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Ptlge 14-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, December 2, 1992

Middleport, Ohio

Meigs senior bakes her way
to cookie competition finals

Racine UMW announce dates
for upcoming holiday activities
'

Refreshments ·were served by
"Advent, Prcplring Our u-ts CJ1Ifts are to be at the church by 6
for Jesus" wu presented by Sue p.m. on Friday. Alice Wolfe is the Frances Roberts and Ruth Wolfe.
The next meeting will be Jan. 25
Grace when the Racine United chaifman and Etta Mac Hill is
2eggs
Methodist Women met in Novem· chairman of the bake sale. Baked at the church.
Amy Reynolds, Paulins Hill
items should be at the church by 9
Attending were Margie West,
1 lablespoon milk
ber.
Road, Middleport, has been select·
Clara
a.m.
on
Saturday.
Mae Sargent, Alice Wolfe,
''The
Fullncss
of
God's
Earth"
ed as a finalist in.the King Arthur
2 te~ vanilla
•
1 ,lcups King Arthur was discussed by Mrs. Grace. She
Names were 'iven for the Ruth Stearns, Eua Mae Hill, Lois
Flour's WinterBake competition in
Unbleached AU-Purpose Flour
stressed trying to enjoy Christmas Christmas fruit basket to be di~­ Bel\, Karen Walker, Robyn Reiber,
the Junior Cookies and Bars cate1 1/2 cups graham cracker while remembmng the true mean- .tributed to the ill and shut-ins. ·
Sharon Hubbard, Sue. Grace,
gory for her recipe "Fit For A King
A banner contest was discussed. Tammy Hill, Carla Wallace, Vicki
Cookies." ·
·
erurnbs
ing. Scriptures were read from
1 cup oats
fsalms and Proverbs and "Joy to It is sponsored by the General Hill, Ruth Wolfe, Gladys Shields,
Miss Reynolds, a senior at
1 t~spoon baking powder
Meigs High School, is the daughter
the World" wi!S suna- Readels Who Board of Global Ministries. FIU'lher Dorothy McKcnzie, Margery
1
teaspOOII
baiting
soda
p~!;ipated
iq the program were information may be obtained by Roush, Frances Robens. Chris Hill
of .Kathy Gardner, who, as you
1
teasp0011
cinnamon
•
~e
West
acting out the "Has· checking the bulletin board at the and Lee Leemight recall, was a winner in the
sled member, Robyn Reiber, Lois . church.
1~salt
. .PiUsbury Bake-off held in Orlando,
1/2 teagpoon allspice
Bell and Eua Mae Hill. All memFla
10-ounce
package
butterscotch
bers
shared stories of favorite
Miss Reynolds created the
chips
·
Chrisunas gifiS or memories. The
recipe by experimenting with vari1 1/2 cliP! pecan pieces
program closed with a prayer by
ous ideas and she says she likes
1
cup
laiSUIS
·
Mrs. Grace.
competing with her mother to see
&lt;
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In
Lee Lee opened the business
who can win in the various conlarge mixer bowl with electric meeting w.ith' the group repeating
tests.
mixer, beat together until creamy the UMW purpose. All members
King Arthur Flour reports over
AMY RJi;YNOLDS
butter, confectioners' sugar and and one guest, Carla Wallace, were
1,000 entries were received from
brown sugar. Add eggs, milk and welcomed. Thank: you notes and
across the United States. Entries
vanilla. Beat one minute more. In cards were read.
were then sent to New England
The secretarY: .and treasurer
Culinary Institote in Montpelier, ham ; bread baking expert and medium size bowl add flour, graVt., for preliminary judging where author Bernard Clayton; Woman 's ham cn~~;ker cl'Qmbs, oats, baking reports were given. It was
the field was narrowed to 70 final- Day magazine food editor and soda and powder, cinnamon, salt announced pledge money must be
ists, five in each of WinterBake's cookbook author Elizabeth Alston; and allspice. Stir to m~. Add II~ tomed in by Dec. 10.
former White House pastry chef mixture to creamed miXture, w1th
Mrs. Grace gave the mission
14 categories.
,
According ·to King Arthur Flour, Albert Kumin; and San Francisco · wooden spoon mix together thor- report. With the ''Gift to Mission"
.,
there is no magic list of what the pastry chef and author Jim Dodge. oughly. Fold in buumcotth chips, donation in remembering Mr. and
company is looking for. Prelimi- . They will come to Vermont's Inn pecan pieces and raisins. Drop by Mrs. Robert Bell for doll8ting the
nary judging guidelines simply at Essex to judge the final recipes rounded tablespoons on ungreased handbells 10 the churtb and a spestated that the company preferred which will be prepared by the New cookie sheeL Bake for 11-12 min- cial mission recognition rememberutes. Wait two minutes . then ing Bernice Carpenter (district
scratch recipes that contained England Culinary Inslitote.
WinterBake
winners
will
be
remove cookies and place on wire vice-president and shepherdess) the
ingredients that were not highly
processed and ingredienis that were announced at the first of the year. rack. Let cool slighdy then top with group has met its goal in becoming
readily available in any supermar- Two grand prizes of trips foc IWO 10 maple glaze. Makes approximately a "Five Star in Undesignated GivY$.,..";!$".,.."~·~·1$·n
ket. Thus, recipes balling for ingre- England, one each in the adult 3 1/2 to 4 dozen cookies.
ing."
junior
divisions
and
trips
to
Win.
Maple glaze:
dients such as pudding mix, instant
The group is again having a
I 1/2 cups confectioners' sugar
potatO flakes or processed canned terBake, Feb. 10, ll and 12 inVerAngel Tree this year which will be
mont are among the prizes that will
2 tablespoons plus two tea- placed in the church vestibule.
pie fillings were eliminated.
A team of five nationally be awarded in 14 baking cate- spoons mille
A donation was given to the
I ~maple flavoring
renowned chefs and cookbook gories. Medals wiU be awarded 10
Fhurch general fund and $100 was
dash Salt
given 10 the Red Bird Mission. ·
authors will conduct the final Judg- the fll'St, second and third place finIn small bowl mix together
ing of King Arthur Flour's';Wmter- ishers.
Due to an unforeseen circumHere
is
Miss
Reynolds'
recipe
sugar,
milk, maple flavoring and stance, the UMW morning worship
Bake competition. They ;nclude
salt until smooth and free of lumps. service was canceled but will be
chef, author and television person- for Fit For a King Cookies.
Fit
For
a
Killg
Cookies
Enough
to generously glaze four held in late January.
ality, Julia Child; the modem day
'
..
I
cup
butter
or
margarine,
softdozen
cookies.
Fannie Farmer, Marion CunningThe UMW membership song
was sung, penny fund collection
taken, sick eaUs reported and many
get-well cards signed.
The annual Christmas party and
dinner wiU be Dec. 14 at 6:30 p.m.
at Sonya's Country Kilchen. Reser· .
vations must be m 10 Lee Lee or
Margie West by Dec. 10. A $S gift
wiU be held. ·
lesions. It is interesting that exchange
Alice Wolfe is in charge of
Dear Aan Landers:' In 1969, I
the .writer's lesions lljJjJCililld .llftt:r games, etc., and Robyn Reiber is in
started my ftrst year as a university
periods of 8Ras. Stress can make charge of gifts anti music.
.
~
studenL Soon after, I developed a
acne
worse
and
can
also
wonen
The
Election
Day
dinner
was
aev~ case of acne, and ·I am sure
other conditions such as ulceis and reported 10 be a success.
SllesS had a lot to do with iL I went
psoriasis.
ANN LANDERS
The Christmas bazaar will be
to three doctors and spent hundreds
In
any
case,
sometimes
there
is
a
"IJ9i,
LooADael•
Satorday
from 9 am. 10 5 p.m. All
of dollars on medicine that did not
11m• Syadlcale ODd
simple
acientif'JC
basis
for
success
in
worlc.
Crellon S)'DIIi=•-"
home .ranedies.
The, summer of 1970, I went to
Wlwu CQII )'OM give lite perso11 wllo
lunch with a friend at the Wocld acne was tenible lind nothing else luu ~~~erytlti11g? A1111 LG11ders'
Bank in Washington, D.C., and had ~otked.. Well, Ann, that woman booklet, "Gems." is ideal for a
while in the ladies' room, a beauti- blew what she was talking abouL llighlStalld or et!{fet Ulbk. "Gcrril"
ful East Indian woman wearing a Since then, I've told several is a colkclio11'ofAM La~ drrs' most
sari gave me a · smile. When I friends about the egg-yolk cure and req1111s1ed poems 111111 esstl]l. SeN~ a
responded, she touched my face aDd the SllCcess rate has been phcnome- self-addressed, lo11r, bllliltu.s-size
said, "Oh, no. Red ugly SJlOIS on nal. Please tell your readers. They,'U
t11velope 111111 a i:lteck or 1111111ey
pretty face. You fix with egg yolk." be forever grateful. .. SILKY SKIN order for $4.85 (litis l11clttdes
I said, "Are you serious? Do you IN WASHINGTON
postage 111111 lttutdlillg) to: Gtms, H ___;_~~~,...,.,
think it would really help?"
DEAR SILKY I f
She replied, "Yes, you put raw
:
axed your c/o AM Ltutders, P.O. Boz 11562,
letter to Dr. Mary Ellen Bndcmu, Chicago, Ill. 606ll-0562. (/11
.e g yolk on face and let dry for 10 1 superb ~logist in New Yodt, CIINMia, send $J.Ifl.)
minull:l, then wash off. Do every and Ibis is her response:
day fa,: one man~ and SJ;IOIS ~o
For many years, topical appUCa- ·
away. You do agam two limes m lions of Vitamin A have been
Alice Wamsley wa, the winner
e~ montb fa- ~ months and prescribed by physicians 11 a
of
the
.video tape, "Meigs County:
agam if trouble ~• ll'eabllent for acne. Because egg .
Heart
of the Valley," given away .
uncon~ but ~ed yolks are an excellent source ·of
I during
the open l!ouse of the Meigs
her anyway: That nigllt I ~ided I Vitamin A, it is not surprising
County
Park District and Visitors
had very ·liule 10 lose smce the that raw egg yolks improve acne
Center on Sunday.
' y .. !LIE E. DILLON
g, _,inel News Slaf't

ened
1 cup conrectioners' sugar
1 cup brown sugar, packed·

•

Mt{{Street 'Boo/(§

·

Welcomes
Santa to Town with

20o/o off

ALL .GIFT ITEMS ·

6:!:»:~!-;.~!~=~·
W'V'l..ll\'.....

·~:

· Middl~port ·
:\'
Merehants' Bolide~
GiVBIJWIJ~

SHARE

ATHENS • Ironton High school
took top honors in the Class AA
division of the "Bobcat Buzz-In"
Quiz Tournament held Friday,
Nov. 20 at Ohio University.
William V. Fisher Catholic and
Warren high schools won tht! Class
A and AAA div,isions, respectively.
Twenty -four schools from
throughout southeastern Ohio competed in the double-elimination
tournament, which tested student's
ability to quickly recall answers to
questions on a variety of subjects
including current events, science
and literature.
Other schools participating in
'the tournament were: in the Class
AAA division Athens, Logan, Mor-

gan, Lancaster, Newark, Chilli ·
cothe, and River View; in the Class
AA division-Waverly, South
Point, Jackson. Meigs, and Philo;
in the Class A· Alexander, Nelsonville-York, Crooksville, Trimble, Zane Trace, Frontier, and Valley LOcal.
The contests consisted of two
eight • minute halves in which participaniS.received 10 poiniS for correedy answering toss-up questions
and from five to 20 points for
bonus questions.
Ironton captured first-placed by
defeating Vinton County High
School in the championships.
Logan Elm High School lost to
Vinton County to finish in third

place.
Members of Ironton's winning
team are Charles Lawless, Tomi
Casde, Matt Bryant Jason Canow,
David Brown, and Aaron Houston.
Their adviwr is Doris Hannon.
Those participaling on the Yin·
ton County squad are Jay Wise,
Angela Brandau, $tacic Hale,
Andrea Faught, Melissa Zimmerman, and Jason Mango. Their advisors are Pete Semple and Jane
Eddy.
.
The tournament, which was
started in 1981, has hosted more
then 2,790 students and advisors.
Ohio University's Office of Continuing Education, Conf~nces and
Workshops sponsors the'evenL

Harrisonville OES holds installation
'

The Hartiwnville OES held its Clayton and I,.ena Smith; district
annual installation recently with president, Wilma Mautz; vice disWorthy Matron Pat Arnold and trict president, Betty SChenkel; disWorthy Patron Larry Well in trict secretary, Shyr~ Olinger; discharge.
trict treasurer, Pam Diddle.
Honored guests were introduced
Worthy matrons and worthy
and welcome: Past grand patron, patrons of other chapters were
Dr. Howard Schull; deputy grand mtroduced and welcomed. Wonhy
matron, Ann Price; grand represen- matrons and worthy patrons of
tatives, Lena McCutcheon, North . Harrisonville Chapter were intro·
Dakota, Margaret McNabb, Maine; duced.
grand chapter committee members,
Instal_ling · officers were:

installing officer, Gracie Wilson;
installing chaplain, Sharon Jewell;
installing marshall, Bernice Hoffman; organist, Catherine Shenerield; installing warden, Stella
Atkins; installing sentinel, Norman
Will; and soloist, Jane Wise.
Officers are: Worthy Matron,
Pauline Atkins; Worthy Patron,
Larry WeU; associate IIIIITOII, Betty
Bishop; assoCiate patron, Robert
RCed; treasurer, Janet Bolin; coriductress, Jill LipiiCOIDb; asaociate
conductress, Pat· Arnold; chaplain,
Goldie Reed; orpiUst. 1BDC Wile;
Ada, Pearl Canaday; Ruth, Lois
The-1993 Annual Work Plan changed to Dec. 12 at the Stow- . Wyant; Esther, Lois Thompson;
was approved when the Meigs Soil away in Gallipolis at 8 p.m.
Martha, Neva Nicholson: Electa,
and Water Conservation District
Attending were Tom Theiss
Avane! George; Warden, Rosalie
Board of Supervisors met recently.
Charles Yost, Joe Bolin, Marc~ Star)'; and sentinel, Charles King.
Plans 10 attend the Area 5 winter Jeffers. and David
. Gloeckner The secrellli'y tllld mmhal1 will be
meeting on Frida~ere made as supervisors; Mike Duhl, district inst•lled at a lala' date.
well as the Ohio F ration of Soil , conservationist; Blair Windon, disWorthy P11101J Larry Well gave
and Water Conservation ·District trict technician; Opal Dyer,' district the table b~ befcR the group
prog~m , administrator, and Hal
'annual meeting Jan. 11-13.
enter11d the di.lling area where
The December meeting was · Knccil, extension agenL
potluck refmhmeniS wen: enjoyed.
.

Meigs S&amp;WCD approve plan

•

.

.

4273
Super Lotto:
3-19-21-25-40-42
Kicker: 079503 ·

.e
Vol. 43, No. 1se

Copyrighted 1992

mkl-40s.

J3il proposalagain discussed by Lentes, commission
· Discussion .of the possibility .of
building a minimum-security misdemeanant jail facility in Meigs
County continued when the Meigs
County Commissioners met in reg·
. ular session on Wednesday.
Meigs County Prosecutor-elect
John R. Lentes, who, along with
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, had recommended that the board file an
application for state grant fund$ for
such a project, aaended yesterday's
meeting with f\ll'ther lnforniation
about the.grant program.
At last week's meeting, Lentes
and Souls by outlined the state's
program, which was discussed at a
meeting last week conducted by
Ohio Lt. Governor Michael
DeWine's office.

Lentes had indicated that a
search would begin for potential
sites, as would development of a
plan to su)lmit with the application
for 50 percent matching monies.
The filing deadline for the application is December 15.
Lentes and Soulsby urged the
board to me the application, based
upon ever-tightening jail regulations. Lentes said yesterday that
state officials had indicated that the
existing county jail could have
been closed three years ago, but
has been left open because of die
county's financial conditiop. He
suggested to the board that two
applications be flied, one for a new
facility and one to upgrade die
existing jail.

· required for the construction,"
Lentes said yesterday. "As it
stands, the county would be fon:ed
to buy land for the facility, and I
expect that the operating costs
would be very extensive."
The expense of operating such a
facility once it is constructed was
another matter of concern for .
Jones when the application was
proposed last week.
"In the long run." Lentes said,
"this just won't be economically
feasible."
However, Lentes cited impend·
ing jail reforms as a reason for ming the application anyway, statil1&amp;,
lhat if jail improvements are mane
dated by the state in the meantime,
fon:ing action on tbe part of the
·county, an application for renova-

lion of the existing jail would
already be flied, releasing the county from at least a part of the consttuction burden.
Commissioner-elect Janet
Howard, who attended yesterday's
meeting, expressed concern that filing a grant application could obligate the county 10 take action if a
grant is awarded. However, Lentes
said that the actual plans for any
facility would not be required for at
least six months after the apPlication is filed, and the application
could be withdrawn if the county
does not see consuuction as being
possible. In addition, Lentes said
that before a grant is awarded, the
county would have to provide
proof of matching fund sources,
and that a lack of those sources

would make the county ineligible,
anyway.
Meanwhile, Lentes said that the
state expressed an awareness that a
50 percent match, in many cases;
made the grant applications impossible for poorer counties, and said
that Governor Voinovich may seek
additional funding for counties like
Meigs. In that case, funds could be
so~ht for renovation of the existing Jail facility at a later time.
No action was tj!ken by the
board, although Lentes agreed to
come back to the meeting next
week with further information.
Present at the meeting, in addition to Jones and Howard, were
Commissioners Manning K. Roush
and David Koblentz; and Clerk
Mary Hobstettcr.

Ohio man suspect in serial killings

0

Shop Middleport and
\
Reetster to Win
"'ta ~~a ~;a '~~a·~· iiua·Na v~a uif·

Low tonight near JO. Friday
cloudy. High ln

..
2 Sectlono, 16 PogH 25 oonto
A llultlm..... Inc, N.wo...,..

Pomeaor •ct' port, Ohio, Thursday, December 3, 1992

•

ADON. Ohio (AP)- A man
suspected in die s1ayinp of live
. . . . . . \IIDCii-

bein&amp; lldd with-

. out bond today on ann:l•e4
we.-cbaF
Dave Ha• IJCilior supt:l"li5D
in charge of die FBrs Cal-bus
office. said We4nesday that
'[bcmas Lee Iiillllll, 42. is comjd.
-1 12 •• .
.... • ••• ~
CICd c.: Ul.
...
pects in die tiDings
Tile Akron Beacon Jounal
reported Wednesday tUt Dillon
was c:haged in Mm:ll willl p• ._

DRAWINGS:
December 3, 7, 14, 21, and 24

ti·•

Meigs competes in ·quiz tournam.ent

Pick 4t

GIFT CERTIFICATES

.-.

Winner announced

646

. $1500° IN

Egg yolk was the miracle
cure for a former acne suffer
Ann
Landers

Pick 3:

Page 4 .

p:~•-.,Jt~,.ft~,..,..fA.,..,M,.~''·,Ilt·~

~:.

Ohio Lottery

Marauders·
open court
season Friday :'+t'•.,:a

'' '

•

m

aJrarcr·

sion
aa .arqiSICRd..
equipped pisull. ;md fOr llavioc a
silencer tbal dida't llave a saia1

munlJcr.
He repodaly ph wkd pihy 10
lbosedlagcs- r.:ed ••• ,•••
IOday bcfon: U.S. Distric:t lnd&amp;e
lobo Manos in Clc~ DilloD.
OOIJid be 9 IIIUM(d to up 10 JCII$
iD prisoa and f"mcd $10,000 liD
cachcwnL
But The Columbus Dispau:h
tqutallllday lhii.Dib ~in
July 10 plead pilty to Jl'
• I I o(
a silcnm- willl110 v:Da1 mmbcr if
the adler atu11t wae
d Oilloll also tcpiXIIedly Jl&amp;ia:IIIO pvc
up all 1lis fit-ms -.1 - live in

*uw

FINISHING TOUCHES • Tbe traditiooal Cbristlll11 decoratloos which adorn the Meigs County Courthouse are ncnvln place.
Here, custOdian Homer Smith puts the rmishing touches Wednes·
day on one of the lighted angels placed on the facade of the historic
building.
·

Wednesday. Whitlatch said that his
mother wllo is usually at the house,
left for a short time, and when she
returned, the. dogs and the equipmcnt were missing.
A minor accident on Craw's
Restaurant parking lot Wednesda5'
morning was investigated by
Pomeroy police.
Larry Grueser, 51, Minersville,
backed .his bUck into the passeng""
side of a car driven by Vera Crow.
There was light damage to
Orueser's bUck and moderate dam·
age.to the passenger side front of
the. Crow vehicle. Grueser was
cited for impoper backing.
Pomeroy police are still invcstigating a car fll'C on the Flood Road
early this morning. It was reported
to ,Pomeroy police at 12:40 a.m .
that a car was on fire. Capt. Joe
Kirby went to the site and found
smoke inside but no one around.
The interior of th!: 1976 Buick was
heavily damaged. Pomeroy futmen
were caUed to the scene. Owner of
the car which was towed is ADen
Easter, 146 Mulberry Ave ..
~aoy.
'

---Local briefs--vegetable growers to meet·

The vegetable grower's wii1ter ~fleeting sponsored by the Ohio
State University and Meigs/Washington County Extension Saviccs
will be held on Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the
Racine American Legion HaU. Several O.S.U. staff members will
present topics such as the current O.S.U. VC~etablc production recommendations; the products/grades that farm markets are looking
for; diseases of peppers; and current and futiR research being conducted at the Pilreton Research Extension Center.
·
There will be a SS fee to help defray coats of handou!J and 10
provide a soup and 11811dwich lunch. Please tuke reservations by
Monday at the Meigs County Extension Office, 992-6696.
Cm¢inued on p 3

'

)'

'·

jail.

At the hearing, Assistant U.S.
Auomey Marilyn Babula named
Dillon, as the "prime suspect" in
" anywhere from six to 11" homi-

cides.

Dillon, an employee of the Canton Water Department, lives in
Magnolia, about 10 miles south of
Clinton in liortheast Ohio.
Dillon, who has a bachelor's
degree !'rom Ohio State University,
has worked for the Canton Water
Department since 1972 . He has
IJcen married Ior about 14 years
and has an 11-year-old child.

He has not been charged in connection with the serial killings, and
Hanna would not say if authorities
are close to filing charges against
any of the suspects.
Dillon's lawyer, Roger Synenberg of Cleveland, described his
clieiu as happily married, a lifelong
resident of Stark County and a
" valued employee of the city."
Synenberg said Dillon would
deny any involvement in the
kiUings.
Law enforcement authorilies Say
they believe the killings of outdoorsmen in Tuscarawas, Coshocton, Belmont, Noble and Muskinguen counties between Aprill989
and April 1992 are related as the
work of one person.
Killed were Donald Welling, 35,
Strasbui-g; Jamie Paxton, 21, Bannock; Kevin Loring, 30, Duxbury,
Mass.; Claude Hawkins, 49, Mansfield, and Gary Bradley, 44,
Williamstown. W.Va.
All were fishing, hunting or
exercising outdoors when they
wereshoL
The Dispatch, in a copyright
story published today, reported that
members of a task force ·investigat-

$300,000 settlement_reached
after Pomeroy man loses fingers

Yule decorations
reported stolen
Christmas decorations from
three· locations in Pomeroy were
stolen overnight Wednesday.
Pomeroy Police reported that a
decorated tree in front of K &amp; C
Jewelers, seven big ,red bows used
with greenery on the stone wall
planting area at the intersection of
Sycamore and Main, and th~ee
large holiday wreaths on the doocs
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church were taken. The bows were
valued at $3 each, and the wreaths
at $25 each.
The tree at K &amp; C was one
many placed along Main, Second
and Court Streets by the merchants
as a .cooperative effort of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association to
make the town more festive for the
liolidays. The trees were trimmed
with decorations made by Pomeroy
Elementary School children.
Harvey Whitlatch of Laurel
Street reported to Pomeroy police
Wednesday that two Walli;cr coonhounds, their collars, and restrain,
ing equipment including two ten
foot log chams and steel ~itching
posts were lliken from hts home

any residence where fJCearms were
maintained.
Since then, he has been charged
with receiving a weapon while
under indictment. He allegedly
bougbt a .25-caliber pistol at a
Cleveland gun show. Hanna said
Dillon had a loaded gun in his
pocket when he was arrested Friday outside a Tuscarawas County
convenience stoce.
At a preliminary hearing on that
t harge, held Wednesday before
U.S. Magistrate James Gallas in
Akron, Dillon was ordered held
without bail in the Stark County

An out-of-(;()Ud sculcmcnt in
the amOUlll of over S300,000 has
been , ... h d ~a 1'\Jwaoy man
IJJst two liogas w1lilc ..urtiug as a

deckhand for a Piu.sbugll-bascd
towingc•••IJA'f.

William O.lbmscy, Jr~ fOIIIICI'·
ly of Mason Connty and now of
Pomeroy. wasit!iutedFcb.S. 1991,
while employed hy Mon River
Towiag, Inc. as a deckhand.
according ID Ramsey's allomey
Randy MugatolftliatP'
•
Motgan said Ramsey was
injured wbeo bis ript &amp;Jove got
caugbl on a laF able.. His iiJda
and middle linaas were an•.,d
!Medical eme111eucy pcrso•nel
.

aucmpta110 save die fingas. but
brnmsc of aJilllll* MM+K, die rm,gCili wen: SD"gically tcmovc:d 81 the

University of Pittsburgh.
Ramsey and wife , Virginia,
em ployed Morgan to bring suiL
agamst Man River Towing for acts
or alleged negligence and/or failure
to provide a reasonably safe place
to work.
Morgan said after putting the
towin~ company on notice that a
lawswt was anticipated and would
be fired, he and a representative
from Mon River Towing .JlCl?CCCtled
with a series of negouations to
resolve the legall!ispute:
Man River Towing on Tuesday
agreed to be responsible for all
medical bills incurred by Ramsey
directly associated with his injury.
The cocnpany also paid a portion of
his IOSl wages and, in return for an
absolute agreement against Man

River Towing, paid Ramsey an
additional $300,000.
"Some people might think this
sum of money is a lot to pay to settle a claim for the loss of two fingers es~ially when fault was dispute'd.' Morgan said. "However.
Mr. Ramsey suffered permanent
disfigurement. T~~ . company
denied any respons1bihty for Mr..
Ramsey's injury and maiJ!tained, to
the end, that his injury was ca~scd
by carelessness or lack of attenuve. ness."·
"The company's willingness to
pay a substantial settlement showelj
there was some doubt in their
minds as to how a jury might interpret the evidence, however," MOr·
gan conclude&lt;!·

THOMAS DI~LON
ing the deaths of the outdoorsmen
tracked Dillon by car and lilrPiane
over hundreds of miles of winding .
back roads of eastern Ohio, but still
lacked a clear link to the shootings.:

Middleport Council accepts
Walburn bid on project
The bid of Elden Walburn for
construction of a sidewalk on
South Sixth Avenue between
Williams and Palmer Streets in the
Betsy Ross Subdivi sion was
accepted at a special meeting of
Middleport Village Council
Wednesday 11ight.
Walburn 's bid was for $3,416
for the consuuction of a four foot
sidewalk and curbing. It was
accepted on the condition that it
· includes all required excavation
·and removal of debris.
·The only other bid on the pro:
ject was $3,936 which came from
Home Creek Enterprises, Inc.
.
Funding for the project comes
·from grant funds awarded to the
BeiSy Ross housing development,
Mayor Fred Hoffman pointed oUt.
Attending the meeting beside~
Hoffman were Council members.
James Clatworthy, ·Paul Gerard,
Dewey Horton , and Jack Satter."
field.

Ohio Power joins EPA Green Lights- program
demand-side-management strategy
to improve our customers' • and
our own • energy efficiency in an
environmentally responsible manner," said Richard Disbrow, AEP's
chairman and chief executive offl·
cer. "It underscores our commitment 10 encourage the wise use of
electricity, as oudined in Environmental Principles and as promoted
by our SMART program."
SMART (Saving Money and
Resources Together) is Ohio
Power's and AEP's customef\service and information program
aimed at S~~ving customen money,
while conserving 118tural resources
and using the utility's existing
resources even more efflciendy.
Green Lights is in line with
other energy-efficiency initiatives
thai AEP has embraced throughout
its system over the years. Those
programs include, among others:
refrigerator
recycling, new tech·
decllicity.
"'l11c Green Lights program is a nologies in thermostats, heat-pump
perfect complement to AEP's and water-heater design, and most

this significant program,"' said
Ohio Power. President Charles A.
HeUer:
·
At a ceremony this morning in
.the U.S. ~A's Washington, D.C.
office,.offiCials !'rom AEP and U.S.
EPA siRRed a voluntary Memorandum of Understanding outlining
each party's obligations..
Under the Green Ltghts progJBm. facilities are upgraded with
energy-efficient lighllllg technologies whctever they are cost-effective and maintain ~ improve light·
ing quality. &lt;Apontions and othu
Olglllizalfuns that make a commitment 10 Green Ligllts benefit from
improved lighting qu~l!tY,
increued worker producll vlly,
increased enc~g)' efficiency ~nd
lowered electnctty consumpuon.
They also mlucc air emissionS .and
othu effects on the environment
ISSOCieled with the generition of

.,.

,,

recently, investment in developing:
the E-larnp, a long-burning, elec-:
tronic appliance designed to combine the compactness and light
intensity of incandescent bulbs
with the energy efficiency of tlua:
rescent lamps.
"Green Lights is our flagship in
a whole fleet of voluntary energyeffiCiency programs aimed at satis-·
fying the United States' obli$ations·
under the new global-chmatechange treaty. We are confident
that by' the year 2000, those ini~·
tives and
. other existing regulatory.
requirements will result in a signjf.
icant reduction of .U.S. greenhouse~
gas emissions," EPA spokeswoman
Eileen Claussen said. ·
Ohio Power Company is based
in Canton and serves more than
646,000 customers in S3 Ohib'
counties.
·
AEP is a public utility holding
companr with seyen eleclric lllilitY·
compames, scrvmg aevcn mUllan
people in seven states.

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·Thursday, December 3,1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
cOart street

111

P~DeroJ,OJdo

'OBVOTED TO TIIB lln'UII8TII OP 'l'lm llltiGS-ICASON AREA

ROBEin' L WJNGETT
Puhlllher
PAT WlllTEIIEAD
·Assistant Publllher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

"

LETTERS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be leu lban 300
;wotds. All !etten ore subject to edilin&amp; and must be sisned wilb name,
lddms and telepbone nlllllb«. No ullli£ned !etten will be published. Letters
.should be·in good lute, lddmlins ils1101, not personalities.

