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14-The Dally Sentinel

•

•

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· ADVERnSED ITEM POLICY-Each Of these advertised ttems Is reaulred to be readily
• • - for sale In each Kroger Store, ex&lt;ept as Slle&lt;lflcally noted In th~ ad. If we
do run out Of an advertiSed Item, we wiNoHer YOU vour choice oF a comparable
~em. when available refle&lt;tlng the same savklgs or a ratnched&lt; whl&lt;h will entitle
you to purChaSe the advertised Item at the adverttse&lt;J price within 30 days. Only
one vendOr COUPOn will be accepted per Item purchased.

Ohio Lottery

IAA AllAmericans
named

Wednesday, December 15, 1993

COPYRIGHT 1993 . THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, DEC. 12

THROUGH SATUROAY, OEC. 18. 199l1N POMEROY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT OUANT!TIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

Pick 3:
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Pick 4:

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Super Lotto:
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Kicker:
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Page6

Low tonll[htln low 30s.
Frlcl•y, high In •pper

Cloudy.
40s.

•

-a t
••

fl

Vol. 44, NO. 164
· ;MuiUmldlolnc.

Aspin's

MANUFACTU ERS'

resignat~:on

WASHINGTON (AP) - Adminislnttion officials say President
CliniOn bas settled on retired Adm.
Bobby Inman 10 replace Defense
Secretary Les Aspin, whose bombsheD resignation ended a turbulent
year of budget baules, regional con.flicts and coouoversy over gays in !he
military.
_
The announcement of Inman, a
former deputy direciOr of the CIA and
ex-director of the National Security
Agency, could come as early as today, said two White House officials,
speaking late Wednesday on condition !hey not be olherwise identified.
·
In an announcement that seemed
. to catch all of Washing10n by sur. prise, Aspin said Wednesday, "It's
time forme to take a break." Standing
. .with Aspin in the Oval Office, Clin-

opens speculation on likely successor

ton accepled "wid! real sadness" !he
former Wisconsin congressman's
requestiO leave Jan. 20.
. . Aspin is the first to leave !he
CliniOn Cabinet, and his one-year
tenure will mark !he shortest for a defense secrerary in two decades. Just
last Sunday he told a TV interviewer,
"I don't !hink there's any problem"
!hat would cut shon his tenure as
Pentagon chief.
.
But White House spokesman
Mark Gearan said !he resignation had
been discussed for several weeks.
Clinron made no mention of a
possible replacement, although one
aide said one was expected soon.
Inman, 62, emerged immedi~tely
as Aspin's likely successor. The former Navy admiral most recently was
president and chief executive officer

of Microelectronics and Computer
Technology Corp.
Calls 10 his place of business in
Austin, Texas,
were not anlate
swered
Wednesday .
Other s
mentioned on
CapiiOl Hill and
elsewhere to
succeed Aspin
included CIA
Director
R.
James Woolsey ,
Sen. Sam Nunn.
INMAN
D-Ga., Deputy Defense Secretary
WiUiam Perry and Norman Augustine, head or the giant defense
contraciOr, Martin Marietta Corp.
Aspin, 55 , who had a heanpace-

maker implanled last winter after
being hospitalized with breathing difficulties , cited personal reasons for
his decision 10
quit. He dilf not
elaborate.
One Aspin aide, speaking on condition
of anonymity,
said that he had
asked the secrerary whether he
resigned because
of his health, the
AS PIN
controversy over
U.S. deaths in Somalia or Penragon
budget disagreements and that Aspin
replied, " It's all those things."
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said it
was "absolutely crucial" that a suc·

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1994
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·

....................................•....•..•................•................................ ; ....••.••..•..•.•....................................•..•.......•...................................

A New Washer. &amp; Dryer to,.
.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Newt1 Starr
The 1994 Meigs County Litter
Control's $78,000 budget mostly
wiU be spent on recycling, !he program's manager Kenny Wiggins
said Wednesday.
Recently, the state gave the
county a $$4,000 Recycling &amp; Litter Prevention grant. The I 994
grant is $1,500 less !han !he 1993
sum, but !he county office will still
provide the same services. Wiggins
said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- because of inflation. A 1976 law
The drafters of a. plan-to levy a placed !he ceiling at 10 mills.
temporary, st:atewtde propeny tax · Joh1110n said making lhe income
· to enhance and stabilize Ohio's tax available for schools would
school funding program admit Iiley generate another $500 million to
face a big task m trying 10 sell it to $700' million.
. !he Legislature.
He acknowledged that would
The Alliance for Adequate create funlllng ·gaps for olher state
School Funding announced its pro- programs. · .
posal Wednesday.
When the mcome tax was enactThe announcement came as a ed !11''19?2;. ~~c~eds w~~.\1
,j\Mt~~&lt;vu ~Wiiltrig--S.IawSilit'tllcikPRllllbl*no-ed · · " ~~lifaiilit "!
tn •Petry Cdiiitr:y Ill IriVlllidltC'I.he thai m~y went fCl(· P,«Jti"~
current state subsidy program. That es.
• ·· • ·
· ·
lawsuit was filed by acOalition of
"I doq'! think we owe ail ~lofiveo!!hestate'spoorerdistricts.
g&gt;: for aslung for 60 percent, he
The alliance plan also would satd.
allow local property taxes to
The jropOSlll establishes $3,662
increase in line wid! inflation, now
plus
a cost-of-living factor as the
generally prohibited, and mlll&lt;e as
mini11_1um
subsidy for eyery pupil
much as 60 percent of the state
m
Ob10.
The
·figure now ts $2,871.
income tax available for schools.
The Perry County lawsuit
·If enacted, the package would
raise $1 billion-$1.2 billion a year. claims the current .system fails to
Neal Johnson, Brecksville- meet a constitutional requirement
Broadview schools superintendent for !he state to provide· a thorough
and alliance chairman, said the and efficient education Ill every
package will be hard 10 sen 10 !he swdent.
governor and Legislature, which is
Ar~uments in the case ended
not in session, because raising early tn December after a month a
testimony. Pe!l'¥ County Common
taXes isunpopular.
. "We realtze they would have 10 Pleas Judge Lmton Lewis Jr. is
malce difficult choices. But some of expected 10 rule early next year.
· mese ideas are new," Johnson said.
James Beus. !he aJiiallce's legal
The group proposed a five-year counsel, said he expects the court
property tax that would bring in 1.&lt;1 agree wilh the lllliance that !he
about $500 million a year. Pro- system is "unconstitutionally
ceeds would pay for replacing and underfunded."
repairing buildings, mostly in poorTed Sanders, state school super·
er districts.
intendent and a defendant in !he
The plan also increases to 28.5 Perry County case, was out of town
mills in !he amount of local proper- Wednesday and not available for
ty taxes that could be adjusted collllilent, his offtee said.
••

,.. 'I 'JI1~.....,.flisfl!"'l)'i

...REMEMBERING LOVED ONES - Again this year the
Meigs County Branch or lbe American Heart Association bas a
memorial tree on the Meigs County Courthouse steps. Bows in
red and green velvet with the names or deceased--loved ones
inscribed In gold adorn lbe tree. Residents making a $5 memorial contribution may have a ribbon placed on the tree and aher
Christmas receive lbe ribboo as a remembrance. Handling the
cootrlbulions are Sandy Laonerelli, Kathy Rutchi, and Nora
Rice. (Photo by Charlene Hoemcb) ·-

were no buseS to Lucasville, making it difficult for friends and relatives Ill visit prisoners, he said.
Guard Robert Vallandingham
and nine inmates died during the
siege in April at the P.rison near
Lucasville, about 60 mtles soulh of
Columbus. A grand jury in Scioto
County began meeting last week.
Vallandingham's family has
said statements by Tessa Unwin, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, were irresponsible and led to
the guard's death. The state has
denied !he claim.

advice of every expert"
"They put the prison down
there, not because it was ·torrectionlllly sound but because it was
an economic benefit 10 a county
!hat was dying on its feet," Dinitz
said in a speech at the Leo
Yassenoff Jewish Community Center in suburban Bexley.
The population of Scioto County was - and is - mostly rural
whites, but more than half of !he
prisoners are urban blacks. They
two groups speak differently, eat
different foods and dress differently, he said.
When the prison opened, there

Ms. Unwin !Old reporters that a
death t!u'eat against guards held by
inmates was a standard warning
and part of negotiations_
Dayton Detectives Dave
Michael and Frank Navarre on Friday told the Lucasville Media Task
Force !hat an autopsy showed Vallandingham died before the comments were made. The detectives
were advisers to state negotiators
during the siege.
Vallandingham's mother,
Wanda, said an autopsy showed her
son died April 15, !he day after Ms.
Unwin discussed the threats.

UMW'President Richard Trum- but he was ready to go WednCsday
ka said about 95 percent of the night.
"I got my clothes all gathered
miners would be back on the job
.
up
last night while I listened 10 the
today.
election
results," he said. "I even
The union won its key demand,
got
my
(lunch) bucket packed
a guaranteed share of any future
IOnight
so
I'll be ready to get up in
jobs when current mines are played
out in the next few years. The the morning and go back to work."
The miners received weekly
UMW had accused the coal compabenefits
of $200 during !he strike,
nies of robbing union miners of
jobs by creating nonunion sub- which was marked by !he slaying
mas. ' '
.. ·
.
· sidiaries.
of a nonunion employee who
On Tuesday, the United Mine
Wilbur England, 47, was among crossed a picket line.
Tennant said it will be hard 10
Wodcers union ratified a .flvc-ye&amp;f about 40 union miners on !he fust
contract ~th COI1IJ!IIIIielllclonsitil shift today at a Consol Inc. prepa- for~ct the past seven monlhs.
'The bosses did our Jobs while
10 the Bt•lnoui.Cfoel Openiluj· ration plant. 'It feels good," he
Association. That ended a 1ti'lli:e . said as he beaded in for the mid- we were out here standing on the
. !hat had lefll!P !D 17JO() m~ nlght-to-8 a.m. shift. "Coal min- picket line," he said, looking at the
picket shack still standing at the
tdle In Wtst Virainllt'~ Jodi• ing's in our blood."
ana, ~n~, Oltlo,' PenriaylV811a ·
t.fike Dezzutti, 36, wasn't sup- plant entrance.
COntinued on Page 3
and ~ll'gtiUII SlllCe May 10.. ,
posed· tO repott until !he day shift,
GRANVILLE., W.Va. (AP)Coal miners weary of picketing and
· paltry strike benefit checks
retiJrned to their jobs today in
seven Slltea, eager Ill work after a
billa'; seven-month :walkouL
,
"It's been hard, light," said 39YCI!f-old Bob ll'ennant, '.' It makes
me ·feel good ~- J'm goinjl bac,It
10 work and·maybO I can pvc die
family a liUlc something for Chrisl-

. Celebrate. the..
Gift.Certiflcates. rro•n

I

.o.n---

UNTIL
£BRIS'DIAS

The county 'lllas actulllly fortu- ways speak well about !he people
nate because 24 county programs that live there . We're in a
in Ohio were not funded, he added. depressed area but Meigs County
"We don't know each year if has a lot 10 offer."
In lhe new year, Wiggins said
we'll get (funded). It's competitive," Wiggins said.
he would like to see county resiThe county litter office wiU also dents:
get $12,000 from !he Meigs County
- reduce the amount of packagCommissioners, with another ing bought;
$8,000 from state recycling grants,
- buy more recycled products
which will be matched with $4,000 - because of an increase in Ohio
locaUy .
jobs;
The annual money is spent on:
- choose paper over plastic
bags when shopping: and
-administration:
- picking up trash along the
- trade in tires instead of
highway and other public property:
rolling them off a side road.
- teaching in local schools; and
County residents may continue
- enforcing !he state's dump- to get their garbage recycled
ing laws.
through the county's two recyclers,
During 1993, the litter c.ontrol Tri-County Recycling and Mandeparunent picked up 6,000 bags or ley's Recycle Center, Wiggins said.
trash, cleaned up 40 illegal dump
Also, !he county litter control
sites and expanded the number of office maintains a 24-hour drop
community groups who adopt !he box for recyclables and will collect
county's highways from five to rec yclables each two months in
nine, Wiggins said.
either Middleport, Pomeroy or the
Volunteer help - such as 338 Meigs Local High School, he said.

- - Local briefs----.
4-year-old boy hit by car
A 4-year-old Pomeroy boy was struck by a car driven by a
Racine woman on a Welch Town Road driveway at 12:48 p.m.
Wednesday, according to Pomeroy police department records.
Theresa L. Cook. 25, Horse Cave Road. told police she did not
hear anyochildten when backing out of !he driveway and stopped the
car when she heard a bump and a child's cry, police records stated.
The child, Travis Klein, Welch Town HiU, was taken 10 Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he remains in fair condition, a hospital
spokesman said.
Klein had a cut on his forehead and scratches on his left arm and
no citations had been made at press time, according to police
records.

Man starts sentence on sex charges
A 50-year-old Pomeroy man was transported to the Orient
Reception Center Wednesday to begin serving two 18-month sentences for gross sexual imposition.
Ronald Davis was transported 10 !he facility by deputies of the
Meigs County Shcrifrs Department.
Davis was arrested OcL 14 and originally charged with !he rape
of a 19-year-old woman. He pleaded guilty to the lesser two charges
on Dec. 8 in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court of Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill. Gross sexual 4mposition is a felony of the fourth
degree .
The two sentences are to be served consecutively. Davis received
credit for 56 days served in the Meigs County Jail.

Deputies probe accidents .
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated
two accidents Wednesday, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The fust accident happened at 5:25 p.m. on Pomeroy Pilce. Glenda K. Hunt, Long Bouom, was soulhbound in her 1989 Toyota and
slid off !he wet pavement in a curve before striking a sign posL
Damage to !he right-front of her vehicle was listed as moderate.
• The second accident occUI'IIld at 6:05 p.m. on State Route 124
approximately 350 feet west of Bradbury Road. Shirley M. Wilson,
Rutland, was eastbound in her 1990 Chevrolet pickup and struck
and killed a deer that ran intO !he roadway. Modente damage was
COntinued on Page 4

'
. \

iflYiles

he said. "Your high-

:Task force head says Lucasville bad prison site
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The head of a state task force that
investigated !he deadlf riot at the
Southern Ohio COJrectionlll Facilily said the prison should never
have been built in !hat pan of the
State.
· Meanwhile, the mother of a
guard killed during !he April riot
4isputed a report about ·the timing
of his death.
Simon Dinitz, a criminologist
who headed the Governor's Select
Committee on Corrections, said
Wednesday nigh 1 that the prison
was built in LucasviUe ''against the

people involved wltli the Ohio
River sweep - made this last
year's successes possible, Wiggins
said.
"It tells me people are concerned about the future of their
kids," he said. "Together we can
make a world of difference."
The largest change in attitude
about recycling has been in youlh,
Wiggins added.
Out-of-county visitors have
complimented Wiggins on the
cleanliness of the county's high-

ways, he said.
~5~!!~r~~j~wr~ 'te • more
traSh,"

Miners return after seven-month strike

.

cessor he named soon in order that the of a request rrom military commandPentagon not be in limbo while the ers in Somalia 10send more armorto
administration struggled wilh tough protect U.S. peacekeeping forces .
national security issues such as Nonh
Shortly after !hat decision, t8
Korea's nuclear program, !he war in Army soldiers were killed in a clash
Bosnia and !he 1mpendingwilhdrawal with Somali gunmen, and Aspin
or U.S. troops from Somalia.
acknowledged he had erred in nm
The job of defense secrelary IS sending the extra armor.
even more complicated now by quesIt appeared that one of !he bigtions of participating in !he growing gest issues dividing the Pentagoo
number or U.N. peacekeeping mis- and tlie White House centered on a
sions in forbidding places such as S50 billion. five-year gap in projecSomalia and Bosnia, reducing defense tions of the Defense Deparunent's
spending while trying to keep the long-term budget needs.
forces read y for combat and social
As pin m recent weeks had difissues such as women in combat and fered w1th budget director Leon Pangays in the military.
ctl8 over the problem , which arose
Aspin had heen criticized for " bcl:ausc of overly optimistic estitendency to ruminate too much and matesof the rate of inflatioo and the
act too slowly. Perhaps the most pay rdi SC Congress has ordered for
damaging incident was his rejection the military.

.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
ANY SIZE PACKAGE

-

2 Soctiono, 12 P - 35 cenlo
AMul11ml&lt;lalnc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 16, 1993

•

•

•

�••

•

•

°Commentary

.

.

. ,

'

DEVOTED TO THE JNTEIIEIITI!I OF Tim IIEJG8-IIAI!ON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
~ARGARET LEHEW

Controller

General~anager

·,

.
..~ .
If I have a problem, I don't like
to just sit &amp;~dund saying, "Oh,
yipes, I have a prciblem." If I catl't
figure out what to do by myself, I
go to someone I think will be able
to help me figure it out. I have
sought treatment from mental
health professionals. And when
asked for advice by friends, I have,
on occasion, suggesred they seek
the help of a therapist
I'd like to be able to tell you
what! gained in therapy, but I honesdy can't In fact, I'm pretty puzzled about what was gomg on in a
few·instances, although the nature
of the treatment may make that
necessary. I do believe I le81Ded
something helpful, but I also
believe I received'as much helpful
information by reading books by
insightful professionals.
Sound confusinjt7 Well, it
should. Psychology IS an inexact
'

'.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less !ban 300
words. All letters .,. subject 10 editing and must be signed wilb name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. !.etten
sbould be In good taste, lld&lt;IRs&gt;ing issues, not personalities.

: News of 1993:
· President Clinton
.was the big star.

)

.
.
science at best. I was somewhat
sW1lrised to fUid that the treatment
rechniques of two therapiSts I saw
were diametrically OPPOsed; and

Sarah Overstreet

.

Clinton claimed a mandare for change, despire having won just
• 43 pen:ent of the vore in a three-way race. Independent Ross Perot
had collected 18.9 percent, which tipped the scale against George
Bush, the Republican president who was forced to retire.
,:
Joining her husband's effon to echo the Kennedy era and bring
new vigor to Washington, Hillary Rodham Clinton expanded the
traditional duties of fustlady. She began a federal campaign for
health-C81C reform, which is to become part of the Democratic ceonomic recovery program.
In the 103rd Congress, Democrats retained their 57-43 edge in
. the Senale, with Robert Dole of Kansaa once again directing the
Republican minority. The GOP gluned 10 seats in the House, but it
_. waa still outnumbered, 258-176 (with one independent). The 110
new members of the House were the most since 1948; it also convened with record numbers of women (47) and blacks (38).
.· Despire changes in the federal government, the economy contin.: ued to lag during the year. The U.S. gross domestic output grew by
· just l3 ~~in the fust six months of 1993.
:
Then the GOP edged up 2.8 percent in the third quarter - to an
: annual rate of $6.396 trillion. It was the lOth consecutive qu8ller of
• growth since e8lly 1991, when the larest economic recession offi: cially ended.
'
Even so, more than 8 million Americans still can't find jobs.
: ~y others are hannred by the epidemic of job layoffs and corpo~ rate restruciUring. But the rate of unemployment fell from more
· than 7 percent in Jan~ to below 6.5 percent in November.
:: By December, with mterest rates at their lowest in two decades,
: leading economic indicators hinted .at brighrer things to come. lnfl.a·
• tion was at a 20-year low of 2.8 perccn~ On Wall S~l, the Dow
: Jones industri.al average $CI a'series of highS above the 3,700 level.

