
colllt4-892-371t. EOH.

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

-:.r:.:-..
.........
co.,.....

Sale

186i ShuHz 121&lt;10, 2 Bodroomo,
Uka Now Throuah Out, lluot
BH To Believe ~1114-44141715.
tm Fornot ~rk, 121115 2 Bodroom, WIB Total Elactrla,
Rongo, p.,.,~l
!!!!dlrDimlna·
Included.
114-2....,..2,
et4-441'
A34.
1882 Norrlo 1ta80 Trailer. Huge
Spoclaioo Roome With Cathod·
rwl C.lnn~ ·Thraughout. ThBodroom, Two Batfi.·H11111 Oardon Tub In Mntlll· lotfi. Ollar
1200 Sq. Fl." Loto 01 Storage.
Hao All Tho Ext- Uvod In
IMo Then 0... YNr. Escollont
Condhlon, Uuot Sao To Appreciate. Coli 114-24'1-2032
LaavoiiHaagoll No An-.
1894 Radmon 14x70; 3bdrm., lncludH aklnlng, ~"'"""• blocko,
Syr. warranty, nomeowners lneuranct, 111d 1 r-r of fr• lot
nnt, •H lor only S'177Ymo., Cllll 1·
800-8314238, aak lor Mlka.
Flra domagod 12x615 ltallor, under blth fub, lftllce on.r, 11.-.

m.es94.

33
~

Fanns. for Sale
acrao, houH &amp; buUdlngo,

toblcco lotmenl S04-171ozt71
or 571·23711.

50 kno Faron, EWI"9!on Area I
Roome 6 Bath, Baril 110 OutbUildIng, tes,ooo, &amp;14-446-8554, 114245.aetl.

35 .Lots&amp;

·-

.,~

~r
,. :··•
o~...

Lppl.~d- L!ld
ILLI'II LIMMit die

........

llmaldmglmlllmlilif
mmlll ur lrmlml. .
'

. l ,; r ,

. ·•,
: ..._. ~
THURSDAY,
DECEMBER 16, 1993
12Noon,3PMUPM 11• .-t·:
...,~

4 • • _;:.

,.::,•,;

Smiley's,Motel

... .. ' I

1-64, Exit 34
Hurricn, WV .

·irn,J
~1"' •• 1

l) ~ ,,.,

, • •1t
di . ~
I

J-"oi.!J'.

·~r.o

coo
,......,\ ' {

. .,, "'

Fumllllod
EHiclancy:
107
Saconct, Golllpollo, Shora Bath,
UtiiHin Paid, ·$t8Wo. 614'4-IS.
44t6Aftor 7 P.ll.
Fumlohod
EHICI"'!CY,
701
Fourth, O•lllpolla, Sharw Bath,
S161111&lt;&gt; UtiiMioa Paid, 614-448o

-~· '· ~ ~

..... -

-

i ' I '
'

\

====-

...

• IC

,

...."::·
, ,·'

~441=1=A=ft:or:7:P.:.II:.
11

wee.

rI I

II

----- •

Palace

Pet

Shop.

LoCated In G.C.IIuroh¥ Co. Gal· 61 Fann Equipment
llpollo. N- open. 6i4-4414404.
R~lwterMI .Cocker Sp.~nlal pup- 2 manure eprwadar. phon• &amp;14·
piN, 6 weeke old~ 2 malt , .4 440.0327

temtle, black, 1150.00, call 614-985-3441 1fter 7pm. Great CaM 1210 dltsel tractor, New
Holland grinder mhl:er, New H~­
Chrlttmu preunts.
land 7ft. hay bind, John Deere
Aottwnlllr PIJPI, exc. pedigre1, 1240 4 row plenttr, AC no till
parenta on premlstl, 1300. 304· pllnttr, Krause 12ft. tractor
dlac, all good cond. 304·273175-4985.
4215.

IO

LOCATED IN GREEN TWP.• on Slato ROIM 141-3
bedrooms, 2 baths, iving mom, dining room, kitchon,
utility room, 22 x 14 garage. Home is oix yrt. old, has M:a
'-vel lot CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

Real Estate General

ORSEEP
1--..,,_...,,_..,,........,.._..,,...,..-1

I I. r I

s.-..

Complete the chuckle quoted
0
by filling In the missing words
L.-.J-'--..1.--.J-'-..J..-...L.--1. yo"' develop from step Na. 3 below•

Troller
For. Rent, In Rod·
nay,I14-245-0ft3.

'Iff Wa,riltid;to Rent

I r

OLDER HOME· 4 Bedrooms, ~ving room, dining mom,
kitchen, lamily room, located on 1.8 acres. PRICE IS
REDUCED. CALL SOONI

Wtntlng to mnt•:2 or 3 t.droom
hoUII, in CINn lnd QOO:d condl·

lion, pralor private oottlng, 6M·
H2oo2428, It no •ntwer pleiSe
INva ._,.on machine.

LOG HOllE- located on Brumfield Road 3 bedroom. bath,
on 2 acres more or less. Call to we.

rAercnan diS e

HOME ON WATSON ROAD· 2 bedrooms. t batl, ivif9
room. cining room, kitchen. approx. t 112 acnos, CALL
FOR APPOINTMENT.
GARFIELD AVENUE· 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen

2 cane 1nd punldn high blck
chah 1 Cine gtaa top couch

Mtacellaneous
Merchandise

6-1510r814-448o4428
'IIG DAY SAllE AS CASH
OR RENT~.owtl (NO DEPOSIT)

ortcH: IS" grwpovlno _..., 3"
&amp; I" atraw h1t1, ..,rafaam can.

table. $200.oo 3G4.e7S.2237
YI'RA FURNITURE

.. ·-·
' ....i '

HelpWanted

' .·

.. .
r
------------------------~~----~~
REGISTERED NURSES
'· ;,. SDithel'tl o•to Weal Center hs OpHings for
Registered Nurses lathe following areas:
'.
Emet:ae1cy Room
Medkal Surakal
Post Atte.s..esla Recovery
Rahahilttatlon
· ·:.
We Offer:
· .. ;
I0 &amp; 12 hr. shift optlans In many spectolty units. ~ ; 1
Salary comme~surata with e~.Ptrlence.
·:. :,
8% evelli!!g &amp; 1laht shift •tremntlol.
; :!
$1.25 /lir. weille1d differential.
·
Excelent heahh &amp; Dental programs.
, ~·:
lndlvlduaDzed Orientation.
"
IOO'Io Tuition Asslsta1ce
: :;~
For lnformatlaa co1cernllg available RN staff ·:. ~
posltloas; cal (614) 354·5000, ext. 7607 or · '"
s.bmlt resume ta SOMC, 1248 Kln1eys lane, :· '!;c;
Portsmollf., OH 45662. SOIIInm Ohio Medical :, ,,
Center promotes the hlrlilg of Individuals who are·, ·,~
non·smokers.
.. , ,;
E.O.E./M.F.H.
·. · :,
Sotthem o•1o Medkal Center
:. · ~;

..

.

1l, ... :::

r---:::~:":::"::~~~=~--ir
· •C

REHABILITATION NURSE MANAGER
· .:
brelleat opporttnlty to beco1111 t•• . NIUe ;,:.;
Manager of 11 new ltt·patle1t Rehabllltatlo• nit at
011 of the finest heahh care centers 11 So1tllen , .;
Ohio.
;~
Respoulbnttles lncJu~e plaanlttg, orgaitlll~~t ;, ~
fiscal management, a1d accountability ·for t•• -•
delivery of quality potlellf care.
·
' ~:
Wa are looklag for a serv.ke orle1ted l.cnvldttal' ;:~
Rent als
with excellent team buDding and co11t1111nkitlo1 ·~
skills wltll a provu track record for slccenfilr ~: ~
IIICIIIallllf a •.,.... lilt.
. .
.. cl
·Tile
ca~dtdate 1111st hold a cmellf O.lo :~:
State llcuse as a ReiiJstered Nurse, Brx.elor's ;,~~
s;;;;~=.;L. Degree 11 N~nl11. ~·d . Certlftc~tl.~l, ,ill' :~~
D!
Re~oblltatlo• ltmln• preferred•.Two :to .tllree. ~o
yllrs .of R•••mtatlo!l experteaci aH '· fwo to ;~
..rea years of IIIIGilme•t ~experleice' prefttTttl: ·j
I~~~~~~r!:l Co•tltlve ~ cM,Hieflis packagl. ·: , 1 ~~~
FI hdroomo, 2 Balhl, A1Uio. · Please · Slbmlt · re11me · to Karel .. WcAIIi'l, ~.:~
D.DMh a !RifM•u.., R•
Profes'sltial Rernlffr, 1248 Kl11eyi :u11e, ~~
quJrad, 11&gt;1-44t-32ft.
Portsi!Htll, OH 45662.
· · ' · . " ~~ ·
Sot,tlllrl 0•1o Madkal' Center prolll!ltes 1~1 ~~~
lltrl11 of llclvldlals wllo are IOI·slll$-..
. :~~
EOE/MFH
· .- .
• · · ' · ' ~·II',
SOUTHERN otfiO MEDICAL CENTER
.. ~:~

Cl'lft

auppiiH

n

l

wtlaltta ..

It

blllt, mlac.
batkllt, n

h•ndm~dl

I

32 Mobile Homes
for

buolnHO, con-

Puppy

Allen C. Wood, Relllor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReB.or/Broker-446.()971
Mosa Canterbury, Reallor-446-3408
Jeanene Moore, ReaHor-256•1745
Tim Watson. Reahor·448·20V

&amp; Livestock

,_-

481 112 Fourth Avenu•~ Gal·

Stove,

llaln St.,

number, lo •llow tor tn lmmodloto....ponoa.
llobllo Homo Lot For Ront, State
Rauto ~ 1-6-6810, 114-448o

(Training Avail3ble)

2 Bedroom Apanmant, Located:
Dlpoait.

200

ltel ptNOQ, · addr... 1 phone

.....-onanoquol

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
lWO DAY AUCTION OF HOUSEHOLD AND TOOL
ITEMS DECEMBER 15 AND 16 STARTING AT 6:00
P.M. EACH NIGHJ.
Due to the death of Mr. Homer Brown at the age of
89 we will be selling the contents of his home. Mr.
Brown lived at 66 Franklin St. lor 46 years. Hundreds
of hems present and the basement was packed fulr of
hand tools. Due to the time of year. and poor parking
availability all "ems have been moved to Hutchinson
Auction Inc.
Take US 50 &amp; 32 west of Athena and ex~ onto 50
west towards McArthur. Auction is quarter ol mile on
lett. Signs posted. We will auction small Items on the
t 5 and on the 18 we will finish the small items and
auction all furniture.
Furniture: 3 pc. maple bedroom suit; 2 maple
dr¥sere; occasional chairs; r~liner; duncan phyla
coHee table w/rnatchlng end tables; dishwasher; brass
hall tree; oak hall tree; painted antique fancy dresser;
matching couch and chair; couch; antique rockers;
odd chairt: depre11ion dre~tar w/mirror; wringer
washers; TVa; atands mission oak library table; desk;
elect. range; SMALLS: Literally hundreds of items a
of all
brief listing follows. Mirrors; pictures;
'
'bed linens: elect. mow•r;
cookoo clocks; watches; old gluaea; old le~tel~t:.tl
pocket knivu; Ia~: hedge trimmers; 2 sp•oedubar
saw; hundreds of other toole; old linens; rolling pine;
other k~chen utenalls; .ma11y other unadvertl,aed

notlglon.

moko
anyor
oudt
"""-·
lmtllllon
dlar'omNUon.•

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
ANTIQUE AUCTION
SUNDAY DECEMBER 19 AT 10:00 A.M.
ALBANY, OHIO

Mark H•lc~IISOI 614-698-6706
LiceiS~ - BoNed II Oltio
B.slness P..1er Fr•k Hutc.lasoa
614-592-4349

race,-·

origin. or 11'111Bentlon 10

"Merry Christmas &amp; Happy New Year
from Dan and Family"

A~tliotteer

Apartment
' for Rant

Located on St. Rt. 124 near Portland, Ohio. Things
you no longer need someone else can use. Hope to
see you to sell or buy. .

