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                  <text>Plgl 12-The o.tty Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

500-channel .T V world could
-bring TV magic, big bi~ls

Marauders
top Trimble
for first win

.

By LYNN ELBER
AP Televllbt Writer
LOS ANGELES Tbe
vaudeville gag goes like lhia: One
reson guest is griping to 1111otber
, ~bout tbe rooms, tbe service, .tbe
· food - tbe lousy food. "Yes,"
replies tbe other guest. "And such
small patioos."
.
Welcome to tbe big-portion
world of SIXk:bannel cable television, coming sooner tban ·you may
realize to a nearby television seL
More channels won't necessarily
mean just more of tbe same. But
will it mean better'l
Aim a newly empowered TV
remote control and you may be
able to choose from hundreds of
pay-per-view movies, dozens of
collegefootball games..
Or switch on a baseball game
and - click - call up a player's

~Cheers'

Slats in 1111 on-screen box. Or click again - get 1111 on-screen list
· of fuhft home pmcs and a stadi·
om sealing chart. Then buy tickels,
all using your remote.
1be8e are among tlic possibili·
. ties of so-called "interactive" tele·
vision, 1111 ourgrowth of mep-TV
technology. It meaas many YJewers
and ~ir sets are likely 10 get a lot
mm: mlimate.
"I think tl)ele will be a substan·
tial fraction of (cable) subscribers
senred by 1995-96,~' said Richard
Green, president of CableLabs, tbe
industry's reselll'Ch and developmentconsortium.
It's TV your way, promoters
say, personal TV- not Ibis coolci~·cutter programming, Ibis justSIIS·there boll tbat doesn't reflect
the"REAL YOU.
But, as. always, buyer beware.

series t~ end after 11

LOS ANGELES (AP) " Cheers" fans have just six more
. months to belly up 10 tbe bar.
The NBC barroom comedy will
.air its final episode in May after
providing solid ratings for 11 seasons, the show's producers.said
Monday.
,
• "We are grateful to our loyal
viewers over tbe years, but we feel
il's better to end tbe series too early
rather than too late," James Bur·rows and Glen and Les Charles,
·who created tbe show, said in a

'statemenL

sea~ons

They didll't say what would
happen in tbe last episode.
Patrons and employees at tbe
Bull &amp;: Finch Pub, the Boston bar
on which "Cheers" was I!Kldeled,
were sorry 10 see the show go.
"Wow, I'm disappointed," said
Ed Doyle, who has tended bar tberc
for 18 years. "I thought tbat show
could run forever."
·
"Cheers" turned the Bull &amp;:
Finch ini.Q a tourist attraction that
an estimated 850,000 people now
visit each year.
..

. MAYBE NEXT YEAR • Katie Marie Ulct,
· 1, BeYer made It to Saatll's lap ID Ashlud, Oblo
during 1 Chrlstmu party held by the 1,._6tb
: Transporlatloa Co., of the Ohio Natloaal

choices;

All those
all" tbat rulftll·
ment, comes at a price, as yet
uncertain, wblch could end ~ bel·
laming ~ 111011tbly cable bill:
The industry moved a big step
closer to Ibis brave new world with
last week's IIIIIIOIIIICCIICIII tbat tbe
nation's largest cable operator,
Tele-Communications Inc., was ·
installing digital technology for I
million customers as early as 1994.•
Digital, as opposed to tbe current analog technology, is what
could allow cable TV to speed
down a SOO-plus lane freeway if, of course, conSumer demand is
·there, and if cable, computer and
other industries move aggressively
tomeetiL
"The image of the (cable)
industry will. change,.. predicted
Green. "Right now 1 tbe image is
entenainment, video provi~r .. .
the same stuff like at the video
store. The image will change 'to
more of a higher-tech, digital
provider of a wide tange.of services." includinr educalion.
Informatioo services now avail·
able through personal computers
also may be offered over cable.
Steering you through tbe mind·
bogglil!g ·array of choices will be
on-screen video TV guides, several
of which are in developmenL One,
InSight Telecast, willl1e tested in
homes next summer and may be
marketed ~itbin two years for tbe
$1-or-so weekly cost of published
..guides.

Guard. BeiD&amp; lalr.o to the cOaloUDganas oilier
J1111ndlather, Spc. Richard Walter, seemed a lot
·safer. (AP photo)

I

128
Pick 4:

7746
BuckeyeS:
11·13·16·21·23

•
Vol. 43, No.I lSO

Copy~ht...

DONATION MADE · Tile Shade River
CooDhuters Assodalioll made a $500 CODtribu·
ti011 to the Bend ~ Jaycees 011 Moaclay. The
funds will be lllied toward the Jazceea' Toys for
Tots progr11111, wbldl belieftiS cbUdftD In Melp

---People in the news---..
.

BALTIMORE (AP)- Nobel
Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel
says tecent events in Germany and
the Balkan~ have made him pessimistic about mankind.
Wiesel, an author who has writ·
ten extensively about bis experi·
ence as a Holocaust survivor, said
Sunday he !'Cturned from a peace
mission to Bosnia-Herzegovina last
week discouraged about piospects
for peace. He described the Balka·
ns as an area of nea- hopelessness.
Sarajevo, he said, "is ·a city
which today symbolizes isolation
... and total abandonment," Wiesel
said.
Wiesel also spoke With forCbod·
ing about tbe rise of anti-Semitism
in Germany.- He called for strong,
offiCial statements of concern from
tbe United Srates ~vernmenL
"We are entenng a ·new century
and, the way things are today, I am .
pessimistic about the next century," be said during a talk at Betb
Am synagogue. "Look at what's
happening in Germany. Qnce more,
Germany is assaulted morally by
the Nazis."

I

Research Ine., a charity formed by ..: And tbey go 'Wow, it really is
~l
Bolton's childhood buddy, the late you.' ..
Joel Brander, after he learned he
Stem is directin his first fell~
ba,d leukemia in January 1990. film, "Rookie of ~ Year," about
Brander died in February.
a 12-ycar~~~f. who can throw a'
Bolton, whose songs include 112 mph £
, starring Thorn~
"To Love Somebody" and "When ·Nicholas. He didn't even ask.:;
a Man Loves a Woman," said his Culkin.
~
"I didn't need the beat that .
.dedication 10 tbe cause be81111 as a
favor to his old friend, but has would be generated doing a;
grown beyond that.
.
Macaulay Culkin film," Stem said '
"Everyone has been touched by
'•
HOLLY, Mich. (AP)- Don't~
cancer," said Bolton, who lives in
nearby Westport. "I want to feel ask .Soupy Sales when be ,Plans to~
I'm contribullllg to people who are retire from the comedy busmess. '
•"Ibele's no heavy lifting," be~
making lnaktbro Its.''
. Dangerfield sai':f be fust became said. "I haven't been making can
aware of tbe need to raise more or running cranes. You've got~
money for cancer research about George Bums, Bob Hope, Renny•
sill years ago when his manager Youngman. You keep working, but~
you might not work as much,
died of lymphoma.
· "Then I became aware of it because I find in our business there·'
· ·
when Michael did an impression of is age discrimination."
Sales, in tbe Detroit area last
me on 'The Tonight Show,'" he
said. ' 'He got more laughs than I week for several nightclub appearances, remembers gerting his start,
did.''
.
.
in 19S3 on tbe Detl'Qit children's
RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- What do television show "Lunch with
tbe "Home Alooc" movies have in
common .with "The Wonder , SouJl;~'livCd in New York the past
30 years but at age 66 bas reduced
Years'' on ABC:!
his touring to about two weeks a~
Daniel Stem.
I
. Steln, tbe frizzy-hailed burglar montb. He also likes plilylnJ guest•
who teams with Joe Pesci to get disc jockey across the country&lt;
,.
their lame brains bashed in by when regulars are on vacation.
"Hey, listen, it's caiicd, 'Paying.
Macaulay Culkin on the big screen,
is tbe unseen voice of a grown-up tbe rent,'" be said "And also, the'
Kevin Arnold (pla'Yed by Fred Sav- subtitle is, 'Paying tbe alimony."~ ·
Sales said some clubs only want:
age) on .the television aeries.
18to 49-year-old comedy acts;
"Most people think I'm kidtbese
days.
.
;
din~," Stern SBld in this week's TV
"But that•s where. they're'
Gu1de. "I tell them, 'Close ·your
stupid,
because when it's funny,"
eyes;' and then I say, 'Wben I was
it's
funny,''
he said "Funny has~
11 and .growing up in tbe suburbs

MILFORD, Conn. (AP) - Soul
singer Michael Bolton did his Rod·
ney Dan~eld imitatioo in public
again, but this time tbe comedian
was in the room.
.
"He does .inc better than I do
me," Dangerfield said, cracking up
the formally dressed crowd during
a five-minute routine in the middle
of a benefit for cancer research
Sunday nighL .
· The .dinner was tbe third·ailnual
benefit for This Close For Cancer

limiL"

2 Secllono, 18 POQH 25 -.te
A Multlmedllt Inc..,..._PII*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio;.Wednesday, December 9, 1992

lt$2

Mason Chamber president outlines common goals

Couty and M - County, W.Va. Plehred at
tbe presentation are, l~r, Terry ~tb'riabt and
Doug Swun of the assodatloll, and Tim ROIIIh
and Mitch Roasb or the Bend Area J•rceea,
' based ID ~ Couaty.

no

:

JOE ELLISON

By BRIAN J, REED
SenliDel NCWI·SIIIff
Joe Ellison, CEO at Peoples
Bank of Point Pleasant, W.Va. and
·president of the Mason County
Chamber of Commerce, spoke tQ
· the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce about common goals
when the chamber met in full session on Tuesday.
Ellison. addressed several issues
pertinent 10 economic development
now being targeted by the Mason
County Chamber, and stressed tbe
imponance of cooperation between
the two communities. in light of
tbeir geographic proximity.
.
"The river becomes a barrier·
sometimes because we make it
one," Ellison said, "but it's impor·
tant to remember tbat if it's good
for us, i''s good for you."
Ellison discussed .tbe chamber's
effons to attract a pulp and paper

plant to Mason County, which haS . of tbe power plants in Gallia"and
drawn opposition by some groups Mason Counties. ·
in the community. He said that
Ellison also reponed that the
although publicity about tbe project Mason County Chamber . was
has died down coDSiderably, tbe attempting to attract another power
project is "not a dead issue," and plant in the New Haven area, and
that "plans are moving right said tbat tbe chamber is confident
along."
that tbe plant will be constructed
Ellison said that tbe Alabama tbere in the next few years.
Pulp and Paper Company bas spent .
Development of roads in the
approximately $4 million toward county has also been a goal of tbe
tbe ~ject in Mason County.
chamber iQ.~~t .months, includ'We know that the company
wouldn't spend that kind of money
and tben pull out," Ellison said,
noting that if constructed in Mason
County, ii would be the largest
construction project in tbe United ·
States at the time of COIISII'UCtion.
As for the economic im~ on
tbe community, Ellison comp8red
tbe proposed plant 10 the construe·
lion of the Kaiser Aluminum plant
in Ravenswood. or tbe construction

ing representing tbe interests of
commerce in the selection of the
site of tbe Shadle Bridge replacement in Point Pleasant EDison also
cited support of tbe completion of
U.S. Route 35, botb in Ohio and in
West Virginia.
He com!Dented on the importance of a propased regional airpon
to be located at a midpoint between
Parkersburg, Huntington, and
C!wleston. .

"This project would have a
tremendous impact on all of us,"
Ellison said. "Although the construction is at least 10 rears away.
we all need to get behind iL I am
afraid tbat we're going 10 get hung
up on where it's going 10 go. and
tben we'll lose it. We need to let
the engineers decide where it's
JOing to go, and just say 'we want
It',"
Continued on page 3

Rutland village witl discontinue
r~sidential street light service Ja~. 1
a ste~· backwards for progress in
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tbe village.
.
Sentinel News Slllff
It
was
a
unanimous
vote of
· When the New Year comes in
council
to
turn
off
tbe
lights
on Ian.
tbe street lights in residential areas
1.
Voters
def~ied
a
renewal
levy
of Rudand will go ouL .
of
two
mills
8Jid
a
new
levy
of
an
That was tbe .decision of Rut·
additional
two
mills
in
the
Novcmland. Village Council at Tuesday
night's meeting in council cham- ber general election.
The village is now operating on
bers. '
"
t
wo"
.zenerates $3,288 a
. • :na. five liahts in tlie business year.millW'Mdch
It
costs
·11bout
$3,600 for
district will be left on, primirily for
street
liglit
operation
alone.
Funds
security purposes.
'
Cor
streetlights
can
only
come
from
Mayor Ed Manin and Council
tall
revenue.
expre~ regret that such actioo is
The mayor said that some have
· necessary and credited it to the
credited
defeat of Jbe levies to tbe
defeat of the village's tall levies in
.
sewer
rates.
He e!Dphasized tbat
November.
sewer
revenues
must be rerained
' T h ='ust
is
no money to pay
for
maintenance
of
the system and
for Ibis
'd tbe mayor.
cannot
be
used
for
any other "purMay
· said tbat witb all,
pose.
the improvements, in.tuding the
At last night's meeting tbe viinew sewer sysiem and the recent
lage
si~ned an agreement. on tbe
walllr line Ie)llacem~nt grant, shut·
New
Luna Road 2,200 foot water
ling off the slreet lights seems like

line replacement. The work is
being done with funding under
· Issue 2.
' .Sandy Smith, cleric, advised
Council that an application has
been completed and submitted to
,Jhe Ohio Public Works Commission for a grant of $573.000 from
Issue 2 monies for water line
replaccmmt In Rutland vilhtp.
Also discussed at the meeting
was applying for funding 10 replace
tbe water tank in the DClll round of
Issue 2 projects.
.
A report was given on sewer
'treatment system lllld,it .was reponed lhal everything is op&amp;ating well
and tbat tbere is a daily flow of
about 1800 gallons. It was als_o
reponed lhal Dale Hart. operator IS
now in the process of testing to
determine .that every line in tbe village is appropriately tied into tbe
system.

supplement their Christmas dinaers. Last year,
225 needy famWes were served. Tlie Items, moat.
ly dqnated, will be distributed on Thursday aad::.
Friday, bued on an. application procedure rom- ·:
pleted earlier. Here, some or the volunteers are
pictured as tile food Is bagged.

FOOD BAGGED • About 20 volunteers,
representiag United Methodist churches across
Meigs Couaty, gathered on Monday to bag food
staples ror needy ramllles. Roger Grace, director
or the United Methodist Cooperative Parish estl·
mates that about 250 families will receive a
canned bam, vegetables, and otlier food Items to

Advisory board proposes levy to
Meigs
board
drops
detention
increase funds for senior citizens
The Farmers Bank would like to invite each and every one of
you to help us make.December 9th a very special day of
Holiday Cheer.
We are proud to bring you the First Annual
..
Christm."as Sing-Along and Candle lighting on the Pomeroy
. parking lot stage at]:OO p.m. on December 9th.

Our area High School Choirs·have graciously accepted our
I
inviiationfor
them to share·their time and talents
to present
.
.
to you an evening not soon forgotten.
So come one, come all to help light up the Pomeroy areal

Your Bankpv~...
..

t::

t

Pick 3:

'Page6

No broad hints? Here
is some.holidayhelp
By LARRY BLASKO
dia magazine on a CD-ROM that
. ~ted Press Writer
arrives every four weeks for a
· Personal computin~ addicts year's subscription of $119.40. It's
liave at least one redeemmg virtue: available for Mac or mM.
They're easy to shojJ for.
Software can educate without
Herewith the Annual List of being boring. Knowledge Adven·
Nifty Computer Stuff reviewed ture bas Science Adventure,
during the last year. All are Widely $79.9S. The fascinating interactive
. available at-discounters or by mail· book written by tbe late Isaac Asiorder for less tban tbe list prices mov is suitable for students in midgenerally rePQrted here lind are for die school and high school. The
IBM PCs and compatibles unless Secret Island of Dr. Quandary,
otherwise noted:
$59.9S by MECC, is a first-rate
if you&gt;have around $500 (street educational game for upper eleprice) and want to solve forever tbe mentary and middle-school kids.
~omplaints of no disk space, get Zoo Keeper from Davidson &amp;:
'one of Iomega Corp.'s ellcellent Associates covers the animal world
11ernouilli drives. The external PC- witb class. It's $S9.9S, and school
powered ,90 Pro stores 90
megabytes oo each removable flop- discounts are available. Bodyd'sk T add
·
· works. $79.95 from Software Mat·
PY 1 • 0
storage, you JUSt keting Corp., is a vividly illustrated
add another floppy.
.
fh
•
Both George Bush lind Mikhail tour o uman anatomy.
Gorbachev sought greatness and
Automap, $99.9S by a company
had unemployment thrust upon of tbe same name, is a computer.tbem. Two simulations give you a ized road atlas tbat tells you how .to
~hance to rewrite hisu.y. Crisis in get from here to there and any
tbe Kremlin, $69.95 from Spectrum points you want in between.
.
Holobyte, lets you see if you can
Dress Shop alters sewing patplay Gorby's political hand and terns to custom fit tbe figures of
survive. Power Politics, $49.95 by real people, $99.9S from LivingRandy Chase frOm Cineplay Inter- softast R~ $49.95 from Workactive, makes you the campai~n ing Software Inc. for IBM and
manager for any presidential Mac, saves keystrokes as you type
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: Star Trek: 2Sth Anniversary, to disk, protecting works in
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'1 mcorrect mg ty, The institution gets the help,
shouldn 'I enjOy doing. Acco· yoo get a tax ded•IICUion.
distriblltes iL
• CD-ROM bued programs are
To organize infor111ation about
blossoming. ICOM Simulations your life and finances- for your
Inc. offen Sherlock Holmes, Con- convenience or for your heirs · Slllting Detective. It's an outstand· ~::"NO::to~~a ~:.9~=
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Ohio Lottery

Fo

Member F.D.I.C.

•· '"'--'

Farmers Bank

&amp; 'Savings Company ·
211WMI-IINII

P.O. lox at
,Pounwor. OH. 457•
"114--1112-21M

TIJRcilila7

P.O. Ior:138
PIIIM, Ol( 45713

114-1174111

By CHARL(!:NE HOEFLICH
~.ram would be similar to the
while the second was entitled
Sentiael News Slllff
· UJ!tions for Elders pr&lt;?)ect which ''Taking Care of You." A psycholoGoing for a levy in 1993 to Will end June 30, 1993 , tbe direc· gist did tbe fUSl session, and Oh:io
increase funding for senior citizens tor pointed ouL
'
University slaff person, tbe second.
programs was discussed at length
Local funds will allow the
Accomplishments over tbe past
at Tuesday's meeting of tbe Advi- Meigs County Council on Aging to several mon1hs were .detailed by
sory Board, Meigs County Council serve those folks not cUITently eli- Betb Theiss. She talked about polion Aging.
§ible for service because tbey are · cics and procedures, weekly inserThe )loard voted to have a comover· income by a $1,000 per vice training programs for case
mittec meet witb tbe Meigs County ,,.,yt;a(!, she-ellplained. .
managers, fund raisers, and tbe
Council on Aging next week to fur!--s fo~ t~e financial pi~t~~;re, updated computer system.
tber discuss a levy of one mlll or Ohver d1stnbuted sheets hsung
She also reported that a new
less -u;lle on the May ballot. •One ·'1'0Siible- reduetioas-in- funding in vehicle, a hot-shot truck, has been ·
inill would generate approximately 1993 and cost control measures , ordered and will be used to expand
$2-25,000 dollars.
which have already been put into tbe present home-delivered meal
In asking for levy support, effect.
·
routes. ·
Susan Oiiver, director, said tbat the ·
While the Options for Elders
As f&lt;r in-home services, Friend
money would be used to expand all program will be phased out in ~uly, said the system has been changed·
in-home services and would allow 1993~ . several other alternatives so that one coordinator does the
tbe agency ro "maintain local con- incluaing CllpanSion of the Passpon entire evalustionllndlhen tbe indi·
trol of service.• Oliver said ~~ ill program and a new program called vidual is prioritized for services.
funding tbrough the Older Ameri- Choices are being considered for "Service needs, however, outweigh
cans Act and Block Grants man- . state funding.
. service availability," she reported.
date tbat services be directed to tbe
A 4iscussion was beld on jusi Now chore service is availilble only
very low. income, low income what additional state funding will once every four 10 sill weeks. T)te
minority and the very frail. She be coming into tbe county for pro- center has five persons who worlc
also said several pro~rams now grams, for seniors and how they in tbe homemaker services program
being funded, includmg Mental should be factored into a levy funded through Title 20, Block
Health Case Mana~ement and _requesL
.
Grant monies, Oplions for Elders,
Passpon, are for Med1caid eligible . · Linda Friend rewrted on the and Passpon.
individuals only. '
$500 grant received for Women's
As for home delivered meals,
"We opt to provide in-home ser- Health Month and holed tbat two about 135 are going out each day.
vice to those persons in need of programs/training sessions for care New requests come in frequently
assistance. High income persons givers had been held, with each but unless the refe1T11,1 is from a
would be asked to pay a ponion of being attended by 18 persons. The health agency, assessments have to
the cost. The basic_m-home pr~- firs! dealt wjth stress and coping be m~ by a Siaff member;

Marines take control of
kejpointS in Mogadishu
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)

- A U.S. Marine landing force, on

a mission of mercy to a starving
land, Q,Uicldy took control today of
. . key points in Moaadishu. wbere the
streets were suddenly free of tbe
tmor of mobile gangs. .
Just hours aft« the Marines hit
tbe beaches, giant Air Force transpons and a food·!IIJ!ef flil)lt were

Tbe youthful gunmen who long
lc:'uchi!Ji down at the crippled
Clly' S airport.
terrorized Mogadishu appareil tly
The Marines and Navy com· had melted away into the city's
mandos, sweepina in before dawn ruins or into the countrySide.
But word of new unrest came
by sea and a1r, met no reported
from the southern Somali port of
resistance.
Insteld, tbousanda of Somalis, Kismayo, w~ a night of lootinJ
some in rap. flocked 10 the shore· .and shootin~d the U.lf,
. 10 evacllt!ll
line to sue in awe • a superpow- . World Food
er's ml&amp;ht- and to shake ita heip- 13 forei"' aid workers by air.
ing hand.
.
. '

policy for grade school pupils
The after-school detention for James Carpenter toolc !he option of
elementary students has been early retirement through the buydropped from the Meigs Local out program offered by tbe Meigs
Board of Education's discipline Local Board when the contract
between tbe Board lind tbe Meigs
policy.
Meeting Tuesday night, the Local Teachers Association was
board voted unanimously to drop ratified earlier this year. He will
the provision for ·elementary stu· retire on July 1.
dents and use other methods of dis·
The dress code amendment for
cipline to include suspension if Meig_s High Schoohdopted ·at aNovember meeting was extended
necessary.
The action was taken foUowing . to include all schools in tbe district
complaints at tbe past·two meetings
Toni Hudson was employed as a
by parents about the policy. ·
substitute teacher and the board
It began when a second grader entered into purchased services
at tbe Pomeroy Elementary School . agreements with Paul Boling to
was given after-school detention in transport a student to the Athens
tbe program which is conducted at County out-of-school se~ere .
Meigs High School from 3:30 to behavior handicapped unit, and
6:30 p.m. The parent objecte"tl" to witb Linda Smitb to tutor a health
putting ber child in witb srudents of handicapped student for up to· five
all ages in a strange school without
transportation home.
Special meetings were set for .
Dec. 16 and 17. Purpose will be to
interview four locaf candidiltes in
executive session for tbe job of
superinteodenl of tbe Meigs Loclil
School District. Superintendent
LOS ANGELES (AP) Charles Keating Jr., responding for
the first time to charges that he
swindled Lincoln Savings
investors, testified that allegedly
fraudulent land sales and payments
were bona fide business deals.
Testi(ying in his fede.ral trial
Tuesday, Keating replied "No,''
"Never" and "Absolutely not" to
questions about14 land and securiues deals that prosecutors describe
as tbe heart of their case.
He repeatedly denied allegations
of fraud by a parade of government
witnesses who have struck plea
bargains.
Keating is accused of billdng
Lincoln investors and livin~ like a
king on loOted funds, leavmg tall·
payers a record $2.6 billion bill
when tb~ Irvine, Calif.·based thrift
collapsed..
·
Keating, chairman of Phoenixbased American Continental, Lin·

•

hours a week.
The board adopted a resolution •
stating that it is impractical to :
transpon Christopher Lamben and reimburse his parents according 10 :
tbe state formula
.:
An application for early gmdua-:
lion from Twaina Cunningham was •
approved.
· · A- mOtioo 1o hire Brent Manley :
as a substitute bus driver died for :
laclc of a second. The board com- •
mended Jeff Wilson for his work as ,
, a mechanic at tbe bus garage.
•
An executive session was held.·
to discuss personnel. Attending·:
were Supt. Carpenter, Treasurer'
Jane Fry, .and Board .members,
Randy Humphreys, Roger Abbott, •
John Hood, Larry Rupe, and Bob ·.
Banon.

Keating tells jury at fraud
trial that deals were legitimate :;.

\ .

I

.

coin's parent company, has becom"e :
tbe symbol of tbe savings and loitn •
debacle. He claims he is being,:
made a ~:oat by government··
officials
· g 10 escape blame. ·:
The U.S. District Court jury has •
not been told that he was convicted •
of securities fraud last year in state :
court and is serving a 10-yeal":
prison senteoce. Keating' s lilwyer
did not put up a defense to tbose. ·
charges.
.
The govcpunent maintains tbat •
as Lincoln faced· huge losses in
1986 and 1987, Keating devised :
bogus land sales to create false •
· profits and engineered a lOoting of :
Lincoln while he and his family •
maintained a lavish lifestyle.
Keating and his son, Charles •
Keating IU, are charged witb fraud .•
racketeering and conspiracy.
ing faces a maximum of S2S years •
in prison and his son faces 4 7S.
:

Kcat: :

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Commentary
111 Coart ltieet
P • ..,.oldo

• D&amp;iot&amp;D TO 'I'D ll'I'IDin8 or 'I'IIB IIBIOS.IIMOl'f A11BA

•
ROBERT L WJNGE'IT
Publlllller

·PAT WBlTEIIEAD
Aetet...t Plablilller/Controller

'
CHARLENE H()Eil.ICR
'General M....r

LBTI'I!IlS OF OPINION ore wekomo. They abould be leao than 300
-.11. Alllellen n · subject ·10 edilinc and must be signed with name
lddreu and telepboae allllll.: No lllllipd letten wiU be publilbed. l,.e~
lboald be Ia plOd IIIID,IIddreuiac iiiUU, aot penooalitiea.

:Military missions seem
'·clear in briefing.· rooms .
•·
ByWALTERR.MEAilS
:·
AP Special Corraplllldent .
• WASHINGTON - In 1V talk show studios and briefmg rooms. the
:'path in and out of U.S. military inlervenlion in stsrving Somalia sounds
;clear llld precisely planned. On the~· it won't be so plainly chatted.
• While there were initial admintstrstion suggestions that American
. 1orces might be in and out by lbe time President Bush leaves offtce Jan.
. 20, lbe more realistic message is Defense Secretary Dicit Cheriey's rejec.lion of any artificial deadline.
:- . President-elect Clinton said talking about troop witbdrawal would put
-the end before the beginlling of die O.N.-sanctioned Operation, which he
lacb. "They're not even in there yet," he said. "Let thein go in and let's

P1g1 2 The Dally Sentinel
Pomelcv llddleport, Ohio
}Yednnday, December 8, 1882

•

Pos~master's

The Daily Senthiel
.

WedneSday, December 8, 1882

WASHJNGTON ~ WbeD tbe
pol....... llfeol of die Ullitcd
~rarea reently coaducred au
1nspecdoll ll a local office, the
lllllk-and-fllo wanted to pass with
flyin_l colon - evea if it meant
pl_ayiDI ~ af~ shell game
WJib undelivered mail.
·T~at's what ~a,ppened when
Marvin Rooyoo vilbd lbe Merryfi~l~ Post Oftk:e In suburban ~uJllUII rec:endy. RIDiyon ~ looking
for OD'IIIC proof !bat his cost-sav1ng pur,~~ C?f posta.l pe~sc:mnc:l
were~~ t
disruptin ail
delivery. )'1111 or
·gm
Like thousands 1'1 bntrtcb !lffJCeS
I!JFr.o~s ~e CO!Jntry. undehvered
riiailtS piled high m
~
of the ~~d office. But wtth
Runyon s VISit, some eager-t&lt;!·
pleue workers at Merryfield hasti-·
ly cJatrec! t1!e ~room of all lei'!~
ov~r matl m time for Runyon s
while-glove test.
.
. When Runyon amved, accord·
mf ID ~ he strolled through
t!te backroom_and remarked at how
tidy and efficte~t the .J!1ace ~·
~ W!JS ftlled with pride. evc:o vmd1cauon. ~ha~ he saw suggesled
that the trams, so 10 speak, were

the

numina 11111imo.
SoWI:ea 1af ~YODibea CCltl·

appelt'IIICel Clll be deceiviq.
. 'I1ID c:lst IUid RIDIYOD about !be
IIIOUDtain of mail tbat wu carted

&amp;'CMCI 111 impiomplli pt..cquUIIed aad arlpe seuion w~ the

offjllltbours before his viait by big
18-wheelers. The trucks were
. inslructcd 110110 retum until Runyondelllrted.
. .
•"they're circling the Beltway
ri&amp;ht. now," this WQrker staled,
rerorrins 10 the highway that riDp
the Washington area. '-'They're
Wliliria until you leave."
.
The larger point 111ade during
troops. lbey were eocour&amp;aed ID be this brief cxc'-- is that the nnid
uninhibited in dilcussina the fall·
·-•"
-,out from Run 's tadica1 restruc· =:so! =o:,'~=Jl.c~~::l~
turin•• which~began implement· · mail service during lbe Chrisunas
ing smce becomi114 polllniDSrer in season, when the total volume of
July, but IIIOit-'nod mum.
mail il SOO million pieces a dsy.
Run~ aeized tbe opportunity
It's a point other critics have
with his Merryfield audience to been openly warning about for
proselytize for his program: the months. 1)te largest civilian wadepostal aervice evolving inro a lean· fon:e in the country could face a
er, memer and mpre competitive shortage of sltilled WOlken if Runorpnizalion. This year alone, Run- yon continues ramming his rtslrucyon expects ID cut the postal labor turing through at.this pace. This
force by 101110 30,000 workers Ill a incident illUSII'SieS how !Ollie local
savings of $800 million, and $1.4 ·pos~ !lffices are already·'ai their
million annllllly In lbe future.
breaking point
.
.
Finally, one mail clerk, who
Runyon is playin-' both Santa
couldn't SIDmllch any more, rose 10 Cia~ and Scrooge this Christmas.
confront the boss. It iurns out Amid much fanfare, Runyon deliv,,

By Jack Anderson
and

Michiiel Binstein

IT r'?CrcuRlTY...,·

•

"ICC."

