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                  <text>P-at 10-Tbe Dally SenUnel

fleather Hill to appear in
26th edition of Who~'s Who
Heather RaeAne Hill was
recenll y selecred to appear in lhc
26cb llllliverwy edilion of Who's
Who Among American High
School Sllldcnts.

PageS

Only five pacent of lhc llllion 's
hiah IChool students are named to
Who's Who.

A senior at Southern High
School, Heather is vice-president
of SIUdent council. She is a member
of the National Honor Society,
Sports Club ud treasurer of the
Letterman's Club. She is Ill office
aide for the school principal.
Heather was the junior altendut
for the Valentine Dance and a candidate for homecoming queen her
senior year. She plays and lettered
in softball, plays on lhc baskelball
team, was volleyball line judge and
a candystriper at Veterans Memori!11 Hospital.
· She wiU begin her studies this
summer at Hockin$ CoUege to~
her R.N. degree m nursing. She
hopes to work with pediatrics or
OB/GYN.
. She attends Racine Baptist
Church where she has li"Orked as

recenUy by Friendly Circle of Trinity Church. The dinner was prepared by the special pojects commiuee of the church.
·
,Following the dinner a short
business was held.
: A donation will be made to
Sl)me underprivileged children to
ltCIP them purchase Christmas gifts
for their mothers.
A Christmas card was received
from Bill Matlack, who is now vishiD in California.
~e Kennedy gave a donation

HEATHER lOLL
nursery helper and aide in the elementary church group.
She is the daughter of Roger and
1ane Ann Hill. She is the granddaughter of Jerry and Marilyn
Powell and Mrs. Inez Hill and the
late Julian "Noonie" Hill, all of
Racine.

Opal and Pauy Dyer, Ryan Watson
and Peggy Smith.

After carotin$ the members
retmned to Cathenne Colwell's for
soup and cookies.
Others helpin$ with fruit baskets
were John Holliday, Freda Smith
and Chelsea Montgomery.

to the Circle.
The group served the canteen at
the American Red Cross Bloodniobile before Christmas.
· Pauline Mayer and Marie Hauck
presented the program "A Christmas Story" by Bryan Weldsmith.
The origin of Rudolph the Red
Nosed Reindeer was pven. A few
poems were read. Everyone attending told of their most memorable
Christmas. The program closed
with prayer by Pauline Mayer. A
gift exchange was held by the 20
members.

Russian children," she said.
Mother Teresa's order serves
the doWntrodden in hospitals, leper
colonies, Ofl'hanages and schools
in 87 counhles. About 3.000 nuns ·
are affiliared with the order. The
Yugoslav-born Albanian won the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.

~MIAMI (AP) -The Clucker's
fast-food chain says it was cheared
out of its menu, recipe and layout
by country music star Kenny
Rogers, former Kentucky Gov.
John Y. Brown Jr. and another
chicken maker.
Clucker's Wood ROIISicd ChickHold Christmas party en
Inc. is seeking $10 million in
punitive damages in a federal lawA Christmas party was held suit against Roasters Inc., which
recendy by members ol the Meigs developed the Kenny Rogers
4-H Pleasure Riders at the home of Roasters Wood Roasted Chicken
Sara and Fae Craig, Plea$ant chain.
Ridge,Pomeroy.
Roasters is "essentially a
. Advisors present were Rachael knockoff of Clucker's," Clucker's
Downie. Pam Milhoan and Kay anomer Eric Isicoff said Monday.
Ward. Members present were Jessi- He claimed that everything from
ca Wheeler, Sarah and Susan menu items to rolisserie appanuus
Greuser, Kenny Napper, Matt Mil- · and counter localioos 1re the same.
tioan, Holly Milhoan, Linzie NotRoasters attorney Ace Blacktingham and Tracy Shaffer. Others bum denied the allegations.
att~nding were Teresa Shaffer,
Miami-based Clucker's has four
Bonnie and Bobbie Napper, Tonya restaurants, and Fort La~
Cremeans and Betty Reibel.
based Roasters has .35.
A potluck was held and gifts PFC Smith assigned
were exchanged.
·•
•' The funniest horse picture prize
Marine Pfc. Christopher B
was presented to Sara Craig. Bon- Smith, son of William L. and Z.COO:
nie Napper won the door prize.
bia M. Smith of 1301 Main St.,
Potnt Pleasant, WV, recently
Christmas party held deployed with 3rd Battalion, 2nd
Marine Regiment. Camp LejeiDIC,
App roximately 63 people NC
for six months to the Wearem
enjoyed a potluck supper at the Pacific. The battalion will be baaed
recent Christmas dinner and party in Okinaw J
of Star Grange and Star Junior mg
· shon training
a. apan,exercises
while conductin other
Grange.
areas in the region.
:Follow.ing the meal, several
Their deployment exemplifies
Quistmas carols Were sung by the the Navy and Marine Corps • new
•juniors present and were joined in strategy entided".. .From the Sea."
singing by everyone present for which shifts the sea services' focus
several selections.
from a global threat to regional
S~~tta Claus paid a visit and dis- challenges and concentrates on
tributcd gifts from the exchange n~-land warfare and maneu·-r
'lift
.
from the sea.
.
·~
. • ~ere played to conclude
He joined the Marine Corps in
the evening.
Aprill990.

:Announce Meigs quiz team results ·
Tbe Meigs High School Quiz
Team recenlly received· the results
from the 1992 Fall Knowledge
Masler Open (KMO).
The KMO is deaigned to stimulate in&amp;erell IIIII recognition for
ilcllllemlc ~ebievemenL This com. putet competition consisu of 200
questi0111 whicll coven all subject ·

lnattet areas. Scares are hued on
aa:UI'ICy plus speed.

·' The competition this fall
involved more than 54,000 SIUdents
· from all so ~~a~allld trom 16 far. eip Iandi. A team of 16studenll at
MeJss ICOieil 1058 points out of a
possible 2000. 'This compares to a
r national mean d 1184 ana 1193 far

e.

•

-" -Names in the news--. ·NEW DELHI, India (AP) Mother Teresa has been honored
1iy Russia for her efforts to care for
destihJIC childrm. .
Tbe 82-year-old Nobel Peace
Jaureate received the 1992 Leo Totstoy International Award oli Monday at tier misSion in Calcuua. The
.gold medal and citation were pre.senred by Russia's consul general.
Tbe Roman Catholic nnn said
·she hoped to open five more centers to care for poor and sjck children in Russia, where 1\er order
aJreadyoperatestwohomes.
"I and my sisters will hold
prayers for the well-being of the

Buckeye 5:
1-7-9-21-23

'

'

Turkey dinner highlights meeting
A turkey dinner was enjoyed

Pick 3:
846
Pick 4:
8665

.•'

Grange members deliver fruit
baskets to elderly, shut-ins
' Twelve members of Star Grange
and Star 1unior Grange went
Christmas caroling recenUy and
delivered 17 fruit baskets to elderly
iihd shut-ins in the area.
Attending were Waid Nichol;
spn, Rose Barrows, Bernice Midldff. Linda and Eric Montgomery,
Connie and Kyle White, Maxine,

Ohio Lottery

OSUwins
tourney in
Oregon 79-75

The team consists of five
seniors - Kevin Amott. Carlton
Drummer, Rusty F.dnionds, Allllon
G111naway 111d Randall Jobuon·
five junior~ - Matt Clark Jason
Miller, Steve Smith, Sreflll Stricter
and Jason Witherell; four IOpho..
mores - Sarah Andenon, Kelley
Orucscr. Juon Taylor and CrJ1t11
Vauphn; two freahmen - Aifllon
Gerlldlllld Dorothy Leifheit 111e
acldenric fdvilor is Rlla Slavin.
P.izza and 10f1 drinka were
~ ·10 the UliJII af'ler die oompebiiOII.

The n~u competition is tile
l'altenblq South double elimination IOUlllllllent ()11]111. 9.
.

; Vol. 43, No. 174
• Copyrlg~lled 1982

Low tonlpt arouad 55.

Cloudy. Thursday, lll&amp;JI aRDC1

60.

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2 Sectlano, 12

.f'omeroy-Middlepon, Ohio, Wednesday, December 30, 1992

P•ae• 25 ;,..,Ia

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A Multimedia Inc. "-paper..

Testimony reveals details
in Bay shooting death
telephoned Kanawalsky from a
By BRIAN j. REED '
nearby
residence and persuaded
Sentinel News StaiT
Details surrounding the death of him to surrender.
Soulsby said that at the time he
Bernard Dyle Bay of Reedsville
surrendered
, Kanawalsky was
were revealed at a preliminary
armed
with
a
fully-loaded 9mm
hearing held Tuesday before Meigs
semi-automatic
pistol and "bad the
Countr Court Judge Patrick H.
appearance
of
having
been drinkO'Brien.
ing,
smelled
of
alcohol
and had
Joseph E. Kanawalsky, 44, of
Reedsville, was arrested Dec. 19 at slurred speech."
Deputy Mohler, who conducted
his Barr Hollow home outside of
Reedsville shortly after the shoot- a post-arrest interview with
ing and was charged with the Kanawalsky shortly after he surrenaggravated m!Jrder of his neighbor, dered, said that Kanawals)c:y told
as well as attempted murder for him that ·Bay had struck him in the
·
allegedly firing at law enforcement face before the shontin~.
"He said, ' wouldn 1 you shoot
officers who were at the scene after
someone if they hit you in the
the shooting was reported.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, face? ', and I said, 'No , I
Deputr Manning Mohler and the wouldn't'," Mohler testified.
Mohler also said that Kanawalvictim s wife; Erma Bay, testified
sky
remarked, "You should have
the hearing, and described the
T-ESTIMONY HEARD • Testimony was
with the Dec:ember 19 shooting death of Be~rd
seen
his face when the first shot
events they witnessed on th'e
Pyle Bay, 45, or Reedsville. Also pictured is bis
heard· iti the murder ease against Joseph
went in him."
evening of Bay's death.
Kanawalsty, left, at a preliminary bearing in
attorney, Public Defender William Safranek.
Acco,rding to Mohler, KanawalSoulsby
said
that
upon
his
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
Meigs County Court on Tuesday. He is charged
sky
denied that he had been drinkarrival at the Bay residence, he
found Bay lying dead in his drive- ing prior to the shoOting.
The victim's wife, Erma Bay,
way, while Kanawalsk:y was still
said
that Kanawalsky had been at
believed to be armed and at large.
. At that lime, Soulsbr said, offi- the Bay residence earlier in the day
cials from Gallia, Metgs, Athens to talk to her husband, and that he
and WashingtQn Conn lies set up a was armed. At that time she
perimeter around the crime scene became fearful and yelled repeatedand began a search for Kanawal- !y at him, "Leave, Joe." She also
sky, who was believed to be the testified that she had looked out her
bathroom window earlier that
assailant.
WASHINGTON ~AP) - Presi- all mankind," he said in brief by the year 2003, or earlier.
· -The most fearsome Russian
It was soon discovered that · morning and had seen Kanawalsky
d\lllt Bush announced today he and · remarks in the Rose Garden .
outside the residence,
1:1te tteat¥ is J!te 11!\lst far-reach- weapons, heavy SS-18 missiles, Kanawalsky was in his residenc~;, standing
Russian President Bods Yeltsin
p(&gt;inting
a
gun.at her. ·
- - will hold' rBhlck Sea sutrimit thi$ ing accord m the 6nef history of would be eli!l\inated - I 54- of ,: located adjiu:ent to tht~ Bay proper- I
a.
n
d the Bays' daughter,
She
weekend to sip a treaty requiring . nuclear disarrnamen~ and ·t:aps a them under the Stratefic Arms ty, and Souls)ly testified that he
the destruction of thousands of breathtaking series of agreements Reduction Treaty of 199 .and now
that coincided with Bush's term in
long-range nuclear weapons.
office
and the demise of the Soviet
An earlier announcement was
retain seaborne multiple-warhead
made in Russia, where Yehsin was world.
The pact bans all land-based
quoted as calling the START II
tiS nuclear
treaty the "doCument of the centu• nuclear missiles with 'multiple warThe treaty is subject to Senate
ry" and "the most important heads designed to hit several tarachievement in relations between gets simultaneously, and includes conftrmation, and Bush predicted it
would be approved.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The demand.
.
these other provisions:
our two couniries.''
-An
increase
in
new
orders
to
Bush
also
said
he
had
kept
Presgovernment's
chief
economic
fore-The U.S . and Russian arseBush, due to leave ofrice in
for consumer goods.
three weeks, said the pact would nals of strategic nuclear warheads, ident-elect Clinton informed on the casting gauge leapt 0.8 percent in factories
-An
rise in the backlog of
progre~
of
the
treaty
negotiations.
November,
the
strongest
gain
in
10
reduce current nuclear arsenals by now about 20,000 combined,
unfill&amp;i
orders
at factories.
two-thirds . "This treaty is goOd for would be pared by about two-thirds Clinton has spoken favorably of the months, the Commerce Department
And,
an
increase
in the inflaaccord in general terms.
said IOdily.
Bush will meet with Yeltsin in
The increase in the Index of tion-adjusted money supply.
Three of the indicators detracted
Sochi, on the Black Sea, on Satur- Leading Indicators, the second in a
day and Sunday. The trip will come row. was a sign that President-elect from the index's gain. They were,
at the end of the president's jour- Clinton will enjoy an improving in order of importance:
- A decline in the prices of raw
ney to Somalia, where thousands of economy during his first months in
materials,
a sign of lagging
Marines and other forces are offtee.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said Wednesday that
demand.
deployed' to help expedite the feedTraditionally, economists regard
deputies are investigating a report from Wayne Chase of Albany
- A decrease in new contracts
ing
of
thousands
of
starving
victhree
consec~tive movements of
~hose 1985 Honda ~-wheeler was stolen from his carport some:
for
new commercial buildings and
tims of famine and war.
the index in e same direction as
tmte Wednesday mornmg. lt was a red, while and blue ATV 200X.
business
equipment .such as comThe president made his com- an indication of economic activity
. J~ck Westfall or R~ville reported that sometime after midputers
and
machinery.
ments with Secretary of State sill to nine months in advance.
mglit on Tuesday morning, someone threw a beer bollle at his 1982
A
drop
in building permits.
Lawrence Eagleburger at his side.
The November jump, which was
Oldsmobile. Light damage was reported.
The
various
changes left the
It was Eagleburger's weekend trip in the range anticipated by
JeffBeaver of Racine ftled a report saying that he was traveling
index at a seasonally adjusted
1 G
•
·
·
'th
economists,
followed
a
0.5
percent
0 eneva ' 0 r a sesston wt
south on U.S. Route 33 at Darwin when a aorthbound vehicle
top advance in October. Before that, !50.3, up 3.6 percent from a year
. passed him, he heard a loud pop and the driver's side glass in his
Russian officials that wrapped up the index bad declined during three ago and 1.2 percent from three
the treaty, which had been months
vehicle shattered.
in the making.
of_,the previous four months. months ago.
The passing vehicle, believed to have been orange or brown,
a
deputy
November's rise was the strongest
Anatoly
Krasikov.
sped away on State Roure 681.
,
·d
since a 1.7 percent gain in January.
1
spokesman for Ye tsin, sat ear1Y
In November, eight of the
today that Bush and Yeltsin arrive index's 11 forivard-looking indicain the Black Sea resort of Sochi on tors turl!ed positive. In the order of
On Monday at 5:15 p.m., Selma Call of Long Bottom was northJan. 2 and sign the treaty the next their contribution to the increase,
bound on U.S. Route 33 in her 1985 Oldsmobile when she struck a
day.
from largest to smallest, ther were:
deer that jumped into the roadway. Light dama,lle was listed to the
Bush said the treaty was not a
-A 16 percent j:ump m conright fri&gt;nt fender of the car.
"personal achievement .. · but I sumer conftdence levels as meatake great pride in this accomplish- sured by a University of Michigan
ment because it's a good treaty."
survey. The.post-election confiBush wanted the accord· as a dence gam
· was th e 1arges t smce
·
A Pomeroy youth was cited for failure to control after a one-car
fl·nal flourish to his arms control
wreck on Kingsbury Road in Bedford Township Tuesdliy around
March 1991, toward the end of the
3:40p.m.
achievements, which include the Persian GtilrWar.
. Jason N. Morris, 16, was northbound on Kingsbury Road when
historic START treaty cutting
-An increase in the average
h1s car, a 1984 Renault Alliance, went off the right side of the road
stockpiles by about one-third, and workweek from 41.1 hours in
and struck a bridge, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi¥hway
the 1990 East-West accord to October to 41.3 hours in NovemPatrol reported.
redal,uce ~Eand other convention- ber.
No injuries were reported and damage to the car was listed as
•On:es 10 urope.
- A 20,000 drop in the weekly
heavy and disabling.
Liule more than 24 hours earli- average of new unemployment
· No injuries were reported followipg·a separate one-car accidenl
er, Eagleburger stood coatless in claims to 372,000.
on U.S. 33 in ;Bedford Township TueSday around 1:30 p.m. .
the chiD of Geneva. and said: "We
~A 2.5 percent rise in stock
AccordinSI_to the patrol, Dawn M. Hockman, 16, Middleport,
now have, I think, a text that we prices as measured by the Standard
was eastbound on U.S. 33 and was foreed off the right side of the
can put to the two presidents. ... It &amp; Poor's 500.
Contlauecl OD paae J
clearly represents the quality of the
-A slowdown in the delivery
.;..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . now relationship between Russia
times of goods, a sign that busi1.
.
and the United States.
nesses were less easily meeting
.
'