45 miles east ol ChilliCothe Preview 8:30 a.m. day of
auction Located 11 miles west of Athens Ohio. Take
US 50 and 32 west of Athens and exrt onto 50 west
towards McArthur. Auction is a quarter mile on left.
Out of state checks require a bank letter.
Oak secretary bookcase; oak knockdown
wardrobe; mahog. 2 door bookcase; oak two door
bookcase; several pieces of birds eye maple
furntture; oak highback beds; oak 3 door Ice box; oak
flatwall cabinet; walnut 2 piece breakfront cupboard;
show cases; dressers w/mirrors; 2 oak highboys
w/mirrors; 9 piece mahogany dinning room suit;
duncan phyfe couch; Remington model 550·i 22
riffle; Savage fox 12 ga. double barrel shotgun; semi
precious jewelry; men and ladies gold and diamond
rings; Regulator RA watch w/porcelain lace; elgin 16
jewel pocket watch closed face; postcards;
glaesware and many unadvertised furniture and
small ttems. See lull ad in Dec. 13 Antique week.
Auctioneers Note: Due to the holiday we were
unable to take pictures. This auction contains many
quatny rtems as in our other auctions. We would like
to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and a Happy
New Year. Watch for our Extravaganza Auction ad
scheduled lor January 30, 1994.
Terms: Cash or ·Check w/posilive 10. Food
available. Non smoking building w/clean restrooms.

.

"You should always take
the advice given by your
mother," one very clever cutie
told her friend. Smiling she
added, "Especially if it doesn't
interfere with what you in. tended to do in the - - - - -

446·1066

Farm Suppl1es

Tape- In Doge &amp; CalL
Available 0-T.C At: J.D. Nanh
Praducod t-8o1tl33.

Pl. P-nt.. WV ~51150. Ploaaa

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

..,._
Golden DotlciOuo applft. Open
HAPPY JACK TRIVERIIICID£: 8aturdlyo only.
RacognllOd Sale l Elfoc:tlvo By
&amp;

RHpona to Box R-4, c/o Pl .

PIHIMI Raglotor,

311-6000

4404201.

Parf•llmo Dook Clartl, Ex·
I!Orianca Pralorrad, Will Train
lho Right IndiVIdual, Apply In
Paroon At: Holiday Inn,
(Qalllpollo) A-utty No Phone
Calle.
PROJECT DIScoYERY • IIATHEIIAllctANIEDUCATOR: Hal~
limo ochoot yHr, lull time
•ummw. Will )U!d INm of
1 - In Improving
mot-leo lnotructlon In SE
~ ochoola. Ph. D. In moth Of
oqulvalonto~ Raoldonl
ot SE Ohio. Up to 145,000 plue
bonotHo. con 814-&amp;13-4411 toy
Dooombor 15. EOE.
R•l Eatato ea.._. Prolaaotonal
training, ERA T-n &amp; Co&lt;lntry
Raal Ellol!o, .!~!'&gt;'*• Iockie

.'

:

JOIN A WINMNG TEAll
Ali A Laodor In Tho Flnanclol
Sarvlcn ArM. Bel!lll A llombor
Ot Our Con11.nner Flf11nca T•m
lloano Having A Good Pioce To
Stort. Aro ycou Sall·llollvalod,
-nlvto And E~oy IIMIJ:
With POG!IIo? A PloHant
.
001111lhy And Good Phona Sklllo
Are A lluot. RnponolbiiHI• lnoludo Aotlvhloo Rolalod To
Cradt,
8a1M
kcount
llonagamw&gt;t And Accounll"tt.
For Jmmedlate Conlktt,.tlon
Conloct: Quy llorrow AI 114-

•

bu!lneases for their
expreulona of
'\ · sympathy.
~ Family of Sadie
E. Miller Cordell

1

Ar.., 81,f.387·7287.

Wood' ~afty, Inc.

Full bl;;dtd Slblriln Hus~ AppiM- juet ott Rt. 143, one milt
pu -'-a, $75 Nell, tM-882-631 . lOuth ot Corpontor. Rod ond

U.S. Center For V.terintry
Mtdlcln• Aplntf Hook, Round

Commorclol •'opilca, prlmo uptown. . POinl PIOaunt location.
Mtln .area ll .30"x1i' wlpotentlal
tar •ddHioilal opoco. Qood
vlolblllly1 a~uoto port!lng.

Pump,
GlriiQI,

I 1I .
3

Space.for Rant

46
3..

IN&lt;mCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rwcommondo thot rou do bullo
nooa whh people you k.-1 ond
NOT to oond money througn tho
moll until you ha" ln-Tgotod

44

ALL Yard Salll lluat Bo Paid In
Ad..nca. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. W.ntod To Buy: Standing lim•- •.,
lt. d1y blltan the 1d 11 to run. ber &amp; Plno, Qood P~cH, 114·
•
581.
Sundoy odMion • 2:00 p.m. 311-eeot.
Tlalnod F-lo Cocker Frld.y, Monday odHian • 2:00
Splnlol, To Good Homo. 814- :. P·.; .mm.; .·S;.;•;.;tu.;;.,.=f· -- - - 448•7h0.
· B
Public Sate
Middleport Chu"'h ol Chrlot hoa
plario, ,_do oomo work, mull
&amp; Auction
,.~e, 814-982-2114 In morn-Rick PMraon Auction Compeny,
Ing; .
full lime euctfonwr, compl••
~trrter; , m111
Lh81a IUCIIon
IINice.
UcenHd
161,Dhlo I Wnt VIrginia, 304Apiico; """""'; e14-111:Z..31etl.
n:J.ml.
Cllow I ._,. ml•.
toOl! :llka Ch-, black. 104-675· Wedemeyer'• Auc:Uan Service,
Rio Grt~,nde, Ohio 614·~s.sl52.
1214.
WANTED: •"'line lar 1MB Font
Putpie:l, Mike ONII Chrlatmal Chrt'•tm• Auction, Sun., Dec. FMI:Iva, 4e, 1.3 11111', nMded
Preeent1l 114-245.0514 Anytime 12, 1pm, Itt. AHo Auction, Rt. 2 ASAP, call 814-88241", &amp;:30omor 51~-2428 after
Aft.. 3.
N a Rt. 3S Ron Prtco wllood of 5:00pm.
5:00pm.
Homo
~plna
Channet
a.v.n
flmtle gray mtchllndiN ua fott &amp; loti ot
_,_ ~,..r
to oklaood
hcinHi,
toyo. Ed F
830.
houHttrObn, nol • chlld't pet,
Employment Serv1ces
114-1112·2834.
9 wanted to Buy
Comotota Houoohold Or EotaiHl Any lYpe 01 Fumhuro,
~ncn, Antlq.,..'•, Etc. AIIO
Ajlpnlul Available! 114·245-

" Tlie family ot

Buslnell
Qpponuntty. : ·.

&amp;Auction

Coli

Pul\iii;;l,

:·

21

281
Coclultlol wlcop, SIO. 304-875- s"'"" Bud li!avt&lt;lck Ton
2032.
Thrao Peddle SIMI Qultor,
Wood Flnloh, Aoid"'l: $100,
Flth Tank, 2413 Jackson Aw-e. :J87.nst.
Point PIMMnt, 30WJ'5.206S.
10gal. lank aat..po. 11Ui. 58
Fruits &amp;
Yaung
P1111kNtt,
$14Ji9.
Hamolora, Jz.te l S4.n.
Vegetables
Evorydoy - priCH.

-F.---L,...A_C.----1,...5---r--11 ,

45

F1na n c1al

1HI AOHA Son...~ 1912
AOHA lnnmtve FWKI 011~
1HZ lncomlvo Fund Fllfl',
...~ Sonny Doe llir, 114-

I

1 c RuN0 K

11012. ..

'tledroom

Pets for Sale

Etlil•d by ,ClAY lt. POUAN - - - - - - -

From Oantool._ Rolrljjorator,
Ston,
'Water
F"mlthed,
$25Miq. No Pllo,l14-441-8038.
Nlco 2 or 3 bedroom oportmont
In lllddlilpoii,,IM-w.!-5818.
.
Ono 10.- Aponmom For
Rom In RIO arande, t325 ~r
llonlh..Whlclllncludoo IIIIIHioo,
$110 OoipooH, Phone: 114-:Z.CS.

One

Pets tor Sale

1haf Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle

Now 2 llodroom Aflottmont, 114448.03110•

Nlctl 2 '8--rooma, 4 112 llllln

I

56

S©\\~lA-l&amp;~trs·

Rent

wv

Point

OUTSIDE
- FURNISHINGS:
Wnsulht Iran T1_~ W/4 Ct.lrw;
Fan ack Rocldng Chair $58;
Ardo W.r'ol12t.oo
Boddlna ·Twin 11at1 Sal JH, Full
Jill Sol, Ouaon $14!1 Sill; 4
Drawer Chnt MUll; Car Sad'o.
Bunk Bod'o. Pooter Bodo. Full
Llno 01 S-orn vStanlna AI J:IO.OO; lndlono Many
Shape'i a Slzn Stoning. Al
S5.00. 2'1Matl0no -BHida 'Auto
Allcllon Or . 4 llllel Out 141.
Opon IA.IL.J:ol P.ll.llon .sat.
GOOD USED APiouANpEs

wood,

mon.
304•173-1513B.Evorythlng muot
go I
Doalgnor ladJ'o groylbtk, 2pc

wlntlr auh, filr tlioukler pieCe
wlmatclllng bora. Tan chair l at-

tamon. 2 matching end tabtll,
curler moplo choir-.......,.
1"11· Anllquo lomp. 11130
coroto
portable typewriter,
worlul. 304-17W307.
Dirt Da¥11 utlrftllllt, -

55

Mlscella.n eous
Merchandise
Slara llltrCIN bllce, $20, 814-

HZ-4127

s..ra rllftOie control jelp. S2S,
614-1112·23!1l

Building
Supplies
Block, brk:k. awer pipet. win·
doWI, llntel1, etc. Claude

lora, Rio Grande, OH COli

~4-

Oold SNI
SIMiwood

SIMI Building &amp;
Doalorahlp, Buy
Wholnole, Dlroct From Tho
Foctory. llalul Protlt Whllo
LNrnlng. Pert~Time To Other
Bualn.... Some S.lect Mlril;et

_,lox Lag 6 Bultortly AI·
tachmenta, Excellent Condition,
t750; Excon:IH Blko, 175, 814218-6422.
Scmo older tobin! $15 Hch;
• ·•-•w~••· 15; -·-••~n 2~ ••·

A..llable. (303) 75!1-4135, Ext.