· ;: As administration offiCials held their briefUiis and deplorei! among the
)elevlslon inttniew propams, the emphasis was on a relatively brief and
l{lmlted mission ivlth an alllinable aim1 the end always in sight, and an
•~lc level of risk.
·
·
::nlll-s the four-point Bush policy rest for the c()JJimibnent of U.S.
.f01tes in trouble spots abroad. A fifth point, that operations serve vital
American intaests, does not apply 11;1 the humanilarian missioo in Somalia.

Thundlly, Dec.lO
Accu-Weather'

/

But t!uU distinction, lbe Bush people say, should not be regarded as a
pra:edent for U.S. intervention in other areas of strife, deprivation, even
starvation. "There are other parts of lhC world where lhiltss are equally
~ but where the costs of trying 10 change things would be monumen·
·lal, ' actint'Secretary of State LaWrence Eagleburger said on ABC.
- Bush officials and Clinton advisen said alilte that in Somalia a limited
use of U.S. military force can suffice to get food past the anned factions
·that have blocked supply routes ID the starving victims of drought and L_!~~td~
famine.
"• In other trouble zones. )lll!icularly Bosnia and the siege of Sarajevo, a
·mission lilte that wouldn't wort.
.
"Cin:unistances jliffer from country to country." Cheney said on
.'.NBC. "Sometimes you mate a judgment bMed on what is in villi U.S.
·interests, sometimes you mate a judgment bMed on the ability .of the
United States 1D do it ... Sometimes you do it based on cost." That, plus
-~Ianning for the way out befOftl U.S. f01te1ac ordered in, ~ble in a
' 5 tndm lira die -of lite fwZ'i"• tha once lllllde up Yuaoaia~
·
.· In Somalia. there's a pliO but 110 guaraolec; "The real difficUlty.' as
·always in this simatioo, will be getting out.'' said Senate Majority Leader
·Gec:qe ¥ifchdl. D-Maine, who supports the operation. "It's easy ID get
in, IlOilO easy 10 get out"
.
·Technology can be ~een in all bcries and burglaries are an crimes tieS.
National crime computers exist,
Tbc plan 11 r.o secure relief supply routes ~t IOOien and anned aspe~ts of. . our soc1ety. Fax which are likely to be commltled
but
Ohio's lletWOlt will differ from
by
repeat
offenders.
The
computer
•gatp, lben, as Chene.y put it, hand off responsibility 10 a U.N, peareteep.. machmes ~ave become standard
1inlt
analysis
programs
we,
r
e
develother
cOmputer programs because' it
:mg mission ro keep the food lllCIYins·
·
office equ1pment, compact diacs
is designed 10 track the ty1;1e of
.. That is 10 be done uiiWiftly as possible, but Cheney said there d!ould , have virtually replaced vinyl
crime rather than the individual
be ilo .tritnry deadline. Bush's spokcsnum, Marlin Fitzwater, acltnowl- records ud computers can be
criminal.
.
edged thlll the idea it could be done befoce Clinton is inaugwated does 1101 · found in bomea, acbools, libntrles
:ne
computer
link
analysis is
"lllllldl military reality.
.
and offices. Recend~, Ohio Allllr·
be1ng
developed
from
a sysrem
ChC¥Y said it might be possible to yield 10 U.N. forces in some ney General Lee F!Jher Jl!1d ~
to
store
case
information,
currendy
in
place
which
allows
oped
-regioaibefo.e J111. 20, but that the ope~~tion shouldn't be tied 10 dstcs or ~uclte~=re Sherifrs Assocmcompare
information
and
establish
Sheriffs
10
exchan"e
information
'deadlines tbat may 11011il what's happening oo the ground.
tion un.
.a new COillpUter sys·
on jail inmares. aeg'inrung in 1993,
' "By Jan. 20, we'll still be ~i ~ slUff over there, .. said one tem _wbiclt will c;onnectthe ~ links between crimes.
Each
of
the
COIIlpllla'
programs
lbe new comput« sysrem will have
.enior military official who asked nOt 10 be identifted by name.
· · sheriff• offieea m aD ~Ohio's 88
in
the
computer
link
analysiS
prothe ability 10 be COilllCCted to !oat!
', Brau Scowcroft, Bush's national security adviser said it ought 10 be counties. Tho now computer netgrams
ask
for
respell
scs
10
investi·
police
depiDbmmts.
over in weeks llllher that months.
'
work will consist of a maio
gale
questions
and
stores
the
Some
of the AdvMtages of this
· Either way, that means it will continue iniD the Clinron administration, ~~. perao~ computers and
responses
in
a
record
format.
This
·
·
trJl8
of
syllem
are the cost cffec1llld the new president will be responsible for completing, aild ending, the ~~cnmeThi II'ICJriog softwateill ~
allows
law
enfcrcement
officeJS
·ro
uveness
of
using
personal comput~
mission tbe old one began.
Iii'"""'· • system w put Ohio
·. Eag1eburger said Bush is CODfident "thai: we can get in and get out on on '¥ cuulng edge of~­ search their records as well as the en rather than an expansive ceatral
records from other 'urisdic:tions in oomputer, the ease of lellthing lbe
our terms." Besides, he said, Clinton would have faced the issue anyhow, '811, hi&amp;h:~h crime lnvemgatioo.
in wone circumstances had Bush not sc!OO.
Hom1cides, sexual assault, rob- the hopes of estsbllst.mg similari- data, the ability 10 establish access
. He said tbe new administrlllion is soing 10 have ID shape policies 10
deal with recuning challenges lilte that of the famine and strife in s()lll8o

~~~m-"12.

.en:c1 • early CbriJimu gift 10 lbe
counuy lut momb by -ouncing
shorter post office lines and no
increu1 m 8l8mp prices font 1eut
ac:ouplcofyean.
Pallll insiden don:t diJpulle that
needed a doleof8USierity ID
off polaltial billion-dol1ar deficits. The rap on Runyon, .
who many call "Carvin Marvin"
·for his budset-clllling ways, is that
he J)UliiCd where pruning would've
sufliceil. The meat cleaver should
have been a scalpel, and the bed-

I

lia.

'

U.S; Arnlwsador Edward Perkins said at the Uoiled Natioos that the
Security Council vote for the Somali operation was an importint srep
IOWIWd shaping an international strategy for tbe future.
"The post-Cold War world illiltely to hold other'Somalias,'' he said.

IND.

• !cc:ilumbus!aao
Cincinnati

11111D2Aocu---. Inc.

------Weather-----

••

codes or ID SIOre the informaticin on
computer disk. wliich can then be
loclted in a filina c::abinet or a briefcase, and the ·abilitv to mail or
deliver.dislts to other J'urisclic•"uuuL
The compurer lint program is
an important addition to crime
solving tools available 10 sbc:Jiff's
offices IliAd local law enforcement
.offiCials. This technology wi11 help
put .Ohio
__,in tbe
- forefroot .of crimtnal m.-piiODS.
As aways, please feel free 1D
call or write me. Swe SenaUJr Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments .rout lhese
or any other issues. My nmnber Is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Stalehouse, Columbus.Ohio,
4321S.
.

.
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.

Florence Leifheit Windon, 90,
Prpspect Hill, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Dec. 8, 1992, at the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
mine - the site at 1D aplalloD M011day wblc:b .
EXPLOSION SITE • Vlrliala Gov. L Doa·
She was a grocery clerk and
trapped el1bt miners over·oae mile from the
glas Wilder talb to reteue persounel as be tours
homemaker. Born on Oct l, 1902
eatnmce. (AP)
the still-smoulcleriq Southmountlin Cosl Com·
at Pomeroy, she was the daughler
pany's Mine No.3 In Nortb, Va., Tuesday. The
of the tare William and Elizabeth
Leifheit She was a member of the
Goodman, representing the Rq~ub­ argued that the federal courts slratcd the difficulties posed when
Lutheran ChUJdt.
licans, argued that the Ohio cb8pter improperly intervened.
districts must be realigned to
She is survived by stepchildren,
of
the
National
Association
for
the
Ohio
Senate
President
Stanley
reflect poptlatiOD shifts.
Virgil and Kathryn Windon,
Advancement
of
Colored
Peopl\l
Aronoff,
R-€incinnati,
lisrened
10
The map•malters aren't supChester, and Virginia Windon,
had
endorsed
the
GOP-drawn
map,
'the
arguments.
posed
r.o mate decisions based on
South Carolina; a brother-in-law,
and
said
the
Democrats
failed
to
Later
he
said
the
case
demonrace,
but
they also must slww that
Richard E. Vaughan, Pomeroy,
show
discriminatory
inrent.
the fmished product doesn't harm
several grandchildrea, and seven!
His argumeat drew a slteptical Livestock report
minorities.
nieces and nephews.
question from Scalia, who S81d the
"It's a CaiCh-22, not only for
Besides ~~~arents, she was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio but for an 50 states,. ' Aronoff
GOP
position
seemed
to
be
"that
preceded in
by her husband,
Continued from page I
the use of race is perfeclly OK so Direct livestock prices and receipts said.
Waid Windon, brothers, Earl and
"U this airJ?ort is indeed localed long as it is benign, intended for a at selected buying points Wedoessaid he couldn't predict
Ernest Leifheit, and sisten, Ruth in a central location, it has 10 be good
day by the Ohio Department of theGilliam
purpose."
outcome
of the case but was
Barnett, Kath1e~n Epple, Ethel , close 10 Mason and Meigs Coun,
Goodman said·. "we had· tO take Agricultme:
convinced
that
Slates "cannot u5e
Clifford. and LuCille Vaughan. · ties. Meigs, Gallia and Mason
Barrows and giltS: steady 10 .so race without strict
scrutiny. That
Funeral services will be held Counties sit right in the middle of race into account" because fedelal lower; demand moderate 10 lighL
law requires that minority represenwas
very
clear
from
the staiCDlen.S
Fridty at I p.m . at the Ewing this area," Ellison said.
U.S. !.2, 230-260 lbs., country of theJustices.''
tation not be diluted. He also
Funeral Home. The Rev. William
points, 40.00-41.00, a few 41.7S;
Both Pomeroy and Middleport
Goodman predicted vic!Dry.
Middleswarth will officiate and will apply for downiDWD revitalizaplal)ts 41.S0-42.50; a few at 43.00.
"The minority community in
burial will be in Wells Cemetery at .tion funds for next year. When
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
our
~ supported (the new map)
Harrisonville. Friends may call at asked about the effect that downpoints, 39.00-40.50.
,
wholehearredly,
and there is no
the funeral home Thursday from 7 town revitalization has had on
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country injwy" 10 blaclt voters,
Veterans Memorial
he said. ·
109 p.m. .
'
Point Pleasant, Ellison was oauTUESDAY ADMISSiONS • points, 38.00-39.50.
•
A
lower
court
had
sided
wilh me
Receipts Tuesday 7,900. Esti·
tious.
Pamela Wise, Racine; James
.Democrats.
But
thai
panel
itself is
.• "Downtown Point Pleasant Miller, Middlepon· and Dorothy mated receipts Wednesday 7;SOO.
an
issue.
loots really nice," Ellison said, • Bigelow, Middlepori.
Prices from The Ptoducers Uve·
Republicans said they weren' t
"but I don't feel that it has done
TUESDAY DISCHARGES • stock Assdciatioo:
given
a re;ISOnable opportunity 10
Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to
much ·good. The buildings look Maxine' Malthews, George Oiler
draw
up
a substitute map before the
good, but a lot of them are still just and Mae Ketcha.
' 1.50 higher.
federal
court
hired a special master
empty buildings."
Slaug~rer steen: choice 71.00'· BORON, Calif. (AP)- The plans," Slade said.
and
took
control
of what should
HOLZER
MEDICAl:
CENTER
.
Robert Byer, Administrator of
79.2S; select 67.00-73.50.
head of an internatiOnal pomogmThe marshal's office and the Meigs Emergency Services, who · · Dec. 8 discharges - Melissa
have
been
a
stale
responsibility.
·
Slaughter beifen: choice 70.00phy ring vanished from a federal FBI in Los Angeles refused to hosted yesterday's meeting at EMS Sheets, Jennifer Ison, Seth 77.2S; select 6S.OO-71.00.
. The outcome of the case will
prison camp in tbe Mojave Desert comment late T.uesday..
headquarters, briefly outlined the Allensworth, Lyla WauJth, Charles
Cows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all detennine whether Ohio's legisla' and may have fled· the country,
tive districts will Slay the way me
Federal prosecutors in Cleve· operation. He stressed the impor- Zeigler, Mrs. Homer Mullins and COWS S3.50 and down.'
authorities said.
land, who spent 20 years trying ID t8nce of cooperation between all son, Christina Ohlinger, Leonard
GOP
drew them for the rest or the
Bulls: steady 10 1.00 higher; all decade.
.
Reuben Stunnan, 68, was miss· put Sturman in jail, called his agencies involved-in the operation Smithson, Ellen Greenlee, May bulls 63.75 and down.
ing at a 9 p.m. Monday bed check escape after i'ust six months .in of the department. including the Wallter, Helea Himelriclt, Charles
That
map
was
used
in
last
Veal calves: no trend; choice
month's election, and the GOP
at the minimum security Boron prilon extreme y frusaating.
county commissioners, the EMS McGhee, April Holsinger, Jerrod 73 and down.
"It's unbelievable, just unbe- trustees, Veterans Memorial Hospi· Bailey, Jessica Sheets and Angela · Sheep and lambs: steady to •1.00 gained eight seats in
Democrat·
Prison, associate warden Jun Slade
dominated
Ohio
House.
said Tuesday.
lievable," said Assistant U.S. tal and the volunlecrs who staff the Ogden.
higher; choice wools SS.00-64.00;
Stwman was present at a4 p.m. · Attorney Craig S. Morford, a mem- various squads and fire departDec. 8 birth- Mr. and Mrs. choice clips, no report; feeder
·Mondsy head count at the camp, ber 6f the Justice Department's ments in the county, all of which William Woods, . daughter, lambs 65.2S and down: old sheep
'located about 7S miles nonheast of Organized Crime Strilce Force.
are dispaiChed through the central Pomeroy.
26.00 and clown.
"I thought we ftnally had hit the EMS office.
;Los Angeles.
; The FBI, the U.S. M~shal's end of the road and he was in
Chamber Vice President Charles
·Service, the Kern County Sheriff's prison , end of story," Morford Kitchen, who presided over the
Meigs Emergency Services
,Deparuoent and other law lll!force- .said.
meeting, urged members to pay
7
p.m.
10
midnight
Everyone
welLitenry
Club
to
meet
units
answered the following calls
Morford
had
argued
in
court
·
1 ment' agencies were searching for
their dues in a timely fashion, in
The
Middleport
Literary
Club
come.
for
assistance
on Tuesday: 8:20
hearings
that
Sturman
was
a
risk
10
·
:Stunnan, Slade said.
light of the chamber's financial dif- will hold it,s Christmas meeting al
a.m.,
Colmnbia
unit,IO Stare Route
Game canceled
t· He refused ID say whether inves- nee the country because of inlema- ficulties. Executive Director Paula the home of George Hackett Jr. on
689,
chimney
rue
at Bill Trout resi·tigators suspected Sturman had tional business connections. Mor- Thacker urged recruitment of new Dec. 16 at 1:30 p.m. The ~· ~turday night's basketball
dence;
1:32
p.m.,
Syracuse unit 10
between Southern and Miller
belp escaping. No other prisoners ford said Tuesday niHht there was members for next year. . .
"The
Poetry
of
Christmas
will be game
Mount
Olive
Road,
Carolyn Wha"a
very
strong
poss1bility"
Stur·
has
been
canceled,
and
rescheduled
,were .eported missing.
Ki1ehen
spoke
of
the Miaoloan Jl(CSCDted by Mrs. Daniel 'I11omaS.
ley
to
Camden-Clark
Memorial
for January 30.
"We are lryin~ 10 detennine if man had left the United States.
program
through
the
Small
Busi~
Roll
call will be 10 !ling an origiH~tal; ~:06 p.m., ~~roy unit
The prison, which does not have ness Development Center in
anyone heard h1m malting any
1D Suversville Road, Vtrgtnia HenLodge to meet
fences, ts in' the mlddle of an isolat- Athens, which provides loan nal verse for a OJr!stmas canl. .
ed area in Sao Bernardino C01mty, monies 10 businesses interested in
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM dricks to Veterans Memorial HosProgram
to
be preseuted
The Dally Sentinel
will hold a regular me~ti~g on pital: S: 13 p.m., Middleport squad
near the Kern County line, of sand making sman purchases for existCarleton School in Syracuse Thunday
a1 7:30 p.m. Open instal- ID Bradbury Road, Janie Miller 1D
dunes. mesquire bushes and Joshua ing businesses. Business owners will present the play,"Holy Night"
(UIP8Sls.NO)
trees. The nearest tow11, Bpron, interested in patticipating can con- on Monday at 1 p.m. The play will lation will be observ~. Refresh- Veterans; 9:36p.m., Middleport
· PubHohe4 evety ..n.m-.· Monday
unit to Parle Street, Dorothy
with a population of 2,009. is 12 tact him for more informatiOn.
'tlmtotP
Friday, 111 Court SL~ ~-·
be performed by the pre-school ments will be serv¢.
Ohio by u.. Ohio Valley I'UI&gt;lilhinr
Bigelow
1D Veterans.
miles southwest
class, primary class' and senior high
Campany/Mulllmodia lac., P"!""!"&gt;',
Paul
Casci
was
introduced
as
a
Party planned
The prison holds about S60 non- guest by chamber member Frank class, under the direction of Kay
Ollio 46769, Ph. 9fi2.2W. s..o... clpaollp poid II l'omeh~, Ohio•
Annual
Cbrisbnas party of the
violent,.white-collar criminals.
Vaughan.
·' 'Tackett. The public is ·inviled and Willing Worlcen class of the EnterSlade
said
Sturman
worked
in
Memhor: The AHodaled Pnu, md lllo
refreshments wUI be served.
prise United Methodist Church will
the prison ',s garage, maintaining
Ohio No.....,... ""-lallon, Nadmal
WITH A CHOICE!
Mvlllillnl ~ntadTI, Branham
be held on Fridsy at 7:30 p.m. at
prison
vehicles.
No
vehicles
were
·NeWIJ!&amp;PII: Sa... 733 Third ATenue,
the home of Marge Bowen. There
reponed missing.
New York, Nn Tort 10017.
Granae to meet
will be a $3 gift exchange.
Stunnan, who prosecurors said
Am Ele Power....................31 SIB
POSTMASTER: Send add,.. cha- lo
. The Rock Springs Grange will
·ODe
of
the
world's
largest
ran
The Dolly
lll Court 81.,
Ashland Oil. ....................... 25 1/4 meet Thunday at 6:30 p.m. (1101 7
Teen choir performance
pornography rings, was convicled
Ptll•- OHio 46769.
AT&amp;T.................................48 3/4 p.m. as originally announced).
The Teen Choir of the First
in
1990
in
federal
court
in
Cleve8UIIIICIIIPTION llATIC8
Bank One......................... ..48 7/8 There will be a potluck dinner. Baptist
iii Racine will per·
•~ Curler or - l l o • l e
land of evading $3.2 million in
Bob Evans .........................19 7/8 Meat and table service will be fur- form at OIUrch
One w.t. ..........................................suo
the
church
on Sunday 11 7
income
taxes
and
sentenced
ID
10
One M.. th. ........... .............................S8.96
Channing Shop..................17 318 nished. There will be a whire ele- p.m.
years in prison. He remained free
One Year................................ .. ,_, ..... S83.20
City Holding ..................... .18
'
8lNGLB COPY
phant gift exchange. Brin-' nonfor
two
years
while
unsoccessfully
Federal MoJilll................... .l7 3/8
~
PBJCII
items for a Chnstmas
Cantata set
1
appealing the COI)Viction. •
O.ily.... ,......................................- 2!1 Ceato
Ooodyear'BR ..................711/8 perishable
project
The
Racine
First
Baptist
Church
He also was indicted on raclte·
Key Centurion ...................21
Saboeriben not -rinr lo ~ lha ..,.,;.
will
hold
a
Christmas'
cantata
on
leering
and
federal
obscenity
Lands End. .............,........... 28
or IUJ nmil in ....._ clirocl lo Tho
Dance
plaued
December
20
a1
7
p.m.
~barges
ilf
federal
court
in
Las
O.Oy Sentinel "" a lhroo, lis or 12
Limited Inc......:................ 26 S/8
.....111 buto. Cndlt will be P"• carrier
Tuf=.' Plains·VFW Post No.
Multimedia Inc..................28 1/4 90S3
Vegas.
After
jurors
failed
ID
reach
NChweot.
·es Auxiliary will
· Chlldrea's Protram
a decision on those charges last
Rax ~estauranL ................ l/8
No label'ri~ by ...0 porndlled In
The Racine First Baptist Churcb
a
round
and
square
Relianc:e Elcctric................ 19
year, Sturman pleaded guilty in
-•benbomo..m.-u.
from
8•11:30
p.m.
with
music
by
will
hold its children's program on
lTOOobiL
Robbins&amp;Myen ................IS 1/4 Smokey Mountain Drifters. EveryMay under an agreement tbat ~is
December
23 at 7 p.m.
Shoney's Inc......................24 3/4
four-year prison term would be
one
welcome.
--.
I)'
Star Bank ...........................33 1/2
served at the same time as the
IS .W..U. ........................ ................
Chris._ Eve servke
Wmdy Int'1. ...................... .13 1/8
26W............................................ . . 18
Cleveland sentence.
Couatry
music:
oJabt
·
The Reedsville United
QW..U.......................................... .78
Worthington Ind ................22 3/4
. 1
Since hil convictions. Sturman
o.--.c....q.
.
Country
Music
Nisht
at
the
Lot·
Methodist
Church will hold i\¥
St~k reports are the 10:30
IBW..U..........................................
had
repeatedly
aalted
the
two federtridge
Community
Center
will
be
annqal
Christmas
Eve service at 7
a.m. quotes prcMckd by Blunt,
:ae w..u................r.,,............... ..... .ftD
al judges who sentenced him to
SaiUrday.
There
wiD
be
a
potluck
at
n
..o
p.m.
Rev.
Seldon
Johnson, pastor,.
Ellill ~nd LoewJ o1 GaDipolls.
reduce his tenns.
6 p.m. and bands will perform from mvites the public.

Mason ...

Hospital news

the

A THEATER

Stocks

s.........

dance=

--e

wm:

.... ,_,..... ..., _...-.... . .

Florence Windon

EMS units
--Meigs anouncemelits-- answer calls

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I

:.Denzil Jackson

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
. Supreme Court is considering .
whether Ohio discriminated against
suburban blacks when it changed
the boundaries of voting districts.
The high court heard arguments
TueSday from Republicans, who ·
controlled the legislative map-malting process, and Democrats, who
claim the nmnber of blaclts in suburban districts was limited in order
10 hurt Democrats' chances.
"They treat black and white
Democratic legislators equally:
they discriminate against them an•
Is there anythinf, constitutionally
wrong with that? ·' asked Chief Jus·
lice Willi;un Rehnquist.
"I thought t}le Voting Rights
Act was to protect .blacks, not
. Democrats, or Republicans for that
matter," said Justice Antonio
Scalia.
The case.is unusual because
Ohio didn't try 10 break up large
blocks of black voters in order to
guarantee the election of whites.
Rather, the map-ntaken crealed
city districts with large majorities
of black voters and smaller percentages- of blacks in adjacent,
largely white districts.
Armistead W. Gilliam- Jr., a
Dayton attorney representing the
!lemocrats,. ~r11ued that . this
1mprojlerly dimwd!ed blaclt mfluence in those suburban state House
and state Senate districtS.
Columbus auorney N. Victor

·. Porn king escapes
~
.from desert prison camp

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Friday through Sunday:
Fridsy, snow liltely. Lows in the
20s. Highs iit the 30s. Saturday, a
chance of snQ.w or Hurries. Lows in
the 20s. Highs in the 30s. Sunday, a
chance of flurries. Lows in tbe 20s.
Highs in the 30s.

•
•
exam1nes
voting
boundaries ·

.so

TOday l•fi h·J•Stor·y

.,,, ..

Extettcled forecast:

· Denzil"Cap" Jacltson, 79, Sher·
&gt;man (Jackson County), W.Va., died
' Sunday, Dec. 6, 1992, at his home
. foUowilll! a sudden illness.
Born m Sherman, he was a son
' of the late Addison and Minnie
• Hutchinson Jackson. He was a
retired worker for the United States
',Postal Service as a rural Jackson
, 'County cmrier. He was a Christian.
· Mr. Jackson is survived by his
,.wife, Mary LeMasren Jackson; six
; .daughters, Patricia Young and Jean
1Atkins, both of Ravenswood,
W.Va., Sue Bowen, Sharon Teets
. and Karen Creel, all of Sherman;
:m~d Jo Slavin, Murraysville; fo~
sons, Larry
and James,
Ravenswood. Sreve of Millwood,
and Edward of Williamstown; two
sisters, Edith Jividen, Middleport.
and Kathleen Ward, ~enbprg,
W.Va.; one brother, Parker 'Jack· '
son, Parkersburg; and several
. grandchildren and great-grandchil..dren.
: Services are today at 1 p.m. at
··the Straight-Tucker Funenl Home
in Ravenswood with Rev. Myron
: Gregg oll"tciating. Burial will be in
. Ravenswood Cemetery.

a

•' .........

South-Central Obln
Tooight, nin developing. ~­
"'bl&gt;'~pixed with sleet. Low m the·
mid-30s. Chance of precipitation is
·, -90 percent Thunday, a mixture of
· r~n a.nd sleet ch8Dging to snow .
1 .High tn the upper 30s. Chance of
. ,precipilatiQn is near 100 pe«:ent

'_____;;,. ;'Area .dea·th. s .---..-...

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The cold (ront, which dmnped Colorado. A winter storm watc~
heavy sllj)w Tuesday in Oreaon. wu posted for wa1«0 Wyoming.·
accumulation is likely by night- Washington and Idsho, was expectAllcall fOIB' lraffte deaths -rues:.
time.
.
ed ID move inro WyomiDJ •.Mc_m· dsy were bJaned on heavy snow iO
The record-high tcmpenture for l8DI and Colorado IDday. 1Jrio8io8 Washington. In Oregon, the SIOml
this d8te at the Columbus weather heavy snow and stroag winds.
spawned a small tornado thai
Forecastus ...
-AU.Ied
• • lbe
station was 66 degrees in 19S2
~
ram.m
liPIOOICd a tree - Colton, aboUt
while the reC:on:J low was 8 below southern Plains would move east 311 milea 1011tbeaS1 of Portland, a
zero in 1917. Sunset tonight will be today into the Gulf oC Mexico .forecllller said.
:
II S:06 p.m. and sunrise Tlllplay region and the lower Mississippi
Anolher storm from a low ~
at 7:43a.m.
Valley. Snow was expected 10 sure system whipped up powerf~
AroUIId tbe aatiott
northern Minnesota, while Caaadi· wjpds and dumped snow on nortl(:
A cold front pushing east across an high pressure was forecast r.o em California. Arizona and Nev~t­
the Pacifte Northwest dumped rain produce frigid tem~ in the da. Twelve inches of snow blanlte'.
in W~itgton state and northern Northeast .
ed PitletCil, Ariz.
. .
•
California early today. Rain also
A high wind waiCh was posled
The
for the nation Tuesday
soaked the southern Plains.
for today for pans of northwest and wu 82 . Naples and West Paltlt
southeast Wyoming and nortbent

occur across -central ancl essrem

Ohio ThiDJ(Iay ataDJOII and some

High court
W.VA.

Berry's World ·

•

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hould

:J::::=s~. not~~=bl~

:r::f'lex

::::'J:: . r:r

The National Weather Service
said nin will develop across·Ohio
tonight and become miled with
sleet aitd freezing rain. Icy roads
are possible anywhere in the stare
but are most liltely in the west.
As the colder air continues to
in.vade the state Thursday, the
mixed precipitation will tum to
snow across wesrern ohio. Some
accwnulation of snow is liltely. ·
The .chan_&amp;,~ to snow should

IMansfield laa- I·

'au D. Hair

..

I I

the·=

da~I~~J!n'i~~~~ the coun!JY, end up operatiiag,' • gas that can a1Jo be quicldy adjust- "Conservatloo has 10 be an imJIOI:·
uoc11qo a major rasae&amp;llDalL IC It says Kevtn J. Coyle, president of ed ID meet demand.
tsnt put of lbe solution bere," sa)'il
worka, a atart can be made to · ~~=~~::!~n organization
Wlllel coaaervation il also sure John Echeverria of the National
reclreaioa
111
unin.....,
legacy
of
to
be ceatralto IDIDY relicensing Audubon Society. "It producea a
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Metl'l, vke praideat
havoc
10
fish
and
riparian
Wild!ife
c!ccisions.
A flalship ce involves win-win-win situstion: water for
·aiJt tor Tbe Associated Preas, bas reported oa Washla1toa aad
llld 10 recrealionaiiCCell that .hu
the Kingsley 15am .on the Platle hydropower, for irrigatorS and for
:Utloaal politics tor more thaD 30 yean.
resulted from clccadea devoted 10
Jl 'J
River in Nebraska. It's probably Wildlile."
•
·
"
lurrmil'g dtc flow of our rivers 10
COfle says there are three sets ' the moet
and most controThe relicenslng process, evcit
cJ-.Ie ele!:tric power.
of mvummental iuues involved in versial of al th" pending cases. for the ftnt 231 dsms, illiltely ID
' The peat -lllljll in hydroelectric the relicensing decisions. Least And it may be one of the first ta1te several ~ears. Difficult caso''
devclopment meaat jobs that bcp1i conteatlous will be provision for FERC decides;
bx-casc deci11ons are unavoidable.
to tum around tbe Great Depres- more recreadonal access to dam
FatiiC!ll uae lbe Platl.e for irriga· ' If we do it right,' : Coyle says,
siOD of a hill CCt1lury 1180• Woody 1:t~enoi11, llld for fisbiq and boat- lion. The clan provides hydtopow· "we can do something very posi·
.. .
Guthrie wrote Mllada 10 lbe raiJinc ina downsltam of the ctam. them- er. Tbc flow regimes from the dam live for the eavironment It's 1 rQl
of tbe Grand Coulee. Names like scl
M
· have nearly destroyed the don- opportunity."
,
•
.·'
BoimcvUie
and
·
Hoover
Dam
are
doab~!:
wi~r:e
~~~&amp;e.:!u'~
ltre8DI habitat for severallpecies
Jay
D.
Hair
ltM
•
Pli.D.
Ia
....
..
aymboiJ'IIf~~~pined nadonal confi- screened turbines and creatin1 of migrating birds, including the s : t : ,,.... lll't .... ltM beell
deoce. But there was a lot we divenioo flows 10 young lliOCb of severely endangered whooping p1
t ollbe Natioul Wildlife
didn't know tbest tha we are find. salmon llld otber species can sue- crane. A compromiJe ID serve an Federatloa slace I'll aad
ing outlbout now. Lib streans of coufully mate the downstream three interesu will require more ID)11dlcated writer for Newspat
salmon flliliq lbemselvea 10 deatb mlpation, and for fish ladders 11 efficient al{rlc~l~~l water use . ..•per Eaterprlae ,tsw!e!Lw,
j
agaiJWtwallaihatiJPUIIbeir ...wu- the dam to o~en pathways for
.ina
rouces. Or chum alleys inunedl- upstream migration. The crutiCh
J. I
a;~downstream from turbine will come,·lte says, over poposals .
_
'
b
wblrriDJ attride sreelbead to cbatlp tbo water flo1li repnes
·
B The AMOelaled Prell
:
mi&amp;radOD )lllbs r.o 1be aea.
lhlll..,O. thellltbioel.
~oday Is Wednesday, 9,1be 344111 dsy of 1992. There are 22 dsysl
A chaiCe Is • bald 10 )Jill riabt . One of hydropower's great left m dtc year.
,
.
J
some t6 lbeae )Jilt •lltlbl ·AAt.r · lldvantaaes IJ that 11 Clll be tUmod .
Toda 'a Higb1iaht in History:
50 yeara of opi:ndon. tbo lkenaes · ·on and off at will .. Just open or ,
One-hundred years qo, on Dec. 9, 1892, "Widowers' Houses," J
of 231 bydroelec:tric daml- up cloae the~ CODtrolling !Be flow ·George Bernard Shaw's fintplay, opened at the Royalty 'Ibea!a- in Lon- ,
for reoowaiiD 1993. 1bla Ia tbe . of water. Th11 advantaae JQkel don.
·
:
. fiiJl bllcb of some 1,400 privalely · hydr~wer a prime auppllcr of
On tbla dale:
•
owaed U.S. bydro-dama whose 'electricity daring peat clemud ' In 1608, Bqllsh poc:Umn Milton wu born in London
:
fulln apertlliOD Is fiDaDy ~ 10 periods. And aupplying peat
In 1854, Allnld, Lmd Tcmlraon's l'amous poem, "nie Charge of lbe :
a review by tbe Pedeia1 BDeriY demud pC)Wer IJ tbe most prof· · Li&amp;bt Brludo,'' wu puiJiilbed in Bna1lnd.
· '
Reaulalory Commilllon. The · IIIIIIDB oocltbedlcf~l.!!:05!..,__._
In 1940', Britlah troops opened ibeir first major o(l'c:osive in NMII •
,
1
precedODta aet ID graatina .now
ut
... u_,., ..~ AfrlcaaurinaWocldW•n.
·
liceDm wiD inn._ bow tlie fed. that reaulllre often diJaetrous for
In 1941. China declared wa- on 1•~ and Itsly
1
era! aovommnt run a· ill -400 dowaatrc:am flab atoclta and
In 194i SO yeara ·ago, the Alam
'
· ~ "Oayane," rea- ,
hYifro.Drolec:la diM lie IIOIIUbjecl wildlifo like binla and diiCb tbat turing lbe 11qii1J "Saber Dance,'' wu lint performed by the KJrov Bal" :
t0 ntc·revlew. The procoas Is def"YY 1111 rlvaino blbltat. SpaWII- lee.
·
,
bo!Mc ed by a 19861aW requlrlag ing uou ue scour~ In aome
In 1958, Robelt H.W. Welch Jr.llld 11 otber men met in Itidianapous :
•'
eovironmeatal and recreational cuea, wedanda are altemarely 10 form lbo llllli-CommuniltJobn Bin:h Society.
:
I
•'·
COIII:el1ll be incloded in mlkwudq
flooded and *led out in othrn.
In 1962, 30 years ago, "laWJaJCel'l Antbla," David Lean'slilm SW· 1
deci:::..a., of"- illitlal231 IOI~Ie
~ ~ r.2Zo~ Englld! ofllc:er T.B. Lawrence, bad Its
pe~ '
MEANWHILE, BACK IN
1'0IIeWII IWkllionl "Ia the llttcb- IIMIIIIID m"!'l'iD IIICR evea ~
In 1975, President Genld R. Ford siped a $3.2 billion .- Jllltai-kat-'
MOSCOW...
pin for boW lbe whole hydiiopoMC flowl by lwtll:hiDI ID .allentative authorization that officials of New Yodi: City IDd 11110 said would peveat
system, more tban 2,000 • • In ~ .I!Q.~-~-'-~e .natural .a city clef'ault
,,
" L-------------------~T---~
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Slate.

