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Sentinel

V:ldnllday. JMuery 2. 1991

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BEND -·
. Your .Locally ·o w.n ed ·
LOW-PRICED · SUPEJtMAR~,.L&lt;

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qumte~

DtA

resume play

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REDEEM YOUR
SPECIAL OLYMPICS COUPONS
ON PROCTOR.&amp; GAMBLE PRODUOS
. WITH US•••••...

Piek-3: 4.9
. Pick-4: 4310
Card&amp;: 8-H; 3-C;
4-i&gt;; 7-S
Super IAlto
16 4~~27-2242

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FOOD LAND
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Qlgmplcs
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. . . COUpOIII WON

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in tho

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Publlshtrs' Clearing HOUio 'Envolopo _
In lOur Mal.

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Meigs .,Commissio11ers
adopt gerieral budget

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TISSU

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FLUSHING THE MUD

oocld water goes

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down, mucb

• When tbe
mud and

debris Is lett bebiDd. Bepnlng Wednesday af·
ternoon ud tontinulq tbroqhout tbe nJpt,
Pomeroy lirfmea beP . bOIIIng do- • tbe
sidewalks and streell in tbe Pomeroy busmess
sectloli as tbe W.ter ~- Bobby Je!fers,

$

Wayne Davis and Rick Blaeltulr were amon(l
tbe firemen volnnteerina their time to tbe~
cleanup etrort. Thursday mOI'IIIq tbe American
Red Cross was in Pomeroy serving breakfast to
: the Bremen, many or whmn bas worked
throughout tbe night in tbJ! ~anup errort.

.: Flood wilters ·recede; firms .
begin cle(znup ope·r ations here

BONELESS
•

CHUCK_
'

1 Section. 10 Pagoa 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newiplp&amp;r

3, 1991

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
. REDMAN BASKETBALL
'VS.
MT. VERNON NAZARENE COLLEGE

USDA CHOICE

' · State highways in the county
.. were opening as Ohio Depanment
·of Transport.atioo worters removed
.the mud and debris put lhm b\!k'
f!oodilig Ohio, schools wm . .
in session, and for many Main
Strt:etJI!erchaniS in Pomero.J·j!;:S
y
"b:'l!l"ell""as 111m11 -~ ·'HI
mQllliri~. .
~ ·
· The flood wale~$ were completely off lhc Slleets in downtoWn

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ROAST

Pomeroy early. Thursday ~g in lhe cleanup process.
although lhe pmting lots were slill
While ~Y of the stores were
c:Overed. The water stood at 45.5 at open for busmess Thursday morn9:30 a.m. and wa8 falling fast.
ing after O'!'ffiers BQd emp~
. PomCJ'C?Y firemen were out all · woiked all rught, Sl_lllll-weni still. m
rugjlt hosmg lhe mud olf.lhe streer,s the process ol pulllllg mq-chancJ!se
5o, that lhings . could, $Cl back .to"· back on_ lhe. ~!ves. ~rs . m· nOI'mahrrsc;xm as ·JIOSSible.. 01t ibe dlc&amp;ted ihal 1t 'Cowd'"lakii liOOilier
.scene ear~y Thursd,lly rnCJ!Dlllg _was day nr tw() bef~ they are,~Y . to
the AmellCiin Red C(OSS. m town to open;
~rve fOod to lhe wcrtem involved

1990 Meigs ~ou~ty
~vents review~
.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

By BRIAN J. REED
Retardation and Developmental
• Sentinel News Stair
Disabilities, $1,118,424; Publi~ AsA general fund budget fnr 1991, sistance Fund, $5,053.725; Liller
totaling nearly $3 million was Control and Recycling Fund,
adopted at .Wednesday's regular $60,000; Real Estate Assessment
meeting .of lhe Meigs County Fund, $218,934.80; Motor Veliicle ·
· Commissioners.
and Gasoline Thx Fund (County
Tile funds and amounts approved !ln~ineer.&lt;Jarage), $1,948,149.16;
for lhe 1~1 budget were.: Board of Sod and Water Conservation SpeCommissioners, $208,858; CountY cial Fund, $48,150; Youth Service
Auditor, . $193,093.17; Count}&lt; Subsidy Grant Fund, $26,363 .49;
Treasmer, $105,572.11; olher EMS, $408,805; TB, $120,710.88;
financial administration, $2,364.10;
·Children
Services
Fund,
Prosecuting AtUl'DCy; $173,674.97; $143,849; Marriage License Spe..
Bureau of Inspection, $55,000; cial Fund, $3,165.77; Community
County Planning Commission, Development Block Grant Fund,
$8,784; Common Pleas Coun, $105,593.47; Revolving Loan .
$65,952.25; Domestic Relations Fund, $8,471.99; State Funds,
Juvenile
Coun,
$54,432.75; . $13,602.94; Mental Relardation
Probate Court, $30,020.30;
Bonds, $51,860.22; Computer
Clerk of COurts, $128,069.28; Research, $1,945.97; ·Trust Fund,
· Coroner
Office,
$26,709.81; $13,229.94; Law · Enfon:emeni
County aild Munici~ Courts, TruSt Fund, · $7,655.70; Agency
$97,211.88; Board of Elections; Funds, $294,189.75, all totalling
$95,916.92; Capital Improvements, $12,527,453.85.
$60,000; Maintensnce and OperaCommissioner Richard , Jones
tion,
$206,404.42;
Sheriff, explained at at Wedmisday'$ meet$397,033.49;
Reco,der, ing lhat lhe b!ldget was wilhin
$75,003.08; Disaster Services, $31,000 of the 1990 budget, and
$6,975.48; COW!!y Public Defen- pointed out that, ~ven the large
der, $23,000;
.
amount of money mvolved, lhat is
Agriculture, $89,375; Registra- very close lQ laSt year's figure.
tion of Vital Statistics, $160;
In other action on Wednesday,
Children Services Board, $111,450;
Soldier's Relief,
$44,429.10;
Velaan's Services. $31,S71 .26; ·
· Public Assistance, $71,080; Park .
Ceminission,-"-$23,100; Engineer
{plat map), $39,910,45; Law
Library, $1,396.20; '. HisiOrical
Society, $7,500; MisceUaneous,
$202,414.12;
Contingincies,
$75,000. •
ThoSe departments receiving
special revenue for 1991 are: Dog
and . Kennel Fund . (half-year),
$8,164.63; County Board of Mental