Clinton will still face
stalemates with Congress
I

,,
ByWALTERR.MEARS
.
AP Special Correspoadenl
:WASHINGTON - While the vanguard of the new Democratic government is chorusing goodbyes to gridlock, there may yet be slowdowns
and stalemates in Bill Clinton's congressional path.
·
Divided govemmen1 is ending, but personal and regional rivalries, turf
rusr.utes and overlapping power claims are not And those are not necessarily matters of party politics.
President Carter had constant problems with Congress the last time the
Democrats had ftill control; Clinton's people have studied that record to
avoid repeating iL
.
II\ Democrat was president and Democrats ran Congress 30 years ago
when two venerable appropriations committee chairmen stalled vital
spending bills because neither would agree to go to ~other's. side ~f the
Capitol to negotiate fmal terms. That was settled w1th meeungs m the
middle.
Latter-day disputes aren't that petty. Chairmen are more vulnerable
now, their powers and seniority guarantees li~ited by reform. But
Congress wasn't designed for speed: the Senate 10 parUcular operates ·
more often as a brake than as an accelerator of legislation.
The Constitution was written to divide powers among the three branches, 'and legislative powers between the two houses. The way Congress
operates now, getting things done in a hurry is even more difficult.
'There are 295 standin$. select and spec~ co~i~s and subcommit· ·
tees in Congress. Authonty overlaps; a maJor bill or Its components may
have to get past a half-dozen of the 136 House subcommittees before it
gets to the full committee tliat shapes die final terms for a vote;
With President-elect Clinton setting the agenda, and Democrats
promising to put their House 8nd Senate majorities to work for his progrmns, the kind of gridlock that was a cam~gn buzzword should be past
'President Bush campaigned against ' the gridlock CO!Igress," complaining that its Democralic majorities rejected his major proposals. In
tum, the ·Democrats pointed to 32 Bush vetoes, only one overridden in
foUr years, and blamed gridlock on him.
"The only gridlock that has existed is the gridlock brought on by the
president," House Speaker Thomas S. Foley said ·as the. old Congress
adjourned •. "yte won't m~s. the gridlock," Se~ .. GC?fge ¥Jtchell, ~
Senate in&amp;Jonty leader, wd m 11 weekend televts1on mtervtew, looking
toward the new Congress that will t:onvene in January, certify Clinton's
election, then mark time Wltil he is inaugurated president
"On the major issues ... economic growth, job creation, health care
reform ... I think you're going to see some action," Mitchell said. "And
that's not gridlock."
Clinton ran against Republican gridlock, said ln victory that his mandate was to end it and brought it up a week ago in a cam~gn reprise.
"We have gor to break this gridlock in Washington," he said, campaigning in Georgia for a Democratic senator who lost in a rimoff election last
Tuesday.
Sen. Bob Dole, the Senate Republican lea&amp;r, said a little gridlock
might be a good thing to stop bad legislation and suggested that's what
Georgians voted for in electing a new GOP senator. ·
·By dictiorlary definition, gridlock is a traffic jam' in which no vehicle
caQ move in any direction. Congress wasn't snarled that badly under
BuSh, and certainly won't be under Clinton.
..
·But its Democratic leaders are sensitive to ttouble with the voterS if
they can' t get things done now. "The Democratic PartY can no longer
blame it on .gridlock,'' said a newly elected Democratic senator, Ben
Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado. "We've got the whole ballgame
now."

.

House Democrats will consider changes to streamline their operations
at a caucus Monday to elect leaders and prepare for the new Congress. A
IIC)V joint committee is to consider reform next year; Mitchell said he'll
propose some Senate changes in the interim.
- The reform challenge now may be more diffiCult than in an earlier era,
when a relatively simple, if hard won, change could be crucial, as when
. the House Rules Committee was expanded in 1961 to dilute the power ·o f
Southern conservatives· and open a path for the proposals of President
Kennedy.
·
·
.
•A study publislled by the Heritage Foundation says congressional
habits now get iri the way of legislating.
.As evidence it cites the 1991 highway bill, 298 pages long, "a monument to pork bane! politics and congressional self promotion." The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 took 32 paj!es- and revolutionized U.S.
transportation by creating the interSrate highway system., ·

.

;!EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and c:olum·
nist for Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
niljioolil politics for more !ban 30 years.

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Berry's World

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OHIO Weather
Page 2-'"" Dally Sentinel ·

Bringing the issue OJ.It or·the closet.
· ' Should ~fessed gays serve in
the military? More general! y, is
thm a wise public view of homosexuali!Y that propounds neither
gay-bashing nor py-glcrificalion?
Such quesuons, and their
answers, play a role in shaping our
culture and our children. 1\ccordingly, they deserve sautiny in our
most .serious way , politically, in
the crucible of an election year.
Instead, the fD'Sl shaping of the terrain wiD be determined by a study
gtoup appointed by Bill Clinton.
Alas, their mandate will be to suggest how, not whether, to inte~
gays into the military. (The ' Yes
Sir" solution.)
In a stran~e way, this is more
George Busli s fault than Bill Clinton's.
It is .not surjrising that gays-inthe-military has become the new
adminis~tion's first big flap. It
was a ticking time bomb from .the
moment candidate Clinton
announced his view back in M!ly.

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non-demagogic way, I guess he
wpuld have gained some votes,
although probably not enough to
win. But America would have got'
ten the debate it deserves on at
least one of the turbulent social
issues that is changing the landscape.
To get a sense of wltal a part of
Squarely in the &amp;rena ofjlublic iioli- that serioUJ; debate would have
cy. It is a matter where the .com- sounded like I recommend
mander in chief has to make a sub- "Straight Talk About Gays,'' by
stantive call, and the two major EJ. Pattullo, in the current issue of
presidential candidates did not Comnientary magazine. '
agree. .
.
Professor Pattullo's career was
. But the Busbies were so trauma- at Harvard, where, until his retiretized at their Houston convention mentin 1987, he was director of
(oh horrible, they were called right- the Center for the Behavioral Sciwingers by left-wingers) that they ences, Associate Chairman of the
were afraid to engage. Had they, Depar!ment of Psychology, and
they would have been called intol- Director of the Psychological Lab-.
erant by some, but Bush would onuories.
·
have been able to· say, "I stand
Pattullo says, fust, that science
with Gen. Colin Powell~ Sen. Sam does not know a whole lot about
Nunn and Adm. Bill Crowe - and homosexuality. That understood,
against Gov. Clinton."
he says it is clear that while some
. Had Bush made the case, in ~ homosexuality is genetic, it is
,---------------~
What is liSIOIIisbing is that..Bush
dido' t make it au important issue
during the campaign. After all, it
places the to11ic of gay .rights

.

Ben Wattenberg

•

•

~~
!I&gt; l t92 NEA. Inc
b~

. "GUesa what kids- FINAt.L Y, we're going to
· have 'cat f160Pie' In file White House."

.

..

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

By The As.toc:lated Preu
Snow is likely to move across
northern Ohio from the west late
tohight into Friday. The central and
soutl)ern counties are in for cloudy
skies and a chance of eit)ler rain or
snow tonight and Friday.
Clouds and precipitation should
keep temperatures from varying too
much through Friday. Highs Friday
will be from the mid-30s to the
mid-40s. Lows tonight are going to
be near30.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 76 in 1982. The
record low was 0 in 1966.

MICH.

'

equally clear that some is behav- ·
ioral. Some is from nature, some is
from nurture.
·
· Because some gay behavior
comes flom nurture, he maintains
that it is logical to assume oenain
outcomes, and dangerous not to
assume them. Specifically, he
posits that if sociery drops jlistinctions between straight and gay,
there may well be an increase m
homosexuality among ~ ·wavering"
children and reen-agers.
What to do? Pattullo says: 1)
vigorously inculcate our children
not to be homophobes, and 2) do
not teach, by example or by law,
that helerosexuality and homosexuality are nothing more than two
equal "ahtrnative lifestyles."
Pliaullo does not deal specj,fical-. .
ly with the issue of professed gays ·
in the military. But if his genenl ·
reservations make sense, clinton's
prudent assurance that there will be
sttict codes of conduct in the mill•
tary far both gays and srraights is
interesting, important, but less than
an entire solution. America will .
have put forth a powerful signal
that our society is value-neulnl on
the matter, and some young persons on the margin may be pushed
over the line into social misfortune. :,
. It is a tortured problem. Pattullo ·
asks this tough and anguished .·
question: "How can we rid sociery ·:
of irrational prejudices against gays ·,
if explicit evidence of society's
bias against homosexuality is an
important element in the process by
which many children become
slraight adults?"
.
Civil rights vs. the rights of
society. Pattullo claims no full
answers, nor do I.
What I do believe is that this is
the kind of social i,ssue that forms
the essence of a nation, one way or
·the other. As such, it deserves a full "
hearing in the political marketplace
- befoo: decisions are made. ·
:
Ben Wattenberg, a senior ret•
low at the American Ealerprise
Iostitute, is author or "The First
Universal Nation," published by .
Tbe Free Press and a writer ror
Newspaper Enterprise Assoc:la· .
tion.

IND.

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W. VA.

---------Weather---------South-Central Ohio
. Tonight, mostly cloudy with
shght chance of rain or snow late.
f:ow near 30. Chance of precipitauon 30 percent. Friday, cloudy
w1th a chance of rain. Snow also
possi~le in the afternoon. High in
the mtd-40s. Chance· of precipitation 40 percent

Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:
Saturday, chance of snow. Lows
in the 20s. Highs in upper 20s to
low 30s. Sunday, a chance of snow.
Lows in the low to mid·20s. Highs
in the 30s. Monday, fair. Lows 2025. Highs in the 30s.

~-Area

deaths-Frances McCormick

W. Russell Bibbee

My "house isn't the Holiday(s) Inn
Whoever wrote "there's no
place like home for the holidays"
obviously wasn't the one hosting
all the wandering, misty-eyed souls
coming home for them.
Millions of American working
women once again fai:e the holiday
· season trying to play Martha Stewart to a house full of relatives, following a year when every moment
of free time was spent just trying to
get Cllfeal 'down everyone's gullet
and f~ding a ~itter when someone
had chicken pox.
·
Personally, I gave up House
Beautiful the year I took on the
second job. I've settled for just trying to achieve House Clean once a
year, whicll is much harder when
folks come to stay overnight or
spend a few days than if they just
come for the afternoon. For an
aftemoon, you can settle for House
Facade, where stray items are tern·
porarily stuffed into inappropriate
drawers, the Hoover is trotted out
for a cursory run, and scowling
children are conscripted for dusting
duties. But when non-immediatefamily people actually stay in the
house as if it were the Holiday Inn,

dreri. But, scientifically, I don't see 'emf" I've simply learned to hum
it's a whole new ball game.
Suddenly, you've got relative how it could be. Neverthel~s. it "Over The River and lluougll The
strangers phindering the medicine will have to be cleaned out before Woods" during ~uch exchanges,
cabinets who are not responsible Mr. and Mrs. Helpful demand to while I imagine myself dressed in
help set the table. Ditto for !lie dust pilgrim garb, selling the little darin the good water glasses and the lings to Native Americans for some
sticky stuff all over the' shelf paper. corn and a plump wild turkey.
But t"trst, try to beat them to the
When my ship comes in, I'll
for the puddles 9f spilled Mer- linen closet to search for a table- have a tuitorial service spend a
curochjome and athlete's foot pow- clotll without baked-in brown few days wiping out my ·home's
der and not therefore willing to gravy stains, so they don't discover most secret cracks and crevices,
overlook them. Wliat's more, these the lintballs. And oh, Lord, they're and a catering service deliver a
are strangers who will hole up in going to expect eight place setungs fu!l~ meal that only requires
rour bathrooms aU morning, hold- of silverware that matches! Send a httle heating up. I'll greet my
JOg your makeup and hot rollers the kids to the garden and sandbox, guests in a lovely hosu;ss gown
hostage and leavin~ you to make and your husband to his tool chesL ordered from the Spiegel eatalog
dinner while lookmg like Janis Hold up a spoon in fmal pre-battle without worrying about how I'll
instructions: "We're looking for pay the charge account, and escort
Joplin after a hard gig.
Then they will demand to set the the kind, with this litde flower in them post-meal to guest rooms
table, as if five minutes' worth of the center of the handles. Don't with their own private baths.
This year I've had to setde on
silverware plunking could make up worry about the ones with the
beaded
edges.
Tl)at
was
last
year's
·another
plnn: "Love to have you.
for five days of grocery shopping,
set'
'
Now,
ckm't
worry about your famicleaning and cooking. So to let
I've
just
about
steeled
myself
to
ly
coming
down
with what we just
them feel like they're fulfilling
the
fact
that
other
people'shad.
Little
Jimmy
is still vomiting,
their little obligation, you'll have to
notice
I
said
other
people'skids
but
the
doctor
thmks'it
may be just
wipe out the little pieces of.- well,
these
days
are
not
taught
to
at
least
to
the
fumes
from the
a
reaction
Y&lt;&gt;u tell me: What the heck is that
make
a
good-soldier
stab
at
eating
furnace
....
''
stuff that collects at the bouoms of
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndiplastic silverware trays. anyway? It a little of everything that's put
before
them.
I'm
ready
for
them
to
c
a
led
writer for Newspaper
looks like the same material
whine,
"But
I
don't
LIKE
mash
Enterprise
Alloc:iation,
trapped in the navels of little chi!potatoes, they got LUMPS in

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Sarah Overstreet

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Republicans may face intramural war
WASHINGTON (NEA) network of affiliate's across the al Committee since 1986 and the years."
Although there have been a few. nation. The potential presidential GOP leadership in Congress for
Some party leaders hope they 1'
skirmishes, the full-scale Republi· candidates from this coaljtion of even longer. Their leading presi- can stave off bloodshed by· gettinl!, '
can Pany war that most expect to the religious right wid ultra-moser- .dential contender is probably various factions of the party to
be waged between now and the
Baker.
unite in their opposition to Presi1996 election has nor yet begun in
·
How these sides form up cim be dent-elect Clinton. •'We need to
eamesL Many within the GOP bier111:
•
seen in the debate that has been concentrate on ~ things we can
archy are trying desperately to
0
raging full force in Republican cir- agree on,'' says Rep. Hc.1uy Hyde,
avoid the son of intramural bloodcles over wltal happened on Npv. 3. R-111., who is leading the conciliaParty moderates argue thiit the tory movement on Capitol Hill.
shed that will leave the party so
divided it will cede the White vatives include co.mmentator Pat combined62percentofthepopulaFormer GOP analyst Kevin •
House io the Democrats for a gen- Buchanan, Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, tion not voting for George Bush Phillips believes that attempts at · :
eratioo.. However most believe the Vice President Dan Quayle and ' represents a repudiation ofthe ceo- conciliation will fail. "Thev've got :
struggle is inevitable.
former dru~ czar lllid Education nomic policies of Ronald Reagan a rough period coming up,'r he said
Deep divisions within the GOP Secretary W1lliam Bennett
and George Bush. These moderates of Republicans. "It's going to be a
Doctrinaire conservatives (or say that Reaganomics must be bloodbath." ·
are nothjng new. Th~ struggles ·
between traditionalists and neo· "neo-conservatives" as they now replaced by more traditional
Examples lilce Mississippi Gov.
conservatives, between social mod- like to call •selves) represented Republican economic goals of Kirk fordice's insistence on declarerates and the religious right, have by organizations like the Heritage elimination of deficits through ing the United States "a ChriJtian
been on hold for a decade because Foundation and the Republican reduced spending and some rev- nation," and then not "!'Ckin' off
when others at the Repubhcan
of the party'$ control of the Oval Conservative Leadership Caucus. enue enhancements.
·Office. With the shattering of the Their 1996 candidate IS clearly
Conservatives counter that what Governors Coqference tried to say
so-called Reagan coalition, the HUD Secretary Jack Kemp.
this year's election represents is a he meant no inSult to non-Christian·
contending factions cu now get
Moderate Republicans are repre- personal repudiation of George Americana, shows whll is smolder- :
down 10 the business of fighting for senled by or,anizations like the Bush, that people were voting injjust beiO'III the surface.
·:
the soul of the Republican Party.
Rippon Soc1ety. Among their against a fail~ Jli:CSident and not ,
What may set the war off is the •
Although there is some overlap, polenti~l pr~sidcntial candi~ates against failed policies.
· contest to replace Rich Qond as '
there are four main factions that are Cahforn1a Gov. Pete W1lson
Ed Rollins, the conservative · Republican national chainnu in .
will vie for party domination by the and Massachusetts Gov. William GOP political operative who January. There are a half-dozen · '
1996 election:
Weld.
worked briefly for Ross Perot, candidates running, but pro.dloice
An alliance of Christian funda- · The pragmatists. This group says: "This was a George Bush Labor Secretary Lynn Martin has · •
mentalists, the religious right and includes President .Busb, former · defeat. This was not the. kind of become the lightnin_g rod in the :· :
ulua-ronservatifcs represented by Secretary of State Jun Baker, and fundamental reali_1nment election contest. She is beiRg blttcirly · '
organizations like the Free · many .me~ and women who have we saw in 1980. George Bush was opposed by the religious right over •
::
Congress Foundation of Paul ~upied. ~portan~ of_fJCCS and pol- not able to hold together the coali- her abortion views.
Werrich and the Pat Robertson's ICY P~SillO!'S wlthm the Bush tion. But this does not mean that
Robert wa. .u Is a ayDdlalt· '
Christian Coalition. The latter, with admlmstrallon. They. have c.o ~~_:_ _we can't put it back together. That ed writer fol' Newspaper Eater· . ·
millions in the bank, has built a trolled both the •Rcpublican Nauon· is our job over the next four prlle Allocladoa.

Suriset tonight at 5:07 p.m. Sun- .
rise Friday at 7:37a.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell in the Northeast today
and snowstorms threatened parts of
the Northwest, bu\ mostly sunny
skies were forecast in the South.
As dawn broke, snow fell from
Albany, N.Y., southwest to Cincinnati, with accumulations forecast
up to 3 lnches in northeast Pennsylvania. In some areas , such as
Boston, warmer temperatures
turned the precipiu.ion to rain.
In the West, snow was falling

MOSCOW (AP) - Acting
Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar told a
jeering Congress on Wednesday
that the Russian people are smarter
and more patient than the hard-liners who are trying to dump his government and block reforms.
Gaidar, fighting for his job and
the economic policy he has chlunpioned for President Boris Yeltsin,
conceded that the government's
program had failed to tame inflation, now 25 percent a month.
But he said a declining number
of strikes and public protests indicated growing public acceptance of
the switch from seven decades of
communism toward a free-market
economy.
"There is no threat of hunger
and cold. We have passed through
the period of adaptation to reforms
without social upheaval," Gaidar
said.
· "Despite all the hardships
· resulting from the changes, despite
all the obstacles that still must be
overcome, the Russian people tum
out to be smarter than politicians
thinlc."
•'The people clearly understand
the need for reform and are ready
to work, rather than rock the boat
of our well-being and future,'' he
said.
The opposition was not swayed.
"Gaidar is a con man," said
Mikhail Astaliyev, a leader of the

W. Russell Bibbee, 65, of Point
Frances Grate McCormick, 84,
Pleasant, died Wednesday, Decem- of Seattle, Wash., formerly of Midber 2, 1992, ai SL Mary's Hospital dleport, died on Tuesday, Novemin Huntington.
ber 24, 1992 in Seatde.
He was Executive Director of
She was born in Gallipolis,
the Point Pleasant Federal Housing daughter of the late Jasper and
Authority and the owner of·ABC Lenora Belcher Grate. She was a
Income Tax in Point PleasanL He. retired !ibr3rian.
was a member of the Board of
Surviving are a daughter, Pat
Directors at Peoples Bank of Point N oecher and a son. Don
PleasanL He, was former adminis- McCormick, both of Seattle; a
trator for Pleasant Valley Hospital brother, Gene Grate, Middleport;
and ail employee of the Evans and a sister, Mrs. Leland (Mary)
Packing ·CompWiy in Gallipolis. He BrownG, Middlefport;S· tha SIC.shter- in-law,
was a graduate of Charleston High Ruth rate o ou
ar1eston,
School and of West Virginia Uni· W.Va.; and a brother-in-law,
versity. He was a U.S. Navy veter· Edward Tewksbary, Wellston; 10
an of World War II and was a . grandchildren; and 19 great-grandmember of the American Legion, children. .
Mason County Post No, 23, and Qf
Besides her parents, she was
the Loyal Order of the Moose.
preceded in death by her husband,
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Born May 30, 1927 in Ripley, Maclc McCormick in 1981; a broth· Super Lotto jackpot will grow to
he was a son of Gerald Bibbee of er, William. Grate, and a sister, · $12 million for Saturday's drawing
Ripley and the late Emily (Skid- Ruth Tewksbary.
after no one came up with all six
more) Bibbee. He was also precedThe family will receive friends numbers picked Wednesday night
ed in death by one sister, Mildred on Saturday from 12 to 2 p.m. at with $8 million at stake, the Ohio
Eileen Bibbee.
Fisher Funeral Home in Middle- Lottery said today.
In addition to his father, he is port. Graveside services will he
The value of Saturday's jackpot
survived by his wife, Gwyn (Saho) ·held on Saturday at 2 p.m. at . in the optional, discounted, oneBibbee; two sons and daughters-in- Riverview Cemetery in Middleport, time payment is $5,388,358.
law, Keith and Julie Bibbee of with Rev. Kris Treintong officiatHere are Wednesday night's
Henderson and John and Lisa ing.
Ohio Lottery selections:
Bibbee of Scott Depot; two grand- W'll"
Zwillin
Super Lotto
children Charlotte and Jess Bibbee
I Jam
g
3-19-21-25-40-42
of Henderson;·three aunts, Mable
Wi~ Zwilling, 72, ~CRaven·
{three; nineteen, twenty-one,
Bibbee of Ripley Marie Boswell of · na, OhiO, formerly of Me1gs Coun- twenty-five, fony, fony-two)
DunbarandJuanitaRhodesofFair- ty, died on December 2, 1992 at Kicker
plain, WV and two uncles, Ray Ravenna.
,
0-7-9-5-0-3
Bibbee of Ripley and Guy Bibbee
Local surv1v~&gt;r~ are two broth(zero, seven, nine, five, zero,
of Charleston.
ers, Leo F..z:-vtlhng, Racme, and three)
Service will be held at 1 p.m. Gilbert Z:wtlhng, Pomeroy; and a Pick 3 Numbers •
Saturday, December S, at the brother-m-law, George Horak,
6-4-6
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pomeroy.
.
.
(six, four, six)
Pleasant, with Rev. Tally Hanna
. Funeral scrvtces wtll be held on Pick 4 Numbers
4-2,7-3
officiating. Burial will follow in Saturday at 10 a.m. ?"Saturday at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens rrear Short Funeral Home m Ravenna.
(four, two, seven, three)
Point Pleasant
Visiting hours will be held at the
funeral home on Friday from 5-9
p.m.
Continued from page 1

,..----:--Local...- - - - ,

HEAVY TROPHY - Abkbazian partisans
drag a trophy cannon they c:aptured l'rom Georgian soldiers near the Abkchazlan mountaln village of Tamyeh through tbe mud to a firing Une,
hard-line Russian Unity faction in
Congress.
"He will almost certainly have
to resign," said Dmitri Stepanov,
another Russian Unity meml)er.
Hard-liners want to slow
Yeltsin's economic changes and
drop Gaidar, the architect of the
reforms.
.
Yeltsin has J'CSISted lawmakers'
demands that he nominate a prime
minister for approval by the
Congress. Because Gaidar is only
"acting" prime mi~is~r. Yel~sin
. has not had to submtt hiS nommation.
But Vladimir Shumeiko, first
deputy prime minister, said Yeltsin
had decided to nominate Gaidar,
even though he may not have the
votes to push the appointment
through.
'

VeteraD8 Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• George Oiler, Rutland.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
· Kelly Counts, Donia Crane, and
Edward Wood.
'

The Dlily ~ntinel
(UIPIIli-NO)
Pab1iahecl every &amp;Ret-noon, Mondaj
liuaaP Friday, 1p Court St., Pcmm&gt;y,
Ohio by tbe Otilo Velley Pubtllllln1

Company/Maltlmedla Inc., Pomeroy,
Obio C6769, Pll. 99J·21156. s-nd claM
JICifloiO pal4 ai"-"'Y, Obio.

Mtmlier: Tbe Aaoodalod Pnu, IIIII the
· Ohio Newopaper llaoclatioo, National
Adnrtlfint Repraent.tin, Branham
Nowopaper llafoo, 783 Thlnl Arra.ao,
Now Yod:, N•n(iilrlr. 10011.

I'OII'I'MA8't'BR: Searl- ·~ lo '
Tlla DaRy _8eatlael, Ill Coart St.,

1\&gt;meroJ, OHio 48'1611.

'

llll1JIK)JUPn0N IIA'l'llli

IIJ'Contar
... - -.S1.60
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Oao Year.................................r- ..183.20
.
BINGLJ:COPr
PRJCE
1).0,.............................................21&gt; Centa
8abocrihon aot rieoiri,.lo pay the carri·
or _ , nmlt In "''aaoa lo The
!)roily 8eatlael ... a thne, m or 12
bula. Cnolll wilt bo ldten carrier
eAcbftelt.
No o~ptiono by mail ponnllled Ia
_.... when home curler ,..,..ce is
uailahle.

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A Langsville man's vehicle sustained light damage in a one-car
accident Tuesday morning on State Route 124 in Rutland Township.
.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Dennis E. McGuire, 21, 31805 S.R. 325,
LangsviUe, was westbound when he lost control on an icy bridge
and snuck a guardrail off the right side of the road.
No injuries were reported and no citations were issued. The vehicle was driven from the scene.

Deer-vehicle wreck reported
A POmeroy·woman's vehicle sustained light damage following a
deer-vehicle accident Wednesday afternoon on State Route 7 in
Chester Township.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Wendela L. Tucker, 27, 32484 Hysell Run,
Pomeroy, was northbound when a deer tan into the side of her vehicle.
· No injuries were reported. The vehicle was driven from the
scene.
·

Shooting at residence reported
Meigs County Sheriff James. M. Soulsby reported that Wednesday evening, Kathryn Hall of Wolfe Pen Road notified the sheriffs
office·that around 5:35 p.m., two slugs struck the flont side of her
residence. The slugs passed through the firSt wall at an angle and
struck the side waD on the left in her bedroom. Hall heard two dif.
ferent sounds and began checking and found the slug holes in the
wall.
·
None of the neighbors had been out hunting and did nbt hear
shots or see anyone hunting in the area.
,
Soulsby said this is the first report of any damage done to residences by stray slugs. HunterS are urged to use caution when fuing
their weapons and to know where the slug'or shot will land.

. EMS units answer calls
Mei&amp;s Emergency Services units answered the following calls on
Wednesday: 11:02 a.m., Racine unit to Third Street. Emma Lyons
to Veterans memorial Hospital; 2:46 p.m., Middleport squad to
Oveibrook Center, MarRaret Slay to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 7:57
p.m., Rutland squad to l'ageville, Dwight McDaniel refused lrealment; 8:58p.m., Rutland to Depot Street, Oecrge Oiler, Sr., to Veterans; 11:24 p.m., SYJ11!=use squad to State Route 124, ~les Zeigler to Holzer Medical Center; 11:33 p.m., Polneroy uruts to the
Flood Roads for an abandoned car fire, owner unknown .

..
·,

40s and 50s from California east to
Virginia; and in the 60s along lhe •
Gulf Coast and the Medcan bor- :
der.
Snowfall W,ednesday included 3
inches in six hours at Redmond,
Ore., 2 inches at Pocatello, Idaho,
and 1 Inch at Baker, Ore., Idaho :
Falls, Idaho, and Muskegon, Mich. :
As much as 3 inches of snow feU ·
on Rich and Middle mountains in :
West Virginia.
The high for the nation Wednesday was 77 degrees at Miami and
Homestead, Fla.

about two miles from Ocbamchyr Monday.
Hundreds or people bave died since August In
the conRicl between the AbkbaziaD8 and Georgians. (AP)

Gaidar' s speech was met by ·
.jeers and stony faces from the rows
Cif burly, middle-aged former Communists - holdovers flom .the old
regime who were elected in March
1990, 17 months before the coup
attempt that led to the collapse of
the Soviet Union.
Deputies interrupted his message of optimism with derisive
laughter, but Galdar quickly
resumed his rapid-fire defense. His
arms 'were stiffly spread as he
· gripped the sides of the wide
lectern of the Grand Kremlin
Palace, which still bore the hammer-and-sickle seal of the Soviet
Union .
Yeltsin sat behind and above
him on the podium, calmly overlooking the I ;041-member
Congress of People's Deputies,

--Meigs announcementsOES to meet
The Racine Chapter No. 134,
OES, will hold practice Sunday at
2 p.m. for installation.

Trustees to meet
The Letart Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
office building.

Installation planned
The Racine Chapter No. 134,
Order of the Eastern Star, will hold
installation of officers Monday at
7:30 p.m. Members are requested
to bring salads or sandwiches.

Christmas bazaar
The women of St. Paui United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains,
will have a Christmas sale Friday
and Sanirday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Toys, crafts, food and yard sale
items will be available.

Lodge to meet
Racine Lodge No. 461 F&amp;AM
will meet Tuesday at 7:3Q p.m.
Officers will be installed.

Patrol probes one-car wreck
Hospital news

on parts of South Dakota, Montana
and Wyoming.
·
A winter storm warning contin·
ued today fOr eastern Idaho and the
west-central mouJrtains of
Wyoming. Winter storm watches
continued for parts of Wyoming,
Utah and Colorado, particularly in
the higher elevations.
Clouds stretched from New
England to Pennsylvania and west
to Des Moines, Iowa.
Higlis were expected to be in the
teens in the northern Rockies: 20s
and 30s across the northern tier;

Gaidar
defends
free-market
reforms

Lottery numbers

·'

The Dal!~ Sentinel-Page 3

Southern_Ohio expected to remain clou~y.

Friday, Dec. 4

Pom-.roy Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 3, 1992 ~

R bert ].. nagman

,•
•
•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stocks
Am Ele Power................... .31 1/4
Ashland Oil.. ......................25 1/8
AT&amp;T................................ .47 1(2
Bank One........................... 48 7/8
Bob Evans ......................... 19 3/4
Charming Shop..................35 If}.
City Holding ..................... .I8
Federal Mo.&amp;.ul ............. ....... l6 1(2
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................72 318
Key Centurion ................... 20 3/4
Lands End..........................26 1/4
Limited !he. ...................... 27 318
Multimedia Inc ..................27 1(2
Rax Restaurant .................I/8
Reliance Eleclric............... .l8 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15
Shoney's Inc ...................... 24 1/8
Star Bank ........................... 34 1/4
Wendy lnt'l..................... .. .l3 1/4
Worthingron Ind................ 21 If}.
Stock reports are th'~ · 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl of Gallipolis.

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec:. 2 - Ronald
Erwin, Garth Weethee, Colin
Pierce, Eileen Brewer, Geraldean
Harrison, Ruth Vanco, Everett
Waugh, James Humphreys and
Mrs. Randy Perkins and daughter.
Birtbs, Dec. 2 - Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Hoffman, daughter, Gallipolis and, Mr. and Mrs. Jason Landrum, son, Jackson.

Firm receives

reclamation award
Richards and Son have won an· ·
award for achievements in recJama: ·
tion at its sand and gravel opctation ·
near Pomeroy. The award was pre- ·
sented by the Ohio Aggregates .
Association at its mid-November ·
meeting held in Columbus.
This is the second award that
Richards and Son have received at.
its Letart Falls location in the past ·. ·
three years. The company was cited
for continued practice of reclaim- ·
ing land as it proceeds with mining. :
As a result stable slopes are estab- · •
lished with' vegetation and erosion ,
is lcept to a minimum. At one location; a down·drain has been lined .,
with. large gravel stone to prevent .
eros ton.
Richards and Son is a major ·
producer of construction aggregates in Southern Ohio. Most·of the ,
company's products are used in
highway and general construction
plus infrastructure repair and
tmprovements. A great deul of itS
material is moved by barge on the
Ohio River and is used CXtel\sively
in both Ohio and West Virginia.