Righting the wrongs of hydro-da·ms

*eel-·

Weaan Ohio

(Toledo 33"

Computer helps in tracking. crtmes.
Sen.}an M. Long ·

By The Asloc:lated Preas
was under a winter storm wa~&amp;:h for Thunday, and
.forecasters said the nasty conditions could spread across the entire

MCH.

BesideS. slowing down Chris.tmas mail delivery, Runyon's cuts
are having devastating effects on
morale among the post office's
700,000 eDIJ!loyees. With the cuts
coming hastily and, some say. arbi-·
uarily, postal workers have hljd
few chances 10 rise in opposition.
When workers have· had the
chance, as with Runyon's Virginia
visit, fear and self-preservation
have prevailed over profeSL
. .
There are even fegal questions
surfacing around Runyon's
reforms. A Washington law fum
representing a loose coalition of
postal WOlters affected by the cuts
recently wrote ID the Postal Service
Board of Governors ID question the
legality of the moves.
.
"It is inconceivable that a major
reorganization could be WKiertalteli
wiihout an organized plan and
wilhout an opportunitr for comment and discussion,' the letter
states. " ... In our judgment, the
actions talcen by Mr. Runyon do
not meet Statutory requirements
and will not withstand judicial
review.''
But RIDiyon's eyes are squarely
focused on the bottom line. At a
t.-0\•11::,.. self-congraulatory press briefing,
Runyon announced that his cut·
baclts had put the posts! deficit iniD
the blaclt - meaning "two more
Chrisbnases at cwrent rates." •
Why isn't Runyon being hailed
1111 one of tbe few Washington officials who has put a bloated bureaucracy on ·a diet? The answer seems
ID lie in the pace of refonns, cuts
that have ru~ lives that see~
secure only SIX months ago.
Jack Aaderson aad Michael
Binstein are wrlten tor United
Feature Syadicate, IDe.

TV..!
I IW"

·Nasty weathe~ headed toward Ohio

OHIO Weather

cuts happening all -too quickly .

111e Dally S.nune1 Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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w.-... ..... . .....:..., ......... . . . . ... .

E.SA

E.«&gt;

�.,

w.ctn• lday, December e, 1112

-

-S ports

The Daily Sentine~

,.

wedneedly, otcem~P,_._!9J2
'

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lgl -••

·

Rio Grande Redmen take on winless Wilmington at hOme , .
~the ~rest .of confldelice Gtande Nov. 21 in the tiUe tilt of their opponenta, who hOld an aver- · to lbe acoriDg of Matt Powell, the Wesleyan 96-73. Tbe one loa was . ais!Ju) It the poiDL t"IIJiaini'l81be
":.m JAioa~,!7 illtbethinl ~t the Bevo Francis Classic. Of the age of 79.-4. For the last several 6--4 sophomore guard from ~ar- an 88-84 fall to West Virginia lo':'N.ro polidoaa
(is.3
c -P ...1p,
University of eight games ~ed to date, the seasons, Rio Grande has hovered nesville who hit a lOlBl olS6 pomll ·stare.
poilltl, 4.7 ~) ltlhe JIO!i«

-sean

. I*.....,

Rio ~rande Redme'! (7-1) are Redmen have · on the !Old for
to defend their own Door six.
.
~~ when the 'Y!Imington
But if bei~ the invader of Olber
c:='"'" (~ pay f VISlt to [.yne teams' terri !Dry is a te't for Rio
· -· •
· . .
Grande's roster, the batUC. have
The game, set for 7:30 p .m. paid Off to the point where the Red:r'handay,lepments a hom~ - men are where lbey want to be in
mg of so~ for John Lawhorn. s per-pme scoriDJ average (99.6),
club, wh1ch last played at R10 wid\ a 20-point VICtory~ over

.,ollll!l the 100 marker per 6uting and was named tbe invitational's
Powell, who curmtU_y leads the
range.
most valuable player.
_ team in per-$8.111e sconng (22.9)
. . HelpinJ to boost thataverage
A balanced effort also had a add is tied widuenior post playa'
were ita b1g wins in the Hawaiian · major role not only at Callwba but Tim Olristian fur free throw shoot·
Punch Classic at Catawba (N.C.) in Rio Grande's other wins,
ing (90.9 percent), is expected to
Colle~. a 107-72 decision ove.r ing St. Mar(s (Tex.· as) 92-85; Sian apinst the QuakerS Ill shoot·
HighPoint&lt;N.C.)inthe~ind Georgetown (Ky.) 80-78; McMas- ing guard, backed by fro~hman
a 130-79 VICtory over District 28 ter (Ontario) 112-88: Sb~w.n~e Jack Morgan (S-~. S.l {'DIDIS, 4

incl..,_

power Concord (W. Va;) in the
Championsbip roun4. thanb in part

.

Stale 96-72: and West Vlfginia
·

-

ScoreiJ(lcll"'&lt;l
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Wilmington, now in its second
year under Bill Newland, emerged
from a 6.18 flllisb last year (includ·ing a 104-71loa 10 Rio Grande) to ,
face a rocky rofid that has sluJckled
them with losses 10 Northern KenlUCky 79-65: Central State 101-76:
Hanover (Ind.) 81-73; •Wiaenberg
9S-62; Ohio Dominican 9S-70; ani!
Wright Slate 112-S3.
The Quakenllost six lettermen
last year -just one a s1ar1« - but
welcomed back seven and can
count among its freshman ranks
two athletes whose high school
team c:Ompeted in this year's stale
tournament Unioto's Matt Combs
and Jeff Miller. Similarly, Eric
s'ears, Wilmington's 6-S !lilnior forward, is a lfiii[UIIIe ol Cincinnati's
North College Hill, also a sll!te ·
competia.
Combs (6-4, 12.6 points, 4
rehonndl) is anticiplled to 11art as
the shoocins guanl, with Rod Donley (6-I,ICJII(Iom«e, 7.3 points, 23

EASI'ERN CONFERENCE
-Y'*·---..11

assisl8 Jill' game) at the poiDL
Leading the offense are senior
CD-C~P~aln Jeff Brown (6-S, 14.9
points 4.118Sis18, 71CIJounck) and
Walr« StephenJ (6-4, IOphomore,
9.4 jloinll. 2.9 rebounds), with co_captain Troy Donaldson (6-8,
senior, 16.4 points, 9 rebounds) It

Ohio college
basketball scores
Men

-c-c..,;.

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HUBBA.RD'S GREENHOUSE
ls10w~far ... /

Grlst11111 Sea111.

9 to 5 Moa.·Sat.
I toSSndav
featii'IIJ P-."'-s II 7
'colon, Pollsettla HCJ!IIIIg
Baskets, ~Trees; F!. .
Baskets, UYi _. C.t Trees.
'for ..-.ed loved o1es: grave
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SM._ St. 99, Wilbaf- 30
Wull. A:r.tf. 79,o.ioaa Sl,
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~-e· HEAR NG AID CENTER
FRIDAY, DEC. 11, 1992-t:OO•Noon
11 Dr. A. J•cboll lilies' Office
II 0 . .dl11k Stnet, J!Hitru ·

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Ohio high school
boys basketball scores

IEIJONE lURING AIDCIIIHR

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their homes. They may be living on fixed or
'·' low incomes. or be out of work.

12119

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a.......... 7:Cip.m.

ilL Laodlll illll JOioo, 10:40 p.m.

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your next Columbia Gas bill.

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•

11 BEN WALKER
LOUJSVll.LE, Ky. (AP) - A
day after owners again pleaded
poverty, it wu lbe 1111e or the century at lbe win!« meelinp.
In an unbelievable stream of
free-agent signlngs and swJps,
teams spent a one-day record of
$121.6S milljon during a dizzying
·array of deals Tuesday involving
'the li~es of Barry Bonds, David
COne, Ktn Griffey Jr:, Dave Stew- ·
art, Dave Siicb, Kelly Gruber, Ivan
Calderon, Dan Plesac and more
than a dozan others.
There might be 11101C IOday, too.
The Los Angeles Dodgers were ·
zeroing in on ·free agent Wade
Boggs, the Yankees were after
G~J Maddux, Todd Worrell was
deciding between the Dodgers,
Atlanll and BOSIDn, and, in a much
lesser move, the Phillies were
go_in~ to announce the signing of
Milt Thompson.
Also· on deck: funher discussions on p possible three-division
split in both leagues for the future,
which would involve playoffs with
.wild-card teams.
· But while every()ne could plainly see lbe craziness Tuesc~:BY. olber
!m~t business was liking part
mpnvate.
.
: For the first time, baseball
,acknowledged that it was negotiateD$ B!' agr~ment With .embauJed
·:Cmcmnau Reds owner Marge
lS
I 'chou. . .
Schott imexpectedly showed up
'at the meetings, not that many people got close to her. She was
;afforded the same type of secmity
the Rev. Jesse Jackson got •
he was Ill the hole! this week,
,
g to baseball executives about
:Schou's alleged racial and ethnic
. • lurs and the whole problem of
racism in the game.
Schott entered and exited a
meeting of National League owners
,through a kitchen and did not comment publicly on her situation. But
l'iusburgh Pirates director Douglas
;Danforth, part of a four-member
.committee assigned to investigate
Schott. said NL president Bill
· White had talked to her several
'times in recent weeks about a solution.
Baseball can fine ,or suspend
Schou, and Danforth said White
had discussed a deal with her to
avoid a confronlalion.
"Tllat's what we would' hope,
that theie •WIIUld· be an ·agreement
that she· would be comfonable ,
;with," Danforth said. "Bill feels ·
there's been modest progress
, toward an agreement, but we're
.certainly not there yet."
Schott showed up a few hOurs
•after Jackson left. Jackson, who
arrived Monday, met with some
baseball officials during ~ast,
,but did not get to meet with the full
group of owners,'ils he hoped. '
Milwaukee owner Bud Selig,
chairman of baseball's executive
council, assured all that owners
,could call a special meeting in January and invite JackSon to auend.
· Selig· said there ·was no
timelable for,deciding what to do
' with ScholL ·
On anOiher matter, he said base- ·
,ball was close to forming a search
··commiuce for 11 new commissioner, a position Selig said he was not ·
a candidate to. fill. _
• Business on the field , meanwhile, was brisk.
: The World Series champion
' Toronto Blue Jays, a day after signing free agents Joe Caner and Paul
: ~litor, were at it~.
· The Blue Jays agned .Stewart,
, formerly Oakland ace, to a two: year contract. Stewart said he had
, SOlie" only one offer from the Ath-·

,Jeucs.

d th entile amount
IIEiitsHARE. and mail to:
1 1 undi!Stan e YcJiiDII M11Y in
1
wiiiiJO 10 The sal · and thB1
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I Columbia villi matcll my Q •
- Oh'10

•P'
au,I:IOp.m.
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1

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Ph

A

UlliiA· UAI · WOIIIIS CliiiiiiiSATIOI FUND
AIIIID,·AND All OTID WLIIKI PlGtiJDIII
WAI.I~NS WRCOIM

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1311111
112101
91 17
109103

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

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rh '"'' ·WI IN
6y 1 1/crutcl ,..,., AI~ s,.dtllt ·
.
Anyone who has !rouble healing or ooderstanding conversation Is invited to have a

- - -... to-.30,...

TJlluolpp--·-·w I' ............
lliloy -·-·

I
I
I
I
I
I

.I
13121utel'll An•ue (...te 7), G•IDPODI
614- 446·17~
'
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9, 1992-9:00 1.111.·4:00 p.111.
Cal Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate Appointment

ThiJl'lda)'S pmel
a.... a Now YOlk, 7:30p.m. •
LA. &lt;llfl- • Now-,.,.,,30 p.m.

Bonds, Ojeda
among those
to play in 1993
for new teams

·-·

cld

~~

The Dilly SenUnet

Ohio

II

'

..
•

-.•'
•

'

=

vases.

....---------------COUPON

t

N•Oar

sl!lt•lft!I111C11 Tincber (6-3, ,JIDlior,
S.2 pomta, 2.2 n:hooinds) u backUP: Eric Winn~r (6-8, senior, !I
po~ 7:3 Ieboonds) ia Mille post.
Wilnlingtoll enters Lyne CeniCr
with a 66.5-point average to its
OJIPOIICI!II'93.8.
.
•
AdmiSSion to the~ IS $3 for·
adults, $1 for non-Rio Grande stu-.
dents and free to Rio Grande studeniB, faculty and aaff with m.
DRUMBEATS: Rio Grande's
~ 30 points against Concord was
JUSt two shy of Catawba's singlcgame house reconf ... In his ICCOIId
yeilr with lbe Redmen, Stephens il'
leading in threo-point shoocins percentaae lt65.4 (17 -26), while Donaldso!J.last year's overall flCld goal
shooting dlampioo, holds ·his grip
on the honor with S9.8 (49-82) ...
The Redmen are ~ on the.!Oid
for their. next seven contests, but
commence a 10-game hoine Sland ·
onJan. 12•
·

Pom

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: Toronto also traded Gruber,
: who had been in a two-year slump,
• to California for secolid' baseman
Luis Sojo, who was lr8ded away by r
' the Blue Jays two years ago. And
' Toronto signed Danny Cox.
The Royals signed two free
agents: Cone and shonstop Greg
Gagne.
·
Cone began his career with
Kansas City, was kent to lhe New
York Mets in a deal for catcher Ed
Hearn in 1987, and wound up late
last season with the World Series
champion Toronto Blue Jays.
Through it all, he's emerged as one
of the top,pitchers in the inajors.
, Cone got a three-yCIUI deal for
$l8 milfi9n, a total that included a
$9 million signing bonus.
• 'Kansas City was my first
choice. I never thought in my
wildest dmunt.l' d get a chance to
play ball back tiOme," he said.
l'he chaos surrou~~.:f. Bonds'
contract was fmally
.
Bonds and the San Francisco
Giants signed a $43.75 million, six-.
year deal that is the richest in baseball history. The announcement
came 45 bows after the conlract hit
a snag and stood up .Bonds at a
press Confermce, an embanassing
episode If there ever was one.
ThO dcii became complete when
an Bp~C~DC~~t wu mado that owner
Bob Lurie, who is trying to sell die
team for $100 million, will not be '
IeSpOilllble If lbe sale doea not get
ita expecled approval. In fact, If the
sale is not approved, Lurie will get
to decide whether Bonds remains
(See MEETINGS • Pap 6) .

Pillsbury Plus

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Whole Farm Raised

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December

Ohio '

1112

Meigs beats Trimbl~ ~6-54 for first victory
~irh
c... e··
con.,.. ~le ~ ~II

By DAVE HARRIS .
•SmHw
Meip OUIIcoRid • ble 17·8
in lbinl~ llld pul1ecl away 10
a
S4 will Trimble in TVC
etbiiU actbl Tuesday evening
Ill.arry R. ~;ilon Oymuasium.
The win ~ rhe Marauders'
reconlll1-1 011 rhe IICIIOII, while
the TomciiJfoD 10 1-1. ·
M''~
CJgs Jam
out on lOp 4-1
and increued
lead to 7-1 when
Eric Wagner drilled alhree pointer
from .deep in lhe right aner Wilh
5:2llcft m lhe (Usa period. Wagner
was fouled on rhe play but missed
the foul shot, but Jack Stanley
tipped in !he rebound to give Meigs
a 9-1 advantage.
·
But Trimble came storming
beck and took a 13-9lead with IS
seconds left on a bucket in the
paint by Tom Hardy. Reuben lOttie
fueled the comelleek with two long
three pointerS from rhe "'""' · .
Me
..6'" Wlll8
igs cut lhe lead to one (13-12)
when Wagner driUed another three
witb just two seconds !tft in rhe period.
Borh teams traded baskets in.rhe
second 'od with Meigs · on
top2t-lf'onabucketby!?ood'ljj)t
Witb 4:00 minules left m rhe period. But two quick buckets by Justin
Day, lhe final one coming at rhe.

e

~ LAYUP TIME cc.es rcW Melp Pard Jolut 11nt1ey (10)~ who
goes to the lloop ror.,_, ot hila PGials ill Twesclly •l&amp;llt's TVC
game agulut vlslti111 Trimble, w~da ' tbe Manaden- 66·54
MoviDg ill oil the plily are Marauden Trevor H....U. (ceuter'
llelow Bentley) aud-Jay Cre•eau (33) as weD u Toaeat To.;
!Jardy.

By NESHA STARCEviC ··
MUNICH. Germany (AP) - If
John McEnroe needs a bit of motivation in w'!at could be his last big
tennis tournament, rhen he should
find it apinst Nicklas Kulti today.
Kulti i.s No.79 in rhe world, rhe
Iowesl·rauked among rhe 16 playersattheGrandSiamCup. . .
· The 21-year-old Swede JOIRed
rhe field only last week, as a late
replacement for injured lVIII Lendl
but his 1992 results include a four:
set victory over McEnroe in the
lint round of rhe French Open.
McEnroe is 33 and has said rhat
he won't play any more Grand
Slam tournaments. If he decides to
scale down his career to a few
exhibitions, rhe MuniCh ioumament
coold be his lasL ·
If McEnroe win his first-round
match, he will meet Goran Ivanisevic in rhe quarterfinals, who filed

'

: iceuy added 14 points for Collch
-.on Lor,n's girls, Joy O'Brien
..... , ofltbe'
','ICd laa
:Turner added seven for Meigs,
irfissy Sisson four, Chrissy Taylor
iuld Vanessa Compston dm:e points
each, and Amber Balckwell and
Lee Henderson two each.
Mei.11:s hit 29 of 80 from the

floor foc 37c..&gt; and ninC of 15 from
rhe line .for 60'J.. Meigs pulled ill
34 rebounds wirh Kelly grabbing
13.
Eric Hayes led Vinton wirh 12
points, Tracy Fain added 11.
Meigs won lhe reseve game 298, Erica Robie led Meigs with leV·
en, Bobbie Butcher and Melissa
Clifford added six each.
Meigs willlnlvelto NelsonvilloYork on Tbiursday.
Quarter totals
Meigs ................. 13 21 18 12 = 64
Vinton County .....8 10 4 13 = 3S
Melp (64) - Vema Compston
9-0-0=18, Lee Henderson 1-0-0=2,
Lori Kelly 5-0-4-14, Kattina Turner 3-0-1.,7, Missy Sisson 1-0-2=4,
Joy O'Brien S-0-1•11, Chrissy
,.1
Taylor 1-0-1=3, Amber BalckweU
1·0-0=2, Vanessa Comspton 0-10.3, Totals -16-1·9=64
By STEPHEN WILSON
Vlutou C011aty (35) - Brica ·
LAUSANNE.
Swit:cland..(AP)
Ha,.a 5-0-2.-14, Milly Mwllin•
Atlanta'•
prapoulro
inelade
0-0-2=2, Tiey Fain 5-0-1=11, Anggolf
as
a
medal
sport
ll
the
1996
ie Puckeu 2-0-laS, Rebecca Ca·
SummCI'
Games
and
to
hold
rhe
pers 1-0-0=2, Amy Hammonds 1event
at
Augusta
National
is
. 0-0=2, Sandy Cattill 0-0-1•1. Tof~cing
an
increasinJIY
uncertain
tals- 14-0-7=38
fate with rhe International Olympic
Committee.
.
T)le debate over whether golf
belongs in lhe Olyn1pics and conli'OVC!'BY over Al181!sta's member-·
•·
' · .
patd $1.7 m•lhon -.a _one-year ship pmctioes have emerged as sillbase sal~ o! $1.5 million and a · nifiCl!JII issues that could stand m
$200,000 SlgJUIIg bonus.

second year.

Ojeda, 35, staned 29 games f&lt;W
Los Angeles last year, going 6-9
wirh a 3.63 ERA. He allowed 169
hits, 67 earned runs and 81 walks
and recorded 94 strikeouts over
· ·
1661-3 innings.
Ojeda, who has also played for
· the New York Mets and rhe Boston
Red Sox, has a career record of
113-97, wirh a 3.60 ERA.
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
~ today that·Ojeda would be
~

w
_ i
-D

!

4

Hardt

.
the ~ond set and reeled off rhe ·
Henn Leconte began his come- next e•_ghtgames to make s~ of
rhat rhe Supreme surface was too back after a four-week layoff collecung at least $300,000 g1ven
fast to produce gripping tennis.
because of 1 Slnlined Achilles' ten- to each qilarterfmalist.
.
. McEnroe arrived in Munich at don by oustin8 fifth-seeded Wayne
"I played a perfect gsme m rhe
the helid of a Siron~ American coR· ferreira 3~. 6-3, 6-0. The French- thW set." said Leconte, who only
tin~tliesh
of recapturing !he . man broke Ferreira for a 4-3 lead in resumed prac~cing one wedt ago.
DaviS Cup. BCSides McEnroe, two
orher memben of the U.S, Davis
Cu~ team are !beret Wimbledon
·
·
.
champion A~ A~i and Pete
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Bas- why DeliS would want to get away,
Sanipras,lhe 1990 WIJUlel' of rhe $6 ketball has been a way out for find a haven where he can concenmillion Grand Slam Cup.
Damien Delts. The resident of lhe 1n1te on basketball ud stucfies, orh·
Michael Chang, who was a tough Whitaker section of Pitts- ers can'L
·
finalist here last yesr, is rhe fourth blll'!lh has committed to play bas·
The disttict athletic board lhere
American in lhe field.
ketball at Ohio University next has ruled that Delts..transferred
Agassi f11ced . Chang today, year.
.
.
only for athletic reasons, and has
while Sampras played Alexander
"Basketball came 10 my life and denied his transfer, even thouj!h
Volkov of Russia.
took me away from the streets.'' Bill Neal, a friend of rhe fl!lllllY
In another mat~h today, top- Delts said. ''My family was always who lives in lhe Penn Hills disttict,
seeded Stefan Edberg battled strong. Ba•ketball was always !here has signed to be Delts' ·legal
Miclulel Stich.
for me. I never had a need 10 get guardian. ·
·
The richest tournament in rhe out rhere and do drugs and stuff."
Penn Hills coach Paul Seneca
world opened Tuesday with an .
But Delts, a 6-foot-8 guard-for- said rhe slllte board is to rule on rhe
.
' ward, doeSn't want to just survive.. matter. Delts is attending Penn

17 aces in ovcn:ooiing Guy Forget

upset. · ·•

GOT IT LICKED - L.A. Cllppen forward Keu Normn (3)
passes l'r1m the lane u~r pl'fiiUI't l'rCIDl n liilklentlflecl Cleveland
plllyer durlo1 Tuecday Dlabt'a NBA pme iD Rlcllfleld, Ohio, wbicb
tbe Clippera ""' 115-106. Norma• acored l l points In the CODtest.