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the commissioners passed a resolu,
lion agreeing to participate in lhe
Hocking
Valley
Community
Residential Center, a de~ntion
facility lbr juveniles who have
committed lhird and fourth degree
felonies.
·
Olher counties participating in ·
lhe program wiU be Hoelting, •
lawrence, Athens, Ross, Jackson,.
Fairfield, Vinton.• Washing~!l'•.:Pike
and Gallia.
..
The resolution, which in effect
establishes an executive committee
to oversee lhc planning stages and
the actual cperation of the center,
was passed by lhe board pending
the approval of Meigs County
Juvenile Coun Judge Robert Buck
and upon consultation wilh
Prosecutor Steven L. Story.
Meigs · County . Engineer Phil
Roberts repOrted to lhe commissioners that damage to county roads ·
due to lhe high water in the county
was, to date, minimal.
· However, .Roberts said lhat
linother slip at Wf~lshti&gt;wn HiU
would need to be ~leaned up after
the waters receded According 10
Roberts, no further .road damage ·
was incurred due .to lhe slip, and
Continued on page 10

day later prominent Racine riders on openiBg day were Rhonda
Sentinel news stair .
businessman, Roy E."Proftitt, who CoUins and Judy King.
,
.
Happy New Year. ~t·~ 1991! •
· was· in lhe oil and gas drilling busi;
· Announcement of a $300,000
Shiny and untarniShed, filled ness for many years, died.
.
Ohio River access to be consttucted
wilh promise and hope. .
Middlepon ViUage Council ap- . near the ·enttance to Forked Run.
But before 1990 gelS lost in the J)l:opri~ $1,378.709 fnr village State Park was made by lhe Ohio
shuf8e of coping \Yilh _ lh~ after operations in 1990.
Department of Natlinll ~·
holiday blues, not to menuon · the
Manning· Roush was re-elected · A $200,000 worker ll'Blllmg
bills, let's look to lhe year now pas· president. of lhe . Meigs County grant to assist coal miners who
sed, and·lhe evenrs which inftuen-. Board of Commissionem.
welt laid off from Solllhcm Ohio
ced decisions, fonned opinions,
Winner nf The Daily Sentinel's Coal Co. as a.result of layoffs was
Brian E. Bass, who escaped from
even shaped lives,
1990 First Baby of lhe Year Contest announced by lhe. Ohio Bureau of the Meigs County· Jail in August,
It lakes reflecting on lhe past to was James William Nally, son of Employment Servtces.
1990 is to be returned to Meigs
put t.hillgs in proper perspective so James Gerard and Katie McBride
.FEBRYARY , .
j County from South Carolina to
that we can more clearly look 10 the Nally of Pomeroy, born on Jan. 2.
The.Me•gs _County ComlSSI~ners answer felony escape charges.
·future imd the challenges of a new ·
The problem of teenage preg- authonzed Michael Sw1sher, dirccAcconling to Meigs County
.year.
nancy and what can be done about tor of lhe De~ent ~f ~uman Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bass
JANUARY•
it was discussed at a meeting m- Services to begm mtemewmg ar- was amsted in late October in
Several thousand Pomeroy cus- itiating the "Hcallhy Babies" chiteciS for lhe construction of new Aiken Soulh C.Oiina by agentS of ·
tomers of the Ohio Power Co. progmm of the Department of facility in Middlepof1:. .
· the ~cral Bureau of Invcstiga· celebrated the New Year and then Human Services. Meigs County has . The.flu-~hed ep1de~mc propnr- lion, acting on infllq)lation fi!r·
almost immediately eJ~perienced a the third hij!hest rate of teenage nons m Oh1o a~d Me1gs County niShcd by lhc Meigs County Sherifpower olllage. Just past midni~t a pregnancies m Ohio.
was not far . behmd as ~ Hcallh f's Department.,
·
tree feU on a ccnductor on Umon
A $7.5 million general fund Depar)ment ISsued a wammg about
Bass then refused to waive ex- ·
Avenue and 3,200 households were operating budget was adopted by the illness.
' traditicn .and Meigs County
without electticity.
'
the Meigs Local School DistricL
Syracuse approved an annual~!(&gt;· Prosecuting Aaomey Steven L.
Soulhem High School, Soulh~
Jane Walton, clerk, and Reed propriations ordinance for 1990 m Sto
began
exttadition
Junior High Sc!I001 and Rl!cme Will, street commissioner, bolh the amount of $1'52,289..
.
~gs.
Elementary studenrs got an un- retiring, were presented plaques by
The first of four public mceungs - Soulsby rejlorted that ·lhe Goverexpected extension of their Pomeroy Mayor Ric¥nJ Sey!er at on lhe comprehensive so~id waste
of Soulh Carolina honored
Cluistmas vacation due to a water a . m~ting of Pomeroy Village . management plan for the s1x county
's request and issued a Goverleak in Racine.
. Council. . .
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area was held. ·
,
s Wanant onlering Bass·to be ·
·: .. · The ; .debate , beP!I over who
.An $828,000, waler line extenEight-year-old. Ryan Ramsburg. · limed. ·
. ·
.
would provide fire p'oUCllon for sion of the Tuppem Plains-Chester son of Robert and Christy
POME~OY UNDER WAT£R • Tbls was the way Pllmeroy
Bass was indicted by lhe Meigs
Letan Township ie,sideniS, the Water District service area was ap- Ramsburg, returned from the Na- COunty Grand Jury in cady Oclooked Wednesday momin11 just before .tbe flooding Ohio River
Syracuse
or
Racine
Fire proved by lhe Fannem Home Ad- tiona! Kid&lt;!ie Tractor Pull at lOber on a fourlh degree felony es- began recediDg into Its banks after reaching 49.4 feet. This picture
. Departments: It was finaUy decided minstration.
was taken trom lbe roof or Andersous Furniture in ·the middle
.
Columbus w11h several troph•es.
cape charge.
, .that lhe levy proceeds would· be
block, of Main Street. · ·
.
Plans began fnr lhe sesqu1cen•
Seventeen people were ralcen c
·
split with both,departmen~ ~fil­ tennial observance of Pomeroy. ·
from the old American Legion Hall .-.------------~--..-:-~......::.
ing and asswnmg responSibility for
Enroilte to a fire on Wolf Pert in Middlepon to the emC!llency
·proteCtion to 10wnship residents.
Road, a Pomeroy fireman lost con- room of v'etcrans Memorial
The Mci~ Local Board of Educa- . !n&gt;l of a tanker truck and it ov&amp;tur- Hospital after showing symptoms
tion decided it would take two ned on Union Ave. .
of what apJ;lCIU'ed 10 be carbon
meetings a monlh .to handle busi"
David M. Persons of West monoxide poiSoning.
. ..
ness or the disnict. The ijvc board Columbia was found in~nt of a
Temperarures reached 68 m
members are compensated at $80 a charge of escape folowmg a two- · down10wn Pomeroy on Feb. 7. .
~g.
.
day trail in the Meigs County
A new Meigs County Chamber
Pomeroy
Attorney Charles CommOn Pleas Court. . ·
of 'Commerce was fonned and
Knight was awoinled ~lie
The Meigs County Regional Bruce Reed was elected to serve as
defender for Me1gs Cpunty I!' a Planning Commission approved its first pre!lident. .
·step 10 proviile better legal serv1ces
p~ for the Rol!in 's C~ Sub- . 'Middleport ViUagc C~uncil·h~
.10 indigent defel)dants , • a lesser .diviSion ncar .Racine pending ap- its own devel~?pment direciOr, ~·U
. proVal by engineering and heallh . Miller, alreBdy a half-arne
COSL
•
. The · multi-county landfill con- officials.
,·
.
employee of lhc village.
.
str'uction and operation could carry·.
lriformatiooal meetings on conThe Meigs ·Local · ·Board of
· a price tag of $12~ million, accord~ solidating the seven ~en~ EducatiOn decided', to ~n
·. ing to SCS Engmeers, the firm .· schools and perhaps the Jurum: hlJh .pl8ns fDI: a bond IS~ to I'8ISC
representing lhe Solid Waste of the Mcip Local School Dis~ct money .for the constru · ·""'
Management Dislrict of Athens, were held ·~ anticipation of vol!ng · ction of two new school
Ga1lia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs on the issue in May.
buildings because or the IJOOl:
and Vinton Counties. ·
.
Seventy-one year old Paul A. response from the votm of the disRacine lost twO · w~ll-lmown Duff was convicted by a federal lricL
.
residents in early I•IIIIY· W'ldely- ~ury of cliargcudalin11 to the grow-- ·Meigs County was granted
tnown Rae~ .Wcknt and long- ·•ng, l!lllrijuana on his Meigs 'County . $4 2S,OOO in 1~ n mo~ies to be
time chairman of~ ~ip ~ty farm.
used for infrasii'IICtiii'C proJCCIS.
Democratic _Exec:utive Cbm1111UCC,
An elcvaiOI' installed in the
Jtomeroy
.
Council · approved a
WATCHING THE WATERS • H~ oJ
-111'111 ot p; etloalloodl, IIDt ot wblcb were
Meigs
County
Courthouse
at
a
cost
$1,0.5,972
budgeL
. ·.
people Ventured IDio Pomeroy on New Year's
Ernest A. (Bud) W'mgctt, died at
mncb wont and IIOIDe ot fticb were not. Here, a
Tipping fees which has nused the Day to aee tbe'lloodlq O'k! RIVer. For many It
VeterBns Memorial HOIIPital follow-· of $138,000 was ~mpleled. and
smaD arooP ptben at tile. corner or Lynn and .
Continued on page 7
. was a 11ft' sl•bt. fC!I' 1011e It . broqbt back
ing an extended illhcss. Just two · opciiCCI to lhc public. The first
Malo Street earl1 New Year's Day. .
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Bass returns
to county to
face charges