To meet Thesday
Regular meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Elections will be
held on Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the
board office.

A THEATER

WITH A CHOICE!
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT ONLY

THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS A
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

STARTING FRIDAY
DUSTIN HOFFMAN IN
HERO
FRI.-SAT.·SUN.1:.30 P.M.
SILLY CRYSTAL IN

MR. SATURDAY NIGHT
~HOW TIMES

IIMIIIN Thill. 0,. Ettnlng SlloW 7:10
Admlaololll1.50. 446-11123

CALl US

TODAY!
992·2124

2

Russia's highest parliamentary
body.
.
Hard-liners wan.t to force
changes in the Cabinet and slow. .
the market reforms, which have :.
brought soaring prices and plung- . ·
ing living standards.
But neither Yeltsin nor the hardliners have a clear majority. Both
sides are maneuvering for support
from about 300 undecided and
unpredictable deputies, known in
Russian as "the Swamp."
Outside the Kremlin's crenelat·
ed red brick waDs, about 200 Cos·
sacks in traditional long cloakS
adomed with J;X&gt;Iished silver bullets.
demonstrated 10 support of Ycltsin,

DIUM PAN PIZZAS

.... ,J 10

99

....
..
'
"'f'

7

�·•

:s ports

The .Daily Sentinel

·

By RUSTY MILLER
"I was happf with my year,"
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Edwards said." didn'tdo quite as
Marc Edwards, who 1&gt;iled up more well as last year, but that was a facthan 6,000 yards dunng his cancer tor of defenses keying more .on ·
at Norwood High ScMol is the me."
1992 winner of the Ass~ciated
Edwards rushed for 2,074 yards
Press Mr. Football .award emblem- on 259 carries and scored 21 touch·
atic of the top player in Obio.
downs as a junior, when he was
Edwards, a 6-foot-1, 215-pound also a first-team all-Ohio selection.
senior rushed for 1 121 yards on
Edwards barely beat out his co234 Wries (7.4 yar«h per attempt) back of the year in Division n, tallHe scored 26 touchdowns and back and defensive back Charles
added 20 extra-points in leading H~ of Columbus Brookhaven, ·
the Cincinnati area in scoring for in
oting by a rriedia panel from
the second year in a row. He across .the state. Also considered
totaled 2,114 all-purpose yards and were Division I outside linellaCkerc
also averaged 40 yards on his 23 Mike Vrabel of Stow Walsh Jesuit,
punts. He also has l,ed the Cinl:in- offensive and defensive back Tom
nali area in rushing each of the last Paolucci of Division IV Warren
three years.
Kennedy. defensive end John Day

Meigs boys to ~tart season on ·road Friday against Alexand~r
ByDAVEHARRIS .
Sentinel Correspoadenl
The 1992-93 edition of the
Meigs Marauder boys' basketball
team opens the season on Friday
evening when they travel to
Alexander to lake on Jay Rees'
Spartans.
Phil Harrison welcomes back
two starters and five letter winners
from last year's.team. The Marauders finished with
a 12-9 mart last
' .

season and a 10-6 record in the Tri·
Valley Conference. Seven of those
losses came with at least one starter
injured and five came by a total of
13 points.
Gone from last year's team are
starters Shawn Hawley, LJ. Mitch,
Frank Blake and Phil Hovatter.
Mitch was the .team's center and
was third on the team in scoring
with 11.3 points a contest and led
the team In rebounds with around

eight a contest. Hawley was one of
the team's forwards and scored 11
points a contest and added five rebounds. The other graduated
starter, Blake, was the team's defensive standout while averaging
five points a game.
The Marauder however return
the top two sc~ from last season
in John Bentley and Trevor Harrison. Bentley, a 6-2 senior is th~:
(See MARAUDERS on Page 5)

9rulllmer, Jack Stanley, John Beutley, Todd

Asb.

rr ·'

Brad Anderson, Jay CreiiiCIIIII, Bobby Jobasoa,
manager Chris Neal and assistant c08ch Rick

Scoreboard
&amp;lmanl&lt;ll .......... 912 4

· In the NBA .. ."

.
EASTERN CONFERENCE

'

AllutlcDI-

T..,.
W L
Odoodo....................l 4

I'd.
.167

GB

Nowlanoy ..............1
Bocton......................6

.533

1.5

.400

3.5

Now Yadt ................9 5

w.......................s

......................4
Pbllldolphla ............3

.)!57

4

9 .301·
9 . .2l0

4.5
5

C.OiniDIMilwa.uba .............lO 3
.769
Chiclao .. ~ .............-.9 •
.692
• Ow\otto ................. .s 1 .m
• Atl.nta .....................7 7 .lOO
CUM!IAND ........7 7 .lOO
lndillla ....................6 I .429
DcoiOiJ. .....................3 9 .2l0

T...,

•

Uloh .........................8 5
H.,...., ...................7 5
o.a-_,................6 7
s.. Anklnio ...... 6 7
~ ................4
7

•

••
•

Dallu ......................l 10

Tonlgbt'saames

Mmtrcal It 8011tG1, f:40 p.m.
New Jcnq ~ OUaw~, 7:40p.m.
Qucbcc It Phil1~, 7:40p.m.
Milmc:KJU. at Detroit. 7:40p.m.
Toronto at Chiclao, 8:40p.m.

·quartelback of the team who aver· aged 13.6 points a game, led the
·~ with 76 assists and fmished
:~nd on the team in rebounding
· (6 a ~arne) from his guard position.
, HarriSOD (6-2, senior) became the
· fi;'St player in Meigs Hi)lh School
:htstory to average 20 pomts a con, teSt when he !lOured in 20.9 points
': a game and pulled in a sht re. bounds a game.
:-, Bentley will be at one guard for
. the Marauders. The other guard
·will be Aaron Drummer, Eric Wag: ner, Todd Dill or Kyle Simpson.
, : Dill was a letter winner from last
·season's team and averaged just
; over one point a game. Wagner,
Drummer and Simpson are all up
:from last year's TVC champion re: serve team. Wagner saw action in
Jour varsity contests.

6.5

GB

.S
l

z
3
6

hdlk. Dhllien
Plxtload ...,.............IO 3 .7(/J
S.alo ....... - ...........9 4 .6n
I
....................! 4 .fl&gt;7
1.5
L.A.L.an .......- ....7 s .513
:1..5
L.A. Cifpoll ...........7 6 .531 • 3
, . _ . . . ..............6 • .429
4.5
Ooldeo State .......... .S 9
.357
S.S

Wedn"""'y's ..,o,...

Nowl...,.12l,Atlonta liS

$aa-91.-12
l'alllaodll:l,lodianol03
'
-Mil.,.ukoe
101,JOO,
Ctiaao 96
r.G:.ru 91
Owloca III,OddonSII!eiiO

Tonlgbt's pmes

w-.

Friday's 1•mes

,...... ..a-.

7:30p.m.
SUI An1onio 1t New Jonoy, 7:30p.m.
n.mit atpt..1MWJ'!'ia, 7:10p.m.
Atlooaa "loooWona, 7:30 p.m.
l'l1lllm4 • Qlooao, • p.m. '

Clalolll&gt;
-"
Iliavoi, 9:30
~p.m.p.m.
LA.
Lit•
at Pbaalix,
a.doae .. Sacrammto, 10:30 p.m.

•
•'

,.•'

. In the NHL...

1:

T-

·-Diotolon
WLTI'II.GFGA

l'llubiiiP .......... 18 6 3 39· Ill VI
N.Y.. _ ..... 1210 3 Z7 99 95
Nowlonoy-...- 13 I~ 0 26 79 77
w~....... 11 13 2 :&gt;~ 93 89

N11ional Luaue

Major college
basketball scores

wi\h

Oeoq,c:lo'Wn 8&amp;. St.. Leo 49

La Sine 59, Phill. Textile 53
Plttobwoh 89. Sc rn..,;,, Pa. 75

1

South
Clemson 93, Libttty 68
Dtvidaoo 98, St. Jcweph'a, MaiM 78

E. Kmtuc:ky 11, N. l(entucky11
Flmida St. 67, Muaadtuk:U164 '
Kmtucl:y 81, Wript St. 65
· NW Loulmna 93, O.U.. 70
W. E:a~v.acky 87, Jackson SL 69
Winthmp 92. ~· N.C. 84

Midwest

Illinois SL 82, Lewis 69
MiMolo~alO&amp;,

SIU·Edwudsvillc 64
S&lt; Lcuis 86. S!ippay Roclt 42

-.
Southwest

13 I S
Jr-. .............. 1&lt; 7 2
aulfllD............... 10 11 4
617 I
Otlawo .............. l23 I

• Hallfaol.-.........
'
,.,.

31 liS 96
30 96 82
2A 112 91

13 16109
5 S3124

t

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

'·
: • T-

NGri'IIDI.tdon
W L T Pta. GFGA

• Yl
... .......... 14 9
DoniL............... 1412
Clolltp.............. Ill!
T - ............. II 10
T-811···-.. 10 IS
S&lt; 1.coU ............ 9 ll

3

319182

I

29 1171Cll

3
3
2
4

2l 75 75
22 93 VI
22 92106

s.,..,.DI.....,

LooAIIplol ..- .. 17 7 2
c.~py .............. 14 9 3
v - ......... 14 9 2

Z7 19 II

36 Ill 91
31 104 19
30 nz 82

to

wi&amp;h Cluck Jac:bon and Gut Poli·
dor, infielders, IDd Mitch Lyden. catclla-·
first bucman., on minor lcapc contncu·
and asli£ned them ro Edmonton cA lhe Pt·
cific Coutl.u
NEW YOifK'METS - Agreed to
terms whh Roger Mason, pitcher, on 1
ono-ye.ar CCGUIC\.

SWi!ord 92. Pqot Sound 42
Utah St. 80, Montana Tecb49
Wuhinctm St. &amp;7, BYU-Hawlii. 60

, T\lllrnamenls

Upchkk Memorial Tournament

Chomploouhlp
SL John'a 90. Iona74
Third. plact:

·

Qc. We~t Tech 73, Bera. 59

Day. Ilw\bu74, Day. Plnenon 48
Day. Jeff'et~onlS.Day . Belmont l&amp;

E.lyril63, Amhcm Z1
Fainiew 66, FJ.yril W. 34
Gamunille51, Mogadore 30
Oilmwr Acadany 47, Orand Vall. 40
Hwtdns«n
Piketon 45 ,
Leipaic 66, Van Bu1111 l5
Libcrty-Bmtm 77, Vanlt•e 35
Lima Cath. 55, Fort Jennings 46
Lorain Southview 52. Ce:uvi.ew SO
MulinJtOO 43, Loui&amp;:ville 37
Maysville 67. Philo 44
McComb45, Arlington 43
Meadowbrook 67, Shmando.h 40

Minerva !58, Cana..l Fulton NW 39
Morgan 69, New l.Wngtm 45
N. OloMod 50, Ci• Maoshall47
Newbury 45, Otui:lon ND-CL 44
Oberlin 59, Elyria Cath. 39 '
PaincMllclluvcy 58, Kiotlaold 12
Richmcml Da..leSE 5&amp;, Paint Vall 51

41-Bobby Johnson* ...........6-2
25-Chris Knight .................6-3
11-Eric Wagner .................. 5-9
15-Brad Anderson ........ .'.....6-3
22-Jack Stanley ..................6-2
23-Aaron Drummer ........ .5-11
• - lettenilan

.
The conference IS as balanced as
it has been for a number of years.
Harrison feels that Belpre, Wellston, Vinton County, Trimble,
Alexander and the Maraude.rs all
have a chance to win the crown.
Miller will be very much improved
over Iasrseason.
· Meigs wUI play Athens in a pair
of non-conference games this sea· ·
son. the Marauderll will also play at
Ohio University's Convocation
Center against Huntington East on
Jan. 16. The season's final non
conference ~arne will be on Feb. 12
when How1e Caldwell's Southern
Tornadoes invade Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium for their fltSt-ever
meeting.
Harrison is assisted this year by
Rick Ash. Rick Edwards wiD han·
dle the .reserve team.

LEITERMEN - Meigs welcomes back live
lettermen from last year's squad. From left to

Jan. 15 ............................. Alexander
Jan. 16 ................... Huntington East
• ....................(at OU-Chillicothe)
Jan. 19............................. at Trimble
Jan. 22 ...............................at Miller
Jan. 26 ................. Nelsonville-York
Jan. 29 ...............................at Belpre
Feb. 2 ......................·......at Wellston
Feb. 5 ................at Federal Hocking ·
Feb. 12 ..............................Southern
Feb. 16 .....................Vinton County

Clllrtll

10W811,
10W40,
IIR, ar

~·

Basketball

Charles Oakley, New York Knicka forwl{d, and Lmy KrymowiU., Utah· hu
center, $3,500 each tor flaar•nt fouls

01

·

NEW JERSBY ~S -Activated
Dan O'Sullivan, center, from the injured
lin. Placed ll)'loo Willilllll, center-!orwud, oa tho injured lilt.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS - Acd:vat.ed
O.arles Sluckleford, ca~tcr, fnm the in·
, jured lilt Placed Ed&amp; Lee Wilkinl, center, on lhc injured list.
SBATILE SUPERSONICS - Rt·

Christ11aas
' Greeting
Edition
·Thursday,
.Deecmaller 24

Football
NaiiOIUII Football ~ue
DI!NVBR BRONCOS - Sogned Dll'
ren .Pamer, p1m111r: .Acti.vatod Alton M~t·
JOfMl'Y• dcfiNivo bldl, fnxn iqjwal rcac:rvo 1nd Codric Tdlmaft, wiO. rocei.ver,
from the praclicc Jlfaad. Placed Detrick
Ruuell. wide rcceiwz, M injured raavc.

l'll'llllhlr
Ill fllliil

MILK. WHITE &amp; COLORS, BESKENS .

noM

lorergn

5
'
WAS $2.45
LB. ----------HOW 2•15

5

,.

:.,

,.

.,

',

Mr. 8IIUt
AII'Ctta
..9793. jj,(81

~,,
$1 DFf

t:e' IIIII

ca•1111"

Price good wrll1

exchange
90 DAY WARRANTY

lo rei~

REFRESHMENTS &amp; DOOR PRIZES
5141. MAIN ST.

POMEROY

.

;' .

John Jac:luon, wide receiver. Activated
Eric Bl~t. nmnin&amp; bl.ck, born the practice aquad. Activated Steve Lof\on, COl·
netblcX, frcm ' in;ttod ftllltrYe and placed

CIIDI' Matcll

car Cll'tl Kna

him m lhepnooticotquad.

• includes 16 oz . COlOr

TAMPA BAY BUC~ANEERS­
Placed Mille But.. wide JeCDi.vu, on injured racrve.. Added Dean _KUtland·, of.
fensi'IC linaun, 10 1ho pncw:e aquad.

Match. Vinyl Dura

Wilb wreatbs of boDy ud mistlatoa, llocldap buag by
lbe fire md ICIDII IIJanketed witb IDDW, Chrilliii81 ...
eac•pana warmlb ud good cbe• as we cberlslllhe ,
lllllllags we'vesband this past year. Far ul••ns ·
••ylag ..tb•akl" to , .., . , •aay lrleads, old aad aew, .,
wbneldad •PPort we'D always b1811Ue. Dolag
. lnllia•• wlb JDU II aur peatnt pleaiDie!

Hockey
Nltlonal HockeJlAal•

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minic Lavoie, dcf'ensanan. 10 Proridmce
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BOSTON BRUINS -

Shield. Glass Shield

Windshield PrOiect~nt

and Fog Shield Antr·F09

29!!5
99
3

111111-ta

p,... good
with exchange

t

eomo

I

n•

I

•

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings EditiQn
on December 24th.
Check this one out! 1993 G•c SON.OMI

$9800
S•le·Prlced
·

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Wedding Sets fashioned in a
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•

THE .DAILY SENTINEL . ... , .

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POMEROY, OHIO

..

•

''

....
-··
-•••...

Price good

wilh •111ch~ •••••••••

C*'Mildl

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r

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ASK FOR P. J. OR DAVE
992-2156 .

Bench IMia, AIC, Rear step bumper, power stMrlng, rally whMie, AM/I'M caHtte stereo,

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M' Fllll'l
or oameslk:

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or domestiC

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LB.---------- NOW 2.05
.ALL HOLIDAY COOKIE MIXES .............. 10% OFF
. ...............................
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. $3•so LB.
MINCEMEAT
CASHEWS REG. 5
4.25 LB.................."NOW s3.25 LB•

MlJ\MI DOLPHINS - Placed Ma.dr.

pair

2!?

FRIDAY, DEC. 4 &amp; SATURDAY, DEC. 5
ALL CANDY COATING CHOCOLATES
WAS $2.35

Sanda-, linebacker, and Bruce Alexander,
c:omerback, on injured ""erve. Siped
Qilf Oclcrn.linebacter, 1114 Alfml Jaclt·
10n, comcrblck. Waived Michael Bran·
don, defenain end, frorri the prac4ce
.quad. Activated Aaron Cn.vcr, runnin&amp;
bldr:, from "'.iw'ed ..ave and placed him
oo tho pnctic01quad
'
NEW YORK JETS - Placed Ken
O'Brien. quuttzbtct: Blair Thomu, nm·
run8 t..dr:; lrY Eatman. tackle; ~nd Demit
Byrd, dd"wivo end, on injwM ;aar:tYe.
Re·•iancd A.B. Brown, runnl~l bad;.;
Brett Miller, tackle; and Mike Non«h,
quattal&gt;oclr..
'
PHOENIX CARDINALS - Waived

Wlplr lllldl Rllllll,

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
Christmas Open Rouse

''

·,.

99

44

. . . .,each,

·,.

Placed Corey

Jo JoF.nAlilh. &lt;UUd.

n••

llllllrlt Wiper

c&lt;X'MliUcd in zcca~,t &amp;~·
BOSTON CELTICS- Rccllimcd
Bart Kofoed, guard, off.waivers and
aign~ him for the remainder tL the ICI·

.....CIDCAOO BULLS -

right are Todd Dill, Bobby Jobnsoa, Jay Cre•
•
means, Trevor Harris011 and Joba Bentley.

Sr.
Sr..
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

National Buketball Allodatlon
NBA - Fined Eddie Lee Wilkins,
Philadclphja 16en center, $4,SOO; 1nd

Columbia 104, SL Fnncis, N.Y. 67

Bnmawiclr: 41, PUma Sr. 43

Harrison will hold one of the .
forward position and will be joined
by 6-2 junior Jack Stanley ..Chris
Knight. a 6-3 senior, and 6-2 .senior
leuer winner Bobby Johnson are
also pushing for playing time. ·
Johnson averaged two points a contest last year in 19 conteSt.
Harrison feels that his team
should be able to score and that
three-point shootin'- will be one .of
its strong points. 'We should be
able to run with the ball this sea-

son," he~d.

. 2IIWiiO

ligned StcYc Scheffler, !orwaol.

Adcna44, w.. ~alll9
Avon Lob 51. Vcrmiliot&gt;34
Beaummt 55, Oe.. C.1holic 4S
Bel.v~ 44, KdlCrina Alter 35
Broc::&amp;lyn 49, Nounandy ~
B..,...dc43, Roclr.y lti= 32

team.

cific Cout League.

.

Ohio high school

who averaged three points a contest
and three rebounds a conteSt. Brad
Anderson, .a 6-3 junior, will also
see playing ~e in the middle for
Mei~~:s, Ande.rson also was a member of last years champion JV

Geren, Cltda,to • minor leap contract
and ucipfd him to l.al Vcgu of the Pa-

s;gne&lt;~

sa.

~

onc ~ ycu

Willi1m1, auard, on tho injured li11.

Far West

Columbia 48, Avoo 34
Cory-Rawa;oo44, Arcadia 23
Cralwood 63, Fidd X1

~ ...............

.

ManNs 81, Manpha S&lt; 76

37 114 77

A-DIY-

Lake, catcher, on •

SAN DIEGO PADRES - Signed Bob

Citadel 59, Chadooton South= 54

- . . . ............ !7 6 3

10 •

S~

Yr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

:Date
Opponent
· Dec. 4.......................... at Alexander
: Dec. 8 .................................Trimble
: Dec. II ..................................Miller
· Dec. 12 .............................at Athens
Dec. 15 ............at NelsonvUie-York
' bee. IS ........................ :.........Belpre
, Pet. 22 ..............................Wellston
Jan. 5.....................Federal Hocking
Jan. 9 ..............................·...... Athens
: ;Jan. 12 ................. .at Vinton County

11 0 W. MAIN, POMEROY

,

FLORIDA MARUNS - Ai="

C..&lt; Cooncctiout S&lt; 82. Quoot~ Coll.

Caou"" S. 31, nov.. 37
Cardinal44; Chardon 41

. ....... 9

HRS. MON.-SAT. 9:00-5:00 PM

the Mr. FOOibail mantel, Barre said
"He handles pressure very well
He's very mature. He's handled the
whole recruiting process well, il
hasn't bothered him in the least. So
this won't bother him either."
Edwards said, "There were high
expectations at my school ever
since my freshman year. Then afte~
my sophomore year, the expects,
tions have been high from the ci!J
(of Cincinnati). But I rook that ana
I lived up to it"

: Meigs' 1992-93 basketball schedule

t.crm1

22 98 98
21 92 98

N.Y. -

No.-player
Ht.
33-Jay Cremeans• ..............6-5
: 10-John Bentley* ...............6-2
· 35-Trevor ~son* ... :......6-2
~1-Todd Dill* .................. 5·11
23-Kyl~: Simpson* ............. 5·9
'

contn&lt;:t.

East

.... 9 ll 3

Pili

DETROIT TIGERS - Aareed to
tcunJ wi1b Alm Trammell, shortstop. on 1
me-year 1:011.tnCL

3.39 grade-point average- 12th in
a class of 187. No wonder he has
been invited to visit Notre Dame
(this weekend), Penn' State, Ohio
State and Southern Cal.
For his career, Edwards rushed
for 6,001 yards and 73 touchdowns
and also totaled more than 500
tackles as a four-year starter at
linebacker. He intercepted eight
passes and r~overed seven fumbles for good measure.
As for the pressure.of carrying

: Meigs boys' varsity roster

The FABRIC SHOP

Baseball

The center for the team will be

6-5 senior letterman Jay Cremeans,

..·

CIDCAGO CUBS- Agrocd 10 ~s

girls basketball scoreS

WALES CONFERENCE '

Transactions
AtMrlc.an IMIIN

'

1161....
7:30p.m.
New Yalllata.EVI!l:AND, 7:30p.m.
LA.l...t• It lioulloa, 1:30 p.m.
Mini-* at~ 9 p.m.
n.Jlllat Seatlk, 10 p.m.
Oda&gt;do .. L.A. Cippon,l0,30 p.m.

$59999

CoJJU!
and See
What It
CanDo
For You!

Wickliffe47,Jobn Ad~m~38

p.m.
S&lt; Lcuis 1t CaiJary, 9:40p.m.

74

SALE

$45999

RivcrView ~.Jobn GlalD!iil
Root1t0wn 63, Stftllltlbaro 34
Solon Ill, Miplelils. ll
S&lt; Jo;cph Aoo"""'y 4~. N""""'dy 36
Tol8.......,59,Tol. Wlito43
Tol Natre'Dame !liS, Tol Rogers 29
Tol Scou54, Tol Libbey 34
Tri·Volley 70, CrocUvillo 26
Uni«o 59, Zane TJJCC 43
W. Bnnch 42. Canollton 36
w. Muakin&amp;wn so, Sheridan 39

SINGER
OVERLOCK
5 THREAD

SALE

w~ 31, Alhtabula Hllbor 30

N.Y. Wanders It Buffalo, 7:40p.m.
N.Y. Rangcn at Wuhinston, 8 :1 0

-n

REG. $899.99

W•laioo SO, Windham 49

Frlday:s.games

3.S
4.5

r

REG. $699.99

I

Edmomm It Vucou~. 10:40 p.m.
Hartford at San Joae., 10:40 p.m.
Pia.bwJh at Loa: AnacJ.e.. 10:40 p.m.

3.5

.615
.583
.462
.462
.364
.1191

M .....

Wednesday's S&lt;Ores

!I.Y. Ron..,. 5, llo&lt;roit 3

1
3

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw. . DI\1IIoll.
W L
Pd.

11 67116

Winnipo&amp; 3, Clllpry 3, tic

.643

7
9
9

22 74103
19 84 9'1

Wiru&gt;p&lt;a........... 8 13 3
SanJ01e ............. 5 19 1

~

SINGER
OVERLOCK
4 THREAD

years and he's as close as I've Seen
to a Chris Spielman. He'll hit you
offensively and defensively and
he'll punish a bell-carrier," said his
coach, Jim Barre.
·
"I'm a power runner; more than.
finesse. I'm more of a John Riggins-type -I'd rather~- over you
~an aroliJ!d you. I ilon tlilce to fll!l
s1de to s1de, so I try to turn ll
upfield as soon as possible,''
Edwards said
.
•
Off the field, Edwards carries a

Marauders ... _&lt;c_o.;_nun_·u_ed_rro_m_Pa_ge_4&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Come and see r yourself what the
OVERLOCK can do for you!
Saturday, Dec. 12, 3:00 p.m. • Pre•register.
DIU and Eric W aper. StaDdiiiJI are
Phil Harrison, Chris Knlgbt, frevor Harrlsoa,

of Division I poll champion Cleveland St. Ignatius, Mentor Lake
Catholic quarterback Pete Jelovic
in Division lll, and running back
Bill West of Rayland Buckeye, also
in Division U.
Edwards becomes the winner of
the sixth Mr. Football award,
which is presented by the Ohio AP
Sports Writers Association. Previous winners include Zanesville
halfback Buster Howe, Euclid tailback Robert Smith (in 1988 'and
1989), St. Henry quarterbackdefensive back Bob Hoying and
quarterback•defensive end Derek
Kidwell of Fostoria.
Edwards' statistics don't tell the
whole story.
"I've been coaching for 16

•

FREE SEMINAR

1992-93 MEIGS MARAUDERS -The 1991·!11 Melp Marauden wD1 opea tile - - Friday
nlpl at Albaay agaiast Aleuader. Team memjlen Include (-ted, L-R) Kyle Simpson, Aaroa

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Nor'Yood running back/linebacker Edwards tabbed Ohio's Mr. Football

Thursday, December 3, 1992
Pagf--.4

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December3 1992

'

41,n~
-

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
91010 hou..: 8:30 a.m. to I p.m. - - , tlo""'Uh Fridoy,
8:30a.m. to 7 p.m. Slluldey, -~~ Lm. to 5 p.m. Sundoy

GALUPOUS
Price.

aot Upper Rl,., Road
&gt;Me-3807
'1tt2.

Cl:

Iii :

�_,

..
Southern puts three warriors on 1992 Division V all-Ohio team

PIG• 8

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

T!t·'

110, Sr.; Tea IWI, , . , _ I
~ 6-!,
:143, St.; T• "'"'' 01
lilt, S.11,
1M, Sr.tt. t 'm Oct• Oe'; , Mi6:IJit..
....,. F&lt;a1riok, 6-1, IU-' ~r.; B* ~
190, Sr.: - v - - . s .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Southern's · Russell Sin4Ieton
joined tcallllllatcs Jeremy Dill and
Michael Evans as well ·as Euf,ern
players Pat Newland, Jared lt.ide:nour and Chad Savoy in bcine
numbered among 21 plaf:: from
southeastun Obio high sc
football teams chosen for this year's
Division V all.()l)io team.
. Singleton was the only local
player named to the second team.
Here's the Associated Press
1992 Division Vall-Ohio high
school football team, selected on
the recommendations of a state
panel of sports writers ·and broadcastm:

-......o.

2.21b,Sr:; ---~6-0, 1,._...;

Sr.;
._,-c-. !!:::f,D1,,6B.._
2. 110. T•• -.....
n.,.,
N•••rk
Cotholic: 6-2. 110.
,.._Mlkollalfiol4,
!.,.IIIII Smi... llul C...., 5-9, 195,
PUal
6-1, 111:!, Sr.
Ja.h ........ C '
rl . . . .
Sr;
n
Cooioby
6-3, 196, Sr.~ Chri• FluJautr.
Sr, ....
1

w,,._6-2.2IO,s..

• ....Lklllo
fiiiM_
fW:t_ - · - ·
Sta .....
..........

u.-u fll . . ,_. . . Momr, U...,.
c....
,_... c.....,_ca...,.lc.
COKII

flU.~

catiMIUc; M ... l'tll, c.

'

l1~v·•

M
I

I

g,.,.,

Ntwal"k

Se'*ld .....

•.t•

OFFBN!E:
" h Bob1e. CUdantd
U.ri co· 6-t, 19t: Jr.; T.-t.S..wart.

C.•·

bt!ra. 5·10, 160,lr.; han

Bator, ..cbmood
H-5·11 , 11D.Sr. llo
Jt«Ooodbu,
South c.1wl.tiDft S."'
1 6-0, 2J5, S~o;

Ma''

Thursday, December3, 1992 ·f

0..0.
ladrp•«--. S.tl,l",SJ. _Q .rliR•*• 0..
ICoUOy,lloollnilla, s.u. 195. Sr.; J.«C.wfood.

Cary-a.-. 6-0,160, S..; llriu Wllocboo;,t,
Lo&lt;k!ID4. 6-1. 11&gt;~ B""'l
c.burt. 6-2. 115. ...
lloiL
6-1,
170.

Sr. lloob-.lakoB,.. W~6-2.210.1&lt;;T..

~ci.WaN,~~,~~'T~

•• , J... a.u.,, Scull o. 1
se~o;;a·-.~
5·10.165, Sopb.; Dwlalla Mlctloy, DormDo. 5-10.
liS, Sr.: LYte Wbita. '7..mlnWe p
... S.ll,
215. Sr. Kk+'w Cado Sani, In hp d
, •2.

no,sr.