1000.

56

Pets tor Sale

__
Oroom and SuDDir Shop-Pot
Orvomlng.
All iWMdo. otvtoo.
~ullo Watib. C011814-448-o211.
SPECIAl! only t:IU5 lar all 3 llllllo AKC Raglat- Qo,.n
.,.--_...:...:.:_~..:.:..;,.

pocluld, JI1U8, Mil tor
coli mornlngo botoro
10:..., 114-!182-3078.
1ux. s .. Plllnt ,._for your.._ Shepherd puppfte, vet checked,
llrot ohoto, 114-1112·2581.
Elllctrto ~JpMifter, no. 1514-11112- ~··Tux. 304.-15?:~014. .
11282.
wa"Mrolrlgorit~
Flrawood: All Haoda do SpiN
I• Doll¥- J40 Plck.Up Lold.
800-4
. ;'\ ' .
814-211-1318 Evonlngi.
Four Pooiir Wotw Bod. Kina For ulo- Super Scope tor Super
Size, Nlw Hutar .S175, S14-44f· Nlmoncto. tuot llka now, uklng
110:2. .
610, .114-itll·7H4.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Nlntancto. 2 eom-., 11or1o 1.
Complota . ~- lumlohlngo. Merlo 3, buck -Hunt, Gun, Game
Hourt: ·.-Sal, f.S. 614-446- Qonlo &amp; 8ooiL AU E x 0322, 3•, oillao ciut Butovlllo Rd. Condition, .....,......,_1107.
Frao~.
.
Four 11" 4~11!1 wilt tlrn,
~oom SUMo, In Oood J40, 1114-Mf.2727.
.. .n. $150. 114-4414548.
Handmodo on Doy IIINo, Qulft

"".!'•

and bath, within walking diatanca of atores and IIC:hoola.

.,

Call to

..

see.

REDMAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK· 6 years old
3 bedroom , 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen
utility room. Priced at $29,900.00

WJn·

24~21

•

New Listing- Great farm home on Rocksprings AdAcres mil- Almost all tillable/pasture- Could be goc•dll
building des. House Remodeled· 4 BR, 2 bath,
DR. K", 2 family rooms, 2 car heated garage. ~nlair­
Tp water, vinyl siding, fireplace, barn, other Dlltag:s,
salelite, fruit trees, 15 min. from Pomeroy. Don't
buys like this very often, Call Jack al 992-2403 or 992·
2780 today tor an appointment List today with Jack at
Hayes Real Estate.

VACANT LAND· approximately 10 acnos located on Bob
McCormici&lt; Rd. Call lor mono·inlonnalion.
11]

1:Y

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
O~R TOU FREE NUMBER
l-aoo.81M-1064i

~

aa&amp;i'

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTlRE US11NGS PICK UP
THE FREE QUALITY HOMES BROCHURE AT SOliE OF
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STOII!I, IUP!RMARKET$,
MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

Rnl Estate Ganerat

Real Estate General

.

~;,;~H • ~4~,

Mcalloh.ln

FwnHure

car.t:, Rack, •ern• Mlde To Order, M-

S5AO Yd 6 VInyl $4.41, 114-141' 448-111411.
1114&lt;4.
Hardwood tor Ale. MO.oo •
load dellvorad. caH:I14-448o0170
Lllul - . twin olza bot! oprNd,
3 Dl- ell of ohoolo, all blue,
ftS,IM-H2-2SU.
r PICKENS FURNITURE
1
L-la Drum Sal, Oood Cond~
I
Newi'UIIId
\9oa Ao!!!"tt $100 Roduco&lt;l
H-hold luml8!."''ffl. 112 mi. tlon.
JOJ!tcho Rd. Pt. PIHaant, WV, To J350, 814-4411'3114.
ca~ 304-175-1450.
llo• Drwo Sllcko, B.._ WKh Woocl&gt;urnor Good Shape, 614211U422.
VNI Suho Shlrta 6 - , , · SWAIN
All
i!oi
NO;
W.ln,.
T
610;
A~ &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Now -ahlrto. L and XL. $10
Typowrltw J21il• W
Otlto St., GelllpoUo. Now &amp; Uaad Eloctrto
Body IIIIIHIIW J20;
lcycle aach, 814.f48-21De.
lu"'""'"·
- . . . • J30; Carpet Cl•nor S41, 114WOfl! baato.h~4~1
I
3158.

5.66ACRES

LAND

Wooded. ·
Surveyed. City

CONTRACT
2.33Acres +

Schools
62ACRES

Wooded
Building Site

Wooded.
Needs to sell to settle

Green Twp.

hunting Grounds
Only $15,000

Reglltei'ICI Dllmatlon pup.
• J210. 304-837·2827.

an estate. Private

BUYER BROKER
Represents only
the Buyer!
Need help finding
dream home.and
negotiating the
terms of sell?
Give our office a
call FOR MORE
DETAILS!

:z.ct-11171.

5~· Sporting Goods
Them_.!CentorHawkon.4e

'Rille, Bolulltul W.lnut
8tdi:lo, Brand Now Condlllonl
S27ll, ~78-:zeot.
~

Antiques

«

Jell. Alvwlne Amlquee,

E. llaln. Straot, on Rt. 124,
roy. Hou"': II.tW. 10:00
Ia,1:00 p.m., Sunctoy 1:00
:00 p.m. 114-1112·2521.
SaWn tool antiquo ot'""lnum

ChMtlmat ,,.., Orlglnll boK,

tuito ond rovotvlng nght, 1200,
114j817·3417.
Wli•luy Ono Horn Or Eototoa.
Dovo'o Antlqun, 338
SoCIOilll A - , Oalllpollo, 114-

44Am,

Mon ·911., 1:30-5,

Frkf,ooy t:SN•.

54[

Mlfli:e(laneoua
' Merchandise

Now 20" IS opaad llountaln

bicycle, J715, rNI hlca, 114-MS.
11310 or IM-14S-111S.
NIW
Hat Wlter HNter, 1100,
45 &amp; " Gallon, 114-:Z.C!I-eltz Attor I P.ll.
Nlnlondo gomo Wlgun I tape.
seo. IJJorlglot coo"!,. $180. au
g~ll. J40.'Wooden "'"" Cablnll
:~- ctooro, S7L 104-115-

Real Estate General

Gi••

"~·"· ...,_.._.,.~.

Canaday

-101-.

Mntantlo whh 2
· H'unt
gun, &amp;2 SgoI}Ducli
C, lllrlo
ather
gomw oold Hpolloly, 114-Mf.

Realty

2313 .

Oak Curved 0 - China
COblnllo Oook Tabloo, I Cholro,
Etc. Alvlr YIII.Y 0.11. Fumttura,
3813 Qoorgeo croot1 Road, Go~
llpollo, OH, 114--4311.
Ouuar floor oolor_'!!,
naado ropolred: 114-Mf.zwo
dayo.
OUNn Silo Croftmotlc Bod, Cell
814-387.o4• Allor 3:30.
RAB Furnbun. Wo bur, olll ond
trada
anllquo,
....,llleld
houioholcl turif!ahlngL Will tow
IRY amount. ~·· 101
Saoond
et .. lllno!iJ _wv. OWnorRockoy Purwon• ..,._Tf3.8341.

446•3636

-

HOME ON .746 Acre lot.. extra features
are 2 baths, ·3 BRa, LR, DA, firsplace. deck in rear, 2
car attaChed garege, heat pump, cent. air. Priced in
60's. Calll9r appointment.

AJIIY IIOUil

• " .... c

Hl\fHl ( lJl AC K 8U RN BRO K ER ~ 45 · 0008
f1UTH C.OODY AS SOC 379 2681

....

NEW FREE
ALL LOCAL
AVAILABLE.
FREE COPY.

'

••lfled

r

D.C.IIIIIIIIH.IIc.
Canne!burQ, fnc:-4!719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed lo rileel your
needa. An~ eize.

crmeE~~I~Affslg~s
Poal Buildings and
Package
Save
Hundreds, even Thousand•
of Dollu1.
Local Salu Reprmnlalive

o,ars.

DONNA CRISENBERY
1 S. St. Rt. 7

.'
IN VINTON

loll Noo. 4..U .... llf.jl Run

mt ·

SALSIROOII FOR LWE
CLOIE TO COURT HOUlE

lEAL ESIATE

�12, 1993

!

Transportat ron
Real Eatata General

71

Real Estate General

.....--·~

lB.

446-7101 or 1-800.585-7101

;:·

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GAWPQUS 45631

.:
M1rthl SmHh ......................37t-2S51 ·7
Cathy Wray......................... 448 _4255 ;:
Cindy Drongowekl .............245-9897 :,
Cheryl Lemley .................... 742-3171 •::

OWNERS WANT A QUICK lALII - Neal· end
cloan 3 bedroom ranch heme, fallllly room, IMng
room, eat-In kitchen, bath, buement. Newer

electric heal pump, sa(ell~e syat8m, nice level
double lot Fronl porch. $28,900.00.
-

113 KINEON DRIVE- LMng room , kHchen, 2-3
bedrooms, balh, family room, utiiHy. Pllllal
fenced-In lawn. 1 car attached garage. . ftle
OWNERS RELOCATED! REDUCED PAICEIII
WANTS SOLD IMMEDIATELYtll - Ideal
locallon. Roomy 3 bedroom ran,ch style home.
Large family room, dining area, kilchen, bath,
laundry. Nice sized level lawn. WHhln seconde of
New 35 by-pa.S. ·
He7

c &gt;w•ner wants it
NOW!! Here ~s a bargain there's
ever been one! Located at the comer of 2nd Avenue &amp; State
Street (Best location in City!). Over 2500 sq. ft. of
remodeled floor space on 1st floor.· Plus great rental
potential on the 2nd floor. Building is in good condition.
Call Dave for an appointment to see it. Don ' t let a great
#209
opportunity pass you by!

VINYL SIDED, 4 BEDROOM HOME - Large livIng room, dining room &amp; kllchen, 1'I• baths. Nice
level lot Partial basemen!, back porch &amp; more.
Priced $30's .
1592
IDEAL FOR THE FIRST HOME BUYEAI Is lhis

RFAL F5 truE K

well decorated 3 bedroom ranch style home .