1-S, 6-4 Tuesday, then complained

on:

, (AP)

Atlant~ beats Chicago·
123-114; Cavs lose .·

By The Associated Press
Michael Jordan smelled some'thing, and it wasn't rhe scent of
'perfection coming from Dominique
'Wilkins' free rhrow shooting.
- "Three terrible referees," Jor'dan said Tuesday night after the
Atlanta Hawks bit 39 Qf 40 from
'the foul line, including an NBArecord 23 straight by Willcins in a
·123-114 victory: The Hawks are 2·o against Cllicago rhis year after
dropping rhe previous eight to rhe
·:-Bulls. "You couldn't determine
.who rhe lead offiCial waS because
' rhey all -stunk."
Chicago was 12 for 19 from the
free throw line, a far cry from
Atlan•'s big numbers, which made
the differeiict bdciluse the Bulls
-had eight more field goals.
. ''The. amazing ·thing w~ts we
•, weren't even trying to foul until rhe
' last twp minutes," Bulls coach Phil
Jackson said. "They match up real
.. well a~ainst us. They're very
~888fCSS1Ve when rhey come out and
' play us."
" •Especially Wilkins.
"Until I came into the locker
. room, ·I dido 't really know rhat 1
-shot rhat many free rhrows, but I'll
· take it," Wilkins said.
'
-· He'll also take rhc 42 points. He
had 44 poinrs in his last pme.
, "For all the doubters who didn't
. rhink I'd Ill; back, I'm back," said
· Wilkins, who missed much of last
sesson when he ruptured his ri'ht
Achilles' tendon. "Oh, yes, l ·m
1
'·back"
•
'.' !~diana's Detlef Schrempf also
:surpassed rhe previous record of 19
·for 19, making 20 in a row before
' mi&amp;'ling in lhe Pacers' 125-IIS vic·!OfY over Golden Slllte.
':' ln other games, it was Phoenix
~lOS, New Jer~ey 100; Miami 126,
;Dallas 112; Portland 126, Milwau;kee 97; Washington 114, Sacrainento 106; Boston 117, Orlando
a 02; New York 100, Seattle 88; rhe
Los Angeles Clippers 11 S, Cleve:Janel 106; Houston 102, Minnesota
94; and San Antonio 121, Utah

Hcn:~':~~;sleftWestMif- ::thi:Ce~~lli':.adecisionon

lhe way of lhe project, according to
10C officials.
IOC vlc:e pre1ident Kevan
Gosper, the most outspoken oppo-.
nent of rhe pr~. said Tuesday
rhe 10-member executive board is
evenly split on rhe issue. He said
there had been a slight shift in
opinion away from the proposal
SIRCC it W!JS first discuss_ed by lhe
board a month ago in Acapulco,
Mexico. .
· "As far as I'm concemtd, it's
not a done deal,' ' Gosper said.
Golf wu not on rhe agenda at
this week's board meetings, but
Atlanta officials are scheduled ·to
make a formal application to rhe
IOC program commission in Lausanne next Tuesday. The proposal
would then go to the executive
board in March and. finally. to rhe
fuiiiOC session in June.

flin High School after three yesrs,
and has transferred to suburban
Penn Hills.
He spumed rhe offen of such
schools u Piuaburgb ' and
Duquesne to slgii a national letter ,
of intent wirh OU:
"I chose OU because of th~
great academics," Delts said. "I
want 10 go there, step in and contribute and try togototheNCAAs.
. When I visited, I really liked iL It
was a really riice pfaCe.
"I wanted to get a new experience, get away from home. I could
1have gone to Pill or Duquesne. I
just wanted to get ouL"
Just last week, Dclts said, some
of his friends were picked up by
lhe lice.
·
·~ of my old buddies in rhe
' hood got arrested," he said.
"Some dude was trying to take
over !heir territory. and lhey were
shootina" at him." .
Though some may unders~nd

"We're hoping rhey'll ovc:rtum
that," Seneca said. "It's been a
distraction, but we're hoping he'll
be ~laying,
be's able IOIP~ into our
learn, we tbiDk bis
m.y t*.e
us rhat one step furthd."
Penn Hills was 28-4 last year,
and fourth in lhe state.
' At West Miftlin, Delts averaged
24 points, 14, reboilnds and 7 blocked shots.
"We played against him in lhe
summer,'' Seneca said. "I've
known of him f&lt;ir a long time. He's
always been a fine talent, but he's
matured into quite a specimen."
OU coach Larry Hunter said
DeIts is similar 10 Linden's Lewis
Geter, who was named player of
lhe year in rhe Mid-American Confercnce last season.
"He's very much lilce Lewis
Geter_ in that he can ptay· •.'nside. or
out,t1de, and he's very arhletic,"
Hunter said.
.
.,_ .

:It

'

~inter

meetings .•.

,; (Continued frpm P!lie·S&gt;

FR~E

•

~.1 .. '"'

lible Play~. broke into tears when
~ talked about wearing lite Giants'
f...ed No. 24 je~y. The uniform
number w~ retired by San Franciscio to honor Willie Mays, but
Bonds is Mays' godson, and rhe
:·say-Hey Kid" pvc Bonds perlftlsslon to wesr it . .
· By comparison, Griffey's four)'ear, $24 million deal wirh Seattle
looked small. But at 23, he also set
iJ record for rhe biggest contract
ever for ~ player not eligible for
fa1ary arbitration.
·
~ In the second trade of rhe day ·
and the fourth of the meetings ,
Boston got Calderon from Montreal for Mike Gardiner and anorher
young pitcher. Calderon hit 19
)J)mers m 1991, but missed most of
IPt ~ after undergoing surgery
On his left shoulder.
; - Steve Howe, recently rein~ and given an eighrh chance
to come beck from drug and alcohol problema. ·re-sianed wirh rhe
Yankees. He got a two-year, $4.2
million conlnlCt.
·
· - Stieb, bothered again. by
shoulder troUble, left Toronto and
signed a ono-year contract wilh rhe ·
Cliicu While Sox.
·
~leuc, who 1081 his stopper
role two yean ago wirh Milwaukee, signed a two-year contract
wirh the C1ic110 Cubs.
-iouh and Dave Magadan
both s . with the Florida Mlrlins.
adan1was let go by the
Mets u Hough was .set free by
rhe While SoL
' '
- Bob Ojeda le'ft LoS Angeles ·
and joined C':velaod.
'

"

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Pri~.Oulw•rhahippointer.

'file Cli~~· winners of 10 of

,: sc:=p}l:0'9~~Jf.h gh--~~ =~ against
;36 points. The Olympian ~m &lt;;JerRockets 10%, Timbe~lves 94
i!ftany, who won the NBA s so:th
At Houston Hakecm Olaju·
:man award fo~ ~e past two sea- won's 34 poin~ and 13 rebounds
• ~~ his Slllrh game or rhe sparked rhe Rockets. Otis Thorpe
:. Tun' Hardaway led rhe Wam'ors scored 21 points, Robert Horry 14
and Vernon MaxweU 13 for Houswirh 33 PQiniS and 13 assists, while
'Chris Mullin and Lattell Sprewell tonChuck Person led Minnesota
·~ 24suponsinf05BP,:tse. 100
wirh 22 points, folloWed by Chris~
tian Laenner wirh 19 and Micheal
'• ' New Jersey's longest winning Willlams wirh'18.·
since 1983-84 ended at six
Spurs 121, Jazz 103
•games as rhe Suns won lheir founh
Sean Elliott scored a seasonstraight and sixrh in seven games. high 32 poinrs and
Spt».'S set a
.p.artes BBJkley had 34 points and franchise record by hilling 10
:,2 rebounds and rhe Suns shot 53 three-pointers. The hosts were 10
1JerCent from lhe fteld.
· of 19 from three-point range, .
·• The Nets were down 103-100 breaking rhe club reconl of nine set
when Kenny Anderson drove and in 1970 ·· t Indiana.
missed a difficult layup. Barkely.
Davi:robinson added 2S points
jyho hit 13 of 21 shots, missed a and 18 rebounds for the Spurs,
Grive ll rhe orher end with 20 sec- while Dale Ellis scored 21.
· OJll)s to go, giving rhc Nets one last
Utah, which has the NBA's best
chance, But Negele Knight stripped road record (6-2) despite lhe loss,
the ball from Drazen Petrovic and was led by John Stockton's 19
~arldey slammed home a breakpoints.
iwaydunk.
. Heat 126, Mavericks 112.
· Visiting Miami brQke a fivePme slide, sinking Dallas to 1-13 A 100-meter race measures out
wirh its lOth loss in a row. That to 109yardsandonefOOL ·
matched rhe worst stan in franchise
friSIIX}'.
The mararhoo is 26 miles, 385
: Miami's Gran~ scored 21 yards or42,19S meten.
20
po: =-~':bc:ds. Y1ldded
l,SOO meters, the so-called
po
Trail Bluen 126, Bucks '7
."mettic mile," is 1,640 yards and
At Portland,' Clyde Drexler one fOOL

me

FREE OIFT WRAPPING- OIFT CERTiFICATES
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS HOURS

C

scored 25 points and Oiff Robin,
son added 24 and a season-high six
blocked shots. Drexler, who'missed
rhe last two games 'wirh a sere right
knee, started and grabbed a seasonhigh 11 rebounds.
.
Milwaukee, , losers of four
straight, was led by Eric Murdock's
21 points and ll .assists and Blue
Edwards' 17 points.
Bulletall4, Kings 106
The Bullets eajoyed rhe trip to
Sacramento as rookie Tom
Gugliotta led seven players in double figures with 20 points. Washington .ended a five-game losing
streak against the Kings.
.
Mitch Richmond scored a sesson-high 35 points and added 10
assistS 1or rhe Kings.
Celtk:s 117, Magic 101
At Orlando, ·Reggie Lewis
scored 29 points and Kevil\ Gamble came off rhe bench 10 hit 10 of
12 shots as rhe Celtics took !heir
lith victory in 12 meetings
between rhe teams. Boston shot 57
pcn:enl from the field, offsetting
ShaquiUe O'Neal's 26 points and
IS rebounds.
Robert Parish had 10 rebounds
with his 17 points.
KDkks 100, SuperSonics 88
Patrick Ewing's season-high 33
points and 16 rebQunds kept rhe
Knicks undefeated at bome. The
Knicks, 9-0 at Madison Square
Garden, are rhe only team unbeaten
at home.
·
Charles Smirh scored 20 points
and Jolm Starks 18 for lhe Knicks.
Shawn Kemp led the Sonics wilh'
19 )lOints and 12 rebounds.
Clippers 115, CavaUers 106
The visiting Clippers spread the
wealrh. Danny Manning scored 28
points, Ken Norman had 22 and
Mark Jackson had 16 points, 10
rebounds and 10 assistS. Ron Harp,
er hit the bif. shots in rhe fourrh
quarter, contnbutingll points.
Brad Daugherty led Cleveland
wirh 30 points. The Cavs lost rheir
second llrli~ht game wilhout Mark

., treak

N A T U R A ~L I Z E R.

PRESCRIPTION .
SHOP

,I

In NB.A''action

DeJts Signs
• . ·•
• · •
·
with OhiO University

Proposal for golf as Olympic
,.1. •
meual spo.rl may ule
Wl"th
. ~''~'OC

Indians acquire free agent Ojeda
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians have ~~ liec
agent left-bander Bob Ojeda to a
one-year contract and hope he
becmiles !heir No. 2 starter behind
Charles Nagy.
_
The Ojeda deal announced
Tuesday includes an option for a

lead to nine points a
hit two free throw•
no
lare' ln rhe
but Meiga woold time lefl on rhe clock in o'VIIIIimo
DOt allow tho Trimble 10 •et any to •1- Trimble a· 47-4c win·. The
•
" •w
c~.
•
Marauders
forced the" overtime
HllTilaa led rhe ......... wirh when Travis Grate rebounded a
21 poia111 16 of those coming in misled TriiDble shot wirh nlno IICCthe second llalf. Harriaon wu onds left to set rhe .._fer Adlun
joined in .double flprcs b)' Eric Kraw1CZJ11's game~ lly-up 11
\Vquer with 13, Jay Cremeans the buzzer. Scott Peterson Jed
added rhe 10. Me""' was 21 of S6 Mc1•11 Wl' th IS po1'nts Jered Hill
from rhe floor for..,...38c..&gt;, including added II, Krawsczyn 'nine, Grate
lhree of 16 from lhree point land. six and Benny Ewing four. Adam
Meip cashed in 21 d 30 from lhe Curry led lhe wlnnen wfth 11.
line for 70c..&gt;.
'
Meigs will host Miller ·Friday
The Marauders pulled in 46 re- · _ruto'ght, while. Trimble
play_. host
boWids wirh Cremeans 2flbbinJ a
Eastern
game ~h 14 IIIII Sllilley pWDg Q~r 1ota11
· .
'12 ~-'*his leCOild llrli""t conleiL u.:n
12 14 17 23 66
M
tllrDed th ..........
· h ··-• .................
•
ti:!~ had eight~.:Sv1: ;~~ · ~':os"(~)·.- 13 1 ~.!.;. ~
ley and Bentley with two each. 0-o-6, Eric Wagner 1-3·2-13, )AV
~:,t1nhad 13 MSists wirh Bentley Cremeans S-0-0=10, Trevor Harric
· ., up six. Meigs was wbis- ·5011 4-0-13 21 Jolm Ben·'· 1-0
tled for i6 mlklllal fr-·•·
.
= '
""y
•
r.......,.
4•6, Aaron Drummer 2:0.0.4,
IUnly led lhe Tomcats wirh 22 Todd Di1J1-0-o-2. BobbyJohnson
points with 18 coming in lhe sec- l -0-"-2, Kyle Simpson 0-0-2=2.
ond half Kittle added 3
.,..
three caine after rhe ~ ~J.:~ TOTALS -18-3-21='6
hit 20 of 6S from rhe floor for 31 '-'
TRIMBJ,.It (S4) -Nathan And I fl 0 f 21 f
gle 2-0..().4, Rusty Ricbltds 0-0an on Y ve
rom three 1=1, Chad Hook 2..()..()oo4, R4i,llben
C\J:'ll;.!r;':~lt ~fus~ Kittle 1-3-2=13,1ustin DfY 3-0Day puDed .in nine of Trimble's 41 2=8, Jerry -Lackey 0-0·1"' _.Tom
7-2-2-22, Adam lrwm 0-0re~. fCICtYC contest, JJ: Az- ,1•1· OTALS-lS-5-9=54

Grand Slam Cup may be McEnroe's final match

'Meigs girls notch 64-35 w,in
.~ver TVC foe Vinton County

::
By DAVE HAIUUS
-• SentiDeI Correspcllldtut
":: Vema Compston led a trio of
Meigs Marauden in double figures
llyirh 18 poillls as Meigs rolled over
)'inton County 64-3.5 in girls TVC
bftsketh!llaction Mj'!:[. evening.
: The win was lhe
y Maraudllrs' dlinl in as liWIY lries.
:; Meigs jumped out on top 13-8
·~ter one period behind Lori KelJy's six points. KeUy and Comp:ilon SCCIIed Six points apiece in rhe
JeCODd period as Meigs oponed up
'II 34-18 lead11t rhe half.
'
: The Lady Marauders put the
jame away in the third period
Jjutscoring VIDton 18-4 to build a
::S2-22 lead heading into the final
.,riod. Compston poured in eight
tin~ in rhe dlinl period to led rhe

·2:S4 111111t pvc rhe Tomcala a 22·
21 adYIIItagC. That would be tho
last time lhai 1iimblo would bold a
lead u Trevor Harrison2J.
· ave·
1
Me 11 the lead for good ( -22)
with two 1'ree throws ll lhe 2:44
mark. Waper's drillocl his third
lhree pointer of rhe firat half wirh.
1:40 left ud it pve Meigs a 26-22
lead at the half.
Tnm
' ble cut rho Meigs lead 10
31-29 with S:231efl in lhe dlinl period left on a bucket 11Y Tom
Hardy. But ~eigs ICOI'CCIIhe next
. 12 points 10 open up a 43-29 .lead
wirh 37 seconds left in lhe period
on a baslcet by Harrison. Jay Cre·
means sparked the Marauden in
that s~~eu:h wirh six of lhe m110011
and gold's points. Hardy ended the
Tomcat scoring drought wirh a free
throw wirh six seconds lefi in lhe
period and cut lhe Meigs lead to
43-30 hcad.iDJ into ihe fmal eight
minutes. Trimble was ice cold in ,
lhe dlinl
.
period bitting only two of
nmereen from the floor.
Meigs opened up the bif&amp;est .
lead of the night with 4:0 left .
when EN Wagner's bucket gave
rhem a Sl-36 lead. But wirh Tom .
. Hardy scoring13 of his team-leadin&amp; 22 points in rhe period, tl!e
Tomcats were able-to stay close but
not clOse enougb. Trimble cut rhe

~

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•

Redwomen advance on threes to,defeat Lady ]acke~ 9.5-60
Tiley may baw oaly 111ot 34.6

from die dne rcMN J1111C,
but whll - done in illlt c~ep~n.
meat by tbc Univenily of Rio
GJUdc RedWOBIIII in lheir 95-60
thmbina of West Virpnia S'. Tuesday at Lyae Center spelled
im~ 10 tbeirc:c.:h.
We took a step in tbe right
mrection at DID' tbrce-poilu shoot·
ing, but I still thiilt we baWl players who are apable of bcint better
at it night after oiglll; Dllw Smalley said.
.
"We got out of a mental slump
oo our three shooting. We'd been
stagnant and didn't have a very
good percentage in that area." be
pc:reall

ldded. wa.. Oeala Narril1iid
. ood
•
d

s..,....
-...----

•

'11veryoae .... actba ... ...
__ ,.
.
•
--q_.&amp;Jma..... heaaiL
"WJMMI ..., Ia ..., pit; ""
....... __. ..._ ... ·~· ~
-u--.rJ!'*
SJIOo!!Da 47.3 pea • (35-74)
0\lellll, ... ledwww 16 of
27 at' the line for !59.~t.
WVS --'1.5)laQIIt
53, .2-6
from the oataldo for 3 perceeu
from die floor, .and 11111t 1-4 of 21

infiicted 36 OD their oppo-ts; IS atro;l!.efense provided by
WVS, bowcva', Clllllblishod a s1ipt . S~~eey 1
IIIII Mic:belle Crouse
lead on the boards, neuing 42 ·but abo credited the bench for i~

to Midway (Ky.) on Saladay. Tile ~·:J.Zt D "5 7 3 • i J..; ·
Yellow Jacbta arc at Blaofiol4 1-1:6; G
I
• :J-J-7. ·
S!Us 'l'bunday.
a It • .
Box ICCie:
P
. c . . a. 5

,. ._

... ,
- -...
s..,..4
~ ~ !'-.l.l.t!

._ 7 -·
.....,.., - - • ,.,
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.. ...
••• •.••$~
• _ • -=
~ ,~
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~S 7P •J.3.S.....t...a. .

't ...;

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'"ll4il.

Will fl

rebounds - eight from Robin heavy c:anlribulions.
Hampton - to Rio Onndc's 40,
,

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STORE HOURS
Mo~tday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

~ad=cO:!rl~:; ~.':..'1.~:Urc.:CR':: :Srlt~~~o~:fof: _=.thlow•"~I,Msfor63.6,-· . =-~tkkr: - 11
Yellow Jackets, who weae huntia&amp; women bcld itlem1ohu 10 IS and ~ in double digiti - liS well
Now 11-2. die Redwwa l!2Wil . 6-l ·Q: . . . , IF s ~~

for their first win in lilt lltlrU.
But tho effort from tho Red·
women bench kept WVS from
advancing .._ Rio Gnnde broti
out for a quiclt lead in die flnt ftw

The Dally SenUnel Page 8

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on
moady tllroup the work of Mia our dccisioa-maltlnJ." malley
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Srartln.la-d Nonia llil four of
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connected ' on four ~~,!3. each ·
moatly in lhc second ...... for lbe
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DEC. 2, 199_
2

University of Dayton to enter Great ·Midwest Conference in 199J.-94 yetu
By JAMES HANNAH
going to be ltnockin&amp; heada in a
DAYTON, Ohio!AP) - Uni- conference that is one of the
vmity of Dayton baskelball Coach $tl~ in die countty," O'Brien
Jim O'Brien says he is eager to said. 'I wdmnlc that opptli~.
have his team ~pete in lbe Oreal . I welcome that challenge. 1'1111 1
Midwest Conference DCXIIeason. . the lc~ I '!l"t 10 CoiJ)pCte 111."
"Year in and year out we're
Umvcrsaty offiCials IIIJIIIDDCed

Tuelclay lhai tbe team will jump to
tho Great Midweal ncxtiiCISCJn,
- ~ tbe Midwatem CollegialeCmfe enccafta' a five-year associ·

teams will assume membership In
the conference July 1. Dayton's
football, softball, water polo and
wrestling teams won't compete in
Ilion.
·
.
lbe Omal Midwest.
'1110 Flyer ba•ltetball squad .and . "We feel .very strongly that our
moat of the ecboal's otbcl vanity future Jicl with die OJeat Midwest,

White, baseball owners want deal with Schott ·
B7JOEKAY
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)Baseball is . 1D CUI a deal wilb
Cincinnati~s owner Marge
Schott that Would provide a dipJO.
mllic end to an ugly episode.
National Lcapc president Bill
White wants to negotiate an
anang0111e111 with Schott that would
avoid confrontation l!nd seule the
furor over bcr lreatmcnt of minori·
.ties, one owner said in an interview
Tuesday.
White has made "modest
progress" in seven! JeCCDt meet·
mp with Schoa, PittsburKh Pintes
direc:IDI' Douglas Danforih Slid. It

wu the first conrmnation that a
sctdemenl is~ dirnmd
Schott r.:es a posslhle line IIIII
suspension for her usc of racial
slurs and other derogatory com·
menta. Although Danforth
· wouldn't say wllat type of pcllllties
arc being discuued. he said the
· owners WIDIIO be fair wi1b Schott.
· who would lie devastated to have to

By DAVE GOLDBERG
ing between die 20s."
AP FOotball Writer
Don't count stats In Houston
This is the um
.· e .of year that
and Atlanta. .Run-and·lllooll doil't

• e::r.cn collect~ faiiiO) COIIIniCt •.

C0UJU.

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TE- AbOJ!tli tbe DOiltlon.
· ~ odlltaw--.rilllal~
Jay Novacek, Dallal, ~bca
·
Tbis Is die dille of year dW the bat ·doesn't block. The annnJ
guys mentioned on Sunday night Jacltie Hmi1, Green Bay. is limi·
11111 Monday night football gee lbe- · tar. Keith .I Kitson, Miami, is
· incentives. And two kinds of guys • farnoa
,_ .
•· ·
- get ignored:
.
T - Offensive line poaitions
.
I -Guys who play on reams that . arc llcreditary, .butAntholiy Munoz
' aren't good enough to get oo prime hal been hun this year llld Lomas
• time.
Brown hal bad 10 be a line by him·
2-0uys wbo play on teams so self in Delroit.
good that the stars get all the acdit
Mike Keno, Atlanta, J01 over·
and they get ignored.
loctcd last year ~ 11011111 playing
• Here is one version of.tbis ononetcs.Pla7JIIgontwo,"bc.wai
: year's team, sung and unsung.
vcryu'n-:!...~Erilt W'"'-=
,,
~...
·' ~·.
: WR - A bard position to be a I«&lt;OId·year guy overlri!!d 0!' a
• unsung at bccauac if you have the . good team; Jobn Alt. Kantas C1ty,
: numbcrl, you get the vOles.
who.gctl ignored ovcry year, and
• Three obvious guys for two Hanis. Barti:Jn, San Fl'IIJIC!ICO. who
slots - Sterling Sharpe, Green plays m 1be shadow of Rice, MDII·
: Ba_Y: Jrny Rice, San Prancisto, and 18111, Y011111. Ct. al.
• M1chael" Irvin, Dallas. But two
Jumbo Ellioll, Giants, was
: unsuns guys: Eric Martin, New hailed on !I good team, U11JU118 on a
Orleans who holds onto every· bad one and is one of the few
dling .;d Cris Carter Miruicaota, Giants who aeems 10 be trying.
who 'does the same. 'carter was
Malee it Bartm and AlL
once cui by Buddy Ryaa in
G - Everybody'• guys arc
Philadelphia because Ryan thought Randall McDaniel, Mfnnesota;
• liC oaly caught TD passes, "noth· Steve Wisniewski,. Raiders; Guy
for Pro Bowl, All·Pro lind

•

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D. a l l a s

NFL's labor dispute not over,
.but end near,·
. Tagliabue says

result if he makes a rutini.
The owners hav~·scbedulcd a
NEW YORK (AP) - The
NFL's long labor impasse isn't mcetins for Dec. 16 in Dallas 10
quite over, although the end looks discuss the labor situation. One
owner suggcsred Tueatlay lbat lbe
' nearer dian it has for a while.
Commissioner Paul Tagliabuc meeting was scheduled because
hat said twice in lbe last two days Tagliabue thought he might have
• that negotiators for owners and an qreement by then. but Dallas
players 11e gcuing closer to lbe col· owner Jerry Jones said he didn't
; tective bargaining agreement the thinlc an agreement would be
• league hu lacked for more than IIIIIIOUIICcd.
Jim Quinn, the lawyer for the
• five yean.
" And while negotiators for the players in the suit, also aaid he
players denied an agreement was wasn't 11118 an aglllCIIIOIIt could be
, 1mminent, both sides acknowl- ri:ached that quickly while confirm.
edged talks arc going on. They ina the ta11ts were CODlinuing.
indicated lballbere might r111811y be
"I don't hint there's a prelimiprojp'CII on a conttact that woUld nary structure in place, •• 11id
• brinl unresuicred free agency and Quinn, who with union prcliclent
• a salary cap 10 lbe NFL for lbe first Ocnc Uphshaw has been the main
negotiator for d!c players. "Tbcrc
: time. •
• "We're at a critical point right IJe a whole bolt or iUuea lbe Jill'•
• now." Tagliabuc said Monday lies are far apart on. To say that
we're cloee is ., oventatDmellt.
L night in HousMlll.
. "We'w diacuaaed 1011 of dlffer·
· "We have a preliminary asn:c·
_ mcnt that is a frimcworlt lor what cot lssucl. but we haven't agreed
• we wanL It involvca free agency, on anything."
Aikcd If the 10·12 days for a
· salary cap and arcater percentage
deal was ruliltic:, Quinn said: "I
of re'IIOIIUCI 10 tbc playen.''
. That't notbinJ new -that's don'tlhialt it'tlaribly
·been tile fdmcworlt for an agrecMany of the iuuca bema dlt·
meni almost ~ Tagliabue ~ . cUlled have been on tile tlbJe for
over U COIDIDltaioner tine yean more than t.wo years llld lbe two
'
tidOI - ' Y n.:bed M lpCIIDellt
180Wb.t 1s new It lhal there is pn:a- . during the trial In MiDftelllOilt Jut
sure on bOth sldDt from U.S. Dia- llllllllllr. .
ttict Court Jlllp David Doty, who
Amon&amp; lbem • free ·~PCY ­
presided at tile lrial at which the the ..,. . would like it liftllr foar
NFL 't teu'a:lliid Plan B he qency yean, lbe ownen five or lb. Alto
andcr dlacUIIIon are a aaJary ~
plan- duOIOD ouL
Doty It c:onaiderill&amp; modons and tbe re11ewal of the draft
- from bOth lidel • • ~SUit of lbat mluccd • 12 rcamdl 10 betwee.i
; 1riaJ ... hla, acccrdina to IOWc:el, six IIIII nine IOIIIIds. ·
I •
hinted tbat neither may like the
87 DAVE GOLDBERG

,.,.,iltic ..

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cxc:itinafllllnwillllbem."~
p~ Raymoncl Pituaid •

a

Me~ San Francisco. No argu·

menL

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\·POUND BOX

O:..,n ••
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- · confcreliCIO.
The adclitioa of DaytOD wiD
give the ~real Midwest acvea
metllbcn. Other members • die
Unlvcni&amp;J of Cinch•!, Mattsllllt
..._._,
Sta110, MalqDettc, St. Louis. 'Dtlt.1 0.. I f
and AJI!betna.Bmiqlwm.
.
ae
With Dayton'• .......6 fmlll :.
the MCC, die ous4aWlll wm~~~we
ss. .•. a
seven IIICDibcn - XaVier, Bccdllr,
••
Dctroit-Mca~..WO.
Lqsoola. •• a 7z
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Byrd Of the CtWgcrs, buried on a
bad team for a decade and 110111 in
the pm!lp You also baWl to Jove
Roll :W . .
of the Sw) n, who

ChBY LONGHORN

•ch·
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5

UK's Pitino praises EKU five
,after Wildcats' 82-73 victory
87 DICK BRINSTER

DOMINO· 10 X or

$249

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LB.

s189 .

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• ,,
APSpiraaWrlter
He stood lhllre ,...ltiaa in vol- .WF
umes of pride.
"Of all tbc years l'w ccwcbcd

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MAID FROZEN

ORANGE
JUICE
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CAM99(

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(I.Q 'Illill: D.