.Letters to the editor
"

'Proper conduct' praised

.~

,

•

FridaY, Dec. 17

,

Accu-Weathe~

And start- that 52 million U.S. adults - 52
ing ar the year 2001. the visits per million! -have a diagnosable
yw would be unlimited for anyone , mental iUness (including substance
diagnosed with a psychiatric ail- abuse)."
ment,, which would tnclude such
Imagine the bill if only onedisorders as anxiety, depression fourth of those of us with a "dia~­
and substance abuse.
nosable mental illness" - 13 milS~ the plan as it stands now lion - received 30 psychotherapy
does nOt specify who makes the sessioos per year al $100 a visit, or
diagnosis or psychiat9c ailment, $3 000 per year. That'S $39 billion
it's rea&amp;mable to ftSSulne that psy- a
Now imagine the possible
chologisls treati"'g patients could bill in 2001 when lhe limits 8le lift.
malce the diagnoses,
...,
ed from numbers of visits per year.
And just how many iliagn.oses You can bet that if the b81D door
would they be making?
·.
were to come off, the cows would
In USA Today, Towson Univet, come home, and a lot of people
sily Professor Rich8ld E. Vatz '· who would make money off the
points out that the Nationallnsti- ' J110gr&amp;m would begin herding them
tute of ~ental Health estimates that m.
.
25 percent of all Americans have at
President Clinton has started us
least on'e "psychiatric disorder" on the ·road to health reforms.by
within any one-year period: "The framiri the debate and starung
institute's Division of Epidemiolo- national lion. But even a 1681Ded
gy and Services Rese8lch claims task force ch as he put ~gether
can becotil too focused 10 one
direclion and
focus in another.
In this case, they've not only lost
their sense of direction, they've
plunged the car off the road.
We're never go_ing to have a
national health C8lC system that can
be all things to all people. The
problems we starred out to solve
are pretty narrow: to fmd a way to
get the estimated 37 million people
not covered by health C8le protection covered, and find a way to
fund it
'
To do that, we may decide we
need to taX major health offenders
such as alcohol and tobacco commensurately with the damage they
cause; force insurers to cover tests
and other preventive measures so
that diseases don't progress to a
more expensive level of treatment;
and perhaps implement a natipnai
health care tax.
Whatever we do, first things
ftrsl. We're in immediare danger of
creating another bureavcnicy run
amok unless we pull in the reins,
and quickly.
Copyrls!ht1~3 NEWSPAPER
EI'TERPRISE ASSN.

•lcolumbusl43•
•

ViaAuod1,.dP,...~

run for our~. IICl~ ·all!l recll;

nology."
Had the Endeavour mission
failed to repair ihe Hubble Space
Telescope, funding for ·an may of
programs, mcluding the $40 billion
space station, might have suffered.
There was more riding on the mission thao,met the eye.
"The fact that NASA has the
ability to do things right will help
us ~dr ... said the Whire Howe:
advtser. 'When one sees that one
of our most important science and
technology agencies has a will to
live, this will invigorate sciences
and technology bureaucracies
everywhere."
Now it's back to C8lth time fur
the administration's science schol815, particularly a reserved nuclear
.physicist named John Gibbons.
When President Clinton presented
him last Christmas Eve as his new
science adviser, he lOUted him as a
"brilliant scientist and gifted
administrator." Gibbon's success
or failure, however, may tum on
how tough of a turf fighter he
proves to be.
When Gibbons took over, he
immediately issued government-

wide directives ordering program
administrators to identify every
cent of every dollar being spent to
support reSC81Ch, and caregorize it

By Jack Anderson
and ·
Michael Binstein

.....

'

in one of 10 pre-set

St!bJC:C.~ 8leaa.

In an Aug. 17 Wltire House memo

new agenda across lhe government
This reorganization may prove
more daunting thari the ~hattan
Project
For example, one of ihe subheadings in the Wbire House memo
asks agencies 10' list any money
being spent for "Global Change"
research, such as greenhouse
gasses and global warming. To
Gibbons' surprise, he found that no
fewer than II government agencies
are currently ~pgaged in "Global
Change" rese;lich - at an annual
cost or about',$1.5 billion. :While
the bulk of tltis money goes to
NASA, the federal government has
doled out dollars to the Departments of Agriculture, Defense,
Health and Human Services, the
Tennessee \l'alley Authority and
even the Smithsonian lnstiwtion.
Gibbons 'next step was to force
each agency to prioritize its
research, enabling the Clinton
administratipn to cancel some programs altogether while boosting
others. This is what's giving fits to
some bur~aucrats. The v8lious
deparnnen(s of government have
been ordered to finish setting priorities by Febru8ly so the cutting
may begin - with the steepest
changes s~ for the Fiscal Yw
1996 bud~et So far, the bureaucracy is balking.
One ~lgh-level official in the
Agricullllre Deparunent, for example, is in,Jhe mtdst of preparing his

'.

Ben Wattenberg

Post office praise

..

Judge not by color·

20s:

.

for Gibbons. After spending
a few days wresding with priuriti·
zation, he simply labeled all the
projects under his oversight as
"Htgh Priority."
"My point is," he told our associate· Dale Van Atta," that since
people eat, drink and·breathe, agriculture programs are inherently
high priority."
That's not the definition of
"high priority" administration
officials would embrace. The
memo lists'mese "specific activities" as having the "hi~hest priority for R&amp;D activities" mcluding:
- "Eslablishing a collaborative
program with the U.S. automobile
mdustry to develop new rechnolo·
gies for clean, more fuel-efficient
cars Ihat can run on dmnestically
productd fuels."
- "Realigning R&amp;D in laboratories managed by the Department
of Energy, NASA, the Department
of Defense and other agencies to
increase their conbibution to commercial competitiveness, reflecting
the Administration's intent to shift
the R&amp;D emphasis from military to
civilian.
- "Development of technolo·
gics needed for a national information infrasbucture and ... creation of
a national communications policy
that will ensure rapid introduction
of advanced telecotnmunications
technology."
Copyright 1~3, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Miners•..

COL ONY THEATRE
TONGHT

..

"

,.

.

,I

TALKING NOW PG 13
STARTING FRIDAY
SYLVESTER 8TALLONE,

ought to get up.... There's no sympathy for people just silting around
doing nothing ..• you know, free :
food for somebody who just wants ·
to go aro!in4. just living off some' :
OIIC"elsc...."
AU this mind r.ou, from people
whose loved chtldren are bemg
supported by the welf8le sysrem!
And so, I say, the window for
serious welf~re reform ip 'wide
open, big time open. Open \vid~r
than anything Clinton ima~ined ·
when he campaigned on . ' two
Ye81S and out.' open wider by f8l
than when he formed his nowdeliberating task force. Tinkering
at the edges, which is what all olher
previous welf8le reform hai done, :
will not saiiatc the current voter
mood. Not even close.
Copyr11Jbtl993 NEWSPAPER
ENTE;RPIUSE ASSN.
·
Ben Watteaberc, a senior ret- '
low at the Amerl~au Enterprise ;
Institute, Is ,autllor of ''The First •
Universal NatiOO," publlllled by :
The Free Pre~~.

" One ye81 ago: Scaetary of State LBWRllce Eagleburger said Serbian
'

~t ~lobodin Milosevic

'

Blid Bosnian Scrb lcailtz Radovan Klndzic :
had to answer for lllrocidea cornmillcd in fornici Yugoslavia. ·
·
·
Today's Birthdays: Author V.S. Pritchett is 93. Author Arthur C. :
Cllrke Is 76.' ~s Uv Ullm&amp;nn is 54. CBS news c~nt 'Lesley
S_l8hlls S2. T'l- producer Sleven Bochco is SO. Football player Willian\
"ThcRefrig~" Perryis31.
' ' '
'• . :
· , ~ghtfortoday: "Any sufficiently ,advariced Iecltaology is i.Qdistin- :
guisliablc froln tnl!gic.''- Arthur C. Clarke (1917- ). ·
·

."

.

81, of Middleport, lonJllme Mid·
dlepon banker and viiiu8 offiCial,
died Wednelday, Dec. fS, 1993 at
his residenu, Gratevlow, on Cole
StreeL
~r. Grate retired ia 1980 as
assistant vice president of the Citizens National Bank after working
there for 38 years. He also served
. m~s as clerk-treasurer of Rufus Jewell
Mi
village.
He was a longtime member of
Rufus Jewell, 58, ~iddleport,
the Middleport-!'omeroy Rotary died
Thursday, Dec. 16, 1993, at
Club, the Sons and Daughters of Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point
Pibneer Rivenncn, and the Nation- Pleaad,W.Va.
al Assoc:ladoo of WaU:h and Clock
Arrangements
will
be
Collocttn and waa affiliated Chris- announced
later by Fisher Funeral
tian Science Church.
Home in Middleport.
Born on Feb. 23, 1912, be was
the son of the late Jasper H. and
Lenora Belcher Orate. He was a
1930 graduate of Middleport High
School, and worked 10 yC8ls as
secretary to the Middleport super·
intcndent of schools before joining
the staff at Citizens National Bank.
Mter retiring Mr. Grate devoted
many hours to his woodworking
hobby which include.d making
grandfather cloclal.
He is survived by a sister and
.brother-in-law; Mary ud Leland
Brown, Middlepo~. a brother-Inlaw, Edward Tewksbm:y of Well·
aton, and five nOllb!lw• 'ind ~·
nieces.
Be~ides his pmnts he was pre- .

WEIU!Y IHIPE8 ...

DEMOLmON MAN R
ONE EVEIINQ IHOW 7:30

SPRING UAllfY Clflf mA
446·4514

7

Publltbed eVfl'1 11\cnaGa, Motdaylhroulh
Mtoy, 111 Coutl St.. - · · Olllo by Jbt
Ohio V.Uey MJieblq Conpayh.tiiJUmda
Ioc., Po"""'Y· Ohio 4S769, Pll. 99:1-~tSd.

- - ....... poldtiPo-y.Oblo.
_,. _
..... Prttl, 1111 !be a.lo .

:-~.~~.:,::.-r~ :
13 nitd Attlu., ,New Yort. New Ycrt ; .
t0017.

..._ .. , . .

=·lolllMI,lll COurt ••· Po-. Olio
lllUCliJl'TI(IIIA,_

· PUIS

---'.....

.

:

" -

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=-~:...=

IS -

-. ...... "-"

..

•w.................................. ........-'41.111

lliYfM!a....;-··.. ·····:..................,MUO

"

8,995

$8,99900

•14,3~9

1992 Chevy S·l 0 Pickup
Tahoe, V6, air, cassette, more.
00

•9,995

1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

,(•1

.. - .....................----.113AO

Auto., air, stereo, sh•P·
00
1

4 Dr., V6, auto., air, stereo, air bag.

..\..

R C~~OTHIERS

......................................... .$21.14

:Ill ..................---------.143-tt
! I -................................- . ...JI.I.7t

1993 Pontiac Sunlird

Loaded • Save • Save • Bavel
00

DOES!

lftM '
{'

v~=:::y"!.~=-Detla.

Norton, Pomeroy; Glena Evua,:
Middleport; Lena Carpenter, Rut- ;
land; Hildred c.non. M""'ddepnrt. :
Wednesday diacharge1 - ·
Sharon Ridenour, Chesler.
:

1993 Olds Citra Special Editioa

. . . .... IIDl dMirlq to pay lbt Cll'ri« .,. '

"""'to od._ - to Tho Jlollyllotlllll
• o -~~~or tz IIIOQJI\- Cnd1t wlllloo
MD IU'*tiptlo• b)' malll)etllliae6 ia

HOI zp ~ICAL CENTER .
Dec. 15 dlacllarJa - Evan:
gclin Ho_pkins, Lsn4a Henry,
Samuel Conley, Helen Stover,
Mary Lanier, XriJten Marts, Jennifer Mullins, Stephen Neal, Mrs.
Michael Coarill and dauahl«.
Dee. 1! blrtlll- M'i. and Mrs.
James Fultz, daUJhter, OU: Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Mtchael Johnaon,
son, Chealtire. Mr. and Mrs.JOieph
Rife, son, Gallipolis. Mr. 11111 Mrs.
Kenneth Rorrer, son, Point Pleasant, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Mart
Shope, son, Oak Hill.

*19. I 995 00

Shop Bahr
Clothiers
for Fine
Wearing
Apparel for
Men and
Women

(USPS ~ IJ.Ht)

Dolly.......................................-3!1 c-.

Hospital news

4X4, 4 Door, Tahoe, loaded.

The Daily Sentinel

IINGUIXIPY

port; ~lma L. Walion, Raci~t:
George Foster MorriDI Sr~ Loni:
Bonom; Clifford Jack Bachnerr
Middleport; Ronald D. Butchc!r1
Pomeroy; E. Marie sar1c~;.
Coolville; Elsie Smith, Racine:
Paui K. Johnson, Pomeroy,
Michelle L. StevCIII, Mldd1eport; •
Katrina Marcel Hayes. bcine:
Melanic Ann Sloan, Pomeroy ~
Melanie Elaine Qualls, Mjdd..,....,•
Misti Dawn Kin&amp;. Pomeroh
Denise Lynn Holman, MicldletJott;.
Avice Pearl BaileY. Shade; Ricbald
Lowell Lauimer ill, Long Bottotb,
James Richard Hupp. Racine; Vir:
ginia Wyatt. Pomeroy; Ella D..
Roush, Middleport; Kenneth E.:
Sorrell, Vinton; Jimmie Lee ~y~
nard, Pomeroy; Larry Lee Mitch,
Middleport; Karen L. Markina,.
Pomeroy; ~a 1e.an Trussell;
Long Bottom; WilliamDexter
Howard, Rutland; KriStin C. Pow-:
ell, Albany.

1993 Chevy 5-10 Blazer

ttl Gila

o.-.~rc:..w--.................. _. ..;..................... ..11.60
Olo ..........._...... _. .......................$6.9.'1
Olo v-........ _. ....,__ ..............._ ..• ~lO

Alban ; ~ Breww, MiitdJeJ;

1993 Chevy Corsica LT
STARTING IT

AD11881011 ta.OO

1'0111o1A111111' ..... -

Albert WOlf, UMll Boaom; Sulirl:
A. Well, Shade; bennls J. Auhr,
Pomeroy; Sam_uel R, Hol!lanl

DON TATE
LDS.·CAD.·GEO
HOLIDAY SELL-A-THO"

The following suits for divorces
were filed recently in the Meigs
County Common PI~ Court of
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill: Geana
Scm, Albany, from 111llinaa Elliot!
Scm, Pomeroy; Lori Al1ll Phillips,
Racine, from Eugene Phillips Jr.,
Albany; Thomas Elliott Seers,
Pomeroy, from Ocana L. Seers,
Pomeroy; Ruth R. Swll!, Racine,
from Thomas N. Swan, Pltmeroy;
Panicle L. Smith, Romerzo, froin
Pearl Allen Smith, Pbmeroy;
Thomas M. Theiss, Racine, from
Clarinda S. Theiss, Racine; Kimberly Chapell, Racine, from Tony
Ray Chapell, Clifton, W.Va.
In aadition, the following
divorces were ctcd Monday:
Jeffrey S. Jones
Jill M. Jones;
Mary Ann Rathburn from Mark T.
Rathburn; Krista) Bolin from
Joseph Craig Bolin.
·

LOOK WHO'S

-\

Rlvmond Eugone (Clcne) Orate,

ceded in death by a brother,
William Grate, and two sisters,
France• McCormick and Ruth
Tewkab&amp;ly.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m . Saturday at the Fisher
Funeral Home. The Rev. Frank
Smith will officiale and burial will
be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call at the funeral
home 2 to 4 and 710 9 jl.m. Friday.

Hyaell, Pomeroy; Debonb C. PwPortland: AIIIOiia K. CUrtis.
l'l!meroy; s.Jty W.lkown-Kivioja.
Reedsville; Htrold W. Abbo~t.
Reedlvlllc; Frink M. Colwell, Vinton; SbarmC. Werry, Ponaoy;
Tina Marie Slater, Lanpville;
~nnetb B. Adelaberger, Albany;
Sandra S. Cobb, S)'q!CUIC; Rowba
G. Reed, Reedsville; Kathryn E.
Ollmore, Middleport; Deborah L .
Oilmoro, Reedsville; Jewel M.
Weldt, Pomeroy; Ardella M. Johnson, Middleport; David Lewis
Decker, Long Bottom; Mary C.
Evans, Portland; Dottie S Tum.Pomeroy; Sarah E. Caldwell ,
Pomeroy: Donald L. Lanning .
Pomeroy; Harold L. Eagle ,
Reedsville; C8lroll L. Teaford .
Racine; Elizabeth Marie Stover,
Racine; Robert Eugene Chancy.
Pomeroy;
Patricia E. Williams, Rutland;
Janice ~y Baker, Racine; Nancy
Rose Cole, Tupjlers Plains; John
Carr Betzing, Pomeroy; Joyce
Chnstine Rouse, Middleport;
James R. Goodrich, Long Bottom;
tdaxine Price, Portland; William E.
Baer, Middleport; Lorenc D. Goggins, Middleport: Lowell A.
Beaver, Middleport; Letitia Anne
Holsinger, Reedsville; Jeanie
Renee Arms, Pomeroy; Harold
Thorne Chaae, Middleport; Lue E.
Shenefield, Langsville; Donald L.
Cremeans, Pomeror; Roger Douglas Clark, Racme; Lalenya
Tiemeyer, Rutland;
Mandi Lynn Sheets, Reedsville;
Charles R. DiU, Pomeroy: Barbara
Riggs, Pomeroy; Don ~itchell
Anderson. Pomeroy; Nellie E. Hatfield, Dexter; Karen Lynne Straus·
baugh, Albany; Kemp Field Beaumont 111, Reedsville; Jeffrey Alan
Rife, Dexrer; Kenneth R. Theiss,
Racine; Crystal Dawn Turley,
Racine; Ella Jean Smithern,
Langsville; Helen E. Darst, Mid·
dleport; Ardella Herdman,
Pomeroy; Donna M Taylor, Mid·
dleport; Kathryn G. Hunt, Racine;
Kathy ~ Dai!ey, Pomeroy; Fern
Lee Dantels, Middleport;
Del Lehm8l Ogdln, Langsvilte;
Jessica Lynn Combs, Pomeroy;

10111,

Divorces 'filed

COntl!Uid from Page 1
Officials said workers at most
mines would spend the next few
days retraining and cbecldng equipment, w))ilc other mines that continued operating through the slrike
would return to normal more
quickly. .
Some miners will rerum only to
find that their jobs are gone.
M8110wbone Development Co.
announced Wedneaday it was closing a sbip mine in Mingo County.

It

:i"uron ·

Gene Grate

Extended forecast
Saturday ...A ·chance of rain or
snow. Lows30to35. Hig,hsaround40.
Sunday ... Fair. Lows near 30.
Highs 81Dund 40.
Monday... A chance of rain or
snow. Lows n~ 30. Highs around 40.
Around tbe nation
One storm scattered snow through
the mountains of the West as it moved
towards the Plains on Wednesday,
while a second weathersysrem dropped
up to a half-foot of snow on the central
Appalachians.
At middsy, snow was scattered
over higher elevations of northern
Nevada, southwestern Utah, Colorado
and New Mexico. Up to 4 inches of
snow fell by early afternoOn at Grand
Mesa, Colo., the National Weather
Service said.
Wimerstorln waoohcswere posted
through Thursday over southeasrem
Wyoming, northwestern Kansas and
wes\ern Nebraska. the weather service
said.
In the Eas1. rain at midday ex·
tended across the lower Great L,akes,
the upper Ohio Valley, the Tennessee
Valley, the central halfoflhe Adantic
Coast states and the central coast of
New England.
Ca.&gt;!.
Friday .. .Mostly cloudy. High
Temperatures around the 48 states
in the upper 40s.
at 3 p.m. EST ranged from 13 at
Jackson, Wyo., to 77 at Tamiami AirExtended rorecast
Friday ... Mostly cloudy. A port outside Miami.
Wednesdaymorning'slowforlhe
chance of showers west in the afterLower 48 si.ares was zero at West
noon.
in the 40s.

~

t

01H3Accu-Wu.th•,lnc.