Living room, kllchan, bath, lull basemen!. Newer
electric heal pump. AHached one carport. Must
see 10 IPPre?atel Jusl minutes from lownl 1103

446ffi44

RANCH &amp; A UTTLE Srr OF LANDI Home con·
sists ol 3 bedrooms, living room, 1'/, betha,
basement, front porch, rear porch, 2.494 acre lol.
Won'l believa this price $36,900.
1594

• ____

R_e_a_I_E_st_at_e_G_e_n_e_ra_I-------------~R~e-a7
1=Est~at~e~Ge~n-era~l--

HENRY E. CLELAND."... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER." ••••• 949·2439
SHERR! HART••••••••••••••742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 •• 992-6191
KATHY CLELANDoMMOoooo 992•6191
OFFICEM.MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMMO992-2259

LOOKING FOR SOME INVESTMENT
PROPERTY? UKE SOME EXTA~ INCOME?
Home wllh 4 bedrooms, IMng room, family room,
kllchen, bath and mora. Plus 2 garage aparfmantsl Looaled al142 Portsmouth Road. Call lor
more details.
1103
NEW ON THE MAAKETI INCOME PRODUCING FARM - Stala-ot:fhe-art veil call
operation. Several modern buildings. Af&gt;pro•imalely 181 acre~. 2 slory, 3,300 sq. II., 2'1•
balh, 3 l)edroQ!n log home. Older doublewlda
home. S'evaral feet · of road frontage. Good

location. Owner will consider selling all or part.
For more inlormallon pleaae call toclayl.
1614
14x70 MOBILE HOME AND LOT - Prloed in
lower $20's. Call for more delallsl Won'l last
longl
-

complele lisllngl

f'!Ckllfl, Sllvorodo,
gOod ...... 2ilolt of ntm.
Chevy

71,000 mil•, blue book vatu.
L L. SmHh, 101
Mon:n.n Clrc:M, 304.a75-3222.

21.000m1. Mooo.
3873, Alp1 wv.

11" Tampo GL, auto, 4dr.,

toadtd, $!800. 1-800-964·3673,

Ripley, WV.

1992 Mazda Protege, loaded,
1799!. 1-800-9&amp;4-36'73, Ripley,

1.1Q0.9f4.

•r.

19!il GEO Trar:kar 4WD, aaume
paymonto. 304-IIH-3201 « -

3151.

Chevrolet Berette, v.s,
AIJlomatlc, l.o1dtd, Blick WHh
Rid Trtm, Sariout lnqulrf•a
Only! $8,800, 114-44a.a&amp;o5.

1111

.

11192 Chevy 4WD, loadod.

304:-

675-5332.
11193 Sllvorodof 5 yr 6,000 milo
warr~~~. Lltet me nrr•niY on
paint. $1!,~· PurchoMd Juno.
304-B75-1H9.
24' Fill Bod Troltor, Thrae A•to.
~~ .~·~~!-7756.

&amp;cy. Ford TK motor 300, $'171.
1985 Buick Llmllod Ed~lon"
good ohopo, $1400. 4 111M 15", •

lawn we!! landscaped . Make an appolnlmenr : •.
lodayl.
llt07 ,

rog &amp; 2 mualonow, SSG. 304-1175-

..

6512.

-

4.2 ACAES - Living room, kijchen and dining ,;

72 Trucks lor Sale

room, bath , central a ir conditioning. 24'x24' ,,,
garage, two barns.
1578 : ~

Job, New lntarkir, New Bed

74

200cc'o

Honda
For FonJ1

Automobll• ·a r.
Tauru1, 61~8-2280 Day.: 114-

256·1257 Ahor 7 P.M.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
liner, 12,700, 614-386-B047, 614tor Sale

1961 314 Ton Dodgo Now Polnl

..

387-0320.

2 PLUS ACRES SITUATED AT f.DGE OF ·,''
GALLIPOUSI Cily ulililies, 2 bedroom home ',:
wilh kitchen , dining, bath, living room FA gas _"
heall
1800 : •

1873 Chevy Plck·Up, 314 Toni
111711 Dodgo BoK Van, Will Sol

1it3 Maradl, 1ij'. open bow,
4.3L engine. looka brand new,
$1~1 54)0, 1-1100 1184-3m, Ripley,

Of Trado, 614-446-3243 Ahor 6 ,W::..:;•·----------P
.M.
I•

..,

WILL CONSIDER

ANY REASONABLE
OFFEAI Come and see lhls ranch home wHh 2
bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen,
belh, one car aHached garage. Newer carpelingl Nloe loti
11583

5636.

1983 Chevy~~ $2,000. Crew
cab Dooley,

114'-

1451,

1965 Ford Club W.gon, Ve,

aulo, tow mlln, auper •harp,

$51&amp;5. 1-800-964-3173, Ripley,

wv.

.. ··

1987 lauzu truck, $1800. 1-800ifHa3673, Alpl•)', WV,

Bud!JOI Pricod Tronomloalono,
UHil &amp; robuln, oil typoo, otlrl•
lng 11 $89; owner 814·245-11177,
&amp;14·379-2135.

New ga1 tanka, one lon truck
whlll8. radlal01'11 floor mate.
ole. D&amp; R Aut.:oJ!IoloY, WV. 304372-31133 or 1

2TJ.'0321.
Truck•Toi&gt;per, I Ft. Long, .Uke

79

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

pkg,

Real Estate General

24ft.,

full

battnhdwer,

Ripley, WV.

·

OFFICE 992·2886
81. ·

...

..... ,

liiJI

Horn~
Improvements
BAsEMENT

WATERPROOF! NO

Uncondhl0111l. .llt.ll~ ' QUII'In. te,~. Lacal· -:w-..ncwtumlshed.

Davit SaWing Machine And
Vacuum ClNner.• R•~. FrH
Pick-Up And Dillvory, Goorgoo
CI'Hk Road, 514-440o02M.

·.

Real Estate General

Ron'a TV S-v!,qe, ,paclallzlng
In Z.nHh tleo" iervlclnQ moM:
other brlndt. HouH CIITe, tt.D

----------------------------·~·

~~ (}{ ()/md(

23 LOCUST ST.
I=~~=J 446·6806

'

nicely.

~· ~~

aiding or tr~Uer skirting. 614·
2454152.

82

1128 SA 141 - CIOM to town 10Ao. MIL
•15,000.00. Call VIrginia 368·68211 .

1

..'

.-.'
!

iu

flreplac~. dining rm., equipped kit.,
aa~ rooms
covered back &amp;, fronl porch, 2 car attached Qlrage'
6 1 ac. mtl. Gtatn 6 City-· DON'T BuY
lNG UNTIL YOU SEE THIS. Vkginla 388-11828. ·

HOMEI Sell
, 4+
acres wilh large barn lype
circular
driveway, TPC W'!IBr. The 1 112
home
tealures 3 bedrooms ,
, front
porch. rear patio. F.O. &amp; wood
. Good
locadon on paved roed. ASAKING $38,600
CXJme see!
.
REDUCEDt1989 Clayton .Sectional home
24 x 40 in vety IJ09d condrlion on a 72 • 72
1o1 This home otrers 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
elicrric heal pumpiC.A., blinds, curtains,
ce~i(lQ fans, tappan appliances, ~dlily ~n:'·
cabinetlpBOO. Closelo,evarylhmgl Th•~ ••
an allordable home definalely worth taking
a took,, all NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY I
AeduceO 1o $28,500 may consider ollerl

.

LONGBOTIOM· 1 lloor lrame homo wilh 1
aqe fearures 3-4 bedrooms , newer B.G.
tumence drilled well. ·wood &amp; storage
ah'ods . Localed on Dewills Run Ad .
REDUCED TO $23,000
COUNTRY SETIING - VERY PRIVATE59+ ,acres with 2 older lrame homes some
ol~er .tiulldlngs. some lenc1ng, pond,
IIBY!Ielcl: wall &amp; cisiBm warer. Homes ara 1n
need ot' some repair bolh currenlly renled.
A$KING $6g,ooo owner wenls lo aall and
wlllccnsider oller11

. REDUCED! OWNER SAY'S 'MAKE AN
OFFER I" Theselolks are moving and wanl
10 sell NOW! This could be an opportun!ly
to ·srop paying renl &amp; own, your home·
Looaled on SA 124 in Audand !his 12 x 65
mobile homo offers 2 room additions, 3

bedrooms, 2 baths. large lrpnt deck/porch,
large yard, garage w/l'(lncrere lloor &amp;
electric NOT BAD FOR THE PRICE! Was
asklrtg ,$18,000-reduciid IO $15,000 May
consider offerl"
.
WANTEDI ... FAMILY TO FILL THE ROOMS
OF THIS HOME! lmmediale possession!
Move In condition! Reduced pncel Localed
on SA 71his 2 siOry home wilh 3 bedrooms.
balh central air. ulllily room. basemen!,
carpOrt, and large Iron! silllng ,porch Is
anxiouse lor a new lam•ly 10 fin Ill room~!
This home has been well malnlelned and 11

lhowsl

Owners have reduced price to

$29,900 come seel Property also includes
appro&lt;. 3 acres.
NICE FARM LAND, GREAT LQCATIONI
On SA 124 near Rulland this farm olin ·
98.119 acrea wilh IWo older homes, some
lhedl &amp; buildings ·2 ,oaplica, Leading Creel!
waW, 2 produCing oil &amp; ga1 wells wl
royalties tree gaalo larger home. $105,000
'

.

MibDLEPOAT- Very comfortable 6 room
t 112 balhl,
Ia~ Iron! porch oenlral air, FANG headng,
decking nice ievei' back yard thai Is
complet.ily fenced, rhis home haa alol ol
clOHt &amp; storage space. ASKING $45,000
n'lake oHerl

RACINE- Jusl off Bald Knob Ret. 1986
Redman aeclional with a f5x35 room
addition. 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, garden tub,
double sink, llreplace, wei balj_ buill In
hutch, newer heal pumpiC.A., t+ acres,
yard, cellar araa, lounda~on lor
fencing on property. ASKING

RACINE - Just on SA 124 on IBihan Rd.
~ a.
wllh • 12xee mobiki heme '"d
older house . . Thla 'property lndudes . 2
oaptics, end TPC walllr. $23,000

ARE GOING UP ALL
IS LOW! FOLKS

rr.me home with 3 bedrooms,

acre.

,

.

SI'I:CIIIL~g~~A~5~~~~~

Thlt home II ol ouperb quolty u tho plumbing hu
been roptlctd. 1111 "'"' wall covering, boaudlul new
carpet through-out, - win-• lnttaUed: SpiCious

kilchan wittt cherry cabinets, Island for Jenn-"lr ,
Rang&amp;. Only a priva!e snowing will dlcide the wlue Ia

here.

..

'"'t4r71
Mobllli InHorn~~
bedrma,
2 baltli~~··E:J:,I:'s~
and lovely c:ablnoll
~tch.3range
&amp; Rtf.,
pump WICA, Aural water, 24' round pool, 7'
,
garage. 1 ac. mil Juor·oll SR 110. Cal Vlrgl~a 368....
88211 Price $35,000.

Miller

.na·

enJoy low" nuons. Four overalztd
Mutir ·
bedroom haa cathedral calling, Whlr1~ Nth lnd
beautiful arched · Filii
2

noor
,.,..._ ,;.'""'
Wilh
!IS~,.
·

M2&amp; 1111 _ , . , -l.E ltOU 1111 lol 3
~2-.-~-~~---14:
....'
...,..__ wll.'"')lto
I IIU-porty. ·• • · 1.
WHITI OAK AD. ioc«lion 30 .C... .m/1.
·
land with Hmbtr. minora! rlghiS ' goOd I1IOd ...!.~
- - ...,128.000.
'
'·
.. _,,...,
1171. ~VI AIIAUTW'U~ COUimlv IITAn
ClrHm , _, (JWrk&gt;oi&lt;Ji!g •
lalce. 73

,;bJ':::l

ac.'::r.:c'nlit~and~~biiOfwo 1 111.1
P - Ule II I pal; %~\t .lake. G~rc~
camp, camping grounds or aubdlvldo. l:qng ,Road

.