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High In lowe-~: 40s .

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Mos.ily clear tonight. Low
near U. Partly cloudy Friday.

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Ohio Lottery

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ROBE~T

L; WINGETT
Publisher

. cHARLENE HOEFLICH

Geaerallllaila1er
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PAT 1\'IDTEBEAD

Aulslaad Pablll..,r/Controller

A MEi.IBERofThe United Presslnter,;;,llonal,lnland DatiyPress
Association and the American Newspaper Publlsbers Association.

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should belesstllan300 .
words long. AU letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with ·
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters iv\11 be published. Letters should be In good taste. addresalng Issues, !1&lt;!1 personall·
ties.
·

·Bush.hopeful Gorbach~v .
hol~s . ftnn on pe~troika
By HELEN THOMAS
.
UPI While House Reporter
.
WASHINGTON- President Bush Is keeJilng a watchful eye on the
Internal upheaval In the Soviet Union ~nd hoping that the perestroika
reform movement will not be burled -In a power struggle.
.
The tug-of-war was highlighted with. the stunning resignation of
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, a leader In the drive
toward democracy, against the hardliners In the Red Army, the KGB
··· and the Communist Party.
.
. ·
She~atdna!lze warned of the "approaching dictatorship" without
naming names but.lt was clear·that he was sending up a red alert ·tO
his close friend, President Mikhail Gorbachev, wbose regime lias
been buffeted by domestic turmoil and rival politicians, headed by
Boris Yeltsln, president of the Soviet Republic of Russia.
Gorbachev !s trying to keep a leg In each camp as he tries to hold the ·
Soviet Union Intact against revolutionary forces which are seeking
total Independence lor each of the 15, republics.
·
He has soug~t more power for the presidency to keep control. He
also has threatened to use force to quell the secessionist movement,
not only In the Baltic states, Llfhuanla, Latvia and Estonia, but other
parts of the Soviet Union where ethnic rivalries and dissidents are
see~lng total Independence from the centrill government In Moscow.
To compromise the push lor greater autonomy, Gorbachev Is
offering a ·looser federation to the republics wblch would Still owe
loyalty and allegiance to Moscow.
·· ·
M~:antlm,e, the hardliners In the mnttary, sensing a growing
weakness of the Central Government are trytn' to recaptUre their
power, and the prospect of a coup staged by the top officers Is notoilt
of the realm. They have not accepted their loss of power or the demise
of the Eastern European bloc without firing a sbot, thanks to
.Gorbachev and Shevardnadze and those who stood mute as the Be~lin
Wall collapsed and the communist rulers were dt:posed.
The empty shelves, food shortages, and the freedom that the
beginning stages of a transformation of a controlled society to a free
market are also playing havoc with the best laid plans for an orderly
transition.
.
Gorbachev Is the first to say he's got t~qubles, .to put It mildly . ..
Survlval1s probably first on his agenda, .a nil compromises obviously
are 1!1 the making with calWIOns to the right of him and cannons to the .
.
'lett of him.
It tCKlk Bush a long time ·to decide that he could do business. wltli
Gorbachev, and even longer for him to declare·tbat the Cold War Is
over .' Now he h.IIS thrown In his lot with the Soviet leader who he
bel!eves has been on the right track to form a more open. ~lety .
But Bush and other top officials are apprehensive that the Soviet ·
Un'lon may revert to the autocratic ways ot the past as those who are
·
bound to lose power seek to hold on, at any cost.
In some ways Gorbachev Is· In a Llncolnlan position, trying to hold
' the union togetller. The Shevardnad2e resignation Is a' blow to the
refOrmers, and to Secretary of State James Baker who had formed a
strong personal relationship with the Sqvlet official.
.
~hevardnadze also was a strong supporter of the U.N. resolutions to
force Iraq's Saddam Hussein to pull out of Kuwait. In fact, Saddam
said that his resignation was a positive sign.
.
·
eush and other officials Insist they expect ,that Gorbachev will ·
continue to .back allied policy In the Persian Gull. The summit ·
meeting In Moscow between Bush and Gorbachev Feb. 11-13 still Is
expected to take place for the signing oltheStrateglc Arms Reduction
Treaty (START).
· ·
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So In one year, the·west has witnessed the break up of the So..tet
e111p1re anti the possibility tl\llt the democratic reform movement
may falter as the old forces t(y to regain control. The posslbllity of a
clv'll war Is not beyoriil the pale.
'
qorbacllev has his work cut out for him. And· Bush .has tried to
bolster his economy with $1 billion In credits, assistance from
International organizations and know how In marketing and
dls1rlbu~on of proc)ucts.
·
·
· ·
.
.
But the So\iet leader Is at the crossroads, and the U.S. ·officials are . ·
.
· ·
·
wohderlllg which path he will take.

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partner· in rooting out the waste
that Is end~mlc In government.
The ~AO audlto'r s are not
headline seekers. They never
Issue their findings without tlrst
· letting the agency under Invest!gallon re~pond to every point.
And when the .GAO nalls ·an .
agency, often li Is the member of .'
·Congress who as(ted for the
Investigation that . takes the
credit.
!
No matter who gets the credit,
the GAO works out to be one of
· the few cost-effective outfits tn
· Washington, It cost $364 million
to run the agency In 1990. That
pa,ld lor 5,000 employees around
the world - 4,200 of whom were
dedicated solely to Investigations
and audits.
So the $15.2 billion savings In
1990 meai!S the GAO paid lor
Itself more than· 40 times over by