C - Everybody's guy (by
..niorit~).i• Bruce Matthaws.
in po and c:oJlcat, thil is ... IIIOil
llooiiiOP Tile bolt py may be·Der· mabi •llllaltes AND b11 playa. proud I've been of a baaltetball
nioatli Dawaoa, l'ituburgb, or You doa 't have to love Deion ream. 6 be Mid. ''ThOle kldiiUlly pae.We. . . .
h!"'J tn IO!'B"._:I'bcy dr wed the
M.tt
,DaJ!w
S111111n, but be's l(lOd.
.
n ' -.1i-IIL4'
QB -Steve Young, San FrMS - Steve: Atwater, Denver; VIctory tonigbt.
The
spcaltcr
was
coach Rick V5,~:0.:: 11t lla.l._"
c:isc:o, by acclamatioll. Altboa&amp;h Louia OJi.ver, Miami. Ull-and-com· ,
,~JOhn BIWay'a heroics mlJht have ing: ~ Joncs, Butrafo.
, Pitino of Kentucltf (J.O). But be Ncadaa .._441;11a.IE ..._
gotten him some votes if he'd
Plarekicbr is Pete SfP.YBDOvich wasn't l)capiag )JI'IISC on his third-· --~~----lla.M
'Aftww . . . .
·
stayed bcallby.
· of Miami because ho Icicles out· ranlted Wlfdca1s:
1'be
object
of
bis
pride
was
'No.231'
Rt- Go 10 die wishbone. How doors. Philadelphia 'a Jeff Fcagles
Eastern Kentuclty, whicb bad just
do yon leave off one IDIOO, BillY is die punter for the same reason scared
mighty UK before a late.
Potier, Piasburgll; I!IIIJDitt Smith. even !bough he almost got cut
"DDe "--I
f fill Z
surge
doused
the drelm.
a
•...
, llllliillf.
l)ollu, or Ricty Wltlal. San Fmn· ~cause be shanltcd a couple at
It took a pair of tJuee.pohwn paiiiiLac
.._ 77 r
cieco? Leave off Wllftll.
midsmon.
..
•
s:::i
.
.
Coaches of .the Year: Bill by Jeff BC'ISIOW in the final 1::08 ilbc wi .. 1 81 '
DE - How do you leave off Cowher, Pillsblqb: Dennis Green, and a carccr·bigb 38 poinll _. 19 JAtWIIID • sa l1z • ..._
l..ti
(5:1) • ?' I X
~
Regie White IIIII Oydc Simmons . Minnesota; ·Mike Holmgren, Green. rebounds from Jamal Mashburn 10
doiL
of the ~flea? By~utdng on ~ Bay: Bobby Ross, San Diego.
O.C (Z-1)
~
Charles
y of die
and showing you don't always taltc a . The stunned crow~ at Rupp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .e Q . ...
Chris Dolcman of tbe V ings. step back when you cbange. Plus Arena went home a Wlllller after " t%lil6tlll.r-= ·a:
Kcntac:lty 82, Easlan Kenadcy CadO.. . . . . . ,
w
Dolcman finally Ia ~g every George Seifert, San Francisco, all:
73.
. go.
weet and Haley is die lingle 11111011 even thouah DIOSt peq~le lhinlt Bill
(beyond Daw Wlllntlcdt) dw. tile Walsh stili CC*bcs the 49crs.
Dal1aa dcfenlc is what ilia.
. .
Cowher.
.
~
U!JIIIDI and very good: Wayne ·
MVP: Young. Foster or Smith?
Martin, New Odea.
Foster, because who else has car·
DT - ~ K""""'y, Seattle. ried 111 offense by himsclf'l Young
who playa with inaedible IJIIN!Iity 11111 Smith 1Je In efficient systt:ms
BJ'I'IIe Awoc:laloll"reit
.. M 1
..... 'Yi
'Wiilal•
(and iltifi) on a 2-llteam. ·
with other weapons.
w.illlcd
Wrilla
State
10
f
d
a
5
ia
a
IIIII
1llilll :l
BiD Ed
NT - Buffalo's Jeff Wrigbt is
a blowout win over )ilqrcbead - " k f t itt · · . . .
die beat pure D01C t.lt1e around.
State. -...:..g 45 ......., for ICbool K p - S... a lJ.D - . Offensive Player: Young, 81id -u~the Raiden OliioU:i• - ~ =
a.w
OLB- Tbcrc 116 15 great guys
here. So the famoua DciTiclt becauseofthutats.
cruiscdtoal02-74vicu.y.
Thomas gets lost in the numbcn
Defensive Player: Haley, NOT
Edwards was 9-forz9 from the .o.ta~....
cld · th ____ .. half.,.,....,.,_
.. •
.,_
game, llld do docs Jllllior Scau of because of his personality, but
becaiiiC
bc'i
ttansfonned
the
DaJ.
fi
m
e""""""
•--T
·
5
S-" Diego, the best young las dcfcnsc
night IS he bettered Mark Vcat'l
""""-I .._!\
W .
ljnetw:br in lbe NFL. Bryan Cox
·
Wright
State
record
of
43
poiou
•
of Miami, and uuung Tony BcJi.
. Offensl'(e Rookie: Watters against Marytrcst in 1984. The • • • •a~'JI..,II.r
neu, who left his heart in Green would nm away with this bu be's __ _.. • ..... r...;M J Nuller Cal- two flee I w 1llilll 11
left. 111e •Ia •
IJl - ia
Bay along with a lot of bruised .not eligible becansc he was on IR """"" .or u"'
all
of
last
year.
Wilh
Vaughn
Duntcr,
where
lbe
Raiders
~
pla)'ed
16
c
.
.
.
.
I
,
.,.0.
quartctbal:ka.
.
Make it Seth Joyner, Philadel- bar bencbcd by the Sai!lta for for three~ had been pollltl
•
phia. and Ri&lt;:ltcy JaclriOD of New blocltina deficiencies, Carl Piclt- · :as=~ of Alabama Stale 11y
0r1eant, who descrvcllbe rocopi· ens, Cincinnati, by ,default along .
John Bnnncn led Morehead •l dttD•
lion that's ~sed bim by for a with tackle Troy Auzenne of the State (0-4) widl25 points.
o..l 8silll R
•
rJecac!c.
Bean.
.
.
illelad: . ... Defensive Rookie: A lot more
ll..B - Nobody here plays full·
time except maybe AI Smith of quali&amp;J. Dale Carter, Kansas City,
Houston and Milte'Jobnson of bcc:ausc die Colts' Quentin Coryatt
Cleveland, ·both unsung for . and Steve Emtman got burt, and
Tile
the t«iring Mike slDiiO- Tampa's San1101 Dotaon'.talled oft'.
IIrY ~~~ the injured John Carter Is just abcad of an eighth·
ocre;d.uhham;; l&gt;Jua Dicit round pick. Pittsburgh safety Dar·
Budl:cll of the Bears, Jaclr Lllllbert rcn Pony, aCJ,d another first·
of the Steclen and Sam Huff and · I'IICIIIdcr, ll,.....k., Robert Joncs of
Hairy Canon of lbe Gianu (What? Dallas Plus Miami'$ Troy Vincent ·
. .
They retired?)
and Marco Coleman, wlro should
CB - You have to love Gill shine llllltiicday.

S•t••••

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give up her team.
lions tbnJghout lbe day as be shut- moat serious aUct~ationt t;ainst
• 'Nobody in their riabt mind tied betaeln meeting rt1001a.
Scboa. Jonca, who IS on YICidon in
wants to injure anolber person
The bacltlasb· from Schon's En.-.., an.......o that Schou Jllldc
IIIIIICCCSIIrily,'' be.said. '"lbal just racial remllb baw ~ ~ ~ 1'Cftlllll[a during an
·
doesn't make good SCDJe. We want lbe winter meet~., in her llbacncc. owilflrs' conference call In 19"87. I a-~alle IIIII
The
Oreal
idwcst,
which
to be fair and tborouib. Obviqusl • The ~ev. Jesse 'Jac:ltiOD spoke to Schott has denied lllllking lbe slllleif wo can reach a COII!IODsus, dw.rs five ownc:n Monday and ·called fOI' ment. and DO other owner ·has con- began competition in 1991 aa die
nation's-nc1IICII Division I Cdllfcr·
the best of all worlds.
: a boycott of major league pmcs firmecJ bearing the remark.
cncc.
placed tbrec !JaslretbeU ll:iMIUI
' 'Of COinC,Ibe Redla~e her life next ..,..;,, unless ~ improve
''We·haven't found anything
in
lbe
NCM toumamcnt Iaiit ,-:
·
vet," Danforth said Tuesday.
at this point in time. Tbat'a the tbcir iDiiiiX'i biriJII. ·
and
one
in lbe Nationallnvi'ariww(
dilection we're 1IIOiking in."
Pb!Jadcl~ chief CMaJtive Bill t 'There arc ~me vquc rec:ollcc:·
Tournament. Cincinnati reached
Denforth is pen of a four-person Oilea ilid owncn didn't discuss lions, but dw.'n 1onJ time ego."
the NCAA semifmala, loaing to
committee set up io investigate the controversy with SchoU at their
Danfortb's COIIIIIIlttce hall ilitcrSchott's remarltl. The commiaec
· ~·
viewed SCVCI8I dozen people·about
could be finished with its inveatip· ~e Cinc10nati Issue never SchoU's repontd IIIC of IIICial slurs Mi~·f"n!'n said be favored I!IO'IDw
lion Deltl wcc1t, turning die matter c~me up," Giles said. "Marge and other derogatory commcnu. to the GJelt Midwal Confelence. 7
"Tbcrc's DO qocstion- ~
over to baseball's cxcc:utiw com- didn'tay anything about that."
She bas admitted amg offensive
tainly
tho Great Midwest affords
mittce for a nding. · ·
Danforth planned to talk to . worda when referring to blacks
'
the
opportullity
for ~ Unlvalily
Sc:bott, who atatL~ away on !be .. Schott today, when the winter Jews and other plUPS.
'
of payton 10 once qam b«wmu
wintct meetings'
day, made a meetinga officially end. She's one · The ~allons surfaced in a
basltelball
surprise ~ Tuesday llldcr of a handful of people left to be lawsuit
· by former team COD· nationally prominent
1
tig6t IIOCIDI&amp;J. S~ wis taten to lbe interviewed before I report is troller '11111 Sabo.
team,"bcsaid.
:
Fitz said the university waa
NL 01111*1' meeting by alla4 way isam . . ·
Danforth predicted die executive
to avoid rqXJrtaa. Sbc dldn't raum
'1110 invcatigative comrniucc is council will act promJII(y when die
a telephone message left at her · waitinJ to ta1lt to Shllon Jones, a inVCIItiglllon is COIIIpletC.
room.
former Oakland A's exccu.tive
"Our work is about done " he
White refused to-wer qucs· usistant who bas made one of the said.
.
'

:NFL's unsung heroes get chance to be heard
~

and we look forward to

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Sunday's Television Ad '.·
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· was Incorrect.·
ACorrected Ad will Run
_ In Thursday's Edltlon.
'

.We are sorry for anyI problema this

might have cauaed.

~:~~=v:tb·:e~~c:~· ?. 'J~~~--·-

oP..rator o;aw Sun:bii'J". lbia illll:bl!p w.il liiiJIJ' ill nnw • ..
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90

�·The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

. ,Wednlldi!Y,·December I, 1192
'

.

'

.

Page 10

•

'

Family
Medicine.

Man shouldn't give.up on his·
fiance who's man~c depressive

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Dear A•• Luden: Several · ......-~.-...,-== '""""'!"'"i m~ COIIfiO I am aoilll to 1c:t Hal
........... .,_hill the WCIIIIII of my
10· If I nllllo, It will be the beain·
ell-. Wo fell tlllllly Ia love IIIII
ninaofWorldW•ill.ldobelleft,

Ann

~
!::'~~y• .J.&amp;...oru.L.
YIOIIldll ve~auD:ally,
ANNIANDICIII

~~
ti!M :~~.:z=
•.T......, )'011 DIIIIIJNOIDO ,

t

b«••
lllinorher
incoii'YOI• - • ~~~~! ~ o£AR ~G: 1 ...,..fllril!l upd ·IOIDC
- ' ~Q~~q
"'nper l~r-§~~.oo-~.t~f~'
• ..._ the
iellce. lllllibuled this iuippopr'l 1:
a-. Ss~ ' •
COIIIJIIIIY could have used better

beblvior.IO MiiiijKi•i

.._and

.

' t~DPnomoruboatil.
1

WbeD her bcblvior " MW! IIIIR
bizane and the outbreaks more
=~~ '!c,ber
.
..........

v:.IDC...:

TROLLING • tarall Foster, 11, IJu, trolls
.'. lwlciDI iD ller llalr, ud llullllreds more bebiDd
•er iD her Plam, PL bo•e. Toy-watchers say
• . IOitalaia did for the troll wlult movies 81ld tele.

•

vision cartOOIIS do for otller bot toys, like Bat·
maa and Teen-age Mutant Nillja Turtles. (AP
photo)

.

!Trolls are a·Christmas sensation
•

•

: By CATHERINE DRESSLER
• .J:
AP lhsi"• Writer
: PII ISBURGH - Tarab Fosler
:tnows what she wants for Christ·
•mas and it's IIOl JIRUY. It's one or
wide-eyed, Sblllpy dolls with
·a biJ nose, big ears and colorful
:hair.that stands straight up - a

:!bose
:troD.

.

paraphernalia could reach about
$700 million this year, toy .WystS
eslimate. They were the top-selling
toy in the United States this year,
said the trade magazine Playthings.
Many trolls sell for under $10,
which means parents can keep their
children happy and stay within
their budgets. .
Trolls have changed along with
the times. Thirty ye&amp;I'S ago, their
clothes were simple felt tunics or
loin cloths. TQday's bOlls come in
aU shapes and siZes with a variety
of costumes and accessories.
At the Fun Services gift shop in
Monroeville. the shelves are filled
· with trolls ranging from I inch to 2
feet taU and accessooies such as key
chains, magnets, jewelry and slip-

• "Tbey're neat because !IOI1Ie of
:JIIem are weird, but in a different
:way they're cute," said 11-year·
•old Tanh. .
; All ugly but endearing face and
'a modest price ha"¥e made the bOll
:. mega•r in the toy world, where
:good looks obviously aren't every'lhing.
: Toy wllll:ben say nostalgia did
:for the troll what movies lmd teie&gt;vision Cartoons do for toys like pen
·
!Barman and Teenage Mutant Ninja
Trolls come in aU ages, niaking
:1'urtlea Trolls were illlnldllced to them popular with grown-ups. 100.
1hc united S~ate~ "aboUt 1960 and There are baby trolls in diapers;
:were playthings for children who teen-agers with booni boxes, mid·)re pareuts today.
die-age bOlls with graying hair and
• In her bciJroom in the PiasburKh e"¥en elderly trolls.
· :SUburb of Plum, Thqlh has about 6o
Trolls also are outfitted for
:trolls, some of them attached to . · every spon, nationality and occu.-earrings and hair bands. Her moth· pation, inc.Iuding th~ .f,.~esthood.
:er, Maria, 36, had a few trolls her· There•s even a male
cer troll
fe1f as a child.
with tiny briefs and a tie.
Retail sales of trolls and troll
Trolls got their start in Scan·

Whenthe~hourswaeup,Kdly

Red CrosS' and Johns Hopkins Hos·
pital.
Nationally, about 700,000
potential donors have registered
with the program, but less than 4
percent, or about 30,000, are
blacks. Since tissue types are often
unique to a p8rticular race, in most
cases, only blacks can donate mar·
row to other blacks.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - John
Mellencamp will play a benefit
concert next month for the family
of keyboardist John Cascella, who
died of a heart llttack.
The benefit is to held Jan. 22 at
the Murat Theatre.
·
Cescella, 45, was stricken Nov. ·
14 while drivin~ in Hamilton
Cowuy. He is surviVed by his wife,
Kathy, and three children.
He joined the Mellencamp band
10 years ago and was a key cle~No metter what it takes," he ment in the group's folk-rock
_.., "I will promote this drive." It · sound. The band was on a twoii
. fullded through the American week b!eak from recording an

""'·""&amp;er.
,•..

•••

ByLYNNELBER
,.
AP Television Writer
: LOS ANGELES - Roseanne
)nd Tom Arnold delivtred a onetwO punch for ABC, with the couPle's tandem pair of sitcoms lead·
lng the network to victory in the
.weeldy llllinp contest.
· ABC reclili'med the No. I spot it
'held for most of November with a
13.1 l'l'tl1lge, according to figures
feleased Tuesday by the A.C.
tlielJcn Co.
• CBS was second with a 12.7
·t¥erage share, followed by NBC
:with IO.S..-Eacll ratings point represents 931,000 homes.
.
: "Rolieanne" was the most:watched program on television.
·Tbe debut of Tom Arnold's "The
.~ Thomas Show" ll8lked ICC·
•ipcl in the Tuesc1ay night time lllll

Dehind "Rosea-e."

·

:•: CBS' new~ine "60 Min·
·iites" fmlshed third, followed by
:two more ABC sitcoms, "Home
]mprovement" and "Coac:h."
·~· "The Man Upstairs," a CBS
:rv movie pairing Katharine Hep:burn with 'Ryan O'Neal, scored

·.

'

is•liDP-·
·
Hal need&amp; a memberal!ip

Anoay=

· ··WISHER ANTI·FREEZE ••••••••••• 99c :"
:.·. ANTI·FREEZE......................3.99
': 2% MILK
· s2 19
PEPSI, ·12 Pak••••••••••••••••••• 2. 99 :;
PEPSI, 2 Llter•••••••••• •••••••••••• 99c {

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planets

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.

.

~ER QU1~~~' ~I.op J
A5hiMd
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ti141'1rUUrU.U.$iiHrW~~~~

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showdd.

WilD CROSS'
SONS

·

PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO

.

l

..

theirOWDexf-noe?Thlsmightbea
l!ealing compromise. 1 ~
iL
WIMII plaMiag a wrili.,, who
pap for wlllll? W/10 IUUidl wlwre?
'Tile AIUI LallllmGIIidefor Britlu"
IIIli aU the IIIUIIItl'l. Se~ il ~elf·
addrt~std,. lolig, brl.sU.e~s-size
tllvelope llllll 11 clwc/c o; mo~~ey
order I''or $3.65 (tllis i11cludes
·
poiiiJII llltd lttwiiJIIt) to: Bridu,
clq AM l.a/ltkn, P.O. Box 11562,
Cllic11go, Ill. 60611-0562. (111
Ctutada, se/fd $4.45.)

~-~.,..,.,,.}$'"'"~"''{fr;t'J$'ii

Private contributions declined
from $4.2 million in 1990 to $1.9
million last year. Among the muaeum's do11011 were the Nixon family
($1 Qlillion in a trust), Chicago
multiinillionaile W. Clement Stone
($1 million), and Bob Abplanalp,
inventor of the aerosol valve
($860,000).
.
.
There could be more led ink in
1992, said Ubrary DireciOt John H.
Taylor. But the 1991 loss was covered with a loan and isn't in fman- .
cia! uouble, he said.
'
The 1991 sbonfaU was caused
by "aggressive spendins" on
advertisins. exhibits, lectures and
deve~i" Nixon~s an:hives, Taywith a sixth place showing. Anoth- lor said.
"
•
er Sunday night movie, "Nalional
"The library needs to get the
Lampoon's ChristmiiS Vacation," word out about its activities in a
followed in the seventh spot.
very crowded tourism market," he
Two more sitcoms, ABC's 881'd.
.r
.
"Ful1' House" and "Murphy
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - King
Brown" on CBS tied for eighth
place. An ABC TV movie, the HuaeinofJordlmislikdytoreturn
Christmas-themed "To ·Grand· • to tbe Ma~Oinic this week for a
mother's House
We Go ," rounded c.__..,
.._....,_
__,,_
•
cancer surgery ~u;a:
out the top 10.
this year.
In network news. ABC was fust
Royal palace officials llid Mon·
with an 11.3 average rating, fol· day tbe schedule is tcntati"¥e, but
lowed by CBS with 10.1 and NBC the kin1 is euected to arrive in
with 9.6.
Rochester on Thunday even~D~.
The top 10 shows: ''Roleanne." · After ~g about four days
ABC, 23.3 ratina: "The Jackie at tbe clinic he's expected to vliit
Thomas Show;" ABC, 21.0; "60 waabinpln: D.C., for a few daya,
Minutes," CBS, 20.6; "llome then~ 10 AllaDta to meet with for·
I~:vemeJit," ABC, 19.8; mer 4llldcotcanct.
·
..
h," ABC. 19.0; "Tbe Man
H-.eln. S7, underwent SWJCfY I
Upstairs" (CBS Sunday Movie~, thilfalht the c:liDic, where doclln
CBS, 18.8; "NBI;ional I.ampoon s said they remo:ved a cancerous
Christmas Vacation" (ABC Sun· groWth in his left ureter. One kidday Night Movie), ABC, 18.5; ney alJo.Jias mnovec1.
..FuU HOuse," ABC, 17.0; "Murphy Brown," CBS, 17.0; "To
Grandmother's House We Go"
In ltallan, tbe Enllilh ldlOftl. 'Diked
as a jaybird' translates to "'labd u a
(ABC Movie Special), ABC. )6.9.
worm• ('Nudo come.ua :).

•

personality disorder. Try to act
dole ., Kdly apin llld be alert
for adler sympiiiDIS 1Jf lllli-aocial
behavior. If you
Ill)', Kelly
sbould be confined to en OJ the
safety d her family and frialdlu
well .• l!Cf own. Good lac:k. Sl!e
cerllinly II lucky to ba"¥e you • 1
rricDd.
'
· Dell' AIIIIIA!'dm:
My
bulblnd
• his
and four otber1 m .COIDJ81Y won
first prize iD a sales CODI:It Most
people would say I llhould be proud
of "Hal,' but that prize has canwwJ
one IJl the wont llgllllltntS we've
eyer had. Usten:
•
.
Tbe prize is a trip tol.as Vegas.
firat-cJaD; fOI'. tbe wot"Dd, ,all'
o•pws )Jiid. pial SSOO in cilb to
pmllle widl. Four of tile five
wiluw are -ned 111011. 'l1le liflb

t:f::~Y~.:r~~

-•led - •

new Tom Arnold
·~how boost ABC to No. 1
:~Roseanne,'

.

had a hearing to delennine wllether
ia
or not she needed addilionel care. 0w'+!'1
not a trip
danavia where for centuries they Tbe psychiatrist told me she - 1 10 Lal Vepa. llri, I lilY the
were depicted as wart-nosed, manic-depeasi'l'e ... ..,m heron caaplll)' ... DO wrs ofterila a
supernaiU1'81 cave-dwellers in folk· lithium treatment. He said it wu
trip Widloal bia wife.
lore. Danish· artist Thomu Dam absolutely essential that Kclly be My JUd•i!l says
I'm out of my
C&amp;f'l'ed a friendly-looking troll for under medical care 10 die dl'eets of
his daughler in the 19SOs and eventually began manufacturing them. the drug c:ould be - - Because of the ptyclaiatrill's
In the United States in the early
recmrrm'Mi911
1960s, they became a fad that soon
• ber !I'Oila aDd I . .
$
..
testified • die llet!riDI d!lt Jtely
faded.
:1: .
No one knows exactly why . should remaiD in tbe l!olpital.
:!
bOlls took off, but many say their Wcll, die jad(IC ""ci!Jed 10 rl I
homeliness is what inakes them
her "hea she lllfotd 10 tiideiiO
·:._·
$
·.•~
tteallneiiL Now Kelly hlllll me IIIII .
attnletive.
Homely dolls have won· chil· ber modler and iays abe IIC'I'CII'waniS •
~
dren's hearts before. 'Remember the
to IICC me qain.
Cabbage Patch Kids dolls, which
My friends say I • beta oft
PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 15, 1992
j
coined the ~ "they're 10 ugly · not beinl involved with a ..UC.
they're cute"?
·
Holiday Glass :1-9¢ With Purchase of Gas J:
deplellive but I really love tbls
Shawna Weyant, 34, and her 6- -.-llld believe I ooald .._, ber
Video Rental- Legal Beverages.
,
year-old niece, Brittany Grubbs,
1tick with her treatmeDI. What
both of North Huntingdon, share a ahould I 1)1/ - SBATI1..B, WASH.
love of trolls:
· Register to
Bicycle to be
,
DBAR SBATIUI: Would ,oe
"I collect trolls," Ms. Weyant WndoD
Kdly if lhe ... cuca'7
away Dec. 17.
{
said. "My friends UliiUie me."
Well,ll!lllic:
dqN
I lim is. ilk ••
I NASClR MINI CAR • I INDY MINI CAR, ..· ,
Brittany i4 especlallr, taken by 0
100. I 1DJC you not to gi"¥e.., on dais
the .troll's belly buaon. 'I ba"¥e an
2 BICYCLES
girt.
.
outie,'and theY do, too," abe aieL
The threatening phoae calls
DUWING DEC. 19th ·
She laughed uncontrollably as
algest an lidded f!jmensioD to her
she described lifting the ~ on a
AT GUND CENTRAL MALL
troll's bunny suit to mal his .,_
the
bottom. "It's 10 funny," she gig'
STOP IN AND SIGN UP!
.
gled.
Jupiler is tbe ~ dthe,.....
eu. Its equatorial dim!!CC is 88.000
miles, 11 times tbe diameter of
Earth. Its polar diameter is about
6,000 mifes shorter. This is an
album at Mellencamp's Sludio equilibrium condition resultia1
from tbe liquidity ri the planet and
when Cllscella died.
.. ,. ~
CHEST~R
•.• ~
ill cztrmefy nqjid 1'110 Of rotMi ~~~'
YORBA LINDA, Calif. (AP)- a JupiiCf day is only 10 Elnb houn
Unlike other preaiciCnlialllbrailea, long.
''
theRk:hlrdNJXoaLillnKy.&amp; Birth·
place takes no tali doflan. But
•
clonorl. admiasioa fees and Iiles ri
m~ • ill 'fl shop didn't
cover ihe biDa in
The library-museum, which
opened in July 1990, lost - y in
,its tint full year of operation, end·
ing with a $577,301 deficit, its
lnterlllll Revenue Service tax forms

---People in the news~~, BALTIMORE (AP) - Actor
Charles Dutton, spurred by the
plight d a ylliDig leukemia pllient,
helped launch a drive Tuesday to
encourage•more blacks to become
bonc-manow donors.
Demitris Campbell, a 21 -yearold blac:k student who wu.dias·
IIOIDd last year with leukemia, has
been -~to fmd a suitable bonenuwrow donor bec•nw: of a lack of
blacks signed up for .the National
Marrow Donor Program.
About 1 pcrcc11t of Baltimore's
436,000 blacks have registered
with the donor program, said. her
father, Roland Campbell.
"African·Arncricans are dying and
they don't have to," he said.
I&gt;uuon, a Baltimore nati"¥e who·
.s till in the TV series "Roc," said
be wu deeply moved by CampI!Cll's efforts to find. help for his

· ·

ICC

:u:.:...~.!":,;; .

had •a problem. • I talked to her
friends and family about my
caicem 11111 discoYered tbll they,
_..:.....,_.
her•
IOO,werewun
.... .......
_
One evening. 1 came borne to
find Kelly making tb~ning
phone calls to a Conner C!IIJiloyer.
The followibge\'elling. abe received
a police cilllion. At this point, her
mother -ltd ., CUDmit Kclly to 1
psychiatric facility for 72 boun.
Becanselhadwimcn llagreatdeal
of her odd behavior and knew she
needed treatment, 1 helped her
motbercommither.
·

.