1101.
A HOIII
i.~~
bHt lhlnga
In 1111WrrH:.:m;~:~~~f.ii.
It ~~
-.n1110 LA, Nl·ln
wJoMc, roo~ lind
.dootl. MIMihlo rount
~·it
' '

... '

ESTATE~

1i __.~-· 446-3 644

INC.

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555

Loretta McDade • 446· 7729
Patrick Cochran· 446·8655

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007
Garnes· 446·2707

Story home W/&amp;ncJolfd porch, fenced lot, 3 carpotiS, 2 catl 448-:1897.
buildings, omce or sales building, blacktop &amp; cement
driveways, 8tst ~not In VInton. $47,700.
1125. CLOSE IN. 5 acroa mn rolling land.

IU3. PRICE REDUCED, 114.11oo.oo: :i liedroom wllh

formal dining room, living rpom, kllchen, dining area with
::lngly ~willohpoclft area, 1'h batht, lull bastment w~h
raptece, 2 car attached garage. Close
Io townroom
• Clly IChoolt. AMUST TO SEE.

-GREAT HOME Willi
downiOWn area,

2 EXTRA

LOTS, in lhe ·

tutt recently remolded. grealtpace

For a garden and beautiful trees, call Wilma at 24S-

9070

•

"

'

'

..23 PATRIOT· ARQ-, nice ltatier home with 3
bedroom, NEW htal pump with ctntral air new hot

-·Cal

Mokeanljlpl.to
EIM)Ioo titlohm -tew
·
1117. IPACE FOR REAL UVINQ ~ Immaculate 4
l&gt;etlroom tlorno, "'"' corpet, paint, new k"CI!en With oak

cablnetl, .dlthwuhlr, renge 8nd ref., aniChed garage

~;;:::ng. Bea.uUiul ltndacape: Roady 10 move rn:

I!AIITlRIL. HOlE WI1H 8PLENDID
VEW OF THE OHIO FIVER... Horne am
3 llRI, lR, FR. DR. 2 112 bot&gt;o, lull
b
t•lt. cantllir, 2 fi,.Pacn, 3 ganges

ffll . ..W UlnNG - Vt,Y cltian home offering 3

bedrm•., 2 bathe, nlet entry, I.A

rm., 3 car

&amp; lemlly

nRED OF BEIIG CRAMPED FO, ROOM
but you want lei bo cloae to town, 100. This
home is lor you, localod I mi. lrOm new golf
ocurse, 3 BRa, bath, LR, OR, kHchen.

;;_;,

JUBT REDUC£D, I ynr old ranch Of! 1o.5
-mort or lou, I bodroOrn, 2 batho, elate 10 tho
Unlvtraltr of Rio~. Cai1Mimaat24~70.
..

•r

I

I

:?.,- ·.

J. ••l ... ,_

"'· '

l'

'

OWNEA-

ATTENllON FIIST TIME HOME
121 Gaven SIIMI- Nico ~ o11.tw 3 BRa,
LR.
kilchart, FR. bath &amp; laundry alum
lidlng. nice yard.
·-...
•

'

~T,A· LAND CO"TIIACT • Co~ lot in chy 1931
..::.':. ~ ~~R3 .bodrm., 2 ba1ho' w/lull
lnaulalod -..t;
' · ·· nuge LA w/ll(lplac:o now
-·oontralalr, kll. w/dilllwililler, iruh
otr-.y and -.g ~· ~or ollloo rm., lruN I!Oel,
1itl tho )'lrd~~. ltlldon opor &amp;
coun
'

IS BeCWSION WHAT YOU WANT? Oon'l
mlaalhlt pne,, 4 BAo, 2 belhs, oily ocliools,
2 a. m.I,,BIIdng $52,000.

b•••ttiiH
'
.

- l e i . ..

1f11
!R;r;;~-~;;:t:~~lndto 1111Xioual0
loca!lon. Urgo

I ,.. '

' • •

'

.

•• •

}I

....

'

• '

large Qllage.
[\

LOOIONG FOR YOUR OWN PEACE

~lor appoin-t

QUI!T- Thla could bo It, ~8.86 AncftWI Ad., 8 yMr old homo with 3 BRa,
2 112 bdla, LA. DR, FA, heel pump, 2 car
garllg&amp; plus 2~X48 do-od ga.-g&amp;.
Apptox. 43 acrM in hay.

70 ACRES m.l, Soc. 12, Madison Twp.Appra&gt;&lt;. 20 acros lilablo, 50 woodt, old
hold houoa on properly has 3 BAI, LA,
kHchan . Color hcuM and sheds alao on
properly.

PRICE REDUCED TO 162,50011 lloautilul
viaw ol lho river, ltomo offers 3 BAS, LA,
kitchltl, bath, in ground pool, largo 2 car
unattached garaga could be a shop. Cell
todtyl

~Ill ct1lo

.,.,.,., gatdtn ttp01 by river.

~

~

,

=~-~~
2K .boeidafn. rm.,
on ""'""
&amp; Mt-:ln k.lll:tien on 111 DDot 1
caroaraaoptuo 1 ... mil. """"""C!BB~.
·

-

"''

1.75 ACRES , mil, near new 4 lane, 4 BRa,
2 batlla , LR, DR, oent air, 2 car allached
garage. .

-

-·'R-iA"'

'

WISEMAN REAL

lt11. DPPORTUNITY KNDCKS ONCE - 5 bedrm., 2 W/dlnlng """'· IIIII. room. gas lumace, vlnyltKIIflor.

.Q

-

tlectriclen.

RklenCIItr Electrical, WV000306,
304-1175-1786..

· garage. lix:ated on SR 180. TNa can be a gd!xl place to
1111 caro·&amp; worker hor!Ho. 21oti.
,,_.
up, 5.~1 IC. mtl.
·-·-•r your,..,,. can boon.,.10112.
NIW
....-r!NO4
BR,'2
bllhl,
large
flinrry
r0om
Ouaillled lluyeil ony. l/lrvlnlo 311 - ·
. ' ' ,'
With llloploi:o, t-ae IMng.room With gas f t - . dining
~Ito- 3 ac. 1o1m~. I1S,OOO.oo.
roqm, ~hchtn , . utility room . baltment, front porch,
-keanollor.
.
ocrMntd 20.1 o tldt porch, plrlo and I car garage
situated on 1 ICrl mil app. 1 milo lram town. 'Tiis homo
Hn. PAiiiE -LOPIIIIn' LANII- LOnd 1avt Will
II dtalgntd lor IIYing spaca and In heme buslne11. Call
Older 2
home Will! • bedrooms and bulldinoo:
Homo In
lo ..... 117"' mtl. Clll for loclllon.
. lor Pt1Ce and locllion.
car garage Two hill N..,;
Hyou lkti;._.'"""
. --· ~""!.._.

~.

UcenHCI

WE NEED LISTING!!!

1m CLOSE IN. Cltan 3 BR t1orno wllh 5 1«01 mJ1 LR
~.:.~ ~n. 1l&gt;llh, very fl. FA, 1 ...,. garage, 'rr*
....,. ~ lull light lor a l'O'Ing laiii!IY or a coupla

SIBirway, large Rvlng room - woodDijmlng 'ftroptace
lonnal dining """"· oourmer k~chen. llrnlly iUom
game roomo have an open lileplaos, SC!Iariuri!
you

':B."

36 Acras, more or less. Beaulilul rolling
land oft Rt. 160. Perfect lor building one
house or a whole subdivision. Must see to
appreciate. $45,000
11215

11124 BEAUTIFUL TRo\ILER WITH ALL THE
~ANISHINGS, on a rental lot, priced right at
.13,500.00 call tDtley 81245-0070.

gr~ · horne. located ln ·an excluatve .,.., Eleven
total rooms with three bath~m• . Foylr with open

W'

·Income Producing Property on 10 Acres!
Buy lor invaslment and building lot potential.
Close to lown. Small pond. Duplex type unit
'provides good income. $29,900
11222

water IIW1k, 8•1 0 alorage building, nica: 1ev81 lot. .

1171. POINT OP PERFECTION IU~ROUNDS thiJ

'wll"'
tledroOm,.

OUT OF THE AREA OWNER IS
SERIOUS, wants his property SOLD !
24.672 wooded acres, mil, has a 32 x 32
barn w~h loll, eleclric and water lap.
Privacy Is yours when you build your home
among !he trees. $24,000.
#607

Own A Comer of
Avenue
a
Lot!ll For your family or lor lhe investor, lhis
property has unlimrted poss ibil~ies. Main
house offers large eat-in krtchen, living room,
sitting room . 2 bedrooms . 1 bath. basement
offers storaga, laundry, family room and
bedroom. Also attached is a 1,000 sq. II. store
room you can use lor a business or convert to
mora family UYing area. Nice 2 car garage with
a 2 bedroom apartmenl to help pay you
mortgage. Enjoy lhis summer on your private
river lot lishing, boating &amp; cooking out All this
priced at only $100,000. #615 .

1104. DEUCIHTI'UL LrffL.• HOME - Pool, 16'K32'
A FINE COUNTRY HOllE - Enjoy tht
lnground. Greal llocallon, Green Twp. 3 bedrms., 1'1•
Q)mfort olalpaelOU5 3 bedroom ranch home. 1112
baths, cozy tR, equipped kltch, new range &amp; ref.,
bath a one wllh a jacuzzle, 36 x,32 ~ room and a
dllhwMhef, fumace &amp; hot water tank. Brick exterior, 2 car
woodbumlng llreplace. Cherry catiineta in 1M
garage, bldg., &amp; dog run. Much work llB8 gons Into thlo
~tchert 2 car 08"'11"· 1 ac. mil. VIrginia 388-6826.
iovllly home. C811 qulckl
. 1900. NICE 2 BR, 1 BATH HOME with LR, DR,

.

CALL VIRGINIA l. SMITH 446·6608 or !Jee-8826
1531. LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION • A CHOICE
PlACE TO BUILD · 2 lo 5 liftS more or itao dii.O
10 Whlto Rd., to Charo~a Lake Or. ., L~ Ct.
Ollaring 2 lilt ID rolling loll, a vatltl)' ol !roo Wid
beautiful view of the lake. AU amtnltiH available.
Ayral water, underground· electricity; · airatOr
1yatema acceptable. Rettrlcliwt convena~ntl apply.
Cloet ID Holztt and shopping.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Rnlc»nl:lal
ar commercial
wiring, naw ....VIca or riiPIIr&amp;.