Partly to mostly cloudy skies
wi II pr~vent the mercury fro111 dmp·
ping very far tonight. Lows will be
from 25 to 30 across the north with
lower 30s across the south.
Normal high temperatures for
mid-December range from the mid30s in the north to De81.40 in' the
t extcren1e southern. pan of the siare.
Normal low remperatures range
from the lower 20s in lhe ex1reme
north to around 25 in the ex1reme
south .
Friday will remain mostly
cloudy with afremoon showers
lposSJ·ble in the western part of the
slate. High oomperatures will be in
the 40s. Rain will overspread the
Slate Friday night and Saturday.The
rain could mix with or change to
snow on Saturday.
The record · high temperature
for thtsdateaLlheColumbus weather
station was 64 degrees in 1984. The
record low was minus 14m 1951.
Sunrise this morning wasat7:47
a.m. Sunset will he at 5:07p.m.
Southern Ohio ··
Tonight ... Variable cloudiness.
Low m the lower 30s. Northeast
winds less than 10 mph becoming

report

The f~llowlnl .were recently 1 Lee Jewell, Rutland; Barbara E.
selected u potentlal perdt
Petenon, . Rutland; Mane A.
for llio J1111uary, 1993. of the .
. Bur&amp;ess, Middleport; Shirley M.
County Couri of Judp Patriet • Wilson,IMI•rMI~ Chadea L. H1rri1,
O'Brien:
Roedlvil1e;
'
Wilma Lee Powell, Racine;
Judy Maie Han, Rudwf; TereJoyce Allen, Portland; Joy Xath- sa D. Courtney, Coolville• Paula
leen Brannon, Reedsville; Wilma Suzette Fink, Middleport; 'Buddy
Jane Black, Portlaad; Thomu G. Kuhn Jr.: Alba~ !!meat L.
Willjam Bowen, ~; Tlmo- Smith, Pomeroy; v· • Lynn Perthy B. Showalter, Reedlvlllo; Jo rei!, Middleport; Harold Leon NutAnn Baqm, -Chea~; Larry Alln rer, Tuppeq Plaint; Carl Oardller
Atherton, Lon1 Bottom; tommy Jr., Middleport; James Reed
Raydax.":'l~,l ~
Jlo!tiiJt; ~- Koeni&amp;, Middleport; Garfield E.
"""""'• R
Cat1riB ~ Pauley Jr.,~ William Leroy
Wolfe, Pomeroy; Now• Smtih, Smith, Reedsville; Mindy Lee Cur!'flddl~port; Dolton L. Garaos, tis Rutland· Nora Sue McGuire
J..angsville; Chrisilna Dawn Pooler, LaDgsville; J;.w M. Miller, Mid:
Pomeroy; Valerie A. Toban, dleport; Robert E. Hart, Vinton;
Pomeroy;
Ernie A. Greene, Racine; Julie A.
Theresa Marie Chur~h, Hawk, Reedsville;
Reedlvllle; Kathryn Hy.ell, Mid·
Pamela J. Rlch8ld, LonJ Botdleport; .Clyde J?d~ard Hampton, tom; Beverly Ann Wilcox ,
Langsv!llc; Dtxte R. Knotts. Pomeroy; Sheryl! L . Wolfe,
Reednlllo; Gerald L. Young, Rlcine; Howard D. BIIT, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy; Mary V. Prk:e, PomC!Oy; Kevin Barry Howard, Pomeroy;
James Allan Wat1011, ReedsVille; Linda L. W8ld, POrtland; Angela
Charles Lee ·Smith, Pome~oy; Rae Searles, Middteport; Edward
Cheryl Leo G.ulll)lf. !teedayllle; E. Parsons, Pomeroy; Cl&amp;~abelle
flan?ld Guy . ~inger, Long Bottom; Landers, Pomeroy; Jimmie Lee
Eddte R. Smtth, Syracuse; Terry Bailey, Reedsvllle; Orella Dorothy

--Area deaths--

By The 1\ssociated Press

Cand·idate 'B' wins /.on welfare
everrlhing he~· but he had
the nght attitude.'
BW: "Which is, enough, cut it
off.'' · ·
·
MAN &lt;Nv.l2: ''Sooner or larer
yoU got to b!~ . the bullet and Start '""
geuiitJ back to malcing the country
wha!lt was.... "
MAN (NU)3 "No, no, not neeessarily cut it all off.''
MAN (NU)2: "Otherwise it
gets ~ out of control that everybody Buffers."
BW: "Loosely speaking,
Dempcrats take the position of
Candidate •A.' Republicans say
what$Candi~re 'B'· say~.... People
in your situation 8le not usually
voung.Re£U!l~ican.''
.
MAN (NU)3: (Who had served
prison time for. armed robbery, and
IS now employed.) "Well, you
know, I've been listening to the
shOw -:-- Ru~ Umbaugh. So I figurot l'm turmng conservative at
least. I don't know about !Icing a
Republlcail .iJ~ noL But'he's got a
lot!Of good VJews. He's saying the
Sl\me tbing, you know,. People

'

I

Cloud's to keep
tonight in th·e 30s

Endeavour's mission saved science programs
WASHINGTON - The recent
success of the space shultle
Endeavour was one small step for
NASA and one giant step for government-funded science.
Or as one Whire House science
adviser exclaimed: ''It ,was a home

forecast for

MICH.

'
for thin psychotherapy.

to every Cabinet secretaiy, Gib'
bons identified the 10 8leaa. rang: This letrer is in response to your laws and regulations, how could
ing
from "manufacturing" and
Jrticle on December 2, 1993, she be qualilied to write and
"energy
supply and dem.and" to
re~ing alleged impro~ wages adminisrer the grant? If !here was
"food
and
fiber JK:O.&lt;Iuction."
no impropriety on •her part, as she
paid to the commissioner s clerk.
Gibbons
is ptcking a fight with
:'. Before I say anything else. I claims in the article, the question
the goliath of JtOvernment the Penwould like to commend the com- becomes: who was responsible for
,tagon.
The b1ggest news !n the
allowing
such
an
expensive
mis)nissioners for conducting themmemo
may be the demouon of
take?
selves in a proper and legal manner
defense-related
rese81Ch, which is
At present, we, the taxpayers,
ln making this matter public and
mentioned
in
lhe
memo as category
~erefore in accordance with the are going to have to pay for the
six
"national
security."
During
vsunshine laws" of the state. As for mismanagement of ~s. Hobstetter
the
Cold
W81,
more
than
60
per· ~ mallcr of an alleged "ch818crer or someone else in the past county
cent of all ~overnment-funded
assassination" by Ms. Hobsteuer administration. I consider this an
R&amp;D was mtlitary·relaled. Under
outrage.
If
Ms.
Hobsteuer
is
an
dver the release of this information,
Clinton and Gibbons, defense goes
I would say • "Poppycock!". ~s. innocent victim, she should at least
on a diet while every o!her categotiobsteuer willingly accepted her voluntarily repay the money she
ry is updared in importance.
salary as clerk and as grant may h.ave received illegally and not
As agencies draft their lists,
writer/administrator, now she' has leave it to us, the taxll&amp;Yers, to eat.
Gibbons
is getting a lesson in
~o accept responsibility for her If she doesn 'I repay 11 voltinl¢ly,
Overlap 101. As we
Bureaucratic
actions while receiving"that salary. she should be made to repay it
first
reponed
last month, Clinton
Unfortonately, the state auditors
: According to your article, Ms.
recently
announced
plans to creare
: Hobstetter was paid to write and have most of the records right now
a
new
National
Science
and Tech·adminisler the Community Devel- and I couldn't gain access to them.
nology
~ouricil
to
implemenrhis
Opment Block Grant (&lt;;:DBG). ~f They are still looking for more
she was a good enough grant wrirer alleged overpayments to Ms. Hobio charge $14.00 per hour for her stetrer and $10,925 may be just the
services, one wouk! think that she tip of the iceberg. After all, she
would have had a very good says she was the grant wrirer for.l2 .
knowledge and understanding of ·years! How many more cx)lCIISive
.
'
the Ohio CDBG Small Cities surprises have the past county
KANSAS CITY, Mo. ·- · I those taxes, because we have to
a&amp;ndbook and the Financial ~- administrators left us, the taxpay- knew
the window for welfare give JlCClllle education, and some
•
4gement Handbook for the Ohio en, wilh7
reform
was open. I hid no sense of cash to live with. It's true, some of
Lin Coleman
CDBO Small Cities Program .
this help falls through the cracks;
how
wide open It was.
just
LandakerRoad
Apparently, she didn't, according
Last
week
in
this
llpiiCC
I
report·
Pomeroy
(0 the state auditors. If she didn't
ed on a focus group of welfare
have the proper command of the
mothers, who vigorously volun·
teered the inform.at\9!1 that many
teen-agerS (not all, not even most) it's true lhe rare of out-of-wedlock
were bearing children in order to births keeps going up; it's bue the
And once their patrons are gain the package of current welfare government screwed it up in wei·
1 would like to express my
appreciation to our local Post inside, conductio~ bustness is a real benefits: caah, food stamps, medi- f8le. But there 8le 'women and little
Offices. They have done a$fe8tjob pleasure. The atutudes of theii per- cal c8le, and so oo. The women I children involved, and we have to
qf participaung in the spint of the sonnel imply that they enjoy what talked to were outraaed aboui it
.keep paying for it. That's Candithey 8le doinj!. and we feel welseason thts ye81.
Let me now tell you of another date 'A."'
: They were active in both Mid- come. It's a ruce touch, and makes focus group I conducted that same
I continued: ''Then there Is Can·
dleport and Pomeroy's Christmas everyone involved feel good.
day. The participllnts, were "wel- didare 'B.' He baa a one-word siQ,:
Thanks, Postal Workers, we fare fathers." They vehemently gan - he says, 'Enoilgh.' He says
parades with both vehicles and ·
needed
that Happy Holidays.
P,osuncn being a part or them. The
resented the term "Deadbeat we have created 1ome kind of
Jean Gilmore Dads." They were a p,art of the Frankenstein monster In the wei•
· Post Offices 8le decorared bcautiRiverview Dr. "Futures Connection ' program fare ~. It is ~ng out: fully for the season, and it really
Middleport and were either at wort and paying of-wedlock birth, c:reating a com8l'ds a nice lbuch to the commtlm~
child support, or studying diligent- fort zone for it, pulijng ~IC into
ly ID 'prepare for jobs,.so they could welfare•.We have to cui ~k wel'
pay child SI!JlPOll for their children fare in Order to stop this. Enough.
on welf&amp;~e. There were six of them, That's candida~ 'B.... 1'
, : It seems that so often we are control your thoughts and· your four blacks and two whites, most in
I paused, and Baked: "In that
elecdon who would you vote for,.
• j~ by the color of our skin and mouth, you may or may not go f8l their lale
•not the contents of our cltmcter•. It in this world. If you c.an't accept
They were quite'weii-SJ)oken. 'A' or 'il'? ..
makes no difference as 10 how we everyone for face value and the And clearly, as the discussion proThere was •n eruption in the
came 10 be in this wpiid. The color conrents of their Character, you'll · gressed, it was apparent that they room: , ~
~ANY PEOPLE AT ONCE:,
o~ our skin lhouldn 't influence how never be at peace and discover wanted 10 take cm.of their chil..
,a~·
·' B,' I vote '8.'."
,
what
beil!ll
happy
really
is
all
·l!'e 81&gt; llx1Ul our daily lives, b!ll it
dten. and.that they lOved ·diOm.
about,
and
that
1$
wliat
!Rakes
life
BW:
"You
would
vote
for
tho
·does. It is· up to each of us to
After a .while I asked a long
·
decide if we are wort~y of one so rich and worth living.
quesiion, which I present here guy who. says' st9P It?" . ·
.
lnmare
(Jose)
Scou,
MANY1PEOPL:E AT ONCE:
. almost \'Cibltim: · ·
' ·
lilOther bued aolely on our tharac·
.
formerly of Pomeroy
'Yeah~'
I ,bepli: "Let's say there is an ·~'Yeah.'
.
. 'Yeah.m
~ lllld its contents, Judge and ~t
P.S.
May
the
spirit
of
Chrlsimas
olhers as you would want to be
election. Candidate 'A: says thi~
MAN Q\IU)1: "At some wint
· jQdged and tnealed. If you would touch your heart and continue to welfare situatioll is 11 real problem. you ~ do IIQIIIethina. The bUck
'
OlkiVI your ' - ' to be your guide, always be with you.
But we're going to liave to keep up Stops hc'!e.,... I can't !lay -1 oondone

,.

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ye81.

By Howard Siner
NEW YORK (NEA) ...., President Clinton's fll'St year in office
- marked by the baltle to revive the U.S. economy- made big
headlines in 1993.
At the age of 46, Clinton, the former governor of Arkansas,
became the nation's 42nd president, and the fust born since World
W81 n. He was the first Democrai to serve in the Wbire House in 12
y~

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CMis~berN.
Cltl Q, Smidt, 7~~~
.

Potential jurors selected for.Meigs County Court

oecember 16,1993
.

Mental
h.ealth .care., has 1ts 11m1ts
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Co-.t Sueet
PomerGJ, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursc~~W.

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Tht' D.,ly S.nlluel
Prg
r
3:
'

PometO)' llddleport, OhiO

Page---2-The Dally Sentinel

H

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Tltul'lday, o.ctmblr 11,1813

'

OR

1993 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME
OR

1993 BUrCK REGAL
OR

1993 (HEVY LUMINA

1992 Chevy S·1 0 Blazer
4X4, Tahoe, auto., air, loaded.

$14,99500

ALL NICELY EQUIPPED
YOUR CHOICE

$12,999
D'ON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8:00-8:00
Sat. 9:0CI-4:00; Sun. 1:IJO..I:OO

OPEN SUNDAY

303 E. MAIN- POMEROY, OH.

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1&gt;'

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�Pqe 4

n. Dilly Sentinel
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Thu111day, December 18,1893:

:rt~u~. QeCember 111,1993

Meigs school board accepts resignatio~s
The resipttions of lbe attendance offiCer llld u aide in lbc
ddt bBce&amp;•llm~ w=

a.:ce1•ed • 'IUesday niabl's

IIICCI·

ollhe Meigs County Bo8n1 of

.

ll.carion

Aue.ndancc officer Malt Boyd
resigned 10 eccept Olbc:r employ·
men I. Mary Hawk resiJined ber
position wilh dJe lldult basic education. SU)ll.1ohn Riebel said that dJe
board will acceptleutn of 8lllllica·
tion for a half-time auen.dance
offiCe position until Dec. 28. Those
tellers are 1o be sent 1o the Meigs
County Board of Education, P. 0.
Box 684, Pomeroy.

Hired at lbe ""'-tina wu Carole
Gilkey for lbc bookteeperfaecre·
*J/tiMIS tooiolin•tcr in lbe COUD·
ty office. Sbe will replace Linda
Maloy wbo has ~...... Gilkey is
a graduate of tbe Southeastern
Business
College and bas bad
. _,.._

•
lie with Hllrt:UIIl
ty w .uranceceApogen/y Nationwidt'
Insuran
•
.
fnsluaiiCe.J
rr Harrl$ was appointed JDSI·
e
·r, lbe =izariooal
dent po-tembicborwill
place on
meeUDg w
Jan. 3 at 1 p.m.

.

exteNIYC UUAN Cllpenence.

A course ()( study for lbc DWf·
lng assistant program was

l!llJliOYfd.

..

T_hc boa!d education a~
10 pick up the increased prenuum
for health insurance for the 1993·
94 bool
·
-::
year.

or

Sports

PiCTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •••

In theNBA,

Carolyn Nicholson and Susan
King were bircd as teacher aides
and Lucille Haggerty as a substi·
tutc teacher. A bus driver certificate for 0.-y CaDielbtuy of Meigs
Local was approved.
The board approved member·
ship in the Oh1o School Boards
Association for 1994, and a liabili·

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.

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The Meigs County Sheriffs Dep~en11s mvesllgallng the
shooting of a horse at a Salem Townsb1p fann.
The horse, belonging to Karen Griffith, was reportedly shot
between Sunday and Wednesday afternoon.
In an unrelated incident, Sheriff I ames M. Soulsby_ ~paned ~t
Buckeye Rural Electric had reported ~ theft of e~ectnc1ty at a rest·
dence on Romine Road. No other details were available.

Our special p&amp;8e(s)

"For Children Only"
(16 years ofage or younger)

.

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t!WtJting fans for lheir sinn~.. .

Doctors repaired t6e -r9okie
point auant's traChea
eight
hours of surgery Monday. On
Wednesday, Hurley was .able to
breathe without 1he aid of a ventila·

durinr

tor.

Eric Murdock scored 10 of his
32 points in the fourth quarter for
the Bucts, who hav~ wen just five
of21 ~s this season.
· The Kings, who lost their sixlh
straight game a1 home and for the
lOth time in 1l"games overall, bad
two shots 10 iake tbe lead in the
final seconds, but MilCh Richmond
Wayman' Tisdale missed
led the Kings with 27
including a lh!'ee·pointer

.

Will be published .
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24th

Hit/skip accident reported
A hit-and-run accident involving a black Font truck happened at
the inletseCtion or state Route 7 and 33 at 4:43 p.m. Wednesday.
according 1o Pomeroy Police department reconls.
Harry Roush, 56, Eagle Ridge Road, RJcine, had his C~m&gt;let
S-10 pickup truck rear hit by dJe D'UCk and Roush was not mJured,
according to n:pons.
·
. .
led ·
Tbe truck- which could not be further Identified- pul
1010
the Beacon Gas Station Parking lot and then travelled north on
Route 7, according 10 reports.

'8dm~7. VlnC'Wftl'~

SL Laulo 3, San )poe"l

in the
The Daily Sentinel

.

DlfiAOrtos
- - •-. .--

·v:;···; ~~·
Oedi!Tenns ·l..af-A-w..,.s-. MastefCMI· vasa
'";~~~Houra: Mon..frl 8 ._rn.-1 p.m.; Sat. Sun. 1-5

m.- ,.__.,.

AaanllePI¥1tloo

•'

Per Pieture •
Prepaid

[iCI]

••

•••

.

•
•

Scr.alc ................... .l7

'•
~

-

,

l'onland .............. .J2

I.A. cu-...........9

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••
''

LA.J..Wim.............. l
s.c:r...sta ..............S

a..B\IBUND a Ml.ami, 7:30p.m.
lndiaal !IAlllnla, 7:30pm.
San Anlioftio at Dallu, f :30 p.m.

Friday' seam..

0

Major coll_ege scores

Q,.

·=«&lt;&gt;.

--=

JUif RICatD ·Ill

-··

~u

;1
C:o

Q

LcaE.:"tus STARS: Traded J•mu
Black, left win,. and 1ft ••"itclc.od draft

pick in 199•, to the Bu.lralo Sabrel for
Ooid Doaaoilf, Baht ...., .

·~

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Model Home Viewing Houl'S 1:00-5:00 p.m.
The-Sat. or by appointment Call 614-!192-2478

NEW YORK lSUNDERS : Tud'"'

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far Marc l...afDIJC, rorwa~ .

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SW Tcua St. 79, a.ocpa St. 13

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I.,.••••: Friday, Dec. J.7 at 3, .M. I
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court SUit
Pomeroy, 0~10 41718

II

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"

T-

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31110101
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GildA
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Speclat Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1993

.

- - - - ·Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon - - - - ••mi!IMononlaNclt¥

,.' tw.tE...;.
·---------

~---------cnv
______ STATE.__ZIP
~

WedaadaJ'IIICOI'•

~-------------crrv
______ STATE--..:Zif'--AC»E ______________________

STMTIIELNEIIY DATE---

llootm5,llnl..,.4
T_B.,4,oa... s
Moa-..J 3, Pi&lt;al4o 3, tie

Tlie Daily Sentinel

A.o.tbllm t, TCIRIII.tD 0

•

NAME----------

12 Months '66.56_ .

N.Y, a-S.~~utr..o~2

~S.Dollu2

1991 LINCOlN
TOWN CAR

CROWN VICTORIA LX

V-a, AI Powtor Equlprnont

v-a, AulD .. lllr, cau .•

2 TO CHOOSE FROM

till, cruloe,
Ail p - Equipnerot

1991FORD

ONLY

$9,495

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1991 FORD
TEMPOU
SEDANS
Aula., air. - a.,1iil, auioe

17 97 IS4

CMrilDIW L T I'll.
r.................. 20 • s 4l
Dollu.............. IS II 7 31
!L Louil ........... l! 11 5 1!
lleuod&amp; ............... 16 11 1 34
""~......... 15 tO 3 33
w
......... 1116 ' 19

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llld "" 20% all the

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l'owwwincbwaandiocl&lt;a

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Send In the lolowlng coupon,

I 7

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1992 FORD
4x2 XLT LWB

23 76 95

37 112103
... _ .... ,• . t4 10 7 . 35 103 M
Buffolo............. IS 14 2 31 lOP M
Mcabot1 .......... 13t2 6 32 M U
~

4 cyl., 5 lp88d
Only 8,000 miles!

cuatom ma~ for 8ftYVM on

1271~
~ 99

29

1993 FORD
RANGER XL

your flat. Wl1tt home dllvll)',
• ~lon II !dill fot
lhoM with I bulll-inJIUIIDIIy.
Give a gill t h l t - more ·
lhw1 DIICI I )'Ur.

Northeul DIY!tlon

1'lulloutaJt ........ t5

'••
•
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0

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r;......s,

••

§

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1'hill4clp1Uo ...... 17 14 I
P1nrido .............. 12 t4 5
w......... ...... 1315 2
NY............... II I! 3
1 ....... 10 II l

••

Mail or bring the entry form lo:

•Diamonds
•Gold Chains
•StfkoWatches

Nc.. Jon0r .•....

•
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~...