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SVAC begins sec~~d-half action- with ·full ·Friday .slate
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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
The gang of eight that Is the
Southern Valley Athletic Confer·
ence will return·to a full slate of
hardw~ action Friday night,,
and In their attempt to chase
lroilt·runner Hannan Trace,
Howle Caldwell's Southern's Tor-.
nadoes will be baltJlng an opponent - Ron Twyman's North
GalUs, Pirates ·- that has revenge .foremost In mind·, In light
of the Tornadoes' 81-63 victory
over the Bucs on Nov. 27 .· ·
With 10 games behind them, .
time . Is running out lor the
sl!cond-place Tornadoes to make
a moV!! to tie the Wildcats lor the
· letd, and the mini-battle between
· the league's shooting kingpinsPlrate.guards Chris Tackett and
Brian Stout, and Tornado guard
Andy Baer -could prove to be a
scoring clinic run by this trio II
the front-liners don't get to touch
the ball as often as Caldwell and
TwYMan would like.
The possible niatchups In this
game will be Tackett vs. Baer
and Stout vs. ,/odd Grinds taft In
the backcourt, with Pirate Darin ·

telling federal agencies how to
use you r money m o I' e
etlecttilely . .
·
The ·overall cuts and Improve- .
ments made In the Air Foree as a
result of · GAO_ Investigations'
·came to $1.5 bl.lllon In 199(), The
fact that . the GAO found $1.3
billion In overspendln·g ,In the Air
Force In 1989 suggests that at
least one branch of the sei{rlce
hasn't learned Its lesson ..
The Navy Isn't listening either.,
In ·1989, the GAO Identified $812
million that the.Navy could save.
The figure jurrtjled to $1.2 billion
In 1990.
· , .
Ifthe GAO lnvestlgatlollB are
any Indicator, the Army Is tbe
one branch of the service. that
cc1Uid teach the others a lesson. 1
The GAO found Only ~. million '
of potential waste ln.tlie Army In
199(). ·
·
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•

Smith taking on Tornado Jeremy
Rose and North's Brandon Twyman and l'taclne' s Roy Lee
Bailey shadowing each other on
the wings. Tl!ere Is a chance that
the centers - Pirate Shane
Smith, a &amp;-3 senior, and Tornado
Michael Russell, a 6-4 junior will become the third forwards If
•the running game becomes
vogue.
·
·
The Tornadoes, wild are In the
midst of a lour-game road trip,
will play Gallla Academy, at
Galllpolls Saturday night In an
attempt to post their third
straight non-league· victory belore rnaklftg their last caravan
stop of this series at Mercer'Jille
next Friday against Hannan
Trace .
Hanna• Trace-Oak lbll
So what II Hannan Trace has
lost Its li~t two games. . It's
doubtful that any of the other
teams ln. th~ conference could
have kept ti!IJlllS as close as Mike
Jenkins' Wildcats did against
· Chesapeake and Fairland, but
that's past history. A road
victory over Oak Hill Is very
much In the Wildcats' future.

Alter Wtnnlng three of four
SoulbwNter...Symmea Valley
when he returns, . as Is junior
. games In the first half of
It would seem · loglcal that a
guard Andy Lester, who has
Ijfcember, the Oaks have lost team fhat has lost four out ollts
scored In double figures In his
their last)hree, bu't now II seems last five games but wol) In an
last lour games .
that junior forward/ guard Bill upset. to close out the 1990 portion
McCarty. whO has scored In
Potter ·and the Simpson brothers of the season should knock off a
double digits only once In his last
- lll!nlor forward Mike and ,sqWid that hils Its last eight_ . five aames, needs to put . his
sophomore center Chris - af!! games, but just as • Symmes. effective shooting touch to use to
starting. to put their offense Valley shocked Vegas with a
help Metzger, who has canned at ·
together. This · triumvirate 17·75 victory over North Gal~ 0\\ least 10 markers In the Highland·
scored In double. flguJ:es In tbe Dec. 21, the same thing could
ers' tastfpur gap1es, and Haney;
same game for the fl~t tln'le this happen when the N()rsemen host
who has turned the ttlck In three
· season In lasfFrlday iJ 94-71 !oss Southwestern.
. of )tis last lour games .
to Jacksoh - something the
• Ky~:er Creek-l!:aatern
Bob Dunlap's Highlanders are
Wildcats wlllllave to continue to green In the backcourt with
It's still not too late lor j(yger
sophomore Aaron McCarty run- .Creek to make. some strides :
' .control.
toward finiShing somewhere ·
ntng the floor and first-year
In the last gam.e against Oak senior Melvin Massie at off· · around .500, but they'd better.
Hill, Trace's pressure-Cooker · guard, but they ·have veterans In · start.playlng like title contenders·
defense prevented any of tll,e the paint In · senior forwards
the rest . of~ the way against
Oaks from scoring In double Richard Haney and Chris · t!nigher opposition than the
· figures In the Wildcats' 80-45 , Metl:ller and senior center John · • teams the Bobcats llave beaten
· '
·
Sites. Tbey will,be counted on to .(Southwe5tern·and.Hannan).
victory.
The Wildcats ~re going to be keep VIking lrontman Chad
But Tom Riccardi's Bobcats
will have to find some way to
seeing more of Jackson County Renfroe llnd guard/ forward
basketbllll than usual In the ne.x t Andy Lester br check.
control Eastern's backcourt,
Renfroe, who put on 11- 33-polnt
starting jurilors 'l.'tm Bissell an.d
week, as they will be hosting
Jeft Durst, and keep these two
Tony a&lt;&gt;rl!horst's Jackson Iron- exhibition against North Ga!Ua,
. mert on Tuesday before playlllg · .. [s just the thing Valley needs to
from getting the ball to center
host to Southern In Chapter 2 of keep teams' from keying on
R,andy Moore, who · has had
performances of 20 points or
this year's series against their senior postman Carl Robinson
Racine archrlvals.

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Dollars sink in off-shore . b8nk scams····
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Robert Walters
(bough many of the .entrepreneurs and Investors come lrom
the United States, others are
citizens of Australia, NeW Zealand, Bttttan, Japan and .other
nations.
·
·
Even Island nation~ thatdo not
encourage questionable bal\king
and Cllher busllless ventures
U!l,ually lack the capability · to
promptly Identity and sliut down
Illegal activities. Moreover; the
. region's geography allows those·
seeking to beat a hasty retreat to
readily .cross national '
..
.
boundaries.
An example: Authorities In the
Marshall lslands terinlaated the
licenses ot more than 100 offshore
banks, estab.llshed here In the.'·
mld·l!l80s by a California-based ·
firm, because they were ~Ueved
to be engaged In fraudulent
Investment schemes.
.,
Th~ company then approached
the Cook Islands, which rejected
Its overtures. It recent19 · was
reported to he promoting an . •
. ollsho~e banking venture In
Belau, another . Pacl~c . bland
nation.