'

1111. ,_..lYE BRICK IIANCH ol.luporl! qUality. 4
bednna., 3 batht, comfortable IIYing nn •w_,mlng

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

Freemn'e HNtlng And Cooling.
lnelallatlon And Strvlce. RSES
C.riHied. ~eeideniiJI, Commer·
clal. 814-25&amp;-1&amp;11. ·

.J

INVESTORS Good commercialloca1ion with
river frontage. Three bedroom, 2 bath home
·ciould be rented or edapled 1o your business.
Call for more inlormalion and appointment to
11•- Priced a1 $45,000.
#503

oomo appliance ropalro. WV
304-5711-2398 Ohlei 814-4....2454.
SepCic T111k Pllmplng saoctlolll•
Co. RON EVANSENTERP"ISES,
Jockoon, OH 1-1100-537-11528.
Will build patio covert, decka,
ICrMnad rooma, put up vinyl

J

room.

Lots lor Sale Localed on Jackson Pike and
old Rt. 35, this property is private and
convenient. Prices start at $6,900. Call lor
more inlonmalion.
#223

Services

&lt; ,•

Basemen! hat huoe Family room, wlfireptice,
bedroom, exerciae area laundry room and stOrage

In Town Location Good neighborhood .
Deep lot. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room ,
dining room , eat-in kilchen. Won't lind many
at lhis low price. $34,900
#208

1986 Chov 3500 w/C..,..mon

mlerowava, only 15,800m!.J. a
IIIII II $10,1116. 1-11110-1184...73,

&lt;I;. ~

cuta ana
newer sideing and
oul. 2 bedroom , bath, ulilily room,
handmade cabinets, · allached workshop,
block garaqe w/overhead Slorage, e&lt;tra tO
• 50 mob1le to use as renlal. ASKING
$35,000 may ocnsider oHer1

GENTLEMAN'S FARM Here's a 32..ilcre farm
lha1's perlact lor the wor1&lt; ing man. Remodeled
2·3 bedroom home. nice horse or multipurpose barn, pond and more. Beaut~ul
setting, complelely fenced . Some woods,
mostly pasture. $44,900
#221

Now, $15d, 814-448-3548.

•'"o.

1986 F150 4112,
•!!c~·
1-600.964-387'3, Ripley, wv.

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING I
SUPER : ··.
LOCATION! Building approx. 36'x58', lwo bay ·
garage, parking lot. lmmediale possession ..
1613 • -

RIGGS CREST - This has had lots ol carol
Three bedroom ranch with lull basemen! 50%
finished. Detached 24'x24' garage and base·
ment garage also. A musl seel Asking
$85,000.00.
1579

7&amp;-7217.

1985 Dodge Rem ~rg;~4 WD,

$2,500
OBO,
Anytlm1.

FAAMI Approx. 52 acres and a 3 bedroom .~
home. Living room, kilchen, balh, laundry &amp; ;.
more. Nice location!
, _ ·,.,

Real Estate General

Bedrooms are King tize, carpot o\'lt ha(dwood llooro,
bath hu all now filllllrfl and Love Tub. ·

87 Acres, mil, Vacanl land located in Green
&amp; Springfield Townships, just oil U.S. Rt.
35. Fronrs on lown ship road and old U.S.
35. Waler and gas available . Land lays
moslly rolling with excellent build ing
locations. Has high hill area w~h nice view.
·· City school system . i!est location in·Gahia
County to l-uild and live. Priced at $67,500.

11 InCh
Mol.....

1982 Chovy truck~,.3141on, good
1h1pe, IHtl• rusl, '1800. 304-173-

THIS MAN MEANS BUSINESS! LOWEI'IED · ;
PRICE TO $24,1100.00. What a graal dealll Just . ·
perfect home lor slarting out or wanting somelh- ~'
lng smaler. 2-3 bedrooms, large lot, IMng room, •.:
khchen, bath, partial basemen!. Storage building! .
Home In good repair II MAKE AN OFFERI ::,

HOME &amp; 80 ACRES- Salem living room, dinIng room. kitchen. Bam &amp; misc. other buildings. $40's.
1580

Real Estate General

localld on BulavUie Pike, this 2 story home
offers aftordabilil\1. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living room , eal-in kitchen and full
basement. Deck overlooking nice sized lot.
$39,900
#205

WIIMII,

NEW LISTING! BE THE FIRST TO LIVE HEAEI : :
Brand new home . 2 balhs, living room, ear-ln -.
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 car garage anached . . ~
Bric,k elderlor. Electric heat pump.
,_ · ~

lllbllthH 1175.

hila formal enuy with open llalrway, brmal Uving ~
room with fkeprace, formal dining room , cnerry ·
cabinet• line the wall or lhe exira large kitchen.
Breakfaal room and Powdlf room. ·
Second floor offers four be&lt;lrooma and bath,

SMALL WONDER There's no place like this
home lor lhe money. Vinyl sided on the
outside, lreshly painted on the inside, all you
have to do is move. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living room, large k~chen w~h new floor. Full
unfinished basement with 2nd bath, 1 car
carport on a large lot for only $49,000. Call

MOBILE HOME PLUSI Lots of el&lt;lras, 14 'x70' 3 bedroom mobile home. 2 slory 14'&lt;22' unlin- ~
lshed swelling. Two eldra outbuildings. Over 1 _
acre lawn. $20's.
1501 • ··,

ATTENTION! DEER HUNTEASI Over 119 acres just waiting lor ycu . Lois ol wooded &amp; pas·
lure land. Septic &amp; water on property.
HeI

~.,

Genellll

Income Producing Property on 10 Acres!
Buy lor Investment and building lot
potential. Close to lawn. Small pond .
· Oupler lype un~ p1ovides good income.
' $29,900
11222

Motorcycles

3 WhNitr

Real

Reel EltBle General

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

Call 1-800-257-0578 ,Or 814-2370488 Roatr. Waterpiooflng. E•

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY

you

interfere with what
Intended to do
in the FIRST PLACE.' .

Ripley, WV.

air, basement, attached 2 car garage·, spacious . ~

MEIGS COUNTY

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

Two story home, full basement and garage hu a
groat doal Ill offflf. lleolgned lor giUIIMng. ·Firt1110or

'You should always take the ad.vice gtven by your mother." one very
dever cutie told her friend_ Smiling
she added, "Espec;ially if it doesri~

1993 Mlttublahl Ectlps•, super

HASTE MAKES WASTEI Don'l put all klol&lt;lng at c ..
lhla heme today. Super location, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ranch slylo home, natural gas heaUcentral , ~

1575

UDIIomci: . . .NIIIXNIU'o.cDNID . . llllll:. . . . . . . . . . ~

=

•

sharp, :tn,995. 1-800-964-3613,

Discover The Power Of Nuniber l.nc

PROFESSIOMAL

SCRAM-LETS
UNCORK
FISCAL
EFFECT
MISLAY
NUDISM
REPOSE
FIRST PLACE

wv.

1611 . .

exists with waler and electricity &amp; sewage on
site, lots or nice building sites. Call today lor

1990 Ford Ronaor 4 flllndfr, I
Speod, $4,200; 814-441 7S1.
1990 Ranger X_L!1 VI, olr, ooty

Aoklng $12,000. Call Ul-245-

corn cribs, shed and more . Approximately 102 ~
acres, mora or lesS. Farm k&gt;cated at SRI
~

OVER 31 ACRES (OWNER WILL DIVIDE INTO
LOTSI wllh minules from lawn. Level !railer pad

1190 Buick Riviera, 1 Ownar,
Condllion &amp;14-2459070.
I

9099.

"

WOWI THIS . ONE IS SOOOO NICEI Large
newer brick ranch with full basement 3
bedrooms, living room, 4 balhs, nice kitchen '
dining area. Family room, 2 car aHached garage
and carport. French doors. Appro&lt;. 5 acres and
pond! Nice wooded selling. Come and seel.
1573

M,4H.

Ponllac TrlnSport For

NEW LISTING! FARM I LOTS OF PASTURE &amp; · ;.
TILLABLI! ACREAGE and woodland , 3 , bedroom. Living room, kitchen , bath, enclosed :
back porch . Addijlonal 3 room dwelling, barn , 2 •

WHAT A LOCATION! ea4 DEBBIE DRIVE.
Quality brick ranch:"Larga rooms conslsllng ol3
bedr00!118, 2 belhs, dining area, living room, lull
basemen!. 2 car garage with electric door
opener. Immediate Possession! Level lot approx.
100'x150. $70's.
1504

1188 Taurue Oll.. lOaded, 15500.

Salt. Clun With New f rOflt
TlrH. Owner A Non-Smoker.

L•:

NEW ui'nNGI ·LOOKY HEAEI- 41 Plus acres
and rtmo~IIICI 3 bedroom, 111• bath home.
LMng room, dining room, kHchen &amp; family room.
BaHment. Land low! lo rolling apprOJC. 37 acres
pasture. pond, barn wllh besemenl. $40's. 1512

1.

E•celltnl

Estate Ganlral

ANSWERS TO

11111 For&lt;l
LX loodod
At; PS. PB, tapa autO. $1ereo:
S2aOO, low miiH. 304-875-2444.

1-800.164-3873, •lploy, wv.

nD. Wood, Brokitr..........448 4818

Phyllll Mlller.......................258-1138
J. Merrill Cinter ...........-...... 379-2184
Temmle Dlwltt ...~ ............--. 441·1514
Judy Dlwltt ........................ 441-G282

Rial

wv.

e.c...

R(AllOR

Ru. . .

Trucka '9" sara

72

Autos for Sale

Sunday

Chov
r B1·~., 4 Cvl., s 1tu er..co xL-t va, ioloctod,
5 urvoo
...,500, 61(.44&amp;. M500. 1-..ewm, RtploJ,

t&gt;~ .....

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

wv

OH-Polnt

,.

.i

"

•• • . .. .

1;

l

\

.'

1021 SECOND AVENUE- Vory nloo homo
offers 3 BRo, LR, OR, kilchen whonge,
n~lrig.. wuller &amp; dryer, bolh, gaa heel cant
air, 2 firoplaceo, som. now carpel
uneltachod garoge. Shade lnln. Callodoy.
OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICES... Thars
whal IIIia 3,000 II. building offont. Localod
on SA t 80 noar Holror. Ideal lor many
uNs. Gan for more inlonnalion.

11192 SKYLANE REBEL MOBILE H&amp;iE- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
1072 sq. ft., approx. 2 belha, 18x15 LR, lWP. - 386 acre !arm. 3 ponds. tobacco RACCOON CREEK AIONTAGE ON nilS
17x15 kitchen, equipped, cent. atr. Calllpr :,:;:..:,.~ ~)wilh ocncrele ftoors. M!'Y NICE PIECE OF PROPERTY AND HOME
mora detalll.
•
3 BRs, LR. kitchen, Balh. largo unattached
garage wlconcn~ta ftoo' 4.5 acres mil.

.11.01NG

FOR BALE- Appro!&lt;. &amp;,1100 aq . INVESTMENT PROPERTY- Mill CIMit Ad
ft. locatld on Uncoln Pilot at Cltlllnely. :..::.· ~~itchon, bath, unanached
c.llor detala.