DEFENSE: t inmea Joo Cundben. CaM1
W...._, '-l, 240, Sr.; IGIID.Ihllkbt. Adlltbn'l
t/1 Rldt·
Sc lolto. 5-10. 225, Sr.: Jeba Mo:D
6-2. ~ s..; Otad w-. w-.
field, 5-lcf,"llil, Sr.; J...;. Smaolla, """" ticll, 6-1,195,
~aiaTdciiU:k.Ja.
chp•dlDOI, S-11, 170. St.; Bdaa Holme, Aa:ia
Soo.., I!U~ 5·1, 115, Sr.; llcraio McAllialer.
Locklwl S.IO. 110, Ir.i Burt Pt.yno. DmviJia. 60, 19S, ilr.; lotr Saodosu, Lctn City Buckaro
Trail, 6-o6, 190, Sopb.; · And:f Sban•on,
Poilla • Notrt DuM, 6-t. lG, .. .. Bacb. Mito X..blaa. Caa1 w~. 5-10. 1~3, Jr.:
Mao SbouD, Dlbo!t, 5·10, 1150, Sr.; luoo Milia',
· :n.Jtcn, U , l«l, Sr. Pwt._Auun Hs.kc:l. faU..
port lfullo&lt;llaaliq. 6-3, 7111, Sr.

lllOild-Sr.,.....,.

lti_

1'DwoU-.,

S...
Ciolbr, line
Cooter
W-a....; Bd4io WoF.wi... McDoaa1d;
Jato 2orlo-. -1\kXloloy; lllllio E Vie!Ula Miillew1; Brie Pottl, Columbiana
Cr111vlow: loltrt Domiwvich, McDoaalAI: Earl
..8UIIIIIIIR" S.U.l.aaaia.

loo a.aboek, Bollaino St Jo!m; Cam Weat.
New Ma&amp;anmu Fnmtir, Nick l.Gwor, SllJ_aiaeitk
Oanway: Todd Bluu. BoollMllo; Miio Dim·
,.oru.a, Woodofldd; Eric lolwoo,~n:noet

Ouaway; Mike Bracxme. New Ph~· TIUcanwu Calbolto: Claad WUcy, Shady1ido:
lllldoael Booth, B Volley;Boelter, Malvom; Otorr llolmliaav, Su.........
Oan••r. Eric McCaldaeon, lfe&amp;erford; Cul
Sommen, New Jltil•~· Tucarawu Cltbalic;
na.- WiUiama Cedi%; - Dnocblco, s......
- c....... Valloy; Mad&lt; Sotitb, Cadiz; ~
McOiliOil. B•lllvilll; Rolt S•llll, WalerfDnll
T...
Mark Bloct·
bom, Miqo lu.oc:tion; Ja1on Bcadnell, H•mmdaville- Nordl; Mite B - Blid
•
R,on Street, BuUn·illc; J.J. Hunt., suf.'t::
Fnntlin; Maa Rico. S~~p.ICrell Oaraw•y; lam
Sm.i\11, Lore City Ba"eyo Tnll; Child Weber,
W'""'"'"ld; Cltrlal.uli«,
PAT NEWLAND, REEDSVILLE EAST.
ERN: JlllEMY DILl., RACINE JSOITrllllRN;
Jeh• DuPu7, PortiWUMitll No&amp;rt Dalnt} Mart
Woods,._ Valley; Janr
Llckoy, a - 'l'rlablo; MICIIAII:L EV ANB,

c..-

c-...

RUSSELL SINGLETON

: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Twenty·six high school fo~ll~ll
pl8yers from SOI!th~ .~hio.1;0·
chiding Oak Hdl s BenJI Lew1s,
were chosen for this year's Division IV all-Ohio football team.
chosen by The Associated Press.
: Lewis, a se(;ond·team pick, was
the only Oak Hill player selected.
: Here's the
Division IV allOhio team. selected on the rerommendations of a state panel of
sports writers and broaclcasters:
FtrJttnm

tm

field Ca.Jinol, 5· 11, 190, Sr.; Ar!dy Mallin,
Wollnillo. 6-2. 190, Sr. IW:t-.lor Roplooel,
Now Lortdoo. 5-9. 115, Jr.: Mau Pilll, l!lyrio
C.tholio, S-6, 142, Sr.

Edolu...,-

RACINE SOIITBIRNi arad

~T....,: Oooaa.-.llock{GniPuk ...y;

Ray flaailta, N.., Lortdcttt; Caa7 ......... T_.
PD1 Ot.,.o; T• Maoay, Geoo; Cilia Mc&lt;birt.

B.........,l!lanruod; Ifill llanrlmao,1 ' - y
DBFENSB : Linemoo-Daa. Ha1Udr:,
OU..oo Sblwa. Rdlm, Nord!. RC~bka~c:. CofoocJ
Lou4oavilla, 6-6, 775, Sr.; Domion Onrno, ""' . ~ -.71lion.l' 1 1'-: Cuil O'fla·
d~tt PymauudDa V.Uey, S-11. 205, Sr.; Bob
hm7, Care7; Ore&amp; Bla~more, Hu.roa; Troy

lloll. • - llooti1tbo, S.9. 200. Sr.; Briatt Mo' - c I I w llanloy, 5-9, 211, Sr. lJoeboc:t.
~tno Yoa,.., CiDcia.Dati IDcli.u. Hill, 6-2.
205, S...; Joe M..,_d, Baltria, 6-2. 210, Sr.:
11owon1 Hurser. Cadloatort-Urtcola. 5-11,170.

St.; lorumy l'orrJ, Jolauto..,. Nortltridp, 6-1,
190, Sr; Doa llottdcaltol, llamUbolllivor, 6-1.
~~ N'cb-'·
' ,.
' 10•
1-~. Sr. B··•·
......,.._.,...
• -· B,,..,.,
172,lr.; Don. l - ar-iUo, 6-2. IBo,ll Sr.; Din
BliiiDll-......, 5-I. 16S, St. ~

o-.
N -.
0110

' OFFENSE: Endi-Coroy Hill, Richwood
N~ Union, S..f*-11, 15!1
Seni«, Joe

poun•.

T._, c.w.._ s-. -.. c.am. w.....

DaYO Hoelechw, v.,..w.; CleanlAwil,
Bau&gt;ia; o... Coartoor. Clrtcirtrtad ~ loob
Ener. B......
v .. s=-r~oriaaliold
S011 - lloail.eulom; Jolutoll Dornoa, Clacbitto Nonh Colleae
Hill;
Ellil U...C..
N•' *m; Brian
""'"~
• ·~
...._,_,
~
............. -.
• -"Mttl
, ...........,.: a.-.~"............ vcroilloa;~H ,
Cio&lt;Utota DoorPodt
• 1·
~~. ~ c_;,_
.,...
.~-~~~~:
Riot Rofo, Avut; Ray RiYIIIty, O..oland Cm·
tnl C.tbolio; Jamio c.aroU, Wollin,..; Bill McOonooll. ""'7: Dlmioo Cnlol; B•dtwood; Jon

w.,

,m:::, :;:;'-__, __•

..

S.IUI, Lonm C.lhalic; Jan Scbilliaa. Auron; .

_..... 6-0, 16S, Sr.; lomio Rae. Airao Mmcll,.., 5·9, ISS, Sr. Lin__.- Cllolaa. Orwoll
Ona4 Valloy, 6-l, 2.43. Sr.; loa Pisoo.W. m,n.
C.dr.olit:, 6-0, 190, Sr.; B-:i~n Fart~m~n. S~
Lohmor&gt;, 6-6, 7AO, Sr.; Calia Maollll. CAPE. ,
225, S...; l - Swipr, Nord! U... SCIUib lluoae.

·-a. . . --·

Oatu Milia Hawken; Rob Oilla;~Lorain
CalhoUo; RCIIIDil&gt; H=bm S.WV..
JUvr,

Dimon-.

Orwoll
OrmdVoDoy;-Bi'l 1 -...Biad:Riv·
cr; JDIUI ~Diltllo ~; UOtl On&amp;oliob, Blll'lOft
Bertobiro; IUoia Sololt; myrio C.tholic; Molt
Bd l'lwlowlti, Orwell Onnd
va~~ey; labntty willla. m,..;. Catltotic; Mark Lan-

6-3, 210, Sr. Quane:rback-Mike Hocbanacfet;

Coi. .N Acadcm7, S·ll, 115, Sz. Bacb-Tom
Pa·oi.!Mlci,. Wamn Kennod)', 6-0, 110, Sr.; J•h
Ptr.tJ••• Caldwell, f.f, 115, Sr.; Anlhony
co..- 0... Mi1b llowl&lt;at, 6-1,190, Sr.; l.ll
Papooh, a... Mi1b Oilmour, 6-0, 110, Sr.; Tnril
Oonoy, ToaiOI.,Y O...ao. 5·9, 16S, Sr.: Joel
MoOr..-, Ardlbold, 6-1, 220, Sr. KickerBrim O'lloir,
5·11, 170, Sr.
DEFI!NSE: ~- Caobl, Amari·
da-Oomieek. 6-0, 210, Sr.: lorry Milia, Apple
Cree&amp; Waynedale, ~2, 117, Sr.; Ry..,. Price,
Bn&gt;dtville, 6-6, 230, Sr.; Raad) Kauaor, TOnrn·
1016-1, 191, Sr.; SliD Weot, CAl'!!, 6-l, 221). Jr.;

- · a-.,..
w.., Wicklilre.

'

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By The Associated Press
:Jamal Mashburn already was
well known before the colle~ basketball season began. At this rate.
Othella ~arripgton 's name may
soon begin making the rounds, 100.
Mashburn, a presei!SOn AIIAm~rica, got. off to a slow start
Wednesday night as he was held
without a point or rebound in the
. ~half of No; S: Kentuc~'s 81. 6~ ~ ;oVc, Wdght S~tte. ·He
w.ilh just 10 poilns and
foitr rebow!ds.
' 'Publicity has its positives and
negatives," said Mashburn, a 6foot-8 junior forward. "Tonight
I'm uo on everybody's chalk

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lotid......_-.

Aftdto J.WO., Wamn KIMody, 6-1 , 220, Sr.
llp.....kon-Brondool Malau,· WillltmJburJ, 5·
1I, 195, S~;.; C11rt Lem.morbrock, Pembotvillo
Eutwood, U 235, Sr.; - OW.. WoiiiYillo. 5·
I, 170, Sri.Mark Sorlao. WlooolenbolJo J.l,
us, lllrit Urdask, w.,_ x.n.ctr. 6- t,
195, St. eck· "•st. W"lllillu. CAPE. 5-7, l4S,
Sr.: Ryu O'Dear, Atroe ~. 6-0. 165,
Sr.; an.;. Scou, c...land C..tnl C.lholil:, 6-0,
19S, Sr. Pwuo.r-Jocd Gallimore, Batavil, 6-~
192.lr. ·
Ink al Ute 7..,1 To. PHIItcd, Wurea

Sr.,

~~:

Llnemn .or lh year: lrlu Malon,

c-• "'..,.,...., Jact ..,.._ " ' -

Wllllulabura; a,..rrtco,llraoii.Uit.

Lakota; D.rr• CubtfHt IAH:uvllle Valley;

JIIIIH-0.-GI'IIIdValor.

.

Seoond'team

OFFENSE: l!nd.-Andy Kaaplto, Cold..-,
6-3, 110. Sr.; DIWOM Clray, B•ebwood, 5-10,
165, Sr.; Mast Brlu., Beachwood, 6-0, 16S, Sr.;
a.JI l.owlo, Ott Hll, s.t, 1" Sr. u..-'!cil Po...U. c.r.y, 5·10. 191, Sr.; Nolan Olodlu&lt;.
Pl•in City Ion1th1r1 Alder, 6--4, 260, Sr.; Mik•
Hall, Cardinatan·Lineoln. 6-0, 11.5, Sr.; Bnd
st._n, Appl11 Creek Wa)'Jledalo, ~. 261, Sr.;
Bei~Jy
Caldwoll, ,_,, 115, Sr. Quor-...-Bubllo llmil, North-... Colortel

,junbav 1!ritttts ~ itntintl

T!i..,_,

Cnwford, &amp;-4, 20S, Sr. Bacb-M.rcus

11'1,

·' ~~

Lemb.

B'"'*ville. 5·10, 175, Sr.; llym Sol!m••. s~
S-9, 160, Jr.; Brod liamilla., Ciocillooti
Indian llil1. 6-0, 110, Jr.; S...e Evw, Amanda·
a...a..&amp;, 5-9, 1110, Sr.; Nothoo TOJ, NGdh Uma
Soulh Rao!10. 5-11, lli1,Jr.; TCIIy l'&lt;ocrl, Mid4lo-

Newark Catholic's new coach
~lmost backed away from post
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) J~ff Buchanan almost didn't pursue
the head coaching position at
Newark Catholic when J.D. Graham srepped aside last spring.
After Grabam, who went 22030, 1 there in 21 seasons with an
unprecedented seven small-school
·state titles, Buchanan wasn't sure
he wanted to apply for the job, let
alone accept it.
•"I had two major concerns
about pursuing the position," said
Buchanan, who starred for Newarlc
Catholic from 1971 to 1973 and
was an assistant coach there from
198lto 1983.
"Number One, no one IYill ever
match the level of success coach
Graham had on a long-tcnn basis
here, .no matter what people think.
I'd sure love to, though. Number
two, my other apprehension.was
based purely on my won-loss
record and other people's perccp· -lion of il," he said.
But Newart Catholic, under its
first-year coach, finds itself 13-0
headmg into Friday's Division V
state championship game against
St. Henry (13-0) in Massillon.
Tailback-defensive bact Chris
Fl~ said, "There was a lot of
talt somg around after the season
who was go ins to be the ne;w
coach. Most of us thought they d
want to keep everything jusuhe
.same as before, so they'd Ji~Y
get a real rough, rough c:oach,!D the
same mold o(coach Grlham.

'.

.Sunday, December .6th

~.

Indeed, Buchanan kept intact
the entire staff and most of the
same offensive and defensive
schemes.
But in Buchanan, 15-45 as head
coach at F'lsher Calholic from 1986
to 1991, the Green Wave got the
funhest thing from the tough·lalk·
ing Graham.
"One difference this year is it's
a lot quieter on the practice field,"
senior fullback-linebacker Paul
Randles said. "He's a lot looser
and can relate well to th Ia
"
Fluharty compared~~~
approach to Bnchanan.
"Coach Grabam felt he had to
constantly stay on us to make us
perf~." Fluharty said. "Coach
Buchanan thinks we're mature
enough to get it done. He IJ:eaiS us
like adults. He's camcd the respect
of everyone on this team and
hopefully, we've camcd his."
·'
Buchanan, who played at Miami
University, said, "I've always lricd
to stress that a person is always
accountable for his own actions.
!'isclpline has to come from withm."
.
•
· To shpw that he can crack the
whip when needed Buchanan
. ~eked his entire team' out of pracucc one dsy last week for lollyPJgi"'- during Slrelching exercires.
Most or the time he's real
calm, but if you make coach
Buch~nan mad, he can be real
mem, ' Fluhany said. "None of'us
want to 11ee lhat .uJe of him;••

1\1/

1' l' I

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TV GUIDE
SUPPLEMENT

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word. search, plus much
.mo~e. This is a complete
guide for your television
viewing. Don't miss it receive it free every week in
your .

Junbq

points, gave the Blazers·the lead '
for sood at 81-80 on a drive with
10:39left.
Nets lll, lbwb 115
New Jersey took advantage of
Kevin Willis' ejection with two
technicals to win at hOme against
Atlanta.
Derrick Coleman led the Nets
with 21 points. while Drazen PetJO.
vic had 20. Chris Morris' 19 points
included a basket from midcourt at
the halftime buzzel', highlighting a
20-S spurt spanning the ftrst and
second halves.
The loss was only the second in ·
seven. games for the Hawks, whO
played the final 26 minutes withOut
Willis, their leading rebounder and
No. 2 scorer.
Spun '.18, 7(;ers 82
David Robinson had 27 points
and a season-high 21 rebounds 811 ·
San Antonio handed Philadelphia
its ftfth consecutive loss.
·
Antoine Carr had a season-high
25 points for the Spurs.
The Spurs led by nine at the
stat·t of the fourth quarter and
scored the fllSt eight points of the
period for a 78-61 lead. S1111 An~
nio built its margin 10 93-76 on a
three-pointer by Robinson with
3:45 to play.

1990 DODGE D-150
SUPERCAB 4X4
S1ock' 23381, 2 darn, 4 """' drivl,
v.a.111r, - · PS, PI!, • wllill. av~~e,
AMifll rldirl, 1/21Dn, IDng will bid. llilp bumper, gougll, llrlirV-....

Slock ' 300351, 2 dacra, 8 qt.,
81110., PS, FIB, AM'FM .... ,..
~·. 1/210n, lang wiclll bod, lllp bumper,~- •

flOW

flOW

WAS

56,295

510,995

.

Harrington, meanwhile, scored
20 points in his filS! college game
as No. 14 Georgetown routed St.
Leo 88-49.
Harrington. a 6-10 freshman
center. is projected as GeorgetoWn's next dominating big man, a
role previously held by Alonzo
Mourning, Dikembe Mutomobo
and Patrick Ewing.
But college basketball's biggest
player Wednesday night . was
Robert Shepherc;l. The smalltst
player on the court at 6-1, he
sparked Arkansas all over for ~
81-76 win against No. 8 Memphis
State.
· Shepherd scored ins~de ,on
offensive rebounds. popped outside
for a key three-pointer and made
five steals in helping Arkansas
mlly from a 20-poini: deficit in the

Shepherd help Hoyas, 'Hogs win
fllSt half.
No. 11 Florida St. 67
"He went in there a few times
No•.l9 Massachusetts 64
with the big guys and not only got .
Doug Edwards scored 19 points,
the rebound but stuck the hall hack and his two free throws with eight
in the hole," Arkansas coach seconds left helped Florida State
Nolan Richardson ·said.
hold off Massachusetts at home.
In the other game involving
The Seminoles (3-2) took the
ranked teams. No. 11 Florids State lead for gOod with 2: 11 left when
beat No. 19 MassachusettS 67-64.
Edwards' tip-in made it 64-62lead.
No.5 KeDtucky 81, Wright St. 65 The Minutemen. playing their first
Even witl1out much from Mash- game of the season, got within 65bum; Kentu~y had plenty to win 64 with 1:04 left on Derek Kelat bolpe in a SC!lSOil opener.
logg's two foul shots, but missed a
Jeff Brassow, Travis Ford and three-point try in the final seconds.
Mashburn made consecutive threeLouis Roe had 19 points and 14
pointers during a late 13-1 run as rebounds for Massachusetts.
the Wildcats expanded a 66-61
edge.
Ford and freshman Rodrick
Rhodes each scored 16 points for
the Wildcats. Bill Edwards had 18
for Wright State.
Arkansas8l
CLEVELAND (AP)
No.8 Memphis St..;6 .
Responding
to persistent trade
Arkansas trailed 46-26 with 3 rumors, Cleveland
gener1/2 minutes left in the first half a1 manager WayneCavaliers
Embry
says
he
before beginning its comeback in . has not lalked to the Dallas Maver.the first game of the season for icks regarding a trade involving
both teams.
Ohio Slate star Jimmy JackThe host Razorbacks took the fanner
son.
. lead at 50-49 when Shepherd
an unsigned rookie,
scored on a rebound basket, cap- wasJackson,
the fourth pick of the June
ping a 15-0 run. Corey Beck, who draft. .
played prep ball in Memphis, made
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
two foul shots with 29 seconds left, reported
two weeks ago that
putting Arkansas ahead 79-76.
sources in Dallas said the MaverAnfemee Hardaway, who led icks were discussing the possibility
Memphis State with 27 points, of offeri!lg Cleveland the negotiamissed a three-pointer and Shep- lion right 10 Jackson for Craig Ehlo
herd rebounded. That led to two and Terrell Bmodon. Others in the
free throws by Roger Crawfold.
media have since followed suit
with the rumor.
''I have not called them.''
Embry said Wednesday, "and they
have not called me. There has been
no trade of any son proposed."
The major stumbling block in
cent. Fishing prospects for yeilow such a trade would be the NBA
perch in 1993 remain poor.
salary cap. The Cavaliers payroll
A variety of Lake Erie fish, SIICh for sa!~Y cap purpo~es exceeds
as walleye, yellow perch, white ~19 million. The NBA ~ ~ary cap
perch and wh1te bas$ experienced a IS s~pposed to be $14 million;,
decline in reproduction this year.
For .~s to make a deal, sajd
Alewives and smelt, which are Embry, we. would ,have to move
food sources for g81Jle fish, experi- . one of our b1g salaries ~usc of
enced increased reproductive suc- what he (Jackson) wants.
,
cess. A series of cold fronts last
Jackson turned down Dallas 4spring, the slow warming of Lake year, $10.8 million offer. He and
Erie and windy conditions are cited' his agent, Clevelander Mark Tcras primary reasons for a decline in mini, are seelcing a contract close
this year's fiSh reproduction.
to the one Christian Laettner goL
"There is a transition.occurring
Laettner, the third pick of the
with our fish populations in Lake draft, signed a six-year. $21.6 milErie and it's possible what we "'!ill lion deal with Minnesota.
Embry• said he had recent consee in the future are some spec1es
of fish reestablished at reduced levels,' • said Roger Knight, a Division
of Wildlife fiSheries biologisL

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Look For It This Sunday

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By JOHN WISSE
Division ~Wildlife
SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP)There's good news and bad news
for Lake Erie's sportfishing fraternity looldng 'ahead io next year's
fishing season which traditionally
begins in April. ·
The good news, according to
state fiSheries biologists, is thai the
1992 sport fishing harvest or Lake
Erie walleyes was up 40 percent
this year compared to 1991. An
estimated 1.5 million walleyes
were taken in Lake Erie in 1992
com'pared to 1.1 million in 1991.
Early predictions rate walleye fiShing as improved for 1993.
Walleye reproduction was
exceptional in 1990 and 1991, but
wns well below the long-tenn average in 1992. About two-thirds of
the walleyes taken this year averaged 14 to 17 inches, due largely to
the 1990 year class. Most of the
walleyes next year will be the same
size or slildlllY. larger.
Lake fuie s slower wanning in
1992 sustained good fiShing conditions for walleyes through July and
August. but was no hefp to reproductive success. The peak fishin~
period for walleyes remains April
through June.
•'Out' catch rates remained fairly
good, but the fiShing pressure· was
not sustained after June.and that is
reflected in the lake-wide harvest
level. Had the fishing pressure not
dropped so significantly in July and
Ausnat, I thi!lk we would have
seen a harvest level close to two
million walleyes this year," said
Doug Johnson, a state fisheries
biologist at the Division gf
Wildlife's Sandusky fish resean:h
station.
The bad news~ the sta·
tus of Like Erie 1 yellow perch
IXJPU(alioil, which continues 10 signiticandy decline.
'
This year's yellow perch reproductive effort was rated well below
nonnlll 'and below last year. The
second consecutive year of poor
pm:b reproduction will continue to
be reDccted in low harvest Jcvels
and mirrors a lrend which has
occurred since 1987.
In 1m, sport anglers lOOk 2.2
million pen:h compaied to 2.9 million in 1991, a decline of 25 _{ICr-

No. 14 GeorgetOWD 88, St. Leo 49
Duane Spencer, another 6-10
freshman at Georgetown, Ilad I 0
rebounds as the Hoyas romped at
home.
Georgetown is 14-0 overall
against Division II St. Leo. The
Hoyas have won the last 12 meetings by an average of 39 points.
Robert Churchwell's threepointer with 13:37 left in the fust
half ignited a 25-2 run by Georxe·
town. SL Leo (0.2) missed 16 olits
first 19 field goal attempts. then
shot aboul40 percent the rest of the
way. Craig Calhoun led the Monarchs with 16 points.

,.. win. dllog., 1111'1111·
flOW

WAS

'8,995

Cleveland-Dallas trade involving
Jackson a myth, GM Embry says ·

Walleye harvest up on Lake
Erie, but perch. .c atch down

Find Some_thing You'll
Really Fall For In The

......,.

Traiiils 108-105 .with 1:40 10
Chicago 34-19 in the period for a
play, Johnson scored four straight
·78-70 lead.
·
''It's great to win the game with poiniS, giving Charlotle a 109- [08
· Larry in the stands for the first 'lead with 1:04 remainins.
Blldla 100, Heat 97
time,·· Lewis said.
Milwaukee matched Portlarid
"They really utilized him in the
third quarter," Pippen Sl!id of with the best rcconl in the NBA at
Lewis. "He ·really got me 10-3 as FI'IIJik Brickowski had 23
fatigued."
P'?inls ~ ~0 rebounds against vis·
.
Horace Grant led the Bulls with . IUDgMialm.
Blue Edwards scored 20 points
20 points, Pippen added 18 aDd Bill
Cartwright 17. Robert Parish and Anthony Avent 18 for the
scored 17 points and Xnvier Bucks. who won their fourth
McDaniel had 16 point$ and 12 sliaighl game and now lead sec. ond-place 01\cago by one game in
rebounds for Boston.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it W811 the Central Division.
With the game tied 95-95.
New Jersey 122, Atlanlli 115; San
Antonio 98, Philadelphia 82; Port- Avent lOOk a pass from Brickows-.
land 112. Indiana 103; Milwaukee ·ki, made a revecse layup, was
100, Miami 97; and Charlotte 111, fouled and completed a three-point
play that put Milwaukee ahead by
Golden Slate 110.
three with 1:03 left.
. Hornets 111, Warriors 110
Blaun lll, Pacers 103
'
Charlotte handed Golden State
Reserve forward Cliff Robinson
its fifth loss in six home games
behind Larry Johnson's career-high scored a career-high 31 points, raJ.
36 points, which included 18 free lyinll Portland from a 16-point
throws in 19 attempts and his go- defiCit to victay at Indiana•
The Blazers outscored the 'Pac·
ahead jumper With 1:04 left.
Johnson hit 18 straight .free ers 18-6 in the first 5:19 of the
throws before missing his 19th, foUI'Ih period to pull ahead.95-86.
Portland.rallied despite having
depriving him of a chance to tie the
NBA record of 19 free throws only one starter, point guard Terry
Porter. on the Door in a three-guard
made in one game without a miss.
alignment. Porter, who scored 21 ·
·

In college hoops,

BRILLIANCE METALLIC BOWS

Mo~rot,

Pona_,. Noln ~•l.luoltlll:oor-, wu.
. low WCNHI
Vallt7J Jo• Sln•••,
. GICMI. . r Trl•bltl Mull: S•llW. lr011loa SL

-.a; Jay lorplr, ManlpOiicr.

JualiD Caaciola. Andover PymatwJina VaUc1;
ltyu Deviru, Auron; Joel Stow1n, Blyn•
Citholic; O.niCOlon, Avron; Bob Mallett,

Tomliollaa, ~5-7,115,Sr.; MakC..,Ilul

z....w.-.

\YHITMAN'S SAMPLER CHOCOLATES

-Sc:la.

Oak Hill's Lewis among 26 area
D-IV
all-state football honorees
.

B7 The Associated Pl'tu
The Boston Celtics, still learning how 10 play without Larry Bird,
gave the Chicago Bulls a lesson in
life without Michael Ionian.
With Ionian nursins a sprained
left foot, the Bulls had no answer
for a second-half rally by the
Celtica. Boston's 101-96 victory
Wcdnesdsy night was Chicago's
· fourth straight defeat with Jordan
on the sidelines over a span of
seven seasons.
· "We would~ to prove to omselve~ we •can play without
Michael," said Scottie Pippen, who
missed two-thitds of his 21 shots.
The Cellics. after Bird's rclirement, )ot off to a 2-8 start, their
worstm 14 seasons, and are 6-9
nOw after winning four of five.
• Ironically, Bird was at Boston
Garden to attend his first Celtics
P.IIC: of the season. He saw Reggie
~w1s, who h~s struggled as the
S!fCCSSOC to.Bird as~. &amp;O-to guy,
w1~d up wnb 32 pomts, seven
~Sis and four steals- all season
h1ghs -. and turned the 'ame
~d With 8-for-9 shooting m the
third qlllll'let.
,Boston trailed 51-44 at halftime
before Lewis scored 16 points in
the period. The Celtics ouiScored

:,:!"-

Donold; Brlaa ....... Moplon; Brion Moo..,

MICHAEL EVANS

Celtics defeat Jordan-less Bulls 101-96

s ....,. UMn!llvilla, 6-0, :120, Sr.; -

old: loo Maaao. Lcolouia; Doo Slrlip~ Moaodoro; Q,. ClaJt, Dol""'; Nllilao Gallo, Mc-

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

In NBA action,

'

1Cm1oo. H-ud Baa Kao.., 6-4.·:121, Sr.; Mito

Special meatlon
s.... s..,;, .._.., luoa·s.n-. Mellon·

JEREMY DILL

Thursday, December 3, 1992

•.

T

Riverside Ladies
Ass'n gives awards,
plans memorial
The Ladies' Association of
Riverside Golf Course presented
awards to season winners at its ·
annual dinner on Oct. 14 at
Gibnore's Restaurant in Pomeroy.
Club championships were
awarded to Joyce Quillen (low
gross), Rita Slavin ·(second low
gross), Dcbna ,Arnold (low .net) and
Louise Roush (second low net).
Slavin was named the pin touma·
· ment champion, and Bobbi Karr
received the Mostlmproved,Golfcr
· aw&amp;rd from Golf Dlgtst magazine.
Ladies' Assoc1ation tournament
champions honored were Quillen
(low gross), Diana Bodkin (second
' low 'gross) and a pair of secondplace low-net solfers in Mary
Arnold and Norma Stanley. The
Ladies' League 1e1111 of Slavin and ·
Roush was honored, as was the
second-place team of .Mary and
Delma Arnold.
In the business meeting, the
members voted unanimously to buy
a memorial at the course in honor
of the late Mary Roush. Commis·
sioncd 10 form a committee to plan
for the memorial were Dorothy
Karr. Mary Ingels, Slavin and
Becky Triplett. In other business,
the members elected Rhonda Wood
811 their sccretary-treaSUJ1!r.

.~

saI 49

1991 FORD
TAURUS WAGON

versations with Tennini, who also
represents Cavaliers injured forward Jerome Lane. "We've talked
about Jimmy, but the conversations
have been casual.
"The thing 10 remember here is
that there are 26 teams wondering
what the Mavericks are going to do
regarding Jimmy."

S1cckl 1T.Ii0, 4 docn,- wagon. 8

CJI.,Iir, •Ill., PS, P8. powor windolll,
poworlllf. poworloclil,
cnilt,
AM.fM ...
wi1.

lilt"""'·

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dlfag.

WAS

511,395

Sports briefs

. FootbaU
HOUSTON (AP) - Florida
Slate linebacker Marvin Iones is
one of four finalists for the Lorn·
bardi Award, which will be given
out tonight. Other finalists for the
award for the nation's top collcge
lineman or linebacker are West
Virginia center Mike Coml!ton,
Alabama defensive end Eric Curry
and Washington offensive tackle
Lincoln Kennedy.
Basketball
NEW YORK (AP)- Jbe NBA
fined Philadelphia's Eddie Lee
Wilkins, New York's Charles Oak·
ley and Utah's Larry Kryslkowiak
· for flagrant fouls. Wilkins was
fined $4,500 for fouling Miami's
· Bimbo Coles on No~. 20. Oakley
$3,500 for fouling Dettuit's Olden
Polynice on Nov. 29, and Krys·
tkowiak $3,500 for fouling New
Jersey's Drazen Petrovic on Friday
night
·
Basketbllll
NEW YORK (AP) - Michael
Jordan of the Chicago Bulls, who
averaged a league-leading 33.7
points in 12 games in Novemeber,
was named NBA player of the
mon th .

1992 MERCURY
COUGAR
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BONNEVILLE
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drive, 6
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PERFECT FOR GIFT GIVING
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
L

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OPEN 9:30•5:00 MON.·SAI.
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Pomeroy

8 The Dally sentinel

By The Bend

U. N. decision
onU. S."help
due shortly

. The Daily SentineJ
Thursday, December ·3, 1992
.Page-9

Photo captures the moment

UNITED NATIONS (AP) African nations fear giving Americans too free a rein in Somalia, but

KENNEDY VISITS FORMER NAZI CONCENTRATION
CAMP· U.S. Coog. Jo&amp;epb lt. Kelllledy D·(D-Mus); soa or tbe
late Robert F. Keaaedy, lays do'lnl a wrea.. at the former Nazi
coaceatratioa camp Ia Sacbsenbsusea, Germany, Wednesday.
(AP)
.

that is not expected to stop the
United Nations from endoninjl the
dispatch of a U .S.-led military
force to the troubled land.
U.N. approval could come as
early as today and U.S. Marines
could be in Somalia by Friday to
begin disarming the Hmi or Africa
nation's unraly bands of gunmen
and to see thit food l!ets to its tens
of thousands of starving.
Some 1,800 U.S. Marines are
already poised off the coast, ready
to go in and secure the capital,
Mogadishu, and its pon, proteCt
relief workers and stop warlords
and bandits from looting humaniwrian supplies.
The Busli administration has
offered up tc 20,000 troops as part
of a campaign reminiscent of Operation Desert Storm - but with a
humanitarian purpose. African
nations are among those considering contributing troops, but even
with U.N. oversight the show will
be run by the Americans.
On Wednesday evening, Secretary-General Boutros BoutrosGhali held detailed discussions at
the U.N. with several leading
American military offiCials.
As in the Iraqi conflict, the
U.S.-proposed resolution expected
to come .up for a vote today cites
Chapter 7 of the U.N. charter,
which authorizes the use of force
when international security is
, threatened.