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forced this position. •
tk!s of treated' apples over long have little difficulty Wlnotntf- a ··
As the lawsuit points out, "no period of tlnle. Moreover, even
moral victory by provtne ,that
advocates lor the healthy, safe that danger was overwhelmed by
CBS broadcast a·shoddy polemic,
nature of all red apples were the .benefits of eating the apples,
not a closely reasoned . report
presented" In the report, let · which boast virtually no fat, no
based upon scientific evidence.
alone any rigorous attempt made cholesterol, lew calor'les and lots
Maybe . Qther journalistS jO'Ill
to distinguish between ~lar­ of fiber.
begin to . take notice, toci. 'I:he ~
't reated and untreated apples.
Ironically, ln .fact, eating apdeeper scandal ot't~ Alar allalr,
The reaction was predictable:
ples (and mostfrults and vegetaafter all, was not the single .
Apple purchases' plummeted;
bles) helps prevent cancer.
broadc;ast - every journalist
schools banned the fruit; consuThe question · Is whetber the· makes mistakes - but ·the fact
mers tbrew out jars ·of apple- NRDC and CBS should be .punthat the rest of the national ·
sauce; one cauer to tbe Interna- Ished lor what they did. Should,
me4la didn't rush io repudiate
tional Apple IJIBtltute asked lilt for example, the press In a free
their colleague and reassure thi! ·
was sale to pour apple Juice down IIOC!ety havt! the right to be
j,
·
p'ubllc.
·
the kitchen drain.' One estimate trresponalbl~? I think so, alI;ikeCBS, theyowethemselvea
put lost apple sales at $100 . though . , Judge, and Jury may
an education - and tfte apple
· mUllon. In despair, Alar's manu- disagree.. But whatever fbe tina!
growers an apology.. ·
facturer eventually yanked the ruling, the apple l!l'Owers should
product from the U.S. market,
••
'
althoup It apparently Is stm sold'
I
.
abroad. _
Wsa Alar dangerous? Almoet
certainly, no. That II not to say
there was no rllk In llll'l!ltlni'
Today Is Thursday, Jan: 3, the third day oll991, with 362 to lpllo;.
Alar-treated apples as ~pared
~e
moon Is waning, moving IQWard Its last qliArter .
with those untreated. But If the
The
mornlnrstar Is Mars.
.
'
risk existed, kno~ledgeable
The
evening
stars
are
Mercury,
Venus,
Jupiter
'
a
nd
saturn.
scientists say, It was quite small.
. •
Those bora on this date are under the sign of Capricorn.
and requlr!!d eating huge quanti-

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Today in ·h~tory_ · ·

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The Daily Sentinai-P._age-;3

.Detroit ,posts 6-2
win over Minnesota

·washington state apple growers. as hardy as· their splendid
crop, hope to teach a pair of
dangerous lear-mongers a lesson
In Intellectual honesty. The grow!!rs have tiled suit against "60
Minutes" and the Natural Resources Defense Council over the
apple scare of nearly two years
ago.
Much as I hate to see a news
prol!'am hounded lor Its point of
~. however foolish, I do look
forward to the courtroom dissection of lrrespoMible journalism
and "environmental" adVocacy·.
But first let's refresh our
memories. On Feb. ~6. 1989, "60
Minutes" aired a lurid feature
entitled "A Is lor. Apple," In
whlc_h reporter Ed Bradley appeared before a lei that Included
• bli red apple over whlcb a
human skull and crou-bones had
been super-Impelled. AI a warmap, he accused Alar, a cbenil. ~al rrowth reauJator, of. befna
the most p0te11t cancer-causlna
agent In the food supply today";
the rest of the pro~am rein·

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Tht.nday. January 3, 1991 ·

Apple ·growers got rotten·deai---:-J-1-ince-._nt_ca_rro,........;_u

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Page 2-111e Deily Senlinel · .
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
.Thlndav. Januarv 3, 1991

MAJURO, Marshall Islands only representative 1n the Marname plates on the exterior walls
(NEA) ~ Luring hapless deposl- shalls was a service station. of office bulldlngs-.that often are
tors to entrust their money to the attendant paid to pick up letters
the only evidence of the banks'
First Colonial Banking Ltd., a · there (containing Investors'
existence) ha·v e appeared
financial Institution here tn the checks) and forward them to
lhroughQUI the Pacific "as shells
middle of the Pacific Ocean, was · Hunt In vancouver.
with little or no staff, fixed a&amp;&amp;ets
the promise of annual Interest · "After fleecing at least 400
or capital. ...Some examples:
payments of~ to 40 percent.
Investors outk of $7 million,".
- Nauru, a one-Island nation
Promoter David Hunt, a .s ell- Hunt fled to the Northern Mart- ' sl!ghtly more than eight square
proclaimed financial planner ana Islands, west of here In the ·miles In area, "does not even
from Vancouver, Wash.,lloensed . Pacific, "to avoid facing securl·
require a visit. to set up a braiJs
First Colonial In the Marshall tiC!$ fraud charges," says the
plate bank." All of ille arrange- ·
Islands In 1983, then told prospec- NASAA's 1990 Study of Interna- . ments can be handled by mall.
live Investors that the· bank's Ilona I Investment Fraud . and
- Vanuatu "has put In place
certificates of deposit, precious Abuse.
some of the world's tightest
metals exchanges and "arb!He was arrested In Alaska In
financial secrecy standards" to
trage trading" programs would 1988, however, then tried and
protect the privacy of promoters
produce huge profits lor them.
convicted In federal cou~t. Last who shield dubious activities
But the North American Secur· year, he was sentenced to Serve behind dummy corporation, also
Illes Admllllstrators.Assoclatlon 10 years In prison, according to encouraged by the laws of the
says Hunt "failed to tell loves- the NASAA report.
72-tsland nation.
· tors" that shortly before his
Hunt's saga Is hardly an
The money-rpaklhg ~chemes
Marshall Islands venture wa~ Isolated case. "Once heavily·. are not l!mlted to banking.
launched, "he had been ordered concentrated· 1n the .Caribbean," Indei\!J: the tropical Pacific
by the sta\e of Washington to abusive off-shore banking offer- ahounas with entrepreneurs who
suspend the operations of his lng opportunities lor swindling, claim to' be In .the process of
accounting and tax..preparation tax evasion and money launder- launching fish processing facilifirm, which had been Implicated lng "has since also taken root in ties, establishing new airline
In a num!Jer of suspect Invest- the Pacific," says NASAA.
routes, planning lavish hotels
ment deals."
That organization, represent·
(some with gambling casinos)
.Hunt also· failed to Inform lng the state agencies that and arranging multimillion. depositors that First, Golonlal regulate the securities Industry. dollar loans. .
.
.
·C9nslsted ot nothing more than a.· ·In the United sfates, saYs "brass
Most - but npt all - of those
post ottrce bo;'!liere and tha! 1~ .. plate" banks (named after tt~e . ventures are legtt't mate. . AI-

.~Berrv:'s World

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WASHINGTON - There Is a
cations and Intelligence" In the
glimmer of hope tha,t with eacti
mUitary, which Is more than lour
new year, the federal governtimes the amount of waste found
In that cateaory-ln 1989.
ment will get better. at curbing
the . rampanL waste of yciur
For years, the Centrallnte)llmoney. That. glimmer resides In
gence Agency and the Pentagon
Intelligence . agencies have resthe General Accounting om,;e,
lsted oversight by the GAO -&gt; an
'whlch: · In 1990, caught enough
waste, lraud and abuse, to s.a ve
arm of Congress. And we have
taxpayers $15.2 billion- nearly . contended lor years that
twice as much as It Identified tn
hundreds of mUllons of · dollars
1989.
' were being hidden · under the
"secret" stamp · because ·conA big chunk of the money was
caught' before It was squandered
gresslonal oversight was lnellecon secret commurilcatlons and
tlve. The GAO Is allowed to audit
Intelligence programs In the · the Pentagon but not ,!he CIA.
Pentagon.
The Impression left by the
That Information Is found In a
GAO's Internal review ollts 1990
confidential report tbe GAO has
performance Illustrate~
· a trull!m
prepared for key members of
that we have always · eved Co'ngreu~We obtained a copy of
that the plodding and
ulol!S
the report on Its way to Congress.
GA:O auditors are one o Wa·
The figure that stands out ts · . shlngton's best-kept' secrets. We
$2.9 billion In sa,vlngs from
have always considered them a
"command, control, communi-