�Pag&amp;-08-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

December 12,1993.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

U. S. citrus producti·on
expected to drop 7 percent

MYSTERY FARM -'Ibis week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Wat!r
Conservation Di$trict, is located somewhere m
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate in the weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop orr your
guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave,, Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the

Ohio Valley •Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
paper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be fea·
lured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Victoria Wilcox receives
oncology certification

.
I•

I
I

I
I

I

GALLIPOLIS · Victoria
Wilcox, R.N., a nurse at Holzer
: Clinic, was recently awarded her
· certification in Oncology.
: The certification process
: required a two-year long course of
· home study and on-tbe·job train. ing, capped by an all day exam. "It
was a long process," said Wilcox,
"but, well worth the effort!'
"The course taught me methods
·and procedures which wiD help me
better serve my Oncology
patients," she said. ''We are proud
of Vicki's accomplishments," said
·Ann Wickline, R.N., Holzer Clinic
Nursing Manager. "She is an out·
standing and compassionate nurse,
who is always qonsiderate of her
patients' circumstan~.·
"This course sharjlened her
skiDs and deepened her msighl into
:the needs of Oncology patients,"
Wicldine said
Wilcox has been a nurse in the
Holzer Clinic Oncology Depart·
ment since 1987. She is a graduate

of the Holzer School of Nursing.
A native of Gallipolis, she is
married
Mike Wilcox. They
have a datlghi!Cf,An1811•ila.

VICTORIA WILCOX

Dr. Strafford named to post
GALLIPOLIS • J. Craig Straf·
ford, M.D., president Holzer Oinic
Inc. Board of Directors and an
. obstetrician/gynecologist ar the
clinic, was recently elected vice
· chairman of the Ohio Section of
The American CoU~e of Obstetri·
cians and GynecologJSts.
The three-year term began in
October L993. Dr. Strafford, a
native of Portsmouth, is a 1968
graduate of Ohio U~iversity an~.
1972 graduate of Oh~o.State Um·
versity School of Medicme.
After completing his internship
and residency at Indiana University
Medical Center, he joined Holzer
Oinic in 1975. Strafford has been
president of the clinic's board of
directors since January 1990. He
also serves as the director of medi·
cal education at Holzer Medical
Center.
Dr. Strafford has served on tbe
boards of Star Bank and the Ameri·
can Group Practice Association,
holds the positions of clinical
Instructor at Ohio State University
College- of ~edicine, a~d is, a
physician adviSOr to the UruvetSlly
of Rio Grande
... College
. of.Nursing.
.

.

opened.''

Continued from D-1
perfonnance. The number of non·
current loans as a percent of total
assets in Ohio remains better than
the nation overall.
" 'Ohio also has a greater number of profitable banks-95 percent
of the state charters were profitable
last year vs. 94 percent nationwide,
he said. The number of top-rated
Stale charter, based on a 1-5 rating
system that regulators apply to
banks, showed a big jump as well,'
Thomas said. The percent receiving
a I rating-the best-increased to 44
percent from 39 percent last year.
"Thomas noted that there are no
ratings of 5, which indicates a bank
in serious trouble, in the state sysDR. J, C. STRAFFORD
tem.
"Of the state· s four regions, the
Dr. Strallora IS marned to Dr. Southeasl ·and Central region,
Becky Strafford, an Ohio Universi- including Columbus, had the highty alumnus, who is medical director est number of !-rated banks, with
at Gallipolis Development Center. 55 percent."
They have three children,
Katherine, Jessica, and Walter.

Like aIQJOd neii!hbor.
State Farm is there.
Sta te Farm Insura nce Compantes
Home Oth ces. Bl ooming to n. llhnots

WE HAVE. THE LARGEST SELECTION OF TELEVISIONS, VCR's AND

75.()().90.00
60.()(). 75.00
55.()().78:00
50.()().61.00
400.00·750.00
330.00-625.00

SQ0.700
Slaughter Bulls
Cows &amp;Calves BH
Bred Cows
Slaughter Cows:
42.00-44.00
Hip Dressing
37 .()().41.00
Ulility
I
Horse and Thck Sale first Thursda of each month· 7:00 .m.

HOLI DA1 VALUES
Low, Low Monthly
Paymants... No Payments

Tll1994

TAPES

PIONEER

SURFACE
MOUNT
SPEAKERS

6995 '

5

.

BOOM

The Racine Village Council
approved the first of three readings
to enact a three-year rate increase
by National Gas and Oil Corp.
Council met recently with
National Gas and Oil Vice Presi·
dent John Dennison, area office
manager Vicki M01tow and south·
east superintendent Bob Crumb
who made a presentation on behalf
of the proposed increase.
They reuorted the requested rate
is $2.47 tfie first year, $2.10 the
second year and $1.99 the third
year.
The three reported that even
with the requested increase the gas
rates wiD be lower than the rates in
effect when National Gas and Oil
acquired the company.
No action was taken foUowing a
proposal 'br Tammy Lyons of the
Davis-Qu1ckel Agency Inc. of
Pomeroy for the viUage to purchase
insurance through the Oh1o Public

. I

... Trust your senses.

1991 Ford Festlva-" ..-'91" ...
2 Dr., auto., AM/FM, gas

save~,

1988 BUICK SKYHAWK ..

clean.

,.

188" ...

2 Dr., 4 cyt .. aUio, air, low miles.
'

1990 CHEV. CAVAUER- '12" ...
2 Dr.. 5 spd .. om .• radio, 4 oyl .. Sharpl

1988 FORD FESTIVA 2." 162".,
2 Dr., 4 speed, air, low miles.

1991 FORD ESCORT-176" ...
2 Or., auto., AMJFM, fire engine red.

1911 DODGE

OMNI-- 163" ...

4 Dr.. auto .. air, loW miles.

1988 CHEV. CAVAUER.." 176" ... .

BEAR CAT

.14SXL

Scanner
/

4 Or., auto., air, AMIFM. clean. Gaa
Saver.

1918 CHEV. 510 PU ••- 1112" ...
1919 CHEV. lERmA ..... '99" ...
2 ~r. , 5 speed, air, low milel, clean.

MOIITH..V PA'tiiENlS BASED UPON

'1,11110.00 DOWN OR EQUAL VAW: IN
TAADE-IN ANIBAINCEFINNICCD
l.BillNO INSTllUTlONS.

FISHER DAC-2403

STUDIO 24

CD MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

• Categaiy/SulKatiJIOfY s..di/Piaybadt with 7 Preset
Categories: Cl•skal, Jan, C&amp;. W, R &amp; R; Rock, Easy
U51llllag 11141 5llow Twts
• 24 r....-amlllllllt Cattgorles/SuiKategories
• 11-Dirtdkilal R..al Tr~msport

• 24·Dlsr llll'llry
• Scralllag 8+8 Dfgll Alph111umerlr Fluoresrent Display
lor lulldlon, Time, Category and SuiKategory Playbadt

·sugg. Retail
5399.95

4 cy1., 5 speed, radio, low miles.

5299.95

Entities Pool.
The fire department requested a
transfer of funds in the fire depart·
ment account so that the monitor
that activates the fli'C siren can be
replaced. The present unit has
stopped .working. The funds were
transferred as were funds· in the
genellll fund and in the refuse lund.·
Council also approved a resolution authorizing pledging not more
than $3,000 as 10 perc'ent matching
on the Round 8 State Issue II application for the storm sewer project
In addition, council approved a
resolution authorizing the filing of
an application for no-interest loan
from the Issue II fund to he used on
the grant for the waterline extension, new water well and water

meters.

In other matters, council:
- Received a report that vehi·
cles are being driven on the walking track at Star Mill Park. Two
persons were recently arrested but
1t was reported that several others
had been seen. Additional barricades are to be installed to prevent

traffic in that area of the park.
- Received a letter from Prose·
cuting Attorney John · Lentes
regarding a recent ruling regarding
the Sunshine Law which requires
public business be done at a public
meeting.
- Put up for bid the 1975
White compactor trnck that is surplus property. The bids are to be
OJI!Iled Jan.IO at 7 p.m. Minimum
b1d was set at $2,500.
- Selected Henry Bentz and
Raben Beegle to serve on the fire.
men's dependency hoard for 1994.
The fire department selects two
members then the four select the
fifth member.
-Recessed until Dec. 20.
Present were council members
Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Scott
Hill and Doug Rees. Also present
were Mayor Jeff Thornton, Clerk
Carolyn Powell, Marshal Don Dye,
Fire Chief John Holman, Street
Commissioner G leon Rizer and
councilmen-elect Dale Hart and
Larry Wolfe.

A Langsville man was cited by the Mi!ldleport Police Depart·
ment on a charge of driving under lhe influence Saturday morning.
S...wn Games, 19, was stopped around 2 a.m. on Hysell Street in
Middleport. He is to appear in the Middleport Mayor's Court
Wednesday e'(ening.

Upper Route 1

EARTH
STATION

.Kanauga, Ohio
•

Officers probe theft

Open Eve~iQ.gs

till P.M~

State panel begins
reviewing distribution
of court imposed fines
how fines have been distributed in
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} Complaints from county and local the ~ast
' We hear from judges, sheriffs
governments about the distribution
of criminal fmes has led to a study and all ltinds of folks in the criminal justice system that we have
by a state panel.
The governments complained divvied up the fmes so much that
that the Legislature has set aside so there is nothing left to support the
much of the money that little is left court system," said Kimberly
Crawford, legislative associate for
for local use.
The Task Force on Criminal the County Commissioners Associ·
Fine Distribution includes repre- ation of Ohio.
The committees are to report in
sentatives of courts, the Legislature, law enforcement and local May to the full task force, which is
governments. The group, which to prepare a repon for the Legislawas created 10 determine how the ture by Jan. I, 1995.
system could be improved, had its
The report will outline the purfirst meeting Tuesday.
pose of noes, evaluate whether fmc
Judge Michael Close of the levels are proper and recommend
Franklin County Court of Appeals, methods 10 simplify distribution,
chainnan of the task force, divided said Rick Dove, associate director
the members in10 four committees. for legal and legislative services
They will study how much money with the Ohio Supreme Coon.
comes in from fines and wluil the
"Even the auditor's office has a
cosiS are for the coons and jails. difficult time trying to keep uack
They wiD also look at how mayors' of all this," Dove said.
courts mesh with the system and

..

Man cited on Dl./1 charge

Ch.. •l
SATELLITE

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

borhoods also were reported to have own a fireann , 53 percent of the stuready access 10 "easy-to-shoot, accu- dents surveyed and 45 percent of the
rate, reliable fireanns" including high- inmates said they could borrow guns

--Local briefs--

•'

Muter

1 Section, 10 Pa1101 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 13, 1993

Racine Village Council OKs first
reading of gas rate increase

~F.I~H~J!