949~2550
SMOI' f [·

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99'

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FOR SH\'1

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CHOPPED HAM

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BANANAS

29C

GREAT LAKE'i

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GRANULATED SUGAR

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PIICES GOlD WHILE SUPPLIES LIST .
We Reserve The Right To l.imit Quantities

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROS.S'
IN RACINE SINCE 1660
'

F:·-"y medicme'
"''w
Qaestlon: I have had trouble
sleeping for years. 1 toss and tum
before I fall asleep, and I alsO wake
up often during tlie nighL l'"¥e bl\en
1o my doctor, but be hasn't been
very successful in helpin~ me.
What can I do to get a good rught's
sleep?
Answer: Sleep problems are
very common. One-third of Ameri·
can adults have insomnia with the
resulting impairment in concentra·
lion, m~ory and energy that result
from poor sleep..There are man1.
· causes.·of sleep disturbance. I don t
have suffteient information to give
you·,,.-,.ific
recommendations for
Ytreallllbou
. gth'your insoalmnia, so I'Ufwnthi'\C
a t e prev ent causes o
s
widesjlread condition.
The most common cause of
sleep problems is called "adjustment sleep disorder.~ This label
~. _ describes the sleeplessness that
results from emotional stress or illness. In a recent survey, 35 percent
or Americans experienced this type
of difficulty SO!DC time during their
lives. I think the survey grossly
underestil!lates this problem .. I
think nearly all individuals have
sleepless times when they are wor· '
riedaboutasickchildorspouse,or
·worrying O"¥er how they are going
to confront their boss,aboul a bOU·
bling issue.
·
Fonunately; the individual suf·
feting with adjustment sleep elisorder improves when the underlying
cause of the stress improves. Occa·
sionall~ some counseling with ~
professional may be necessary to
reestablish normal sleep pattems. A
mild medication that helps bliflg
on sleep can also be of bencliL Ir.
this condition, medications for
sleep are often needed for only a
few nights, so there is little worry
of developing dependency upon
lliem.
· Another very common cause of
Sleep problems is poor sleep
hygiene. No, I didn't make that up;
"slecp hygiene" is another one of
those funny label doctor:s love Ill
use. It implies that the sleep distur-

bance is the result of the individuhabi
al's poor sleep
'ts or_behaviors

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Paul
McCanney is IU!ewin$ his 30-year
relationabi with &lt;Apttol Rtcords
and EMI ~ecords, whicb dates
from the Beatles' fll'St recording
contr11ct with the companies in
1962.
Capitol announced Tuesday that
McCanney had signed an exclUsive
recording contract that pves Capitol the U.S. distribution rights to
ntheewm
· ~I!'DCYn~ghts.sand BMI
ternational
. Terms 0~ the contract
not
announced A statement said only
th ·•
·. 1 •
· ih t

were

British monarch - the temporal
held ci the Cl!arth of England .- •
to diwn:e and remarry siDce Henry
vm in the.! 6th century.
CIDCAGO (AP) - Pl'o basket·
ball star Michael Jordan says his
new baby sir! is exactly what he
wanted, since he already hu two
boys.
Jordlln's wife, Juanita, gave
· birth to the couple's third child,
Jasroine Mickeel, early Monday.
She weighed in at 9 pounds, 8 '

that ...ake sleep less hkely. As
ounces.
many as 20 percent of .adults have
"She'sahugegirl;" Jordan said
poor sleep hrgiene, and from my · w~ i:'x:S:U:C ?~ur~ ~~~. Tuesday. "I have three beautiful
o~ _observauons, I would say J!!at . beginnin11 with ttp'Off The kids. Those are my three tropllies,
thiS ts also troe of nearly all htgh Ground .r scheduled for release and they're the most important
sehool_and co!kge studen.ts.
Feb. l. '
·
thin tome."
·
I thmk a liSt of the t_hmgs ~ do
· McCartney left Capitol for I 0
. ~ Jordans' other children are
to ba"¥e good sleep hygtene will be
be~
·
tbe
helpful to you and the rest of my years. · ore re~J!"Uftg !0
com· Marcus. 4, and Jeffrey, 2. •
1989
readers In order to have good qual pany m
• said Jenkins. lalerna·
· lee. aU 0 f should: Mai • tiona! distribu&amp;ion of his records . TORRINGTON, Conn. (AP) 1~ s
p,
us
· - . n· has been handled by EMI since Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. plans
:Ogu~:~nsgiC:~.h~::.C
1962.
to abandon his .Statehouse role tern·
.
potarily to spend an evening next
weekends. -Avoid naps. -Avoid
LONDON (AP) ..:.. Princess year in higher office.
takin$ stimulant drugs after noon. Anne's grandmother, Queen Moth- ·
Weicker will make a one-tiroe
Caffeme
from
coffee,
tea.
cola
and
EJ'
b
h
h
1 d 'd d
·
chocolate, and stimulants used as er tZI! et , as no ect e
cameo appearance as Kin g R'.te hard·
dec
· on·g'estants 1·n cold and ,,·nu·s whether to attend the princess' ICC· the Lionhearted on the openinj!
ond wedding, a spokes"7Jntan says. night of "Robin Hood: The MUSI·
medications are the most. comlJIOn '
The spokeswoman, who by cal" at the WamerThealer on Nov.
ofhfe~de rs. -qet d3~ mmuAtes ~df palace tradiUon was not identified, 6, 1993.
P ystca1 ex~rctse at 1 Y• -. vo1 . disputed tabloid neWSJ?llPCf reportS
Weicker sent a P.lfSOnalletter to
lar~e meals JUSI before bedbm~ or · this week with hcadlmes such as theater oflicials Fnday IDiling them
gomg !D bed hunPJ..-Allo~ ume "Queen Mum snubs Anne's wed· he will take part, said manag_er
bto d"wmdd down' beffobredgomgdto ding" and "Gran snubs Anne."
James FritclJ.
e • an get out o e and o
"Atllie moment she still hu no
Rick Doyle, who is writing the
sometl!ing quiet if sl!lep doesn't plans to travel to Scotland, but she · musical, said·he thinks the ~over~ccur m a reasonable amount _of hu .not made a fmal decision," the nor is perfect for the part. • I like
time.· Make the beW:oom q~1e1 spokeswoman said Tuesday. "She Lowell- he's a character," he
and cool. -Try to. avo1d conflict, is undertaking a full program of said.
~orrx and frustration before bed- IOJ!g-standing JXivate enga11ements
CLEVELAND, Tenn. (AP) tune.
at the weekend which she ts relucAll 18-month-old girl who doctors
There are q'!ite a few ot.her tanttobreak.''
causes of sleep distwbance besides
Anne, 42, who was divorced said would never walk was inspired
the most commpn ones I've already this year from Capl M11f1c Phillips, . to take her fust steps al!er viewing
cove~. lllness, both men,tal and is to many Navy Cmdr. Timothy Billy Ray Cyrus' "Achy Brealcy
phySical, and drug ust:• Jl;Utic~ly Laurence m Scotland on Saturday. Heart" mustc video, her mother
·
alcohol, ~!lay result m tnsomm~. Queen Elizabeth II and most of claims.
Heaven Leigh Yarbrough, who
Even snonng can cause poor quali- Anne's other immediate relatives
wu born witb•cerebral palsy, took
ty sl~p. I recommend that you fol· plan to attend.
low~ng the rules of good sleep . The Church of England frowns her fust steps last June when the
hyg•e!IC f~r a few wee!ts.- If your on remarrying divorced people. country singer's popular video was
Sleep tS still fitful, then IllS time to Anne is the ftrSI close relative of a shown on television.
see your doctor again. You may
even need to spend a night or two
under_the watchful eye of a special,
ist in a sleep lab to ~tablish a )rape_r treatment for your sleep difficul·
lies.
'"Family Medicine". is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
CHEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. (AP)· her face in surpiise.
to John C. Wolf, D.O., 250 -What would you do if you went
The next slide said: "The perGrosvenor Hall, College of Osteo- to a movie starring Kevin Costner son next to you has an important
pathic Medicine, Ohio University, and Whitney Houston and instead questioltto ask you."
Athens, Ohio 45701.
•
Stevens jumped to his feet.
saw your face on tbe theater
When a picture of both of them
screen? Carin Russo said "yes" •ppearcd on the screen, he asked
to her boyfriend's poposal.
She and Bob Ste"¥ens went on a Russo to marry him.
Russo, teary-eyed, said yes, and
date Friday with friends to see
Stevens
put an engagement ring on
"The Bodyguard" in this Buffalo
her
fmger.
'
subli!P.
.
The
theater
lights went up, the
Unknown to Russo, Stevens, 26,
By JENNIFER DIXON
use-by dates and pioduction code, had purchased space With Screen audiencti stood and cheered and the
· AP Farm Writer
that appear on the package or can Seen, a company that. markets couple were congratulaled by about
advertising projected on the screen 50.relatives and friends who had
WASHINGTON- Campbell are:
entered the theater 11nseen by
Soup Co. is voluntarily recalling
-Swanson Mexican Style between ftlms.
Stevens
arranJ!ed
for
three
Russo.
four frozen dinner products and Combination Dinner (13 1/4 oz.)
"I wanted to do something that
three kinds of canned soup because with codes: JAN 94 EST 4G A22; slides, the fll'St w1th a picture of
Russo
as
a
child
and
the
question
hadn't
been done before," said
some may contain small pieces of FEB 94 EST 4G BJ2; FEB 94 EST.
Stevens,
who spent $400 for the
"Does
anyone
in
the
theater
lmow
glass, the Agriculture Department 4G BL2; FEB 94 EST 4G BP2.
this
penon?"
.
stunL
says.
-Swanson Hungry Man MexiRusso, '23, put her hands ~up to
Tbe soup and dinners were dis· can Style Dinner (20 oz.) with
tributed to at least 33 states, Guam ' codes: JAN 94 EST 4G A42; FEB
and Mexico,
94 EST 4G BE2; FEB 94 EST 4G
, The problem was discovered BM2; FEB 94 EST 4G BR2.
when pieces of glass were found in
-s.wanson Budg.e t Mexican
bags of rice purchased for the soup Style Meal (10 1(2 oz) with code:
and frozen dinners, USDA said FEB 94 EST 4G BB2.
.Monday.
·
-Swanson Hungry Man Bone·
'. . The recall involves about less Chicken Dinner (17 1/4 oz.)
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- notexpccteduntilatleastFebruary.
-332,000 frozen dinners and about with codes: FEB 94 Pl33 BD2; Former television medical reporter
Federal authorities had charged
,_23,000 cangof soup.
FEB 94 PJ33 B-2.
. Dr. Nelson Kraus has agreed to that between J!lft- 8 and ~~ 20,
· · The department said it has
-Campbell's Chicken with plead guilty to a misdemeanor K~aus _presc~tbed the pamluller
£eceived no complaints from con· Rice Soup (10 1(2 oz.) with code: charge of wrongfully J.n.IISCri~ing ~ila~ 16 .tunes to a_penon ~y
sumen about any of the products.· OCT 94 P5 0562.
nan:otics, federal•uthorities 1181d. . ·did not tdentify.
.
Consumers were urged to return ·
-Campbell's Chicken Gumbo
Kraus former medical reporter
WCMH ·meteorologt$1 Jym
. any suspect products uoopc;ned to Soup (10 3/4 oz.) with codes OCT for WCMH in Columbus, faces a . Ganahl pleaded guilty !n June to
·lhe store where they were pur- 94 P5 08E2; OCT 94 PS 08E3. ·
maximum one-year_ptison term a·· two felony counts of usmg decepchased.
-Campbell's Home Cookin' fme
of up to $100,000 and prob.. tion to obtain dangerous drugs
:· The states are Arizona, , Ready to Serve Chicken with Rice tion for a year, U.S. Aitorney from Kra~s and another doctor.
, Arkansas, California, Colorado, . ·soup (19 oz.) with code: OCT 94 Michael Crites said Tuesday.
.
G~aJ:tl wd he took the drug for
Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, ·. P5 DAD3i
A
sentencing
date
was
not
.
mtgrames.
Hawaii, Jdaho, lllinois, Indiana,
The code numbers may be on .. $Cheduled.
.
;. Iowa, Kansu, Kentucky, Maine.. .more than one line and may not be
The
State
Medical
Board
could
Massachusetts, Michigan, Min- the only numbers embossed on the
sttip Kraus of his medical license. .
· jtesota, MississiJ?pi, Montana, can or package.
Nevada, New MexiCO, New York, · Consumers with questions about He ~as to appear today before. a
· North Dakota and Ohio.
the recall may call the toll-free medtcal board exam1ner, sa1d
Lauren Lubow.
· • Also, Oklahoma. Oregon, South USDA ~t and Poultry Hotline at spolceswornan
The examiner will give the
. batota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Hl00-5354555. Tbe hot line may board a written report and recomWashington and Wisconsin.
be reached from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. mendation, Lubow said. Tbe board
. · . ~~uct names, net weights EST Monday through Friday.
will make a fmal decision, which is
ind
, includlJ!II recommended

::'::t!

Man goes Hollywood
• proposa1 t0 grr
• lfrten
•·d
Ill

Campbell soup to recall soup, ·
dinners because of potential glass

STUDENTs OF THE MONTH • Studenta of tile month at
Tuppera Plalna Elemeatary Sehoul were recaplzed·at liD -bly
recently. Tllole stndenta are, front l·r, Michelle Thomu, second
11J11Cle; Kevin Marcinko, first 11J11Cle; Jessica Kebl, kindergarten I;
Dusty Murplay, kindergarten 0; second row, 1-r, Lacey Bunting,
sixth Jll'!!de; Molly Heines, fifth grade; Danielle Spencer1 fourth
grade; and Chris Lyoas, third grade.

Art project put on hold
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·
The state is scrapping· plans to
spend $1.5 million next year to
restore art in a building to be used
by the Ohio House while the Statehouse is closed for renovation.
Instead, the Ohio Department of
Administrative Services will wait
18 to 24 months before seeking
new bids for art restoration in the
Ohio Departments Building, about
two blocks from the Statehouse.
The reversal of plans came
Tuesday, two weeks after the state
Controlling Board approved
fmancing the an .epair.
· Fred Forbes, head of the Division of Public Works, said he
determined that construction
planned for the rest of the Depart·
ments Building as part of. a $24
million renovation would create
dust and dirt that could damage

:::~o~: fabrics if they

He said money should be spent
on more critical safety needs in the ·
building that atso houses the
Dep81'!111ent of Education, Depanment ·o f Agriculture, and other
agencies.
"Rijlhl at this time there are
other htgher priority things ... we
are not 11oing to do that an restore·
lion pro.JCCl now.".Forbes said.
. The Conuolhng Board. last
mmlh;IIPPIOved a trensfer of $1.45
million 10 Evetgreen Painting Stu·
dios of New Yor1c could complete
restoration before the House moves
' into the building in July 1993 for
an 18-month stay.
Forbes said qo contract was
signed with Evetgreen. ,
"I'm sure they'll be disappoint·

•

··$6.9 million Pennsylvania
:lottery ticket unclaimed

' HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)- pot ticket stands to mis~ out on
. With the holiday shopping season $6.9 million. The ticket is no good
. iii full swing, you'd think a few if the prize isn't claimed by end of
million bucks would come in business on Friday.
are good for a year after
handy. But the Pmnsylvania State theTickets
wi~ning · numbers
are
Lottery ean 't seem to pvc. the stuff
announced.
away.
·
Last month, a $:6-S million ticket
· For the second .time in little went
unclaimer jll'Ckpot tickets
more than a month, officials are have gone
unclaimed since 1982,
sean:hin' ror the holder of a misS· said lottery
·spokesman Mark
ing multimiDion-dollar loucry tick- · Schreiber. A Super
7 .~cket worth•
eL ·
$9.2
million
expired
in February,
Tbe holder of ~ Super 7 jaCk·
1987.

.

Maryland man suspends
Christmas tree from ceiling
niece helps with the decoraung.
HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) "I think some ........., tblnk I'm
Don't expect to find any presents
under Dean Bordenave'a Cbrisbnas · a devil worshlper."'IIC"seicc. "The
tree. You won't even ftnd the base people I work with think I'm
crazy."
of dte tree down there.
He said he J101 the idea al!er seeFor nearly a decade, Bordenave
has suspended his holiday tree ing ~ ~mall, ~JCial tree hanging
from the ceili!'g. His 8-year-old frOm d_te ceitini of a blr. '

.' .

ed, but we have ihe right to Cancel
a J?roject at any time we want," he
Slld.

.

The project originally provided
for:
-Cleaning wall and ceiling
murals, and applying a protective
coetin~~:.

We have
Christmas
Appliances for .
.
her:
Coffee Pots,
Electric .•.
·Roasters,
Griddles,
Can Openers
and Toasters.. '
PICKENs· ·.,:
HARDWARE , .
•p

MASON, W. Y4.
~&lt;

Special of the Week!

Doctor pleads guilty to
illegally prescri/Jing drugs

Ll.

RUFFIS- 20 COUNT- 30 GAL

&lt; ·J •lc&gt; .. •J.\(.1

'

PIZZA BURGER

s1.59
WITH FRIES••••••••••• $2.29 ·

Budget constraints
trim space plane plans
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bud·
get relllities have clipped the wings
of the Air Fon;e's plans to ha"¥e the
National Aero-Space Plane reach
orbit and fly 2S tunes the speed of
sound, an offiCial said.
The experimental hypersonic
craft's top SliCed will likely be cut
from Mach 25 to Mach 12 or Mach
IS and its runway-to-space
approach may be •bfndoned in
favor of launch from the back of
anotller airplane, Air Force Maj.
David Thurston said Monday.
"Congress is makina difficult
choices in 1111 ere !If ileclining bud·
gets... he said. "The bottom line is
that it's going to be a suborbital
craft.,.
Plans for a plane that can take
off and land as usual but reach
orbit have been an emblenl ri U.S.
commibDent to l!dvlnced tcebnoloBY· While European nations,
\ncluding Russia, are Wlllking on a
similar plane, post-Cold War bud·
get realities made the Air Force
reassess its vision for the craft.

REG. $699.99

REG. $899.99

SALE

SALE

$45999

$59999

Come
and See
Whar Ie
CanDo
For You!

The FABRIC SHOP
HIS. MON.·SAT. 9:00-5:00 PM

110 W. MAIN, POMEROY

·-

.,·

�Wednnday, December I, 1112

-Community calendari

of the Bend... ·

•

• lloyl Ia IS heiJnnlng to loot 1

t!••JoJ

JID CllrilanliL

I

dliat an.&gt;:t~me now you can
. . -ride llboW lbe -and
-ing quile a number of

~clocollld~.

• Out J.ouae 7 towards Chesler
liBel Tupper.• Plains is one of a
.. . . . . of food dinlcdons in which
:-. llavel tbis yr.. The cvet-faith·ful Paul Nelle who bas been deco. _ lbe Neue home for lbe seaD far yem on end again bas an
......
.:u~··wulilp~ it's eDCOIUII&amp;ing
to eec people litl Paul continuing

mlbelinc1Wons.

·

~ Ooiilc uprivl!l', you'll!JCO 801110
. I&amp;Ddouts in Minersville. Up
flacille and Symcue way lllenl arc
eome nice lhings also ·especially
alon1 the river between the two
· 1.. ~unities aqd Middleport bas a
fQt of decoraled 'homes-South
•'Phird Avenue is goo!! on either
•
Arthur Strauss on S. Third is
lnotber one of those continuing in
"is tradition of decorating exleDjliYely for lhc Chrislmas holiday
-.on. You misht'want to nole
:that the Strauss rose garden
)awards the rear of the home has
~come the setting for a _
large
Nativity and In the bactgrouiid arc
~ quite lntaestinglishied trees
)!long with other effective lighting
the location. . ·
·
, The George Hackett home on
:;Browncll In Middleport is another
&gt;you'shouldn't miss. Actually, at
Ithis point In ·time it doesn't seem
•like !here are 11 many homes into
:outdoor decorations, but on the
:other hand some seem more exren•sively done tbis year.
: And' the business sections of
Pomeroy and Middlepon arc excelolen! this year. Pomeroy encourlaged by tbe Pomeroy Merchants
•Association which recommended
:the clelr 1ipts is impressive with
:lighting gomg from lbe lOp 10 !he
•bottoms of lhc buildings in some
I
Anderson'
•981CS. s, of CQUI'lle, ts, a
lstsndout what with the extensive

:m

I

li&amp;bting including lbe out~iD;IIII of

an of the windows of tbe btdld-

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Revival at Hillside B:J!:ill Church; thro~h
Wodnesoa;r, 6 p.m. nightly. .
Kenny McComas, -;"'J,eacbel'.

~ lbe front windows ot lhc
slllre would be cxc:eplioaal in m
community-they're peat. Mid.
dlcport merchants bavc usod tbe
smaO 1reea on bolh sides·of North

Doug McComas, m

them.

These tio in wcll witli the town's
auractive overbead wreaths.
Yep-ell in all, it's !qinningiO
loot a lot like Chrisliilas-and I
like that. doll 't you?

CHBSTBR- Th.c Past Councilors Club of Cbe 11 Council No.
323, Daughlerl of America, will
have a Christmas supper Wedncaday at 6 p.w. served by JoAnn
Baum and the 11a1e inside sentinel
convention committee. A meeting
and party will follow and lbere will
be a $3 gift exchange.

Spe•king of Chriillmas, Meigs
County does have residents confined to lbe Alhcns Health Cen'ler
and cacll
the Ladies Auxiliary
or Drew ~ebsrer Post 39, Amencan Legion, sties that lhese people
are remembered. The au•iliary has
a box at the Quickel Insurance
,\gency in Pomeroy where gifts
can be left for lbese patients. Per~
haps, in a few days, I can give Y;OU
more detsils on how many Metgs
patients arc conliAed and just what
gifts are suitable to the circumstanceS. The cutoff date for leaving gifts at lhc insurance agency is
Dec. 20.
And, toy el~tric trains always
tie into the Chrislmll season beautifully so it's quite timely that the
Southeastern Ohio Railroad Club
will be featured at the University
Mall in Athens lhis Saturday and
Sunday. Several local collectors
will be taking part in the exhibit
with some or their prized trains. It
will be an exlensive display and the
tid in you may want to drive over
and sec iL

THURSDAY
POMEROY • . Tbe P'omeroy
Oroilp of AA will meet '111unday at
· 7 p.m. at the·Sacml Heart catholic
Churcb. Call 992-5763 for Infor-

mation.

I

i

u....

.
I

CHRISTMAS NATIVITY Tbe Dutbell ~;~I York arrlves .at
Upton H011se School, in Windsor, Wednesday, witb ber two clilldten Princw Beatrice, left, and Printea Eu1enia, right, where
Prineess Beatrice Is tl!klng part In the school's Nativity play• one
or tbe tbree kings.
.
4

Cigarette smuggling, a
major Canadian industry
an average of $3 in tobacco tsxcs
on eacb pack of cigaretles, companid to an average 52 cents in lbe
Uniled SlateS, said a study commissioned by Imperial Tobacco Ltd., a
Canadian compaily.
As a ~t, a carton of Canadian

cigarettes sold for 528 more In
CaJUida last year than in the Uniled
SlateS, according 10 the study by a
Toronto accounting firm,
Lindquist, Avey, Macdonald,
Baskervillc, Ine. It said lhc averqe
price of a· pact in Canada was
$4.94 and tn the United States
about $1.50.
High I?riCCS have led 10 such an ·
inc:ril8se m contraband lhat one in
nine cipretles purchased in Clinada last year was either stolen or
smuggled in from the Ubited
States, the study said.
The main IObacco smugglers arc
Indians whose mservations stnlddle
the border, according 10 authorities,
but increasingly, organized crime
and even diplomats .e·involved.
Not only has smuggling grown
dramatically in lbe past two years,
but Canada's high cigaretle prices
have led 10 s great incn:ase in theft
from retailers. Robbers now hit
stores tor the valuable cigarettes as
well as money.
In an effort to stop tbe smuggling, the Mounties have added
patrol boats, four-wheel drive vehicles and snowmobiles 10 lbeir arsc- ·
na1·of aimc-fiahtins welpons.
. "We have the required equipment, but it would seem the other
side has more money and is getting
better," said Cpl. Michel Goulet,
head of the Cornwall, Ontsrio,
detachment across the St. •
Lawrenc:c from Massena. N.Y.
According to lhe Imperial study,
the contraband has cost $1.4 billion
in lost trade within Canada and
$1.()4 billim in lost govennent revenue.

'

'

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority, will meet Thursday at 6
p..m•.atlhe home of Donna Jones
for a Chris1mas party. Bring $5 io
$10 Ohristmas items for the
exchange.
HEMLOCK GROVE ' The
Meigs County Women's Fellowship will hold its moatbly meeting
Thui'lllay at 7:30 p.m. at the Hllllkx:t Grove Christian Church. Officas will be inslalled. Public invited.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Roclt
Springs Grange williiiCCt Thursday
at 7 p.m. There will be a poduck
dinner. Meat and tsble SClVICC will
be furniShed. There will be a .white
elephant gi~ exchange. BrinJI nonperishabfe tlems for a Chnslmas
project.

...............
·tlhaor-

lllolfllocWI-Colocll&gt;lol
llplolll E....
S.Al

MoN. tbru FBI.

84.M.-5P.M. -

Sn.B-12

• Ado oublde tloe co-'J' JOUr ad nuu ••• l&gt;e prtpoid
• ~~eoo~.. dloeo......r ado pold Ia ad.......
• r- Ado: Ci-y aDd F.....t ado uDdor 15 '"'nL willl&gt;e
""'3clapat,....._,
• Pr1oo ol ad for aD oapilal._., Ia douldo priee of ad coot
•1po10lU...typooaly.....t
• S..liaol io ... ...,..,..u.lo for . . .n .....
clay (chock
for.....,.flntclayad,_.la paJ*')· C.UbeforeMO P·•·
clay .ro.r publlcalioa "' ...t.o
• Ado doot ....... paW Ia ' " ' - ....
Cud oln..Joo
Happy Ado
Ia M-nu.
Y..-.1 S.._
• 4 cloulf..d ad•..U..O.• plooad Ia .... Callipolio Daily
Trill0111 (acept Cloaillod Dioplay, Rue..... Card or Lop)
Noilceo) will ,.too appear Ia doo Polat i'loaNal Ropier oad
oho Doily Soaliaol, "*•IU"'...,. 18,000 bo-

RIPLEY, W.VA. -Liberty
Mownail'eef'l will perform Friday
at SltatelaniLin Ripley, W.Va.

qua

Clonified pages cover the
following telephone esch.all{lea •••
G.Wa County Melp Coanty Muon Co., WV
Area Cod., 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304 •

r....

POMEROY - Return Jonathali
Meigs Chapter, Daughler of the
American 'Revolution, will meet
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Grace
Church Parish House. Mrs. Kay
Cecil; antique collector and
appraiser will present lbe prograni
"Antiques- Bits of Our Heritage."
Brhtg a. small antique to share.
Hosaesscs are Mrs. Dwight Mil-

-llo•

675-1'1. PI-DI

992-Mlddlepo..U
J
Pomeroy

446-Collipol!.
3674 hire
3~VIa-

985"re• r

24S-8io CHade
256-Ga:raa lHR.
643-4r&amp;Wa DioL
' 379-Wolaal

1143-Ponlaad

4~a

57.6--Apple c ......
773-M882-New Hnen ' ·

247-Letott Folh
949-Koclae

Words

15
15
15
15
Monthly . 15
·\

Over 15 Words

$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00

1
3
6
10

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Breakfast with
Sants will be featured at the Meigs
County Museum in Pomeroy on
Salurday from 8-11, am. The cost
is S2 for children undci age 10 or
•$3 for those aae 10 and over. '111e
menu inclu~ pancakes, scrambled
eggs, bacon, sausage, breakfast
breads and beverage. Then: will
also be aafts for file children.

Rate

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

· .

.

21- a.,,. ••, Opportuall)'
•211- M....,. "' Loaa
. 23- Pnof..loaal s...~coo

lashan Rd., Racine

I \1&gt;\1 ,11'1'111'

32- Mobile Home~ for sue

.

RatllS are for consec:utive runs, broken up days will be

33- FarJU for Sale
34.- Buoiaou Bulldlap

'cllarged for each day as separate ads.

'35- Lo11 a Ac...,.

939·2826

&gt;

I: I \ I \I

41- HoUMI for Rent
4Z- Mobilo
for R..

a-

r

~FarwforRoal
.M- A.........t lor Heal

'I"'P
Waateclto Buy
u......k ··
HayaCnla ·

11·23-~t2-1mo.

~JAYMAR:
· · Quality ·.. •

4•101 for Solo
Trucb for Sale

v•• a: '

•

949·2391 or
1·100·837·1460

Lawn Mowing,
F~!rtlllzfng, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
· Shrub and Trea
Trimming &amp; Removal
. R•i&lt;Mntlll I Commercllll
FrME.tlmlt..

AREWOOD FOR SALE

wn·,

Boote a Mol&lt;ln for Sale
Auto Parte a 4ce•.-i•l
Aal&lt;l Repair
C..pitlfl Eq.u,....

Chesltire, OH.

112/tfn

949~2734

PH.614·992-5591

Fresh Cut Dally
5'- 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.
742-3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26

TREES

cuns

&amp;

BRADFORD'S

n~~)!llng

':;j}~

Fresh Cut Trees
or Cut Your Owa.

38904Le4uli•l
CrukRo•d
Middleport, Ohio

East of Dlrwla on Rt.

10/1/92

GUN SHOOT .
FORKED .RUN
SPORTSMAN

CLUB

SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 1
gaugeonly .

·sTARTS

. CHERRY RIDGE

611 oa Gravel R01d

WICK'S
..
HAULING SERVICE
369701aiR• ....

',

. Public Nollca
- ' t prapoaal.

PUBUC NOTICE

SpiiCial Early 111'4

$1000hloll

NOTICE OF
ApPOINTMENT OF
· FIDUCIARY
On Deo-l!er 4, 1
tho Melga County Protiatel
Court, C11•• No. 27704,
~~n T. Wolle, P. 0. Box 68,
RHine, Ohio 45771 w••
•ppolnted EK..,utor ol the
eirtat• of Cotter Hayman,
doco11od, lata of Charry
Street, Racin•, Ohio, Ohio
45nt.
•
Robert E. Buck,
"
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nollolroed, Clerk

lalurcflr. paarmber 11th
lido . will toe opened ''
•• t o:oo All, Ttio ita- . DoiOI.iftber 1411 81 2:00 P.M.

~,. j

' National Bank, RHin.,
Ohio, will offer lor .... .t
Public Auction, an Uoo IIMk
hrldng lot, tho fOllowing:
1!181 Ford ~hbiCk

Fanners.express worries about ·
Gore's environmental agenda

1888 Pontile RNIIIrd
I !187 Ford Tliunclerblrd
Sort.! No.
IFABP6038HHIN7113.

.t tho Olelrlat Oflooo loo'ltecl

at 31SI1 Bar 30 Rollll,
R-edavllle, Ohio 41772Tho Tupper• Pl•lna-.
Cheater Wat•r Dlotrlot
r•orvM tho rtt.t to waive
any lnlorm.U • and to

rojoct .,ytand .. blda.

SIZED LIMESTON[
992-3470
12-t-12-1 m

I

CHARLIE'S .;.,

SMALL DOZER ·~
WORK.
,,
DIIYE.WAY 'WOII
•ntl LIMESIOIE ;

llawGUHI

POM·POM,
TUMBLING,
BATON TWIRLING

DEUYEIY IEIYKE .~
S.allla.w.rlc ...

All Agea Welcome
S.,.c;lal ClaM 3-6
YearOida

$25.00 ,., · - .,

IWOIIAIU UTU ;'

992·7553 ;

For More Information
can 304-273-3721

POMEROY, OIL
· 11-13-'82-1

By JOHN NOLAN

Assocliited Prta Writer

,.
'

PubliC Notice

Overbrook
has part
time shift openings (7:00-3:00
3Y. hr. shifts) for state •
tested nurses aides. Salary ·
based on experience.
For more Information contact
Karla Hunter at 992-6472.

1110 FOR TRUCK
Th•

Chrlatmaa money
agalnllncome that
kMpa going wt.n

. you can't.