DEVOTED TO Till: INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8·MASON AREA
o

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.GAO agency · doin~ its job _ ____;J~.ac_kA_nde_rso_n

the ·Daily Seritinef
111 Cout Street
· Pomeroy,'Ohlo

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Commentary
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BALL BATI'ED AWAY - WhUe pln1 up for
two points, Cleveland Cavalier lroobnan Danny .
.Ferry- (35) has the ball batted away from him by

Phoenix's Andrew Laa1l• the second quarter of
Wednesday nllht's NBA game In Richfield, Ohio,
which the ~uns won 1~5-83. ( UPI) . ,

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121~109
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Indiana defeats- San ·Antonio
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By UDited Preu Jniernatlonal'
. The Indiana Pacers plcl\ed the
oddest time for one of their
biggest victories of the NBA
season.
Vern Fleming was sidelined
with back spa,sms and LaSalle
Thompson was hampered alter
root canal surgery, but Reggie
Miller scored 36 points and the
Pacers beat Midwest Division
leader San Antonio 121-109 Wed·
nesday night.
· "Thai's the way the Pacers are
ea{lable of playing," said Bob
Hill, who replaced Dick Versace
as Indiana's coach two weeks
ago. "I'm elated wltll our effort
and !he mental toughness you

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·nee4 to beat San Antonio. We had
42 assists. . They're trying tp
'1ilake each other better and they
care about winning."
·
Miller scored seven poln\S In a
streak of 13 straight Indtana
points that pulled the Pacers to a
78-63 lead just 2:&lt;101nto the third
quarter. San AntoJI!o had score&lt;!
the previous 13 points, Including
the llnalll of tjle first hall, to pull
wl thin 65-63. ·
George McCloud's three-point
shot gave Indiana Its largestlead
at 93-73 3: 43 before the etid of the
third quarter, but a 12-2 Spurs
run pulled San An tonlo wl thIn
~ 95-85 entering th.e fourth quar~r.
The Spurs came no closer than

~~io Shlte.opens J:lig Ten .
·season tonight agamst ·fowa
COLUMIIUS, Ohio (UPI) - Chicago State.
·Ohio State's "cupc.a ke" pre-Big
Even a 71-60 win over GeorgeTen schedule gfts puttoan early town In Las Vegas Dec. 22 was
test Th1,1rsday night when the tempered by the absence of the
Buckeyes open 1 'the Big Ten Hoy as' S:loot-10 Alonzo Mourn- ·
season . by hosting surprising thg, who sat out the game with a
,1owa·
.
loot Injury.
Now,Ayersflndsoutlftheeasy
. Qhlo Stat~ Is unbeaten at 10.0
and ranked No .. 6 !n the nation pre-conference schedule was a
· •
after beating Mississippi State help or mistake.
· (82-80) and Miami of Ohio (S!HI7)
• "Everything we have done up
to ·win the Palm Beach Classic · untU now has been to gef ready
last week In Florida. "
lor the next 18 games," added
The Buckeyes were. piCked, Ayers, whose team follows up
along with defending champ Iowa's visit' with. a game SaturMichlgan State an · Indiana, as day agalMt Michigan In · Ann
p~·season favorites In the Big Arbor.
·
Ten raC'e, · ·
.
.
"I thlllk our last three games
Iowa,. on the"other hand, was shouldl'\!aliY help' us·prepare lor
'telt to. be a nilddle-ol-the-road the Big Ten," said Ayers. "We
team In the BlgTen thlayelir. But had to play lor 40 minutes In
the 19th-ranked Hawkeyes bring ' three of fhose games and that
a 10-game winning streak and an should make us a better team."
11-1 record to St. John Arena.
In all three games, Ohio State
Their only loss ~as a 77-68 had to rallY to win alter falling
decision . to Notre Dame the . behind early.
All live Ohio State starters
second game of the ~ason.
"The Big Ten. II what we have averaflnlln double lleures and
been pointing lor since the start · shooting above 51 percent from
of the season," said leCOIId-year the field. Forward Jim Jackson
Ohio State head coich Randy leads the Buckeyes In soortnr
· AY,rs, whole team opelled with with a 17 points per game
live CQnsecutlve loptlded 'hOme·- average and fOrward Tred Lee In
lrins over the llkel of Bethune- ljeld goal percentage at 69.7
Gookmart, Delaware State and percent. ·
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By CARRIE MUSKAT
UPI Spo..._ Writer ·
A new ·year, a new lineup.
That's all the Detroit Red Wings
needed to snap out of their
power:ptay slump.- -· Steve Yzerman scored two
goals and detenseman Yves
R,lclne had a goal and two assists
to spark the Red Wings to a 6.2
victory over Minnesota Wednesday night, snapping a threegame losing streak.
.
The Red Wings, who rank last
. In the league In scoring on the
power play, had been blanked In
20 power-play chances before
Sergei Fedorov . ended the
drought , at 13:48 of the .f irst
period.
.
. Minnesota' s penalty-killing Is
nexi to last In the NHL. ·
"We · knew Detroit has had
trouble scoring on the power·
play, but we'fl? the worst penalty
killers In the league," Minnesota
bead coach Boll Gainey said .
Deti'Qit head coach Bryan
Murray made a lew lineup
changes In hopes of helping the
Red Wings regain their scoring
touch. He- put Fedoi'ov on a line
with Yzerman and used Racine
and ,Per Djoos as pqlnt men on
the power play. ·,
·
"Fedorov's speed enables us to
do some things," Murray said.
"When he's on with Yzerman,'
one can fill the middle and the
other can make things happen on
the wing. I hoped W(!'COuld create
some things we've been missing
offensively.·
"I don't plan to use Fedorov

better ln. the Eagles' last four
games.
Wlfh Moore and reserve pivot·
man Wes Holter as Eastern's
tallest players at 6-loot-1, the
Eagles are even with the Bobcats
In the helgllt department, as
seniOr center Jamie Bush and .
senior forward Shan't,_ Swisher
stand III at 6-l!or the BObcats. So
It will mean a game of pos,ltionon
the Inside and a good shooting
touch oil the outside that will
determine who comes out of this
encoUDter with their leathers or
fur Intact.

SVAC standings "'

(Overall)
TEAM ,
W L PF
Soufhern ......... ,....8 2 7Z1
Hannan Trace ·." ..7 ·2 · 645
Eastern .... ....... .... 6 3 · 610
Symmes Valley ...4 4 462
Norfh Ga!lla ..... ... 4 5 .714
.Oak Hill .............. 3. 7 682
Kyger Creek .... :.. ,2 8· 593
Southwestern ....... 0 7 386