Thia yMr buy •

Alllole IJI... Ioo .
TW L T I'll. CFGA
N.Y. ~ •.. 22 6 3 47 114 75

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EAsTERN CONFERENCE

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lo
Ho
H

NHL

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*From Mfg. Suggested Retail

••'j

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PULSAR

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Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area •

· W-SLIOO,~Tocb61

SEIKO or

.

• Carriage Carpets
• Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetimt,Warranty
• 25 Year Warrant}' Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

Cent. Flarida 100, Florida Atlantic 74
0ocqi1 T"" 72. Oocqio 69
Quooiu, N.C. 15, Win_llwp 71

•

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BA.RS- Silver

$·14,449

·,, ·

Soulb

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Famoue

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East

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Hockey
NodooalHocltiJU.ot
ANAHEIM MIOHTY DtlCKS: Ro·
c:o1lod David W"lllilmo, dd........... ..,..,
Saa. Dioao ot 1M l11tanutional Hocltey

uw.ua......7:30p.m.

u

./f"

• 2X"!O Floor Joist, 16 In. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater

Dtoo&gt;il&gt;tW~7:30p.m.

LA.I.akea at Pbil&amp;delpftia. 7:30p.m.
O.W.atCbadd.tc. 7:~ p6. .
N.w YcDu OW:aaa, I p.m.
Milwtukee at Se~uiO, 10 p.m.
Minnelou.atLA. CUpped, l0:30p.m.
OlbndoaPhoWa.,tbi30p.m.
Oalden State It Sacnmento, 10:30
p.m.

NOW

• Annstrong Solarian Floor Tile
• Kitchen Compact Cabinets

r~ 8"~J1oOI ~iling

..
'..

V-41,1ir, aula., lilt CIUiH, CUI.
Ail P-r Equipment

• Georgia Pacific Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 In. On Center

TOD!pt'IIUIU

.c:

A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features

* Andersen Windows

10
12.S

l.A.Lobm tt New Y..t, 7:30p.m.
OladDallu Nnr 1...,.,•7:30 p.m. · ·

c

..,'t:l

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6.!
I

'•'

1993 FORD
TAURUS SEDANS

I OM·JOU

6.!

Mll...llbo 96. ...._., 95

'•

1111

•

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quality! Dlllla.aab"

SAN FRANasco o~s, Si.....,

Pbooala 110. ~ s.... 104

'••

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Miio SimiiUI, •nd Tracy Woodaon, in·

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THUNDERBIRD ll
lOW

Aldtio Comn, pilcha; Pnakllollok; fim
bucman-third tii•eman, and Dive Rohde.

~ 10l,Dcnvt~r93

.•

.,

I!
IS

--

1991 FORD
V-41, · li,
.. 1111. cruiM
All·p
--Eqo .......

NlllonalLaau•
PllTSBUROH PIRATES : Siaoed

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.474

$12,995

.

,": ~~91

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Before you bay a..._.. alatwh•a at any .
price - abap .
. .far oatatandlag

10
10

NOW

..

II.!

.!SO

9

4 c,l .. 51P"d, .... CM&amp;.

~INDIANS : Si&amp;ned Ray
Mardn.u and Omu Munoi, inflelden,
aad Apoliaar Garcia, Galvin Joae.•.
Ramsti Correa and Dnrid Lynch, piu:b-

Wodnaday's ocor..

'

...c

,..... .........

Ctiicqo 1(!1,- 91

I'I
,,

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CHICAOO WIDTB lOX : Sian'"'
Julio Fnnoo, . . . . . . blaer, .., • en&amp;-

12.!

2 .19,
3 .Ill

...................)!

Goldea Suoe.......... lt

.•

Form

ButbaU

5.!
6.5
10.!

Patllle Dl•ldon

1993 TOYOTA
PASEO
~Coupe wi11114,COO . -

993 FORD TEMPO or
1993 MERC. TOPAZ
SEDANS

A-Loom

GB

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Donvor ....................9 II A50
... ,. ...........7 13 .3.50
Dallu. .... .................. l 19 .0!0

E4aicnion. 9:3:! p.m.

Transacti o ns

9
II

s.. """""•........... t4 a

•••
•
,,'

Ofticial Entry

SmloM •

7
I

Mw-tDI...Ioo
Team
W L Pet.
llauolon .,............... 20 I .952
U&lt;oh .................... l5 7 .682

1993
DAnONA ES

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

Wi~Wpea It VtnCGUY•, I~3S.p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

•'''

Spurs 1U, TraU Blazers !11
David Robinson moved ahead
of O'Neal into the NBA scoring
lead by scoring 37 points .against
Portland in host San Antonio's
highest offensive output or the season.
The Trail Blazers, who were led
by Clifford Robinson with 18
·points, shot 38 of 100 from the
field.
Willie Anderson, starting at
point guard for the Spurs for the
mjured Negele Knight, tied his
c~r-bigh with 12 assists 10 go
with 12 points.
S'uas 110, Warriors 104
Phoenix won at home against
Golden State for 1he 17th consecutive time as Charles Barkley scored
33 points and "Oliver Miller
grabbed lwo key rebounds in the
fmal minute.
Miller gave the Suns a 104-101
lead with 4 7 seconds left when he
followed teammate A.C. Green's
(See NBA on Page 6)

FAMILY HOMES INC.

Oaaw1 11 Wuhiftaton, I :OS p.m.
Anlhaim ar. Dallas, 8:35 p.~p.
St. LouU at~. 9:3S,s.m.

4
4.!

Owliao ................ ll 9 .!!0
~ ...................1 . II .42t
ll.I!VI!UNIL ......7 t2 .361
lloavit ....................6 13 .316
Milwtukoo ......... ....! 16 .231

''
i

_ ............,._
,I,,. .. __.
....................

.

Lol Anplel: 11 Bllfl'llo, 7:3.5 p.m.
Tororu.a l l N.Y. ldmden, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Rm-11Iloarit, 7:35p.m.

•

· Cllllnl D I AIIonla .• - .............1! 4 .719
au..., ................. 11 I .579

.

Friday's aames

T...,
WLP&lt;LGB
Now Yadt ............. 14 4 .711
Odondo................. ll ' .!50
4
llooton ................... ll II .!00
!
MYmi ......................7 II .31!1
1
N-~ ..............7 13 .3!0
I
Phll ....lpbio .............7 13 .350
Wuhlo................ .6 t4 .300
9

•

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wilh 36 seconds left lhat made the
score 96-9S. After Murdock missed
a sljon jumper 12 s~onds later,
Richmo11d rebounded, actting up
· the JCi!!ils' fmal chancel.
Spud Webb, rdling in for Hurley
as the Starting point guard, scored
17 points. Lionel Simmons had 17
points and IS rebounds.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Ch!ca&amp;o 108, Boston 98; PbiladelPh.ia 101, Denver 93; U~ah 97,
Mmnesota 95; San Anton1o Ill,
J'ortlarut91; Phoenix 110, Golden
State I 04; and the Los Angeles
Clippers 110, Orlandn 109.
. CUppcn 110, Maak 109
Los Angeles ~fefeaied v!sitin~
Orlando when Dlmoy Mannmg hit
a jumper from the lop of the key
With I. 7 SeConds rematning.
Ron Hllpcr's 27 points, Man·
Ding's 2S and Loy Vaught's 23 for
the C:liP.pers offset Shaquille
O'Neal s 31 points and 14
rcbounds,and Nick Anderson's 24
for the Magic.

. Butrolo11 Pi'!'bw&amp;h. 7:3.5 p.m.
~II Philadelphit, 7:]5 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

$1000

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 992-2635 • TOLL FREE 800-426-5581

Tonlgbt'a &amp;amfS

NBA standings

-ONLY-

E &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

Someone has been illegally soliciting in the area, pos~ng as a
member of the local Fraternal Order of Pohce, accordmg 10 a
Pomeroy Police dispatcher.
Tbe disparcber said dJe ~and state F.O.P. groups are not currently seeking money and CJbZenS should bel::' lbc ..
U anyone gets a lelcphone caD, cmtact e
• .._~ ....,_.
ments or the Sheriff's DepartmenL

MID IIIII A

"

The Daily Sentinel

.

. B1l;lle Aaisoctakd Pre~~ ' ·
The Sac.rameniO Kings weren't
up 10 52'
· one for.injilrcd rook·
ie Bobb Hurley.
The. 'ngs, in their rust lfame
since Hurley was cri!ically inJured
in a two-car crash' latc Sunday
night, feli96-9S 1o Milwaukee on
Wednesday niahC
.
'" It was pmty emotional. I really wanted to win for Bobby," said
cenler Mib .~plowski, one of the
rust people to discover Hurley's
acciden.t. "I know he was lislening
and watching."
Hurley, now listed in serious tiut
stable condition, was honored
b~fore the gam~ wi~h a sp.~~ial
v1deo presentation, mcludmg a
message· from Hurley's father,

Continued from Page 1
listed 10 the front of her vehicle.

Illegal solicitations occur

RomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

Bucks edge Kings; 2' Bulls, 76ers also win

r----- Briefs...-----,
Shooting of horse reporte~.

.'

·'

.

.

tt1 COURT fr., POMEROY, OliO 41781
•

2 TO CHOOSE FROM

ITARTING AT

$7 995

1989 POHnAC
SUN BIRD
4 cblr, '""*'·auto.. air, .....
CLEAN CARl

�'

:Pege 6 The Deily Sentinel

'

Thuredly, December 16, 11193 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MU's Deaton, King make first ·team; John$on ·also·honored ··
B....._,____
:MO.-.
q~k
ca~~~oo,
l!dw...,
---Cnia

ByRICKWARNER .
'., p~i.-n Wrf'Ar
uvwtUI
-..
Idaho
Doug Nussmeier, who led Divisioni-AA with
33 touchdown passes, and recordsetting runners Tony Vinson of
Towson State an d KCl'th Elias o f
Princeton made The Associated
Press 1-AA All-America team today.
Nussmeier, winner of the Walter
.. ,
' Pa yton Award as the di VISIOII stop
player, was ranked second in passmg efficiency during the regular
season. He completed 61 percent
for 2 960 yards and finished his ca' 'thth h' he
.
.
reer wt
e tg st passmg rabng
in 1-AA history.
.
led th di · · · sb
Vmson
e viSion tn
ing! aii-Jliii'POSC yards ~d scoring,
while Elias was second m alllhree
categories.
' e-season I•AA
V.mson set a SID
record with 2,01 rushing yards
and scored 24 touchdowns~Eiias, a
repeater from last year's team, ran
for 1,731 yards and 19 touch'th 21
. h'
downs, cIosmg
IS career WI
school records.
The offense also features
Lehi~h:s. Da~e Cecch!ni, who led
the div1s1on m recepllons and receivingilards per game. Cecchini
Caug ht 8 passes ror I , 318 yar ds
and IS touchdowns.
·
•
Th e Ol_her WI·de. receiver
IS
David Rhodes of Central Florida
who had 78 receptions for 1t 159
yards and 12 touchdowns. The
tight end is Evansville's Hanz
Haag, who had 66 catches for 778
yards and six touchdowns.
Kerry Hayes of Western Carolina is the return specialist. He was
second in kickoff returns With a
36.5-yard average and tied a divi.sion record by returning three ~or
touchdowns. He now has six touchdowns on kickoff returns, a 1-AA

ru -

f,

YciungstownState.
The \01
•·•ense .'•led
by "-·'"--'--·
.
~
Terry Irving of McNeese State,
who made lhe team for the second
straight~~· The other lincbackcts
are William "'ft~
of Mal:shall and
~f"'
Chris Zingo o COrnell. ·
The linemen are Alex Mash of
GtorgiaSoulhem,OiadBratzkeof
Eastern Kentucky, Matthew
Steeple of Morgan State and James
f
.
Folston 0 Northeast LouiSiana.
The defensive backs include Brent
Alexander of Tennessee State,
Rodn&amp;J:rrison of Western Jllinois,
·c W·'~er of Stephen F.
Austin and Chris'rlelon of Boston
University
'
The punter is Terry Belden of
Northern Arizona, and the placekicker is Jose Larios of McNeese
State. Belden led the nation in
punting with a 46-yard average,
while Larios made 22 of 28 field
goal atrempts.
Larios is the only sophomore on
the team. The other unden:lassm•n
c
are juniors Rhodes, Haag, Hayes,
Harrison and Helon.
Northeast Louisiana, Marshall
and McNeese Srate each have two
players on the squad.
Here are the 1993 Dl'vl'sl'on [.
AAAII-Americafootballteams.
F'~ team
'"'
OtrtnM
Quuted&gt;o&lt;l;- Ooua Nuoameior, ldoho, .....
21 0.-.Latoo.,....,o...
Runnin. Ncb - Xoith EUu, Princeton, S11,200,_...,w.yr.......,, NJ.; TonyVin·
ton, ToWIOD Swte. 6-2,227, Mllior, Accoced:,
Md.

·

Lculslano.6-

c-,Fio.
•' ±', • - r_, IJ!b1c. ~State..
"'- 225, - · - . T o w : William Ema.

4,

MJ.J.SHA.U., s-9, 210, ...1.,, Chadut~··
210
HI,
' - ··
BaW-D- AlA...,, r - s~at~

:'a~~~ c....u.

10, 172, Ienior, BJaominaton, Minn.; Oa~id
~~ ea.n~ Florido, il-l, ll!l,jtmi«, MuJbor.

\'ttend - HonzHoos,ev.....rue,6-5,2l5,

iuniaru..::.'::""'·::;.,., spoan. Northwmtem

Sute, M, 304, I&lt;Oioo, Soo&lt;landviUe. u.: Roy·
mond Batiota. Narthcoot r..ou;.;. ... 6-4, m ,..
nior, NeW OdCIDI; OW Or.aton, MARSHAll,
6-5, 260, ...,;.,, Painoavill~, Kl.: Bill Dudtin,

;:-. ;.:

,....D'J!:

Rio leashes Bulldogs
91-69 in road game

+., ..... l'wol. ~- Unl-·
1:r. a• MD...,., 11a11 erou: FeiDIDitoo s~.
r.- _,_,..,.h. s - t'wmf=

u...a.a - DtvW- BIIRlh. YCIWII"'" su~e;
l!nriD
Flarido A.aM: l'boadlur

Lin •

••--w....a.--ltill.

SiaiOil:i,~· y..,,.b.,au.:
aM-a.
,..._

.
.
.
,
,
T.MAS .
I 'I '

•

• Ltiii&amp;J!.

Hurler. in serious condition
desptte breathing on his own
tion to explain why he was driving
down a dark road wilh no lights.''
Wieland could face criminal
charges if tests show he was under
the influence of an amphetamine at
the time of the crash, Heenan said.

:';:"s.\1'.~1::.~·-I.Joi....,;. · ·
l'lot•-T...,-.~..-Arizana,5·
10· 115
01
·"'""'· atdalo.Ariz.

MERRY.CR'D
WS
ft.&amp;1
•

·

·

•o A I r

Second team

Qwu'!"** Davo-....., """"'-·
L,!::1.~m:. w.~plku, Nanlt•ot

..

1

~·

.

.

' ·
DUB DRIENDS

·

-

:.::

•

~,

ie • • ·

. •

Beverly Ellen Maxon recently
celebrated her fll'Sl birthday at her
home with her parents Ray and
Becky Maxon and her older brolher
David Allen.

Birthdays

..

Wlde- -~~Miclt.Ponnoytv..w:

The cake, decorated in a
"Thumper" theme and ice cream
were served to guests.

o....,,.,....,..

o.r-

In addition io her family, those
attending or sending gifts were her
m·a ternal grandmother, Irene
Rhodes, paternal 11randparim!s,
Raymond and Bermta Maxdn and
Gary and Flossie Dill, paternal
great grandmother, Eva Bennett,
Frank, Corena and Sarah Adams,
Paul and Leota Wolfe, Tammy and
Ryan Beej!le, Jay, Judy, Jason and
Joshua L1mback, Chris and Kim
Eakins, John Farkus, Pam and
Mike Mambourgh, Thurm and
Bonnie GarriSQn, Tracy, Kelly and
Brittany Myers, Allen, Deanna and
Lynzce Tucker, Tim, Mary Beth
and Zaclc Dill.

.

- Shono Qooon, r ........ Tech:
CniaLinaMn
Stoub WiiUom ot M•"'· Mou Molrill
Dda..,..A.ihan,Coolt,s.um6mu..s..... '

1...:=.~~'f:J!..r'"=. =~

CatoWuS~ate.
Bocb- Todd Briooon, Moo~ana: Adrian
Smilb, Sou&lt;hwea- Soate; Brian lbl&gt;dall,

... soa~e;s...wa~~aco,s.........

oe~aw

....,.._R..,..Moeutdwn,"""""
Tblnlteam

Quuted&gt;oclt-S~~.... AJooms.....

R~ bocb- Midtaollli&lt;Oo, South eu.
•....W1derocmven:
~.. ""!"'"Smilh.
v.....,.....s
- Tony
lrookl, .....
Eulcrn

wultio,...OuioS........,IIolyC.....
Tip! end- Ioiah 1l1iu,
s~au.

'"'*""

BEVERI:.r MAXON

t.inanat- Palrlclt lfidu, t.lddie Tcmcueo;
Shnnt Moare.lddiana Sta; Tftlll Pollud, Baa·

-Community calendar-

om WuhinJIDft; foanldln Staph••· Ooa•al•
Soulliao;Andoo"•'=
...,BootatU.U....Uy.
Rccwn .pec:ialilt- Dwiafrt Robim:&lt;lll, June~
Madiooo.
Placekicker -

.
Roau Mipcr, Nort.hean

Clouout IJNcfGI
4• PoitseHias 60'
6Yz• Poilsettlas '2.00
IOW Poitsetlia Baskets
5

4.00

,.

Berried Holly &amp;
Bin SptWCt Trees

12.95 to s17.9S

5

Seated, Tom Tope; L to R: Mike Shaffer, Mary Shinn, Nathan Ball,
Frances Taylor, Diane Arnold, .Chris Hampton, Bev Lewis and Jim
Howard.

From the Employees of

Open DaHy 8-5,
Sundaya 12-5

HUB BAlDS
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE .

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day ollhat event. Items
Qlust be received In advance to
assure publication In the calen·
dar.
THURSDAY
· POMEROY - The Middleport
Child Conservation League will
meet Thursday 11 the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church for a
potluck Christmas dinner,. There
wiD be a secret sister Jrift exchange
and an ornament exchange. Mem·
bers are reminded to talte gifts and
food for niledy family.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter
of AA will meet Thursday at 1 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. For more information, residents may calll-800-333-5151.

992-5776

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602, will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday. A World War I
medal will be presented at 6 p.m.,
there will be a dinner at 6:30, and
lhe meeting will talte place at 7:30
p.m. All members encouraged to
auend.

FRUIT BASKETS
A hrlelf Gilt for Anyone On rour U11

JUIIIROIIAI CIIII$111AS 110Wfl•

F•llr Packetl With OniJ
Tile Flaist QHIIIJ Fancr
ElegantiJ Wrapped!
9 Sizes To Clloose From

6W' Pot (small plant) '4.98
6W' pot (large plaat) '6.98

8" pot (2 plants med."height) '8.98

. Prlcecfl4.98
to '39.98

5COLORS
TO CHOOSE FROM
RED, PINK,
WHITE, MARBLE &amp;
JINGLE BELLS

"8o6.' • Arl~antage"
PaclcM In

Place Order

In Advance

To.Jheure

NBA action...

FLORIDA NAVEL ORANGES .
.

OIIIArtlf 10 fOUl WISIIIS•

Pecans, Enghsh Walnuts,
Filberts, Brazn Nuts, and Almonds

40, 41, 64 ce11t per IMII••:..•••114,91
IOce••t ·
-'13.91

$1-.69 Ll.

J2 ,.r kx"...- ....,_

.'11.91
-'10.91
FANCY RED DEUCIOUS APPLES

40-••-..··-·-·--

\.t..
.

or SALTED PEANUTS

'

.

In the service
CHRISTOPHER HALL
Marine Pvt. Christopher Hall,

IN .TIE SHELL

.

'1.49 LIJ

I

All 1 Pound Bagged Bulk Christmas Candy Now Thru Christmas
(OYer JO Ylll'letfet 1e C111111 ,,_,

.

Al1o Available: Fancy Country Mtild lr•..t lncllvldually Wrapped Assorted
Milk Chocolate, Darkf , ... Wlllte Chocolate
s4,99 PER POUND ·. "Mix or Jla1111•

Thureday, December 18, 1 •

LOTIRIDGE - The Lottridge
Community Center will have a
Christmas dinner Saturilay at 6:30
p.m. at the hall. Those attending
are to take a covered dish. The
Center is located on Athens County
Road 53.