;Bush, Yeltsin will sign
.peace treaty this weekend

thelasi~rtfn~~:~~!1I:.vould

~~~~~;..assuring

Beth , had left the home and
returned later, and at approximately
6 p.m., Kanawalslcy returned to the
Bays residence.
Mrs. Bay said yesterday thai
Kanawalsky and her husband left
the house and w31ked to the edge.
of the driveway, where moments ·
later, gunftre erupted and Bay feU
to the ground. A family friend;
Gerald Barringer of Reedsville:
was called to the scene, and thel)
officials were summoned.
She said she didn ' t think thal
Kanawalslcy appeared to be intoxi~
cated, but instead "like he'd had it
breakdown. His eyes looked like an
animal's."

Mrs. Bay said she had lived iR

fear of Kanawalsky for some time.:
"I was scared all of the time-,
because he had been there several
limes with guns," she said. "He lui4
gotten really bad since last summer."
Following yesterday's testimony, O'Brien found probable cause
for the charges against Kanawalsk1
and bound the case· over to the
Common Pleas Court for action by
the grand jury.
Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys
Linda R. Warner and George
McCarthy represented the stare in
the case, while Kanawalsky was
represented by Meigs County Public Defender William Safranek.
Cash or property bond Was con.
tinued by O'Brien in the amount of
$500,000.

Government's leading index
J·um. ps ·o.s percent in November ....

,__-Local briefs--Theft, vandalism reported ·

Despite the latest rise in the
leading index and many other posi~ :
live signs, analysts warn that prolh ·
Iems remain in the economy that :
could make the new year less tiJan.:
prosperous.
·&gt;
Economist SDD$ Won Sohn of·:
Norw~st Corp. sa1d low interest rates, low inflation and growing :
employment should help foster :
growth. But he said factors acting.as economic drags include a heavr.: :
consumer debt load, declinin t :
defense spending and moribund •
commercial real estate markets.
~
Economist Louis Crandall of ·
R.H. Wrightson and Associates in :
New York said several new faciOIS •
should emerge as negatives. Even
as the U.S. economy improves,
conditions in Europe and Japan are·
weakening. That bodes poorly for :
U.S. trade _perfonnance.
•

Deer accident investigated .

Youth cited in one-car wr:eck

:Middleport's recycling program. questionable in 1993

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
Sentloel News Stair
Middleport's recyclin~ program
may or may not continue mto 1993.
The grant money to finance the
program ends on Dec. 31.
Jean Trussell who has beaded
up the program .for the yillage said
that whether 11 conunues Will
depend on action from Village
CounciL
The matter was sched)iled for
' diiCussion at Monday night's meeting, Trussell said. However, the

tile stale of Obio.

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town to gather up the recyclables.
meeting was not held due ·to the Center for disposition.
The one-year recycling program
According to Ro$er Manley •
~k of a quorum.
' Wbile at one time it was felt the there is lillie profit m recycling was financed with a grant of
recycle program could pay for now and all of the ·money he takes $11,910 from die Ohio Deparunent
itself, the decline in demand for in at the Center from sales to com- of Natural Resources, Recycling
such materials on the market left panies which recycle goes for the Division. With that money the vilthe village with lillie income from labor cost of handling the materi- lage purcltased recycle bins for use
sale of the recycla!lles !hey c:oUect- als. He does, however, j)lan to con- by residents, other collection
equipment, the lllilcr used for coled. Aluminum cans are the only . tinue operalioo into 1993.
lection and lloragc, and promotion
The
village
has
provided
mosUy
items which have returned money
of
the prognm.
to the village. They hav~been pur- "in-kind serviccl~ 10 the recycling
About 10 percent of the housechased by Manley's Recycling program. This hu Included using
holds,
120 total, participated in the
Center and the rest of the items col• village employees and a village
pogram.
Tecied have been accepted at the owned truck for travel\ng around

MAY COJI!TINUE, MAY NOT· Middleport's rtc)'Cle prolrata 11111y or may not coatlaue over Into the aew year. ~t
which bas llllaneed dte PI'OI"- explra Thursday. Tile
11
up to coundlud probably wiD not be made until nut weet. Here
J. E. Pauley ol Pearl Street puts out bls bin or plastic coatal.era
lor Tuesday's pickup.
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'Wedi1Ud&amp;f, December 30, 1112

'Commentary
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111 Coart 8tleet

,..e!OJ,Oido

' DIIWOTBD TO 'I'D IJIITUD1'a OP 'I'D !lt!C1e M'POPf AJUtA

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ROBERT L WINGEIT

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Publhh-r

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:::PAT WHl'i1:HEAD

· Alllstant PubllsberiContraller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G•m MIIDJIPI'

LETTI!RS OF OPINIOI&lt;\ ue welcome. They sbould be leu tbon 300
ue subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
•: . addlels and telepbooe number. No lllllipod !etten willl\0 publilbed. Leacn
:•: sbould be in ao00 lUte, addlelliD&amp; inou, DOt penollllilieo.

• wrds. All !etten

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Letters
to the editor
.·.
Happy New Year

:·vear Editor

· I jwll dropped into your home to
Wish you a Happy New Year and to
take a little time out to tllanlc the
ones who voted for the Carleton
SchootiMeigs lndusUies levy and
also the ones who did not vote for
i.L .
We understand you know more

about your income iJwJ we do.
We can't vote' for every levy.
This has been a bard year for
everyone. So thanks once again.
Don't drink and go out on the
road. Go to some church's New
Year's party.
Jessie Grueser
Rutland, Ohio

.•

The Iran-Contra is a dead Issue.
Walsh ought to start in on ihe
House overdrafts. Look in.to the
cheaters who hired him in the first
place.
This kind of political in-fighting
gives our form of government a
bad name. It has been going on
since Aaron Borr shot Alexander
Hamilton in a duel over politics.
No wonder George Washington
disliked political parties.
President B·ush did the right
thing.
Ga~

To the citizens of Meigs County

have bad the privilege of workiog
during my term of office. Also.
thanks to all Village Mayors,
Councilmen and Village Clerks,
Township' Trustees and Clerts and
ev·ery agency director and their
employees. Special thanks to the
staiJ in the Comrnissiooers' office.
Your dedication and COO.JICration
always made my jOb eas1er and I
will always be grateful to each of
WASHINGTON {NEA) - A
you for your assistance.
de'ath watch of SllllS has begun .on
Most of all, I wouljilike to Cal'itol Hill. House insiders now"
thank you, the citizens of Meigs believe that lllinois Democrat Dan
County. Serving you has been a Rostenkowski, powerful chairman
high personal bonor for me and has . of the Ways and Means Commit·
:successful.
· .Next week two new members given me the most enjoyable and tee, will be indicted part of the
owill join Manning Roush to form rewarding sixteen years .of my life. ongoing House Post Office investi·
. I
.
new Board of County Commis· Your trust and confidence 10 my galion.
siuners. I would like to extend my ability is something I deeply appre· · Rostenkowski will probably be
;congratulatio,ds and every good ciate and will always remember.
charged with viola~ federal elec·
In closing, let me simply say tion laws by.converung campaign
wish to Janet Howard and Bob
Hartenbach as they assume the this. I sincaely hope that 10 some funds to personal use to buy large
CQmmissioner's position. This way I have made a conUibution. blocks of postage stamps in his
offic:c is a complex, demanding and Because if I have, it means that I home disUict, and then exchanging
timeconsumingjob. Manniog, Bob ha¥e been able to give something them for cash at· the House Post·
and Janet need and·descrve the help back to this County-a County that Office. Insiders also believe the
.li1J4 cooperation of every Mei~s has' beenso. good to me and my transactions, if proven, could land
GQtmty citizen. I am sure you will family all of my lifetime.
Rostenkowski in hot water with the
-e.a~nd to them the same kind of
Thanks Me1gs County. Serving Internal Revenue Service.
c.P.fli.ence aJid courtesy you always you has been a pleasure.
Rostenkowski maintains his
innocence.
eXtended to me.
Sincerely,
A would also like to thank every Rich Jones
Apart from his guilt or inno·
Commissioner, office hOlder and Pomeroy
cence, the 11reater question is
Cowthousc employee with whom I
whether he will be fon:ed to relinquish his tax-writing chainnanship.
Who will take over, and what
effect will that have on Bill Clin·
ton's legislative package?
' '
By The Associated Press
Under Democratic caucus rules,
· :Today is Wednes&lt;lay. Dec. 30th, the 365th day of 1992. There is one any committee chairman indicted
~$y left m the year.
;
on a felony carrying more than a
· Today' s Highlight in History:
..
potential' two-year term is required
S'eventy years ago, on Dec. 30th, 1922, V4ldirnir I. Lenin proclaimed the to step aside 10 favor of the next:establishment of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republica.
ranking member. That member
. ;On this date:
.
.
becomes acting chairman "for the
• ·In 1853, the United States bought some 45,~ miles of land remainder
of the session, or as long
•friim Mexico in a deal that bec8me known as the
n Pun:hase.
as
the
chairman
remains under
"~ In 1894, suffragist Amelia Jenks Bloomer died. She had gained notori·
indictment."
Upon
conviction, the
:'tty for wearing in public a shan skirt and baggy trousers that became caucus would vote for
a new chairknown as bloomers.
man - not necessarily the next·

On January 2, my term as a
l=qi10ty Commissioner will end. I
~~d be re'!liss if I did not la;ke
~ opportunity to express my SID·
clB thanks and ~
· iation
~citizens of Me1gsaro:ty and
~tell you what a pleasure it has
·~ to serve in this position. Over
ihi years I always Uied to tept s~nt
t&lt;Ri in a fair, impartial and consci·
Clllious manner. It was alwar.s my
deaire to do everythiog poSSible to
·mate this County a ~Jetter place ~
liYC and raise a family. I think in
. many ways that effQrt ·has been

:our

Today in history

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wnters

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

IND.

1

• IColumbus Iss• I

W. VA.

....€!\\ '

~

South-Central Oblo .
Tonight. cloudy with a chance
of rain. Low lfOIDid 55. Chaoce of
rain is 50 percent. Thursday,
· cloudy with a chance of rain. High
around 60 early with tcmperarures
falling into the SOs. Chance of min

Berry's World

Robert/. Wagman ··
two years. In that case, the' acting
chairman would be Florida's Sam
Gibbons. That could mean
headaches for the new administra·
lion.
Gibbons is among Capitol Hill's
most absolute advocates of free
trade. Although the Ways and
Means Commit~Ce does not directly
get involved in trade matters, the
~ident-elect has said he wants to
pais certain tax measures proteCt·
mg American workers by makin4 it
more difficult for U.S. ·comparues
to move jobs out of !he country.
Rostenkowski would champion
such legislation; Gibbons would
probably oppose it
Abortion rights advocates
believe their cause on C8pilol Hilf
was greatly helped by the 1992
elections.
When the 102nd Congress ·
.adjourned, Planned l'arenthood
Federation of America believed it
had 186 House votes solidly, in
favor of the "Freedom of Choice
Act" - the abonion rights bill
intended to codify into law a
woman's right to have an abca1ion.
According to Planned Parent·
hood President David Andrews, his
side has picked up 27 more votes

from incoming freshman in the ThOmas .S ranking Republican on
House with the largest bloc coming the influential House Administra·
from the 24 new women elected to lion Committee.
·
the House·for the flfSl time.
If the organization's count is ·
GOP Capitol Hill insiders say
correct, the Ch.oice Act now can · they expec.1 that, over the next two
count on 213 votes - only five years, Gingrich will attemjllto fun.
short of the majority needed for nel hundreds of thousands of con·
passage.
servative dollars into the ~gn
.
coffers of incumbent R~ublicans
In the Republican caucus that to build up political IOU s he will
organized the GOP side of the aisle then cash in for the race against
for the upcoming 103rd Congress, Michel
ultra-conservative Republicans, led
by Minority Whip Newt Gingrich
Speaking of campaign cash, the
of Georgia. staged a nlini-coup that two weeks in December that
captured several leadership posts. Congress was in town organizing
This gives the far right effective itself and the first two weeks of the
control of the GOP leadership and new session are known among loball but isolates House Min~rity b&gt;:ists ~ "~,burner" season. In
Leader Bob Michel of Illinois a thiS period, newly elected members
moderate.
· ' . of Con$fesS hold after-election"
According to high-level GOP fun~·nusers .to pay .off debts ~d
staffers, Gingrich's efforts in this begm to build the1r. re-election
year's GOP caucus 'are only the wartbests.
.
beginning of a major effon to take
At breakfasts; lunches, -4inners ,
control of the House GOP In twO and cocktail receptions, lObbyists.
years. at the caucus to~ for and political~ commi~ will
the 104th Congress, he will' chal- give to candidates they.m1ght Dc;'l
lenge Michel for minority leader
have supported durmg theu
·
fledgling campaigns. .
the march to· minority leader
· Many new members waited to ·
will not be easy for Gmgrich.
·
thtow
their parties after committee
While he was successful in backiog
assig_nments
were announced. That
conservative Texas Reps. Richard •
way
they
would
know which
Armey·and Tom DeLay for Repub·groups
of
lobbyis.ts
and
interests to
lican Conference chairman and sec·
~h.
.
.
retary respectively, Anney only
Robert
Wqman
Is
a
syndicat.
won by a scant four votes. In addi·
ed
writer
for
Newspaper
Enter·
tion, Gingrich was unstlccessful in
an attempt to oust Rep. Bill prise Assoc~tion .

The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at
· the Pageville Town Hall for the
1993 organizational meeting.
Meet Wedaesday
·. The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Wednesday at 4
p.m. at the township hall.

Area death
Lorain Wilcoxen,

' of
Longtime owner and operator
W'llcoxcn Funeral Home, Loraine
Lee "Willde• Wilcoxen, 63, of
Point . Pleasant, died Tuesday.
Deeeml)er 29,1992, at his home.
Born May 3, 1929, he was the
son of Maryland (Pullin) Wilcoxen
and the late Morgan Wilcoxen.
He wu a 1948 paduatc of Point
Pleasant. Hi&amp;b Sc6ooi and a 1951
gradiiiiB of the Plalburgli Institute
of Mortuary Science. In addition,
Wilcoxen was a member of the
MiniUm Lodge No.19 AF &amp;. AM,
Beni Kedem Shrine of Charleston
and the Heights Unired Methodist

~

'

e·

•

Joseph Spear ·

••P

ever larger? What ever happened to
all that "trickle down" hokum?
Why can't the schleps who push
brooms lnd stack boxes take home
a few more dimes?

.

The Spear Foundation, a small,
underfunded Washington think
tank, has Studied the economic
arguments against a minimum
wage Increase - namely, that it
would be inflationary and cause
uneniployment- and has conclud·
ed they are mostly poppycock.
With labor hi short supply, less
than 4 million people wortcd at the
minimum w~';!::"~t and the
non-partisail
•
Budget
\Office estimates the highu mini·
mum wage would add no moro
than 0.3 percent in inflation per
year. Between 125,000 ·, and
2S0l.OOO jobs might be lost, the
CBu says, but a University of
Michigan 1\UdY put the figure at

70.000.

So what's the real problem? I
suspOct it'n plain old liberal-con·
servative clasb.' with the IIJI:II:iOUS
haves cheering from the sidelines
aJid the abject have-n~ tOokinJ ~

Doroth!DS'th of 31110 Salser
Ohio 4~771 correct·
ly identifie the mystery farm
which
in the Dec. 20 Sun·
day Times-Sentinel as that of
Howard and Nancy Ervin, Racine.
She wu one of three to mike the
· ccrrect identification and her name
wu selected as the winner by lot·
tery. She will receive $S from the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. which
co-sponsors the contest with the
. Meigs County Soil and Water Con·
scrvation Distric:L

. Road, Rae'

'lhe Daily Sentinel

from the stands. The Spear F'ounda·
lion has been mulling this prcdica·
ment for some time and has come
up with a solution. .
What we should do is pass a
"maximum wage." Lest I be
viewed as some sort of subversive,
I'd suggest a relatively high figure.
In a recent Baltimore Sun cafmnn
touting a similar plan, a wriicr &amp;om
F'ederalsburg, Md., Paul Chance,
Jll~ a 10)1 W13C of $1 million,
an I'd go along with tbaL W1lo
needs more than a rniUlon dollars a
year 'in take-home pay anyway?
Everything in eltcess of that
amount could be thrown in some
son of 1n11t fund llld cam intaeBt.
Every year, we could 11111 it to sUbsidize a minimum WIF• reduce the
national c$ebt. repair the ~­
ture, provide medlc:al IOIViccs for
the elderly lnd indipnL How docs
the "Michael Mllken Shelter for
the Homeles8" sound? Has a nice
to it, I think.
leave ·the delails to the can-do
people. I'm just an Idea man.
'

Pabii..Jt PflrJ .r.a GDft, ... . . . ,
"'-" Frlola,, IU Coon St.._ ~wtGJ,
Ohio . , .... Ohio 'lllollor .....llo....

~~a~~~s..!:::."!.i

poot1p pold al Pomoro,, Olllo•

.Me-. Tho ""--aled "'-• 111111• tho
Cllllo NoWipOJIOr ""-'•-· NaUonal
M•wlloflc _._...,.laltta1 .llnnlwn
Now I F: llalla, m Thmo Annue,
......._ N.., 1IWk 10017.
•

POBI'MAIITIIR:--,..._

JOHpb Spear Ia a sJIIdlcated
writer ror Newspaper £aterprlle

lo

Tho DallY llaDbo~ Ul Coon &amp;.,
PuiwCJ!h OHio 41188•
1111801l1P110M BATU

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~EAP

· Name contest winner

.

.. .

Lottery numbers

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were three tickets sold naming all
Ch~Kh.
five numbers drawn in Tuesday
He was preceded in death by one night's Buckeye ~ game and each
grandson, Roger Reed McKinney, pays $100,000, the Ohio Lottery
II and one sister, Lola Daugheny.
said.
. Surviving in addition to his
Here 11e Tuesday night's Ohio
mother, 11e his wife, Mary (Eads) Lottery selections:
Wilcoxen; four daughters an&lt;l sons- Buckeye 5
in-law, David and Anna Morris of
1-7-9-21-23
"
Carterville, Ill., Roger and Winona
(one, seven, nine, twenty-one,
McKinney of Point Pleasant, Paul twenty-three)
and Barbara Casto of Greer, S.C., Pick 3 Numbers
•
and Barry and rma Barnette of
8-4-6
Greenville, S.C.; and five
(eight, four, six)
grandchildren.
Pick 4 Numbers
Funeral arrangements are inc·
8-6-6-5
omplete and will be announced at a
. (eight, silt, six, five)
laler date. They 11e being handled
by Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

Let the· rich subsidize the working stiffs
A debate
that ought to · panies; these are the people; who
be' banned on
of obscenity. manage them.
Tbc question whether to mise the
On Capitol Hill - a hellhole of
, . minimum wage.
h
· if
there
The essentials are these: The
ypocnsy ever
was one House and Senate have voted to
increase the minimum wage from
tl)e current $3.35 an hour to $4.55
an hour over the next three years. before the pay ·raise, there was no
The adminisllllion wants a ceiling end to the moaning about the
of $4.2S, with a six-month "train· wretched misery it wreaks on a
ing wage" of $3.3!5 for new work· body to have to get along on
crs. The president has threatened a $89,500 a year. And at the other
veto and has enough congressional end of Pennsylvania Avenue, a
support to sustain it.
blueblood presi!lent has decided
Think about it for a moment
that this ia a test of his manhood,
1unk bond dealer Michael the point where all that wimp stuff
Milken invented nothing, con- ends, time for Poppy to put lila foot
sttucted ~. pmduc:ed notbing, down. "I have no intentlOI!·Of
and in 1987 was paid ssso milllOQ bud= 1 incb on this,'' he has
by his finn, Drexel B~ Lam· dec
.
.
bert. In three yean, he ptl)led down
Finally, consider this: The minimore than-$1 billion.
mum wap has beon at ill current
· In a survey of 708 of the coun· level for OiaJ!t yoara, duriDa wbich
try '1 top corporate executives, time the COlt of llvlni walt up 36
Bullness ·Woek round they take percent llld Mkbrl Milten's daily
home an averqe of $1 million a pay pealted lllboat $1.5 miDion.
year in sallrlcs llld bonulea - an
1'bat'l the oblcenity. Witb so
avenge or $2 million a year if you much wealth oat tbare, wby ill there
count aoct Olltionlllld Diller com- such heUed Tllioa 10 m.lna a
.pensation. Tlicse are not the risk· tiny bil of U. Why is the
raking enlrllprben who build 'C1011!.: bet~een. rich and poor grow10g

WASHINGTON (AP)- AmerleanS are enjoying their safest year
on the highways in three decades,
federal officials say, as deaths and
is 40 percent.
drunken driving are down and use
Extended rorecast:
'
of seat belts is up.
Friday through Suaday:
Transportation Department offi·
Friday, a chance of snow flur· cials projecred Tuesday that when
ries north, fair south. Lows around 1992 is over, 39,500 people will .
30 with highs 35-40. Saturday and have died in motor vehiCle acciSunday, fair. Lows mainly in the dents - the lowest death toll since