·

·

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
U.S. military units expected to be
sent to Somalia- should lhe Unit·
ed Nations give the go-ahead will be a mix of amphibiouS, light
infantry and helicopter assault
forces, Pentagon sources say.
· "It will have a Oexible capability to move in quickly, secure ports
and airfields, secure the Jines of
transport ... and be positioned to
defend itself, if need be," said one
senior military offiCel familiar with
some of the preparations for the
effort.
First on the scene will be the
1,800 Marines of the three-ship
strike force led by the amphibious
ilssault ship USS Tripoli, which is
off the East African coast.
They are expected to be followed several days later by light
infantry Marines from the 1st
Marine Exp'editiona!y Force, Down
in from Caml? Pendleton, Calif., an
administration official said
Wednesday, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
Elements from other quick·
strike units, such as the Army's
light infantry trOQps of the lOth
Mountain Division at FOri Drum,
N.Y., could be tapped to join lhem,
military sources lidded
Also steaming to the region is
the Navy su.ppl_y ~M~ Jack
Lummus, WhiCh IS I . With 600
vehicles - uaciOI'S, 11'11ilers, ll'UCks
and fork lifts - to help in lhe relief
mission, as well as warer purification units, generators, fuel and
olher supplies, the sources said.
President Bush was expected to
meet today with the regional military commander for Africa, Marine
Gen. Joseph Hoar; Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and lhe chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.
Colin Powell, to put the fmisbins
.touches on U.S. plans for Somallii.
Hoar's plan requires lifting by air and sea - up to 20,000
1ro0ps, ranging from covert Special
Operations teams to the mechanics,
cooks, medical aides and paperpushers needed to support such a

•

•

•

JACKSON DISCUSSES SOMALIA • Tbe
Rev. Jesse Jackson; left; meets witb UDited
Nations Secretary IIOutrous GbaU Wed!Iesday at

'tion and disease. Already, 300,000
people are dead.
· The Security CoWICil draft resolution on Somalia would authorize
"member states ... in consultation
with the secretary-general, to use
all necess•ry means to establish as
Soon as possible a secure environment for humanitarian relief operations in Somalia~''
It gives 'the commander, expect· ·
ed to be a U.S. officer, wide leeway .
while providing for U.N. oversight,
Zimbabwe, China and other
nations expressed concern Wednesday about the precedent of U.S .
troops going into a developing
' country uninvited.
They seek greater U.N. oversight and accountability and warlt
the Security COuncil, not the operation 's commander to determine
when 1ro0ps will widulraw.
.Developing nations are also
concerned about the increasing
influence of the United States since

n ·espite relief effort,
Bosnians still doubt U. N.

German Bundestag
approves Maastricht Treaty
BONN, Germany (AP) - The
beleaguered treaty on European
unity got a boost Wednesday with
the overwhelming appro'l&amp;l of Germany's lower house ofparliamenL
In arguing for approval, Chan·
cellor Helmut Kohl warned that
only a unified E1110pe could combat resurgent nationalis"' jn Germany and elsewhere in~"Germany is our falherland, and
Europe is our future," Kohl
declared b,efor11 the Bundestag
. voted 543-17 'til iP!xoYe the pact,
. which envisions a Single European
currencr .and common economic
and fore1gn policy by lhe end of the
decade.
'"No one, especiallr not here in
Germany, .should believe that the
~rer of nationalism in Europe is
f1nally dead or exists only in the
Balkans," Kohl said.
"Whoever knows the history of
our country in the last centur.y
knows ... that (bec• ...se oO our geographic and geo-political location
... our probl~ms always are also
Europe's problems."
The upper house of parliament,
the opposition-controlled Bun- .
desrat; will vote Dei:. 18 on Maas·