TUPPERS PLAINS - A Christmas cantata will be presented at lhe
RUTLAND · The Leading Tuppers Plains Churc;h pf Christ
Creels Conservancy District will Saturday, at Z.p.m. I~is beiDJ 'l*eholil ils teftll8r meetmg Thursday, · sented by the Walnut Street Church
at5 p.m. at the office. The public is of Christ of Belpre.
invited to attend.
RUTLAND - Star Grange 718
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- will have its annual Christmas dinty Library Board of Trustees will ner Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Salem Center Fire Station, Meat
library in Pomeroy.
provided; those attendi!ig to take a
covered dish. Adults to take $3
MIDDLEPORT • Choruses worth of food items for needy resifrom the Meigs and Wahama High dents, and children arc to take
Schools will !?resent an hour of items to be donated to other chilChristmas mustc on North Second dren.
Street in Middlej!on Thursday 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. The program is sponRUTLAND - A Christmas
sored by the Farmers Bank and lhe Snowflake teen dance will be held
Middleport Community Associa- at lhe Rutland Civic Center Saturtion.
day from 8 to 11 p.m. The charge
will be $3 a person or $5 a&gt;couple.
WELLSTON - The Galliaf,6eigs- Vinton Solid Waste ManKANAUGA - A Christmas play
agement' District Board of Direc- will be presented at the Silver
tors will meet Thursday at 6:30 at · Memorial Baptist Church Saturday
the McNally-Pittsburgh Building in at 7 p.m.
Wellston.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Free immunization
clinic for children ages two monlhs
POMEROY- The Rev . Eddie
to kindergarten will be held from 9 Bufflngion will be a guest minister
to 11 a.m. Thursday at the Racine at the Naomi Baptist Church SunFire Department by Glenna Riebel, day at 10:45 a.m . The public is
R. N. Immunization records to be invited to auend.

THE MALLS START THEIR SALES
ON DECEMBER 26TH.
BUTIONS &amp; BOWS START THIS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17TH.

Fall &amp;Holiday 12 11os. &amp; up 40o/o on
Special 'Rack 3 ~os., ..,_..... 50°/o oo
Pageant Dresses~-·····""·25°/o oo

New officers were ipstalled
when lhe Meip County Women's
FeHowlhip met recently at lhe Rutland Church of ChriJL
Installed were preaident, Linda
Bates; first vice-president, Tina
Lambert; second vice president,
Ruth Underwood; secretary,
·Kathryn Johnson; trcuurer, Ann
Lambert; reporter, Becky Amberger and card secretary, Isadora
Williams.
The opening song was "0 Come
All Ye Faithful" lead by Jane Wise.
Prayer was given by Isadora

son of William R. and MicheHe R.
Hall of 4S080 Baum Addition,
Pomeroy, Ohio recendy completed
recruit training.

During lhe ·training cycle with
Recruit Training Regiment, Marine
Corps Recruit Depot. Parris Island,
S.C., recruits are taugbtlhe basic or
battlefield survival, introduced to
typical military daily routine, and
personal and professional standards.
All recruits participate in an
active physic~! concJ!ti!Jning ~ro ­
gram and gam prof1c1ency m a
,variety of military skills including
first aid, rifle markmanship and
close-order drill. Teamwork and
self-discipline are emphasized
throughout the cycle.
The 1992 graduate of Meigs
High School jojncd the Marine
Corps in June 1993.

'

'

'

FQOD
ST""PS

ACCEPTED

2400 E118tem Awnue (acrou from KMart)
Gallipolis, OH • 448-1711
1/4 Mile North ofPonieroy-Mason Bridge

SHOP BUnONS &amp; BOWSIII

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:

Maaon, WV • (304f n3-5721 .

992-5177

Stmy."

~thryn Johnson condncl£d lhe
meetina. officers reports were
given and Christmu carda were
signed and eent to the sick. Takins
part in skits and Christmas carols
were Sherrie Might. Sharon Hawley, Charlotte Lambert, Donna
Jenkins and Jane Wise.
Refreshments were served.
The IICJ&lt;t meeting will be Jan. 27
at the Zion Church of Christ

MANLEYS RECYCLE CENTER
503 Mill StNet

Mitl.leport, Ollio

TilliE DAYS ONlY

• •.., . . ...., . . . . .s..,
Dece•ller 20, 21, 22- 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M.
ALUMINUM CANS 30' PEl POUND (lo DMiers.
Also Buying Clean Aluminum Scqp, Copper, Brass, Radiators.
Accepting on Donation: Glala, Plastic, lln Cln1, New1pepers,
Coqluter Piper, Oltlce Paper.

Mnt11 C.......,... •nd o..l's JUeh.n Bt.ssints
on Tou 1'1111 BeiW.~ -..~en!
(614) 992·3894
992-3194
CLOSED DEC. 23rd 111RU JAN. 2nd

JI-IUI ·
'

• No PAYMENtS
MARCH .1984

nu.

1l'

•

.•

1788
CUT 25'- .~
••

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~CUT

CUT2P 129%
•

~ AM/FM 111r•1 'I
... tD 100 lllllil II'UIIilll&amp;tl ~ 1111111-IUIIIIIIIII•ter
~ wltll- ·In l)lllbr
; Y• - T1mer and alarm. 1111. • ·• lti5·!M&amp;
: Whh case and batteries. Reg. 24.ft 122·171
; Add headphones tor stereo. Rog. rr.• 112·180 : B&lt;Jih·in clock with alarm 1111
···············~··················· •......•...•.........••.•••.••.•..• .•. ..••...........••••••••••••.....
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ml:::.•

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Stocking
~ Stufforf

48811 PC will w:n•swa,
• WDPIII a CDiar •• • .., CUT.
• MS-DOS 6, Windows 3.1, MS
Works with spreadsheet,
database and word processor
e 4 open slots and 3 open device
bays for easy expansion
• IBM"' PC compatible • Mouse
Reg . ..,..m. h•m• 1411.11 125·'162414091

••••••

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2-player, dual screens. 1111· 21.H 160·2475

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13", 27149MHz .. 1111. M.ft reo.,!l3

POMEROY

100 E. MAIN ST.

Williams, and devotions by Pat ·
Thoma who read "The Christmu ·

AT

!!!!

NO NEED TO WAif 1111
CHRISTMAS IS OVER 10 SAVEl
SHOP LOCALII

7

GET ACQUAINTED CBRIS1MAS SPECIAL

__...
--....

CUT 17' :

·BUTTONS &amp; BOWS.

Peel

Meigs fellowship nominates new officers

IN POMEROY AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
INFORMATION

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
will meet Friday at 8 plm. in the
Oak Room in Athc!L'I. This will be
lhe ftnal meeting for 1993.
SATIJRPAY
MIDDLEPORT - A round and
square dance will be held from 8 to
11 :30 p.m. Saturday at the old
American Legion hall ih Mi!ldl~
pon. C. J. and the Country Gentlemen will play.

'

'

CARRIERS EEDED

CHESTER - Free immunization
clinic, I to 3 p.m. at the Chester
Fire Department for children, age
two months to kindergarten. Parents to take immunization records .

PR.E-CHRISTMAS .SALE~

laJ I'IN81 fOflrtelfl
IJ$0: PLAIN ROASTED

::D';~~Eiol"iiii:Eiu~1~~·91,.,
2J .......................111.91

•
brought by parents.

Daily· Sentinel '

•

DOROTHY ROBERTS
A birthday party was held
recently in the observance of the
birthday of Mrs. Dorothy Roberts
of Pomeroy.
Cake and ice cream were
served.
Attending were Sherman I.
Roberts of Oklahoma, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Fillinger of Dayton, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Gray and Sarah and
Matthew of Dayton, Darrell
Roberts of Henderson, W. Va.,
Linda and Joe Roberts of Pomeroy,
Linda Harrison and Ron Capehart
of Pomeroy, J~stin and Jillian Harrison of Bidwell.

From:

TANGElOES eo per ltex--$14.91
INDIAN RIVER PINK GRAPEFRUIT

Th~

---Society scrapbook

Daddttn&amp;-,Aiabama·Bimtlnaham.
Tl&amp;btiod-PuMcN-.WdMos.....
Uoomat - Tam Walron, wun.m ot Mary,
BJo'"! R,.h. MeN•• Stale; lluoiAI F.... '"''"""'
Waohinaton: Joe Bu..,h, T"u s..uhom; Mot
..., a..... apooiolilt - o... Fftoemao, c.,.;.
·PI•'*'*"' Todd Kwz. Dlinaio s....

10 111 fVflf IUIIGfrl

(Continued from Page 5)
miss. Miller then outjumped Chris
:bed.
Webber
for the ball with 29 sec"It's like watclling one or those
onds
remainin$
after Kevin Johnfilms of a flower blooming in fast
son's
miss
of
his
second free throw
motion," Falk said. "I'm really
left
the
Suns
up
105-103.
thrilled by lhe progress he's made.
Latrell Sprewell scored 28
He's a very lucky young man."
Hurley remains in serious condi- points, and Webber had 21 points
tion in the intensive care unit at and 11 rebounds for Golden State.
Bulls 108, Celtics 98
University of California-Davis
Horace Grant sco~d a careerMedical Center. Trauma surgeon F.
William Blaisdell said Hurley was high 31 points and added 15
taken off a ventilator Tuesday night rebounds and four blocks as Chicago won at Boston for its seventh
and was breathing on his ow.
While doctors monitor his victory in eight games.
The Bulls, who outrebounded
improvement, police await blood
the
Ccltics 52-36, .also got 22
test results to determine if drugs
played a role in the Sunday night points and 10 assists from B.J.
crash that left Hurley lying in a Armstrong. Dino Radja had a
roadside ditch and requiring eight career-high 26 points for the hours of surgery for c.ollapscd Celtics.
Jazz 97, Timberwolves 95
lungs, broken ribs and injuries to
Utah
snapped a three-game mad
his knee, back and wrist.
losing
streak
when Karl Malone
Police spokesman Michael
scored
eight
of
his 31 points in a ·
Heenan said Tuesday night hospital
20-4
fourth-quarter
run that
tests found an undetermined
the,
Jazz
to
overcome
a
enabled
amount of amphetamine in the
poor
start
in
the
final
period
at
blood of the other driver, 37-yearMinnesota.
old house painter Dan Wieland.
Isaiah Rider scored the first four
• Heenan said ofricers sent the
blood samples to the county crime points of the fourth quarter, then
l4b to determine if Wieland was set up C~ristian Laettner for a
-driving under lhe influence or had three-point play that gave the Tim:merely taken an over-the-counter berwolves an 82-76 lead. But·the
Jazz, held whhout a PQint in the
medicine containing amphetamine.
· Wieland, who broke a leg in the fll'Sl 3:16 pf the qUart«. scqted 20
· crash, denied taking any drugs and of the next 24· pomts to talte a 96disputed police statements that he 861ead.
76ers 101, Nugelll93
was driving without his headlights
Jeff Hornacek scored 25 points
when his station wagon collided
)vith Hurley's light truck ncar AJw and capped a decisive 9-0 run with
-Arena following a Kings' game a three-pointer with 49 seconds
remaining, lifting Philadelphia past
/ With lhe Los Angeles CUppers.
· Hccrwl aid police hope to have Denver.
Clafcncc Weatherspoon bad 22
the ICSl results back in several days.
"It's looking lite early next points, while Moses~ 1iad 12
••:week at the earliest,'' he said, points and 1!1 reboilnds for the
Jd!linjl .that-investigators were also 76en, while Mahmoud 'Abdui·Rauf
cJulmllung W1cland's car to "see if had 23 points for the Nuggets,
thete was any electrical malfunc- whose road record drOpped to 2·9.

·

~
..• •.·. .p.~,~.IWH· k..
.4 !J!f.,W,~,,...,..,,,"W:W,,· ~
.·

6-4,II5.-.0ollado,T.,..: a-:.,Hatlloaot.
w- lllinGio, 6-1, 200, Junicr,
... m.:
1
CWio w~. Stopltoo f. A...... 6-0, "'·"'

By TIM BREHM
11 occasions.
Student Correspondent
Scoring leaders for Rio Grande
The University of Rio Grande were Walter Stephens and Jeff
Redmen were oil lhe road Tuesday Hoeppner with 14 points apiece.
at Wilberforce. Leaving lhe friend- Matt Powell and Jack Morgan led
ly confines of Lyne Center didn't in two categories: assists, with
seem to hamper their efforts, three and five, respectively, and
though, as IIIey defeated the ·Bull- steals, wilh lhree and two, respectively. Pit\Yen·ailt! Breu Coreno led
dogs 91-69.
' •
in
reounding with six boards each.
Scoring was much more'balTeam statistics for Wilberforce
anced for Rio Grande this time.
···
were"iliilited
to lea(ling scorers,
Individual pof&amp;t totals for the
starters were all wilhin five points Cliff Brown with 24 points and
or one anolher. Assists were also Brian Copeland with 14.
The BUlldogs (1-3) are at Union
dished out by many of lhe players
(Ky.)
Friday. The Redmen (11-2)
as lhe ream totaled 16.
Team defense also played a key uaveled to }\awaii today to play in
role as the Redmen came away the Hawaii Pacific Honolulu
with nine steals. The Bulldogs Shootout to compete in three
seemed to have hands of stone as games: Brigham Young-Hawaii
Friday, Hawaii Pacific Sunday and
lh~ turned over lhe ball 23 times,
wh1le Rio Grande lost lhe ball on Victoria (Canada) on Monday.

BySTEVELAWII.ENCE
. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (~ Bobby Hurley, bteathing wi.OOut a
v'entilator and' drinldng liquids,
showed strong signs of recovery
Wednesday from a car accident
that nearly killed him.
· David Falk, one of Hurley 's
agents, said the 22-year-old rookie
guard for the Sacramento Kings
was able to sit up in his hospital

,__

Wirlo ,......,. - o...o Cecdtlnl, Ldbah 5·

t:.==:v~;!.::S::.;, ~~m:
career record.
w-..,Oii•
Rounding out the offense are
Rctum opedoliot - Kony "''"· Wutom
H 155,jtmi«, Camdm, S.C.
linemen Marcus Spears of North- Cudino,
Placc1Uc:kt:r -1we Lariol, McNeae S~.ate, 5Weslern Stale, Raymond Batiste of
6, 160, """'""""" """'""·
Northeast Louisiana, Chris Deaton
Lin"""' _
Ooo&lt;gio soumem, .,
of Marshall, Bill Durkin or Mas- . 2. 245, oonior, n......villo, Ga.: O&gt;od """"'
sachusetts and Drew Gerber of Eu
.... K-cry,
~~o&lt;~, 268, '"""'·""""""·Ft..:
Matthew
Stet~ple. Mora~n Stltc, 6-3, 275, ~enior,

.

''"'"'""

By The,Bend

..... .........,. ......... ,......cw..
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~11fHIN
Prla!IW!' It ~'ltl" IJICI ......

We're BIG on Serv1ce!
~nrt

beSI ol all

IV!&lt; r1• r1ghl1n your nrJghbo ,· houtl'

�Thuraclay, December 16,11193

ThuNda"y, December ~8,1183

Son finds deer that dad left
PINDLA Y, Ill. (AP) '

Jim

.Alfred
news
Alfreci uiiitCdMetiicidiSi Church

,
RECOGNIZED • Certificates were preseated
::, to these students during the Student of the
~ Month assembly held recently at the Tuppers
, Plains Elementary School. Recognized were left
: to right, front, Jessie Sargeat, second g.~ade;
.

Michelle Thomas, third grade; Nicholas Kuhn,
kindergarten D, and Shawn Reed, kindergarten
I; an.d back, Bradley Brannon, fourth grade,
Corey Whitlatch, ftfth grade; Meghan Avis,
sixth grade; and Darrea Scarbrough, first
grade.

held irs annual holiday basket meal
recently followins the regular
morning services wilh Pastor
Sharon Hausman asking lhe bless·
ing.
Attending were WUma Henderson, Nina Robinson, Richard and
Florence Spencer, Charlotte Van·
Meier, Russell and ·Eioise Archer,
Oerlrude Robinson, Melvin Tracy,
• Ossie and Clair FoUrod, Kathy and
Steve Watson, Lloyd and Doris
Dillinger, Marilyn Robinson, Dan,
Shelia, Kirlc, Danielle and Tiffany
Spencer, Tim Spencer, Susan
Pullins, Sarah Caldwell, Lloyd and
Ruth Brooks, Philip and Sharon
Boyles, Laurie, Ashley and Jessica
Boyles, Nellie Parker, Clara Foilrod, and Will Poole, all local; 1nd
Thelma Henderson, Belpre; ·
Clarence Warner, Athens; Kalhy,
Nicole and Kyle Essman, The

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

died of a heart attack
"Hunting is real important
whU, doing what he loved best: around Findlar,." Mayor Gene
hun..,J dec:i. Bulit wasn't until !he Wooters said. • Ir you have 10 go
day f{ter lhe runeral that his son out, that's a heck of a way to go
discOvered his father's last act was out"
bringing down a magnifteenl buck. · Brent Fogleman plans to preMia nOticing lh8l an arrow was .serve the head and anaers.
missipg from his father's quiver,
Fogl~man died Nov. 14 at 6~.
Brent Fogleman retraced his Doctors h8d advised him to give' up
falher's steps in the woods to find smoking and hunting arter·he suf.
the Cl!fCass of the animal, pierced fered ·a fieart atrsck 12 years ago.
by an arrow, in a creek bed. The Fogleman surrendered th'e
buck had eight-point anllers.
cigarelle$ but not lhe bow Qr gun.
" We were extremely thankful
"I agreed wilh Dad,'' his son
that the Lord took him the way the said. ·~It's ~uality of life, not quanLord took him," Brent Fogleman tity oflife.'
said.

one to three drinks day are only altaCk risk.
about half as liltely as non-drinkers
"We think we have found lhe
10 suffer bean anacks.
mechanism' by which alcohol may
The evidence has lleen mount- · protect against heart disease," said
ing for at least two decades that Dr. J. Michael Gaziano of Brigham
moderate drinking is ,good for the and Women's ~ita! in Boston.
heart. However, the latest study
He and his co-aulhors said !heir
adds an essenlinl piece of proof. It work convinces them of a true
explains how this happens.
cause-and-effect relationship
The researchers found that alco- between alcohol and a red~Jeed risk
hol clearly raises the bod(s supply of heart anacks.
of high-density lipoprotem choles·
An accompanying editorial in
terol - HDL -lhe so-called good the New England Journal of
c~=~:·~ The increase is enough Medicine agreed.
1£
most of lhe lower bean

•

•

•

I

JIIIIOflll p.-..ct~Dn,

llen!lal MIYioe, PUll' A

eng dGae

..........

To place an 'ad
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12

Choice of Drink

• 99

COPY Ol!ADLINI!
Monday Papor
T....toyPaper
Wedneoday Paper
l'lnlrldly Paper
Friday. Pilpor
Sunday Paper

DA')' BERlRE I'UIILICATICXII
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tu.day
1:00 p.m. Wedheoday
100 p.m. Thwtday
1:00 p.m. Frld.y

Ad1 oullide th, eouat.y your ad nuu -.ut be prepaid.
' Receive diteouot for acb pOd lD adnaee.

1

• Free Ad.: Ci...,waJ&amp;nd Fouad adl uader 15 word. will be
run 3 da:r• al no charp.
• Price of ad for aU capit.alleuen i. double price of .d c01t
• 7 point line type only ueed

THRU SATURDAY

1

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE
OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL 7 PM, SUNDAY 1·4 PM
~REE GIFT WRAPPING AVAILABLE
FREE PARKING :
CARD and DISCOVER

Sentinel il DOl retponlibJe for enon afler fnl. d.J (chock
for errar1 rll'lt day ad r~ma iD ,.per). Call Wan 2 rOO P·•·

day after publication \o •ake cG~Te~tUoa
• Ad. that muat be piid ill adnaee •re:

Card of Thoolu

Happy Ada ·

ID Mer~~~oriam
Yard Sal•
• A clauilied advertlaement ~eel la 11M
Dail7 S.Uoel
(excepl Cluoit.ed DU.play, BuoU... Card ar ~

n.

Days
I

Worda
IS

3

IS
IS

Onr 11 Worda
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
s .42
$13.00
S .60
$1.30/day
$.05/day

SHOE PLACE

GaiUa Cowlly

992·5627

Melp Coanty

99~portl

867-0oeol!lre

Not ·BE

Pomeroy
ler

At

675-Pl. ......