20s. Highs in the low to mid-30s.
1962.
They also expect the fatality rate
based on total miles driven to continue the annual decline it began a
decade ago, dropping one-tenth of ·
Service set
a percentage point to 1.8 deaths per
A New Year's Eve service will 100 million miles of vehicular trav·
be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at el.
the Silver Run Baptist .Church in
"We're talking about the lowest
Cheshire.
· fatality rate in history. It's some·
thing we aU should celebrate," said
Marion Blakey, administrator of
React to meet
The Meigs County React Team, the National Highway Traffic Safe- .
Inc., will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m: at ty Administration.
Officials aJtributed much of the
the home Guy Hysell on County
Road S. Membership fees are due. decline to increased use of seat
New members and past members belts, encouraged through new
state laws and stepped up police
~~ewelcome.
enforcement, and a decrease in the
incidence of illcohol-relared traffic
Literary Club to meet .
deaths.
They did not find any
The Middleport Literary Club
decrease
in
speed.
will meet Wednesday, ]an. 6 at 2
Based
on
figures for the first six
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
months
of
the
year, highway safety
Library in Pomeroy. Mrs. Dwight
Wallace will be the hostess. The Tree drop' deadline Jan. 6
book review, also to be presented
Residents in the Village of
by •Mrs. Wallace is "Rosa Parks,
My S10ry." Roll call will be to tell Pomeroy may dispose of their
of someone who had taken a diffi. Christmas trees (not artificial)
behind the old junior high building
cult stand.
in Pomeroy before Wednesday,
Jan. 6 and the city will dispose of
them properly.
·

--Meigs announcementsTrust- to meet

II Wllllra. .............""'""'""'"'' .."'"'I!IM
.18
.78

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p.m. Sunnse Thursday w1U be at
7:53a.m.
Arolllld tbe natloB
Dense fog lingered over the central and eastern states today, while
a winter storm continued to hammer the West with heavy snow.
Snow I!Dd freezing rain fell
today in parts or northern New
England and New York, while
warm moist air &amp;om the South sliding over colder ground produced
thick fog again in many areas from
the Mississippi Valley to the
Northeast
.
A strong low~pressure system
remained stuck today in the Pacific:
Ocean off of Washington, promising more rain up and down the
coast and snow in the mountains of
Washington, Idaho, Oregon, Mootana
California
Nevada
Wyo~ing, Colorado~ Utah.
'
Donner Summit in California's
Sierra Nevada received more than
4 feet of snow Tuesday while parts
of Nevada ~rted up U, 18 inches.

officials project alcohol ilivolve·
ment in 45.8 percent of vehicle
fatalities in 1992. That would be
down significantly from 48 percent
last year, and continues a decline
from over 57 percent in 1982.
The rate motoristS and their pas·
sengers used seat belts increased to
62 percent nationally, based on the
findings of surveys within each
state. That was up from 59 percent
in 1991 and just 10 percent a
decade ago:
"There truly has been a sea
chan'e for the 'better on seat
belts, ' .said Transportation Secre·
tary Andrew H. Card Jr.
Total deaths by motcir vehicles
has been on the decline since 1988,
when the toll was 47,087. The 1992
total, if it holds up, would mark a 5
percent decline from last year's
41,462deaths.
The annual toll hasn't been
below 40,000 since 1962. The
record high was S4,589 in 1972.
Officials say the recession can
be a factor, as people tend 10 travel
less and highway deaths tend to
decline during tight times. But !'Sti·
mated miles of travel are projecred
to increase slightly this year.
Final figures won't be available
until spring, but Blakey said that in
the past estimates based on the flfSt
six months of the year generally
proved accurate.

AID Ele Powcr....................33
Ashland OiL..................... .25 3/4
AT&amp;.T.. :.: ........ :...................S21/4
Bank One...........,...............53 3/8
Bob Evans .........................19 1/4
Charming Shop.................. 18 1/4
City Holding.......................21
Federal Mo,K.ul....................l6 3/8
Goodyear Ta:R ..................68 1/8
Key Centurion ...................22 3/4
Lands End..........................27 3/4
Limited Inc........~ ............;. 29 118
Multimedia Inc .................. 31 3/4
Rax RestauranL.:................I/8
Reliance Electric............... .20 3/8
RObbins&amp;.Myers ................17
Shoney's Inc ......................23 1/4
Star Bank ...........................36 1/4
Wendy lnt'I... ..................... I2 7/8
Worthington Ind................22 1/2
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or GaUipoUs.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
. TUESDAY ADMISSIONS·
Richard Friley, Pomeroy; Gertrude
Finlaw , Pomeroy ; Genevieve
Demoskey, Middleport; Ann
Davis, Middleport; and Mary Hendricks, Pomefy• .
TUESDA · DISCHARGES •
Earl Frecker.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dec. 21 discharges - Rodney
Hamilton, Ethel Hineman, Shirlene
Davis, Anna Jenkins, Thelma Naugle, Alfred Roush, Ella Jenkins,
Sibyl MacKnight and May lsrsel.
Dee. 21 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Adkins, son, Souih Webster.

Fridays.
Additional information regard·
ing these pro~rams may be
obtained by calling the Cheshire
CAA office at 367-7341 or 9920·
6629, the Gallia County Outreach
Office at 446-0611 or the Meigs

County Outreach Office at 992S60S. The toll-free number for regular HEAP inquiries is 1-8()().282·
0880 for for the hearing impaired
with a tele-communication device
for the deaf (TOO) 1-800-6861557.

Middleport Court news
Bonds totaling $850 on five dif·
ferent charges were forfeited by
Jason S. Hysell of Pomeroy when
he failed to appear in the court of
Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman .
Tuesday nighl
Hysell forfeited SilO on each of
three charges, aggravated menac·
ing, disorderly manner, and consuming alcohol under the age of
21; $210 on resisting arrest, and
$310 on assault of a police officer.
Others forfeiting bonds in ihe
court were Simon H. Johnson,
Pomeroy, $64, speeding; Micjmel
L. McGraw, Athens, SS3, speeding.
and $60, expjred registration; and
James F. We)&gt;er, Middlepon, $60,

failure 10 maibtain control.
Fined in tile coon were Rodney
Clonch, Middleport, $25 and costs,
no operator's license; Kevin R.
Klein, Pomeroy $10 and costs, fictitious tags; David Michael Jeffers,
Huntington, W. Va., $10 and costs,
running a red light; James W.
Herdinan, Gallipolis, $50 and
costs, FRA insurance sus~nsion ;
Thelma Henderson, Coolv1Ue, $10
and costs, improper parking; Stanley E. Aleshue, Middlepon, $10
and costs, expired tags; Judy L.
Tyree, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
open container; and Paul J.
Anspach, Middleport, $10 and
costs, expired tags.

· The regutM HEAP program also
offers heating assistance once per
heating season to low-income
households with deftaying the high
1
cost of home heating. The application deadline for regular HEAP is .
Feb. 26, 1993 leaving approximately two months to apply.
The income guidelines for both
programs are the same. However,
· regular HEAP requires the previous
12 months' income while the past
three nion!hs' income is acceptable
on emer,ency HEAP. The 12
month period or three month period
_ for the income test is determined
from date of application making it
jlOSSible for some with decreased
mcome during these periods to
qualify later in the program. Exam·
Colltiaued from )lilt 1
pies of these type situations could
occur from layoff, strike, retireroadway by a left-of-center westbound vehicle.
ment, disability or death of a
Damage to Hockman's 1979 Chevrolet Camaro was listed as
spou8C (){ houscllold member.
light. No citations were issued.
Applications for both ~grams
can be made at the Oallla-Meigs
Community Action Agency
Cheshire office Monday through
. Meigs Emergency Services units answered the following wls:
Thursday, 9:30 to 12 noon and I to
TUESDAY, I: 13 p.m., Middleport to North Front Srreet, Oenovieve
3:30 p.m. The Oallia County Out·
Demoskey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:31 p.m., Syracuse
reach Office, 220 Jackson Pi!ce
squad to Lee Circle, Eva Leach to Veterans; 7:44 p.m., Pomeroy
Gallipolis, and the Meigs County
squad to East Main Street, Pauick Lindeman to VctenlliS; 8:09p.m.,
Outreach Office, 39350 Union
Pomeroy squadS to Slate Route 7 and U.S. Route 33, Terry Allen
Ave., Porneroy,IICCept lfllP)ications
Day, Jr., to Veterans; WEDNESDAY, 6:47 a.m., Tuppers Plains
Monday lhrougll Friday.- 9 to noon
, units to Locust Grove Road for an auto accident, Elizabeth Bryant
and I to 3:30 p.m. No applications
refused treatment.
are taken 111 the Cheshire office on

,..---Local briefs---..

..

F'loridi. ·

The high temperature for th
.i
nation Tuesday was 84 . at
Kingsville Texas.
·
'

Klan takes down
·controversial cross
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Ku
Klux Klan removed its controversial Christmas cross from a downtown p1:blic square early today,
several hours before a city-issued
permit was to expire.
·
Meanwhile, city officials said
they would con tin be a .legal battle
to prevent such unattended,
overnight displays in the future.
Two Klan members avoided any
confrontation with proteste~s by
removing the 10-foot cross before

•·~~ .

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daylight'while a half-dozen police'
officers stood by. The Klansmen
sang "Onward Christian Soldiers'"
while carrying the cross· off die
square.
.. .
During the I0 days of the dis..;
play by the U.S. Knights of the Kir
Klux Klan from nearby Hamilton,
three crosses were knocked doWII'
and two were destroyed br·
protesters who considered them.
symbols of racism. '

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
'rime marches on and I've been
out of touch. I've missed youand I hope that's a two-way street.
Family illness and death seem to
have taken me out of my usual
paths. Many times over the years, I
have expressed my wish that these
things would never occur for me
during the Christmas holiday season. It's normally such a happy
time which I thoroughly enJoy.
However, fate does have a way of
intervening and we can't pick and
choose times for misfonune. I do
have some things I want to share
with you-so. moving right along.

stroke. She later that clay fell and·
had to be taken 10 a hospital. She
underwent therapy aiid stayed over
in Collierville a weet or so lonp
than expected, at the request of her.
therapist, to conlin'!e the treatrnelll.'
Then she flew into Columbus
where she was met by her son and
daughter-in-t~~ow, Carol and Ed
Kennedy, and returned to hCT.
home.
. Good to have you back, Carrie: :

And popular Carrie Kennedy is
back at her home at the Stone
Wood Apartments in Middlepon.
While visiting her son, 1oe, and
family in Collierville, Tenn., before
Christmas, Carrie suffered a slight .

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA ,..,,

Bet Bill (Bucky) Walters would'
be glad to hear from you.
·
He was at the grocery at the cof'..
ner of the "T" in Middlepon ror
It must be such a rewarding years and also served as a Middle-,
feeling for people like retired p&lt;in Council member. Bucky has'
music teacher, Alice Nease, to hear · had more than his sh~~e of health.
from rormu students.
problems. His address is William•
~ecently, Alice heard from one Walters, in care of Betty Buskirk,'
of her former students at Pomeroy 1663 Sugar Maple Drive, Colum-,
High School. Harold Hysell of bus, Ohio 43229.
·
Lawrenceville, Ga. Harold thanked
her for all of her work with him
You'll be pleased to know thal
during his.high school years. Dur- Eloise White, formerly of MlddlCing the holiday seaso.n. Alice heard pon and Pomeroy , is doing well
from Harold again. He is now a following knee re~~cement
t Hospimember of the Stone Mountain surgery at ML Carmel
Barbershop Chorus which took sec- tal in Columbus. She resides in the
ond place honors io the Dilde Dis- assistant living quarters at Lutheran
trict competition in 1992 and the Village and according to a note
group has been invired to take pan from her daughter, Barb, should oo
in the Buckeye Invitational to be back there by now. Your cards·
held next Aug. 20 and 21 in really lifted her morale and she
Columbus-and, of course, Harold continues to improve with ongoing.
therapy. Mail will reach her in care
will be ihere with the group.
of her daughter, Barb White, S5 N.
Mary Powell advises that there James Road, Columbus, Ohio
are additional copies of that excel- 43213.
lent video on_ Meigs County still
Now isn 'tllJal special? Farmers
available. She thought you might
of
Columbiana
County demonstrat·
want to purchase some for Christ·
ed
in
Columbus
this week protest·
mas gifts. It's a little late for that.
ing
the
construction
of a state corHowever, anyone who has been or
rectional
facility
in
their county,
is a resident pf Mei~s County
which,
they
claim,
will absorb
would certainly apprec1ate a copy
valuable
farm
land.
Now let me
of the .outstanding video, done by
see.
Didn't
we
in
Meigs
County go ·
Roger Gilmore. You can pick up a
all
out
to
get
one
of
those
institu·
copy at the District Park Office,
located in the former Pomeroy lions here but to no avail? Oh well,
Public Library building, or at do keep smiling.
Farmers Bank.
446 4524

.

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-···
IISUUICE
s.... s,.,=.
,......

EMS units answer calls

.,

northern Rockies· me 30s and 40s
across the cen~ states· the SO.
and 60s aci'OII much of .be South.;
the 70s &amp;om Texas across the Gut!
Coast· and the 80s in souther~(

T AKIN~IT ))OWN • Ku Klux KID member Toay Gamble or. :
Covington, y., and former Klansman Steve AnclerMD o1 Cleves,, _
Ohio, back ouad, carry a cross from Fouataln Square early :
Wednesday -rningln Cincinnati. Tile Klan's 10-day permit from
tbe city to display the ero5s expired Wedaesday. (AP)

Stocks

application period in second ·month

Emergency HEAP for ihe 199293 application period is in10 its second month and goes on through
April 2, 1993, the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency advis·
es.
The federally-funded program
offers heating assistance once on
an emergency basis for eligi~le
households whose heat-relared utilities are ilisconnected, threatened
with discoJIIICl)t or bulk fuel supply
is less than I0 days.

front held still over the northern
Roclcics and Plains today, keeping
temperatures in the single digits 01
below.
Temperatures today were
exJ)ected to be below zero in the
northern Plains; the teens from
Nebraska to the upper Great Lakes
states; the 20s in northern New
- ·
·

Traffic deaths hit 30-year low

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

Inc.

ranking in seniority. .
If Rostenkowski is indicted, it
would almost surely be for crimes
carrying a maximum Of more then

Oh10 today with just a chance of
rain over the soulhem third of the
state. Rainfall amounts should be a
quarter-inch or less with little rain
over the south. The low visibility in
rain and fog will slowly improve
today. Highs will range from near
55 in the north to around 65 in the
south central.
This rain is ahead of a 'COld front
that will move across Ohio on
Wednesday. ·
More rain is on tap tonight with
just scatte:l:areas of rain Thursday.
·
·
Highs W esday will start in
the SOs.and fall into the 40s .after
the front moves through.
New YC8!! Day should be dry. in
the south w1th a chance of flumes
in_ the north.. !due~ of .the weekend
w1U be dry With highs 10 the 30s..
The record high ~ this date in
Columbus was 63·10 1964. The
record low was 12 below in 1880.

lro~ec~ol ~I

'

Rosty may be charged in postal scam ·
as

..

.

Raio or drizzle will he common
acr~ss the northern two-thirds of

MICH.

We have been publisbina the inluview. "There 11e no voluntary
this umbldla ia llqgering. Work·
in worlt:ers' compensation
ers' comp pays when aCtor Mel results of our own long-term invesligation
during
a
aeries
of
columns.
to
speak
of in the state of Maine.
Gibson · gets bruises and pains
•
including
one
focusing
on
Califor.
We
can't
even fatboin a furure in
doing his own aiQIIts on the set of
nia, where a recent survey found this state."
that one in four.busineases now has
Cities have also been dcvastale4 .
plans to relocare some or all of its b~ ::r.,;vorkers' c:omp crisis. The
operations out of the state. The ' P ·
J!11ia Inquirer eStimiiC8 that'
total cost now for all this coverqc one io four of dial citY's employees
annually is more than $62 billion miss work because of injury each
- nearly Uipling in the last dec* year - and that narc than 6,~
alone, and far outpacing the rise in former city emplayees are c~y
health-care costs during the same out on worlt:-related and other dis" Lethal Weapon 3." Former period.
·
abi:~fi pay !otally $?3 million
Washington Redskin quarterback
Fraud abuse and related escalar- ann y. In San FranciSCO, almost
Doug Williams, who led his team ing costs'in the workers' comp sys- one·thir~ of city employees have
to a 42-10 Super Bowl rout of tl!c tern -besides weakening the com- filed cla,ims.
.
Denver Broncos in 1988, ~rted. petitiveness of American business
In Pltt~burg~l Mayor Soph1,~
ty collects a wccldy $513 workiiiB' - is also crippling for Alabama, Masl~ff tned a Safety Lottery
comp payment from the club.
Connecticut, Florida, Louisiana, for SIX ,ml!nths to cut down O!J
And on the horizon are a host of 1\&gt;fassachusetts Montana Pennsyl· • workers comp costs. Sbe began 1t
new ills, a Pandora's bQx of ll'!lU· vania and~. The two states in when SS of ISS re,fuse workers
bles for workers' compensation greatest crisis today are Rhode were out on worlt:crs ~p. So lhe
claims never foreseen in the origi- Island and Maine.
·
·
began .~mly dnlwmg 10 names
nal comp acts seven decades ago
Only a 300-percent rate increase of S811ita1i011 workers • the end of
- AIDS cases from health-care co~d persuade private insurers. to each mooth. If not one .was out on
worlt:crs, and diose suffering from return to Maine, from which most · comp, .each would ~1ve $21!0· ~t
"secondary smoke'.' inhalation. have fled. "Maine is the best had a salutar&gt;: effect, but dido t
And now, fow levels of radiation example of the total crisis- a sl.ash the heav1est comp cos~ for
emissioh from c':J:.~ter monitors meltdown is a good way to Pittsburgh - from cops and fireand even police
guns might descri)&gt;e it." Thomas Smith, a vice men; ~e city is still reelmg ~
result in compensable claims in president of the Travelers Insur·· the millions of dollars each year m
states.
·; ance Co., told us during a recent workers' comp costs.
.
The AFL-CIO's top expert on
v'
._ I
workers' comp,1ames Ellenberger,
"
places lhe blame on many
LAc;T YEAR, I WAc;
t
v
doorsteps. "Injured workers are
complaining about inadequate ben·
OONATtN6 TO
efits,' ~ he said. "Employers are .
TUIS CHA~ITY.
complaining about workers' com·
pensation costs that 11e too high."
Although some compensable
claims stretcll' the imagination,
some of the outlandish ones are
still rejected. Take the polic:e officer who suffered a stroke while lie
·guarded the traveling King Tut
treasures exhibit in San Francis!:o
in 1979. He claimed he was enti· ,
tied to disability paynients because
he was a victim of King Tot's curse
- a curse pronoun!:¢ bx Osiris,
the god of the dead, on those wbo
disturb the dead. A superior court
judge was not convinced and
rejected the $18,000claim.
Jack Aaderson and Michael
Blnsteia are syndicated writers
ror United Feature Syndicate,

WASHINGTON
The
nation' s oldest social program workers' compensation insurance
- is reeling &amp;om grossly inflated
medical bills, rocketing litigation
cas~. fraud and abuse.
The files of insurance investigatorS 11e teeming with cues like that
of a Baltimore man who was lifting
a box on the job at a supermarket
· and felt a twinge of plio. He col·
lected for lost work and medical
bills on the first inJury an~ then
made a second chum, saymg he
had sligan oily Door !Uld reinjured .
.
Investiga
suspected that his
discomfort stemmed mo~ from a
broken jaw m:cived in a barroom
brawl. But he refused to go back to
work - at least refused to continue
his day J.'ob. Tlien investigators
teamed he was working nights·as
an exotic dancer in a Chippendalelike sUip joint, wearing fUr boots
and a fur bikini and passing a torcll
between his legs.
.·
Today, some 96 million Amen·
can workerS are oovered by work·
ers' comp, which is somclbing on
the order of nine
of 10 workers.
Although
not be
covered,
under

A dead issue
Dear Editor
If you found a .penny on the
street, would you assume that a
bank had been robbed?
That is about as much evidence
'as Walsh has on Cap. Weinberger.
A little piece or paper in a room
'full of papers was found. Cap.
Weinbergu's initials were on that
·scrap; at least, that seems to be
what Walsh wants to prove. Weinbeiger must have done something
sinister!
· .After years and millions of dol·
)ars spent Walsh has not earned his
:saiL He has not convicted anyone.

Aceu·Weather• forecut for daytime condit,ions and

False claims riddle.~ workers' comp program

The Dally SenUnel Page ·3