(614) 378-6153

fl 1m - 12 pm and

6

_., . . . . IIXJd

-roWEnc;-sHtNtrructoiC
·
240 u,,. llnr • ._ • ..
OH. 45631
~~po~~.,

'-131141 Ul-1752

ho.ll141446-1044

Real Estate General

lollowlngepeclftoalloM;
8auoll truck -long bed
4;0 Ulw • oyL engine

·10

CHRISTMAS·
TREES

. MICROWAYI '0VIIt
'. '••dVCIUPIII:

..... .. Or.. .:
AUMUII

INSULATION
I•VInvl Siding

PlciiU

742·2097 ·.

539 Bry• Place

Middleport, Ohio

- '.

KEN'S APPtiANCE
SERVICE
·992·5335 or
. 985·3561

...,..., ,... Peol Oflce
217L ...... It."
POMIIOY, OliO
. 312311211tri

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES :

'

KEESEE
992·2772 or

.,

~,,

Special Holiday Hou,..

RUTLAND, OH.
HomegrownCeretully Sheared
Scotch &amp; Whhe Pine
4' &amp; Up with a great
selection ollarger
treea.

Call742·2143 or
742-2979
11127

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT COMPANY

OFFICE 992·2886

•.

Rental Program. ' :
12-1-2 mo. pd.

Open Until B Mon.- Set.
After Dec. 10
Great Home111ade

HARlEY HAIIIIIG
RESIDE liCE
35975 Flatwood1 R..

1112611

Hot Water Tarik ' .

SAT., DEC. 12-10 to 8
SUN. DEC. 13-1 to 6

'-"OJ• Ohio

Real

Check w"h us tor '•

MERRV CHRISTMAS
OPE II HOUSE

5' • 7' TALL

(C0111ty lOIII 261
REASOIIlllE

Tupporo Pl•lno-

Cheat.r W•ler Dlatrlot Ia
lnviUng ...ted bldo lor a
lllta Ploii-Up Truoll with lie

CUFTS
992·2549

~:Y,:~rrom.tart

E.O.E.

. . NOTICE TO 8IDOERI

EST~IS

i::iii~T=R=O=LL=EY=S=TA::T::IO::::N:::

MOTHERS AT
CttrlatmM lneomel .

.....,_:::::::::z:====----.,1

.n,

Fill

. 985·4473 '
667·6119 .

Uc. llo. 0050.32

up. Start at .-a and
you'll never have toworry about

232 2d St.,
Po•roy
992·2036 . '

Stop &amp; .Compare

FIE carll.

mo.

OHIO VALLEY ,
PLUMBING &amp; •
HEATING, INC.·

mod•ling ·.

1hl1 all , ....for I

Tuppen Plilno-Cheow
Wallar, Dletrlct
11187 N l - Senlno
By: Harold H. Blacaton
11182 Chwrolet CIO Pup
ProeldoM
1871 GMC Tractor Trllil•
of .,. Board of Dl,.,..,.
(171 Clowrolot PT CKI
(12) 9, 16, 23, 3tc
TIM Ierma ollhe nle .,. (11) 25; (12) 2, I; 3tc
GMh.
.
TIM H - Nallonot Bank
_
,...rv•lho.rtght to reject
_
Help
wa'n'&gt;....o
11 II!IY or all llldor or to I'MIOve
""'
unit from llo . . .t.ny • _ _
lljrie.
'
In Ofder to lnapeot any or
Cen~er
tho above ftllllled property
prior
to . th.o ule .
-angamon.. nuoy be m. ..
by calling Mt-2210,
~nd
(11)21; (12) I, II, 3tc

·:

HOLIDAY SPECIAU
~.50AToa

I 'I. Mile to Grove.
WATCH FOR SIGII.

6:45 ,.••

Public Nollce

1

r-oy,ow.

: 81SSELL &amp; BURKE
EVERY THURSDAY . CONSTRUCTION
EAGLES CLUB l•lllew Ho•s .
Ill POMEROY
Notice

.

Dirt, Gravel::-~nNiiD
LICENSED 11'111 "'

BINGO

Public

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND

HAULING ·

14-742-2138

BUfl.DOZIMG .,

11-17-112-1 mo

PLUMBING

614·992·7144

·

mo.l. ~=====12:-5:-tln~:

CHRISTMAS .
TREES

Rl

LIMESTONE,
Stone Co.
SIZED UMESTONE . , GRAVEL &amp; ·COAL
FOR SALE . Reasonable·rates
Call614·992~
JOE N.SAYRE
. 6637
SAYRE ·TRUCKING
St••Rt. 7

Mol&lt;&gt;,.yclco

'45- r...,.;.hed R.._
46-- Space for Reol
47- Waated to R•t
48Beat

BURLINGHAM -- Modern
Woodmen of American Camp
7230, Burlingham, will have a
Chrislmas poduct Saturday at 6:30
p.m. at lbe Modem Woodmen Hall
1n Burlingham. Turkey, bam,
mashed potatoes, dressin)(, rolls
and drink will bC provided. Bring a
covered dish and lllblc service. The
camp will deliver dinner to the
elderly sick and shut-ins at 3 p.m.

ALL SESSIQNS GOOD
FOR &amp;MONTHS

Seed A Feniliur.

,.,.='..,.,..------1 36- Roal Eotate Waalad

FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.- Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at lhe Jackson County Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
-

"Mr. Gore brings a lot of intluerice, but I think when it's all said
CINCINNATI- An Ohio farm and done, he'll have to yield to
""""' has a masage for Vice Prcs- some common sense," said John
l'dint-elect AI Gore: Don't go over- Hosemann, chief economist for lhc .
board on environmcnlal protection. , Aml!l'ican Farm Bureau Federation.
Gore, a U.S. senator who lives
"Vice President Gore says he's
an environmentalist. We've aut 811 on a cattle farm at Carthage, Tcmn.,
·!be environmentslists we can .00 is sensitive 10 the concems of fannin agriculture," C. William Swank, ers, spokeswoman Marla ROIII8Sh ·
executive vice president of the said.
Gore and President~lect Clio- .
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, said
Tuesday. .. '
ton inlend 10 balance their concern
Gore's boolt on lbe cn~nt for lhe anvitonment with its impact ··
··
and bis quic:lt move 10 intt.rcedo in on busincsa, abc said.
Gore will support research to
the propoaed stsrt-up ~ an East
Liverpool, Ohio, hazanlous-waste help farmers opera1e in ways tha,t
incinerator suggest a heavy hand, will betlec protect lbe environment,
Swank said at lhe farm bureau's she said.
' tScnator Gore wrote in bls ·
annual meeting.
"We're about to get rid Of some boot that he learned to protect the
very hazilrdous was!es," S wa~ Earth by working on his cattle
said. "And all of a suddeu, he nus- farm," Ms. ROIII&amp;'Ih said. "I don't
es his hand and says, 'Whoop, think you'D find a r.mer in Ameriyou're not going to do lhat unill I ca who isn't interesled in protecting his land."
look at iL '"
·
·
Farmers want to protect thd
Environmentalists question
environment
alid thou land, but
whether permits for lhe incinerator
should
be
involved
in any debate
were thoroughly reviewed and
about
environments!
regulations
'whelhcr the burning would be a
that
could
affect
agriculture,
Hose•
. health threat 10 residents.
Fanncts already arc under pres- mann said.
.
"The Irick is, how do you do it
,, .
sure 10 be more careful about dislhat of whites.
posal of Jlllricultural chemicals and at lhe lowest cost without putlin~
-One-third of blacks live are flllltratod wilh wet1anda mtric- tbC economy into a tailspin? I don t
below 1be poverty line or $6;932 a tions that prevent some farmers lmoW any farml!l' who deliberately
. •
year for an individual. Oaly one- from using property they own, wants to poUu1e," he said.
1enlh of whites are lhat poor.
Swuk Slid.
-Blacks are iinprisoned far out
of proportion to their numbers.
Blacks account for about 12 percent of lhe population but half the
prison Inmates.
Besides imprisonment, many
LIMA, Ohio (AP) - The pi~ with the decision.
·
black men find themselves remains or a 4,000-year-old woman
"We've been ~ent this long
involved with lhc criminal' justice will be returned 10 an Indian group and will continue to wnrlt with lbe .
systcn1 at an age when m, people for reburial afler a museum finishes museum. We're not go!':J .to'
are likely 10 illany.
llCienti&amp; reMan:h of lbe bones, the proteat lbeir decision," slle ·
·
In some big cities, around half museum's c:un10r said.
The bones were unearthed in
the black men under age 3S "arc
Indian poupe bave been asking Allen County in 1960 and had beeti '
either iit jail, in Prison on probation the miiiOUIII f&lt;J a year 10 return ihc displayed at the museum lor ~.
qr parole,1011ght on arrest wanaDII remains.
than 15 years.
or out on bond," said Jerome
Raywood Schuclt, director of
The board voted earlier lhis year.·
Miller, direcltor .o f the National the ADen County Museum, said he to remove the skeleton from dia•
Cenler on lnltliutions and Al.-- probably will let lhc Indilal COD• play but keep the bones. The deci·
lives, an Alexandria, Va., issues duct the burial
He sai.d sion was mldc because there wai
group
be will ast IICVcral I
groups insufficient proof concerning the :
In 'Baltimore, 56 percent ·of their views on the most appropriate heritage of lhe bones Ibid which :
)'0111111 black men n involved wilh burial.
lribe they would belong bi, Schuck ;
lhO jUidCe IYitem; in the Diltrict ~
There are four poops that have sal~
.
'
Columbia. 42 pertlON, Mill« laid.
made aborlginallaild claims of the
The bones bolona l!l a prcbis- :
"'111e CCCinomic opportunilics Ohio area, Schuck said. Thole toric people c ailed' t.he G I•cial ·
available to men are grealer for tribes are the WYI!Idol. the Ollawa. Kame who inhabiled lbe Midwest
while men than blaclt men," said · the E11tcm Shawneea and the 4.000 yean aao. predating the trib- • .
Reynold's F..ey. mearch ICientist Delawlre, all of Okl•bOIJ!a
al system, he said.
..
•
at lhe Univcrsity of Michigan's
The museum~• board of direc:He said it would be diffiCult 10 :
Population Studiea Ccnler. "Blaclt tors voaed Monday to return the track the bones' lineage because :
women IW forted to assume more remains.
. .
lbe Glacial Kanie were the a.1iest '
economic rokll than while women
Joyce Mlhancy, pmident of lbe known seitlers of the' regiori and ;
are bcc•nJC fewer
can support American Indians Inlcrlribal Asao- prehistoric people roamed from l
lhem."
ciation of Toledo, said .~h~ w~· area to area.
•, , I

rna~

,\ I 111'&gt;'111( 1,

\

•

M.. .ieallu.....,.eall
.. 1: v..lli&gt;...
For Sale or Trade

'

s

$13.00
. $1.30/day

FOREVER .
BRONZE

Poto for Solo

11\\\(1\1

$ .20
$ .30
$ A2
.60
$.05/day

,. KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINnNANCE

'32.00
Many more speci11ls.

RATES
Days

OP!aN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

. R&amp;C IICAYATI..

12-1-'92-1

BOrnE Of LOTION

hoan. Mrs. Cecil Blacltwood. Mrs.

Michael Elberfeld, Mrs. Gary
Moore Jr., Mrs. John Rice and Mrs.
Arthur Skinner.

Alit,., llobt

CHRISTMAS SPECIAl
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE

667-Cool~e

1

GUll SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

DEER CUT
AND J
WRAPPEb
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.-

c~

12N1 mo. pd.

895-Lot~..
· 937-Bulrolo

· 142-K•daa~

25511111., tllddllport,Oio.
tt24384 Do!t,J'42-3412G EVf·
I -poll WMialoyl
I .,.12 pmSIII!nlayl untl

RACINE GUN

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
1:00 p.m. S.hlrday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueodoy .
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thwldty
1:00 p.m. Prlday

Monday Paper
Tueodoy Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Paper
Friday
Somday

CLOSED SUND4Y

POLICIES

...... llraUe
PwwltMrlng
Rubb•-wlnvl Roor .....

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
. Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

~Duty Ylnyllloa.. ~

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

..,_Slap._.,...

992-2259

ltxterlor ahould be Iedin
oOtor

Mud a Snow llr•
Domll Light
Clglntto Ughtor

1'-r Slicing Window
'JWo bl* lll'e requ•lod;
- with two- whul drive
and the aoaond will lour
whaelclrlva.
·
The Dlatrlct Ia alao

trading In a 1881 aoovrotet

$-IOwhlch _,be-et.
tto. Dlotrlol Olflco at 1:00
A.ll. Md 4:15 P.M. lnolude
In OICII bid, 1M price lor the
trul1 ln.
· The blda muat be
by •1110% bid
bond, and .porlor-noa
bond 10 tho filii 111110unt or

_,.,..eel

1 card of Thanks . .
, Scipio Voluntetr

Fire

.Dept. would like to
thank tltl rltldtnta of
Scipio for yOII' support
througout tltl ytlr end
voting ·for tltl fire levy.

AJld • Big Thank You
Howard Frank for your
donaUons. Tltank you

lglitL
Scipio Voiun!Hr

Fire Dept
',,

608 EAST MAIN
205 North Second Ave.
, Mlddl_,ort, OH
YOST ROAD- 7.8 AcAII and ranch type home with 3
bed100ms, lull basement. and ono car garage. Homo has
juot been redecorated witli new cl!binats and hardwood
ftooro. GreatlocatiQn- just of Fom1ot Run Road.
·

AM-FII Recio

men

\•

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
'

LONG BOITOM - ''The Glory
of The Lord," a Olrislmll cantata
CHESTER - Evangelist Ron
under lhe direction of Sue Mathe- ·Marr, Winler Garden, Fla., will
ny, will be pn!IICDted Thursday at 7 ·speak at New Life Covenant .
p.m. at the Long Bottom Uniied Church- of God in Chester at 9:30
M~t Church. Bveryone welcome.
.
. '. _a.m. ~d 6 p.!D. 011 Sa!Uid4y, an4
Sunday. Pastor Gary Hines invit.e4
othe public.
.
~
. ,.

c:eren:';,

QUAUTY PAM' SHOP

•- To place an ad

PRIDAY
;
LONG B01TOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottolll
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. A special group'
will be peri
. • There will also
be local~ Sieve Reed
invitea ihe' public. Fellowship will
follow.
·

Indian groups won't protest
museum's decision about bones :

r

I

l

Poverty, social ills.keep many
black women f~om marriage

. ?inti-Nazi agency faces phaseout

•

.

nJPPERS PLAINS - Tu_ppera
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. Members
are urged 10 attend. .

Meanwhile, it's time to do _that
By JEFFREY ULBRICH
shopping-. If you've liv~ long
Associated Press Writer
enough you're aware that f!ICCS arc
TORONTO
,.... Two Mounties
high-but then you can 1 take it
patrolling
the
frozen
SL lawrence
with you. I told a friend of mine
River
spotied
a
snowmobile
dragthat. He says if he can tate it with
.him he "ain't" gonna go. Do ..cep
L
gilljl a sled across the ice and sped
smiling.
thell' own machine toward iL The
suspeel CUt his lOW rope and raced
away,
He left behind 2S eases of
cigareues, another drop in lhe overflowing buetet of contraband
tobacco poUring iniO Canada from
,•
the Uniled States.
··
The huge price difference
, OREGON, Ohio (AP) -The rosafe's expansion fn May 1991 on between highly tsxed Canadian
•'Ohio Environmental Protection lbe condition that all sand on lbe ' cigaretles and Ametican tobacco
fAJCIIC)' covem1 iip aeolos\1:11 tellS' silt be removed and that tile new has created a billion-dollar smug•
:in 1990 that would&gt; have stopped wasle pii be encased in a synlbelic gling industry th~ stirs memories
~the expanSion of the Slllle's only liner.
of lbe 1920s and Piobibition across
·~ wasle landfall, a former
Sahli said the board never tnew the borda'.
'
;-s~are ofliciahaid.
Envirosafc conducted lests that · · "It's almost like the days of AI.
;- ''If we had had .this report, we showed large sand seams in the Capone," Sgt. Waltel Wafl!l', chief
would hive never given Envirosafe new waste pit. He said lhe sand custornes and excise officer of lbe
, the permit. '111e report was kept seams could cause waste 10 Spread Royal Canadian Mounted ,Police,
• • from us. It was concealed. It was to Otter Creek, a Late Erie tribu- said in Montreal. "The only thiJigs
: unethical. It was covered UP and I l8ry.
missing today are the Tommy
: think people have to know that,"
Sahli said the board originally guns."
· said Richard Sahli, former board n:jecled the permit because· it was
Most of lbe contraband is Cana; director of the Ohio Hazardous unsure whether there were sand dian-made cigmttes lhat have been
· Wasle Facility Board.
seams in the new waste piL He said exported duty-free to the Uniied
', .Sahli, who supporled the expan- lbe board wouldn't have reconsid- Stales. Smugglers buy them lhere
; sion, said Tuesday lhe ~ showed ered its original decision if it 11M and slip them back into Canada,
• polential problems at 1be site.
examined lbe report.
where a growing distribution nei: Sahli saicl'he is asking EPA
"It would have been all over. wort has sprung up.
•
::Director. Donald Schregardus to There would have been no reason
Despite the booming illegal
'ieopcn the case so the board could to reconsider the Aug. 29 decision trade, lhe Canadian__ govcmm
. ent
1 'eceive additional information based on the geology,". Sahli said. shows no sian qf modifying its polabout' lhc Envirosafe Services of •'There was a siBDificant difference icy of trying 10 force smokers 10
Ohio tnc. landfill in this Toledo between what !be tests showed and quit by makin~ cigarettes pro.suburb. .
what they testified 10."
hibitively expenSive.
· Salill is now director of the Ohio
Cl)uct Hull, an EPA supervisor
· "Our milD conccm is lbe health
·;Environmental Council, a coalition overseeing the expansion, said the of Canadians and preventing the
:or IIKlRI than 100 sts1e environmen- point is moot because the board harm lhat arises from lhc consump'lal poups. He said he wants Envi- requircll that all the sand be tion of cigarettes,'' said Bill Maga,
JOSiife 10 SlOp construc:tim of a 42- removed' and replaced wilh hard a senior policy analyst atlbe Health
aae Wille cell.
cIay.
and Welfare Minislry. "Taxation
; "As far as I'm concerned, the
"We haven't found anything has been shown 11 one of the most
.tredibility of Envirosafe and the new or any reQSOn 10 be concerned effective measures in reducing
;Ohio EPA has been buried just like that !here's any kind of e.nviron- toblcco consumption.''
jhc toxic Wasle itself," Sahli said.
menial problem," Hull said.
In 1991, Canadian federal and
...: Sahli headed the,board in May
Hull said he dido 't tnow why provincial governments collecled
'1991 when it approved the compa- the results weren't given to the
ny'l CIII(MIISion permit, IC'm'Sing an · board. He said an on-sire inspector
earlier decision. A year. later, the should have noled that Envirosafe
IOhio Supreme Court refused to was conducting the rests.
.hcarlbecity'ofOrqon's appeal.
"We're trying to go bact and
: Wld!out the permit, Envirosafe ficn- out h
..... da
•would have 'run· out of landfill lo-w ere we were
Y
and that week," Hull said.
:1pace as early as next year and
Oregon officiais want to know
· By TIM BOVEE
•Would have been forted to close.
ho ade lhe d · ·
Alloc:lated Press Writer .
Envirosa~e conducted under- w m
ecJSIOD not 10 share
WASHINGTON- Poverty and
lhe information with the bosrd.
1round pumping tests for three
Envirosafe President-James the ills it produces are kee11ing
days be&amp;inning SepL 25, 1990, a Hamilton said the companv f!'tc many black women from marilage,
,month afletlbe board rcjecied lhe the information to lbe EPA r,s - n:searchera say. The government
;qllll_~a~y's expansim permit.
ly after we had it."
says one black woman in four
• . On Dec. 20, 1990, lhe board
"They're trying 10 say we hid reachca the age of 40 without ever
~ 10 re~;onsider its Aug. 29 something," he said. "The inforhaving married.
lllllllll'iclq and lake additional infor- marion was not wilhheld"
That's far more than among
Hull said he didn't find. out while women, when: only one in
p!atlon concerning Envirosafe's
p!!logy.
·
about the tests until A(Xil, about 18 10 turns 40 without havin' mar, The board approved En vi- month.s after they were conducted.
ried, the' Census Bureau S81d in a
study relellscd Tu=sda
.
The IIIUdy, " . e, Divorce
and Remarriage in the 1
," also
said lhat divorce may decline during the decade 10 tbe point wiMn
'
; DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Audi- in 1992, and asked for an increuo four out of 10 marriages can be
JGII in !he u.s. Department of J•- tO $4.26 million for next year. As expccled to dissolve rather than the
tlce 1a)' the government should of April 1991, the offiCe had 485 five-in-10 rate generally seen in lhe
~ out the agency that spends open cases.
1980s.
·
Glillioas of dollars a year 'hunting
But,
it
said,
rclllarriage
also ·is
Because U.S. courts have no
illderlv World warn Nazis.
expecled
to
decline
in
lhe
'90s,
jurildic:tion 10 try Nazla for W&lt;Xid
In ·a report made public thi1 ' War 'U crimea, OSI enforces imml· with only about two of three
m01th, the inspector general did . gratlon and naturalization laws, womea romatrYina • a divm:e.
6ot recommoad that die J u1tice which prohibit concealing Nul
Fewer bllck. riien are avalllblo
~t cloee lhe office, but involvement when entering the for lllllrlqc "primaily bee- or
iliillhc deplibl... lhould be (1111- country.
pov.• ty and IDMY of the ditftcul,
.,... b the eveac.l doling.
In six cases, suspected Nuis ties that follow from that," said
: !'Malt of lhc cdmca lid placo died before OSI staned invcstigat- Clrl Haub, a dcmognqn'ler wilb lbe
45 , . . qc&gt;, and the ._.... ' inglbem.
P11pulation Reference Bureau, a
of Nul c:rfininlls is 75," the
"If ckad-alivc checks had been Washington rcsean:h lfOUP.
Among the f~c:tors that
MeciDr ..~era! WI'Oie, according done orie:ly, lhe cases '!l'ould
6J I report by the DaytQn Daily not have
resean:hera
say keep bllclts from
opened,.. lbe inlpec!Jews lOIIeY.
marril&amp;e:
tor geiiCIIIIIIid in a SC~Matetcpon
-Black unemployment now
• The Office ot Special In~­ released in July. ·
·
dona 111!4 ~ budget of $3.9 million
_ , at nearly !~_ percent, double

TFormer state official asks
f.board to reconsider case

e~­

lisL Special singin' n!ahdy~ Rev.
James R. ~ Sr. mVJiea me public.
'

Second effcctivelr with the dis-

plays of white mint-lights in

.

STIVBRSVIW! -Brother J~
Cotaerill will l]leat at tho
· Sliveraville -wonl of Faith Oum:h
on Tharaday and Friday at 7:30
p.m. Pallor Da.id Dailey invitq
!be public.

by Bob Hoeflich
•

•

.

.·

$48,500

TUPPERS PLAINS .- Rioo Run Road - lns1anUy appeal·
ing is tliis 3 bed100m modular with 2 beths. You'll love to
CIOme home to cook .Upper in tlils beautiful kitchen and
theri reiJix In front ol tlie tlrapiaca. This is lilting on
appn&gt;x. 1·li1CA11.
REDUCED TO $43.500
FAIRVEW SUBDIVISION - Crew Roed - A large 1 ~
acra lot wltli a Barrington doublewlde, sitting on a full
buemonl. Homa has 3-4 bedroorris, dining r09m, family
room, and lnground swimming pool , back deck, and
much mora.
WAS $57,000
NOW $51 ,000
·RUTLAND- A Corner Butl,_a ·Opened lhroo yaaro
ago, but 11 doing a thriving buoino11. Eveoything you
need to opeiJIIe a Yiclao IJirllal, ooft Move Ice cream, hoi
ctoga, etc..The bullinaat comet wilh the bulidi!'IJ. appro~.
2300 current vldooa, VCR'a Ninlando games, 2 oco cream
machlnoa, and much mora. lock; slock and bemol .....
·
.
ONLY$115,000
wELCHTOWN ROAD ·A two otGoy homo with 4'1. acru .
hat a new Hardy furnace, a new root, equipped kltchan
(range and Allrigerator), wariher and dryer, comes wilh a
· famity room, clnlng room, and thN8 becfrooms.
$30,000

DOTTIE TURNER, BroiW.---·-----1111--

IIIIENDA .-;mRS..-----·-------1111124011

~ mwART......:--·-·"--·--~-

IAIC)Y

a••

al1'a.R...----------·-111-1171

IPIWILINCL.--·-------&lt;*&gt; IG-Ma
OFFICE-·-o;-o··-·····---····:·········---112-1114
. ,)
J!ARY
j.

Box...169
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

NEW LISnNG- TUPPERS PLAINS- 2 stoly, H bectoom
home on paved Rl 1+ acre, fenced back yard, 2
fireplaces, unique original styling.
$49,900

NEAR 4LBANY - Lovely split toyer home .willl 4
bedrooms 2 batho, decking, garage, appliances,
basement 'with workshop, 8.35 acres wi1h truot trees &amp;
shed. $54,900
DEXTER· 1 112 stooy. home with 4 bedrooms , cellar,
garden area, added lnsulalion, large front porch, newly
painfed. $16.000
SR 388-1 ftoor frame home 'with :j bedrooms, view of
river, needs repair. ASKING $5,900 make a good
fishing/hunting cabin I
.

'.

.

POMEROY, OHIO

REDUCED: LOVETT RD. • 2 sto,Y log home with 2208
sq. 11. living space, 3 'bedroom.s, 2 baths, lar_ge
deck/porch, bull in accessories , 3 112 acres. Beautiful
home &amp; location. REDUCED TO $79,900

•

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10%·20% Off
1Pu11te1·o, Beginner Sete,
Youth Cuetom Drlvera.
Lesaone Included whh
purchaa.e.

YOUNG
Do you r1Hd a

.

In llfl?

._.rt

18 yra •nd up. Earn aa

much u

you WMI, lull

or part time from your

SHRUB &amp; TREE ·
TRIM and
REMOVAL

home. Nocuh

•LIGHT HAULING

ownboaa,JIV8n It
you'ra et,~lllcaci!T•,.wdetllllnl
Thla II""

•FIREWOOD

. Inveetment, be your

Located on Scout Camp
Rd., Cheater, OH.-

BILL SLACJ( .
992-2269

USED' RAILROAD nES.

......

11127

I

DIC..!r

1888 SKYLINE Manufactured Home- 3 bedrooms, 2
balh, CIA, fireplace, akyligh1, appliance&amp;, skirting, otepa~
In 'Like New• condition. Leave on rented lot..,r move to&gt;
location of your eholcel $29,900 (OWNER WANTS AN
OFFERI)

SANITATION

' ~ber SJMCial

DON'T JUST DRIVE BY OUR OFFICE I STOP IN AND
SEE THE GREAT SECLECTION OF HOUSING WE
HAVE AVAILABLE! ONE MAY BE JUST RIGHT FOR
YOU I OUR DOOR IS PLWAYS OPEN ... TO YOU I
HENRY E. CLELAND.............................882-1111
'fRACY BRINAGER............- ....----Mt-2431
JEAN TRUSIELL ..................- .........-Mt-2eecl
OFFICE-•• ;••••••••••••••••••••~........................112-2251

••

FREE EmMATES

992·3138
I

•

�'

•

.\

.·

December
WednMdly,

Ohio
3Z Mobile Homll
torlelt

"

Pomeroy Middleport, OHio

Uuntacll

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtp&amp;

Aplrtii!Mt
fOr Renl

TUTIIU'
PI IIIII

O fovr
Rearrange lallars of
xramblod wordo
PHILLIP

ALDER

.._

- ...
~I Hollr
II
., ........
,
, Moll,
AIC,
s eel ~ lsllsl4
~a~

... .
~

NORTH

11-t-11

+872

.KJH
tAQJ

--- -......

tQJ5

HayiGIWn
- . . - '!!':!'._~·~t-..

WEST
+KQIU3

.....

71

Autos for Bale

~ BARNEY

I'M L'ARNIN'
· TATER HOW TO
PLAY CARDS

--

Wanted to Do

:~PEANUTS

'

=
7

Wesl

Norlb

1•
4•

It
Pass

It
2•
Pass

Yard Sale

1.

a.

- .......... _
11101.

- . ·I U

--

21

/

I

olio

CLO(lC.f' 01'1

.... ... wv. ...........

BuSiness

OpportunitY'

12112112, Clllldown.. Ad.,
11-4• Iaaie, loollw coil,

.......
.....-.rm,

wfVE SeT OUP BIOJ.OtiiC.AL

• b.,,............
""'"
llolh!o

Fmanc1al

.......

IIIO'TICEI

--,...,..""'
thlil

-

~do

SNOOZE

"" '-1..

C.ONT flO£. .

.--""--. \'J
(,..

Fumished
Rooms

45

OHIO YALLEY PI.IILIIHING CO.
IIDQR. . . . . .

_fl

a.u-.

......

-~~

NOTtooolld-=lho
111111 unll .... ..... ..... ....

lhoolloflni.

.~

.

~""~ c: c!::

1814 Chovr • ...., 41A. ~
J04-e7H7M or . . . I:GO Pll
1711-'IIID.

piJie
h nvonlofy And fE..
QuJpiMinl C1 Ancf c:t I 'C Illo

AIM II h'dll I .... ,om Home
.._"' lio Vlnlon Cc!untJ. Ohio.
114 - 1024 PriDed R. . DDtdl

11811 Chevy · - ' woe-,
IJnl Condition! ~
8oudo, M,IOO. ~~ i
1111 Oodaa Dollola, 4 ......

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

SCIIAMslETS ANSWERS
', .,
Worker • Shirt , Drunk - Nozzle - OUT in SNOW
A fellow worker at the used car 1o1 t worked at was
in the country just a short time. He couldn't understand
why we lock up toilet paper and leave expensive cars

GRAVE
BLANKETS

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS

For Yo1,1r Lpst

Rugs, Placemats,
Quilts, &amp;Types
Pillows, Animai1,
lots of •mall articles.
~and up

I

Loved 0 ne.
Handmade with
white pine.