PA
594
'181
623
480
733
. 733
736
507

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 6 0 476 304
Southern.............. 6 1 533 429.
Eastern ............... 4 2 434 431
North Gallla ........ 4 3 577 537
Symmes Vailey ... 4 3 400 417
Oak Hill ............. . 2 .5 456 515
Kyger Creek ........ 1 6 411 533
Southwestern ....... 0 7 386 '507
TOTAU ............ 21 2'l 3873 3873

and Yzerman together regularly,
but I'll try It against teams that
can skate," Murray said. '
. (Reserves) ,
Racine said·he and Djoos tried
( SVAC on••)
to create more ·action around the
TEAM
L PF PA
net by shooting from the point
Southern .............. 6 1 397 283
wi.t.h the man a,~vantage.
. North Gallla·. ....... 5 2 418 298·
If you can just put thlli!~Clf In ~ . Oak Hill
·5 2 4011 359 •
front, you've got the big guys like
Hannan fi~~~ ..... · 4 2 32G 256
(Joe) Kocur and (Bob) Probert,
Eastern .. :'!...... ::::: 3 3 284 317
who can scr~n the goalie or get
Symmes Valley ... 2 5 318 412
,the rebound, Racine said.
Kyger Creek . .... ... 1 6 272 . 378
. Yzerman scored a power-play · Soutllwestern
1 6 234 - 354
goal off Racine's rebound to
TOTA" a
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boost Detroit's lead to 5-2 with
"""' ............ !'7 2'l 2857 281171: 38.left In the seeond period and.
Frlday'a slate
.h e. scored his 25th goal on a
Hannan . Tr~ce at Oak . Hill
short-handed breakway at 12:26
Southern at North Gallla
of the thhi! perrlod . to compl~te
Kyger Creek at Eastern
the Red Wings' scoring. ,
Soufhwestern at Symmes Valley
Slliur\lay'a ~:ames
Minnesota's Ulf Dahlen
Southern at Gallla Academy·
knocked his own rebound past
Port. N.D. at Symmes Valley
Red Wtngs goalie Tim Cheveldae
.at 2: 04 of the first period to tie the
.'
score atl-1, but goals by Fedorov
at 13: 48 and Jimmy Carson 15
The .Daily Sentinel ..
seconds la'ter broke the deadlock.
(t!IPslt. . .)
· BrenrFI!dyk gave Detroit a 4-1
A
lllv1lead with 3:43 remaining In the
first period and 1'!11nnesota goalie
Publllht!d every allemOOII; MOIIday
throulh Friday, ll1 Court St. , PoBrian Hayward was replaced by
moroy, Ohio, by tho Oblo Valley Pub- ,
Jon Casey lor the rest of the
lflllln1 Compalll(IMUHimedla, lne.,
,
POmeroy, Ohio 4!'789, Pll. 992·21:16. Se- ·
period. · · .
'
cond ,clua PQ!Illle patd. At PomerOy. ' ·~
Mlmiesota' s Mike Modano
Ohio.
··
scored on a shot from the point
Member: United Prell Jntematlonel,
durtng a power play at 11:45 of
Inland Dally Prfto A•octatlon IIIII tbo
the second period to cut Detr-oit's
Obto
!::elattan. Nauonal
lead to 4-2.
,\dvertlotq
tattvo, Branllam
,Newopapor Sa •· m Tldtd Aven110,
"We just got too far behind too
New Yortc, New Yortc 10017. •
early," Gainey said.

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OU -hands Wright
.·State 75-56 loss
/

A'IHENS, Ohio (UPI)- Steve
Barnes
and. Rush Floyd each
.
scored 16 points to lead Ohio
University to a 75-56 victory over
Pistons 118, Nug1ets107
eight points the rest of the way.
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Dennis
Wright State Wednesday night.
"We hadn't seen them since
Bob got the job," Spurs head Rodman set career' highs with 34 . The Bobcats, now7-4, broke the
coach Larry .Brown sal.(!. points and 23 rebounds , leading . • game open early In the second
"They're In much better shape the Pistons to their fourth · hall by scoring 16 unanswered
points. That run stretched a 39-35
now than when he got them. The straight wtn. Rodman connected
on
15
of
21
field
goal
attempts.
Bobcat
lead to 55-35 with 10:36 to
btif'guys complemented them
their
play.
OU
led 36-31 at halftime.
The
Nuggets
dropped
well. This Is the worst shot
fourth
straight
and
for
the
ninth
.
Dan
Alol
contributed 15·polnts
selection we've had all year.
time
In
their
last
10
outings.
and
Lewis
Geter
13 lor OU.,
They got a lot of easy baskets
Wright
State,
which
slipped to
because they ran well. We took
5:5,
WIIS
led
In
scoring
by Mark
the quick 1;hots, not the shots we
·Suns ,105, eav1 83
Woods
and
Mike
Haley
with 10
needed to take. We didn't play
At Richfield, Ohio, Kevin Johnpoints
each.
Tl)e
loss
snapped
a
well at all. They.!ust dominated . son scored 29 pol,nts·and xavier
three-game winning streak lor
the whole game;
· McDaniel added 21, Including six
·the Raiders.
. Chuck ·Person added 18 points In an 18-3 Phoenix tun at the start
lor Indiana, 12-18, while David of the fourth quarter 'that gave
Robinson led the Spurs,19·7, with the Suns their fourth straight
22 polllts and 11 rebounds.
victory.
In other games Wednesday
night, Utah chilled Miami 112.
Sonlcs 121, 78ers 9t
104, Detroit · overcame Denver
At Seattle, Derrick McKey
118-107, Phoenix bombed Cleve- scored 11 of his teljm;hlgh 24
. land 105-83, Seattle .~an Phlla· · points In the decisive third
delphia 127-99, Bos~ked New quarter to carry the Sonlcs, who
York 113-86, Milwaukee dumped won lor only the third time
Charlotte 106-91, Minnesota against a team with a winning
bucked Dallas 115·95 and Atlanta record. The 76ers have lost three
defeated the L.A. Clippers 120- In a row, all on the mild. ·
107.

chana~
St.,

I'QII'I'MA!I'ER
- ll1 Court
to '!be Dolly S...tlllel.

Pon-.~-.

IW8Caii'TION UTili
·
Brcanter•._•._..
,"
oaewHt................................... luo

Ooe Month .................................1$.10
One Year ................. ................
IINGLEOOPY
PRICII

m.110

Dally ................................... 25 Cento
Subocirtbero not dellrtnato pay the carrier may remit tn advance diNt~ to

The ~Y S...tiDel 011a 3, 6 or 12monlb
!lull. Credit wUI be (llvea carrier ....,
weelt.

PIOK-UP ONLYl
LARGE 1 ·ITEM
PIZ_ZA·

. PAN 01
OIIGINAL
STYLE

S6

DELUXE
PIZZA

WITH 4 PlPSI'S .
NOW

ONLY.~$1 •099

available.

llalll&amp;~ I

lpt-

l ....e•olpeo-tJ

13 we.u ......... :... ..................... llt.u .

il6 we.u ...................... :........... m.M
52WeHI .................................. rtUI
•

Oodllolelllotp C..IIIJ

n we.u ..................................m.ao •
:111

w..a ................. :................ uo.:10

112 Weeks·...... :.......................... 115.10 •

12 Oz. T-BONE...........................~....•to.9S ·
59.95
10 oz. RIBEYE...........:.:••..................•
'
5 oz. SIRLOIN..............•...................56.99 "
All Dinners Served With

. All-U-Care-To-Eat Soup, Ftuit &amp; Salad Bar,
Choice ofBaked, Mashed or
·. French Fried Potat~;
Rice or Onion Rings, and
Hoinestyle Dinner Rolls ...·

JOIN US FRIDAY NIGHT
ANti TAS'fE"THE DIFFERENCE
•senior Citizens Receive 10% Discount

Mason F~mily
Rt.33

...

'•

area• ,wllere berne earrter .rrvlce II

STEAl&lt; NICI-IT

Hours:
·
·
11 am to •Mid. Sun, ;Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

1·.

No oublcripliOIII by maU permitted In

Mason Family Restauran
Friday Night Is

Po~e:y 992-2124 .