~~~r~in ?~.!~.P. ~.~o~~....&lt;?~~o..~2.~!!~~~

11Im ...,. Dee. 31

.

.

The ·Daily Sentinel

· .·

PIG• 2 The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
w~~-y. December 30, 1 - .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

111

-~~~-··
111111c•m
aiCIII61

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�December

Sports
.

In Far West Classic title game,

Ohio _State beats Oregon 79-75

'

.

Tournament .
Southern defeats Jackson 71·54 in Rio Grande Holiday
..
'

~ting their best perfonnlnl:e
of the year, the Southern Torlllldocs
rolled to a convincing 71-54 non·
leQue triumph over ~ J~
I~men Tuoaday eventng 111 the

Holiday Toumamimt atthe.University of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
The win advances l'jouthern to
tonilht's finals.
lfowie Caldwell's troops are ·

now 4-1 overall, while Jackson

rebounds and blocking several
shots. Ryan Williams bad another
steady game with eigbt, Mason
Fisher lalliod four. luJdy Grueser
two and Robelt Reiber one.
Contributing to the effort, but
not hilling the aooring column were
Jeremy Dill, Trenton Cleleand.
Jeremy Nordlup,Iamey Smith and
Tucker Willi_.,
Jackson was led by David
Kight, who nou:hed IS, Malt Wal·
bum added 14, and Brad Howe Jl8d

leered 24 and 21 points. reapectivoJy.
Russell Singleton tossed in II
points as well as grabbin11 16

drops to 3-4.

Southern was led by dual 20point efforts from seniors Michael
Evans and Mark Allen, who col•

•

--

Southern quickly set an upbeat
. tempo early in the game while
playina an aggressive defense as
well Jackson's downfall came in
its inability 10 hit the good shots, its
inability to get the second sbot and
in its slnlggle to get a good shot
against the Soulhem defense.
Southern also hit the boards
well in the opening round. garnering a 12-4 llllv8ntage in that depart·
ment, led by Evans• five. Southern
hit 7-IS from the field, while the
Ironmen hit a meager S-18.
Southern raced on '10 a 22-14
advanta~e at the buzzer. Southern
maintamed the same . tempo
lhrooghout the firSt half. Singleton
hit the boards well, grabbing eight
in the firSt half as Southern continued its 24-10 rebounding edge,
AI the half, Southern hadhit 1330 overall, while Jackson had hit
just 12-33. Southern led 44-30 111

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MINNESOTA TWINS -

WALES CONFERENCE
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LOS ANOELES DODDERS Apod 1D...,.. wilh l&lt;aty l!mil, dWd
buanan. and Swve Wllaoa, p;ldlor, on

-olo. . . . . . . .

you the very best
throughout the
new year.

PICKENS
HARDWARE

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MASON, WY. ·

SALE!

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~ CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
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ST. LOUIS BLUES-

wins. to Pooaa &lt;I
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POMEROY, OH.

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Major collqe .
'*ketball scores
Ohio bigb ~ehool
girls' basketball scores

E..t
Md.·l!. -61, C.0. 00-oicdOIIll IlL

'

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A&amp;-Ualo- 'IS.~. k. 63
a-.;, T... IQS. , _ , waiL 15

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run to pull away in the
A,ll College Tournament at Oldahoma City.
No.17 Michlgao State 81
New'Hampsblre 51
The Spartans led 36-19 at half.
time.~lben opened the second half
with a 16-2 run.
James~ 90
No.1!1 Callforllla 75
The Dukes knocked Cal from
the unbeaten ranks with a 31-of-51
shooting performance. · r
SW f4!dslana109
No. 20 Nebnska 80
At Honolulu, Michael Allen
scored 28 pohits to lead an awesome perimetellllack. .
No. Z1 Cindnnatl65
..
Dayton 55
Nick Van Exel hit consecutive
three-pointers during a 10-0 second
half run that lifted visiting Cincinnati.
No. Z3 COilllecticut 91
Hartford 66
At Hartford, Conn., Brian Fair
scored 17 of his career-high 24
points as Connecticut) opened a
30-pointllrst-half lead.
·
No. 24 Vuderllilt%
Bowling Gl'ftn 69
Bill,Y McCaffrey and Chris Lawson each scored 17 points as Vanderbilt won the championship of
the Music' City Invitational at
Nashville, Tenn.
Ore2on State 93
No. 25 Brigham Young 79
At Portland, Ore., BYU finished
last in the Far West Classic with its
second loss in as many nights. Oregon Slate was 42 of 49 from the
line, including 25 of 26 over the
fma16:30.

In NBA actipn,

.

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fJ1ie !Meigs County q)emocratic Party
Coriially Invites rJh.e Pu.6(ic 'To fJ1ie
Swearing-In Ceremony Of
County Cotfi.Tnissioner Jantt £. !Jiowart!,
Sl'uriffJa17W M. Souls6y,
Prosecuting j{riornty Jolin !It .Lentes
a~S~tli 1Jistrict 'U.S. Congressman 'IeiStrick.fatul
jlt 3:00P.M. on '11iur.siiz.y, January 31
In '11ie·!Me¥Js County Common Pf.tas Courtroom,
!Meitfs County Cou.rtliouse.in Pomeroy.
·
State $s.presentatifJe MarK..!Maiune 'WiiCPef/orm. 'lT'u. Ceremony.
){ reception 'UJi£CJoflow at
··
Carpenters '!}{g.{{ on 'East !Main ,Strut.
fJJit.se are your ntwCy dettd officials.
'11iey wou.U Wve. to meet you, atuf fuar your Ukas ora- fww
wt can 11IOVt forwara togttfier.
.

.,

"
I

"

"
"
"...

"

..

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.•

I

Paid for by Meigs Co. Dem:leratic Exec. Corrm., Treas. Jane M. Frymyer, 42199 Gilley Ridge Ad., Shade, Oh. 45776

,

2,314 this year. The opposition is
averaging 118.3 points against the
Mavericks, who are scoring at a
100.6 clip.
The Kin$s' previous lar~est
margin of v1ctory was 44 pomts,
146-102 on Dec. 22, 1983, against
the Denver Nuggets. Dallas lost at
Houston 116-68 on Feb. 4, 1981,
its previous worst defeaL
Anthony Bonner scored a
career-high 23 points, leading six
teamrilares in double flglliCS. Mitch
Richmond contributed 22 points
and Walt Williams added 20,
including all 14 of his free throws.
Tbe Kings won their founh straight
game.
Dallas, which played without
starters Derek H~r and Sean
Rooks, both out w1th right knee
injuries, shot 37.6 pen:ent, was outrebounded S7-37 and committed 28
turnovers.
In other games, it was Golden
State 132, Houston 112; Seattle
lll, Boston 87; Chicago ll4,
~harloue 103; New Ylrt 97, Indiana 91; and Cleveland 114. Atlanla
96. .
.
· Warriors 132, Rockets UZ
At Houston, the wllrriors gor 32
points and 14 assists from Tim
Hardaway in completing a Texas'
sweep. Golden State outscored·
Houston 49-28 in the finall5:36.
Chris Mullin had 29 points and
Sarunas Man:iulionis added 20 as
the Wllrriors shot 63 percent

By The Alloc:lated ~
There won't be many such
nights for the Sacramento Kings.
There might be a whole bunch of
them for the Dallas Mavericks.
In matching the seventh-biggest
rout in NBA history, the Kings set
a franchise record for victory margin Tuesday night with a 139-81
romr, past the Mavi'Zii:b.
' We play,ed almost a perfect
game,~· S:fento coach Garry
St. Jean sai "Defense made for
easy baske , and I was very
pleased with
defense. We had
lots of help." ·
.
"It's ruce to get one like this ,"
added Kings star1ing forward Wayman Tisdale, who l'layed only 16
minutes and had eight points. "I
don't think I've ever been In a
game by this margin. I thou.ht we
did everything right"
And the Mavericks, as is their
wont this season, did everything
wrong. Dallas is 2-21, including 11
straight road losses. The Mavs are
the NBA's only winless team on
the road.
"They got on us early and we
kind of got down,'' said Dallas
·guard Walter Bond. "The buried
us. We are a young team and we
have to regroup. btlt I don't think
tonight was mdicative of our
team."
Oh? Dallas has scored under
100 points in five sttaight games
. and has~~~ outscored 2,721 to

our

THE FABRIC SHO P

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3
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ALL IN STOCK PAnERNS

~6,n...h3
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50% 0FF

Loa~ JERSEY DEW.S - a-n•

Qooboo 4, Now

'

All FABRIC

Hockey

dpH Chria Goved•rU. left wina. to
Sprinafiold of dlo AmerictD Hockey

47
44
31
31

used a~

Mavericks down Kings; Cavs win·

~

I.

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Oregon State defeated No . 2S
AP Sports Writer
Brigham Yoong 93-79.
It was one of the grearest games .
Elsewhere in the Top 2S, 'No. 2
of the year between two of the best ·Kansas defeated Hawaii 94-66~ No.
teams in the country, yet almost 7 Seton Hall crushed Cornell 7Snobody saw it
.
59, No. 13 Purdue edged Texas-El
It was No. 5 Michigan vs. No.6 Paso 63-61, No. 14 Georgia Tech
North Carolina on Tuesday night in downed Youngstown State 10S-8S, ,
the semifinals of the Rainbow No. IS Oklahoma crushed Alaska·
Classic. The Wolverines won 79- Anchorage ·102-70, No. 17 Michi78 when Jalen Rose rebounded a gan State beat New Hampshire 81·
missed shot and put in a short 51, No. 21 Cincinnati blat Dayton
jumper at the buzzer.
65-5S, No. 23 Connecticut beat
~game was not televised by a Hartford 91-66 and No. 24 Vandernational network, and it wasn't bill topped Bowling Green 96-69.
even shown in the largest market in
No.2 Kansas 94, Hawaii 66
Michigan.
Kansas took control early
It was syndicated by Prime Net· against the Rainbows and had a 21work and was shown in only IS point halftime edge. Eric Pauley.
markets ...:... with a toial eossible matched his career-high -with 23
viewing audience of 27 million points.
·
about one-tenth of the country.
No. 7 Seton HaD 75, CorneD 59
ESPN, the network that regularly
·At East RutherfOrd, NJ .. Seton
televises college baslcetbaU nation- Hall opened the game with a IS-O
wide, showed the Freedom Bowl run and it should have been all
foolball game instead. .
.
over. But Cornell closed to 65-54
What basketball fans m1ssed with 4:24 to play before Anuras
was one of the few games each Kamishovas hit a drive and a free
y~ that lives up to expeclations. It tluQw to ignite a 10-2. bursL
No. U PunhJe 63, UfEP 61
was the first regular 1eason
match up ever between the two
At El Paso, Texas, Matt Wad·
sc~ls and ended with a frenzill4 dell. hit an 18-foot jumper at the
firush worthy of March Madness. · buzzer to give Punlue the champi·
"lt was a great game to watch if onship of the Sun Carnival ClasSIC.
you didn't care who won," North
No. 14 Georgia Teeh lOS
Carolina coach Dean Smith said. ·
Youngstown State 85
"We hung in, played hard and
At Atlanta, Malcolm Mackey
got lucky," Michigan coach Steve scored 19 of his 26 points in the
Fisher said.
second half as Georgia Tech broke.
There were three upsets in the open a game that was tied at half·
Top 25 Tuesday night: James time.
Madison topped No. 19 California
No. 15 Oklahoma 102
90-75, Southwestern Louisiana
Alaska-Ancllorage 70
beat No. 20 Nebraska 109-80 and
The 15th-ranted Sooners, ahead
by just six early in the second half,
1

r

4 160130
... 1711~
44 1&lt;11130
36 154121
25 113162
9 13111

.......... 2213 4
C)Woo ............... 11 11 6
: - ................ 21 13 2
i
15 15 6
' llollfcnt ............. II 22 3
Oluwa .............. 3 33 . 3

said.
Rickey Dudley had 12 points
ancl'l6 rebounds for Ohio Slate.
Antoine St01ul•mire scored 24
for Oregon and was named the
tomnament's most valuable player,
but lie wss only 8 for 22 from the
field.
Brigham Young (7-4) showed
little ~mblance to the aq•~ 1bat
beai Oldahoma and Memphis State
before losing to Duke in last
w~·s Maui Classic.
"We just ran out of gas in this
tournament," Cmprs ~h Roger
Reid said. "We haven't bad a regu•
laJ: practi,ce in two weeks, IJid ibis
was not the same basketball rum
that you saw here."
Gary Trost~ a career-high
29 points for BYU, but he got liule .
help from his teammates· as the
Cougars feD behind by 16 points in
the first half and never carne closer
than eight in the second.
Coach Jim Anderson's Oregon
State team sna.Jiped a four-game
losing strea1t to llllprove to 3-S.
Skelton,
Funderburke,
SIOUdamire, Brent Barry of Oregon
S.late and.Trost were named to the
all-tournament team.

Michigan edges North Carolina
79-78 mi·nus national TV glare

Wishing

OftO-)'elf contnc&amp;a.

Aa.iDI.woa

~ -

I

.

S£ATIU! MIJUNEIIS - Apocl "'
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oaa mo.JCUcontract. J)aipatad YoDil
....... pddtor. r... _

IntbeNHL ...

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CLI!VE1.\IID INI)IANS - Apood
' " - ..;m AJ....,n.p;._ olaulap.
on • c..,_rccalnd.

......... _SW.,I0:30p.m.
~-Sacr::·

-.,Joey

aDCAOO WHITE SOX - E I IIIcir 1993.,.;... ......
Con,
biMmm. Apwd 10 tcnna
wilh Dan Plll. pildal.

.,._ aa.;.,p.l:~m.
lJIOb 01 Putlmd,1D p.m.

•

..

temu: wilb Roc Tiq)ey, cat.chcrr, on a

the~" Green

In other college basketbaU action,

JACKSON
r
(14-16-10-14=54)
.
David Kight 4-2·1=1S, Matt ·
Walburn 3-2-2=14, Tommy Hill 0- •
0•2=2, David Seymour 1-0:0..2,
Brad Howe 3-l-2•U, Dennis
Crabcree 3-0-0=6, Robbie Travis 20-0=o4. Totals -16-5·7=54

tive agreement last week and sai,d
they hoped for a fmal settlement
early this week. The deal, if fmal·
ized, would bring free agency to
the NFL, impose the league's firSt
salary cap, and cut the draft froln
12 rounds to seven; with a cap 11f
$2 million for roolde salaries.
FQOtbal
PHOENIX (AP) - Former
New Yod: Jets defensi:ve end Mark
Gastineau was returned to Arizona
from New York to face a drug
charge.
.
Gastineau; 36, bad a brief court
appearance at which the charges
were formally read, and he was
being held without bail, Maricopa
County sheriff's spokesman Sgt.
Jay Ellison said.
He's charged with one count of
failing to appear on a charge of
possessing a dangerous drug. The
charge stems from his 1991
Phoenix arrest for allegedly picldng
up a package . with 200
amphetsmme pills at the airport.