S76.Applo G....

245-Rio Gnoda

1143-Paltla. .

256-CII)'OD Dloo.
64ii-Anllla DloL
379-Walnl

247-Lo&amp;utF...
N9-Radae
742-Ratlaad

77a..M-·
882-l'low&amp;....
a95-Lolut

,\ I I I I ' I

ar- Molollo u - for Sale

33-F-farSalo
U- Buol- Bulldu.f,

S5- t...... " " -

36- Roallolal. 'l'aaiOd

937- B..tl'alo

I II

X
...........

I : I \ I \I •

13- luuraace

7- Loo1 aad Fauad

15- School• lt: lnllruc:tioD

16- RodN&gt;, TV a CB Ropair
11- Mioeello-w
Ill- W~niOd Ta Do

HappyAd8

HaBOUJeenaocufun
for Beauty
and the Bea•t,
So to Chi Chi i we
~Ul tfO to fea.t.
T1ae Beaat turned
18 ,.., 'I'huraday
and 1M Beauty
._et 16 today.
Happy BirWlay

53- Aaliquoo
54.- lllioc. Monhanclioe
55- B..tldias SuppU•

Melga County
Jnftrm1ry, your kind·
nan to Brother will
never be torgotttn.
Blrchftald Funentl

Home, RIY. J1mu
" K181aa, the pall·
baal'lll'l, thOle who
unt ftQWVI, Mariti
and·Howard

Blrchftald for iht
food lnd for tholl
who cMna to .,..;
their 1111 nttipactl to

IOIDEIITIAL
COICR'' ETI
WORK

8

64~ ,

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

Porches,
· Patl.os,
Sidewalks

I 1111 \MI V~ARHMJIV

; ~ ~92·7878

•

.

NEW-REPAIR

Gutters
' DownipouG

Gutt.r Claanlng
Palntlnl

FREE ESTIMHS

'949·2168

S.1....tfn

GUN
SHOOT
'
'

C...ral BauJUoc
Mobile Horne R.,.ir

C.rcl of Thanb

1

Sqtinal ...................... '55

PIERSON ·
IROTiiERS
SPORnNG COODS

~Enforced
11/ICit'l -pol

675-6755

CLUB
IN POMEROY
Specllll Eatty llrd

31&lt;1103 1 mo.

Homegi'OWn.car.tully
Shend Scotch &amp;

" 7n1

BILL SLACK

882-2281
USED RAILROAD 1'1E1

l8nn,
llelillllot
l&amp;m.tol

Nov.241h.

r.

, DK's
flrll
AT THE
QJIMI1'Y PIINT SHOP

l &amp; L111E lAIN
33151,_ .......
. . . . . . 45771
614....2-5344
I-I00-714·TIIE

e

Corne by and regleter
for free Battety lo be
~an

•wey o-mbtr

24, 1993. No purchrequlred to reglltlr end
don, have to be pre1ent

to win.

w.--··. .
•• , . . . . . . 11

1-100-714·1111

...,.-=:-All)

........

VAMTYOFQUAUTY

IIITAL TOYJ,
~

ra.-o"""" 1:00

Hn

.._

....

Ia IIIII\ Milt. l
lu ......... to I'.
tt.Myl ....... ....
deltn,lll'f'FI t Udl
Ad., POII*"Yf Ohio
11/lftl -

pol

~~

...

SWHIIIr
• Slrvlce • 89 •Beltl
Regina, &amp; 11101( ocber braada!
Pn Shipped UPS
fMI• Oependmla Strvlcel

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

NOVEMBER SPECIAl,
(BEAT THE BAN)

. NORINCO MAK 90 (AI(4n.----•110
NOR INCO UNI. SKS ----'9S
1200 ROUNDS NON.CORROSIVE..s130
CALL Ami 6:00
304-415•7256
111121111-

CHRISTMAS TREES

BUDFORD'S
UMITEO BALLED TREES
"'IllaiLrir.OCA~n:rED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Ealllat ·
.,
onto Rt 811, go 4 mf.lo Mllapoe1 13. Tum
South on grawt road, 1% mflee to grov..
WATCH FOR SIGNS

JIMIII'·''M IDVICI
Our Business is Security
Alann Systems
_
CIOlled Circuit TV
Security Cameras

(304) 882•3336

-IIW IIIEUL UFE 1ntl

ACCIDENT
IISUUNCI COIIPINY
.,
I

Rocky I. l.,p, D.C.U. • Apnt
hx lit ·
....11,.,., Olllo 45760
(614) 143·5264

HOURS: 10 'llL DARK

BISSELL· BUILDERS, INC. ·.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
:
New Garages • Aepl,cement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL an.J .RESIDENTIAL
~E

Medlen • cancer •Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortg~ge ·

Open8to6
a..,....,,
Jdncll:

ua

FUSH CUT TilES AVAILIILE
01 CUT YOUI OWl

u.

$10.00..ch

Open 8 Dey'e A Week"

Hoovec, EurfQ. 1\i.Star,

MOilTGA.GE COMPANY

Cheryl A. Jamet1
William C. Jamet1
Co-Ownera

CHRISTMAS
TREES

304-n3-5533

Rainbowa, Kirby, Electrolux,

New Haven W. V. 25265

Cd 742·21 43 or
742·2178

CALL

-;

McLendon

Wh•• Pinel/ l Up with
1 great Mllctlon of
larger tren.

91"':::

of large ,~:rt!~·, Meny new IIMnL

Land C!Mrlng, Ponde,
Witter u-. S~pllca
Llcenu • Bont11 ~
Charlie llalftlld,
OpMIIilr
742·21103

U\NILJ, OH.

~ lkllna polyuter cord

boltf.

Now has beautNIJ! Coeur Spanlal Pupplae. Allo
featuring a 2 lt. corrmon Black Tequ. Layaway&amp; .,.
now av.UIIble lor Chrillrna. s.Je on 0\1' ·enllrw llock

tOitcher oOump Truck

71211'1G

ofiREWoOD

'.

614-742-2138

............
.,ra........,,

~GHT

'

SAYRE TRUCKING

FREE card.
Uc. No. 0061-342

·~

u•YIL .

.

Jott N. Sayre

$100 Payotl
Thll ad good for 1

'

..........

I

IINIOIIIbii.Rit•

. tDozer oBicldKie

Grlndlt.ff 8ncllhe

fiJ-4471

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
,,COAl

CONSTRUCTION ·

a

,..

HAULING

··11110

1Wo-.

10·-

wtl

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878

Lft, wide eo end 70 • a.t. Special RIWIL D~
performence prv!IM.
TniCidolltl SALE l"rk*
llbeigl • belli'
•
Aggrmtv. had dN9t
• JJ.\

667-6621

HAUUNG

J.l.l.

Todd'• mom. Klty

.

GE

'

Coch Caldw:oll.

FRE): ESTIMATES

,...,

$12

7n/1rm.

8:46p.m.

12 O.uge Shot

made ·the dedication
oaremeny for TOctcJ
Grlnclehlff on D.c. 10
ponlllle. Worde ••n·
not IIIIP'"' my feel·
Jnge lind . , . _. . . ..
He would be eo proud.
lpecl•l th•nb to

ShoUder Motn ...... '155
Hom~ ................ '22

~ATURDAY

6:30P.M.

1V1rJVM Involved who

DEER llEADS
MOUNTED

RACINE
:FIRE DEPT.
.,' EVERY

. FIICiorJ Choke

.Complete
' · RemOdeling
atop a Coi,RPe1'8

D.A.IOSIOI
EICIYAnNG ·

992-3470

Upholo~&lt;ry

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES '

1

You r,of

very epactal thlnka
to the amployMI of

FURNACES

.

36970 lal R• Raad
POIIIfOJ, OWo
GUVEI, WID,
UMISTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

511- Spo..U.C Goodo

Cl,rd of Thankl

thank• to or; Tom
Bayne and IUIH on
the 5th noor 1t
vatarana HoapiUIIIn
Huntington, W. VI.,
. Dr. Witherell,
Vater1n1 Memorial
Hoapltll 1nd Stilt. A

.....

aBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

1-tOOitl-oo7o
UIWII, !JIIIO

14- BUIIneu TralnlDf

Moore wlahaa to
thank you for your
· klndn- llhown
during hla alcknau
. and dllth. Spaclll

,

ttMtll•
ftJoiNI

•'IOU ....

12- Situ.atiou Waa ...

5

Ad.
( I I - of Ill AI. U)
.......,..,. Ohio
112-1702
c-160owld
I

eDOZERS

11- Bolp \V..,IM

5-HapPJAda
6-- Lo.t ud Found

The family of
Harman (Brathlr)

a.a7 A£

HAUUNG
SERVIa

' .,

l'rolu\I{HO~

AlgpTreeFarm

-&amp;-fllliMI'
ML~a••u

•

'.

,......... for.,..,,

FramaRepU

YaaiOd 1o Buy
U..lock
Grata
165--llol!l ,a Ftodloor

'

1

Cho-llld

cutyvurtrw.

ap.ciiiJzlng ~ Cullom

41-Ha-for'Roa•

Auetioa
9-- Want.ed 1.0 Buy

OIRISTMAS 1REES

liUIIY'IIITO

1\

,.__ llalollo Ba•• far Rnl
F011111 for Rao1
74--lllalon:rcloo

a- Public sat. a

a 4\IR
24Hour
Emil gsncr k\tca ·

...

FrullllaVoplaloloo

For SaJ...r Tracit
I I I:\ I • I I ' I ' I I I '

667-Coohlllo

2- In Moonory
3- Announcemeo&amp;l
4- Cinaway

.....

AEITO!RA1'ION-

INSUIUMCE

Palo lor Solo
lloolcalloalrwoooll

Muon Co., WV

4118-lAoa

9854

388-Vbotoo

POMEROY, OliO

U..,dn~ll

'

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
~olllpollo

/t_ J

...,

1111:

FIRE A WATER .
D•. _ .

C::IASSD'If:IIS
GET RESULTS· FMTr

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fo~Uming telephone e:cc:htJnge• ...

U1ie

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(114) 112·7474

We epnl •

"SPECIAL CAllE"

Monthly
Rates are for coneecutlve runs, broken up·days will be
charieil for each day u eeparate ads.
B,uolneN Card-.S17.001 Inch per momth
Bulletin Boud-.$6.0011nch per day

the CallipoU. Dai17 Tribune, reachlnc ower 11,000 hom•

.

lGOODRATES

Rate

15
15

6
10

IRIIOLD'S
PLUMIIIG,
HEiniG&amp;
COOJIIG
QUALITY WORK

RATES

Notice.) willallo appear in liM Poial P'leu.ut Lpter ud

SUNDAY, DECEMI:JEll 19th
HOME COOKED ROAST BEEF DINNER
Mailed Pet• n • GravY
GI'NII IiRns with MuliWoomt • Hot BuHal'ad Roll

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

40°/0 OFF All SHOES IN SALE ROOM

'ITEM

uphallluythe

By ttppt. only
814-e8'7·PETS

FOR MOM, DAD and KIDS!

0
0
0
0

w. give NIJIIIIIId

for .....
.. p, . . . .,.. d

SANTA SHOPS HERE

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
; INVISIBLE KIT! ER SULKING
blizzard oftea produces loss of
~ ABOUT HOMES AND BARNES · electrical power, so people get out
;
Question: On binerly co~d their kerosene heaters to stay .
. nights we use a kerosene heater m warm. Another factor is that the
:. our house to supplement the he~t blowing snow tends 10 seal up the
·:tlom our old furnace. How great IS little crevices and passages that
~lhe risk of carbon monoxide poi· allow air to pass between inside ·
·and outside environments. The
•soning from doing lhis?
:
Answer: Hooray! You are result is a house that has less air
: thinking about safety, and that is exchange 10 dilute the deadly car. the flfSt step toward having a safe bon monoxide. question: What are
:. home. Carbon monoxide . is an other sources of carbon monoxide
:·-invisible and odorless gas. t is pro- in lhe home? Answer: A leaky fur·
~uced when hydrocarbons, such as nace or ftreplace flue can let carbon
;;:the kerosene in your heater or monoxide mto your home instead
: wood in your fueplace, are incom- of venting it ourside. To reduce
7 pletely burned. Under ideal CO!"· your risk of this, I'd recommend
: bustion the larger carbon-con18111· that you have your furnace and
; ing molecules of fuel are broken fireplace inspected every year by
~ down and c~mically bondc;d wit!t your furnace dealer.
: oxygen ob18111ed ,from lhe au. This .
,
..
~.forms carbon dioxide, that is
While I was reviewing the medi..P~own by its chemical formula cal literature in preparation for lhis
' C02. Carbon dioxide poses no column, I discovered a risk that
heallh hazards for humans when surprised me - power washers.
lhe concentration is low. However, Yes , those gasoline-powered
its chemical "cousin" carbon devices that spray hi~h- pressure
monoxide, CO, does present seri- water and look somethmg like lhe
~s hCallh problans.
"washing wand" a1 self-service car
·; .. Carbon mooox.ide causes prob- washes.
· Jems at very low concentrations
Power washetS were responsible
because of a peculiar feawre of our for two deaths and numerous hoshemoglobin, lhe oxygen carrying pitalizations last year, with a dispari of our blood. Hemoglobin's proportionate number of the vic-'=hemical afrinity for carbon tims being fanners. This is because
'fnonoxide is so strong that it many fannetS apparently use power
erefers 10 chemically unite. or . washers to clean livestock barns,
· bind," wilh it instead of oxygen. particularly pig barns. This is OK,
:"'l'.s an example, exposure to carbon but the power un•t should always
~. monoxide at a concentration of one be left outside the building. If the
: molecule per million molecules of power unit is inside, exhaust fumes
: air for one hour will result in 80 from the gasoline engine may be
• percent of the blood's hemoglobin trapped in a poorly ventilated bam,
; lleing bound with CO. This Ieav~ and carbon monoxide call reach
; only 20 percent of the' hemoglobm dangerous levels.
.
: io carry oxy11en 10 all. ~e bod(s
You can'~ count on w.arntng
, parts -a senous conditiOn reqwr· labels 10 remmd you of theSe dan:· ing immediate medical attention 'to gers, but there are two important
, save lhe individual's life.
ways to protect yourself from car·
; Kerosene heaters 81'e', efficient bon monoxide build-up in your
: and produce little carbon monox· home. Fi~t, !'C ~ure to have ade·
' ide, but little isn't none. So, tl}esc quare venulauon m any_area.where
·t~eaters should not be used m a.. rou use carbon monoxide-produc•
, closed space like a home without mg 1:9-uip!"enL. Second, d!is odor·
·:: added ventilation. It is essenlillto less, mv1S1ble killer can be detected
· ·have some open windows so that by special cards that change color
·:: !here is fresh air coming into lhe in the presence o~ dangerous lc+els
~ Jiuilding. When using a healer like of carbon monox•de. Co~tact your
··,this your home should feel warm local branch of lhe Amencan Lung
:":obul 'with cool drafts of outside air. Associa~on about the availability
;/If you don't have lhe dra~rs. yo.u ofthese11i yourarea.
-~ are at risk oC carbon monoXIde po•·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly col"·
.
• sonmg.
-;: PCOI'le die of carbon m~oxide umn. To submit questions, \mte to
~poiso 0 mg every w!nter, Bl.'zzards John C. Wolf, D.O.. Ohio Univeni·
·,. seem 10 make lhe nsks partJcularly ty College of Osteopathic
O::high. There are probably several Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,'
'"Contributing reasons for th1s. The Ohio4srol. .

TUPPERI·"'-AANI

' S.lo olndl1111e,
. llw81do-.t,•

Call992-2156

Plains.

jModerate drinking reduces heart attack risk
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
yei that moderate alcohol consumpAP Science Writer
tion helps keejlthe heart healthy.
Here's news to drink to: Doctors
The research, published today,
~ have found lhe sttong~l evidence . found lhat people who indulge m

Fo~leman

ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
llhS.IIMyC.Ue)

WICKS HAULING
36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

HOUDAY SPECIAL

.

$9 75 A101 SIZED LIMESTONE,~
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

'•

'

�1G-The Dally Sentinel

Page

Ohio

· BEA'ITIE BLVD."' by Bruce lle.lttie·

Announce 111e 11b

44

3 Announcements

.Aplrtment

__ ...... _
---T--tor. .
-·

KIT 'N' CAitLYLE® ~y Larry Wrtpt

ror Rent .

71 Autos tor Salt

1

Doo::, . _

--..- ..ll:!ladua. .

4

--fOriMIThlo ..._

months old, ~1295 .

5 t•male puppiu, mostly G•r-

man Shepaird, tome Collie. 304-

Beautiful tlutfv gold/While killen. black fWhltt klttan short
haired. good ChrislmiS gift . 614·
25&amp;-6445

-·R-oii!IO .
hoNI&gt;V

lnfofnlildlhll .. d . . . .

new IJJ411*'

...........

~-

Bugle, Part Bass.tt , Ntca Kid 's

P.ta 614-256-6408.

~

-

J*

NORI'II

40

....
......

.....

.,

•An

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

Merchandi se
I GOT YOUR PANTRY
ALL CLIANID OUT,
. AUNT LOWEEZY

-z•

NElat
p,.
Paa

4.

Puo

Paa

Opening lead:

-en-

"

2 Uadercoohd
3lloldNed

Vliet period

oi-(Wir.l

!It Woril 011 I

10-

4 No•oltJ

"tft'ne11 W•ltl delll

711ck

tiAp, tl
tUTti Ill
21 Qnla

5C.Utopplllll
• Leddlr p8l1

towol

32 .......
32Kitlof1110110
34 1006, ........
35 Wlldlnl bird

ue

-

town

M~ot
5I llllut IIOIIIIJ
!It Flllw cllnlctor

.. w.,..n ......

.AKQUU

Reo I Estate

53011~

27C: 1p~oy-

SOOTH

wv.
47 Wanted to Rent

llerldllll

52- tlu
lollatlllant

23=8poln
24F....

.IUIIU 41

5&amp;111, .......

50Actor-

2011Np
22 Unit of

tAJ:IO

91- wHh ....
Aloci lrollor " -· A l l - -.
Coli ollor 2:00 p.m., 30C·T/3.

... ,

41=:1,0111

17=~
tll.otlglnt(el.)

••

nlc.lurttlllt

4211,.

1not

EAIT
.JJDI,

I

41 lllclty 1111

13 8tct
14....,org.
11 ,llltured

tQIU
.AQ17 2

Pu,zle

31~8
. •

olclory

• 11-11-11

•••ua

~

'IM .

IIIIIIIUII
llo-

,.••

37 .....

12 ...........

Furnished

Roome tor renl • •H or monlh.
Slortlna 111120/mo. O.Hio Hotlll.
114-441'·-·

..t.a" rt In •

Part

45

knowtlgly-'

OUt_.,..,

- -- -

•

Rooms

low.

Pupplu ;.

.... not

--

895-3017 Of' 895-3013.

Chrittm..

~

rnlkelf1Y 8IKtl pna:wu,

.

'

,.....

31 illleu

1 aa•d••• of

...,

-··· -

~or ltfllnloiiiiCIIIIO

2 tomolo llooglo pups, 3112

I

.. 1478. ~~
·- ,
I
'Ita Oktl, ,_, ·PI, AIC, MVWII ,.
~·
runnlng, l1500, · •

••n 1 nor • ••• •='

Giveaway

PHILLIP
ALDER

&gt;

Mlhl.,
- -·

ra..d .. ,.., cdar, f'llgiDn.

304-6-··

ACIIOII

**'endrune'':~, :142'"'
.~

._,p..t•rw•.

"',. . Whlllli-llloflll

wrapol"ll•lrMring door. Aloo moklng
hicHry,.maked d.., jwky,
sumrMr MUUgt, lrlll botognl.
Crawford's GrOCif'Y, Htndlreon

wv.

.

NEA ·crouword

BBIDGJI:

o:;;;: t400, t14-; :
-;;-i.~

~.

1!10 Fodoool FlllrHolletvM

Now skinning, cutting,

.•

,.. Iloilo awtolion )
..._.. on Litle K,.., CrMd ;

Al . . . . . . . . .-.glh
INI ,.. I f l li IUbfl(.il ~

Co (11021 154-1'120.