•

Somalia has been in turmoil
since former dictator Mohammed
Siad Barre was ousted nearly two
years ago. Fighting among those
who would succeed him has
destroyed central authority ~nd
helped to I~ a seyere droughtmto
a calaStrophic ~amme. .
.
An lnrernauonal relief opersnon
force.
.
.
.
Depending upon the amount of has been. hamstrun$ by feuding
hostile force encountered in the warlords and bandlls, many. of
So~ali capital of MogadishiJ, the them \een-ager.s, and, some 1,000
Marine umt's primary task will be Somalis are dymg daily, of starva":' secure the port and international
auport so troops and equipment
could arrive safely.
They are outfitted with a wide
array of attack and transport helicop~: AH·l Cobras, CH-53 Sea
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-HerzegovStallions, CH-46 Sea Knight transina
(AP) - Despite their key role
ports and UH-1 Hueys.
in
keeping
~vo from starving;
~~~r !!" II;IIIPhi.bious landing, the
U.N.
peacekeepers
typiCally
Tnpoh will d1sgorge Maril\es
encounter
cynicism
and
even outaboard LCACs - specialized airright
hostility
in
the
besieged
city.
cushioned landing craft - ·while
Sarajevans
accept
tr.N.
food
the dock·landing ship USS Rushrelief;
spurning
it
could
mean
star·
more launches other amphibious
vation.
But
thef
often
are
left
Crus·
vehicles and the USS Juneau protrated and fummg over the U.N.'s
vides suiJI)Jies.
reluctance
to choose sides militariThe Air Force will provide ''a
ly
in
Bosnia's
war. ·
sky chain of ·C-14ls, C-Ss," to
"
From
a
citizen's
point of view,
transport tl!e infantry units and
when
someone
is
desttoying
your
their supP?rt teams overseas, one
house
or
killing
your
children,
it's
officer Slid.
In line to command the venture · hard to understand how the U.N.
on the scene is Marine Lt. Gen. could negotiate with those peoBob Johnson, who was one of Gen; ple," says Ivica Puljic, news editor
Norman Schwarzkopf's top aides at Bosnian state TV.
U.N. military and civilian offiin Operation Desert Storm, the
cials
blame unrealistic expectations
sOurces~d.
Pentagon and military officials and misconceptions about what
stress the effort isn't considered a peacekeeping means.
Frequent rumors have it that
combat mission as much as an
operation designed to support the peacekeepers interfere on beltalf of
one army or the other or engage in
U.N.'s humanitarian goals.
And it may be possible in some black-marlceteering. U.N. officials
cases to avert violent conflict with have blamed fighters from both
a very open display of America's sides for incidents where peacehil!h-tech firepower, another senior keepers have come under fire.
Canadian navy Cmdr. Barry
military officer sugg~ted.
Frewer,
the peacekeepers' ·
"You invite those warlords in,
sr.okesman,
a_cknowledg~d,
bring out an M·l tank, let it blow
'
There's
some
misunderstanding
one of their armored pickup trucks
to pieces and say, 'Any ques- ... We have a big job tQ ... help the
people understand what our mantions?"' he said.
date
is and be sure that expectaMuch will be said about the
tions
don't go beyond what is
U.S. military's intentions and plans
achievable."
in advance, in the hope it will curThe main task of UNPROFOR
tail aggressive activity on the part
of the local warring parties, a - the U.N: Protection Force in
Bosnia - is to
relief operasenior Pentagon offiCial said.
·
"Our intentions will be very tions. No
protect
clear," he said.
·
to intervene
-mediated
cease-fli'CS are violated.
"It ' s important that people
understand lhe limitations," Frewer said.
Singer-composer
Husein
Kurtagic, 54, who now heads the
·Bosnian humanitarian agency SQS
trichL Approval in the chamber of Lily, says bitterness toward the
Gennan states has been complicat- United Nations srerns from its relaed by party wrangling over a pro- tively even-handed altitude toward
posal that states relinquish some Sarajevo defenders
seats on a new delegation to the EC besiegers, and its failure to lmll•Je- ;
ment fully Security Council resolu·
to local representatives.
tions
adopted in response to the
However, government officials
Bosnian
war.
say they doubt the Bundesrat
"We're
very unhappy
would risk the psychological
UNPROFOR
because they treat us
tremQrs a no-vote from Germany
equally
with
the
enemy. They
could send throughout EIU'Ope.
up
every
time
the
Serln say no;"
Maastricht, named for the Dutch
Kurtagic
said.
city w;here,it ,was si$ned last year,
"We're not against the individl-:
has WI~ backing of all Oer·
ual
people who have come
man parties.

U.S. units bound for to
Somalia will be mixed

from all over the world to help,
we're against the system. If you
can't carry out the resolutions, stop
making them! ... We feel like rabbits in an exJ;M:riment."
Puljic S31d his news programs
seek to portray U.N. personnel in a
sympathetic light, though he shares
the frustration at their failing to
stop the war.
"This is the basic reason DeOOie
don't take them seriously, because
they don' t take themselves seriously," he said.
,
.
Twenty peacekeepers have been
kiUed and more than 200 wounded,
however, since the fust deployment
last March.
On Wednesday, the first kidnapping of a U.N. peacekeeper was
reported. The victim, a Dane, was
grabbed while jogging outside the .
capital near lhe Croatian-held town
of Kiseljak. He was released
unharmed eight hours later.

the U. N. Tbe two dlsc:ussid tbe pllllllibiUty ol
" United States military IDtervention In faialne
ravaged SomaU. (AP)
'

the Persian Gulf War and are wary
of any presence that could be seen
as a neo-colonialist occupation
force.
China, which has veto power in
the Security Council, is expected to ·
abstain in the vote.
DiplomaJS were trying Wednes·
day to work out differenc·e s
between the United States and
African' iind other nations.
The degree of U.N. involvement
will be far greater than that in the
gulf war, when the United States
ltad nearly full control. But diplomaJS said Washington will haye the
last word because it is contributing
most of lhe troops and money.
Council President Chinamaya
Gharekhan, an Indian, said

Wednesday night that the United
States and others contributing
troOps would pay their own way.
In Washington on Wednesday,
the chainJulil of the House defense
appropriations subcommiilee said
the United States should not put
large numbers of troopS inta Somalia because America "can only
afford so much."
Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa.! sa!d
he was moved by the staMillon m
Somalia, but that other U.N. members, such as the Japanese or Soma·
lia's oil-rich Arab neighbors,
should help pay. ·
All U.N. members have been
asked to eontribute lroOpS or cash
to the effort, whose size has yet to

the PTO with over 250 people attending. Pictured is the
kindergarten class dressed as
Pilgrims.

a.m.

Middleport students present program
A Thanksgiving program was ond graders were "Indians" and all studentS blick on Stage singing
by the smdents of Mid- sang "Buckskin Suit" and "Five "Over the River" and "We Gather
dleport Elemcnauy at the Novem- Little Indians." The a.m. kinder- Togelher."
ber meeting of the PTO. Ova- 250 garten class dresses as Pilgrims and
A short business meeting was
sang "The Pilgrim Song " and · conducted by Bonnie Baker. Durpeople anendtd
The f'IJ'St graders. wbicb were "Wake Up Little Pilgrim." The ing the meeting the,parents were
dressed as turkeys, sang songs, gral finale included cheerleaders, thanked for their participation in
"Three Turkeys" and "A Turkey football players, referee and the the recent flindraiser event. A
Tom and a Turkey Mom." The sec- band. The program concluded with . three-piece set of luggage was won
by RocheUe Lawless.

p~ted

Consumers still hav~Oto be sharp,
despite new food labels, says GMA

bed~ined.

Stop
--· Shopping

By MARY Mai:VEAN

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

LADIES DRESS PANT$ 20% OFF
LADIES SWEATERS 20% OFF
CARHARTT BACI(PACKS &amp;
DUFFEL BAGS 20% OFF

· "You can't buy a diet in the
supermarket, you bav.: to buy
food," said Jeffrey Nedelman,
spokesman for the Grocay Mlnufact~Rn of A111erica, a aade group.
Marion Nestle, wbo dlairs die
nutrition dq&amp;w at New Yort
University. Slid: '"The real issue is
that consumen Jl'&amp;ni labels tbt
say,
'Eat this, don't eat .....
.
.._• and
n's not that simple.."
What consumers will get.c, Col'

OPEN THURSDAY EVENING UNTlL 8 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6,12·5 P.M.

on thol1wids and thousands of pro-

cessed foods.
.
For example, '"light" will gen-

erally mean the fat content is half
that for the standard version of the
product. That's good news for
sli&lt;ippers who have bought, say, a
"lite'' oil only to find it was a
lighter color but no lighter in fat.
The ,rues are likely the end of
"'no cbolesterol' ' doughnuts and
""bigb-fiberl' beer. But a compaay
tbat motes, for example, a low-fat
food will be able to say so.
The rules, announced Wednesday:

-Provide definitions for words
such as light, high-fiber and low-

Theme announced for
Sunday open house
Christmas Open House at the awarded for both contests.
Meigs County Museum will be
The advent wreath may be made
Sunday fiom 12:30-4:30 p.m.
of live m dried marerial and will be
Displays and trees depicting judged on originality and correct"Christmas Around the World - ness of usage. En~es should be
Traditions of Our Ancestors" will broupt to lhe museiun by Saturday
be fealiRd and tlllditioaa1 swr.ets afternoon for judging. Winners in
wiD be suved throuaboul the after- both contests will be announced
noon. Nearly 50 Madonnas from during the~ house.
. the collcctim of 8c:Uy Dean will be
Further mformation regarding
. on display for the open bouse 1DI the contests or open house may be
throughout the Olristmas 11 ason · oblained by calling the museum at
An advent wreath contest will 992-3810 or stopping by during
be spoiiSIRd for the geneqJ publil: · business hours, 1-4:30 p.m. Tuesand a Christmas card contest for day through Saturday.
school children. Prizes will be

MIDDLEPORT

290 NORTH SECOND

fat . Some points are still to be
decided, such as a definition for
healthy.
- Require that labels show
calories; grams of total fat, saturated fat, carbohydrates and protein;
and the amounts of other nutrients.
- Put the information in the
context of a sample daily diets of
2,000 cl\lories, with 65 grams of
faL Serving sizes will be uniform.
- Exempt most foo.d sold iii
restaurants; but inclujle packaged
fonds sold by them.
Labeliog will be voluntary for
produce, fish and fresh meat. For
those foods, the industries are likely to post nutrition infnrmation in
stores, said Sara Clarke of the
American Meat Institute. She said a
seasoned, frozen packed turkey
probably would carry a label, while·
a fresh one wrapped in the supermar.ket would noL
Bruce Silverglade, of the Center
for Science in the Public Interest,
which lobbied for the rules, said
they give consumers the information they need to improve their
diets and reduce the risks of heart
disease and some cancers.
"For many years, labels
revealed the good news about vitamins and minerals, but not the bad
- fat and cholesterol,'' he said.
Many high-fat foods now carry
no nutrition information, or· base
information on tiny serving sizes.
Words such .as "hFaJthy" have no
set meaning.

Eastern honor rolls are announced

Select Froai Elth~ Beautllalb' Sheared
Frazier Fir, White Plae, and Scotch Plae

The honor rolls for tbe rirst
· nine-week grading perio.d in the
Easrern Local Scbool District have
been announced:

All TrHI A;• '•rl•ttly $hp., •II .....,,, ,,,.,

F.RAZIER FIR WREATHS
18" AND 24"

Eastm!IJicla Scllool

Twelfth grade - Jeremy Buckley. Lisa Hofflll8ll, Kim Michael,
Matt Michael, all A: s; Jeremy
Cline, Chad Griffith, Tracy Mur·
phy, Mike Roush, Vicki Warner,
Bobbie White, overall.
Eleventh grade - Pat Newland,
all A's; Kathy ~emard. Adria
Frecker·, Debra Frost. Christy
Hawkins, Shelly Hendricks,
Stephanie·Hoflinal, Ra1dy Kaylor,
Shelly Poller, Tyson Rose, Jllime.
Wilson, Andrew Wolf, ovaall.
Tenth grade - Brandy Bllber.
Charles Bissell, Susan Brewer,
Ryan Buckley, Dina Combs, Tara
Congo,loe Kmclmik. Annie King,
1anet McDonald, Heidi Nelson,
Jamie Ord, Jessica Radford, Jeff
Stethcm, Stacy Woolard, overall.
Ninth grade - Brian Bowen,
Randy Burke, Melissa Dempsey.
Rebecca Evans. Jessica Karr,
Roben Laughery. Jennifer Mora,
Robert fdurpby, .Nicole Nelso11,.
Connie Pooler, Brandi Reeves,
overall.

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TO BEAUJIFY YOUR HOME FOR THE HOLI~A'fSI

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Localad 114 Mite North 01 Pa111110r Brldgt. Mason. YN • (304) m-5721 w n:l-5800

J11111ie Drake, Jeremy Kehl, Lamar
Lyons. Michael Weeks, overall.
Cbester Elementary
Sixth grade • Valerie Karr,
Aaron WiD, all A's; Jacque Hall,
Melody Lawrmce, Kelli Lightfoot,
Jessica Marcum, Jason Mora,
Brym Moss, overall; Radley Faulk,
acadrmic.

Fiflb grade - Chris Krawsczyn,
Jessica Pore, Joshua Will,
Stepblnie Young, overall.
Founh ~ - Juli Bailey, Kris·
tan CheYalier, Cinda Clifford, John
Coolrc. Wes Crow, overall.
.l binl grade- Tammy Bissell, all
A's; Anthony Bearhs, HoUy Broderick, Ben Holter, Garrett Karr,
Whitney Karr, John Krawsczyn,
Jonathall Louks, Sara Mansfield,
Michael Taylor, Jonathan Will ,
Charlie Young, overall.
Riverview Elementary
Sixth grade - MicheUe Buckley,
Juli Hayman, Heath Proffitt, overall; Mike Sobieslti, academic .
Fifth grade - Cassie Rose, overall.

Fourth grade - Amber Baker,
Renee Barringer, Amber Church,
Nadllln Mln:inko, overall; Brandon
B10waing, aeademic.
Third grade -, Kayla Gibbs,
Racb.:l Hupp, Jessica MeG innis,
Danielle Rucker, Corey Young,
cwaaD.
.
Tw;t; rn l'lallls ElemeDtary
Sixth grade - Stephanie Evans,
Suab Householder, J.T. White,

. ic. Seventh grade - Kelli Bailey,

~ grade - Molly Heines, all

• ~ ........- - •

sell, Mauhew Caldwell, Andrew
Rollins, Sleven W-"· overall .
......,
· '
Fowtb gmde - Mauhew Grubb,

Ca!d-1· A's; Megban Avis, Mauhew Dis-

Brandon _B~. Micbelle
-well, B!lhc Pooler. all. A s;
Ste~an1e Bearhs,
Blllena
..........- . Buc._an
Buc

AI. 7, upper River Road;Galipoli$, OH • (6t4) 446-1711

·

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the flfSt time, standardized labels

Assoc:iated Pras WriRr
New food labels will help sboppers compare brands of cereal or
cookies or bologna for ~ like
fat and fiber. But they wont taU
the place of nutritional good seose..

.

•

.

.
•

I

'

•j .

•

Josh Kehl, Justin Robertson ,
Danielle Spencer, Gary Vierling,
overaU; Joey Brown, academic.
Third grade - Bradley Brannon,
Kimberly Marcinko, all A's; Tina
DeLaCruz, Ashley Hager, Jake
Householder, Tiffany Kidder, Chris
Lyons, Jason Miller, Elaine Putman, Stacie Watson, overall.

DEAR READERS: This is a love
letter from me 111 you.
I just received I photograph of ·
several smiling and exhausted
women -.ding in liont of dlnens
of boxes and tubs of mail. In lhe
background are plastic bags and
postal'bim filled to overflowing with
letrers and small packages.
Along with the pbotograph came
a letter from Hear Now, a volunteer
orguization for the hard of hearing.
Last July, I printed a plea from JiU
Scaaren, an audiologist. who wrote
about Hear Now and its National
Hearihg Aid Bank. Jill described
how Hear Now reconditions and
repairs used hearing aids and gives
them to needy individuals; She then
asked you, my readers, to donate
your old or unused hearing aids, and
as usual, you came through like the
champions that you are. Here is lhe
letter from the president of Hear
Now.
Dear AnQ Landers: Thank you
for that terrific column you printed
July 17 abuut our organization.
The response has been beyond our
wildest dreams.
Before that column appeared,
we had a staff consisting of one
part-time and two full-time people.
Much to our dismay, we were the
best-kepi secret in the country.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
" lllf2, Lo. ""'...
'nD&gt;eo SJ!Sdlc* ond
CreatonS,...U.....'

'

.

.
.

still getting approximately 100
more every day. We've also received
thousands of letters from hanlc.f-hearing people asking for the
devices.
We wiU respond to everyone who
writes, although it will take a while
to get through all this wonderful
mail. Over SO energetic, enthusiastic volunteers have discovered Hear
Now and are wonderful workers.
Many Colorado newspapers and
radio stations, as well as three local
television stations in Denver, have
run some terrific stories about Hear
Now.
We truly appreciate lhe way you
put us on the map and made it possible for us to help so many people.
You truly are a special person. We

Mrs. Pat Holter reviews
new Jane Smiley novel
"Anne Morrow Lindburgh . A
Gift of Life" in memory of Mrs.
Etollia Cassell and "'Soldiers of
Fortune" in memory of Miss Florenee Smith, were presented to the
Middleport Library when the Mid.dleport Lirerary Club met recently.
Mrs. Martha Hoover introduced
Mrs~ Pat Holter who reviewed the
book "A Thousand Acres" by Jane
Smiley.
In her major new novel, Ms .
Smiley takes the reader ,into the

Sugar Run School
committee meets
A discussion on ways to
improve development plans was
held when the Sugar Run School
Committee met recently.
A total of $1,700 has been
received from interested individuals from across the United States.
The group discussed suggestions for fund raisers, historical and
foundation grants.
A campaign is being developed
known as ''Put a beam in t,he school
to help support the roof."
There are people willing to volunteer labor to clean-up the property and to repair if the structural
work and roof can be completed.
Windows and rooms in. the build·
ing can not be repaired until the
roof is completed. ..
It was discu~sed to use the
downstairs for youth activities and
the upstairs for a children's museum.
Another estimate will be
obtained on structural repair and
roof replacement as a tin roof is so
costly.
Anyone interested in ''This Old
School House" project should contact a committee member: Rachael
Downie, 949-2289; Linda Mayer,
992-5954; Eleanor Smith, 9922639; Alice Globokar, 304-7735707; or Lois and Marvin Burt,
992-2101. These committee members are also compiling a roster of
Sugar Run students and teachers.
Others attending ,the meeting
were Mary Powell, Bob Snowden
, and Roger Willoughby.

world of a thriving Iowa farm,
1000 acres, unencumbered,
unmortgaged, of the richest, flattest, most arable land on earth. The
lime is :1979. The head of the family, a proud and exacting farmer
whose family has lived on this land
for four generations, unexpectedly
decides to retire and turn over his
valuable holdings to his three
daughters. In time, it·becomes clear
that lhe transfer of land is the fust
in an unfolding of events that will
dismember the farm and now helps
operate a thriving dairy farm ,
describes farming as a "whole different way of life" and said that
this novel is very true to life.
The meeting was held at the
Pomeroy Library with Jeanette
Thomas as hostess. Mrs. Betsy Parpresided.
'
Members were reminded that
"Friends of the Library" dues of $5
are now payable. Roll call was
answered with each one relating a
personal farm experience. ·

sans

% OFF STOREWIDE!
Ope• Thunday til I PM

Thanks a heap.

Ann Landers' latest bookltl,
"Nuggets and Doozies," has eveljthing from the outrageously /MIIIfJ
to the poiglltJIII/y illsiglltful. Send~
self-addressed, long. business-me
envt~lope and a check or molliy
order f~r $5 (this includes postage
and handling) to: Nuggets, c/o AM
Landers, P.O. Bo:r 11562, Chicago,
111. 606Il.C562. (I• CIJIUJda, selfli
$6.)

.

If history began with writing, ihe
first chapter opened in Mesopotami•r ·

the Tigris-Euphrates river valley.
Clay tablets with pictographs were
used by the Sumerians to keep records
. alter 4000 B.C.

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can't thaJik you enOugh fOr what y~
have done for this small volunteer
organization. .. M. BERNICE
DINNER, PH.D., PRESIDENT,
HEAR NOW, DENVER
DEAR BERNICE: I appreciate
your generosity, but actually, the ·
credit for the success of lhe effort:
should go to my fabulous readers. ·
They are the most warmhearted, .
responsive people in all the wOOd
and have never let me down.
Dear Ann Landers: About your
response to the dummy in San:
Diego whose boyfriend had been·
freeloading off her for eight months:
-- you told her to give him tWo weeks~
to move out.
Are you nuts? I say, change thii
locks, bill him for half of at'
expenses for the. eight months of.
freeloading and sue him if he doesD't:
pay up. She says she's afraid o~
losing him. You should have tole!·
her that she had nothing to lose. ·:
I'm a member of a 12-step grou;
where we see a lot of ell!lblint
behavior by wO!Den. We men ill
lhe group want to help these women
get their self-esteem back. On·
occasion, we've volunteered to bel~
lhem pitch the SOBs out into the
streeL It's not very spiritual, but it
sure works.
For reasons beyond my compehension, an awful lot of women
who ileserve better refuse to break
out of lheir caretaker, "I can fix him
and make him better" roles. Many
end up like "San Diego; or wone.
Tell them to wise up. -- BOB IN
MICHIGAN
•
DEAR BOB: You did .. and 'I
can't improve on your ,advice.

According to the Kids' World Alma·
nac of Records and Facts, the ship
H.MS. BoWIIY was the scene of one of
the most famous mutinies in history.
In 1701 the Bounty sailed under the
English flag to the South Pacffic. The
first mate, Fletcher Christian, led a
mutiny against Captain William
Bligh. Bligh was cast adrift with tB
others in an open boat.

THURSDAY, DEC. 3/ PARADE 6:00P.M.

VISIT oua

ol:'

After your column appeared, our
world turned compl~y around.
More than 15,000 hearing aids
have been donated so far and we are

CHRISTMAS KICKOFF

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. 253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT

'~

(

992-6669''
•

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Plla•

1o-~ Dally SenUnel

Community calendar
Coam•aitJ Caleadar lteaa
a_ppear two dan Wort aa eYeDt
aad die da7 vllllat e-.eat. lte..,
111aat be receind weD ID ad\'UCe
tel a~Ure publlcatloa ID tbe w-

e9dar.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs United
Metho!list c~~ve Parish will
~ taking applications for Christ~ food baskets through Friday
frbm 9 a.m. to noon at its office at
311 Condor Street in Pomeroy..
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 1 p.m.
at Sacred !Jean Catholic Cllurch.
Call992-S763 for information.
POMEROY- Dr. J." Wilmer
Lambert, former disttict superintendent of lhe Central Ohio District
Church of lhe Nazarene, will speak
at tile ;pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene through Sunday at7 p.m.
nightly and Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
~ 6 p.m. Scott and Patty Anderson w1th Lenny the Puppet will ·
speak and sing. Other special
sm~ing also. Pastor Glen McClung
invttes the public.

POMEROY • Sam and Nancy
Davis, missionaries, will speak
Thursdat at 7:30.p.m. at calvary
Pilgrim Chapel. On Sunday 11 7:30
p.m. a quartet from God's Bible
School will sing. Rev. Victor
.Roush invites the public.
FRIDAY
LONG BOITOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom, will
have )niiChing and sin~g Friday
at 1 p:m. with David Dailey and lhe
Dailey Family and other local
singers. Pastor Steve Reed invites
lhe public. Fellowship will follow.
EN.TERPRISE • The Enterprise
United.Methodist Chun:h will have
its annual baza8r and bake sale Friday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Kenny
Uu's building in Pomeroy.

gasbord in Ga_!Jipolis.

a:ENDERSON, W.VA. - Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center. Bill Bush will
be the caller.
·
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge F&amp;AM, Satwday,
7:30 p.m. ()pen installation. Roger
VanDyke, 32nd Degree, will insrall
officers. All master masons, wives
.and friends invited. Refreshments
Will be served.
GAlllPOUS • Members of the
Meigs County REACf T~. Inc.,
will have their Christmas dinner
Saturday at 6 p.m. at Dale's Smor-

1992

Tlluract.y. December 3, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SUNDAY
. POMEROY - SOLOS (Meigs
County singles) will meet Sunday,
4-6 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
POMEROY - A quartet from
Methodist Church. "Dealing With God's Bible School will perform at
the Sttess of the Holidays" will be · Calvary Pilgrim C~l Sunday at
lhetopicofdlscussion.
7:30 p.m. Rev·. V1ctor Roush
invites lhe public.
FLA.TROCK, W.VA. • The
Spencers, a gospel music family
LOTIRIDGE • Smor11asbord
from Mansfield, will perform at the dinncl', Lottridge Comm!JiillY CeoGood ·Shepherd United Methodist ter, Sunday, noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost
Chun:h in FJatrocr, w .va on Sun- is SS for adults and S2.SO. for childay at2 p.m.
dren under 12. Public invited. ·
PO~OY - Revival at }{illside Baptist Church, Sund11y
through Wednesday, 6 p.m. nightly. Dr. Kenny McComas, guest

·National Ho;me Care Week underway

Three women starved
themselves to death

)niiCher. Doug McComas, musical
cvan,clist. Special sin&amp;lng niaht!Y·
Rev. James R. Aclee Sf. invites the
public.

BC!21use of the services proVid- Medical Complex adjacent to the
ed through the Meigs County hospital and residents are always
Home Health Nursing Service of welcome to visit or come in and
Veterans Memorial Hospital many inquire about serviCes.
chronically ill and elder!)' ~nts
All services must, however, be
are able to stay in lhe comf&lt;l'table ordered by a physician. Referrals
surrotmdings of lheir own home.
come from doctors at many hospiThis week as National Home tals.
Care Wee.t is being observed, lhe
The agency remains the fastest
local Home Health Service is growing deparunent of lhe hospital
~bserving. its 21st year of opera- reflecting the present-day J?hilosouon. Offices arc located in the phy of keeping residents m their

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) _ ;
.Three women who authorilics
believe had a his1loly of mental ill·
ness starved themselves to death
even thouah they. bad acc:ess to
mooey.
.
Mustingum County Coroner
E.J . Booth said Wednelday that·
Twila W. Pollard, 77; her V.ter.
Thelma G. Baker, 71; and"Mrs.
Baker's "!'n&amp;bter, R~ Sue Be!'·
ton, 43, diedof SlarYIIIOO.
Booth said he ruled on the caus·:
cs of death after reviewin&amp; the evi·:
dence . Bootll said auto_Psies·
"weren't necessary because 1t was:
very obvious what was wrong."

POMEROY • Christmas Open
House at the Meigs County Museum will be Sunday from 12:30·
4:30p.m.

own ho~ • long as possible. It is

considered not only the most economical thin~ to do but also. the
most compassionate .
The department is under the
direction of Elizabeth Smith, R. N.
From Jan. 1 to Dec. 1, 1992, a total
of 26,780 home visits had been
made by the staff of nurses. Last
year's total was 27,226 while in
1990, 20,SOO were visited. Smith
anticipates that this year's figures
will surpass the 1991 total.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains.VFW Post 9053 Ladies

Auxiliary will have a round and
square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.ni. Music will be by the Happy
Hollow Boys. Public invited.

. • MIDDLEPORT • Revival serW'.es, through Sunday, Middleport
S:purch of the Nazarene, 7 p.m .
f!,ightly. David J. Myers, Logan,
MIDDLEPORT· Middleport
MangelisL Public inviled. Lloyd D. Presbyterian Church will have its
~pmm Jr., paslill.
craft and bake sale Friday and Sat.•
•
urday at the Sears Srore in Middle:: POMEROY- The Meigs Coun- pan during business hours. ·
t¥·Senior Citizens Center will hold
open house Thursday from 3-S
SATURDAY
p.m. Music will be provided by
RUTLAND • There will be a
Classics and refreshments will round and square dance at the Rutbe served. The memorial ttee bon· land American Legion.Hall on Satacing deceased members of the urday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
~ter will be lit at dark. The inside Music will be by C.J . and the
~ featuring ornaments to honor
Countty Gentlemen. Public invited.
Telati ves and friends will be
lrimmed and \it for lhe holiday seaTUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
$0n. The public is invited."
Plains VFW Post 9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary will have a Christmas
:. POMEROY- There will be a dinner Saturday at 6 p.m. for memtilke, craft and ceramics bazaar at bers and their families. Santa Oaus
. tile Meigs County Senior Citizens wiD be there. Each family bring a
Center in Pomeroy on Thursday dessert.
.
from 10 am. to 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Teddy Bear
; ;MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- class for kids by Middleport Arts
pO_rt Arts Council countty store will Council, Satwday, 1 p.m., for ages
~ open .Thursday from noon to 8 6-12. Cost is $10 and includes supp.m.
plies. Call992-7733 or 992-2675 to
,•
register. Class size is limited.
·. RACINE - Southern Junior
~gh Boosters will meet Thursday
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.af.the junior high school. Public Liberty Mountaineers will perform
iiiYited.
Saturday at the Senior Citizens
•.
Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va
:.;RACINE - Racine American
Ugion Post 602-will meet ThursThe annual Chrislmas dinner for •
di)' at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
American Alloys employees,
•
;; ·ROCK SPRINGS • Salisbury retirees and their families will be
'G&gt;wnship Trustees will meet held at the USWA 5171 local ball
;,iursday at 7 p.m. at the to)l'nship on Saturday, December S• from
lla)l.
11:30 A.M. to 7:00 P.M.
..•

County's Home Health nul'!leS. Here she checks.
Mrs. Anderson's blood pressure.

AT-HOME CARE· Martha Anderson who
lives on South Second Street in Middleport is
replarly vlsil~ by Amy Baker, on~ of Me.igs

· HARRISONVILLE • HarrisonviUe PTO will have a Christmas auction Friday at 7 p.m. at lhe
school. Dan Smith will be auclioneer.

DAJINTEREST AND.NO PAYMENTS ,'TIL MARCH
. 0% i~tereat and no payment until March 1893 _on approved RSVP account wi1h single·tk:ket purchases totali $100 or more Fol i
·
. remaining balance tssubJec! to a !lnanca charge of up to 21% APR depending on ~urstateofrestdence15Qe~n·
th.l 11 tow ngthheCM Interest period, any
1
Account Agreement. Off~r 15 valid Dec. 3·24, 1992.
'
•mum mon Y nancec arge). ~fer to ycN.KASVP

¥

SALISBuRY rACK Z46 ·Salisbury Pack Z46
competed recendy Ia a tonrnament to eant their
. , soccer sports award. Pictured, 1-r, front, are

:nx:

Andy White, Riehle Dill, Joey Martin. liack,
Christopher Neece, John .Witherell, Jonathan
WDson, Zacb Davis and Jamie Boyd.

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: POMEROY PACK 249 • Pomeroy Pack 249
: competed recendy in a touraament to earn their
:; soccer sports award. Pictured, 1-r, front, are

ers Reg. tttlU5 113·12411

om

60·20,000 Hz, with no mcwethan

a."" total

Officers were nominated at the
recent meeting of the Rockland
Temple 615, Pythian Sisters of
Long .Bottom, held at the Long
Bottom Community Building.
Gerri Long was in charge.
Officers are: Geni Long, most
excellent chief; Alta Ballard, excellent semor, Mae McPeek, excellent
junior; Gynn Newhart, manager·
Ada Bissell, protec)or; Judy Holter:
secretary; Melody Roberts, treasurer; Alta Ballard, ttustee; Elizabeth
Hayes, grand representative.
Jane Bowles, grand senior of
Ohio, a visiror, spoke on the Pythi-

ail Sisters.

.

Refreshments were senied following the meeting.
The next meeting will be the
Christmas party on Dec. 14 with a
gift exchange. All members are
urged to attend.

.-

~

Jackie.Frost surprise party held
. A surpriSe ''OVer ihe Hill" party
was held recently in bonor of Jackie Frost's birthday at die borne of
parents, Woodrow and KathT.'
Mora Kathy Johnaon ••i"'ed with
lhepany
'
Fonner classmatoa, Claas of
1970, lll'ived dreaed in appropriate aaire for the dleme.
Following theme telaled games
the guest of bono~ opened gag
gifts.
· Refreshments d bon d' oeuvres,
relish and fruit traya with dips,
cheese balls and ci'IICkera, cake,
nuts, coffee, ice toa, pop and

mulled cider were served to the
guesiS.
Classmates att~nding · were
Peggy M001e, Carol Erwin, Unda
King, JoAnn Francis, Debbie Buck,
Karen Walker, Vickie Hill, Brenda
Day, JoAM Clemens, Shdia Cash,
Kathy JolmJon.
.
Othera auend~'n
were Mae
Koblentz , Marie ·
, v·uguua
··
Chadwell, Denise ora, Janet
Eblin, Judy Mora, Debbie Frost,
Julie Brown, Mite Froat, lArry
Bunger, Richard Mora. Ores Eblin,
Woodrow and Kathryn Moril.

25o/o

Check Our
Nightly
Special&amp;

Calvin Holley, Ryan Pratt, Joshua Hooten.
Back, Adam Shank, Michael Stacy, Wesley
Thoene and Curtis Hanstioe.

tocal scouts Gardeners conduct workshop
['compete in
Max·
:tournament
•

.

'·
: Two local Cub Scout Packs Pomeroy Pack 249 and Salisbury
Pack 246 - competed recently in a
rournament to earn their soccer
sports award. They played at the
Monkey Run Park where a new
.l)lodified soccer field was laid out
and permanent goals were erected
fpr the competilion.

CCL presents 'Hobo Night'

Pythian Sisters meet

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There were bales of straw
8f0Wld a false fare and games were
played. ''This Land Is Your Land"
and "Hobo's Lullaby" were sung
by Kitty Darst and Ketti Snider.
Guests registered on a brown
grocery ba~. Name tags were labels
off cans w1th their names on them.
Everyone was presented a "hobo"
bag (small sticks with bags made
from red handkerchiefs) filled with
candycom.
,
Nancy Morris gave the blessin$.
Refreshments consisted of chih
served in tin cans, checeses served
in tin piti pans, and beverages
served in canning jars. S 'mores
were $erved as dessert.
District President Patti Bodimer
thanked the MCCL for the evening.
She spoke on the state convention
in October in Columbus and UC$ed
everyone to attend the convenbon
next year. It will be held in Mansfield. ·
Guests attending from Toddlers
to TasselS in Gallipolis were Cathy
:Sosllc, Carol Rupe, Mary Louise
Hennes)', Noreua Gillispie, Mary
Ann Jameson, JoAnn Johnson, Jean
Gillespie, Cathy Wray: Molly Plymale, RoscaJee DcLille and Sharon
Hutchins. Members of the First
Step Mothers Club from Gallipolis
~ere Anita Merry and' Patti Bod,.
•mer.
.
.

EARRINGS
. ONLY$19

.

· !he Middleport Chil.d C~nser.
vauon League presented a "Hobo
Night" recently at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Chun:h.
Linda Broderick, president, welcomed the guests, members of the
South Central' District of the ·ohio
Child Conservalion f:eague:

PINK ICE

rQ~;;F~~PRICEI

.

:; :TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers
TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul
Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies United Meth()llist.Chun:h, Tuppers
.&lt;uxiliary will meet .l'bursday at Plains, women's Christmas garage
(t30 p.m. Bring candy for treats sale, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
aqd help decorate for Christmas
ij:lfae lhe ~gular meeting.
·
SA'LEM CENTER - Suir
'
Grange and Star Junior Grange
. MIDDLE~T ; t.1eigs Junior Saturday, 7:30 p.m., grange hati
High AcademiC' not&gt;sters will meet · near Salem Center. Potluck refreshThursday 't 1 p.m. at the junior ments. All members and candidates
high school. .Public invited.
urged to attend.

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DIAMOND

IAVE'100

UPTIMtJS .

~JID,.X •

~£AL1$1'7C......,

lAVE
'40

BlEAT

lAVE
'10

CD,.,.

"'
t1t11
loor AI $15 Pe&lt; Monlh•

• 20-track programmable
• Extended bass system
Reg. 151.15 142· 5015

'BUrt

l'fldlt . . , '

Cdillr

l - AI $15 l'e&lt; Monllt•

8JJIIItiJI , . fltlliiJ

low AI $15 ,., .....,..

low A1 ris Pe&lt; llonllt•

• Simple pushbutton tuning

• Hear news from around the world
• Easy digital tuning, covers SW,

Reg. 121.1511e·1~
Memortx Is I~ lrldtr'nart Ill, pj used undef

liC:Inll trom, MlmOru Ttlll N.Y.

·-

Reedsville hews

• Quality handheld
built by Tandy

•

.; Garret Chevalier, Frederick·
rpwn, and Carol and Becky Reed,
Tuppers Plains, visited recently
with Mrs. Lona Chevalier.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Ernest WhilehCad
were recent visitors in Washington,
D.C., with their daughter and
=~ughter, J~ and Sarah Fry-

Reg. 211.15 117-1051

FM. AM lind LW 11og. 178.11 120·213

,.,.,
.•.,..,

;_ Raleigh and Shirley Hetzer,
JUron, toured West Virginia and
Washin~ton, D.C., recently. They
also visited with Jackie Bi~y and .
die Fred Smith family in Vuginia.
: Jack: Westfall has ~tume4 home
after being a patient at Camden~lart Memorial Hospi,tal in Parkersburg, W.Va
· ·Thanksgiving guests at the
Rlank Bise home were Delores, ·
JJ:ff, Scott and Sarah Foster,
Charles Green, David Watkins,
Adam Fussleman, Belpre; Dennis
Q'Kaye, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Kenneth
and ' Sybil
Fulton,
~cConnelsville; and David and
Lleigh Ann Bigley, Reedsville,
: Holiday dinner guests of the
Qrant Smith family were lhe John
SIDitb family, Weston , W.Va.;
Michael Smith and family, Kent;
apd the Terry Smith family and
Lucille Smith, Reedsville.
.
. ! Thanksgiving dinner guests at
t~e Lyle Balderso~ home were
llazel Balderson, V1enna, W.Va.;
. K:athrytjJ&gt;ietz, Belpre; Bill, Nancy
and Katy Dietz, Columbus; Jay,
and Courtney Long, Vincent;
Lillian Pickens, ReedsviDe.
• Ernest and Maxine Whitehead, .
J)envet, Grace and Mark Weber
V(ere Tllantsgiving dinner guests of
~ill and Gladys Meredith, Beverly. ·

~Lisnc_

EhiMir

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

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

Erai'MJ...., ,.,,

'

• Preprogrammed
for TV, VCR,
cable boK 115·tl!!8

• LCD air combat game

• W long • 7 functions
49 MHz 180·4013

180·24410

_,..1
iioiioii\1 , . . . . .

Conc•rtrnat• •·

...
SJ t:tflt
IF "fif AlliN 'I

::....:;:J!I . . . . 1
• 20 mernortea

• Whlt8 01 allnOfld
llog.2I.M-"
143·5o121541

• ComPIICfD Fun to play
· • 25,eoundt, 19 mythma
llog. "·" 142-4014

""""

_,-aii...SI
With over 8600 localioml
natiOnwide, Radio Shack .
Is N1 In electronics

A...&amp;-AW

• Phonetic help lor Be,OOO
words

,

Reg. 27.11 H3-874

'p

TNIII "•rCJ
flog. 11.111 112·1511

. CIITII't

.,...

~Liane_

• Wtlkea with FM. AM or
beeping llltm

Mlc;:IIIONTA•

• D•ya month,
dateandtlme
lllfl. Uftl3.!1071

.,.IS.

i , ,.,,

• Quality 80-mlnulll
chrome CUIIttel
1-pll. flog. IUIH4-N7

-·---

A Christmas workshop was
directed by Betty Boggs and Nancy
Wachter during the November
meeting ot the Riverview Garden
Club held at lhe Reedsville Churi:h
of Christ
Each member made a Santa
from a bleach bottle, yam and folt.
Marilyn Hannum had assisted with
the project but was unable to
attend.
Maxine Wpitehead presided at
the meeting. Roll call was
answered with a "bible verse of
thanks."
Gifts were brought for patients
at the Pomeroy Nursing and Reba.bilitation Center. The gifts will be
delivered by Francis R~.

Mrs. Reed read a poem,
"N9vember,'' which was written by
the late Fay Sauer.
.
Finger food was served to
ine Whitehead, Francis Reed, Mary
Alice Bise, Janet Connolly,
Dolores Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Marlene Putman, Gladys
Thomas, Grace Weber, Janice
Young, Nola Young and a guest,
Christie Young.
The community Christmas ttee
lighting will be Monday at 6:30
p.m .
The club's Christmas party will
be Dec. 17 at the home of Mrs.
Whitehead. A gifi exchange will be
held.

'

Open House
Join us for refreshments
and entertainment.
'

Th

y, December 3
6:30 ·8:00P.M.
After the parade!

!'a

~"'!!..-

~

f11111's1RitliDSIIo:k-Jifiii---J/IfJIII-•I'Wml(llllylf~-~~~~~- .

I

I

., I

Member FDIC

97 North Second St. • Middleport

�.
t

•
•

'

pz 1~The Dajly SenUnel

Pomeroy

MiddlepOrt, Ohio .·.

Ohio

.,.__--Names in the news--' PARIS (AP)- Pierre Cardin
Roth, the former 20lb C«::ntury
1M lint cletiper to venture in~ Fox studio chief, mov«::d to Disney
rUdy-to-wear clothing 35 years as an independent producer last
.,, baa become the lint designer month.
·
tli41C&amp;ed Into the Academic des
"I look forward to woddng with
her on many projects in the
· .;, Tbo 70-year-old couturier on fulllre," Roth said.
WiN'n=1 ay joined the Academic,
wboae other memb.ers inc:lude
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) relme Marcel Marceau, writer-ac:tor Angie Dickinson is of two minds
Peter Ustinov, ftlmmaker Federico when it comes to television sex.
~-llini and musichin Yehudi She agrees with Vice President
MeDuhin.
Dan Quayle that there's too much
· Cardin was elected last year to qf it, but admits she has made a
fill the seat of actor Pierre Dux, career of it.
who died in 1990. Membership is a
The North Dakota native,
national honor; members are not accepting the state's Theodore
required to perfonn any duties.
Roosevelt Rou~h Rider Award on
The Academie des ~ Arts is Wednesday, satd Quayle was misone of five "classes" of the Institut repi'CSC'Ited when he said fictional
Francais, created in 1795. The class reporter 'Murphy Brown glamourof Beaux Arts has 50 members, ized single motherhood by having a
ranging from painters and child out of wedlock.
engmvers to musicians.
His point, that a two-parent fam"I'm thrilled to be the first ily is preferable to single motherdesigner elected" to this honor," hood, was lost in the uproar, DickCardin said before the ceremony, inson said.
•
for which he wore a unifonn of his
"It seems to me that too many
shows are dwelling only on the
own des!&amp;D·
.
•· Cardin's couture house opened sexual side of life, and I guess
in 1950. H«:: was briefly kicked out that's because it's the easiesl to
of the prestigious Chambre .Syndi- write," .she added.
cale de Ia Couture when he brought
Dickinson, 61, starred in the
out his ftrSt ready-to-wear line.
series "Police Woman," from
1974 to 1978. She said her perfor. : LOS ANGELES (AP)- Julia mance helped make more dramatic
~obens, last seen in miniature as
parts available for women.
'I'mterbeU in "Hook," has signed
But she.conceded some of her
a· d«::aa with independent producer other roles, such as in the films
Joe Roth to develop projects.
"Big Bad Mama" and "Body
· The two-year deal announced Double," were on the steamy side.
Wednesday by the Walt Disney Co. Asked how she has kept her career .
calls for the star of "Pretty going, she jokingly replied, "My
:Woman" to develop and produce naked body.''
•films in whkh she will star. Tenns
Her new television mini-series,
:weren't disclosed.
"Wild Palms," to be shown on
ABC in February, "is very ra~hy
•

---Ana.

Thanksgiving Day
:guests announced

•The Area's Number l

and P,layfuUr Oli the expliCit side or
sex, she Sllld.

COSTA MESA, Calif. (AP) Sir Lancelot - in the person of
Roben Goulet - bas seized King
Arthur's throne without spilling a
drop of blood oc missin~ a note.
" I've graduated, ' said the ·
Tony- amt GrammY Award-winning sing&amp;, whn first knew fame in
1960 as the boldest knight of the
Round Table in Broadway's
..CameloL"
Now he's playing King Arthur
in a national tour of the Lerner and
Loewe musical, which comes to
Costa Mesa later this month.
"It never occwred to me when I
was doing Lancelot that I would
ever to do the other role. That was
Richard (Burton)'s role," Goulet
said by telephol)C from San Francisco.
He said his interpretation wasn't ·
inOuenced by the great Welsh actor
because "I never really saw
Richard Burton play the role. I was
always on stage, I never sat out
front to watch him."

Ma~ketplace
RATES
Days
6
10
Monthly

GRIPPING CONVERSATION - Comedlaa
Eddie Murphy takes cllllrge of the COD\'tnatloa
during an appeiii'IIIICe 1fith Rep PbUbin during
tbe "Live WKh Regis lllld Kathle Lee'' talk.shqw

in New York Wedaesday while making an .
appearaace promotlag his film "The Dlstln- ·
· gulshed Gentleman.'' (AP photo)
· ·

Mrs. Grace Weber read "Three
Good Things~ and "1banksgiving ··
Prayer" at the November meeting
of the ~ille United Methodist
Women. Mrs. Gladys·Tho.mas was
hns
leSs. ·
·
·
. Mrs. Weber also gave the openmg prayer.
The Week of Prayer and Self
De ial ff
n o ering was paid and members voted to pay the bill for
pecans.
.The Christmas visit to the coon-'

nmir.ct

bldg.

-

Col814-992·71041or

DIABETIC SUPPORT
MEETING
Thursday, Dec. 8, 7 P.M.

t.

·

In

Auclioa

,._ w...ted,. Buy

In Loving Memory
Of
MARY M. ROUSH
on Her Birthday,
Dec. 3rd.
Sadly missed by
family, loved ones
and many friends.
You're an angel in
our eyes.
Gary, Ty and Mitch

ATTENTION ELKS
Saturday, December 5th
Christmas Dinner &amp; Dance

P.V.H. Commu. Room
Speaker: Marie Gravely, R.D.

JOSEPHINE HAYNvES, et al.,

32- Mobile Homea for Sale
33-- Fanu for Sale
34-- B111iiHIIi• Buildln81
3:;.... Low &amp; Acreqo

"

"

Woated10Buy

u-...k

Day &amp; Crala j
Sood &amp; Fer1ilioer

I 12-- T'r-t.. for Sole

Entertainment by: Crossover
Jackets Required
Members Only
Sunday, Dec. 6th
Memorial Services

:non.

; A family life Thanksgiving din:ner was hel&lt;! recently by the Mod:ern Woodmen of America, Camp

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE

BOrnE Of LOTION
$32.00

DOUBLE .PEDESTAL DESK .

lklltJJ/Jb;.AND ~~

-Easy care du111ble vinyl ottomans
-Assorted Colors
-Great Gift ldeasl

Reg.' $32.00 ·
OTTOMAN.·................. Sale $25.99
Reg. $37.00

939·2126

No. PCA 89-30093-R\1

ALL SESSIONS GOOO
FOR &amp;MONTHS

"A CHERISHED GIFT"

GLIDER
ROCKERS
n. NEW OMI double pedeellll desk combin• lima honoNd roll top daaign

will alyllahly done IICcenta 1181 only DUI could provlde.at auoh • aflord+la
prloa. Oeoorlll81 giMa lnaert. BrMa ftnlall llnlolla. Double rolling doon.
Coordlnal8d brau flnlah pull doalgn wllh c.,._ dr•ar .,.avlllf.

SAU ••,,OO

1

232 2•d St.,

Po•roy
992·2036

I

,

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

NEW~ USED PARTS

ALL MAKES MODELS

DEER
AND

WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH:
992·2734

CHRISTMAS
SALE PRICES! .

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

.,.,.•..

-COIISIRUCTION

•IUwHomes

•Co111plete

Reinod..ing

S~op

or

&amp; Compare

FlUE ESTIId'nS

915·4473

667-6179

&amp;

DERSON'S

~ADDNII

'

-

..
'.

GRAVE
BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

$20.00
(614)"949·2058

11fl41'92/1

11127

_.....,...,0

1%aDetel,..._
WAICI fOI IIIII

"

'•

,_

auanz

Stone o.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call

614·992~ .

6637

St. Rt. 7
Ches•ire,

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
' end Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming l Removal

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
Need a Gift?
Rugs, Plac::emats,
Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals,
lots of small artlc::les.
50¢ and up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

\'(EBERS
CHRISTMAS TREES

n~~~!Jing

.........

YOUNG PEOPLE .
Do you need aatart.
In life?
18 yre and up. Earn aa ·
much aa you want, full .
or pel1 time from yourhome. No c•li
•
lnveetlll4lnt, be your own boaa, aven II
you're atllla atudant
Thia Ia Income that
kaapa goln9c,avan
when you n'l..
(614) 378-6153
.,
8-12 and 6-10 pm

CHARLIE'S
SIIAll DOZER
WORK.
DRIVEWAY WORI
1nd LIMESTOIIE

DELIVERY SERVICE -

S•all Dozer Woik
$25.00 ,., ...,
IWONI?U UTU -

992·7553 .
POMEROY, OR.

11-13-'92-1 mo.

mo.

4.

I.e•••··

319M
CI'Hkl••• ·
Mid.leport, "io

614-992·7144

~O/I/92Ifl

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10"·20" OH

Punera, Beginner Seta,
Youth Cuatom Drlvera.
l.eeaona Included with
purehaaa.
located on Scout Camp
Rd., Cheater, OH.

985-4356

SKRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING .
•FIREWOOD . -

. BILL SLACK
992-2269
•

USED RAILROAD TIES , •
4+92-llti

11-30-1 mo.

Komagrown•
Carefully Sheared
Scotc::h &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up with a great
selec::tlon of larger
trilea.
Call 7 42-2143 or
742-2979

ShoiModola • Colllctlblla •
'Rkl111 in Stock'
.Spocllll EdiU&lt;MI ·Show PiiSttAt

OUAUTY PRINJ SHOP
255 1111 Sl, lllddllpo~•.Oit. .
H2-33M Dlys, 742-3020 En.
I 11111-4 pm WHI!dap
lom-12 pmSalurdoya und
Chrialmll
Aok for Dollla

11127

H l D
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZE.~ 1 BACKHOE

and TJIACrutOE WORK

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SllES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TJIUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

R&amp;C EXCAVATING ·

BULLDOZING

PONDS
St:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l SEWER ·
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp; ·
HOME SITES
.
HAULING: Limestone,.
Dirt, Gravel end Co•l ·
LICENSED ond BONOEO •

PH. 614·992-5591

11127

CHRISTMAS
TREES
5' • 7' IALL
IIIUY UIINI .
RESI?EICE
15971 ........s ...

. CIIIIIY IIIH
E11t of ..nil• M Rt.

Al'fiiiC-NT: Q

R:

MOTHERS AT
Chrlatmaa lncomel
Eaay work from
home. No cash start
up. Start at once and
you'll never have to
worry about
Ctvlstmas money
agalnllncome thai
keeps going when
youean1.
(814) 378-6153 '
II am -12
and
. 8

'

GUN SHOOT .FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00
Noon
'
Factory choke 12
gauge only
STARTS

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

orCutYouro...

•
I

ltan?ennaH
143·5336

Fres•CutlrMs

~.....,...,0

_,

~ M.i.c. Merchandiae

s:;.... Build;ag Supp~,.

Ruldentlll &amp; Commercial
FrH E.tlmatu

935-4352

01

cum

--- .............
Zip .....

.

992·3671
DOWIIOft POIIEIOY, OHIO

ThoMas White

BUDFORD'S

TO 11ICIIM A CUM 1'111111(11, CMICI&lt; iHIIOX(UI WIIOCH N'OI.Y'

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERINGS

3123192Mn

CHRISTMAS lUES

REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM
ll'lrlt)

.

• 2-7-92·111

..-------------------------------·-···-········

/laynoa v. Shooey'a, /oo. - PcA-119·30093-RV (N.D. Fll.)

(LUI)

.

oQIIgation to

.
Thomas A. Warren
Barry L. Goldstein
501 East TenneaHe Street/Suite D
Saperstein, Mayeda. Larkin &amp; Goldstein
P.O. Drawer 1657
·1300 Clay Streetl11th Floor
TallahUIM, Flot1clo 32302
Oakland , California 94612
,
Til. 1·800-950·1~
.
'rhoy or .......,. !rom their · - wiiJ talk to you !reo ol chorge.
.
.
~OU MAY OBTAIN A COPY OF THE DECREE AT YOUR EXPENSE. TO OBTAIN A COPY, YOU MUST CONTACT THE OFFICE OF THE U.S.
DISTRICT COURT CLERK AT THE ADOAESS SET FOilTH ABOVE.
11. •
of o ...,_ COUBMI. For purposes of aervlng cogtn, any oblecttona. the address tor service on counsel ror the Defendants is:
~.,....G. Aornaoy, Farris, Warllllcl &amp; Kanaday, SUIIe 1800, Thlrd Nlllonal Financial Center, Nashville, TN 372t9
af the Stttllmel1t 11 not 8DPfO'Itd by the Court, no money wtl be paid and the caee will proceed to trial. However, thara 111 no assurance that an~
tltlr dlcltllon would bllri tavor of claaa ·~bers, and If tt were, that It would be as favorable to the class members as f;hls Httlement.
)lotad 1hla 2&lt;1111 day of November, 1992. ·
a.r1&lt; ol Court, Unllad Statft Dlo1rlc1 Court, Northern Dil1rlc1 ol Florida, Penucola Division
•
i···-············------------------ -- ----~-----------------------------------------------------

NMDOY,OIIO

call

Check wHh us for
our Hot Watw Tank
- Rental Progratn12·1·2 mo. pd.

Pa• the toll free number llstacl betow;

cc....

•
Many Styles &amp;
Fabrics

y~ur

ic-•
,,... hot Oftko
217Ls-.llt.
SJIRJINt DEC. 1, 1992
BENNER
SANITATION
D*ember Special
$8.00
Senior cntzena $6.00
II you need trash pickup or·more Information

OHIO VAlLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG, INC.

Inform Clau CouoNiin wrHing. Failura to report a Change of addrau may result In a qualified claimant being barred from rece•vlng the benefits
bl the Mtllement. 1r you have any questiOns abOut rha Decree, you may cali or wrne the offices of Class CoUnsel at tha following addresses or

,..

992·5335 or
915·3561

11·23-'112-1mo.

c"""J)CHC(Ienc muat ata,.lhe nomo
.

-of._-. Hr;- v. Shoney /oo., No. PCA H-300t3·AV.
10. ClaM Countei/Further lnformdon. If you change your .addrass after sending in tna Request for Claim Form. II is
W

lEN'S APP lANCE
SERVICE

Bashan ••., Radne

pounr.cu.e, 100 North Palalox Stroot, Pa~. Florida 32501. AI A-lor~ Forma or -

OTTOMAN ....... ; .......... Sale $46.99

kkU~

. FOREVER
BRONZE

-nd

Reg.$59.00

POM·POM,
.
IUULING,
BATON TWIRLING
All Ages Welcome
Special Clan M
Y811'01ds
For More Information
Cell 304-273-3721

' MICROWAVE OVEN
PERFECT GIFT?
a•d VCR REPliR . .
ASK ABOUT OUR
IU liliES
?rl, It I• Or Wa ·
GIFT CERTIFICATES

o.cr...

. OTTO~AN .................. Sale $29.99

MoiO,.yclea ·
Boa11 &amp; MolOn lor S.le
Auto Parb ll: A..,,...,;..i

52- Sporting Good.
53-Arltiq ....

Many. mare specials.
NEED TO BUY A

appllcanta tor emplOyment and blaCk employees at Shoney's, Inc.'s Corporate Headquarters In NaShville, Tennessee and at ShOney·s. Captain .
O''i , Lea's Famous Recipe, Fifth auaner, or Pargo's Restaurants owned and operated by ShOnay's. Inc.
THE PURPOSE OF THIS NOTICE IS TO ADVISE:
.
• OF THE STATUS OF THE LAWSUIT, INCLUDING A STATEMENT OF YOUR RIGHTS WITH RESPECT TO A PROPOSED SETTLEMENT OF
THE CASE
• IF YOU HAVE A POTENTIAL CLAIM AS AN APPUCANT, THE REQUIREMENT THAT YOU MUST MAIL A REQUEST FOR CLAIM FOAM
• IF YOU ARE A CURRENT OR FOAMEA EMPLOYEE, YOU MAY MAILA REQUEST FOR CLAIM FORM IN ORDER TO ASSURE THAT
THERE IS A RECORD OF YOUR CORRECT CURRENT ADDRESS
• OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO FILE WITH THE COURT AN OBJECTION TO THE SETTLEMENT
1.-The Abcted ClaiM.. The folloWillg persons may be entttleci to receive benefits, including a monetary award, established in the proposed
setUement:
All black persons who unsuccessfully applied for employment at any lime between February 4, 1985 and November 3, 1992 at Shoney's,
Inc.'s Corporate Headquarters In Nashville, Tennessee or at any restaurant owned end operated by Shoney·s, Inc. (Applicants ;
All black persons who are current or rormer employees at Shoney·s. Inc.' s corporate headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee or a1 an~
rntaurant owned aM operated by Shoney's, Inc. "and whO were emplOyed In one or more of those restaurants between February 4, 1985
and November 3, 1992 (Current or Former Emptoyees): and
All black persons who would have aDQlied for employment at any tlme between February 4, 1985 and November 3, 1992 at Shoney's, Inc.' s
corporate headquarter:&amp; In Nashville; 'renneasee or at any restaurant owned and operated by Shoney's, Inc. but failed to apply because of
' their belief that Shoney'a, Inc. engaged in racially biased hiring practices against black persons ( Constructi'f'e App1icants) .
2. Terma of Prep a11d S.tdement. Sublect to Court approval, the plaintiffs and defendants have agr&amp;ed t.o the entry of a Decree by tne COun
that ea1abfishet certain hiring ~Is , a sefttement fund and certain injunctive reHef agreed to In order to satiSfy claims of the plaintiffs and class
members and to pay attorneys tees: coats, and other expenses of litigation and settlement. Thts reltef will De In final semement of all ctalms by
Jne plalnttfh and c:lass members against Shoney's, Inc. aM Raymond L. Danner for claifns ot emplovment discrimination and lor retaliation
because ol race that were raised or could have been raised In this case.
s. Tho lwltlo.Mnl ,..,.., The proposed Docroe requires Shoney's, Inc. to establish e Se"lement Fund in lhe amount ol $105,000,000.00 lor
payments to qualtfted ctalmants and for payment of some expenses that will be incurred In the senlement and claims procesS. not including
~ys' fees. Pursuant to the Decree, Shoney's, Inc. also has agreed to pay Class Counsel's attorneys fees, costs and expenses. The
ttletl•~ent Fin:~ will be used to pay ,monetary awatds to qualified daumembers who comply with the claims procedure required by the Co!Jrt.
Jhe exact amount of funds to be pald from the satttement Fund for which a claimant might be eMglble will be determined by the ctalms
procedure eligibility requirements and other limitations set'forth In the Decree. Payments to qualified claimants will be made over a specified
periOd ot time as required by the oecree. Constructive Applicants wiU generaltv receive the benefits of the equitable hirin~ goals established by
the Decree but will not be eligible to receive a monetary award trom the. Settlement Fund.
,_ a.1n1a Procidure for A~l. It you are a member of the Applicant claaa mentioned above and want to be eligible for participation in
the aettlement, you must 'ubrnlt a written ~equast for Cl-'m Form; a umde Is pJintecl at the bottom ot this notice. THE l=lEOUEST FOA CLAIM
FORM MUST BE SENT TO THE COURT CLERK'S OFFICE AT THE ADIJI'II'S$ SHOWN BELOW AND MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER
II'HAN January 11, 1993. If tha proposed Decree Is given final approval by 1t'HI Court. you will be sent a specific Claim Form only ~you ha~e
'previously aent a Request tor Claim Form stating that you may want to file • claim . Each ctalmant must complete and return the C1atm Form •n
ICCO&lt;dtlnco with the ln,lructlono 0&lt;11ha Claim Form. PLEASE NOTE THAT SENDING A AEOUEST FOR CLAIM FORM OA RETURNING THE
ACTUAL CLAIM FOilM DOES NOT GUARANTEE YOUR PARTICIPATION IN THE SffiLEMENT FUND.
'1. CIMM Pr11 1d n for Cwnnt Of Former Emplo,.... If you ·are a member of the Current or Former EmplOyee Class, you ma¥ lile a
:Aequeet for aalm Form to a11ure that there Is a rec::ord of your current address. ShOney's. ,Inc:. will be mailing claim fo~s to all Current or
Former Ernptoyees for whom Shoney'a,lnc. has a valid, currant address. Shoney's, Inc.'s rec:ords, however. may not contam a correct address.
h 11 yow rnponslblllt)' to assure that Class COunsel has YO"! correct ad"riss.
1. OlhM' Aflnnlttvt Rtllet. The proposed OecrM also esiablllhes goals for hiring Black persons in certain positions with Snone)t's, Inc.,
lmpltmentltiOn of an tntemal complaint prot!ltdure, training and educetional programs, as well as other obligations.
1· Binding Ehct. The proposed Decree, if Finally approved by the Court, wilt be binding on all class members and will bar any person 'whO is
a member of the classes from seeking relill other than that provided for In the Decraa from Shoney·s, Inc. or Danner tor claims of employment
dilcrimlnatk:ln and tor rataliatton because of race. Cllll mtmHrl wtfl not bt allowiCI to ••etude thernHivel from the terms ot the Decfw,
1. o~u-. tD 1M COnllftt
If you believe that the proposed Decree should not be finally approved for any reason, y()U may
preum your obfectton at a hearing on January 25, 1993, It 1:00 p.m. at the United States District Court, United States Courthouse , 1DO North
Palafox Strltt, Pensacola, Florida. A.ny ~mber of the settlement classes who wants to obtect to the proposed Decree must tne an objection
eppeat.at the hearing. The obJect:loni muat be tiled in writtng with the United st_.,s Dlatrlct Court Clerk's Office, wtth service of copies
1.1por1 Qaelieounael and ·tor the defendente, on or before JanUJry 11, 1993. A~ attorney who will represent an individual objecting to tt)e
~Deer" must fie a notice of appesranc:e with the coun and Mt'VI c:ounsel for all parties orr or before the same date.
1. Clerfl'l Addr'Ma. ~ The Clerk's addrets Is: Office of the Cttrk, Unked States District Court, Northern District of Fk&gt;rida, United States

OftOMAN
BILE

•10900.

J

II·IS.'I2-1 mo.

In Loving Memory 01
WALTER (BILL)
WHITE
Softly the leavaa of
_memory fell,
Gently we gather and
treaaure them all,
Unseen, unheard you
ere alway• near,
- Still loved, still
missed, still very
dear.
Ml88edby
Wife &amp; Femll

~:;~ Inc. and Raymond L Danner have agreed to settle an empk&gt;yment discrimination class action lawl uit now pendin(. in the United
States District Court In Penucola, Ftorlda. The lawsuit claimed that Shoney's, Inc. and Raymond L. Danner discrimlnatecf against black

:Modem Woodmen
:hold family dinner

16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miacellaaoouo
18- Wonted To Do

742-D60

.
NOTICE OF PROPOSED CLASS ACTION SETTIJ!MENT AND CONSENT DECREE
"J
•:
T(): BLACK PERSONS WHO It) UNSUCCESSFULLY APPLIED FOR EMPLOYMENT, (2) WOULD HAVE APPLIED FOR EMPLOYMENT
BUT FOR THEIR BELIEFS OF RACIALLY BIASED HIRING PRACTICES AGAINST BLACK PERSONS, OR (3) ARE CURRENTLY OR
HAVE BEEN EMPLOYED AT SHONEY'S, INC.'S CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS IN NASHVILLE. TENNESSEE OR ANY SHONEY'S,
CAPTAIN D'S, LEE:S FAMOUS RECIPE, FIFTH QUARTER, OA PARGO'SIRESTAURANTS OWNED AND OPERATED BY SHONEY'S,

Attending were Pauline Rife,
,Cbristine
Napier,
Ralph
:Mac:omber, Rick, Jan, Chip, Mike
-and Stacy Macomber, Ryan Wat:son, Maxine, Opal and Patty Dyer,
;Lucille Haggeny, Carl and Jane!
·Maris, Bob and Wanda Fetty, Ray,
:Bernice and Danny Midkiff, Larry,
;Linda, Eric and Chelsea Mont1gomery, Gary and Anita White,
:connie and Kyle White, Dorothy
·Bolen, Allen, Vickie, Allen and
:Peggy Smith, John Holliday, Gin;ger Holcomb, Eldon and Rose Bar·rows, Catherine Colwell, Dan and
'Ruth Evans, Francis and Mary
Tyler, Martha Ward, Bob and
,Kendra Ward Bence, Earl and
1ieorgia George, Mary Hall, Paul
1111d Amanda Perroud.
: FoUowing the meeting a time of
:fellOwship was held.
1_

12- Situation. Wanted
13-- IIUiarance
14- Bllli.... Traiai*'ll
1:;.... Sct.&gt;ob &amp; lutruclioa

RAVENSWOOD
~ NYA HAll
••• a.....

~

Plaintiffs.

VaM44 WD'•

&lt;

SHONEY'S, INC., et al., Dafendants .

,

,, I I\ I ' I I

ll- Help Waated
4- CiYeawar
5- Happy Ado
6- Loot and Found
7- Loot and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;

-BRopt.· 4P"'f**Y
BR, 3 · 2 gonogu,
lncludoo
4,800 oq.ronlecll
It lorm

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

~ 9:30-5:00

I \li\1 -1 1'1'1 II'

~U~O:r-1- - - ,

2

A Thanksgiving dinner was
:enjoyed by 50 membm and guests
•of Stsr Grange. The dinner was
:held at the Salem ¢enter Fire Sta·

STORE HOURS'
Monday 9:30-8:00
· Tuesday-Saturday

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

42-lfJobile Hom• for Rent
43- Farn•• for Rent
44--- Apartment for Rent
4S- Furaiahed. Rooma
46-- Spaee for Real
47...:_ Wanted 10 Real

Tho prtce hU .,_ - I a 1188,800 IIKI
ttnonclng "' up lo 110% "' . , . _
may bo ...,._ lor quoJiytng por·
IO!IIo buy V8IY n1co 11oma'"' 3llaa•oln ·

,
All Sizes $12.00 _
Warren Connolly, Osborn Rd.
Reedsville- 667-3551

'lfhen members of Feeney-Bennett
· . Twenty-seven shut-in calls were Post 128 American Legion met
made and cards were 5!'nL
·
Nov. 25.
·
Games were played and prizes .
Donations included $200 10 the .
awarded. Refreshments were Meigs Head Start Christmas party
served to the above named and expenses. Jerry Hawley, post comMrs. Mamie Buclcley, Mrs. Diane mander, also donated four boxes of
Jones, Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs. JDys to the program.
Emma Durst, Miss Anita Thomas
The Syracuse Fire Depanment
and Mrs. Lillian Pic. kens. Mrs. was given $100 to assist in the cost
of providipg ThankSgiving meals
Pickens won the door prize. .
The meeting closed with prayer for the needy and shut-ins.
by Mrs. Reed.
Also, $100 was donated to the
Mrs. Weber will
be
hostess
for
Big
Bend CB Club for its Christ~
.
.
m~~

.----..PR"'IC""E"""

FOR SALE
.CHRISTMASTREES

..

Cheryl Leatherberry of
Coolville, a eompwer aci«::na and
lligher ~-~stu·
!!ent at MounWti S11te ~· bas
tieen nam«::d 10 tb«:: preaident s list
tbls mew thlt 111«:: e.med a grade
point IVCI'Igc of 3.~ or above for
llie last QUilter.
.

$30

41- Hou.a for Real

:Grange members,
:guest attend dinner

~

$ .20

lti:Yl \1 :-

••

,.

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

r----,---,i'iliriii~c.n;;;;;:;;r,m..:;-----i 36- Real &amp;wte WaDted

: Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr.
)nd Mrs. Kenny Brewer, Texas
-Road, Pomeroy, were Mr. and Mrs.
:41fred Frank and Lucille Clay,
J'omeroy; Dewey Smith, Middle·
po.n; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brew·
er, K.C. and Ryan, Hilliard; David
)3rewer, Portland; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wood and Molly, Gahan:na; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tye, Bill m
)llld Steve, Columbus.
'

:o n president's list

Over 15 Words

Rates are for conserutlve runS, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Topic: "Diabete{l in the
Holiday Season"
Public inv~ed to altend. Call
304-675-4340 Ext. 281 or 448
for information.

REG.$819.00

Rate

i5
15
15
15
15

3

(Diet~ian)

!- The pledge service was led' by
Bill and Mary Lou Rose, Jessie
Brooks and R.C. Henderson, all of
:Coolville.
: · Memorial moments of prayer
•were observed for 50-year mem;bers: Osie Henderson and Hobart
·Swartz, Alfred; and Jessie A.
:Doolittle, Coolville, all recently
'deceased.
·
Roberta Kerce!, Coolville, gave
:a Thanksgiving reading, "When
:father Carved the Turkey," and
•Matjorie Malon, CoolviUe, led the
:Thanksgiving songs.
·~ Edith VanDyke, Nellie Bargan
, and Clella Stephens, all of Athens
; branch of American Cancer Soci-I
•ety, described and distributed
:hemocult test packets to those '
:requeeting them.
• Members contribUted canned
JOOd_s 10 a food basket for a deserv.
mg family on Thanksgiving. All
:Were invited 10 attend a founders
day smorgasbord 10 benefit Carolyn Johnston, Coolville, on Sun:day at the Coplville Lions Club
.from II a.m. to 3 p.m. The cost of
the diner will be a freewill donation.
Th«:: annual Camp 10900 Annual
Chriatmas Party and Oyster Soup
Supper will be Dec. 12 from 4-6
p.m. at the Coolville Lions Club.

Words

1

Donations made
sin~~:
~~~~a~!s&lt;1:Je-d
f~~~
. ,. Thomas h
_
osts
Reedsville
uMw
I
Several donations were made
view after his 1970s Oscar-winning
soundtrack for ·'Shaft, 'i but the
deep-voiced entertainer plans a
comeback with tunes that may even
include rap.
"I don't feel like I'm 50. I feel
like I'm 20," Hayes said in a Wave
Newspapers Group interview published Wednesday. "When you
··
d
d
ba.ve name recogmuon
an goo
marketing, it can be done.''
1 Hayes, who hasn't had an album
in four years, bas been perfonning
· Pal
Ita! . d oth
f
~~ el11!0 • y, an
er parts 0