~ otllilml. 7:30p.m.

o

.SOUTHERN
(U·Zl-11·9=71)
Mark Allen 3-2·9=21, Ryan .:•
Williams 3..()..2=8, Michael. Evans
5-4-2-24, Andy Grueser I..Q..0.2, ...
Robert Reiber 0-0·1•1, Mason ,
Fisher 2-0-0=4, Russell Singleton
s-o-1=11. Totals -19-6-15=71

~ sides announced a tenia·

' ToaJPI'spmei

LA.~·~ 7:30p.m.

ww •

Southern led 62-40 alter three ··
frames, ·then desllite slippin&amp; 1011e ·
in the final round held on to the 71· ..
54 win.
,,
Southern bit 2S-S1 for 48 per- ;
cent overall, 6-1S threes and IS-21 •
at the line. Jackson hit 21-69 Cor 3S ,
peroent ovetlll, but hit a devastat· ,
tng S-26 from three-point range.
JHS hit 7-8 at the l;ne, ·
.~
Southen! won the battle of the ·'
boards 43-24,led by Singleton's 16
. and Evans' niile. Howe had sev~ ~
for Jackson.
··
. Southern had 16 turnovers aild :,
eight steals. Jackson had 11 .
turnovers and sill steals.
Southern plays tonight in the
fmals at Rio Grande. ·
·

Footllilll
NEW YORK (AP) - NFL
commissioner Paul TagliabliC and
players' association lawyer Jim
Quinn talked by telephone as the
sides worked on a tentative seaJe.
mentofthe league's five-year labci

7

'fllildaY'III:ONI

S1

ihe half.

Sports briefs

Nooo Yodt 97, Jadioao 91
Cli&lt;qo 114, a.-103
a.B\'!l-4ND 114, A....oo 96

•

I

II

: EASTERN CONFERENCE

go one on one,llld the 111011 staned
falling at the end for roe," he said.
Skelron bad 29 points in the 8577 lint-round vicuJ6' OWl" Orep
State. &amp; scored nioe points in the
final five minures against Oregon.
"The offense didu 't come to me
like the first game," he said. "But
I fell like my defense was solid,
then I was able to hit the shots
down the s~mth.''
Oregon (6-S) provided a tougher ·
challeJ.tge than might have been
expected. The Ducks were j' ust 6- '
2~ last sc:ason ,an~ ~a~ on y one
VICtory over a DI'(ISIOII I team
.entering the toumamenL, .
But they stunned Bngham
Young 76-70 on Monday and were
up by sey~:~~ wil;h 11 1/2 minutes to
plar, aga1IIJt Ohio State.
.
.
One of my goals for the year IS
to be competitive,'' first-year
coach Jerry Green said. "Last year,
they came in here and got thumped
by 30 on the: first nigh,t an~ 30 on
the second night. I 'don t think anybody thumped us this time.' •
The Buckeyes' bawrence Funderburke scored 13 .points and
blocked two shots during a decisive
8..() run late in the game.
"Fundetburlce sent a couple into

By BOB BAUM
PORTI.AND, Ole. (AP) - For
Ob,io State, Oregon and maybe
even Oregon Slilte, the Far West
Classic brougbt hope for the future.
For Brighlpl Young, it brought
disaster.
. Ohio State's young Buckeyes
won the tournament title with a
toUgh ·79- 75 victory over surprising
Oregon on Tuesday night No. 2S
Brigham Young, the pre-toumament favorite, loSt to Oregon State
93-79 in the third-Place game as
the Beavers sank a tournament·
recOrd 42 of 49 free throws.
Jamie Skelton, who wasn't even
a starter. until Monday's opening- .
round v1ctory over Oregon State,
scored IS of his 21 points in the
second half for Ohio State (6-2)
against Oregon.
"We're a young !e8J11 trying to
get better," said Ohio State coach
Randy Ayers, whose team is the
tWo-time defending Big Ten champion. "I believe these two games in
Portland are going to help us in the
conference sesson."
·
Skelton showed he can provide
some much'.-Jed firepower from
the outside for the Buckeyes.
·~coach wss calling my play, to

.

•'

V1

SuperS1111Ics 111, Celtlcs87
Seattle improved its home
record to 13-1, tied for best in the
league. The Sonics' victory before
36,431 at the Kingdome was their
sixth in tl)e past seven games and
was paced by Derrick McKey's 20
points.
Sill Sonics scored in double figures. Gary Payton had 18 points
and nine assists.
' The Celtics equaled their season-low JIC?inl total in losing their
third straight ·
Buds 114, Hornets·103
Michael Jordan doesn't particularly enjoy playing NBA games
back in North Carolina, hia. home
state. He managed just fine,
though, with 28 points, 12
rebounds and 11 assists to lead the
Bulls to their fifth sllllight victory
and eighth in nine starts. Horace
Grant added 20 points for the
Bulls.
Knk:ks 97, Pacers 91
At New York, Greg Anthony, in
his first start of the season, scored a
career-high 23 points for the
Knicks. Patrick Ewing scored 24 of
·his 29 points in the second half.
The Pacers got a seascin-high 16
points from rookie Malik Sealy,
who played at nearby St. John's.
CavaUers 114, Hawks%
At Atlanla, Brad Daugherty and
Larry Nance each scored 22 points
and the Cavaliers shot nearly 60
percent. Slacey Augmon led the
Hawks with 25 points.

Philly, minus Lindros, bombs L.A. Kings 10-2
By JOHN KREISER
blowoui?
AP SPorts Writer
·
It was. The Flyers scored 10
Even without Eric Lindros, the straight $oals to pummel the reelPhiladelphia Flyers cauaht the Los in' .K111gs 10-2 as Rod
Angeles Kinp at the right time.
Bnnd' Amour had three goals and
The Flyers had won only twice three IISSists.
on the road before'Tuesday nlgh1's
The Flyers went 2-7-0 during
visit to the Forum. They wae w'ith- Lindros' first absence, but
out Lindrol, their 111r rookie who Brind'Amour.wasn't sutpriaed at
aggravated a sprained knee in the the offensive explosion.
morning skate, and quickly fell
"Brie's the kind of. player who
behind 2-o.
·
can't be. out for a long time or else
A perfe11t scenario (or a you'll miss him," he said. "But for
I

one g8DIC ~ two, you can affoi'd to
·miss anybody. If everybody comes
together collectively and plays

i

Cow~er NFL's Coach of the Year
nator Dave Wannstedt.
Rod Woodson said.
By ALAN ROBINSON
Cowher
also
knew
where
the
"That gave us a sense of confi.
· PITTSBURGH .(AP) - Pjtts·
burgh Steelers coach Bill Cowher Steelers hadn't been regularly - to dence that maybe we didn't have ·
before," Cowher said. "From
needed just one season to accom- the playoffs.
"We set high standards and we there, we kind of
plish what predecessor Chuck Noll
. fed off it"
never did m 23 seasons: will the talked about winning championships," he said.
NFL Coach of the Year award.
Cowher needed less than one
Noll, who retired a year ago,
quarter
of his fll'st game to prove
remnins the only coacltto win four
he
was
a
much different coach than
Super Bowls but was never named
Noll,
who
was more of an old
coach of the year, a fact that
school,
play-it-by-the-book
coach
Cowher almost couldn't believe.
than
the
more-contempqrary
. . "Don't tell me tltat," be said.
Cowher.
"You~ll mate me feel had."
The Steelers, 13 1/2-point
Cowher - at age 3S, barely a
underdogs,
trailed Houston 14..() in
year older than some of his players
their
opener
when Cowher called
- again has Pittsburgh t_eeling
for
Malk
Royals
to pass on a fate
good about a team was a dynasty in.
punt.
His
completion
to Warren
the 1970s but has been mostly a
Williams
keyed
the
Stulers'
comedisaster since, making the playoffs
back
in
a
29-24
upset
and
generatonly once from 1985-91.
Cowher, the second youngest ed momentum the Steelers would
coach in the NFL, received 23 of ride for weeks.
"That's the first time we've
79 votes from a nationwide panel
had the turning point of the
ever
of media members to edge San
season in P.te fll'st quatter of the
Diego•s Bobby Ross, who got 20.
A Pittsburgh native, Cowher first game," All-Pro cornerback
took basically the same team that
was 7-9 in 1991 to an ll·S record, .
the AFC Central Division champi- ·
onship and the top seed in the AFC
playoffs.
The Steelers enjoyed their best
season since 1979, when they were
12-4 in the last of their four Super
FULFILL YOUR lEW YEAR'S RISOLUIIOIS WITH FIT
Bowl seasons. Only four other
TOGETHER IERO.IICS
times in their 60-year history have
the Steelers won as many as II
NEW SESSIONS BEGINNING JAN. 4TH AT
games in a season•
CARLTON SOfOOL
· Cowher, formerly the Kan'sas
SYRACUSE
City Chiefs defensive coordinator, ·
came to Pittsburgh last January
Mo1days &amp; Wed1esdays 6 PM to 7 PM
lalldng of winning championshiJlS
and restoring the Steelers to an elite
slatus in the NFL.
''The thing that impressed
everybody was that he knew just
what he wanted and where he was
CALL 247-4285 OR 8ft-7836
going, •• said Steelers president Dan
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Rooney, wbo chose Cowher over
ANGIE CONNOLLY· CettHied lnatructlon
Dall~ Cowboys defensive coonli·

.

John Mcintyre and Luc
Robitaille gave the Kings a 2-0
lead just 2:43 into the pme, but the
Flyers scored four stiaight goals
before the end or tbe period to
knock out Kelly Hrudey, added two
more in the second off Robb
SIIUber and four more in lhe third,
(See NHL • Paae 6)

camlllae Ita

.

•

'

Yllaraday Md
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I '

.! .. .

nlaht'sFar West Clallc challlpionlbip Plllt Ia
Portland, Ore., where tbe Buckeya wou 79·75
to wlu tbe dtle. (AP)

PRESSURE- Oreaon's Aaro• Johnson
(right) llnds blmself under prasure from Ohio
State guard Jamie SkeUon during Tuesday

HIGHQUAUTY

NOT HIGH PRICES
HIGH OUAUTY
NOT IIGH PRICE

••'

.·
'

I

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�e

PNI

Pomanay llddlaport, Ohio

The ~lly Sentinel

In ltltest colkge bowl aetion,

Fres~o

Weclnaaday, December 30, 1992

.

WHSgroup

State shocks USC 24-7; Washington State edges Utah
.

By_KEN PEl ERS
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - It
wu the greatest win in Fresno
Stale history, and just maybe •
of lhe most emblnassina 1oaes for
Southern Cal.
Inspired by their cbance 10 play
one of lhe nation's ttaditiooal football powers and motivated even
more by comments by Southern
Cal's quartcrback, .the determined
Bulldogs upset the 23rd-ranked
Trojans 24-7 in the Freedom Bowl
Tuesday nighL
"This is certainly, historicaUy,
the~ win in FSU history by
far, • J!ulldogs coach Jim Sweeney
said after his team dominsted USC
on both sides of the ball. "I felt
like we were in control of lhc ball

.

9S yards, "'*"'«~ him
tbreo ~mes ud intercepted him

llteiDpls Cor

three~

S11d Fresno S"te safety ~am
WIIJOII, who had one intertqJCI04:

"They have ~ -tolking all week

sbouldn

how we
t be on the fteld
with them. Thll just motivlled II.'
more."
The bowl week continues
tonight wilh Hawaii and Illinois in
lhc Holiday Bowl Bl San Dielo. On
Thursday. Wake Forest and Oregon
meet in the Independence Bowl,
Arizona faces Baylor in the John
~Bow~ !I'M' Air Force tactles MissaSSippam the Liberty Bowl

'
before tbc eight-game exttavaganza
on Friday.
.,
On New Year's Day, n s Boston
Colleae IIIII Temcme in the Hall
of Fame Bowl, Texas A&amp;:M and
No!fe Dame in the~~ Bov.:l.
Ollio Sllle llld Gecqia thll Cnrut Bowl, Pan s- and Slmlford
in the BJerlr!Nsllr Bowl, Syracuse
and Cokindo in the Fiesta Bowl,
and Micbiaan and Washinaton in
the Rose Aowl. On New Year's
Night, Nellnlsb plays Fkirlda Stale
in the OranJ!I Bowl and Alabama
faces Miami in the Supr ~wl for
the national cbampi~. .
·
Nose guard Zack Nax, maddle

m

llaeblcker Cbria Pe1en and ead
Nlck Sarflupea"adcd the Fluno
Stale dolwclwe etbt.1Vbile JIIDes
B'!rton ,llld Brian Porter also
chipped• widl
the Blllldo~' o ease, wbicb
led the nad011 m
for· the
second s&amp;raight year, avenaina
40.5 points a aame, ICOred on a
one-yard run by Lonmo Neal in
the second QIWI« and a 43-yard
field goal by Derek~ Ia die
third and then put die pme away
with a pair of IOUC:bdowna in the
late aomg -. a two-yard rua by
An~y Daigle and a li_ye-yardrun
by Raven.

iafaiit'lms.

scorint

Soulhem cal got on the board
fust, on Deon Sliother's one-yard
dive in the eecond quaner.
Ia Tuesday night'~ other bowl
game, No. 18 Wasbmgton State
OIJIIC(nC) Utah 31-28 in the Copper Bowl
WIHIQtoll St. 3l,Utah 11
Drew Bledsoe passed for a
scbool-m:onl476 yards and Aaron
Price ticked bis second Rlllle-winnina field pi this -.on at Arizona Sladium as the Conprs withstood Utah '1 second-half come·
back.
.
Washington SllliC led 2J-0 after
· one quarter before the Utes aallied

meets recently

to tie it 28-28 in lhc third period.
After Price's go-ahead field goal
.
with S:08 left, Chris Yergensen•s . :20-yard f!e.ld goal a~tempt with . :;
3:19 remi!D!Dg was wide after the-, . ·
Utes reached Washington State's ; .
five ~n a 70-yard ~uf!; from
Fnmk Dolce 10 Sean w·
s.
Bledsoe broke bis scbool record'
of 413 yards while lhrowing touch·
downsof87 and48 yards to Phillip
Bobo. The Cougars am11sed 636
yards in offense
•
Price son oi WashingtOR State
coach Mike Price l&lt;icked a game- ,
winning 47-yard field aoal against .
Arizona early in lhc season. .
·

game.''

General
' INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Ten
Olympic aold medal winners,
including swimmers Mike Barrow·
man, Pablo Morales and Summer
Sanden, were aelected by the Ama·
teur Alhlelic Union u finalists for
the 1992 Sullivan Award.
The ocher fineJitt• fa; lhe awanl,
which will be -anced Mln:h 8,
are wrelller Bruce Baurnpnner,
speedJtater BoiiJiic Blair, fipre
skater Kri1ti Yamquchi, boxer
Oscar De !;.a Hoyt, aprinter Gail
• DeverJ. diver Milt Lenzi and hur·
dler Kevin Young.

"

mealing aemt pals for
1992 ud eschanging gifts, they
drew- for 1993 secret )Ills•.
'l1le pq~ jliincd in sinaing seven!
-a..lliallll .....

Thole lllaldina lhc December
"'"«i"' were Patty Noel, Nancy

Anderlllll, Carol Roush, ~
'Wolbnan, RalDona Knight, Bernice
a.te, MIKiorie Walburn, Bernice

Smith, Shirley Sullivan, Jo !&gt;on
Goulm, Bclty Russell, Lyda RusseD, Linda Reynolds, Shirley
Tucker, Sylvia Sayre. Juae Maxey,
Pal Alleusworlh. Peggy Reilmire,
Emma Lee Kearns,--sue Hayes,
Comie Smith IIIII J&gt;tuy Edwanls.
Their ~~ meeting will be 8l
Shoneys Rcstamlnl in Paid
Plessant on Ian. S at 6 p.m. AD
former Wahama Hip School
classmates are cordially invited 10

p.-.

wiD he lhiiWil at 7
fal wul by ...al•l h7
IJ'OIIJIII ol the dlurdl. Rev. Jaaes R. Acree Sr.
IDvlta the public.

auCIId.

CARL~ LUE DILLON SHENEFIELD

. ..
.

.

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY • Carl E. and Lue IMDcJ. Sllelle- •
field, 21938 Tower Road, La_11pvlle, are celebrat1a1 tilelr 15th::
weddlDg analveraary tocl•y (Wedaesday). TheY were married at the Rutland Methodist Church by Rev. Cbester Lemley. They are •.
the parents of two daughters: Laurie Aan or The Plain• and :
Denise, at home.
__
:

.

.

Two drinks at New Year's Pa~y?
Let someone else drive home
&amp;7 Jcilua C. Wolr, D.O. AJaod.
ate Proleuor of Family Mecllc:iDe
Ohio University Colle~t of Olteotbic Mediciae
~on: How many drinks does it

Partakers, God's Little Lllmbs and tite.Chliclrea

SPECIAL SINGING • Hillside Baptist
Church wiD bave a New Year's Service TbUJ'So
· day at 7 p.m. with guest speakers aaid special
singen IDdudla1 The Blood Covenant SIDaers,
Miss Linda Jones, The Redeemed Quartet. The

NHL action ...