Real Estate

NNCIIGift?

ACIIOSS

$20•00

OPAL HOLLAN

(614) 949-2058

985-4356

..... • d-""''"'lor,.."'

31 Homes for Sele
BR

....
1'1., .11 - ....
2d
walls,
2 _,....
bolho,
dlnlnt
~
In - . Uy ...,..... 2 par-

CHESTER

-.•mar-.

11-30-1-.

....

rwtr~or,

Eurob,Lft ..·o.

GRAY'S

Deer Heads....••••••••••..••••*190 I room hams, 2 ..,.. on river
• . - . - -24018.
Turkey~ ...........................'1
BEAUTIFUL HOUIE 'FOA .,LE
Hlalcoolool Canw Lot ....
•
h
.
*400
llaln St. Pl........... w. Va.
FIS ••• •••• •••••••••• ••• •• •••
par Inch 9ornPIItllr Renontecf: a Full
HVAC, Co1Dat. AftiCall (304) 895-3386
ln.- « tfr.11H4NIM
OOVEAHIIENT HOliES F""" II
after 5 p.m.
~':."':GP,=:,o:: v!:
00

......

(.

L..-----------~---------...11

,~

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

ANa Far
11) Cunanl
IOHN111.
4112
A"!" L1a1.

QH.

For In Cholihlra w.
taga, • . . _ • ""'"' .... Flat
IAil By ~-W::IO P.ll

PhoM: 114-44._,. Allor 3:30
P.lt.l-21.

INC.

Home Or lnwMbnant 1

. New Homes • VInyl Siding

a.

·
New Garages • Replacement Wfndowa
·
Room A~dltlons • Roofing . .

.....,. In . , Wlh A1C
" - Lot ..
tM4IM7IO
&lt;lri1WIIo71
. . . . . _ _ Uyls ......,l

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

lA, 1o11211ill, 114 - ... Gooll FE\11bdf DDdwiiNn 2
,.._ - Tpd Cllr lottall

.

t to:

Me ul 1 N P

'

L-.;_------:----.---------"'--"'"''..J"'

'

..

'

Fer:

'

.....
I

DCfiMr

......

'

- . lor
nl1r1 .... 875-2018.

.,~
'

•

47 VIP
50 For (Sp.)
51- to Joy
521ncrealtln
loudnn•

57- Mill
58 Corn p?ant
porta

Si Cut
60 Intermediate
(pral.)

61 Shoo!

palo, -

.

'I

. ''

,111 ...,..

:iO.'t i'W: - ...... e;:
.Piall yo MIS loa!'' o An.

'·

'

IWEDNESDAY

_. ••aattAIIIr7:oa,...

.npo~alaa wW lour, ... ~

BB2·

::'
...To J P::;,=::
_.,_.IIIII

I I I

I

I

Jhl!rt1

... OilY
5 95

69

. . . . . Or . . . . ..

Serv1ccs

1:-w*il.·~~­

=~=~~·=

Poae...y l't.Uy Sendnel
112-2118

Pt. Ple"••t Betl•ter
875-1333

.......

•
'

'MGDBWL

a we o

UHVWLUVGFUTTI

W T I

up c .

CAFCNV

UEG P U GT

xwv
F W L C

XWVJGXP

M G V J

•

a w c_o

MZGXSTCO.'

Y UX

EHZ CX.

PREVIOUS SOLUnON: '"I don't find It that easy to bare my soul, to do
Intimate things In front of a camera." - Barbra Strelsand.

C1 1il2 TV UStin9 InC.

Ft Worth. TX

DECEMBER

''

91

•

•

..•
•

.
'''

•

'· I

w..
.
.
.
....
...........,

TV,

.•

ill " ' - 1111 . . . , .

"_""'
af· olio .... . . _
, ~--..-.

57

patch up a broken romonce? The Aa?roGraph Mate-er can help you to un,
d-..cP - t to do to make the rola,
•
•
· tlonlhlp work. Mill $2 plua a long, self,
ASTRO·GRAPH
a d d - . stamped enve?ope .Po
Matchmai&lt;ar, 1&gt;.0. Box 91428. Clevel1111d, OH 441,1-3428.
·
CAI'IIICOIIN (Dec. 11s.11n. 11) You're
likely to be able to pertoo 111 physical
Iasko more afftclant?y today than mental
oneo. Give your muecleo 1 workout and
your mind 1 -t. ·
AQUAIIIUI (.IM. »Fell.11) The oddi
are tNilld o?lght?y In your favor today In
altuatlonl Phil have et.mento a1
chance. Howevw, this clowt"t give you
11cen1t to be o toolla?l rlok tok.-.
PIICEI (Fell. 20 llarol&amp; 10) Do not be
'!-'Y COl-lied today with how you
will handls c?evelopmenta that could be
prob?ematle. You tend !0 worry too
mUCh obOut negative lactcn thll1 mey
, _ materlllllz8.
•
·
Oec.1D, , •
AJIII (lllroll 21·Aprll 11) Try to
spend 10111e time today cotchlng up on
Tho year ahead may be qune unlllllal I'OW PIIPUwork ond/Ot COII ..POit·
becouSI peop;e or thlnga thll1-. for, denoe. Put t!llngl In an ordtrPy lromt
mor?y obat- could now ..,.. u and make phone Calla you've
brldgel on your.peth to IIUCCMI.
bean negllctlna.
·
IAGn'TAIIIUI (Now. 13 Dec. 21) Mort TAUIIUI (April 10 .... 10) Financial
can be eccomplllhed today wlih an ef. lnd?oatara looll
poolllve lor
1tct1vt plorl.....,.p orr~t than you at Phlallme. Target.,... !hat could
through Independent action. Be,a team be meaningful to you·m.,.,....ro. and .
p?ayer Instead of • loner. Trylna to locuo your el1art1 and energlea there.

,

..,. arl 3 I II ..........

~..a.-- ·· -­
~.,...

=
ll??oL

.. ,. ,. ,.. ;;;;; •-· a

.,

lil:!:ll..:t
~··.c. :::.==
"

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'

. . . . . 111111-1 .

y

"

~

13•._ _,;, _ __
14•._ _ _ __
15....__ _ _.,..,.

GaiUpoU• Dally Dolb~e
'
448-2342

Judl1h5 Short play
6 Petroleum

(abbr.)

111011 Lt!G ....... .
"" TIGI •a!o ....... ....,..
:?OSI-IIIDPIC .
-

wmx

1 Baoketball
league

Mercfllndlll

-- ,II".............

Comp~raUvt

3Whltl
projection
4 Nowolllt

DOWN

54 Miscellaneous .

.. '.

2

62 German Mr.

11a-.

Q. llive near a family named Jones.
Is it wrong to refer to them as 'the
Jones"?
·
A. Yes, it is. You may want to use
"the Jones family." But If each member of the family iS a Jones, then the
entire group needs to be made plural.
Whenever a name ends in S (like
JONES), you'll have to form tbe plural
by adding an E as well as another S.
Learning to express yourself well iS a
good way to keep up with the Joneses.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

........

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

i;MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

•'

Ctdl our olficefor paid ill adaiaAce ralea/

lllu

o. ................ ~

.... a1 ...

.

Turn your clutter into ca.h,
~ it the egy woy... by ghone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your chHtified ad today!
15 aoordt or leu, 3 4tw,
3 pqgeu,$6.00

-..................

em- ...................
....... lidl

•

.,.

'

~.:=:

..........
-

.·. ·. ~

~~-_:__c:.:...-·

!::...No=~~~

. . . . . . . . lnlf,

..... MVIM

76 ·Auto Panaa

'"'!'tl....'-'"'

211 ....... w..

I

'

llulllnd. ·011: 4 l a l - . I
On 2 Aort Lot.

(No Slllllay Calls)

I

..........

.

.I.

11W4HI11.

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

614-949·2101. 949·2160
. or 915·3139

I I

lo 1:811 p.m. 114 ... 21111.

;B....
.... ~·lei·

f

w CSfi.ZtiO, ball
lllb, 2,4110 oalual

IUJ or ao1. AI ...... Antlquae, Clwl I
... IIIII, Whllso . . .
il24 It lloln .......... Rl. 124. ............ ._,..
p 'ray. 11--= II.T.W. 10:Gt
ji~l
ii~.;iiji;!iiiiCi-r;ciM~
o.m.ta 1:GO P.'!4--Y 1:GI "'Cllloow: CM ~

· cA~H?II .
r

S..:..f:O

Antiques

53

~ HolM

Ill... -1,1112 lllllo . _

~

Molorcyclet

Ac:CIIIOriH

••u W
-----~·­
PIN do"Wn EXTRA
~ ....... - . 011 ••- .
2 lt*DCMM, 2 Acree. 11110

BU~LDERS,

....... -. ....... 74

dou-.., Unlumlolloil
ow!fllla!Mar ...,.,
f
- ..... CIJon.
m.ooo.
2 ""'"" 1 wldl ~ ...... - . uoa. 1100
tub. O.Uipolla fenY. IIOW75- t a rh 111 141 1111.·
7217.
I ..,., J

L-----------"-m~ . L-----------~

BISSELL

....... ~ ...,.,

1t12 Ka
dr!Nn -

.•

315 Spetdl
37 Walt
39- Grande
40 Famed
l"vtntor
42 More
delle lou a
44 --daley
46 Tho one•
here

Wordiness or excessive laqguage is j i i....I....JVERBIAGE ('VER-bee:ij'), as in
"the verbiage of government reports.' Never let its spelling colifuse
you, · even though the noi!D VJ!:R·
BIAGE starts with VERB .

~-·l:wPIL

....,_ dlpoal lnlf ,.,.,.. Ill
rwquhrd, 114 1• IIU

,.

The World Almanac® Crossword
Puzzle'. I
.

By Jef!Hy McQain

1HZ Jaap Wrsnallr, I -~1

.Household
Good a

:;
'

OUR LANGUAGE

&lt;

an.

1

.,

--~O~UT~in~S~NO~W~·----~·~~====~---------~·~

«&gt; ........APD.IUU

,,.. - aand,
· .....
lull
.................
.,...,..

r.1 ercl1 and se

1

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

By Pbllllp Alder
1 Cindie pert
In tournament bridge 30 years ago
5 Earth
simple overcalls were sound and the 9 Dononllc
anlm11
jump overcall was super-strong. Playwere afraid that the responder 12 Produce
lletrlc unit
I Wllould make a lucrative penalty don· 13
14 Allan wo.,.
of an indiscreet intervention. Nowen'a quartera
everyone bids. Overcalls are 15 Armored
jump overcalls emaciated.
mom mal
tbe opponents are going to enter 17- onnum
your auctions, trying to disrupt your 18 After
finely tuned bidding engine, you must 19 deducUone
AgrM
have mechanics ready to repaor any 21 llarbra Sire~
damage. A good garage at which to
nnd movie
start iS Mike Lawrence's book "The 24 Stelrcase
pert
Complete Guide to Contested Auctions" ($14.95, Lawrence &amp; Leong, 25 GrondCanyon State
212-866-5860).
.
27 Songi lor
Lawrence considers aU the possibiltwo
ities; giving sound advice .on how to 31 TV"'"''
deal with enemy interference. My only
aource
regret is that there are no full deals to 32 Zoll hlrolne
break up the material. But as the book ~ ~ctor Bruce
is 380 pages long, perhaps. Lawrence
didn't want his readers to feel they
were buying an encyclopedia.
Declarer misplayed today's deal, allowing an overcall · to · deflect his
thinking.
West led the spade king. South
ducked. hoping West would fall for the
Bath Coup; but no, be swit.ched to the
diamond two. Expecting West to have
the king for bis vulnerable overcall,
South finessed dummy's jack. However, East won with the kina and fired
back his second spade. Now declarer
had four unavoidable· loeen; ·
spades, one diamond and one club.
The diamond fillesse is an Uluslon. H
dummy's diamond ace is played, the
contract is secure. Declarer' draws 1
trumps and drives out the club ace, es:
tablishing a discard for his second
spade loser.

clltVI, II,GIIO OIIIM, UG aond,

_ , ....... J0447UI41.

·1

·1
.
•
.
V by flll•llg 1n the m•ss•no words
ll-...L.......IL-...L..~-L--1
1
you develop from step No. 3 below.

....

WIU ..,.lor sldody In mr hams, . I .....,.11 lor ,.., 1 a z
IM-118N8al.
l A . - dop. IICI'Id. ~

X

6 PRINT NUMBERED LE TTUS IN
'l!:lfJ
THESE SQUARES

ow to
fight back

----

-

Soatb

EN: D I

•

t get great satisfaction fror_n
knowing the answer to a qu1z
show. But there os .even more
,________-"'"""' satisfaction if there is somav y s.0 A R onearoundtohearme------ it. ,
5 I I I6 I
f t Complete t he ~huckle quoted

Opening lead: • K

NOPE-- HOW TO DEAL
OFF'N TH' BDTTDM
OF TH' DECK

RA TREE SERVICE. TOIIPing,
Trimming. TrM A-VII, HOdge
Trimming. ,,.. lo"""'lnl 114111-liiiTAI• 4p.m.

Employment Serv1ces

SOBlE

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Help

•

WREBER

tK2

'

18

tl098764

SOUTH
tAH
.AQ983
+H3

;:.

I
I
I. I I I I .
1,.

K95

tA3

·.

to form four simple words.

I

t64
•u
+

z

iow

tn.
bo-

~ I
I I ~
-4--.....1.1-...1..-.L.__,~_ ~

EAST

.10
tl0862

Trans pv tat 1c111

11

..••

( .

GE. . ( . , a1::Jilrii 20) Your-fiide- ·
pend.,.. will be very lmponanl to you
today and you won:t like being Imposed .

' '.

upon by others. Try to aVOid people
whom you·know have a tendency to do
Jual that.
CANCER ( , _ 21..hdy 22) Strive to be
he!plul - - you can today, be·
what you do tor Dillen will bring
you true gratllic8llon and happiness.
Look out tor the person.
LEO (olulr D-Aug. 22) Being around
~people !lOIJid make you fll!ll
_., llllCCII!IfOrlatoday, 10 try to give
them 11 o Mrlh u poallble. You
be too oppoe?lng e?ther II you~
on an.
VIIQO (...... II lopl. II) You're In a
,aooll ....,_, cyc!t todey 10 ~··
"1inporttnt that you aim tor ~ve
a objactlva ShOOt high, be11 you .fall lhort. you could

I

.''
'•
•
•

..•
•I

-·t

-!

·•
•

tara-t•

•
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Pag1 11-T'tw o.Hy Sentinel

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Pomeroy-llddleport, Ohio

EASTMAN'S

Ohio Lottery

•OHIO VALLEY eGALLIPOLIS.
•PT•.PLEASANT •TWIN RIVERS •BIG BEND

APnames
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High In mid 30L

9-11-Jl -34-40-43

Page4

Kicker:
360413

'•

••

'

Your Commupity Minded, Low-Priced Supermarket

,,

Vol. 43, No. 161
Copyrighted 1992

.

2 SecUons, 12 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 10, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Syracuse asks coUnty to fund London Pool
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Members of Syracuse Vi!lage
Council approached ·the Meigs
County Commi ssioners on
Wednesday about county funding
for the London PooL
Mayor James Pape and Councilmen Jack Williams and James Hill
attended the commissioners' regular meeting yesterday, armed with a
financial repon outlining the deficit
in the pool's operational budget.
. During the past summer, the pool
operated at a loss of $10,1.87.50.
· "'fhe operation of tl)e pool has

ASSORTED SIZES

RQIT BASKETS·

been a constant drain on the
finances of the village," Pape sai,d.
"Due to operating costs and necessary repairs on the facility , 1992
was the worst year ever for the
pooL"
In order to make the needed
repairs to the pool and keep. it open
last summer, village council was
required to b9rrow $10,000. That
loan ·will have to be paid from the
general fund, Pape said.
The group emphasized that on! y
about 50 percent of Syracuse residents use the pool, and that the
poet is open to and used by resi-

dents around the county.
If it is to be opened in the
spring, at least $8,000 will have to
spent to repair leaks in the pool,
in~luding funds which were borrowed to make repa irs after the
pool closed this fall.
Not only is the pool fund operating in the red, but increasing maintenance is depleting the village's
general fund, which is being used
to supplement the pool budget.
"We've been struggling along,"
Williams said, "but that's over. I
think the townspeople of Syracuse
would have a problem with our

AND
WILSON

Corn King
Ham

.HAM

and

. $15 9 ::~~~CIS
lB.

4·7 lB. AVG.
· 95% lEAN .

99

I

·.

3 LIS.

I .

WAHAMA PRESENTS CHORAL SHOW·
of'Waliama Hi~b &amp;hoot, under the
direction of Crystal Hendricks, performed durIng a choral Jlr*ntatlon sponsored by Farmers
Baqk at lbe stage on the parking lot in Pomeroy

~ 'f·llh:boir

JNo!dmie~&lt;lay

evening. A siuble crowd was 011
for the event wbicb concluded with the
lillltir11 of candles and the singing of Silent
by all.

Searchers
find 7 killed

LB.

.in mine blast

5 LB.
BAG

·NORTON, Va . (AP) Searchers found the bodies of
seven inen killed in a coal mine
explosion, but dangerous levels of
methane gas forced them to withdraw before they could locate an
eighth miner or remove the dead.

BI·RITE

c

Powdered
r

Gala ·

2 LB.
BAG

•

Chocolate -. $
.Cherries

Paper

Towels

19

601.
12 CT.
BOX

$ 29

BULK CHOCOLATES

Bloomer
DEW• PE~I
PRODUCTS

14.99

9~,

DIAMOND WALNUTS

'.$14'1·

~ • c1 ;

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,

ID L.lllllt Qullitilln' Prta. Etloctlve Thlu ..... Dee. 12, 1111• USOA Food Stamp. 11ftc1 WIC
• Nat "-ponelble for "Typagraphtc.l or Plalortll Erron.

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.

--Local briefs,-___,
Lock tampering probed

.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that Pat
McDole of Belpre reponed Sunday that he discovered the lock.on
his cabin at Long Run near Long Bottom had been tampered WIJh.
No entry was made.

Deer accident investigated
Russell A. Saunders of Gallipolis was southbound on State
Route 1 in Orange Township on Saturday night when he struck a
deer that ran into the path of his 1991 Honda Accord. Light damage
was reported.

No one injured in 2 wrecks

oliday Poin

. UIGE II SHELL

HELPING THE HEART ASSOCIATION l Agatn this yelll'
the Mel1s Branch or the Amerk:an Heart Alsociatlon bas placed I
memorial tree on the Courthouse steps~ Red booties !ascribed with
tbe names or tbose to be remembered ldorn the tree were bung
Tuesday afternoon by Amy Ferguson, left, and Catby Rucb~. ~lie
booties are available rrom any member or tbe Heart AlsoclJ!Imn
for $5. After the holiday &amp;eiiOII, the donor receives tbe decoratiOn.

4001.
TUB

CUCKERS .

'
lOX

.
We AI liM ...

$ 99

KEEBLER TOWIHOUSE

$

•

Judge Fred W. Crow lll, SEPTA's
repon "indicated that !he defendant
still did not show normal remor.;e,
and that the defendant was still
more concerned with his destroyed
motor vehicle than with the death
of Mr. Will. In fact, the repon indicated that the defendant did not
even know Mr. Will's first name."
"Further," Crow's entry said,
"the SEPTA repon indicated that
despite 30 months of incarceration,
Riggs still blamed his actions on
his co-defendant."
That co-defendan 1, Harris of
Pomeroy. was sentenced to IS
months in prison on a charge of
obstructing justice, and has since
compleled his SCI\tence.
In denying Riggs· motion-for
shock probation, Crow also cited a
letter received from a family mem·
her of Will.
.
"The coun contacted the family
of the vjclim to get their input.'' the
entry said. "The court received a
most heartfelt letter from the vic·
tim' s daughter, wherein she
advised the court that an early
release of the defendant would
cause severe emotional distress to
Mr..Will's surviving spouse, who

is still grieving deeply over her
loss. The victim's family also related that if the court released the
defendant, it would be devastating .
to them."
:
"The coun does not believe that ··
the defendant was completelo/ ·
truthful when he testified at h(s '
sentencing hearing. The defendant
testified that he burned the truck
alone and without help. This court
did not then, nor now, believe that
the defendant was completely open •
and honest concerning the facts ~np' ~
circumstances surrounding the
death and attempted cover up of the
crime." .
"The defendant fatally hit Will
with his truck; refused to take th~
victim to the hospital, lhe vl.ctim'~
only, however small chance for
survival; dumped the body over a
hillside; attempted to establish an
alibi; burned his truck to cover up
the crime; and lied to the investigators until his co-defendant finally ·
confessed . Mr. Will's body may
not have yet been found had Riggs •
co-defendant not confessed."
Riggs is CIJI'l'!:lltly imprisoned at
Southeast Correctional Institution, .
Lancaster.
•

Comprehensive Plan Committee
hears report from Vinton County official
The initial meeting of the Com- Vinton County Strategic Plan ,
prehensive Plan Committee of the "Future Focus 2000".
Meigs County Regional Planning
Tribe said that the process began
Commission was held at the Meigs with the visit of Donald Jakeway,
County Economic Development director of the Ohio D:panment of
Office on Wednesday afternoon.
Development, in 1991 . The visit
Cindy Oliveri, Economic Devel- "lit the spark" which led to th e
opment Agent of the Extension development of a strategic plan for
Service introduced speaker Deanna the next decade. The fir.;t s1ep was
Tribe of Vinton County, former to get.the approval. of the county
president of the Vinton County commiSSIOners. Invned to paruc•Chamber of Commerce and County . pate were 4~ IC!'ders from all phasExlension Agent. She now serves es of pubhc hfe , and 13 people
as District Home Economist of responded to be a pan of the task
Jackson area and was asked to force.
. .
explain the planning process for the
The task force, after rev1ewmg

Clark to head Pomeroy merchants

BRACH'S

Candy
Canes

By BRIAN J. REEP
Sentinel News Staff
Jason Riggs of Reedsville will
stay in prison following an entry
filed on Wednesday afternoon.
Riggs , who pled guilty to
charges of tampering with evide~e
and gross abuse of a corpse tn
1990, had filed two motions for
shock probation with the Common
Pleas Coun on those charges and a
motion for super shock probation
on a charge of aggravated vehicular
homi&lt;!'ide , to which he also pled
guilty.
Riggs was sentenced to fi_vc to
10 years in prison for .his role !n the
death of Victor W1ll, who was
struck by a truck occupie.d ~Y.
Riggs and Douglas Hams m
Spring, 1990. Will, who had been
attending his high school reunion at
Chester, rolled over the truck mto
the bUck bed, aild was transported
from the scene. His body was
found two days later on a creek bed
at West Shade.
Riggs was recently re-evaluated
for eligibility to participate in the
SEPTA program in, Nelsonville, a
program for non-violent, first-lime
felony offenders.
According to the entry. filed by

the statistical data, which is readily
available, addressed the purpose of · .
deciding what Vinton County citi- : ·
zens really ..wanted in their county.
Among the questions considered
were, "When describing our area 1Q
"It appears they died at their
people outside our area, what term,
work stations and died in the explofeatures and images would you
sion," said Bill Tattersall, an assisuse? ", "What do you feel are the
tant secretary of the U.S. Labor
area's
three
greatest
Department.
potentialS/strengths?", and "What ·.
do you think are the area's three
Relatives who had waited in
greatest weaknesseS/constraints?"
~old, snow and sleet since MonAmong other things the Vinton
day's explosion were given the
County
group listed were barriers
news by state police as several
and
problems
as well as thing that
ambulances drove up to the mine.
had happened recently of which
Vinton Countians were most proud.
A special six hour retreat was held
in which the participants really
detailed what should happen. The
By JUUE E. DILLON
cy that will award the grant money, will be submitted in February by resulr was a strategic plan which'
Sentinel News Staff
will be in Pomeroy Friday morn- the Village of Pomeroy.
was developed in about mn e
The importance of shopping' months.
Officers for 1993 were electC!I ing. Mrs. Clark urged everyone to
at Wednesday's regular meeting of make an asserted effon to welcome local and promoting local shoppmg
Tribe noted that Meigs County
the Pomeroy Merchants Associa- McDaniel to the business district. with others was expressed by Mrs. might want to adopt a plan· espetion.
She will meet with John Musser, Clark. She stated that attitude has Cially for MeigS County, and pomtJoe Clark will serve as presi- chairman of Pomeroy's revitaliza- to stan with those who are in the ed out thin a plan mtght take as.
dent; Jim Anderson, vice-president; tion committee, and Pomeroy business district daily. She al so long as two years, but that a Strate!~
Vicki Ferrell, treasurer; Julie Dil- Mayor Bruce Reed, as well as rep- stressed the need to work well ,with gic plan should be much shorter
ton, recording secretary; and Nancy resentatives from Middleport's other groups and promote a posi- John Lentes, president of the plan-·
Thoene, paid corresponding secre- revitalization committee. McDaniel tive attitude, not onlY. for Pomeroy, nin g commission, asked Developtary. Susan Clark, outgoing presi- will also visit Middleport on Fri· but for all of J1:1eigs County.
Continued on page 3
Mrs. Clark expressed her appredent, thanked the 1992 officers and day.
media representatives for the'ir
Mrs. Clark praised the effortS of ciation to all who assisted in any
work over the past year. Mrs. Clark Musser for all his work in the revi- way with the Christma s open
will remain as liaison between the talization process. She Sl;llted her house. Special appreciation was
Downtown Revitalization Commit- appreciation to the village counctl extended to Bill Quickel for servtee and the association.
.of Pomeroy for moving forward ing as parade chain'nan. This year's
The next promotion by the asso- with the project and taking !he nec- parade was one of the largest ever
ciation will be an "Old Fashioned essary steps to insure its success. for the associatioq.
Paula Thacker, Meigs County
Saturday Night" this weekend with She also encoumged everyone to
panicipating merchants extending remain upbeat and positive jlconornic Development Director,
attended the meeting to alen memtheir business hours until 9 p.m . throughout the process.
Santa Claus will make an appearPublic hearings for Pomeroy's bers of the project now in the
ance at the Pomeroy United revitalization will be held the sec- works to establish toll-free tcle·
Methodist Church from 6-7 p.m. ond agd third Tuesday of January phone service between some
Members of Pomeroy United in the auditorium at Pomeroy Vii- exchanges of Meigs and Mason
Methodist, Trinity Church and St. . !age Hall. According the Scott Oil- counties.
Paul Lutheran Church, all under the Jon, village council member, full
Mrs. Thacker also stated the
direction of Lois Burt, will stroll panicipation by those involved in need for someone to take on the
through town from 7-8 p.m. as they the do':""town busi~ess \listric! is responsibility of continuing the
carol the shoppers in the business v1tally Important dunng these pub- Miss Ohio Rtver Valley Pageant
district.
• lie hearings.. ~ik.e s troth , started last year. Anyone interested
Speaking on revitalization, Pome~y s rev•ta.hzauon consul- in working with the pageant should
Susan Clark, president, informed !3DI. w1ll be speaking at th~ hear- contact Mrs. Thacker at 992-5005 .
members that Lisa McDaniel, a mgs .to answer any q'!esuons ~d
The meeting was held in th e
field representative from the agen- prov1de any necessary mformauon. conference room of Bank One .
Application for the grant money
Rescue workers began drilling a
ventilation hole today, but had
given up hope of finding the other
miner alive.

BRACH'S .
ROLL

three officials Said.
become an annual requiremen·t for
Pape, William s and Hill agreed opening the pool.
that funding in the amount of
No action was taken on the
$15,000 from the county. was all request by the commissioners, in
that would prevent permanent clos- light of the upcoming 1993 budget
ing of the pool, mdicating that they process. Outgoing Commissioner
were unwilling to seck additional Richard Jones said that those
taX money from Syracuse residents involved had to be "realists" in
considering the reques~ noting that
to fund the operation.
"I would hate to think that the the county faces a half-million dolpool would have to close for a lack lar budget shonfall that will have to
of $15,000," Pape said, "and then be eliminated by January I.
The board asked tltatthc request
have a child go to the (S yracuse)
be submiued in writing, but Commarina and drown."
They also stated that they would mission President Manning Roush
Continued on page 3
expect any county subsidy to

Riggs denied shock probation

UP
LIL
HICKORY GROVE

continuing to operate in the red and
working from the general fund. The
borrowing's not over. We' ll have
to continue borrowing just to keep
the pool open."
Admission to the pool has been
kept at a minimum, Wllliams said,
in hopes that low adm ission rates
would attract more swimmers and
increase income through the concession stand. Howeve r. cooler
weather which discouraged swim ming, combined with downtime for
repairs and an increase in residential swimming pools all contributed.
to the poor year for the pool, the '

$ 99
•

Two accidents involving minor damage and no injuries were
investigated by Pomeroy Police Wednesday ev.~ning. .
·
At 6:48 p.m. ail accident occurred at the mtersecnon of Coun
and Main Streets. Louise Carsey, 42, Pmperoy, driving a Blue
J Streak Cab owned by Bill Snouffer, backed from a parking spa~
; into the passenger side quaner panel of a car owned by Keym
Knapp, 26, Pomeroy. There was no damage to the eab ahd no Clla·
lions.
At 8:03 p.m. David L. Harris' car parked on Coon Stree1 was
Continued on page J
'

15

.until

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