The Dal

Po•eror, Olllo

992-6215

(Caenty ha4 26)

ra.tny, Olllo

RIASOIIlllE

I

CHRISTMAS .
TREES
··
Frezh Cut Dally

5'- 8' Tall

OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden'•

Residence

:

Rutland, Oh.
742-3051
SR124
,
Ready Nov. 26
11·17-ea-1 mo~

111:tt/1 mo. pel

•

••

'
•

'

•

�-

-.

11112

Ohio
!h

••

32 IIDblle Homes
for Sale

Q

kiT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpl

wanted to Rent

•

Television
Viewing

•

Tr ,,n&lt;;poit.lli(;!l

r.1erc11a11d1Se

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

71

I

Auto1tor Sale

s£

._.op

1171 11or :J , 410
Collwt!tlblo, ollvlr lo
oolor. 114 111 2011
t

KNOW TilE ANSWER

-~·t•,"·~S
' $100. ••• - ~

KNOW TilE ANS~~ER!I

1ftlr 1:00 PM. ,

111112 Oadao Olnnl, 71,111 ......
304.e'll-21as.
_,

NO, NOT TODAV..
NOT TOMORROW ..
NOT NEXT WEEK ..

SMILE. MAAM .. YOU
LOOK NICE W~EN
'(OU SMILE. . ,

.. BUT SOMEDAV
~OR SURE!

I

'- I' ·'

t4tt~J

"''''l rn

No Dopoon on Ront-2-own;
Nothll!ll E- Proownod.
Big So!fngo On All Ylnrl l Corpolln StoCk.
44 Mollohan Corpoto,

&amp;14-446-"' •

Bunk Bodo Cotnoloto, Nlco,
$100, CoU 114-2!16-1231.
TWD
bedroom
houH
In
Syrac:qsa. 114-H2--7189 ltllr Corpol tx12 teO; Ylnyllx12 148.
Solo On All Corpol In Stock
5pm.
$5.00 U"' MoUohtn Fumllw-.
Unlumlshod Sonll House In 114-441- 44.
~1s. P...., a Yard, Good
t Plec::e Dln.ttl 511,
Neighborhood '-kina R...,.
. - ; 1 Na Lloge lledroom, tlordly Uood. IM-245-115011.
llolrlgontor, a lloilge, $27MIIo. GOOO USED APPLIANCES
No POls, Call Earl T-, 614-446Wo..,_L dr,.ro, "lrlgorotoro,
0161.

Retriever Pupt To GIVNWIY,

Good Fot Chrlotmu Glftol 61440-7508.

Two flmllt fine,_, 614-tn11949.

a........

Wooden pallet• to giveaway.

F.im

11n11 _.,od, Go~
llpollo Dolly Tribuno, 125 Third
com4

Ave., Gllllpolla.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found: Biondo F1m1lo Cocker
$ponlol, Vlclnl1y: 1 -, Un-

Employmen'

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

Se·. ces

cPin Road, 814-251--1551.-

Chompolgno Colorod Milo
Poodle Wurlna Nylon Collor,
Hvtton Car Wai'h Are~ Oft ~. 7,

6'14-446-82711.
LDot: Apricot Poodlo In
LoGrondo Blvd Vicinity, $25
-ord. 614-446-1676.
Fawn ColorH ' Ftrntle
~XIr On Mt. Cll'mlll ANd, VInton OtMo, Rewtrdl Wearing
Lbst:

~liar,

614-245-5512, 114-

Y,..: p..,_ At Big Boor,

Help ....,___,

Retea.....

AoNmblo ~ • Euyt No •lllng. - · . dnlfroct. F,~J IJI•
1 010111- 2 4 ~ I - .

...C:

on:.!._
c

(801)31'1-2WXl.
~YDH.
··

2 btllroom

fliiglll

Day, 1'8Ward1 814-002-6313.

... :104-e75--

2 I '

1142511109

pold, - - tokonL no
poU, ~ IUI5:00~111 . .

Holrotyllol

Noodod:

2 BR OIOblls homo. EnrgrHn.

Paid

~2678.

w.p..

YHII~ Gau........614-448-72117.

3l J

home, 2 112
!loulh llcllonolds,
~ ofter6:00 PM.

~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

GUill . . . . . .

3 bedroom mobile home, 2
- - from PomeroJ, 614·992~
515&amp;

&amp;-..-.3BR,2
llolh, 1 ..,. '"' lot 40 ft.
polio. 15 mlnlll• N. ol wlnllold
'"' RL 3S. MOO mo. ~'~"'

..

AII•Yord lolso II ... lo Paid In
~- Doo...., 1:00tlm lho .
clilt - . lho od Is to
.
Sunder ooltlon- 1 :OOtlm Frlcloy,
odltlon 10:00o.m.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Complete home tum~~~~U·
Hours: Mon-Stt, t-5. 6

0322, 3 mlln out Bulavllle Rd.

FrooDollvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE New/Used

Houuhold lumlohlng. 1/2 onl.
R~.

Jerrlcho

P1. PINunt, WV,

Clll304-875-14!10.
Aatrt.,atora, Freezers, Wutw*

,~.-~

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive St., Gallipolis. Now I Uood
furniture, hAler., Wlllwn l
Work boots. 614-446-315U.

TV consolt, 21 ln., nice cablnel,

$95; Jllytog Wri111JOr Wllhlr,

IqUiri IUb, good wprklng con,
dhlon, $150. Skaggo ~plloncoo.
114-44&amp;-7398.

UMd appliance p1r11, Delbert
Swllhlr Appllanc•1 comw of
Rond l Perch St. Kanouga, OH

52 Sporting Goods
Brownt1115 SwHI \6 Shot Gun,

1112an
R""' girls dolhoe 10.
~....,. 14 huoltyo, ..,...,, whot-

,..._..-....-tor
114-882.a275.

~glfto,

614-446-:J&amp;t~.

... ,.,

..... .,
-

....... Mo170, 2 Bod-

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

Mce28 fueseea.4.._N, Of
I' I ~llgi&amp;U&amp;I . 1110,
LM

p·,...,

+

Bu•

•w "Ice
Dlpotll,

2111'-,0UI SI.RI. 218, I
....,.,..._..&amp;At a.lCafle.

.......... 1.

Ga Deer Sl1yer $225; Winch..,
t« 30.06 Bolt Action $185;

Apartment
tor Rent

HAUUNG
UMESTONE,
GRAYn&amp; COAl
ReasOMIIIe rates
JOE N. SAYRE

2

BR

bll:£ •• IDfl

mz'

~ *-'1$..

-.-.-.
\llr cas: , n.
...._

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 pol'-

-.--.~~:. •-

2210.

.cud. .....

toTALLY AUTOIIOllVE

....

•Bien wrilng

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

I

I

I

I

I

I I I 1 I

Fla ... _, Ell, 120 Fourth
- . -polls, $11M!o.
lllliM Plid, IM 4t6 4411 Aftor

---It

Dopooll lloqulnd.IM-446-1519 .

Ill

fle4

I • lYing. 1 ond 2 bodond

YlRlvonlao

41f•11-.. In lllcldleDo1t. From
- - Coll--5150. EOII.

•

Color Comoutor Pocklrd Boll

381, DX Wkh La.. Printer, &amp;
Softw.l'll $2,800, AIIO W•lght £.
qulpmenC,

441-1803.

6'14-oM&amp;-1778,

614~

Flnli Solo 01 Tho Yoon now lr-lsr (oono ond donlm Jack-

om

• • 11

alz• mtnl, womens,

ond clllldienL Only $~. SH
Paaay1 132 Bunornut, Pomoroy,
10-5-d.olly, _T_y ttwu SO!urdoy, Doc:. Olh.
.
Fl...-, Ook, Hickory, Ash,
Split, Slackod, Ooilvorod, $40
~pLaid. 154-3J'II-4131.

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
•

I GO

Fish ......................... 4 P:8' Inch

Call (304)
895-3386
.

after 5 p.m.

'

-----·-h.
_____
.
=--...,

32 llftJ llllll: I Ill

Rooms

,..,., :::z::a•-.
... .

-.

Nutrlllon

Products
Acid . Body

toottHing Amino
-lng wolaltl IOU ond lot
. "torS..
_
~
~
.
.
.
.
_
01111a
Hotel.
bumor lariii.roo. Avolloblo ox1171
1
- o l y It Rho Aid Phlrrnley.
J • . . ,., ..........
n....:ru :a..s:;..n;:._ 11 --.opo. Tho- woy 10 dlol.
till - . ~ C1SS I:GII P-r1L. -77)~

===------' -.-wv.
,

oAYS-·-fLIMINATf
TMf lliN6S' ANl&gt;
At,.l. llJT

ONf:
MOON .
$'a •

~-

Englnei 1872 R•vene · 42ft,1
AlUminum T111llar, Home Nlt'l!
Bank, Recine, Ohio. 11...,MP..J

•

e

1U. REALLY ~ IJtRY
Lmtf ,aea)T LIFL .

MORTY .MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

HontSo 3 w - 200 BIG Rod.,

wn amor.,

THe PROGRAM

hlg..- "'~ ....
$1100. OBC.. - ·
1'15-13151.

.._

u,.. • -or.

U5UAU-YSE:EN AT
IH IS ILMC WI L.L.

NOT eE' eEEN.

Auto Parts&amp;
AcCessories

THIN I&lt; I

MVSELF.

/

/

e~~r \
llk:hoio 1

r

.J U5T FIRED

([)GI !DII Room lorTwo

:

robulft, oil tvpoo, ••rtlna '' $99; ~
114-245-5677. "l14-371--,
22113, Polnoroy: 814-112-!1100. ~
New ;u t1nkl, one ton truck

own1r

a

-,

,

I

i

Serv1ces

s. ___.i..------

6----~----------

7. __
8.
_ ~--~----------_....;._ ___;__ _ __

9.---:---------

10~----------~----~

15~----r----~

446-2342

992~2':156
675-1333
\•

TH' LEAST YOU CAN DO
15 HELP MY SISTER
Z:ONIE MAE
DOWN TO TH'
RAILROAD
STATION!!

I

i

-------;
81
Home
lmprovemenls
---=:.BA:O:S:::E~M:':EN~T:-.;.;.:....-.',

SHE~S

SDIN'
HOME

??

WATERPROOFING
1
Uncondltlonol .llfotln guoran- \

tM. Loc~l refereu,cn fumlahed. 1

Coli ' 1-a00.287-4578 .. 114-237- \
Aogera

·~

BUiment

Wotorprooii111J.
;
eun11 Hom~ lmproJeiMnt•: I
Yurs Exporionco On Oldor &amp;
-F....rotlon
- ·Work,
Room Addllono,
Rooting, •
Khchono And Baths. frM E~o
tlm-1 Roloroncoo, No Job _
Too Sig Or Srnlill 114-311l41S16.
Divis Sowing · lllachlno And

ASTRO-GRAPH

Vacuum CIAnlr RtP.Ir1 FrH

Pick-Up And Doil""''', Gocorgoo
Rood, 114-446-4214;
JET
Aorotlon Motor., rapalrwd. N• ...buln. motors In ttock, RQN
EVA!!.!, JACKSON, ·OH. 1-800-

BERNICE

Crook

IU-IINI.

.

.

BEDEOSOL
.

Ron's TV Sorvlco, opodollzlng
In ZlniUI a-.o Mrvklng moat

olhor bnondo. Hoooe olill, oloo
oorno oDDIIsnoo ropoJro. WV
304..!71-2381 Ohio 114-441-1454.
Sopllo Tonk Puonoing I80LGolllo
Co. ROH EVANS ENTERPntSES,

--.011
82

..

woo.amue.

Ilea. II, 11112

Plumbing &amp;
· Heating

Fraomon'o Hoollnj And Cool11115lnltollollon And orvlco. R8E8 •
Clrtlllod. R-1o1, eom..... ,
clal. 114-311-1111.

11

84

,

Electrical &amp;

:=•1.!

Refrigeration ·
RHI.,.ttiUol or
wiring, new 11rvlce or
Meetlr Llcelllld

,

Ire. ·
n. ~

Rldonooor Eioct!lcol, WY000306,

Edie campaigns fm a raise
when PhH gets a larger
salary. Stereo. C
(!)Over Doing itAn
examination ol work ·
addiction and why people
become 'addicted. (D:30)
ll])
Marlin Marlin reveals
an embarrassing secret
about himself on the radio.
Stereo. Q
Ill S11NY 01111e Flrol
Chrlo- Snow A French
nun cares for a boy blinded
br a lighlning bolt. V:Oic:e8:
Angela Lansbury, Cyrll
Ritchard. (Anlrnatedl (0:30)
8:00 !2l 11 1121 a-.. Carla
adm~s her foaling&amp; lor John;
Cliff worries about Adolf
Hitler. Stereo. Q
([) 11 (D a Hoowhonl The
Sloans trr 10 derail Charlie
~·
and Gina s relationship.
Stereo. r;J
(l) (!) yYo1e1JI A dead man
1ums up at a ball wl1h a table
knife through his heart. C
!lll D 1121e Malc:olm x: the
Real Story Den Rather
· repor1s on the charismatic
Ieeder Malcolm X whh new
intervieWs and rare•footage
accounting his political and
i!!lrsonal lila. (1
Stereo.

e

BARNEY

whMiil. l'ldlatore: tloor mala,,

0488

7:30 I])
•
IIJ Jeope""~
(JJ The ..., _ .
(J) Ill tntlr18lnment onight
· Stereo. Q
(()8 You Bet Yow Llfl .
illliD Wl1MI of Fortune Q
11J • Family Feud
a Croooftre
7:35 00 Sanford l Son
7:45@ NFL Tonlgh1
8:110 I]) 11 IIJ Out An NighS Jell
and Vidal change their minds
about a former ~h-school
buddy. Stereo.
I!) The Binda o Time (PI 2
of 21 (2:00)
([) a (()a Deit8 Delta's
divorca is delayed when
Charlie refuses 10 sign the
papers . Stereo.
(l) OEIIM: The Hille Story
Scientiiic end )oumaNstiC
evidence combine to
lllustrole a serigus
environmental challenge of
the day, the depletion of the
Stereo.
ozone layer.
(!) Higher Education
AcMK:aCyTeam
all D 1D lilly Orehlm:
The Ba1t1e lor a Nlllon'a
SouS Author Jonl
Eareckson-Tada, Wintley
Phipps and the State Army
Band and Chorus. (1 :00)
Stereo. C
ll]l • nif Simpeona The
Simpsons remember the firs1
time Lisa spoke. Stereo.Jl
0 M..-, She W""" 1;1·
Qll Crook and Chaae
@ NFL FOOibeR Alanta
Falcons at New Orleans
Saints (L)
PrirneNawa C
· Ill M-lne'a CTirla-•
Aller Paris is h~ by a huge
snows1orm, Madeline, her
friends and Miss Claval can't
gel home lor Christmas.
(A.nimaled) (0:30) Q
1:05 W MOVIE: Dla-1 Are
f'orever (PGf (2:301
8:30 I]) D 11J OIH....,t World
WMiey has trouble a11he
unemployment ollic:e; Lena
forms e club. Stereo. C

(1 :00)

Budget Ti'lln1mlnlo111, Uud &amp; t

Thm your clu.Uer into cash,
~ it the easy way... by phone~
no need to leave your home.
Place your ,dallified ad today!
15 ~rdl or less, 3 dap,
3 gqpen, 15.40 paid in advance.

into a Puerto Rican woman
while drivlrog a cab. (RI
Slereo. Q
@ SportaCenter
aMoneyllne
Ill The Waltone ·
7:05 Cil BeveriJ HI...IIH

a

Ole. D R Auto, R{pioy, WY.. 372-3133 or 1-800-273-tm.

.

Your nnanclal protlptiCta lor lhe year ·
-...cl loOk bel1er than - · provided
. you guard vour-JI egalnll extravag.- end un- ln-bt..,tl. II you
handle thlnga c:ompetontly, yo~~r banlt
will It by thll Ume MXI
year.
IAGITTAIIIUI (....,. 2111M. :11) Thll
11'8 good time tom- thlngurounch
bit ao don't be content with the 11etu1
quO today. II you leal you
c:h8nge .
w••thlng lor the betiBr, do H. Trying to

'*'

patch up a brOken romance? The AstroGraph Malchmaker can help you so un·derstand what to do to make 111e relatlonship work. MaH $2 pius a long, Beltaddr~. slamped envelope 10
Matchrnllk•. c/o this ~. P.O.
Box 81428, Cle\letand, OH 44101-3428.
CAPRICORN (0.. - - 111 Be!'8UI8 you live up lo your agreements
today, ..,... when you feel they might
benefit anollter more then yoursel!, you
will win the respec1 ol your

soeiate with doers.
GEMINI (May 21-Jtine 201 Endeavors
where you can demonstrate your ambltlous aspirations should 1urn ou11o your
liking today, especiallr IS lhey per1aln to
your work or car-.
CANCER (June 21-.lufr 22) Whether
teadllng. selling. promoting or merely
conveying Information to olhers, you're
apt to be extremely skillful In getting
your points across today.
LEO (July 23-AUQ. 221 Todar you mlgh1
contemporarl~.
have to con1end with some unexpected
AQUAIIIua (,..., ..,..,, 111 Today Chtlf1li8S aulhored by others or outtllda
y011 could be rather fortunate - · Influences. Instead o1 being disturbing
money lo concerned, prOIIIded you're lectors, tl1ey're Nkely 10 be poli!MI.
Pt'lll*ed to work hard lor whal you VIRGO (Alii. D-lept. 22) A. social Inhope to gain . Fortunately, you should - • mighllurn outto be far more
lmporlanl lhan you Initially anticipated
be 01 an lndt*riOua frlrrt8 ol mind.
PIICII (Fela. 21Hianlh Ill) Cornpu- today,ao do n011-1 111n a casual manlana might mike a muddle ol iltlngl to- - - Something big could come from
day, then leave the ~ up to y011 1o moetlng a , _ con1act.
.
straighten oul. You'U..elc:ome the chal- UIAA (lepL 23-0at. 21) Major accomlengeend do a good lOb bec:llll81t Ia a plllhtnelttt are poulble at 1hla time bet:halange.
.,.... you're In 1 favorable achU.l (llln:II21·Aprtl11) You can get. menl t:yde and arni:&gt;Jy equlpple! to deli
1101 done loday IS you operate In an at- ' with apposition or - mQIIIItere iree from o u - lniluenc:ea. ICOIIPIO (Oot. M-Notr. 22) Peraonal
II you're working on 1011181hlng ax- t1mbltlonl are aroutllll today, but more
lrernely lmporlan1, kMP It to youraass.
Importantly, you'l know how to h TAUIIUI lAid iiHiar 1111 You tend to fun while mlklng · yo~~r mark In 1118
1118 behevlor ol peraona w1torn world . Othata will lind your metltOda
you're lnvoNed wilil today. IS you _ , · lnepllotlonal.
your ollorta to be meaningful; lry t~ as- .

'·

I

(/

WFSr

.