Sports briefs

.......
Abel'

GUEST SPIAK:ERS • Hlll1lde B•ptl1t
Church will he havlq a New Year's Eve senk:e
·Thunda7 Ill 7 ,... G"aat ~en lnclude Ron
CloDdl, DaD Hood 111111 Joe umphre7. A movie

They were.
The Bulldogs (9-4) physically
dominated tile Trojans (6·5·1),
tolling up 405 yards of total
offense 10 183 for USC.
Ron Rivers rushed for 108 yards
on 19 carries for Fresno Stale,
which had 241 yards on lhc around
and 1~ passina by quarterback
Trent Dilfer. The Bulldogs, who
didn't have a single turnover,
sesled the victory with two drives
for touchdowns in the fmal 3:35 of
play.
Somewhat amazinaly, Fresno
State's much maligned defense,
which had allowed nearly 30 points
·a game and was ranked 981h out of
107 nationally, almost completely
shut down the Trojans and also
came lip with four turnovers.
Most notably, the Bulldog
defenders put the clamps on USC
quarterback Rob Johnson, who had
saicl thai !he Trojans wanled to put
the Bulldogs in their place and
''beat !hem bad," and were pl!lying
them only because it was a bowl
game. He added that USC would
never schedule Fresno State.
The Bulldo&amp; defense held Johnson to seven completions in 18

(Continued from Page 5)
including three during a fiveminute power play by a unit thal
came into ihe game last in the
league on the road.
. In olher games, it was Washing·
ton 4,1he New York Rangers 3 in
overtime; Chicago 6, Detroit 3;
Winnipeg 5, Boston 4; Vancouver
7. San Jose 5; Quebec 4, New Jersey 1; Montreal 6, Edmonton 3 ;
and Toronto 3, the New York
lslandas 2.
Capitals 4, Rangers 3
Michal Pivonka set up the tying
goal and scored the winner in overtime as the Caf.ilals, held to I 0
shots in the first two perinds, overtook die visiting Ranaers.
_ Blackbawks 6, Red WIDgs 3
• Defenseman Igor Kravchuk
Sc:ored twice in Chicaao's five:goal
first period as the Blackhawks
coasled in Detroit, avenging a 4-0
home loss to the Red Wings two
days earlier.
·
Jets 5, Bruins 4
. Tie Domi, acq_uired for his muscle, Scored a goal in his first game
for Winnipeg and Teemu Selanne
6roke a third-period tie as the
tevamped Jets beat visiting Boston.
Domi, acquired Monday from
the Rangers, aot a one-minute ovation when he scored midway
ibrough lhc fmt period.
«
Canucks 7, Sharks 5
• Vancouver scored five times in
ihe first period and defealed visitIng San Jose for die sixth consecutive time this season. Greg Adams,
Cliff Ronning, Anatoli Semenov,
Pavel Bure and Trevor Linden all
scored in the bi&amp; fmt period.
·
Nordiques 4, Devils I
Ron Hextall made 37 saves, 16
in the fmt period, as Quebec beat
New Jeney Bl the Colisce.
Owen Nolan, defensemen Steve
Duchesne and Adam Foote, and
Mats Sundin provided the offense
for Quebec, which won despite
being outshot 38-24. Alexander
Semak had New Jersey's only goal.
Cuadlens 6, Oilers 3
Ex-Oiler Vince Damphousse's
second goal of the aame. a shanbanded tally 1:07 into the third
period, broke a tie and sparked
Montreal to a win in Edmonton
keeping the Canadiens tied with
Quebec atop the Adams Division.
Maple Leafs 3, Islallders 2
Glenn AnderSon's flubbed shot
trickled into the net with 51 seconds left in regulation time as
Toronto beat !he Isl.andets.
Anderson broke in on right wing
and cut for !he net, but fanned on
liis shot. However, goalie Glenn
Healy was falling backwards and
could only waach helplessly as the
puck lrickled over the goal line.

'l1le W.H.S. Ageless C'••*s
Hip School met on
Dee. lO a die home of Mr. and
Mn. Dille Walburn in Middlcporl.
llajulie Wilburn said grace and
die poup 1111joyed a coveaed dish
of WlhanJa

take to make a person drunk?
Answer: It's almost time 1D ring in
the new year - an occuioa th.al
• many peqlle wiD celebrate by rais·
inJ a few toasts. While moderate
drinking is acceptable in our soci·
ety, drinl&lt;ina 10 the point of getting
drunk is DOL And, when a~ is

of God. Rev. James R. Acree Sr. Invites the pub·

lie. Pictured Is the group Blood Coveaant
Singers, 1-r, Saady King, Barb Pratt, Shelhy
Rutter and MIIHe Roberts.

:Livewire Class has Christmas party
.'

A Ch.ristmas j)arty was held
re&lt;:enlly by the L1vewire class or
·the Fores~un United Methodist
Church atlhe hoine of Mary Bell
and Dale Warner.
A potluck dinner was served

an!~ games were played. Santa
Claus made a swprise appeaa;mce. ·
Attending were Marcia and Stacie Arnold, Fay and Keaney Wiggins, Jennings and Barbara Beegle,

Hilda and J\,lf Yeauger, Johnelta
and Bob Davis, Wilma Reiber.
Selma Call, Mary Nease. Carolyn
and Booner Salser, Evelyn·and Edi·
son Hollon and Pat Th~.

Community calendar
~~-~~~~NES~D=A=Y~~~~~~~

"SILVER PLATTER" FRESH WHOLE

lb.

KROOER SHEtnlET OR

BOSTON BUTT

· GOLDEN RIPE ,

Paklce

Pork Roast

lb. ·
;:nllbs~ lb.
$ .

Slt1oln steak...

$1JJJ
~

r;:,~e;;!iz. 'J''

!:~.~~. . . . J1~:~~~
=:..~lb. ,. =~ 12~z. JJ
"St. IIIII I'I.ATJIIr RlfSH

.....

CfNTfll CIJT

Peas....................

Pier~. · II

WITH PI/ICES LIKE THIS . . .
WHY SHOP ANVWHE/1£ ELSp

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'St. IIIII I'I.ATI'fll" FRfSH

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.
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;,ac;;ye

U.S. GOVT GIIADfD CHOICE

;;,e;;$ TOIJ

0

Dole Bananas

. ...
...

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~,,

crest
.
~·
Toothpaste .. 6.4-0z.
.

Golden crown
seltZer water
1-l.lter

l,.'l
$
= :.~. . :~.:. . ~
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Cllllllll:\4 Qf

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Htr.

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f.

• Keebler o·aolsles 6.25-oz. Pkg.

MEDIUM 1WAY·SEW£S 18·20
EACH ..• $!11.99

REGULAR OR THIN

• san Giorgio Spaghetti 16-oz. Pkg.
CONTADINA PASTA READY OR

• -lpe Ready Tomato sauce 14.5-oz.
FROZEN JAACARONI &amp; BEEF, THREE
CHEESE ROTINI OR

• weight watchers
Macaroni &amp; Cheeses-oz.
5-Ct. Pko:

"IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE" FRENCH ONION.1~""
RANCH, DIU. OR SPINACH

•Springdale Farm Dips 12-oz.

••

connoisseurs

••

.· smaumv
Choice

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/SERVES 8·10J

IAEDIUII JWAY·SfMS 12·16
EACH ..• $29.119

"IN THE PROOUCE DEPT." MICROWAVE

• Pops-Rite POpcorn

,,,.•"'

'".

• vanevdale Bacon 1-lb. Pko.
ASSOfm) RAI/Ilti'S

..•,.,"'

•

• Armour Meat Bologna Hb. Pko.
6-PAK 12.01. CANS . .. 51.99

~
~

•

BUY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS
AND GET THE SAME ITEM FREE/
SUCED

r.

"'••

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

aa1s1c
HJW.

f,

I'

BUYOIII-crrOIII

DIET COKE OR

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ORE.

PRI ES.
HIILIIIJIF
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PillE!
· coca COla