The Dl!lly

ALLEY

;.' "v:
----~
· -------------6

D.W.II., SS. - · "SSim" lodY
lor
*~-·~
,., 1,...,l4nl/llp.
:30pm llan-Fri.
Fun! II Sporta Trivia Glme Funl!l
1·100 .11203 Ext. totS. &amp;2.91
Per Min. Mnt Be 18 Yra. flrocall

POnteroy--Middleport, Ohio

DOWN

to

IFIWiriiiM
111811Mcl8ttoor'o lldrt

1 - Pop

U~IIP-1

24 . . . . .

21=~11tor

:It Actor-

Paa

.... IJII

~~

+J

111M

..........

2tlllltol

........,

IOCIYol,_

32WidiNI

Angling

dllnk(2 . . .1

for your contract

...+-iri . :11 Dec: a ate
'--1-+--1 31 Call - -

39~.,_
In ncwiNm

=.'t'.
42~=-1

41

aw••
hontllldt

--

HOW, YOll
WRITE THE

44 Al'ftlt£OIIt;e

41- Cllln8
41 llt'llplaplll
47 'PP atldl
41 Pncla ..

REPORT

_7___v_;a_r_d_S_a_l_e_____ l

J &amp; D'oloula

.._

~'~~•• ond S.ivogo,

1lso buying Junk Clrs &amp; trucka.

11 ladlv't.,

30C·T73'5343.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CtiiD1ty Cipher cryplOgr'MW . . ~from.
II a br ............... ,_ 8nd , _ _.
&amp;cf'IIMWIInU.CilpM'..-tor ....... T~'*-I ..... C.

'P

P

GPRR

UPF

UL8'Z

8RYS

NIRFWW

ff! ACREAl DEAl

HF
'It OIIC lllorro CIIMic :114 Tan.

AI lo 11118 f14-3~lllltl.
tHO Fanl 4 Cvllndor, 5

Renta ls

•

SpoH. 14,200; 114-441-lmt.

I

73 vana &amp; 4 WD's

,

11'11 Jo.,r : : P truck, 4x4,
1120G,IM;:t,

'''
•

I

CD'S

-?

ClACCIFIED ADC

NUI'M Aida Training ProgramPomeroy
Nurwlng
and
Rahabllltatlon Center will bl of.
ftri"SSI clMeN In Janu~ry, llm-

Want to:
PIN ctownEXTRA

•pm.

Appllcollano

,,.

, compiOIO

tht

TCE

.

I

NIOI 3 tltdrootft houM In Pl.
~nt 1 Nil 114-812..fJIS8.

Mualcll

U n - . Vwy N1co. .SmoH
In Clollpollo~.With 1 BR,
Hu llelrla., • ~ovo. Nl..
Porch, Pir!d"ll• No Polo,
Ror. · - -lrocl. t271111o.
Colt Elrl Tope, ~It

lnatruments
1 - 1 0 - or~ .-u.
lube • • " ' 114

1434.

~ion.

llllidr Clorlnll 1100 f14411-ma.

Fruita&amp;

tm~,

Mondly

Irt

:
{

,..., Hondl 250, 4 Trail, Nice

new. 304•75-4148.

DATE BOO

i

~

Automobile Ira Far Fonl
Tauru., IM-44~ Dllp; 114I!H-1117 All« 7 P.ll.

,

I

•

''"'""" 100 4 - · $1,200, ' •

•'

~

Today is lhe 350th
day of 1993 and the
86th day offall.

ll

I

hem Or E.tlllea.
AnUcauea, 331
Clolllpalio, 814-

''
'

-511., 9:311-5,

FO-.a w~ I"ERRY

I 1M o5LAD HE. DIDN'Tf-16.VE A
A'oO!JIHFLIL. CF FOrA10 CHIFS

PORT'ER.

WHEN HE SAJD"THAT.

TO PLAY PING-·

I

•

•

Furnllhod, 2 Br,

-Frldly, P.ll.

Fum-L nory cilon 2 BR.
Wl....,.run pik:l; In Port• am,
Wa,_edo ICNMOM to bruah hoa l500.oo
mOIIIh. Dopoolt. 814·
I small lat In AICIM, 814-Mt:
388-1000
:1140 lftor 1:30pm.
TWo bedroom mobile hornn tor
18 Wanted to Do
rM11, lllo at**~ tor rent lllrt·
l11j1 oiS851mo., 114-8112·21117.

7hm your clutter into ca&amp;h,
Sd it the eau ~Day.. •by ,phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your cla18ificd ad todqyl
15 word. or le•l', 3 dw,
3 pqgers, $5.40 paid in advance.

2 Lorge

Soourllr DIDolli ROqul...t,
0... 114-Mit. E.. nlngo; ItO 11.11. at4-3117-"IUO.
2bdrm. apta., total tlectrlo, •pplio_. tum-, llundry
raam loclhloo Cioll IO IChoOI
In town. AllltliAilona IVIIJible
1t: Village ·or.n Apt .. t4t or

1--------------------

coll814.ft:l·3n1. EOII.

4 •. __________________________________
"·----------------

21H. Ill Mectrlc, tppiiiRCM fur·
nl.._,, on lht rnl~tnl.
Lluertlnd Apt1., New Hav•n,

WV. EOH ,..aez.:me

5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

•

Galllpolit Dally Tribune

Fl.-,

ASTRO·ORAPB
_71___Aut
___o_a_.r_o_rSl...:...lt____

Building

SuPP1•"'"'
.... -

Chwrolot: 1M1 Dido •

-h• ....,. -

Dovlo

-~~~~
IIIChfno
et.ner A.....,,

-r-=

......... '

. I..~,

~

WI IU.Io, 01.- F - TIIO

Foct"!Y· ....,.,r,Proltl · -

1Mm!l1jl. Put·'llrM To Olhlr

AVIIIIIIID. C:IIIJI ,.....,... Ill.

-·
1.0.
for morw lnloilteallen o.u Ron'o TV - ,. -'"!Irina
1...-2111 dora or 114-1112· othlr
In - .........
1100_.alo,oiOO
moil
2172 ....,.. - -......
wv
1171 - k Century, S4t5; 70 ~IJI.flllltl.!ol
Clwvy 1 lan, -

·11Wil'-GII2.

- . t400;

.......,ONct..

·~··· £Iii

~lo Tlnll,, _ -=~~Ciolllo
C.. liON 1-INTIIIIP IU,

oloa-.DH_.,._,
.

1m C...lltt SUpl .. ltt IR, AC,
.
'
110 lllfllno, MOO 010. ~~M-~71·
1111.
Will poilla .................
put.
. .-~
vln :
11'11 .Ceprloe a.olc pte~
lldrllrll- I
~·

446-2342
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

992-2156
Pt. P1eee•nt Rep.ter
675-1333

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~ R~.f14 ~.

--- -............. ...- =: I·-·-·
··
-·
D

And!:,

Free,.,
Pick-liD And IIIII::Y:,_fiiiO,
V.uum

84

Ellct1'1C81 &amp;
Rifrlgtrltlon

· ·~

Aaaoclaliona may be eslabllehad In lhe
year ahead with persona with whom
you'\18 . - r been p!8YfouiiY allgntld. Thill .
could oome abOut lhtough a meet ui'IUIUIII '
chain ol: clrcumetanCel.
- IAGmARIUS (f!ov. It-~. ~1) You
need lhe type ololcltAfli loday thllleln\u. lale your Imagination and allow you to
express youreell. What yo~ say or do
COUld havti a very strong i!lfluenOI on olh·
en!. Gel jump on lifo by unc1e-.g
lhe lnlluencea which are governing you In

a

I I I I r ;:,
s

I

'Withthewaypricesaretodayifs

I

!l 0 II T A ''

1 1 1

~=:,--r~..;-.:.:..r-.,..-11r;--~

0 c:~.;;~,;.~'in~ ·~h·~:".
1

quo••d

.
_
.
•
.
_
bv ltllu,g on th mi"'"g words
l-...l..-;0/-...l..-1--...J..--l you develop lrom step No. 3 below

8

II 1· 1· r I' I' I' I' r I
I I I I I ~HE; I I I I

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTfRS
•

l.i

I he year ahead. Send for your
, aa
Graph predictions" today by malting ·
GEMINI (May
20) Toy to asaoci·
and a long, self-addressed,
ate wilh persons loday whose basic beliefS
envelope 10 Altro-Gnl!lh, c/o thie ~- and philooopl1y mesh with yours. They will
per, P.O. Box 4465, New Vorl&lt;, N.. Y. help slrengthen your fallh, and you. in
10163. Be sure to slale your zodiac sign.
rum, willllimulala lhelm.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) To,,be CANCER (Ju"' 21.July 22) As of today
productive and elfectlve loday you ITIIlsl there mlghl be an extraordlnaoy shift in
keep your priorities in order. Maner tliat conditions whicl1 could make H- r lor
could enhance your male~al well being you to achieve a hidden desire you've
should be listed at the very top of your been nurturing.
agenda.
••
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) So1Mo10 you preAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Foll. 19) You haVe Ylously felt wao never your ally might be
g&lt;l!&gt;d leadership qualllles loday and il drawn clol8r to you allhil lime lhrough a
could be counlerproductlve to hide y&lt;N/1 chain ol circumstances. Tha association :
llghl under a bushel. In sltuallona lhal ~ will gonerm mutual bel 10111&amp;.
·
tor a strong hind on lha fllllr, lllep In and VIRGO (A~g. 23-Sept. 22) A career or
lal&lt;8 CM~r.
' wort&lt; 8ltu8llon you fait powtr11u to aHer
PISCES (Feb.
20-Maroh
20) looks 111&lt;8 Mcan now be chlnglld with only
Acknowledge incllnallona today lhat urge a nomlnol eflort on your behalf. Tal&lt;e con·
you 1o try lhilgllhal could bellar your lila t11ruc11ve meiuuMIDday.
!
and persono lor whom you•ra reeponeibie} ' U8RA (llept. 23-0ct. 23) The!a'a a poaai· ·
Whatyoulhlr!k you cando can be·done. · ;. billy you m!ght b e - 10 do beliar lhan
ARIES~ 11.,.,.. It) Wlllloul real'
usual In an arrangei'nenl loday wh8ro
!zing M, you mlghl ha\18 been ehowlng pnot. chance Is a primary f•ctor. II you leal
etlnll8l to Mloct ll1endt ~- . :. secure about lhls, fire your btill ahol.
ly. Tlils beliavior
be tiiTIIIIIdlid. TIV 1.' SCORPIO (Oct. 24olloY. 22) When ~
10 do •omlllltlug aboulllodly.
. tllty moti11811d todoy, you'l be an extiTAURUS (April 20-ltllly 20) When you ,. }Y determ~ poraon who II no4 ill&lt;ely to
lal&lt;8 on on uaigMMinl or O()jecllll8 today, .• Jea\18 any looll8 lhi1Nida once you commH
Marol.. a wil to win within you that will ·' · youraelf IO a apaclflc olljeelr.,.
not be dulwttlll. What You do nlay 1....-

eho!tll!

'There's gold in the
creek!' the old prospector
yelled to his partner. "So
what?" his partner shrugged.

~

SCRAM-lETS ANSWEIS
Tomboy- Ripen- Vying- Morose- MEMORY
The old man celebrated his 1Oath birthday. 'Wlat's
your secret?" someone asked him. 'That's easy," he
grinned, 'have good health and a short MEMORY.'

J IV

lanllh 21 lnoh Calated Ooneole

,. ~

• &lt;C..MBLE
~~TIERS

IIIII &amp; - I I movil proloctor

D•nlty, 14k ook( .;.;.· uphtre
ring, size I, ISO. OIMI
Chrttlmla P,...ant! 304-TJ3.
5&amp;38.

1

1

I~

with IICIWn, -.. c111 ew.m.
3071 before 10:301m.

ll•twacd

BUslneu '

"'

anchored at Boston Harbor and

ch1ln _.... 11444&amp;.1800 ·

Block, briCII, -

21

the

be-

I~:::~~~ nearly 350 chests of tea over·

1...1&gt;111 ond Faolblll coldtl: 11711. mini lo Mlr mint. Knlv• &amp;

==i· !;~

.

British rule boarded a British vessel

Am1na 11 Foot FrM FI'MI With

o-.
24W121.

.'

"·

'

leo llokor, Almond, 814 44f 1137.

- ·RIO
Inti~*,
tile: DH
c:Miodo
Gr.-,
Coli -114-

11~----------

1&amp;~
· ------~-------------14---~--------15~--------------

Souonocl

55

--~- ·

12---------------

AAA,

Dllllvorod And · Stoclcld. P,U.
Load 110, t14-211-e781.

1111

7.'--------------

"'

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1773, American colonists protesting

tJt.l .. tM~6£: i~~
A liTTlE LESS
Etf.OTING ...

Ooocl-lon, .;c;Hi,.,

L

8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9. ____________

10 _______________________

2 Floortl,

~-!.112
Patio,
~. No "''• ~ Plua

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

6

Bod-.
llt!!,J P-,

'

actor·

ITHURSDAY

Two bedroom trailer In ARine,
&lt;111114-tll:l-11868.

AJ:ianment
forRent .

·-- •trnu~tunt

in what came to be known as
the Boston Tea Party.
'
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Ludwig van
Beethoven (1770· 1827), composer;
George Santayana (1863·1952),
I~:~~;~~~,~~~; Noel Coward (1899·1973),

A-, Oollipollo,
$320/Mo., 814-441-4418 Aftor r

no Founh

tAM I

I

T R A I' E

Dec. 16, 1993

~·1~4~~~-~~o~·~---------._J

on 2 IICrll lot:, Pott. CrMir. 1rwa,

llabllo -

••••

r1

1 1 1

UPORD

••

a

Sh~ng &amp; Aec.lvlng Clark,
coL·ucenH PNftrred. Apply In
Per10n
At:
Burllla
Oil

HT

IIII Nt;KT

c11n wltl be ellalb~ · to apply lor 1300. pr month, 304-t'll-llll.
omplaymont. EOE.
2 bod,_, trolior1 rot a dtp, lit.
LocuM Aa on rf;ht, no
Ol.k. loood TrUclllng Campsnr a......N.304-QI.1071.
Loolll11j1 For OTR Prlvora. Sl!'llo ... ·-- -· -·- ... Dr Toom Drlvott. lluot lo OV.r 2 Badl ooru, -··· $250/Mo.
211 ,.,.. 01c1 Wllh 2 Yooro ex. Dopaslt, Phanro: 114·388-8259. •
porionco And Goad IIVR. All E·
qui-nt lo Lolo- eannnbr ponlllly IUmlahod, ..,.
tlonol TriCIOIII With Roolor.
ed a
helt,CMI
to
Wllkly Poy. Hoolth lnouronco
Wltlr
fwnlthed.
Avoliobto. t.f00-43'1'o8784.
h. 814-448-0228

CA8H?H

ZL

MFZI'MF

low to lorm four words .

being occoplocl at 38759
42 Mobile Homes
IDI'Inao 11d., 'Po!MIOY.
olzo Iii llmMocl. NO phano
lor Rent
Apply In Jll'""" botw3pm, 11-f. . Sludtnll lhot .... 14X70- ~. aaad cond
CMI~IV

KLPSK

R:earranri8 l•tttn of
0 four
scrambled words

lor ronl, S37Simo.

30C.f7S-4411, .

8FL8"F

'::~:t:~' S©\\.o\\~-~~!rs·
- - - - - - - - - ' - - U•od ~. CU.Y I. 'OW.N

- ··alaio

EOUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER 11/FIH
NON.SIIOKING AND DRUG
~REE ENVIRONIIENT

SLZ

MFZI'Mf,

IF R P Y
I M N C.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II lhe Bible come out today, Matt-. M81k,
Luke end John would have to go on the Jay LAno .._,.. - Jim M,.,..,..

S-4 8R
10 Go~
llpolo. . nolahbafhOocr.
$4SO'month. 114 4411181

THE

ZJF

ZL

YIU

WJLGW . '

41 Hou-lor Rent

311&lt;. -

VT

WPIKPIIL

•

•

DECEMBER16I

�Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 16, 1993

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Ohio Lottery

Cavaliers

Football93

•
WID

Catch All The
Excitement!

•

PageS

Prescription

INGELS
992-2635

For AD Your Prescription and

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PAll ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

The Top Twenty MaJor Conege T11ms
e - NEBRASKA
7 ·WEST YIIGINIA

1 - FlORIOASTATE

2 ·TENNESSEE
3· TEXASUII
4 - NOT!IE DAilE
$-FlORIDA

e-ucu

I-AUBURN

10- MICHIGAN

Friday, Dec. 17
LAS VEGAS BOWl
F~day, Dec. 2&gt;4
JOifj HANCOCK BOWl
Sa!Ur9r, Doc. 25
ALOHA BOWl
T....,,Doc.21
LIIERTY BOWl
.......,,Dt•. 21
COPPER BOWL
T!Hndoy, Doc. 30
HOLDAYBOWI.
FREEOOII BOWl
,Frldoy, Doc. 31
INDEPENDENCE BOWL
PEACH BOWl
GATOR BOWl
ALAIIOBOWl

11-IIIAIII
12 ·SOUTHERN CAI.FORNIA
13- PENN STATE
14- OHIO STATE

11· WISCONSIN
17- BOSTON COllEGE

15- ALABAMA

20- WASHINGTON

II· COLORADO
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Oklahoma ............- ............... ___ 28

Ttxll Tech ..................... _, 'D

Colofldo ----··--------- 31

Fr11no Sllta --··--------· 24

Laulevllle ·---·-----·-----··-- 22

Mlchlgtn Sllta -·--··-·-··--·11

Kanus State ···-----·-----·-- 28

Wyoming ·······-------- 21

Ohio Sllta ............................. 29
Southern Ctl ............................ 32

Brigham Young ---------· 14
Utah .................- ....---·-··· 18

Vlrglnll Tech ............................... 24
Clemson ............................... 30
Alabeml .................................. 17
Ctlllornla .................................... 21

1nc11na ...............- ......- ....- ..... 22 ·

Iowa ...................._...................... 12

SALES • SERVICE
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llchlgan .........................--·-- 34
TenneltH ---·--·--·----···· 28
llaml -·----· ·----·-----··- 29
Boaton College . ...................... 23
No1rt Damt ....................... ____ 20
UCLA ............................. _ ..,... 'D
Southern U......................_ ..... 21
Florida Sllta --·-----..----··· 24
Florida ·-----·----·..···--···- 26

North Ctrollna Sllll -·----- 1T
Penn Sllta ·--------··-----14

... c.........