PANASONIC

Vol. 44, NO. 161

Muldmodlalnc.

from drug ftealers .
ers.
drugs or worked for drug dealers.
"Controls imposed at the pomt of
But sociologists Joseph F. Shesale likely would be ineffective, at ley and James D. Wrigh·t, the repon's
The four Sllltcs were picked
least by themselves, in preventing the authors, voiced skepticism that new because 1hey reponed having probacquisition of guns by Juveniles stud- gun-control laws would keep fire- lems of youth v1olencc in mner-city
ied here because they rarely obtain arms away from criminals or youth. sthools. Thus, the results were not
"Controls imposed at the point of sale
their guns through such customary
"Mos1 of the methods of obtain- representative of the nation · s high
likely would , be ineffective
at least
by
•
'
• . •
outlets," sa1d the study commissioned ing guns reponed by the JUVcntlcs are sc hool populat•on. No ctues, sc hools
tht~ms,lves, m preventmg the acqUISitiOn
by the Justice Department.
already against the law... the report or corrccuonal fac ilities were ide nti 4
Therepart
did
nol
dircc1ly
comsaid
fted. ·
~'tr&amp;!~~':~~::s !:=, -·~··of"ggfls'·qy:-JP~Itlt§s tftiflf~:tr·nere --bement on the new five-day waiting
aocordlng to the study by two Tulane
Cause they rarely Obtain the/l'gUnS through
period for handgun purchases that
The s1udy found a high correlaThe study was commissioned
University sociologists.
SUCh CUStomary OUtletS. "
Pres1demClmton rccemly signed mto tion between gun possession and during the Bush administrauon by
law. Nor did it refer specifically to mvolvement in illegal drug trafflck· the Justice Department \ National
. In ' addition, 83 percent of 835
....... Justice Department study
Juveniles
m
the
same
age
group
who
·
were incarcerated for serious crimes _ _ _ _ _...;......;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ other gun-control proposals. such as ing with 72 percent of the Juvenile Institute of Justicc and the Offi ce of
one named last week by the Clinton inmates and I B percent of 1hc stu· Juvenile Jus1ice and De linquency
at. six detention centers said they powered revolvers and automatic and from family members. And S4 per- administration to license gun own- dents reported ei1her ~avmg dcall Prevention .
owned guns at the time of their arrest. semiautomatic handguns. the report cent of the inmalesand 37 percent of
. Guns were easily available to said.
the students said they could get guns
students and inmates, either at home
Six percent of hil(h school stu· on the street if they wanted one. ac·
or "on the street," said the study re- dents said they had possyssed a mili- cording 10 the study.
leased Sunday. It was based on re- tary·stylc assault weapo~, at the time
Beside family members. drug
sponses from schools and detention of the survey. Among the'mmmes, 35 dealers were seen as a major source of
. centers in California, New Jersey.ll- percent reported having assault weap· a firearm, lhestudysaid. Twenty -two
linois and Louisiana.
ons when they were arrested.
percent of the students and 36 percent
Youths in the inner-city neighEven if young people did not of mmates said they could gel guns

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WASHiNGTON (AP)- Guns
are so easy for young people to obtain
in crime-ridden urban neighborhoods
that new laws controlling their sale
probably would not reduce their
availability, a Justice Department
study concludes.
Twenty-twopercentof758 boys
at!O inner-city high schools reported

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... Trust ;vour senses.

Low lonight In mid 30s.

'l'l ostly cloud y. Tuesday, high ln
40&lt;.

New laws unlikely to curb availability of guns, study says

3PACK

FISHER - 9335

PageS

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) dard, the newspaper said.
Bridges in Ohio and around the
More than 4,200 of Ohio's
nation are deteriorating faster than 30,000 bridges are deficient, and
they can be fixed because of 4,600 are obsolete. The 8.800 defidecades of neglect, the Dayton cient or obsolete bridges put Ohio
Daily News reported.
. sixth in the nation for the most bad
One in every three bridges in the bridges, the newspaper said.
country is structurally defiCient and
One of the worst bridges in the
cannot support standard loads, or is slllle is lhe West Fifth Street brid$e
too narrow or otherwise "function- over the Great Miami River m
ally obsolete," the newspaper said downtown Dayton, the Daily News
The Daily News spent four reported. The concrete that forms
months investigating bridge safety iiS arch strncture is crumbling.
using documents from the U.S .
The deterioration of bridges did
Department of 'I'ransJ)ortation. The not happen oventi~ht
newspaper reported the results in a
For decades, vtrtually the only
three-part senes that began Sunday new bridges built in OhJO were on
and continued today.
new hi$hways, said Jim Barnhart, ·
About 195,000 of the country's supervtsor of the state's bridge
585,000 bridges are considered maintenance and inspection pro·
deficient or obsolete, according to gram. When the highway money
the newspaper's analysis of the began to dry up, so did lhe money
National Bridge lnvenlllry, a com· to build bridges.
puter summary of inspections on
1n 1981, the Ohio Department of
BREAKFAST
SANTA...., roanJIIIle!s bad the opportunity
all bridges that are at least 20 feet Transportation built only 69 Saturday morolna to ba¥e briakfast witb Santa Claus at the Meigs
long.
bridges, although thousands Qf County Museum In Pomeroy. Sarah Triplett, ·10, and James A.
In Ohio, 46 million cars cross bridges in the state needed rehabili· Werry, 6, both or RaveDSWood, W.Va., todk advantage of tbe oppor·
bridges that are judg.ed substan·
tuuity to tnlk to Santa Claus, Curly Wiles or Pomeroy.
Continued on Pige 3

342s..llvt.

INSURANCE

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Newspaper says Ohio
.bridges are neglected

SNOWDEN

STATE FARM

4-1-4-7
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CAIDU

are on permanent display in the
ARS National Visitor Center at
Beltsville.
ARS scientists inducted into the
Hall of Fame must either be retired
or eligible to retire and be recog·
nized for excellence by national
and international colleagues in the
scientific community.
Gorham, who is eligible for
retirement, led a research team in
1962 that developed a diagnostic
test for bluetongue, a viral llisease
that has cost U.S. ranchers minions
of dollars in lost export sales.
Gorham and a !~fBduate student
in 1973 fli'Sl descnbed a new slow
viral disease, caprine arthritis and
encephalitis.

6-9-4
Pick 4:

WID

Soil scientist, animal
researchers join hall of fame
WASHINGTON (AP)- A soil
scientist and two animal
researchers are the newest members of the Science Hall of Fame of
the Agriculture Department's Agri·
cultural Research Service.
Those honored are John R.
Gorham, a veterinarian who heads
the Animal Diseases Research Unit
at PuUman, Wash.; lhe late Sterling
B. Hendricks, a soil scientist who
worked at the Beltsville, Md., Agricultural Research Center; and Clair
E. Terrill, an animal geneticist who
did sheep research at Dubois,
Idaho, and then came to Beltsville
to manage animal research at the
center and later agencywide.
"These scientists have been
selected because of their records of
achievement in advancing scientif·
ic knowledge 10 the benefit of agri·
culture," said R. Dean Plowman,
acting assistant secretary of agriculture for science and education.
Agency plaques citing the three
researchers' accomplishments will
join the 27 others awarded to scientists since 1986 when the Hall of
Fame was established. The plaques

Pick 3:

•

cent from the August projection,
the report said. While the Washing·
ton state crop is forecast the same
as last year, in many states the har•
vest has fallen short of expectations.
Exports of apples, grapes anc!
pears dropped in 1992-93, but foreign markets still accounted for 10
percent to 25 percent of the fresh·
market sales.
" The downturn can be reversed
by continued market develop"
ment," the report said . "The
prospect for selling U.S. apples 111,
Japan has improved and the market
for U.S. table grapes in Mexico has

Gallipolis...

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mlnerlll Wells, WV
December 4, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
85.00.102.00
300-under
75.()().88.00
300.500
62.()().84.00
SQ0.700
52.oo:68.00
800-over
STOCK HEIFERS:
65.()().82.00
300-under
60.()().78.00
300-SOO
57.()().68.00
S&lt;J0.700
50.()().64.00
800-over

STOCK BUllS:
300-under
300-SOO

oranges probably will increase
from last year' s lows, the report
said.
"The 1993-94 Florida grapefruit
crop will be smaller than last year's
record, but high sugar content is
expected to result in good-eating
fruit," it said.
· Grower prices for grapefruit are
expected to be higher than hisl
year, when a bumper crop and
weak export demand resulted in
low prices.
Declines in U.S. production of
apples, Bartlett pears and grapes in
1993 supported some grower
prices.
The October forecast for the
U.S. apple crop was lowered 3pcr.

WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
citrus production is expected to
drop 7 percent in the 1993-94 crop
year from the previous year's near·
record output, the Agriculture
Department says.
Oranges are forecast to drop 7
percent, grapefruit 9 percent and
lemons I percent.
"Primarily because of a smaUer
Florida orange crop and slightly
lower juice yields, U.S. orange
juice production is expected to total
1.1 billion gallons, down 10 percent from the record set last year,"
said a situation and outlook summary prepared by USDA •s Economic Research Service.
Because higher beginning
stocks will partially offset lower
production, the U.S. orange juice
supply is expected 10 be down only
3 percent from 1992-93, it said.
Grower prices for processed

Ohio Lottery

Rio
teams

•

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

Officers of lhe MiddlepOrt l'olice Department are investigating
the reDCWd theft of a nativity iiCene item from a Middleport church.
A black sheep wq 1eportedly 110Ien froin1he display in front of
the Presbyterian church on North Fourth Avenue. The theft was
reported Sunday.

THE ANGEL TREE ·Tiie Meigs County
Department of Humaa Services is sponsoring
tbe third annual Angel Tree project in which
area businesses, oreanlzatlons and volunteers
from the commuully help provide needy chil·

dren and the elderly In the community wltb
Christmas gills. From left to right, Mary Hobstetter, Rita Ball, Barbara Chapman, Debbie
Ellis, and Jane Banks are shown putting the fin·
ishlng touches on the Angel Tree.

Angel Tree to brighten Christmas for some
By LEIGH ANN REDOVIAN

Sentinel News Starr
Christmas will lie a little
brighter for needy children and the
elderly in the community again this
year through the efforts of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services and its Angel Tree

proffe

project depends on local
businesses, service organizations,
churches, Sororities and volunteers
to provide Christmas gifts for more
than 500 children and more than SO
elderly in Meigs County.
'"!'he project embraces the lrne
spirit and meaning of the season,"
said Michael Swisher, Director of
the Meigs County DepL of Human
services. "It is a. very wonhwhile
project for the community to
become involved in."
Aocording to Swisher, the pro·

ject was insPired by area coal miners who carried out similar pro·
grams in the past.
Willing businesses and organizations are given a brief description
of a needy child or elderly restdent
and are asked to purchase a gift for
their "angel." The deadline for
gifts for those interested in spon·
soring an angel is Thursday, Dec.
15.
The gifts are brought to lhe
Dept. of Hu n Services for
employees
I
liver them.
Delivery be ·
.2 .
"Being involved in ,t project
gives yon the feeling that Christ·
mas is more about giving and helping others, than receiving gifts
yourself," said Barbara Chapman,
supervisor of the jobs unit for the
department.
Although sponsorship has

grown this year. the department
said that it is difficult to reach all of
those in need. According to Swish-·
er, the department will be concentrating more on serving the needs
of the elderly this year.
Veterans Memorial Hospital has
been a sponsor of the project for
the past two years and this year
sponsorship there has jumped from
assisting 12 to 24 children and
elderly. The project started when
several employees decided to sponsor the project in place of their annual gift exchange.
"This is a wonderful Opportunity
to let the needy in lhe community
know thai there are people who can
help them," said Sue Stone,,toordinalor of the project at Veterans.
"Our first responsibility is to the
sick, but we also help in any other
way we can."
·

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