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CI.EAIANCE SAlE Dl
SEl.ECTED CHIISRfAS
•

~~~~!Ob~ur~sda~y)~a~t~th~e~~~i~gs~C~ou~n~ly~~

· presen~'the
"The Passion Play" on Thursday at
7 p.m. Followinalhc movie will be
a service from lhc word or Goc1 and
special singing by the sin&amp;ers at the
church: The evenina will close with
TIJPPERS PLAINS -A belated prayer. Rdreshments will be
Christmas cantata, "The First served at the 111idnight hour. Every•
Noel." will be presented at the onCis welcome.
Tuppers PJai!1s Christian Church of
Christ on ~dnesday at 7 p.m.
DARWIN • The Bedford Town•
Public invi
ship Trustees wiD meet Thursday at
2 p.m. at the town hall
.SYRACUSE • SuliOR Township
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
POMEROY - A watch service
7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Munici- will be held Thursday Bl 7:30 p.m.
pal Buildin&amp; ror the rinal 1992 by die Middleport Wesleyan -Bible
meetinf. An organizational meet- Holiness, Rutland Bible Methodist
ing wil follow.
and Harrisonville Holiness Church
at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
RACINE - The Racine Ameri· Route 143. Speakers will be Rev.
can Legion Post will serve a dinner Amos Tillis and Rev. Victor
for members and their immediate Roush, pastor. There will also be
family on Wednesday at5 p.m.
special singing.

REEDSVILLE - The Olive
· Township Trustees hold an end-ofthe-year meeting Wednesday at
7:30 p.m: at !he Shade Rivet State
Fon:siry Building. .

. ..,,..

RACINE • Racine Apostolic
Church will have a revival beginning Wednesday at 7 p.m. with
Jerry Cotterill, evangelist. Every- ·
one is welcome.

Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy
at 5 p.m. Brin&amp; a COYered dis.h.
Meat and beverage will be provided. Public .invited.

REEDS.VILLE - The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will
have a New Year's Eve service
Thursday at 9 p.nr. Special singing
will be by Harvest Trio, Jett Family
and other singers. Rev. John Douglas invites the public.
FRIDAY (New Year's Day)
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary willliave a round
and square dance Friday from 811:30 p.m. There will be a potluck
dinner from 6-8 p.m. Music 'will be
provided by the Smokey MoUntain
DrifterS. Everyone welcome.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Friday at 2 p.m. at the home
of the clerk, Pauy Calaway, to

MIDDLEPORT -New Year's
Eve Dance, Old American Legion
Hall. MiddlepoiL Music by CJ and finalize 1992.
the Country Gentlemen. Admission
is free. Children are welcome if
SATURDAY
accompanied by an adult. No aJco.
HOCKINGPORT· A round and
TUPPERS PLAINS - A belated holic beversges. Bring soft drinks square dance will be held Saturday
. Christmas cantata, "The First and snacks. Call 742-2179 for from 8-11 :30 at the Reynolds
!Ifoel." will be presented at the information.
Building in Hockingport. Music
T~rs Plains Christian Church of
will be provided by Out of the
Chnst on Wednesday at 7 p.m .
RIPLEY, W.VA.- The Liberty Blue. Ronnie Wood will be the
Public invited.
, Mountaineers wiD perform Thurs· caUer. Everyone welcome.
day at Slcateland in Ripley, W.Va.
POMEROY - The Salisbury
ROCK SPRINGS -The 1993
. Township Trustees will meet , RUTLAND • Rutland Commu- Junior Fair Market Steer weigh-in
· Wednesday at 4 p.m. at die town- nity Church, New Lima Road, will for all prospective ·4-H and FFA
ship hall.
hold a New Year's Eve service steer elthibitors will be Saturday
Thurs~ay at 7 p.m. with Martha
from 9-11 a.m. at the Meigs CounTHURSDAY (New Year's Eve)
Nelson, Melody Kin$ and Patricia ty Fairground in the show arena.
RUTLAND : ~eadan11 Cre~k King. Rev. Dewey King invites die All steers must be weighed-in and
Conservancy Dastn~t orraces Will - public.
identified at this time. Call 992be closed 10 the public on Thursday
6696
for funher information.
so that staff can conduct an end-ofMT. UNION· A New Year's .
year inventory.
Eve service will be held Thursday
MIDDLEPORT - A J;Jrother- ·
at 8 p.m. at the Mt. Union Baptist hood prayer breakf~t will be ~ld
. · LETART - The Letart Township Church. The Messen$ers from Saturday at 9 a.m. at Hope Bapust
trustees willaneel Thursday at Fairmont, W.Va., will sang. Public Church in Middlewrt.
I 0:30 a.m. at the office building ror invited. Pastor Joe N. Sayre invites
the.year-end meeting.
the public. Refreshments will be
SALEM CENTER - Star
served.
Grange
and Star Junior Granae will
LOTIRIDGE • The Louridae
meet
Saturday
at 7:30 p.m. at the
Community Center will have a
MILLFIELD • A round and grange hall near Salem Center.
New Year's Eve party Thursday square dance will be held New Baking eontests will be held. Bring
. from 8 p.m. 10 midnight. All bands Year's Eve (Thursday) from 8:30 non-perishable products ror the
are welcome. Refreshments will be p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Bl the Russell barrel. All members uraed to
served. Everyone welcome.
Building in Millfield. Cost is $4 attend. Potluck rerreshments will
per person and $1 for children be served.
HOBSON • Hobson Church of under 12. Music will be provided
Christ in ChristiaR Union will have by Out bf die Blue. Everyone wei·
RUTLAND - There will be a
!I walehni&amp;ht service Thursday it 7 come.
dance at the Rutland American
p.m. Pastor Theron Durbam invites
Lcgio Hall Saturday, 8 p.m. 10 mid·
the public. 'lbere wiD be different
RUTLAND- A New Year's · night. Music will be provided by
speakers.
Eve watch service will be held Pun: Country. Public invited.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Rutland
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Pull Freewill Baptist Cburch. Nonnan
HARRISONVILLE • The HarGospel Church in Long Bouom · ~or, Rick Weaver and John riSOIIvUie Lpdge No. 411 F&amp;:AM
wiD bsweaNew Yesr'sBveserVice
y will preach. Pastor Paul Tay- will meet SaiUiday at 7:30p.m. All
Thunday at 9 p.m. There wiD be lor invilellhc public.
rnas1CI' masons welcome. Rel'resh·
special music and felloWship. Pas··
ments 10 be
. liCIVed.
.
POMEROY - A poduck dinner
··tor Steve Reed iavites the public.
will be held New Year's Eve
There will be 110 services Friday.

•
.,

before heading home. .
:
Most
importantly,
anybody
who
for trying to drive a car. . '.
1bc mlist recent stausttcs from is obviously drunk should not .txl
the Centers ·ror Disease Control allowed to drive under any circum·
show thal about 42 peicent of the stances. Instead, insist that this per;
fatal vehicle accidents in this coun· son stay overnight, go home willl
try involve alcohol and that more somebody else, or take a taxi. .
By rollowing these steps, you
than 20,000 Americans lose their
lives in alcohol-related accidents can help to assure that your 199~
·
esch year. Every one of theSe acci· willaet off 10 a safe start.
On behalf of all of us at tht
dents is a needless traaedy. You
can be sure that hundreds or people Ohio University Colleae of ()stco.
will again have !heir holiday sea, pathic Medicine, I'd like 10 take
son splfiled this year by New this opponunity to wish you and
Year's Eve drunken drivers.
your family a very happy, peaceful
Question: How can you tell if you NewYesr.
are 100 drunk 10 drive? Answer. It
Here's to your heallhl
takes the avenge person ene 10 two
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
hours to elirninale the avenae alco- column. To submit questloas,
holic drink, such as a jigger of dis- · write to John C. Wolf, D.O .,
tilled liquor. a boUle of beer, or a Obio Ualversity College of Osteoglass of wine. Given this fact, a pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
good. conservative rule of thumb is Athens, Obio 115701.
that if you have had more than ane
drink for eai:h two hours that you
have been at a party. don't drive. Earns scholarship
Also remember that inebriation is
Dana Fick, Long Bollom, has
gene~y brought on quicker if you been awarded the Froberg Scholardrink on an empty stomach.
ship in the amount of $500 !'rom .
If you are hosting a party at Hocking College. The scholarshiP
which alcohol is served. you have a is ror spring and winter quarters.
rCspcnsibility to your guests. Make Fick is enrolled in the ceramic
non-alcoholic beverates available, engineering techOOJOgy and materi·
preferably served in the same type als fe!;hnology programs.
of glasses as the alcohol. Guests
should not he persuaded to drink,
nor ridiculed if !hey choose not 10.
Gary Freeman, Pomeroy, has
Snacl&lt;ing should be encouraged.
Coffee should be served in !he last received $400 from the Froberg
hour or so or the party. Although Scholarship at Hocking Colleae.
coffee does not counteract the alco- The scholarship is ror spring and
hol as some people believe, it does winter quarters. Freeman -is
offset drowsiness, and a lenK!hy enrolled in the ceramic .engineering
period of socializina over corfee technology and materials technolo.provides auests time to sober up gy programs .
drunk, there's absolutely no excuse

Receives honor

KENNETH GRUBE

Announce birth
of first .child

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Grube. Scot·
town, announce the birth of their
fii'St child, a son, Kenneth James
"KJ. n on Dec. 3 af C8bell HuntinglOR Hospital.
He wei&amp;hed seven pounds and
14 ounces and was 20 inches lona.
Paternal grandparents are the
late Kennelh and Kathryn Grube.
Scouown. Paternal great~grand­
mother is Edith Myers, ScotiOwn.
Maternal grandpare11ts are
James and Wanda Mohler, Middlepan. Maternal great-grandparents
are Ova and Marie Rossiter, ScolIOWD.

Godparents are John and Mar·

ROCK IN THE NEW YUR With •GYPSY• at
the WATERING HOLE
'
THURSDAY 7:30 P.M.-2:30 A.M.
'10" PER PERSON
. PAin FAVORS, BUFFEIIHD DRAWINGS.

,.HE WlftRIIG HOME
n&amp;TEROm7

sha Mldns. scouown.
Mrs. Grube is lhc fermer Anna
Marie Mohler, Middleport.

OUR LANGUAGE
By Jeffrey MeQuill
A penon who's SWJ'HFUL Ia lazy

or babltully: slow to acL U you're still

unsure about using thiJ adjective,
don't be too slothful to loot It ap In tile
dictionary.
Q. I was wondering about tbe names
of montlls. Why is tbe Jut month, for
example, called DECEMBER?
A. DECEMBER mmes from Latin
for "'eath IIICIIItb.• bued 011 DECEM,
•ten• (also related to DECADE and
DECIMAL). Ia tbe ancient Roman
calendar, DECEMBER was considered tbe lOth month of tbe year. Even
tboup we IIOW' count December as lbe
12th month of tbe calendar, we've
kept DECEMBER as the name for lbe
last moath of our year.

SUNDAY
LOTIRIDGE - There wiD be a
smorgasbord dinner at the Lollridge Community Center on Sunday from noon 10 1:30 p.m. Cost is
$S for adults and $2.SO for children
tmder 12. Everyone welcome.

·New Years'
Hours
Thurs., Dec. 31
Fri., Jan. I
· Sat., Jan. 2

Use any of these cards to bank 24 hours a day at our
Automatic Teller Machines.

CHESTBR- The Ken~
Chapler,lzllk Walloo Leque, will

hold muzzle IOilder lhooll Suaday
at 1 p.rn. Prizes are die same u for
lhe Oilier shoots Ia addjrim to lhe
re~ open stahl mau:hes, there
wall also be sliootina off-bud
scoped mall:hes.

Normal hours
All offices closed
Drive-thru banking 8:30 A.M.-12 P.M.

Menter FDIC

�..

'

the o.Jiy Sentinel

Pq1 I

\

P'oni*'GJ lllldl1port, Ohio
1112

THANK YOU

~cuulay thru Sunday
.

•.
•

21 OZ. CAN

8 AM-10 PM

RATES

99'

I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH. ~
. WE RESERVE liE Rll.l I~ LIMIT QUIInnES
PRICES GOOD SUI., DEC. 27 IIIII Jll. 2, ~ 993

To place an ad

'

CAMPBELfS .

MoN. thra h1. &amp;.II.-5P.II.- SAT.B-12

·CHICKEN
NOODLE
SOUP
•

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Ch1cken Breast.............La.

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Ham Patt1es................
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.BOB EVANS P~RK

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Spare R•bs....·--··---.18. 99
$

USD~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
: Chuck

~ECKRICH

Roast....
·

eeeeeeeeeeeeeLB.

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.Bologna__···-···-···-·;.18.
~MOUNTAINEER 1-LB. ROLL

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159

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$1

Bam Ado

Yudleloo
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CRISCO
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3201.

79c .

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ZESTA

PubUc Notice

Public Nollce

In' Loving

portatlon;--Columbue, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
Stonclord Time, T-dey,
J1111uery 21, 1. .3, lor lm·

the groundo of roce, color,
or national origin In
coneidera.., lor "" award.
Minimum wage ratea lor
thla project have b!"'n
predetermined 11 required
by I8W ond ,are oet forth In
the bid pro_.,l. "The dote
eet lor compleUon of thla
work eholl be oet forth in
the bldclng propoeol."
PI- and Speclllcationo
ore on file in the O.,.rtment
of Tranaportatlon and the
oftlce of the Olotrlct Deputy
Director. .
.
JERRY WRAY,
Director ofTronaportation
(12)30, t992;(1}6,2tc

1!10VOIIIIIIII8in:

Athoone, GIIW., Hocking,
llelge; Vinton CounUeo,
Ohio lor Improving oecUon
ATH·S0-3.36 on United
Sllllol Route 50 lri the
Vlllogu
of
AlblftJ,
A-ville, Buchlel, ChiUn·
• .,., Coolville, Jocklonvlh,
Trimble, Centerville, Che·
ohlr.e , Crown City, Rio

Lqter Roush,
Who left Us
December 30,
~987. Sadly
Missed By Wife
and Family•

..

Smoke.d St;~usage.......LB. ·

1
3
6

15
'5
15
15
15

$4.00 .
$6.00
$9.00

$.20

$.30

$13.$X)
$1.30/day

$.60

10
Monthly

Ralelll!e for CDIII«UtiVI! NilS,

,

I

IiI \I

$.05/day

broken up cfavo
will be
.~..

I ' I \ II

I I I' I
,\ I ! \

SJ-IIIol.llo a-lor Solo
SJ- y..., for s.d,
M- BeeJ
Ia'~!'·•
3$- r-

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a A.a.-.

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, ..... - Tnolot

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U-lloltiloll-.lora..to7L-v.U-Faraolora..
44- Aro-tfw B.t
45- Fanaiolood a-.

.46-s-r.. a-t
1-lalloll_,.

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5- Loot ... Foad
1-Loot ... , .....
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9-11'..... to a..,

11-Bolplt'uo.l
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IS- ScJ..alo a I IS- Ilodio, TV a C8 Ropolr
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....

51-

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Coodo

SJ-Aat~~J-

54-Mioc. lllorc.........

11- 1t'oatod To Do

55- IluildUc S.pplleo

~-..u,.
· Eloetrieol a ~-d..j
c-.Jih....
•
~--· •••- a... RepUr
:
Vploolowy
•

Gr•nde, VInton, Glou•tar,

Leurelvllle, llurroy City;
Pom•oy, Rocine, RuUend,
_ _ _ _ _..;.,.._ Syrocuoe, HMulen, lie·
Public NotiCe
Arlhur, Wllkeovllle ond
• _ _;...;......;,_..;..;..;.,;...._ Zalulcl, ond vlllo1111 routeD
CofnRACTORS and oectiona by r0111ovlng
10 OF
•
BTATE
ond upgrodlng ex feting
0110
hlghw.,.e911ng. .
DEPAAJIENT OF
The Ohio o.,.rtm•l of
TAANIPOATATIOH
T,...eportatloft herebf noii·
rr. all bldd11e thot It will
Colunlllo•, Ohio
JJa...,ll,
IIIli I
aHirmeUvaly ineur,e that In
, ,D Cofttl
.......
oontrect •twed lnlo
uiif"'..:::r~CT
purouent to thle adv.ru.-a, minority bUill-

Public Notice

;NoncE

t..:::i

""'

II~

STP·F\'11(11
e, Ita hecI .II .pcelltl. . be
t the allloJI ollhe
• rt I

• Dlreolor of the Ohio
· DeportMent of Tr-·

..,...,.,._ wll be iilleickd

lull opp-nlty 1o e.._ll
bide In reepon01 lo thla
Invitation oncl will not be
dlocrimlnated au-lnot on

PubliC Notice

NOTICE io BIDDERS
FOR SALE
1185 Ford Crown VIctoria
8erlal 1 2FAB43GIFX217616
Pollee package. Plua other
pollee equipment. The cor
and equipment can be ,..,
et the Rutland Civic Center
aiAutloncl, Ohio.
,
·, Sulad ·'bien muet be
received by 12:00 noon,
Januory: 12, 1112. Bldo will

be 0 ~ at 7 p.m. Jonu~
12 at Rutland Civic Center
Councii.ChDIIIbaro.
· The board retarvea thli
right to refute any and all

bido

(f2)

2a 29 30 3tc

' ' '
---.,.-----.-

PubliC Notice
NOTICE OF PUBUC
HEARING
The . VIII- of Pomeroy
will hold the llral of two
public heerlngt on Jan, 5,
1993 at 7:00 P.M. In the
Village oHicM at City HaU
Auditorium. The purpon of
tllie hearing Ia to explain the
Ohio Community O.velop·
ment Block Grant (CDBG)
Downtown Revitalization
Progrom. The eecond
h-lng will~&gt;&amp; held on J ...
It, 1113, at 7:00 P.ll. In the
Ylllllga olllcu. ~II l,n·
tereated cltlzeno and
buoln•• and/or building
ownero ore encouroged to
attend. · F41r, further in·
lorm!'tion · oontact Meyor
Bruce J . Reed.
(12) 30, 1992, 1tc

I ------=R-ea~I~E~~-at-e~G~e-n-er_a_l________

SALTINES
.

IUlUnN IOIRD DEIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE ·
PUILICAnOI .

•

·------------------------~------------~ '~
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
382 E. Second
Open New Year's Eve a1 6 P.M.
Open New Year's Day a1 3 P.M.
Call for Reservation

Hats, Horns, Noise Makers.
Admission $4.50, Skates $1 .50.

992·3432

EVERYONE WELCOME!

'

SKATE·A·WAY
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
7:30 till12:30

MASON BOWLING CENTER
. Mason, West Virginia

304·m·saoo
Open New Year's Day 3 p.m.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. 5 P.M. for ~n
Open EveJY' Evening at 5 p.m.

Celebrate The New Year
at

It's A New Year's Eve
Bash at

D's FRENCH QUARTER
AND GALLEY

D's FRENCH QUARTER
AND GALLEY
Celebrate as OJ Clayton
presents Yesterday and
Today's Top 40 Country, Rock
and Dance Tunes.
The Party's al D's!
Nightly drawings in the lounge
Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat. for Free
Dinner for 2 and Limo

New Year's Eve Package
Chef Andres offers you:
Choice of 3 entrees
(Prime Rib, Piatto
Mediterraneo, Surf and
Turf), Appetizers, Dessert
and Champagne.
• Call for Reservations
446-9261
Open Thurs. 11 am-2:30;
4pm-2:30 am

Service.
Must be present to win.
Open Thurs. &amp; Sat. 11 am·
2:30; ·4 pm-2:30 am;
Friday 4 pm-2:30 am.

.

·POUND BOX

99c
l&amp;u'H be floating on a doud with
the buys you'll find In the
classlfleds.

I .
Real

'

'•

MAXWELL HOUSE
~·ASSORTED FLVORS

COFFEE

2

.

··Lotsa Pop. . .2 utre Bottle ·
STOKELY

.

Tomato

J u i c e e e. .eeee46

BATHROOM TISSUE

.99(

'

4ROLL .

PIG.

,.n.

Good Only ld Ponll'e Super Vllue
Offw Good Oeo.27 thru
2, 1113

Limit 1 Per CuiiDII'III'

oz.

SUNSHINE

DOG FOOD
20ll.

lAG

s

99

I
I
I
I
I
I

---.

--·---,•

SHOPPER'S VALUE
.
4 Ll.
Ill

SUGAR

· 11

BEEF

1:

'99( :

Good Only At Powell'I Super V•lu•
Offw Good Dec. 27 thru J•n. 2, 11183
Limit 1 P., Cll8tclmer

· GRO~ND

I

I
I

10 U. PACKAGE

$

90

Quality,
Stone Co.

OFFICE 992-2886

'

SIZm UMESTONE·
FOR SALE
Call 614·992~
. 6637
St. Rt. 7
Utt.iN, OH.

'

'.'

,'

'
•

•

2011 NDI'Ih Second An.
Mlddllpor1, OH
BUNKER IIU. - Hyou -.t a louge tarm with privocy,
heN it is. AIIP!ox. 159 ..,.. with about hlifliiloble. It is '
.. fenced wlft JIPPIO•· o40
having new loonoe. His a
fiOI'd, 2-3 - . . big red bam, equipment ·lhld, and
ofler ouWidlnga. The home ha 3 bedroomt, and 11'11
gu to ~t wilt Moy ~lor am•r home. ..,100.

992·2259

.,,.t

UINGI'IILLE - You'l low Ia come horne 1o ralax in fMI
counlly. In thia 2 bedJoom ranch will equipped kiil:hen,
lilllntl on t3 ...... nyou enjoy hunting. this I• lhe ~
,lor you.
...2,500. .

'

,· R&amp;C

General

Ju•.,. - ·

Frozen
· p··1zza..........:..·3
---,I

E~ate

IIIIDDLEJIOAT- HMI!bon St-l..oolcftg lor a nice home
in toM!, on a quiet - t ? Thit 3 bedroom home, 1:0
ilofy horne Ia
h has a lot of haldwood lloo111,
fil'lplllce, 2 ._ booth .. • porches. Sits on a comer lot and
fMI home it Mil end lOr. "
$32,000.

TONY'S ·

..

41- Bo-. for-

458 J.....

I

.

...••

1:1\111 '

675-1'\.~

882-N.w

I

..•
•
.•••

p.,. for Solo

11-JI-rto ....
IS- Prof:
s. .....

$.42

.........a

ol\\\11\1
:

chargacl for .ch day u teparate ads.

667-Coohlle

In 111n10ry

Memory of

$199

$189

Over 15 Words

•'·

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

3 LB. CAN

$ 39

1

P·•·

AdJA .. . . . . . WIIWdu•

of n.Joo

'

LB. •

t'r

Rate

G.Wa c_.ay Melp COUJIIy Muon Co., TiV
Area Code 614 Ana Code 614 Area Code 304

I

or 10 OZ. UNKS

~Sau

•I &amp;dll..aa 1 ''' W.non.,._fint ...J(•.__
for_lnl..,. .. , _ .. ,.,_). c:.I ...... !:OO

.........c:.r.. ... ,... .. ..._.....

Words

(:ltuljfiMl page• eot~er the
follott!ilyJ teiBplaone eulaonget•••

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

.. Doll, ... d, ....... •-11,000 - -

pork Lo·•1n................LB•.s.149

HORMEL

C~o...,

........... .... .............. lodnWopriMol - • 1 polai ... ""'..., ....

..,. ...... ,

2

$/129.

.

-

Days

100p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. friday

CLosED SUNDAY

rouaa

10% OZ. CAN

.

DAY 8I!RJRB PUBLICATia-J
1:00 p.m. Scolurclay
'
1:00 p.m. JofGllday
1:00 p.m. tu.!ay
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday

Call 992-2156

-

SPLI!

The Deily

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

.

•

CHERRY PIE
FILLING

STORE HOURS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POl HOY- llullmry Ave. • A 1:0 etoJY home with
, _ roolllld IJI!IIra, new porch, lrahly painted inaide
and out. ~ baMment. Owner will taka LAND
CONTRACT will .5,000 down lor 7 yewa II tO% '
inltrwet wltl a monthly payment oii111U3.
$11,000.
RACINE - A oon~ 2 atory bride building with •

......,.... upellolra. Hot gNat ..,.., pol8ntial, or put
your bullne• downallf111 and rw~t lhe apar1111oonta
upetalra. Sill on 1111'11 Iota.
...2,000.

•

POMEROY· Vacant lot on Spring Ave. would be a good
rnablle horne lila u all utilities are available. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
ASKING $5,000

'

·r

MIDDLEPORT· A GoraQaou. home local9d near fie
wiJidJ makaa thlt home wry convenient lor 1hopping,
blinking eiCi· tO room1, 5 bedroomo, 2 112 baths,
flrepl-. wciodbwner, gorage, ahed. pado, very nice
hama lnlido I out!
...,000
POIIEMOY- Large 3 atory building with a 50 x 100
f*ldng lot ha a1ot of potenlill, could lie uaed tor 1111
bulldl!lg with 3 unlll.
12t,IOO

.,.._.t

IIIIDDLEPOIIT· l.eg®n Rd. jutt out of town, 2 atory
. . _ hama will 3 bedrooml, balh, endooed front porch,
24 x 24 gage, lddod inaulatlon.
~7,000
NEAR ALIANY· 5plit Ioyer home with • bedroomt, 2
bllhe, decking, proge, appUancet, basement wilh
worklhap, 8.311 ICNI with lhed, lruft lrees. Close to bolh
$54,100
Aliena and Pou•oyl
WE WISH YOU A WE I HAPPY NEW YEAR I

HENRY E. Cl El AND.. _.:.__""-··......-.IIN111

1rtACY IRtNA01R.---··----.MM4»
tiiAN TR'IMP

t ·- - · - - - - - - -••.141

2111

()ffiC:!..----~................... - ....-.112-2211