Ktnluckp ·------·-------- 'D
North Ctrallna ·-----------· 18

A(lz~na ........:...·-·----- 22
Vlrglnl• ...........-----·------ 16
TIUI A&amp;ll ----·-·-····---11

1 - Scu-!em ............................................................. 94.3
2- Pacifio-10 ............................................................. 94.0
3-BigTen ...................................................................... ~t . a
4 - Big Eight .... .. .. .. ............ .. ............ ........
.. .. ~1 . 2
5- Atlantic CoasL ................ ......... ........ ............... 90.7
6- Big Easl . .. . .. .......... ....... ..
....... 87.6
• 7- Scuflwosl ...... ............................
.. .............. 86.2
8 - W.llm .. ....................................... .. . .. ..... .t .... 82.8
g- Sl1y ...............................................................:...... 70.~

West ................................................................... 70.3

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South Ctroll111 Sllta -··-··- 18
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Will VIrginia ·· -··-·---- 23

HIGHLIGHTS
When Wnl Vuginia coad1 Don Nehlen ~ ihat ~ hla MollllainMs dido, ge11he chance to play Nebraska for
lhe na1lonal ~. k would be ,he biggest crime aver perpetrated on a cofJega loolball team,' k -ed lha1
he'd gonen a snuk peak II our mathemalical rankings. Ollhl six learns we have ranked abovt llle undelealed
MOU01aineer1, llle one !hey migllt c:ome dDsest 10 beating II Nebfllka. The way lhiRgs Sllnl, 1ht Onrtlge Bcwoi m.
wil be declared the nalional chan1Mon. and In tht unlikaly evl011ha1 West Vorglnla llampiH FDrida In the •
Bowl,
Nehlen and his boopl wil have '*Y ~ to llake a dalm of tholir own. We're slicfdng wilh Florida Sllla, 1M wk!W
playofls and wilh 1 COIII1Ion ihat lsn1 8CIXII11plishlng mudl. 1htrt'l no war to " - lor surt. Just ttri how ugly flings
might haw~ I URCIIf8818d Alilum were aligiJfl for a~ gt1111t.
The wcrd 'Caali1iorl' conlinues to IICCIIll1aly desallt llle teams !hal show up in postseason bowl games. 01 the 36
leams lhat played In bowls 11111 year, 20 ol1hllmll't returning 1hll year. Far bal1er or worH, 1 winning prog11111in major·
co1ege IDDibal ~~~ms10 bt llll'fiiiPIIuatng.
0\K lorecasting average remained consislenUy high !his season. Because olthe _ ..xpanding Oivislon I·AA, we
picked. e rec:ord IOial ol 2.370 games. 40 ol which tACfed in lies. We were r9tton 1,749 of llle rtmalnlng 2.330. a
peroen!age ol .751 .
Finally, hera's our annual ranking of the lop 20 c:olagt conferences, based on the avorage of our JIDWII' quolientslor
!he leams In each of 70 conlerencas. The Pac·IO !ought i1s war lo lhe top of lhe list 11111 season, bu1 lhls year the
So~Mleas11m Conference Is back on top lhiWlks lo !he s1renglh ol Tannessee. Florida, Album and Allbama. Here's lhe
breakdown:

10-

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11 - Scutland ............................................................... 68.7

12- Mid-American ......................................................... 68.6
13-Yanliat ................................................................... 64.1
14-Soul1em ................................................................. 63.1
15 - Ga1eway ................................................................. 61 .11
16 - American W..t ............... .................................... 511.8
17 - Nol1h Central .......................................................... 58.5
18 • Gulf Sou1l! ..... ..................................................... 58.1
111- Mid·Easllm ............................................................ 5$.7
20 - l.ont Sllr ............................................................... 52.8

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Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Dec. 18-20,

••a

(Saturday)
DALLAS .............................. 11
**N.Y. JETS ••••..•..•..•.•.. t4
This series stands a14-l in the Cowboys' favor, though !he Je1S won !heir most recent game three years ago- and
Dallas has never played this good a Jets ream. N.Y.'s weakness is pass defense.
DENVER •••••••••.••. "...............ll
**CHICAG0 ................ 20
Tbe Bean bave bearen the Broncos four out of !he last five times lbey've played, including a 16-13 OT win in
'90. This one looks close, because Denver will find ittouglr to pass against Ibis D.
ATLANTA............................!?
.. WASHINGTON ...... 13
.
(Sunday)

In a baule of teams !hat bave swapped altitudes since last year, Atlanta wiU end Washingt&lt;in's four-game winning
streak. An omen: In last year's 24·17loss, Neon Deion returned to Ieick 99 yards.
••CLEVELAND................l3
NEW ENGLAND......... 16
Tbe Browns almost always beat !he Pattlots, but they seldom dominate: Last year !hey needed Mike Tomczak's
TD pass with 31 seconds left to win 19·17. N.E.'s offense is allergic 10 end wnes.
**GREEN BAY ...................24
MINNESOTA ...............21
Wben the Packers and VIkings met at the Metrodom&amp;, Minnesola won 15-13 on five Faud Reveiz field goals, !he
las1 one witb four seconds left The Pack won'tlose i1S fourth in a row 10 1he Vikes.
• **KANSAS CITY ............... 31
SAN DIEGO .................... 19 .
In e fmal minutes of tbeir forst game wilb the Chargers nine_ weeks ago, Joe Monlarulled the Chiefs 80 yards to be
winning TD - !he 27111 comeback win of bis career. At borne they'll cruise.
·
J
••L.A. RA.IDERS ................ 20
TAMPA PA)' .................14
Tbes~ two ~s haven't met since the Rai~ ':"ere in Oakland and beat lhe Buccaneers in '76 and '81. Thmpa
Bay IS weak m every category,but L.A. really ISO t much better, winning wllb defense.
'
LA.RAMS .......................... IO
**CINCINNATI .............9
The Beogals bave won four of 1heir six ganies against !be Rams, including a wild 34-31 OT game in '90. They're
almost-dead even, making Cincy the logical pick at horne, but we see a mild upset.
••MJAMioooH...HH000HoHOoOoooooool9
BUFFAL0oooooooooooooooooooo 2:3
~L
In late September Miami dominaled 1he offensive and defensive lines and beat Buffalo 22-13 in a game !hat wasn' 1
as close as the scoo:. Witb playoff bome fields a1 stake, Miamt needs Ibis one.

PIDLADELPIDA .........." •• 18
**INDIANAPOLIS...... l3
'
The Eagles and CoUs haven't played In tbrce yean. Afrer battling Dallas and·Buffalo and before tryi~ to prepare
for New Orleans and S.F., Pbilly will welcome !he chance to beat up on someone.
~.
PBOENIX. ......."''!"''"'""'"'.. 26
••SEATILE................. 17
)('
S~ is 0-3 against lhe Cardinals, wbom !bey last lost to in '89. Phoenix can move !he ball and sco're poinls, bul
11 s lost a lot of dose galll\lS. Tbe SeabawkS'tan't keep Ibis one close.
'
••Pl'ITSBUKGH ................ l7
HOUSTON ................... 24
.
~weeks ago Warren Moon dlrew for 295 yards and Houston's defense s&amp;:ked Piusburgh QB's six times as the
Oilers shut down the Stee!m 23-3. Wldl HousiOn on a tear, Piusburgh has to win.
'
.
SAN FKANCISC0 ••• - ........32
••DETKOIT ................l l
In two games in '91 and '92 the 49en outscored m Lions 59-9. For what It's wonlt, bolh were played in S.F., and
1lle lasllime 1lle 49crs came to Deuoit (in '85), tbey lost Not Ibis lime.
·
(Monday)
N.Y. GIANTS ..""""'""""""""28
**NEW ORLEANS '""24
It's been five years since 1be Gian1S and Sain1S last met. N.Y.'s running game is among·lhe best in !he NFL, wbilc
N.O.'s, defense is among 1he league's worst against !he rusb. Bolh need a win ..

MIDDLEPOft

1--11111!1-------------•
992·5627

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1994
Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
255 Mill

s,.

•

MOSCOW (AP) - The Uniled
States and Russia signed space and
investment accords and traded
promises of goodwill Thursday,
determined to show that political
tumult would not .stymie Russia's
reforms or friendship with the
WesL
"The mood and spirit of our
deliberations has been exttaordinary," Vice President AI Gore said
as !he ink dried on 17 agrcemen1S,
including a 300-pa~e contract
adding Russia to !he mrema1ional
space sta1ion projecL "I foiDld the
Russian leadership in a positive,
determined and confident mood,
commitred to moving ahead witb
democracy and refonn."
For all !he fanfare, !he space
cooperation deal was s1rUck monlhs
ago and Thwsday's ceremony was
arranged merely to sign tbe contract. And the new Investment
accords were relatively modest,
including a $125 million grant for
Russia to buy energy efficiency
equipmenl and new jomt U.S.-Russian ventwes in gold mining, heavy
engine manufacturing and nuclear
power plant safety.
So tbe leaders emphasized !he
symbolism of their meeting as
proof Russia was maturinjl as a
dem~, able 10 Carry on 11S foreign affans even as it copes wi lh
inretnal p01i1ical upheaval.
To make that point, Russian
Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin closed a news conference
by lhrowing his fist in 1he air and
deliverin~ a .personal message to
!he American people, not wi1h !he
scowl !hal accompanied !hat ges.
ture in !he Colil War days but the
wann smile ot an old Criend.
"There is no need 10 be afraid
of Russia, no reason to fear Russia," Chernomyrdin said.
Still, Gore took tbe Oll!K&gt;rtunity
to rebuke Vladimir Zhuinovslcy
again. The na1ionalistleader' s anureform party scored surprising sue. cess in elections for Russia's new
parliamcnL
"Neilher I nor my counb'y can
remain sUent about !he ouuageous
and reprehensible views with
which he has associated himself,"
Gore said, before comparing Zhirinovsky wi1h Hitler.
"I feel compelled to say !hat
given all of 1he experience of !his
century, anytime someone emerges
on 1he scene wi1h a claim to a share
of power and popular appeal, who
talks cavalierly about mass dea1h,
the world cannot remain silent,"
Gore said. "This is a challenge for
Russia, and 1his is a challenge for
1he world."
Zhirinovsky has advocated
reviving the Russian empire and
has said he would not hesi tare to
use nuclear weapons. The attacks
on him are designed to isolate him
as an extremist and make olhers in
!he newly elecled parliament reluc1alll to join him in any anti-Yei1Sin
coalition and risk Western economic aid.
Although he attacked Zhirinovsky, Gore said !he election
resul1S were getting belter for President Boris Yel1Sin by !he day, as
reformers and moderare independen1S make gains in parliament ballo1ing.

Middleport

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Sa1uiday, JilT. I

HALL OF FAilE BOWl
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Vol. 44, NO. 165

Sundry Seeds See Us"

THE HARMON FORECAST

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UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

..---Christmas is... --......,

Planning continues
for Meigs' 175th
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SendDel News Statr

THE JOY OF GIVING • Many Meigs
County businesses aild Individuals are con·
tributlng to making Christmas brlgbt for dis·
advantaged boys and girls through the Meigs
County Department of Human Services'

"angel tree" project. Betsy Jones, Lowry
Casci, and Sberry Cbapman, left to right,
· bandied the cbUdren's gills for Oblo Eta Pbl
Chapter or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.

•
Plans for Meigs
County's 1751h
anniversary observance were furlhered Thursday when 1he committee met at the Meigs Museum to
discuss celebration plans, fund raising aclivitics and special projec1S.
Margaret Parter, chainnan, presented to tbe committee a mission
statement which was adopted. It
nores thai. tbe commiuee will give
periodic reports to !he Meigs County Commissioners and the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, Inc. on planned programs.
and designated thai. all fund raising
will be done in the name of the
1751h AMiversary Committee.
Rev. William Middleswartb was
elecled treasurer for 1he committee
and il was decided !hat all funds
raised will be kept separate from
funds of !he sponsormg agency.
Once 1he year of activi1ies is over,
then any funds remaining will be
turned over to !he Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society.
Besides Parker and Middleswarth, o1her officers elecred
were Cindy Oliveri, secretary,
Karen Werry and Mary Powell,
publicis1S.
Four new members were added
to the committee at Thursday's
mee1ing. They are Roy Holter, represcn1in~ 1he Sons of !he American
Revoluuon, Dana Kessinger, Meigs

County schools, Susan Oli:ver,
Senior Citizens Ccnrer. and Rutb
Power, Meigs Librarian. ·
.
Those four join 1he officers and
Jeanette Thomas, Joyce Davis,
Rosalie Story. Dave Oloec~.
Dawn Spalding and Charlene Hoeflich to make up 1he committee.
A sample of a CUS101Dized COY•
erlet was displayed at tbc meeting
but action on whelher to design a
coverlet and use it as a fund nisei'
was postponed until the Jan. 13
meellllg. The coverle1S ue 46 x 61
inches and sell for about $40 and
must be order in a minimum number of 225. Whether there is
enough inrerest in purchasing !he
coverlets will be a deciding factol'
in
1he projecL II 1he com:miuee
·des 10 ~ ahead wilh die
project. tben a design will be devct:
oped and colors selecled.
lnfonnation from Open Window
on wood replicas of Meigs County
buildings was presented wilh no
action being taken. It was popostd
thai. once !he logo ~ been devel•
oped !hat perhaps it could be put 011
one side of the wooden piece, and a
shon history of Meigs County on ·
!he reverse side.
Parker reported that no logo
suggestions have been received. A
committee of Dawn Spalding;
Mary Wise and Parker will work
on developing a logo and repon at
COntinued on Page 3

takinu

Inman eyes easy Senate confirmation, hard Pentagon problems
WASHINGTON(AP)-Retired
Adm. Bobby Inman is wiMing waves
of eager suppon on Qlpitol Hill as
Presidem Clinton's choice to be his
new defense secretary. He would be
the firs! civilian Penlagon chief in
more !han 40 years who previously
had a full career in unifonn.
In announcing his selection to
replace Les Aspin, who is leaving in
January, Clinton said Thursday he
believed Inman was 1he rightleaderto
help the adminisuation forge a consensus in Congress on national securi1y priorities.
"He brings to this job 1he kind of
character all Americans respect,"
Clinton said, noting Inman's upbringing as !he son of a gas station owner in
the tiny east Texas town of
Rhonesboro. He graduated from hi gh
school at age 15.
"He rose to distinction and sue·
cess on !he basis of his brains. his
talent and his hard work," Clinton
said in a Rose Garden appearance
with an unsmiling Aspin at his side.

Inman, 62, said the JOb- which good person for the job."
Sen. John Warner, R-Va .. who
he neilher sought nor initially wanted
-"won't be easy" in a time when said he has known Inman for more
many Americans think defense spend· than 20 years, said his selection indicates Ointon is "moving wward a
ing is a poor invesunent.
One of his first problems, if con- morebipanisanapproach" to increas·
firmed. will be reconciling an esti- ingly vexing problems of seuing namaled $50 billion gap between what tional security priorities.
Inman will confront many wugh
the White House says the Pentagon
can spend over !he next five years and issues, including an immediate crisis
what Aspin had said was needed for over North Korea 's suspected nuclear
weapons program, the impending
the nation's defense.
The budget problem IS believed withdrawal of thousandsofU.S. uoops
from Somalia and the worsening civil
to be one reason Aspin resigned.
Key members of Congress from strife in Bosnia.
In his Rose Garden remarks,
bothpartieslavishedpraiseon Inman.
who has held-level high positions in however, Inman said his first focus
defense and intelligence under Re· would be on the Penlagon itse lf: setpublican and Democratic presidents. ting i1 on a course thai would restore
Sen. Sam Nunn , D-Ga., chai r- public confidence.
The last career military offi cer to
man of the Armed Services Commithold
the post of defense secre1ary was
tee, welcomed !he nominatiQn and
said he intended 10 hold hearings as Army Gen. George S. Marshall m
soon as Congress reconvenes on Jan. 1950-51. By law, a military officer
has to have been out of th e service for
25.
at
leas! 10 years tO hold the post.
Senate Republican leader Bob
Dole of Kansas called Inman "a very Inman retired in 19R2

AsifiOunderscore his independence. Inman
declared that he
had vo1ed for
George Bush in the
1992 election even
!hough he did not
like Bush's eco·
nomic policies.
He went on w
say he had not
sought the job and
OUTGOING defense secretary Le5 Aspin, left,
did not waDI it, but and Presiden1 Clinlon lislen to retired Adm. Bobby'
accepleditoutof a Inman Thursday when il was announced Inman._
sense of obligation would replace Aspin, who resigned Wednesclay.(AP):
to "duty and coun try" and what he fel t was the presi- porate boards and · 'ught at the Unident's "absolutecomm1 tmen1" to build versity of Texa&lt;
bipartisan support for a mili1ary pol- .
He served in the Carter admmistration m the late 1970s as the naicy.
Af1er retinng from the Navy in tion' s you ngest head of the super
1982, Inman ran two Austin, Texas- secret National Security Agency.
based defense companies. More re- Pres1dent Reagan chose him as No.2
cently he has remai ned 1n Austin and man at the CIA. a post he resigned in
done cons ultin g work. . served on cor - 1982.

U.S. begins pulling combat troops out of Somalia
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
-The Uniled Swes hegan pulling
combat troops out of Somalia
today, starting with !he baualion
that fought in the battle !hat persuaded President Clinton to bring
U.S . forces home.
In a gray, humid hangar at the
Mogadishu airport, about 450
members of the U.S . Army's 2nd
Battalion· 14th Infan1ry Regiment
lined up in full battle dress for a
brief deparlure ceremony. They
!hen boarded a Boeing 74 7 for !he

by March 31 after an Oc1. 3
ambush of U.S. Army Rangers by
Somali militiamen Jcilled 18 Amencans and wounded 75 near the site
of a downed U.S. helicopter.
Three hundred Somalis were
reponed Jcilled during 1he 12-hour
fiJ'CfJght.
The 2nd Battalion, moving
through heavy gun and rocket-propelled grenade fire in a densely
populated section of south
Mogadishu, rescued 100 Rangers
and carried out the dead. Two sol-

overnight flighl10 Fort Drum, N.Y.
"I have mixed feelings
myself," said Maj . Gen. Thomas
Montgomery, commander of U.S.
forces here. "It's hard when you
come here to feed people and you
wind up fighting for your life.''
Although some support units
left Thursday and !he carrier USS
America left two weeks ago, the
2nd Battalion was the ftrSt combat
unit among the more lhan 8,000
U.S. soldiers 10 leave.
Clinton ordered U.S. troops out

Man giving $500 million for education reform
W~SHINGTON (AP) - Fulfilling a pledge to help primary and
secondary education, philanthropist
Walter Annenberg is award1ng
what is described as the largest
grant ever made to public educa·
lion reform.
A Whire House ceremony was
the selling for today's formal
announcement of !he grant, ex~t·
ed to to1al $500 million. PreSident
Clinton, Education Secretary
Richard Riley and olhers planned
toaltelld
The ~rant comes on top of a
$365 m11lion gift !hat Annenberg
gave 10 three universities and a col·
lege .prep school in Itme.
"I kept on reading about so
many youngsters witb knives and
revolvers and lhreatening !he lives
of teachers and !hat began to upset
me," Annenberg told The New
York Times in a story in loday's
editions.

"I felt I had to drop a bomb on
the situa1ion to show the public
what needs 10 be done,'' he added
Annenberg told Tbe Tinies !hit
$50 million will go to !he Coalition
of Essential Schools at Brown University, a network of more than 500
secondary public schools. The
coalition's founder, Theodore R.
Sizer, proposes !hat schools give
teachers and sluden1S more freedoms to teach and learn in their
own s1yles and lbat schools involve
paren1S to a gn:arer degree.
The rest of the grant wUl be disttlbuled:
-$50 million to go 10 !he New
American Schools Developmenl
Corp., !he Times reporled. It is an
independent, DOn·profit group created by federal legislation under
1he Bush
.
. adminisuation,
b
dipromot1ng
mnovauon y awar ng pan1S to
encourage new educatton programs. Annenberg was among

•

those appoinled 10 lhe ftrSt board of
directors.
--$1 S million to !he Education
Commission of !he Stares to help
state and territorial governments
carry ou1 education reform, The
Washington Post reponed today.
-The remainder will go to edu·
cation organizations and associations to overhaul school bweaucrades and improve curriculums,
teaching and student achievement,
the Times said. These organizations have not been selecled.
A news conterence was scheduled £ollowing !he White House
ceremony with Theodore Sizer,
director of the National Institure for
School Refonn at Brown Universi·
ty, and David Keams, chairman of
1he New American Schools Development Corp•

diers Jcilled and 32 wounded were
attached to !he baualion.
The bloody debacle that
stretched into !he morning of OcL 4
was a low point in !he mission thai
began on Dec. 9, 1992, when U.S.Ied multinational forces landed to
protect relief suwlies to a country
where 350,000 died last year from
famine and clan warfare.
The humanitarian mission
turned into combat when clan leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid began
opposing U.N. efforts 10 organize a

new government and launched
ambushes and attacks from June
until !he October baules, when he
declared a cease-fire.
About 2,500 U.S. troops, 30
pcrcenl of !he total force, ue 10
depart before Christmas. Two of
the three U.S. bases will close next
month. U.N. military commanders
have been scrambling to replace
the formidable air power, intelligence ne1work, and logistics sup.
port the Americans will 1ake wilh
them.

....---Local briefs-vinton woman cited in crash
A Vinton woman was ciled on charges of driving under the influ·
ence and failure to con1rol afrer a one-car crash on Price S1rong
Road in Salem Township this morning around 4:46.
Belinda R. Roush, 29, 27376 Price S1r00g Road, was southbound
when her car went off !he righl side of 1he road and crashed into a
ditch, according to a report from the Meigs Coun1y Sheriff's
Deparunent. The wreck took place about one-half mile from S.R.
124.
No injuries were reported. Damage to Roush's 1978 Chevrolet
Malibu was listed as modenlre and disabling.

Youth's car hits utility pole
A Middleport youlh was 1rcalcd for minor injuries following a
one-car accident on West Main Sttect in fron1 of the G'lll Telephone office in Pomeroy around 12:04 a.m. Friday.
James P. Coun1S, I7, Middle Street, was westbound when his car
slruck a relephone pole after he momenlarily reached for an object
on !he Jl8SSCIII'CI' side. according to Pomeroy police reports.
He was D"1JIISPOifcd by 1he Pomeroy squad of the Me~s County
Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Ho5p1tal where
he was treated and ~eleascd. The entire front passcnaer side of !lis
COntinued on Page 3

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