+Kas ,

.74

ALDER

..... 52
t1U2
+AJ4

tJ81
tK109B72

...

SOli'I:JI

tQJ 7 4
'QJ so
tKQ97
tQS

Partners
are only human

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

,.

By P~llp Alder

Soo..

Eul

Wool
Pass
Pass

Paa
There are times when experts make
All piD
abnormal plays that work brilliant!~ .
There is someone in the !Jack of the1r
""''
Opening lead: + 10
minds telling them that tbis is the moment to deviate from the textbook. Today's hand is a good example.
o
North's three-spade rebid was a
Iimlt raise, inviting game. South, with
a hand not W..rth an opening bid de- tential ruff. Then he will probably-spite its 13 points, passed promptly. play the ace and another spade, nor
West led the club 10: three, ace, five. ·risk the finesse. .
• ·
Back came the club jack: queen, king,
Apparently a brilliant defense. But
slx. Reading the club position accu- how it is time to come clean. That wu
rately West switched to the heart how West hoped the play would 10. But
four. East ,.-on with the ace, declarer be bad a partner who also saw 111e •
dropping the jack. Stoppmg to count bear! four. Knowing this coultln't Iii
the points, East realized there was no from a doubleton, East returned Ill(.
future in diamonds, so he returned the clu.b four .alter winning with the bear~
heart five: queen, sev~n. SIX. Not a~- ace. Now declarer could aflonllo !Q~
ticipating the danaer, declarer fl- the losing spade finesse and still make
nessed the spade queen. But East won . his contract.
· _·
with tbe king and played a third heart, The best laid schemes o' miee u~:
which Wes~ ruffed to defeat the 1bridge experts.gang aft a-gley.
·- ·
contract.
• - . , . . illoit«t ,. - -,..~ ~
Note that if West switches to the I u- tD PaiJIIp A/dor, 111
w. •• 1 ,..
heart seven at trick three, playing · l'llo.r.-..."....-COIITt.lnotw*tae- ~
high-low, declarer wUI foresee the poI ._

..

1...----------___,

. • I

tore"'

·® ---••

...-

--------"'-::-'----'---:-::------::-::··
The World Almauac ®Crossword Puzzle:·~
ACROSS

37 Paralftel
39Ughl-leather
40 Spawa
42 Elk'ahom
44 Flrt11'111

1 Orlnklng
veuel
4 Troplcallruli
8 Tamorlak 8811

tree

owners' org.

12 Language

45 Box lor
donation a
48 01 a chlnllt:al
element
49 Ia next lo
53 Anlntllhom8
54 Polaonoua

IUflll

13 - your t"th
14 Suppoll:
archaic:
15 By birth
16 VIllain In
Othello
17 !roland
18 Principle
20- Comat
22 DlploonlcJ
24 Own (Scol.l
25 Wearawoy
28 BoH!e·CIP
remover
31 Actor'uignal
32 Wllac:h and

plant

&amp;6- Guevara
57Aclrlll

c-

58 ......, apol
59 HlrdWirl

Item

80 Rlncl
61 Brought 1111
82 Long-

Whitney •

4lllalleanxloua

.,.......
.flour

yean
10 P111ot

5 Singing

DOWN

34 llako angry
35 Jan• Auaten
title

..
.
'
I OnciiY8rJ3 i

3 Hammer part

1 Sman coin
2 PIMntlll

=-·..

11 .._. lllltla ••
11 Airline InfO •

worltahop

21
23 Prlaoll- •
25Hflllclrcle ;
26 Knoell
!.
aplnll
.i
27 Relllilbllng .. cltrul frutt :

=~

8 Artlat'a

28 Acldii'IJ

•

29 Dlflar..t

:

30 Rllae

,

Awanl

-,-f-+-t-1
~
- -4--1--+-1

33Two,~

31 011fta dawn &gt;
38 Coverlcl
·~
c:ontplotatr ,

bll

46 Cut
47 Amerlc:an ·

~~-

~

_
•

r.:_ ;

46Poellcloot ,
80 W. Colli cqfl. :
5 I Rullllll
,
52 - lily
55 -claFr~ :

•
. . !&lt;
I

B

.

• -

45Pe"-

~ ~~~; 2..t

11,::=.
,.,.::eTlnll

•
:

43Ru'-ant ••

ol Oruml
(PGI (2 :00) Sweo. Q
Ill Halilvtlll 18 ...,.,., King Uvel r;J
Fathlr DodllgyYitlrial

GlNawa

I

41 ;_ ond
flathtr

in UYtng ~ Male
critics review great ar1; man
who run from relllionshlps.

e

,
:

8 day
7 Colonnlcle

li$ •

· 1:30 IJl
lfJ Wlngl Joe has
everyone gueeling what
happaned during hla date
with Alex. Stereo. C
il]). lloW1tlle llltlre The
group IOOkllor • , _
roomma.11 to replaCe Pam.
Stereo. t;l
10:00(2). i1J L.A. Lew Keluy

...
-

EAST

+3 2

:00)

~

0

•

tA1098

PHILLIP

• '&gt;

..

NOtmf
+At3
t63

.

g

Motorcycles

3CM..!7S-1718,

'

SIX

11111 OMC. Cab OV•r, Cummine

ooc"'IIJ oyotorn, 115;

14._~--------------

Furnished

,ur vJE'V~

ON t,. Y 60T

RNIIatlc equllur, $25·

12------------------18~--------~~-----

/

OICAY.

..,.,,..,...;.;,_,_,_;...;..~ .
150W PlonMr Speaklra, 1125; ~

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

Deer Heads••••••••••.•.•••••••'190"

apoocr,J

6)4-892-4417 ... 304·77MM3.

•

'KBU

ii:~&amp;Nel1
c

conditioned

3. _ _...,..._ _ _ _ _ __
4. ____________--:------

$6995

~DI ......

&gt;1004.

Nawollour

Slereo: E;J

76

' ..

. '

BRIDGE

II) GuantiMn Leap Sam runa

...,.,, _

."

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
•• ·z
Oddity - Lusty - Fresh - Behold - OTHER SIDE ;
As citizens and voters in any election we should all
remember thai campaigns are like·cleaning windows.
The dirt is always on the OTHER SIDE.
.

Qenendlon

o1oc

lhe

6. GET
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO I
ANSWER
•

i •e .R-nna
IDe CIIS
C.
Stereo. t;1

((). :;,rQ . . -.

Her, aoo Size 1i89 Ford Bronoo XLT, V-t, PS,:
ROund Bolso, St.....S Outsldo PI, PW, POL, A_MIFII_caiMtte,•
Cocltlr Bponlol, lloll, Buff $10, Slorod 1n Bom $12. WIU aun roof, red and white, 4WD; •
Colored, l-4•• Shott lcwH Lood. Don Coo, Polrlo4 Rood, 114-114~~55.
.
Chlldron, $50, 114-245-1501.
614-379-2671-

AKC. Roglotorod I - h Old

~ Squere One TV Stereo.

SteG
([)
Edition ".,.
(l) (!) MICNIH~

2.56-1101 Evenlnga.

Fanback wicker chtlr, ht of
Comlngwoie, boby homo,.dotlo, box ol boyo loons &amp;
ahlrta, alte12-14. 304-815-4548.

liMIIED

frOMSIUI

~g:::::,_:.:._,lng.o~nd:::AH.::Bu~==)~.~i.:•
::yto:-::::;o.

llhem

A PRINT NUMB£RED lf TTERS
W' IN THESE SQUARES

7:00~:.i:::;.-

c._._

1--~--------------2.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

~ wdriSI acttir ,_,

TIME

Pets tor 8ale

..

f t Complolo tho chuckle quotod
V by filling in the missing wOtds
L..-1..--1-...L.....JL-.J......J you de,velop from step No. 3 below.

I])NawZOmiQ
6:35(1) Andy Qrltflth

r

FrMar Belt or Lamb, grain t.d,
-..__,__ !R lumlohod cut
wr~pped,
frozen
a
~ll.~l....,.nce.
dolhrom, haH or· wholo, 304304-112-25141.
TIU688.

c 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

IColiJr

Clui8IMu li'MI. Santl'l EIVII.

AI. 2. -on Milos N. o1 Point
P I - - 304-415-5773.
7P.Il
Colontol molding. Ook I Poplar.
F...-_ 3 Roome a Both, door l buoboard. 12 n. m•al
C1oon. llo ...... .,...,_, &amp; brook. Vinyl lidlng. 304-475-

~

1 1 1

&lt; I

'

....., Bod llonroa l Ploy Pen
&amp;col- ~-. 614-44141711 Alor I P.ll.

(loSIIIHyC.Is)

1 1 1 I

. •

.._,.Hodt_

-

* •• 1

31'.2~2011.

I

I7 I I I I

. 1121e E-onmenu Tcinlght

2210.

I

y N0

L.

QtUpcae

,,~~i~~~~~~

72 Tr\Scks for Sale

..

.

ll])

1i88 Ford .F-150, AutoL Air •'
W.mod To Hotol Tobocco, 614- sc,an; ,,.. Nluon 4"-s.;;d~
$3,1H; 1887 Toyoll 5 Spood', Ali,
251-aoo:J.
S2,Ht; 1185 9-10 Chovy UIIIHr
Truok, Auto, $2,Ht· John'a Aut,..
Livestock
63
SaiH, Below Hol~_y Inn, In
~
10 i&gt;IGIL$20 Ncb. Rfco'L 10 Milo Kanauga, 614-441-4782.
CNoi 11ooti o15 RL aa. 304-458811¥1rodo Truck, vi
1111
Ton, 1181 Modo! v:h~2,fll10, 614t
14 YNr Old Arobiln llorw, Wont: 448·1803, 614-448- . •
svoo. 814-258-1364.
73 vans &amp;4 WD's
2 rwgiOitrod oollsd Horolord
bollo. 15 monthe old. 304.a&amp;2- 1i88 Ford F-150, 4x4, 302 V-4,
2426.
~~~B; 58,000 mMoo, 3Q4.
8Old Pigs, $25 Eoch, 4
Yoor Old Alplno Billy Golt, 6f4· 1187 Chevy Cullom btro Vtn,
317-7164•
Cuotomlzod, 4 Copt. Choirs:
Sloroo. C.B. Elc. l5,H95, 814·,

Ylrtable &amp; Functlont, NeVer
UMd, JUit In Time For
~I S250 or 8eol Ollor,
114-441-1122, Or 114-4-

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3129

CELLULAR
.....0,........

Block, brick, Dlpoo, windows, tlnt•1 ela. ClaUde Winlora, Rio Grlndo, OH Coli 11424W1U
·
llolli roofing ond lidif1ts,

61 Farm EquiJ)ment

114-11!12-4723. .
-hod lonch a llony Wolght

New Hcfmes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement wrn•lldo"-wara
·
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL IDld RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

.

Supplle.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

0L

I

Nawo

Musical
Instruments

4008.
25'" color console TV, beat offer,

'ISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

,. '

~3311.

~~a11rpolls, Ohio, ,,...

·

,

1189 Pontiac LoMonoL 5

·•·'

'What would you do if you
were asked advice about
[ I 1 I ':' · something you knew nothing
' =·=~·~-~~-::;~·Ht_,about?" The student replied,
' ·.."I'd ask tor a retainer and have
P I E S 0 M·
call in
-~----

ClriMn Sandlego? Stereo.

$2,81111; ·11187 Dodgo ~­
Spood, Air, $2,3H; IH
Plymoulh Sundonoo, A&lt;Jo, ~~
1~41111; 1!187 Ford Tornpo .....
Air, $2,4H; 11166 Chivy CIVIlis~
Clerlnet with c.e, $126, eXc Auto, Air, S2}!i!; 111M Ford LT!l
aond, 304s458s1Ul
Auto, Air 11,..,., 111M PllltltOYiij
4 Spood, S1~~(.;ti8~
SIIVII' Oemelnhardl Flute $200, · Horizon
Ford Eoeot1 Wagon 5 "!'"" Air,
Ludwig hby CkMd Plano, $1H.
John'l Auto StiH, 8efow
$3,1100 010, 114-441-172~
Hollclar Inn. In Kanauga. IW
!
Y.....- DX-7 Key -nl and 441-4782.
ooltoholl oooo SlfO; Puny C.S. 81 ' 9-10 Top Oun pockogol
400 attNO ~ amplifier, $10,100. 304-175-2403.
$400•
Fender-l... man
10
ampihler 1425; Peavey monllor
CHEAP! FBW.S. SEIZED ·
~YS~em, lnclud• amplltltr, 2 . 1189 M.,..do.. $200; 1188 VWf ·
block widow -koro $400; 110: 11187 Morcodoo- $100; 11111!
PeaveW' 10 bind . atereo E.D. -•no- S&amp;O; ChOOII! tro..
$175; Yomoho DX-100 koyboor~ thouuride l'ltrtfna at $50.
tnd eoftshel M81, $17&amp;; FREE. lnfonnotlon- 24 hour hotY1m11hll AX·15 drum machine, Uno. ·!801l37t-2i29. Copyrl;tl!,
$100. c.u 61t ••• '525.
101148YJC.
,

57

Camino. Exc ...nt col)dllion.
$300. King - n g ltovo,
Ulod 1 - n . $300. 304.&amp;75-

614·742·21

...

A-....

I'""'
711-7732.

1982 Flborgluo toppor lor El

SAYRE lRUCIING

-~

Womod: Ulod Sorvlcooblo
Pilno For Rodnot CotnmunHy
Bulcll!'l. PI- Coli: 814-2465511 Oi 114-245-6540.
WHSTE'SIIETAL DETECTORS
Ron Alia 1210 Socond

eondhlon.

Chlhyuohuo mlxod puppoo,
CMotmu _..to, 304_

CA8H?!'I

-Sq.ll.ll-lol,2d
....... -.g
--.

Finn. 114-446-43tl.

Purebred m•l• Boxer, 8 mo old,
hid thola, hOUHbntken, $t5o~·
ol belt offer. · Dllchaahund &amp;

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

~2

In

53.,_9528.
RCA 25" cOlor Conoolo T.V.. $75

aood

apeed,

:.1"'-:::_:1111:;2:..:-4:..:166::;..-:-:-:::-::--::-:'

I

6

([)• !lleAacNewtoQ
(l) Wl1efe In 1118 World II

ounr;~

PUPPf Po!Ke Pol Shop.
l.ocatOd In G.C.IIUIDhv Co. GoillpoiiL Now opon. 114-441-0404.

Mc...._'ol1iT

8ean:h

New ·Yorker,

1188 Nloan, rwd,

74

id

do'IIJ

Chrysler

OigHt

or1ay

I:Oii W Thlee'l Company
11J1 NBC Newto C

1185 Chovolto, 23,000 oduli
mllel, 4 cyl, auto, good cond,
304-17H~
.
i
1$85

...

HU R E GS

1--T--T-r.--r---1
5

1D Jlln Tin Tin, K·t Cop Q

I

ln\lll anlmttt and 1upp11H.

53

--2-..-_....___ __
=--·--.

m.

eoot: S200. Asking
eon eM441-1721.
P1utlc And llodol CuiYerlllndt
Thou to Inch In Stoc:k. Ron
E..no, Jockoon, Ohio. 1400-

Allin, All llllllod SIMI Ports, &amp;
Scrwod End Bo.....o, Chromo lsmo ,.. Food Dolior. Juils
Bon, Now In Tho Box WMh ~ Wobb. Collli4 ·411 ta31.
CHIOriea $120; AIMl, A~ Fe., AKC Boxer pupo, blk mask,
AKS'o Coli B-n 10 &amp; 10, 7
1 whlto.J200- ollor 5:00
Doyo A Woolc. P. Hock, 2310 lawn
Pill, 304-475-liOil.
Eootom, 114-448-1822 Or l14446-95tl Lorotto.
llloub&lt;ng 12 Ga. DHrslayor
Whh Extra Borrol $185; fthlco12
PrciM Are Firm. Phone: 614-4462799 AJ;k For Larry.

1

·
G0 ld A d On

.
11a 'a tt.
AI
n
•
n
yx ~
With Dlsmond And lnhlli •J .

56

.

.Juo1 Arrived Frnh Now Shipmont Of Boot Duality SKS

-Fumlohod,CentnlA!rl

...

P.M.

Dryors $100 I Up. All
Sold With Worront~ ~~ Woohor Womon'o Black LNihor Motoreye .. Jackll:
.. ,' Size: Small, Ukl
I Dryor Shoppo 11
Wt44.
N"owt $10. 154-441-0885.
Automotlc Wllhtrl a dryoro $75
lo $85; rslrl~toro Si5 to $110; S5
gu ,...g.. $75; 1 gu dr,.r
Building
$15; we alao ltock new aAncl
Waohon &amp;

114-446-l\73.

ld I Mobile
...... $275111o.. Coli 114-441·
0722..

--.Thin.-.
HYwll

MI.

hml,

Cool, Slobr ~11 $45 A
Ton Ool!vwod, I14-441-&lt;114L
K1111i -bomor Ub Now,
$35D, can 1~7!1 13 Aftfr 5

Dryers, VCA'a, Stovn, Color

For Rent: D= l I

PY-

- r .11~1:; I monr misc. 1u1 Uno Tnoploli llsh blnlo,

Qt

a world
I!) Ed

I.Nthor S.Oto, $2,485, 114-379• 7.
'
..
ICIIIai'IIOUI
Pets
tor
Sale
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Who wu It thlt llid It: Fame II e curoe. lhare'l
1 lot of truth In 11181." - Bob Dyllon .
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Pomeroy _Mf.ddleport, Ohio
•

Ohio Lottery

Eastern,
Southern
boys previews

IT'S OUR 1-2TH
AL
GRATE
TMAS KI~K-OFF
AT MASON FURNITURE ~0
..

Pick 3:

158
Pick 4:
4657,

. Page 4

lAir 1U11llbtla mid 201.
Saturday «attend IIIOW nurriH.
lllgb-30.

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.

.

Vol. 43, No. 157
- Copyrighted 1tt2

2 tlectlciM, 16 Pagee 25 oeote
A llullllnaclla lno. ... wapaper

.r J)omeroy-Middleport, Ohio,
.
...Friday, December 4, 1992

'J)esign work proceeding on Shadle Bridge project
'

.

Replacement location to be \
detennined in 4-6 weeks

STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN ONE OF TEN GIFJ:.ITEMS TO BE GIVEN AWAY!
DRAWING DEC. 23, 1992- NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN!

By Mindy Keams

OPEN 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. • FRmAY, DECEMBER 4m

:roc

The West v· .. ~wofTillnsporlalion will choose belweell
two altemalive
Shadle Bridae ~q~lacen!enl project within the
next four to si,x. weeks, bul design wort baa already begun on Allemative
I, those atlerldinj a public hearing earlier this week were told.
G.R. Kalwar, DOT supervising engineer for the project, told ap·
proximately 60 people attending the hearing that although engineers have
yet to decide on a specific plan, design work has started on what is known
as the "preferred" Alternative I. This alternative connects the Silver Brid$C
interchange to the south in Henderson, and ends in the City of Poml
Pleasant at Third and Viand streets.
The other option, known as Altemalive II, would begin in the same
place, but end to the north at the S.R. 2 (Kiwanis Boulevard) intersection,
near Hardman's Home Center.
Also on hand from the DOT were Dan Musrock, project engineer; Jim
Colby, environmental analyst; and Rusty Hall, highway engineer.
The environmental study necessary for the bridge replacement has been
completed, it was announced. More preliminary wock will need to be
completed before right-of,way Iaild is purchased from owners in the sum·
mer of 1994. DOT officials estimal.e the bridge will be let out to bid in the
winter of 1994, construction will begin in early 1995, with the bridge 10 be
completed in 1997,
Kalwar told the group that when the project began, it was simply' a
project 10 replace the ex1sling bridge. He added when the four lane hij!h·
ways were announced for S.R. 2 and U.S. 35, it becainc a joint P.rojc!ct
which will need to connect at all points.
'
Kalwar stated that sketches of Alternative I and II were strictly prelimi. nary, and details were subject to change.
Alternative I is the preferred
plan. It places the proposed bridge temalive I is $21,935,000. ·•
AIIernative II places the
alignment approximately 100 feet
BEST CHRISTMAS SPilUT • The ltlllpttlftl ~ by Roy
. · ,JANTA COMJCS TO TOWN • HIP,II&amp;IIdnl the Cllrllltau
proposed
bridge approximately 300
upsueam
from
the
existing
bridge.
Gru-, Rock Spdnp ROIICI, Pomeroy, waa him not oae, bat two,
parlj.de_ ill Middleport Tllanday aipt • tile arriYal of Suta.
feet
upstream,
connecting the SilA
connection
is
made
10
the
Silver
first _places In the Middleport's holiday parlllle last night. His aol·
AfW the parade Suta pceted acverat hlllldnd chlldrea ud dlsver
Bridge
interchange
in Bender·
Bridge
interchange
to
·the
south
in
mated anow.an took the trcJpll¥ for BestCiuiltalaa Spi.rlt. Md llis
trlbiited Jiodday treats proYided b7. IJae Middleport C-ualty
son
10
'S.R.
2
in
Point.
Pleasant
10
Helidclson and 10 S.R. 2 10 the·
Ji&amp;lated Cluiltmaa tree took the award for the eatry best carrying
Alloclalioo, . , _ . of the evmlna siiCIIvldes. ·
·
the
north
at
the
S.R.
2
(Kiwanis
north in Point Pleasant at the Viand
out the theme olthe parade, "Aveaue ofTreft."
.
and Third street interseclion. 11 Boulevard) inlersection. This
Coatinued on page 3
parallels the existing bridge and
would be 1,800 feet lon~.
.. Right-of-way acquisttion " would
parade moved down North Second, the troJ?hY presentations to the . Meigs County Fair royalty, the require 13 residences and live busiBy CHARL~ HOEFLICH
down South Third, over to South "bests" m several categories of the Meigs Junior High School band, ness relocations.
Seatlnel News Starr
'Tis the season to be jolly and Second and then up to Dave Diles parade. Roy Grueser took two iro- the Meigs County Humane Society,
U.S. 35 would require relocation
phies for his light sculptures, one Overbrook Center, D. J. Farm at the intersection with S.R. 2, due
everybody seemed to just that at Parle where it disb!mded.
Santa on his float was taken to for his entry in .the best Christmas Toys, TOPS, Peoples Bank, several to grade problems caused by a
the Middleport Christmas parade
the "T" intersection at Mill and spirit, an animated snowman, and youth groups; fire ttucks and emer· higher bridge, it was told, for
Thursday night.
Starling this weekend, Ohio
Hundreds of spectators lined the North Second wheze be greeted the the other for the best entry on the gency vehicles, were among the clearance over the Kanawha River.
·
V!'lley
Publishing's The Sunday
others
taking
part
in
the
parade.
parade
theme,
a
Christmas
Jree.
sueets to view the"parade which excited children, listened to their
This intersection is intended for 'times-Sentinel and the Saturday
Leading
the
parade
was
ihe
Mid·
From
the
group
of
equestrians
in
carried out the theme "Avenue of Christmas wishes and pa!iaed out
the parade, Holly Milhoan won the dleport Legion's color guard and temporary usage and will be edition of the Point Pleas""/ Regl.rTrees." The festivities were spon· candy treats.
eliminated when the U.S. 35 four· zer will cany a weeldy digest-for.
All the while a brass sextet from award. The Meigs High School members of it Alllliliary.
sored by the Middleport Communi·
Following the parade, Middle· lane upgrade ties into the existing mal supplement of television list·
ty Associalion, Bob Gilmore, chair· the Meigs Count;r Community band took tlie award for tbe best
Band enrertained With familiar car· marcliing unit, and Salin and Lace, port fourth graders directed by Silver Bridge interchange in Hen· ings called TV Times.
man.
The digest will offer not only
The highlight, of course, was ols. Making up the group were Bill a pompon group, took the best roc Becky Zurcher entertajned with a derson. Kennedy Avenue would be
program listings for the
complete
cut
off
from
Viand
Street
and
remedley
of
Christmas
songs
in
the
the arrival of Santa on an allrBelive Hall, director, Andrew Wolf; Keith walking units. On hand to present
area
in
easy·IO·read
lime tables, but
quire
a
new
connection
to
S.R.
2
lobby
of
Peoples
Bank.
Refresh·
the
trophies
donated
by
Middleport,
float p~ ~Y Feen~y-Bennen Ashley, Uncia Warner, Steve Jenk·
also
entertainment
columns and
for
access.
.
ments
were
served
there
as
in
sev·
·
Trophies was Amy Rouse, Catfish
Post 128, Amencan Legion.
· ins and MarilyD Spencer.
fearures.
i'he
total
estimated
cost
for
AI·
eral other local businesses.
Chuck Kitchen waa emcee for Festival queen.
Enuies were judged as the

Many OIMr SaniJIP Too NunuiroWJ To Men.tioll • Prket On Moat OfT,.; lte,., LUted HeM Altd Many Other lterru Throughout The Store Are Cood Through December 24, 19921

WHITE IRON DAY BED
SPRINGS

**La·Z.IIo)'
Marta~ LAundry f:l Dlalnvashen
ReeDnen
* Eatertabunent Centers

*Wall Unlta

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*Table Groupa
Sola Steepen

Stop In Soon
And Visit Our New

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-- ~._.J * Sectional•
All
Priced
UNITS &amp; BEDDING EXTRA

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Our Selection Of Styles And
Finishes Is Complete;

Buy Now For Chriltmas!

Access~ry

Stooll

Departme.n t.

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To Go!

Livbij; Room Suites

CURIO
CABINETS

Priced
From

$168
·

BEAN BAG CHAIRS

ALL NEW ARRIVALS,
r

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Hundreds line streets to view Middleport's Yule parade

Bean Bag Olairs featuring headrest support; dbuble
zipper; double sewn scam.
(One IMer Seam with Top Slitch Reinfon:ing).

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MAPLEoaOAK

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$299
MICROWAVE

CULTURED MARBLE TOP

REGULAR '329.95

1.3 cu. ft.

Cundiffs make deer
processing a family affair

z(!Ol..t
..

• Button, pleated arms
• Semi-attached beck .

:

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"'

FREE O'ITOMAN ·

Avlilable in 011:
or Maple FmiJh.

By BRIAN J, REED
Seatlnel News Starr
As deer gun season approaches
Meigs County each year, throngs of
men, women and children take 10
the woods.in search of the elusive

Set indudel
36" table with a
12" leaf llld
4 side chain.
AU. onmR 3,

5.

7PIECB SHTS

wilma!.

PRICED TO 001

Most of those foriunate to bag a
deer then have the deer processed
and fill their freezen will\ the meat.
The business of deer ~rocessing
has become a lucl'8live, if seasonal,
· one foc many Meigs Countians.
Jim Cundiff .of Racine, and his

Limited Tinwl
Only!

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TREMENDOUS VALUE/

REGULAR '399.95

Come in llld oee our
dak·line. roll lop and

•79" H x 27" W
•Dark Brown Finish

No. 10522

DESKS AT SALE PRICES!

newlyexpanded
student
deab in atock.
They Al8 CloinJ Fut
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HALL TREE
•Decorative MiJTor
•Antiqued Coli Hoob

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DINING ROOM SETS

WITH

$}99

NEED A
DESK?

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$23.995

ZENITH 20" Diai(onal SENTRY 2 ·.

Remor.. Control Color TV •SS204"IW

~SIMPLICITY

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SWIVEL ROCKERS

SS20,41W

• Receiver/Monitor.
:
• Remote Control SCJJIO.
• On-Screen Menu Display .
• Auto Channel Search. ·
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• Chromacolor Contrast Picture Tube.
• Flashback.
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• Contemporary style. Eastern

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Super
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Big size oven,
automatic ,_......-;~--t...~~!!Oi"!lll----·~•
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defrost,
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Table Lamp At
10 po~er
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''
levels, .
Regular Price
turntable.
Get The Second
;

RECLINER BUYS!
Cnriatmu ·
Recliner
Today!
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SALE

$199

. TROPIDFS AWARDED • Middleport Fes·
tlvai-Queea Amy Rotllf, aecoad from left; pre.
IICDted trophies to, from the left, Holly Milhoan,
Pomeroy, equestrian wlaner, (Roa~~e), and to
Marcia BrownlnR and Maryaaa Browning,

Get Your

I

Matching Lamp
FREEr

'

· We At.o Ho.fJe A Large
Seklctiora Of Floor LorrqJJ!

Sale

,I

A

REGULAR '229.95

.

Pric~ *139

Br KATIE CROW

Seatlnel Correspoadmt
Ntimerous complaints reprding
poor television cable reception
were heard when Syracuse V"JIIage
· Council mel in regular sessio,n
.
Thunday Dlaht.
Councilman Deanis Wolfe
JeiD1ed tha1 be bid Jeeeived lOY«;
al complaints. A letter will be
-.. drafted to Cablevi1ion in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., hoping that the
silUIIion will Improve.
r It was abo nOted thai "oo sol.ic·

95

•

'

Clleshlre, or Satin aad Lace,
best walklna
unit. The other trophy wlnnen not preseat for
the pkture were the Meip High School Band,
best m•chlna ualt, aad Roy Grueser, tbe best
Chrlslmaasplrlt and the best tbeme ftoat.

Syracuse residents complain
of po.o~ cable TV.reception.

Limited S~~pplyl

.'
••

'TV Times' new
feature for OVP
newspapers

iting" signs sh':~a&amp;:ced at
each end of the
llmlll.
Soliciting is prohl ited by ordl·
nance except when a permit is
. iS811Cd b1 the ma)U. The ordinance
states, that no person who Is a
salelmlll shall C111J1F In a "••n•·
or trade of seiHng any article or
· product, exceplina farm producll,
either aa a prtocipal or qent 011 a
!Jouae.to-houle buis widlill tbe vii- ·
Iage of Syracuse. This shall not
include salesmen of mille, bread
and C?tbr:r (oocl~ffs."
.

Wolfe presented a copy of Mid·
dleport's codified ocdlnancea. He
feels, as docs coqncll, that this •
would be BOIIlethiJII for SyriCDse
Village 10 consider. A leucr will be
direC~ tO the~ which per·
formed the wodt D Update lllld 1)'1·
temlze all ordiaances, and to
receive aa eslimate or the cost.
AI Wolfe's 111agestion, council
went on recoro supporting Ioca!
ldcPhone service between the 992
exc'hanae and Now H8VCII and
-CciiatiJiiied OD pajc 3

PROCIII
allopMURieJwe,

ror family beet
tbe lllop.

.
·~

wife Thelms get the whole family

involved in their deer processing
business, located near Maplewood
Lake. Their son, Jim Cundiff, Jr., is
a meat cutter with Ohio Valley
Foodland in Gallipolis, and puts his
butchering sldlls 10 good use at the
shop. Their sons, Larry and David
Cundiff abo assist them.
The Cundlffs have been in the
business of deer processing for 15
years. They fusl purchased the saw
and other processing equipment so
that they could pi'Ocess their own

beef. They then decided 10 use the
equipment to earn "a little extra
cash," Cundiff said. Now, the shop
processes about 90 deer per season.
Rob and Sharon Cunningham of
Syracuse also assist the Cundiffs in
the process. Each deer takes about
45 minutes 10 completely process,
and the cost of $35 includes sldnning the deer. Smaller deer cost
less to process, Cundiff said.
Custolllers can specify how they
want their deer cuL Some request 11
all ground, "hamburger-style",
while others ask them to save the
hind quarter so that jerky can be
made. The meat Is presented 10 the
customer wrapped in individual
Continued on page 3
·

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