EXCAVITI~

· · BULlDOZING •.
·

PONDS

S~PTIC

..

SYSTEMS .. .
LAND CLEARING . .·
WATER &amp; SEWER ~

LINES
'!i ·
BASEMENTS &amp; l ·
HOME SITES
.,
HAULING: Urnaetone;':
DIJt, GntVel •nd Coal '
LICEN~ oncl

BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

BISSElL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages e Replacement Wfndowa
·
Room Additions e Roofing ,
COMMERCIAL lind RESIDENTIAL ·
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or915·3139
llo S•tllllay C•lls) ·

12·5·1fn

TROLLEY
SIIIION CUFTS

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

614-992-2549

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

HOLIDAY HOURS
Mon. -sat. 1O.S p.m.

Sun, 1-6 p.m.
Handmade Gins For
'Everyone, and Gftat

Gil\ Ideas.

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent .
Box 189
Millllleport, o•1o 45760
(614) 143··526j'·~

CELLULAR ·

Aulfaor'Md AfMI
I
TOTAlLY AUTOMOTIVE PEIIFOAIIANCE

LAK~

RACINE, OH.

949-2734
12-1·'12-1
OH.

-···

.•
•
..•
'

-••

•

�•

PomerOY

Middleport, OhiO

KIT 'N' CAIU.YLU by 1Mry Wf'llllt

lk llftlll

'

......

ACIIOII

PHILLIP
ALDER

t7f5

•
'••
•

.. .

'''.ANDMEEK

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

~

IMT!

:l.:"i.l

=-•- ~: _

" .., -

-.• --!""-1

- ~--·-"'.1:!'
Colli -w -. •~
,._...,...._

~-

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Wantld tO Buy

-

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111 ••
lin ILl, 0011 ,....
•.-.a.11c
utcao

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··=~

oollondllini.
p p , • l:to tfl 1:00 Pll.

.

"' ltVIclnlty

12. · JC

.
do: lion or o111oo
Cal oftw 2:00.
M'l!iiMIL 114"441.

:0::=-'---,,.-,.,--..,...-.,--

how . . - :

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21

V.O.IOne
- Oetnntut
"n '''' ....._
Pold _ _...;;.::;,.:;.;;,;.;.:;;,.;.;;:._
Opportunity _ _
1-7217!
INOTICEl
OHIO \IALLIY ~1111111113 CO.
m r~ llioil ,..,. do -

Z:OG
=..:i.~ -·
2:1111• p.lll.

tho

Real Es1a1e

"

•UGHT HAUUNG

Kill'S IPP"tw.CE
SERICE
992·5335or
915·3561

•FIREWOOD

"BillSLACK

992·2269

742·3305
AFTER
7:00P.M.

.._.f.- hit Oftloo

USED RAILROAD TIES

,._,,OliO

117L ...... It.

312~

12-10-92-lf&amp;t

441~331.

...........
. ...-.-_
...................
a:::z .. .,_,-45

Furnished

&amp;IWIIDS

CHIJSTIW Sill

,10"-'"'

I:I~: No••

IPul..,., BeginnerOH
s.ta,
Youth Cuatom Drfwre.

LMeone Included whh
purchiH.
LMalld 1111 Scola Clmp
Rd., Chelllr, OH.

. OIITI"._"f.WRE SURE

.-.

-.........

...... 1110.11WJ1.a101.

-·

-~11" "ID 60'

THE LI~ASH ..

IF4IIl A. !MJALI( ?

~

......

- - ""'*'

4 BR liOuM, liooltllll, lorgo
lo1. Move lit cond. f'ow 'on
with - - 14:1,100. 11447ll-

--

-

lie In "'.lonl,llll,
IIPTJC T-IACICED 111'1

U.. IIIFORCIIA llpt!o Tonll
,.,_.,_. 10 PrftWII fte:NJp.

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....... ,_., ­...,
---,.·~·

Pg'

_ . AI: . _ . .

S1

=--·--_
.........
-:... ..... ..... .
......
="'..,..... .
iiiFORCER ..,... Tonll "fMI.

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Tnatw":l

IIIANI AND ERNEST
,;;.;.:::::;...:
______=::--,..-----------------------.

CMd ......,., ...._

. ,.1~ -

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-.............
- Doweo II,•
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1

11127

74N1211!w.
ponllllilldop . .
Ch.111ttw
Alii for Dllloi

........,

I IR, goo -

llooowii~hnl

1111·-·

J _. T lu Service
•100 lb. c:,~nc~e..

Carpotocl, lull
..... No polo.

liov .... .-.mo

Suppllel
COUNTRY

FURJITURI

CIIAPTI

.... Iiiio.

. H904LH••
CI'MiliH41
.......rt,OIIIe

FREE

614-992-7144

992·3131

21m-·

ant to:
PIN doRa EXTRA

..

SCJ.SOU11

D. . . . 16 Tis 'I I ••

992-3470

12....:1·1 mo

PIES

OIDEIIOW

FOIIIIE

....

5

11

me

~.1

7

oflk• ,,. paid iA •

f

"M

t:IES~UCT.IV5

ewrtcHER.

TC:L..EV161CN.

J
a

,

-~ - j
~~-----

1._ _ _ __

992·2036

2--..,.....~_;,.-

3._ _ _ _

Check wHh us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.

~

4---~-s___ _ .;__
6._______
7.__ _ _ __
8._ _ _ __

-

-·..
...,

••

Pus

•Roofing
ofneullltiDn

Jdlsm••
MW•••rt,O•Ie
••

r, c;.: _-_;

Pass

33 P

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34AIIaoulll :: ~
31CW..bll .,.

:=sol .- ·-~
I r;
- •
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3 • • ~
411o-- . r

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43 Fr.chfor
II. . .I t

'.

..

T~~;~:~' S@\\.g{}lA-:'£~!fs·

. ..•.. - ..
._

.._

.

--·',•'

neighbor mustered up
1--rK..:...;;U.,.Q~R;.,.;.I-I . enough nerve to take skydiv·
5 1 1
1?. ing lessons. Her instructor told
I 1--'-'--..L.--'· .:. her that courage is not the abL.--'.-L.
~-----.....::.-..., sence of fear but the ability to
M0 T N E F
carry on with dignity in ..~ of

I
I
.

I

I .-~
•

•

L-.1.....1-

8
•

16•

I
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•••

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••

••

Complete t he .chuckle quoted
•
.
.
by Mlmg .n the m•ssu-.g words
J......I.......JL...J you dewelop f rom step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBER ED LETTER S 1
IN THE SF ~QU ARES
UN SCRAM.SLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

I

I

2

!.

J

'
'

f4 I'

I I

II

••

.'
•;

•t·••

SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
Hangar . Match • Do_i/y • Revolt • CARTRIDGE
Times sure have changed. My husband asked our
teenage son if he wanted to"play baseball and he replied, "Sure, dad, 1'11 go get the CARTRIDGE.'
.

e 1192

TV Uatinp

InC·

A Wofttl. TX

DECEMBER 30 I

'

•'
•

•

- '•••
"
•
I

l

11 •._ _ _ _ _ 1

BERNICE

12•._ _ _ __ 1
13•._ _ _ _ _ 1
14•._ _ _ _ _ 1

BEDEOSOL

Mllcllm- Clft help you tot :=~
~whet to do to mak• llioi m
lhlp · u.ti S2 plu8 8long, MII....S.
dl
d, ataa ped
ente!o~
to
U I lwo II or, P.O. Box 81428, C....
lond, OH 44101--3428.

AQU••• (,_ • ,...
l"ludcl8 _....
11) Subdue

~ICit lllaoll today 1D
and people In •, gi'N8 mill!*. n you
1*1111 ln. lhlnldng dart! lltoughta, ~
glOOmy Clay

....... - • -v

15·---- -- -

you
.,...r.
CAIICIII (....... 21......, JJ) 1111 open to
t h e - Ol!d euggeotlono of • - •
todiiJ, but, by .llioi token, don't
think ~na they ..... to uy 1a llioi
- Ute your own Judgment u well. .

' 84

-••

=u•a

•

.

. . . ......

.... 7
- ........ 772 7

Thla II not
Poke your ,_Into Ill·

1 'DJII
n - Dl your lluln 1
liMn II 1 c:hlla thai your cur1oelly

•

•

••I

VMO (Aug. 11-lopt. JJI Think twice
bllore becoming lnvot..d In .n enter~
pr1111 or pro)Oeltodly thalli nllniQid
by lnofher, llleau.. you COUld bl hlld 1

II tllln"gl go 1

.

KOIII'IO (DIIt. - · JJ) AttHudl II .
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and your mate don'tegtM on. lniiMCI
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Galllpolla Dally Tribune
448-2342
Po•erey Dally Seadael
H2-2156
Pt. Pleeeeat ReJI~r
875-1333
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THATSWHATI

THE REMOTe

'Ibm your clutter into ctuh,
S.dl it the eau &amp;DGy...by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clauitied ad to£!
15 word. or leu, 3 du•,

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mo. pel.

HOMEMADE

1211411 -

HOLitAY IPECIALI

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OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

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232 2•11 St.,

1:00P.M.

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OHIO VALLEY
PlUMBING &amp; .
HEinNG, INC.

UCIIE lUI
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SUIDIYS

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WKI'S
HAUUNG SERVICE

10/1/92

49
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69

means "brotherly," but we need an·
other word for "sisterly." Is there one?
A. Yes, there is, hut it's not used
frequently. Think of how Jhe noun
FRATERNI:rY is related to FRATERNAL, and you'll-see how the noun
SORORITY is connected to the ad·
jective you need: SORORAL. This "sisterly" word is based on the Latin
SOROR, which means "sister." Consider this word, which is pronounced
"sor·OR·ul," to be relatively useful .

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PWaiiiG
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7 AlllrmaUve
vote

4 Wldelhol
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5 Cltrul trull
6 Artdlco

38 SIMp 111110

A child prodigy o~ one who succeeds at a yo.ung age is a WUNDERKIND . This German term for
•wonder child" is pronounced "VOONder-kint," as any WUNDERIOND can
probably tell you.

AND

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By Jeffi"ey McQuain

IP,281l-a7!1271-

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OUR LANGUAGE

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Laurence Peter once suggested
"Bureaucracy defends the status
48WIIItw ..... long past the time when the quo
lost its status.• This occurs in brlcl~el
51 Gulclo'llow
11018
occasionally. Sometimes a player J.......,j...53 fiDIIeot . "
clings to a card that will never win a
Nlfo
• . ;,_;
trick, instead discarding a vital card. 1..4-. . .....!
Aiternatively, a player signals with
-.
card that costs a trick in that
third possibility occurs in today's
It is one of the problems in tbe
chapter of Hugh Kelsey's instructive
·-·-"'
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
~
book "Simple Squeezes" ($14.95, GolCtllbrtty Qptw' cryptagr'lml . . cnllld'""" ..
.., - , . . . . . . . . . . . , _ _
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trump?
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When partner doesn't double the
IT R L,
YJV
L Y G F D
TJ
Blackwood response of five diamonds,
•
asking for a lead of tbat suit, there is
HDRDOTATEJ,
UDH
AWEZH · "
I
no reason to attack with anything oth·
I
er than a club.
AWZTSHDV
YRR
HWD
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South wins the first trick with the
•
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JDTR
ATLEJ.
•
plays a hear~ to dummy's king and
•
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Society, tho prod..-, the distributor. Thay'AI 11ie
autti&lt;Jr. I am just tne worker, tne builder." - Jean.Luc Goclord.
cashes the spade king, discarding ·a
••
heart. Now comes an avalanche of dia·.
IJIOI!ds. At the end, South holds the club•
•••
three and heart 10. Dummy has the A·
'
8 of hearts. East has to keep two
'
hearts to hold thatsult. Which cards do
• • •'
you have left? Probably a spade and
Ultod ~y CL&amp;Y I . POLLAN
the club two. But if so, South cashes
the club three, which is now high.
Rearrange letters of th•
. ''
. Have you seea tbe answer? Y011
four scrambled words bemust lead the club two at trick oae, no
low to form fo.ur simple words .
•
the club four. Only then is tbe era
'
• •
slam defeated.
•
RODIRT
· I feel sure ·ibis lead problem would
2
defeat everyone except those playe
1
I
·'
who lead low from a dOIIbleton, a sty!
,popular in Poland.

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' Wouldn't you know it. 11'1 my
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UarrtAIIUI (Now. JJ Deo 211
8j: idlng Iota DIIIICIMJ today II no uthat you'l bl g&lt;W8r~IMCI a
good lime. In feet, ....,. ...... actlvlllla
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0 hio Lottery

First baby
of year
contest

Pick 3:
570
Pick 4:
7293
Super Lotto:
16-29-31-35-37-46
Kicker:
177178

Pages 6-i
rr:il

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON
I
I
I
I
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I

18 COUNT

I

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LARGE EGGS·

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DOZEN

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Coupon good lhru 112/93

I
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Limit 1 with
coupon M~d $10
or more
additional
purehaae.

MEDIUM

YELLOW
ONIONS

3

liS.

U.S. NO. ONE

15 LB.

RUSSET

lAG

low 30$.

·•

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I
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I
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FOODLAND
GRADE 'A'

Low t..,lpt In mid :2&amp;.
. Cloudy. Friday, cloudy, blgb In

I

99c

Val. a, No. 175

Happy New Year To Your Family,
From OUr Family Of Foodlands

1 Section, 12 Pageo 25 oeni•
A Muldmedla InC: N-paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 31, 1992

Capyrlglued 1992

, Commission reveals first Issue Two project for '93
by a Community Development
By BRIAN J, REED
Block Grant in the amount of
Sentinel News Staff
The rirst of Meigs County's $57,300 'approved by lhe commisIssue Two projects for Round sioners.
According to Commissioner
Seven was. announced when lhe
Meigs County Commissioners met · Richard E. Jones, the village will
in regular session on Wednesday no1 be required to provide local
matching monies for lhe project
morning.
The board commenlled Rudand
A $515,000 waler line replaceVillage
Clerk Sandy Smilh for her
ment project has been approved by
work
and
"perseverance" in seeklhe Issue TWo committee, which
ing
lhe
grant
funds on behalf of lhe
wiD aUow lhe Village of Rudand 10
village.
·
replace an existing waler lines. The
Jones
said
that
he
anticipales
·
Issue Two funds will be augmenled

other local projects to be
announced shortly.
Roben Dyer, Administrator of
the Meigs County Emergency
Management Agency, reporled lhat
lhe county's Emergency Operations
Plan has been approved by the
Chicago office of lhe U.S. E.MA.
Mler being approved by all local
agencies involved, it will be published and distributed. All town·
ships in the counly, except for
Olive Township, have adopted lhe
same plan and will be included in

ii.
Jones lhanked Dyer for his work
on lhe project and for his Coopelll·
non with lhe board in lhe past
"You have developed an agency
lhat all of Meigs County can be
proud of," Jones said. "A lot of
people have been involved, but
you're the one who has been
pulling lhe wagon."
In his final act as a county commissioner, Jones appointed three
Meigs County residents to a commitlee which will be dexoted 10 lhe

. development and design of a Meigs
County flag . Dorothy }l:arr of
Pomeroy was.._named chairman of
the committe~and Maida Mora
and Joan Wolfe were also named as
committee members. Jones suggested lhat two olher members· be
named by lhe new board of commissioners early in 1he year, and
lhat a design be submilted by June
I. Several requests for a county
flag have been received by lhe
ccmmissioners (including a request
from lhe Ohio Slate Fair).

The comm1ss•oners also
approved a request from Recorder
Emmogene Holstein-Congo for a
carryover of pelly cash in the
amount of $50, and approved a
request from Byer to carry over
accrued vacation time for EMS
employees.
.
Present, in addition to Jones,
were Commissioners Manning K.
Roush and David KobleniZ; Con\·
missioners-elect Janet Howard and
Robert Hartenbach ; and Clerk
Mary Hobsletter.

'

ES . $199
DID OIIEG.

SEVEN
UP
2liTER

99 c

MAMIE BUCKLEY

Meigs Countians -make
resolutjons for new ye~r
....

E SELLS

POTATO

SAVE

CHIPS
16 oz.
Cll.

50'

ONION PITCH

ASST. YlRIEnES

CHIP ·DIP

COCA·COLA

c

c
LITE I

KAHN'S DELUXE CLUB

DELl BOLOGNA

$ 99

CONNIE DODSON
•

1

~

By JJ(UAN J. REED
Sentlael News Starr
DO you make a new year's resolotion every year? More imponantly, do you l:eep lhe ones you lnake?
Several Meigs County residents
were asked aboutlheir plans for the
new year, and ahho!lgh none of
lhem mentioned their resolutions,
all of lhem had somelhing specific
to say about what they expected
1993 to bring to lhem and those
lhey care about.
MalJ:lie Buckley of Reedsville
makes a practice to never make

\

~'\

•

...

•

New Year's resoluticiils: .
"I don't make resolutions
because most people don't keep
them. B~t I can say .lhat I would
like 10 live a betler hfe ~ch year
lhll!! I did ~e year bef~re.
MoSIIDlpottandy, Mrs. Buck·
ley S;llid. "I would like for lhe Lord
to g1ve m~ strength so lhal I can
lake care of myself before He lakes
me oul of lhis world."
.
Mrs. Buckley, w~o will be. 90
years old m March, ts. a long-~me
member of. Reedsv1lle Umted
Contmued on page 3

DONAT,ON TO REVITALIZATION- A
$750 donatiCJ!I to the Middleport downtown revitalization project, specificaUy for the cost of the
P.lan development .for streetscape work, was

FENTON TAYLOR

Powell still in critical condition;
appeal sought for.clothing items
Charles Powell of Long BotiOm
remains in critical condition in lhe
burn unit of University Hospitals,
Columbus. He was laken lhere by
LifeFlight for treatment of extensive bums and smoke inhalation
following an early SIJ!W'(Iay morning rue at his trailer home.
. .
His wife, Eslherla Powell, was
1realed at Veterans Memorial Hospital following the fire, but was not
admiued,
I
Meanwhile!, an appeal for clolh-

ing and hou!hold items for 1he
couple has
n made by family
and friends.
.
•
The Powe 's trailer and everylhing in it was destroyed in lhe fire
which reportedly started around a
woodburner localed in lhe living

room.

Donations of money may be
senl 10 Box 271, c/o Nora Martin,
Racine, Ohio. Those with household ilems tt clolhing to contribule
may call 949-2799, 843-5172, or

- Repabllean ofllelals wkoee
next week took their 01tltl of olllce
u.t:.... Coullty Common Pleu Court Jud1e
Fred W.
III 01 Wednesday afternoon.
They are, front, Clerk of Co arts Larry E •.
Spencer, and back 1-r, County Co.mmlssioner

949-2329 and pickup service will
be ·arranged.
Items can also be left at the
home of Maryln Powell, Brick
Slreet, Rutland, for. storage until
lhe Powells are ready 10 oblain new
housing.
As for clothing, Powell wears
size 38 waist, 30 lenglh pants, exira
large in shirts and coats, and a size
10 1{2 shoes. Mrs. Powell wears a
12-14 in pants, medium in shirts,
14-16 ih coats, and 8 in shoes.

Robert ·uartenbach,· Recorder Emmoaeae
HamlltoB, Treuui'er HOWllrd E. Frank, Coroner
·Doualu Hunter, M.D., aad County Engineer
Roltert Euoa. Democrats wiD be sworn iD at a
reception on nursday afternoon.

made Wednesday by the Holzer Clinic. Here
Sharon Harvey; R. N., represenliag Holzer, left,'
presents tile check to Mayor Fred Hofl'man and
Jean Trussell, pr9ject director.

Final public hearing on ·downtown
Middleport project to be held Tuesday .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A fmal public hearin~ on Middleporl's downtown revitalization
progmm wiD be held Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the conference room of
Peoples Bank.
Members of both Middleport
Village Council and lhe Middlepon
Community Association will be
present at lhe hearing 10 which
merchants and olhers of lhe business community are especially
in vi led 10 auend.
Jean Trussell, project direclor,
will explain what is planned in lhe
way of upgrading and res10ration
of buildings. in lhe downtown central business area, and what loans
are available to business building
owners. Those owners will have to
come up with a "match" 10 the
revilalization funds put in by lhe
Ohio Deparunenl of Development.
At that meeting the overall project will be explained in detail.
Trussell is now seeking rinancial
commiunents from businesses and
building owners since 'all monies
which the Ohio Deparlment of
Development puts in10 lhe project
must be matched dollar for dollar.
Merchants will be asked to sign
agreelilents aboUt what lhey will do
to lheir buildings, TrusseD said.
In addition to the match from
lhe businesses, lhe village will be
required 10 put in 10 pen:ent of lhe
10tal amount.
In other wor\ls if lhe grant
request is for $400,000 lhen lhe village will have to come up with
$40,000. However, Trussell
emphasized, lhe actual grant figure
will depend on what lhe men:hanl
or building match is.
The village's 10 percent match,
according to Mayor Pred Hoffman,
can be spread over two years and

need not be in all cash, but can joint narrative will presenl a disinc! ude lhe local share of Issue 2 tinctive and unique situation since
funds as well as money which lhe it involves sister communities, it
village is spending on olher down- has been pointed out by Strolh.
IOwn projects.
The grants, however, will be
At lhe last village council meet- separate and there will no commin·
ing the first readin!l was given 10 gling of funds, Trussell stressed.
an ordinance providing for appointMeanwhile, lhe village is solic·
ment of a design review committee. iting corporate donations toward
That commitlee will be lhe group the cost of preparing the
charged wilh ccntrolling lhe down- streetscape design plan . This,
lqwn work, seeing lhat lhe pt!!ser- according to Trussell, will facilitate
vation adds flavor and lhat 11 IS all lhe gran1 application and contribute
appropriate insofar as revilalization by giying lhe village more of lhe
is concerned, Trussell explamed·.
necessary criteria needed toward
As earlier agreed, Middleport favorable consideration from the
and Pomeroy will file a joinlllllfl'l!- Ohio Deparnnent of Development.
tive 10 accompany lhe grant appliTrussell said Strolh, lhe vilcations as recommended by Mike lage's consultant on the overall
Strolh, SBA Consultants of Jack- project, has prepared a preliminary
son, who is working wilh bolh vil- design sketch which would be
lal!es on revitalization funding. The
Continued on page 3

Middleport receives
$35,010.34 grant
He said that the grants are
awarded to local transit systems
that allow persons aged 65 and
ovet: and people wilh disabilities to
ride lhe transil system for one·half
lhe regular fare.
·
The program is state general
revenue-funded and administered
by the Ohio Deparunent of Transportation.
The money will subsidize (he ·
Blue Streak Cab which has been in
operation since 1983.
'
The
village,
according
to
Mayor
Tbe Dally Sentinel will not .
publish aa edition Friday, Jan. 1, Fred Hoffman, has also applied for
so employees ean spead tbe boli· $44,000 in federal transportation
'day witb their families. Normal funds and $56,600 in funds from
publication wiB resume wit• the the Ohio Department of Transportation for operational assislallee
Suaday Times-Sentiael Jan.~.
to the local cab company.
•

The Village of Middlepon has
been awarded a grant of
$35,010.34 from lhe Ohio Elderly'
and Handic pped Transit Fare ·
Assistance
10ward continued operatic .of local affordable
public
· .
Announcement of the grant
came from Sen. Jan Michael Long
late We~~Desday .
-----------

No paper Friday

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