..

(304) 773-5321

.

�Page . 4 The Deily Sentinel

r

POmaov-Middi8POf1. Ohk,
-

S~acuse remains unbeaten with OT

Scoreboard ...

JM6ary 3, 1991

Thursday. Januerv 3: 11J91

F~ily

•·
WID
•

._

THREE REGISTERED
PHARMACISTS TO s·ERVE YOU!
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

~L-...1 :

'
•

turdar be wu boaored at 1111 open bouae at the
ltore ud pr-Ied 'wtth a gold pocket watela.
Here Robbie .Jenldu, vice presldeitt ef I'I'DeU,
pr-tl Davl• wltb the lift. LaoldaJ oa II the new
local niuager, AI DMwlller.

RETIRES- Dave D1vta wbo baa been work·
lng ta the lumber bualn- for ll,)'eara, !llll'llng
rib Pomen)' Oemeat Block wblcb wu Ja&amp;er
purcbued b)' O'DeU True Value Ltunber, rellred
Salurdar u manager of the Pomeroy store. 81·

Christmas meeting held

.
"""'
· The RuUancl Friendly OatdtleiS
met recently for their ChristmaS·
meeting at the home pf Mn. Joe
Bolin following a catered dinner in

" Pomeroy.

.

good lime 10 broWJe the newly arrived seed catalogues and plan your
B.ulbs" noting that most bulbs have garden for the coming 81'1'11011. In
a pointed tip which point IJPWard, Winter prolcct shnJbs by making a
but tuberous begonias J\ave a waD Q~lants around them
rounded scar which ,.should go up. . for a ·
. Pine boughs or
CaniiM and dahlias lay flat on the branches or used Christmas trees
soil and are badly covered over. make , good mulch II'OIUid plants
Begonia bulbs can be started inside during the cold weather.' She noted
in shaDow trBys or damp peat and that the holly plant bas sttong
polled when ~ appear then Christmas. signillcance datin back
moved outdoors after t11na« or 10
Dadilions of cverfa!:g
frost ill IJI$L. Dahlias 1111ge fronl life. Hollies· are either male or
pompom types or two feet to large female with one male · to five
&lt;lecoralive dinner plate typeS ci femalea being ideal for .pollinllion
seven feet. These can be started ror belly production American
see4 as well as tuben ilr bulbs boDy has · duD leav~ but the
and tbey need sun and .water for English, FOSfCI', Blue Girl and Boy
best growth. Cannas sbould be star· all are atttactive varieties. .InkberrY.
· ~ a~trr weeks &amp;er01e tomato . 'IS loved by sevetal,species of birdS
ume m
trBys. A good shade \ including robins cedar wuing and
area bul is. the callium with its others who t~~.' the berries which
diversely colored . and marked ripen
Christmas.
·•
leaves although red varietiea will
Also attendilig were ·i..orri and
tolerate sliMy loc.&amp;tiOIIJ~ ·
Jacob Baines. Joe 'Bolin joined the
Judy ·Snowden pw anlenlng hostess in serving refteshments 10
lips for JUII8r}'. noting diat tbis is the gDCSts.
-'

· Devotions on "Holidays" by
Longfellow were given by Carrie
Morris. Members answered roll
witb- an unusual or handmade ornamenL . . .
.
An O!lllllllent exchange and gift
V(fliP conteSt were condiicted. Winning gift wrap awards were Juanita
· I:amben and JOBII!IO Fetty.
A gift exchan
. ge was . held and
~t pals for this year were
draWn.
.
·
. · Suiy. Carpenttt won the hoStess
door pnze and Judy Snowden won
the month's ltJlvelinJ.prize_ dOnated
by Carrie Mmis. Mlrjorio Davis
als9 brought 1 uaveling prize owed
to Janet Bolin.
,
•
Mrs. B(lliil thanied the club for ·
flowers sbe teeeived during the
funeral of her father.
·
Joanne Felty and Margan:t Ed- • ,
.-ants visited the . Veterans
Memorial Extended ~ Unit to
da. garden therapy wolk will! the
.residtllts making plant material
· wreallif. They . deliveml live
. leUiaS 10 decorate the facility.
~~setti• vicre aJ,so delivemiiO a ·
J!UIIIllez of Rutland area residents·
· · confined .10 home or lllll'lina Cite
eenters. n.eaiiPf wolk wiD .contin·
ue for Valentine • Day.
·

can

Sflw. .

. MUlti Tadi

Memberallllnd Sllhl'a Nunery
and Oaillmll Shop in DeCem-,.
Suzy Carpelll« blld the RutiiDd
Post OIIICe window diaplay for
· December fealarina I clecinred
Ciuislmll ............. pria&amp;ea
and a Slnla tllllklmeidL J.- Bolin
wiD place lbB Jalmuy . . .
·Mirjclio Davis teld "'loimty of

HOME.ENIEifAINiRIT (ENTE• .

'·

..

..

;·:; :==·

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

.,E REPAIR ALL MAlES

I'

Weight control
classes to begin

Quality Prescription
·Service That You-Can ,
Depend On.

RCA

t

9ook personal

·

e

fACTOIY AUTHOiJZED
SERVKE
.
m

·
Medicine

beli

a

E....,... .

Famil~

lber·

tied

1

~~~~-~:o_f_
Osteopathic Medicine

, . It'•

n.a-.

_ Lichtenberg to aitend OU .·

.

Happy New Year.
time lo laae welghl
• QUESTION~ Evrzy New Year's
'
I~ I~ 10 lolc weighL I
john C. Wolf, D.O.
usually do !otic some:, but by next
Associate Professor
· New Year, I've found it again. Why
•
of Family MedicinE:
~ tbiskeep
ning?
'
ANSWER •
'ty ill a serious
he8bh
Individuals more·
·
1hal1 20
over their ideal Workouts clecrea.&lt;~e, 11ic Weight that These .foOds also tend io have fat ·
body .
11ft at increased risk or . WliS. "~" ill ''found" once again.
with them, and fat ill something y~
developing a number or disorden .. S~lies ~ve -lhls: dae average--don't·need inbundala wbenY,ou
A . few examples lift: l!igh blood diet resu!ts .m a live pm:ent weight are dieting; y~ want 10 use up ihe
pm!SIR, .. heart
disease and GAIN Within one yeilr. ,
rat you already have 110rec1 in your
Keith Cook
diabetes. It makes good sense to ·· QUESTION ·llt:no'fithat I need body. Sweets only have( calories for
•
•.
keep YIJ!If weight ~ the ideal for to eat~ and work J?Utmore of)en. MmK&gt;:·
co_niBin none or the ..
•,
'f'I'!C height and build to belp min- What IS the best diet ror we1ghl essential Vilamms, . minerals or
·,
, unize .the risks ci developing these loss?
- proteins. So, it is lOgical to
• . · . Keith cOok, srin.nt l!l'le Cook, ;.
disabling di81'1'ses
, . ANSWER • · Successful weight . elimlnate sweets from your diet
Racme, and Raymond Cook, ·
~~ rcsearc~~· haS · ·es- . l~?SS ·tates. more than following a w~ tijiJig 10 lose wei,ghL
lilblished that very few people have SlDiple diet slieeL P.M. Warwick o£. · Reaa!!l!css of the' dJet that you
Syracuse, W!ls'rccently dePloyed to •
J!landular problems that predispose . AUSiralili's Univasity "'of N~w . choose,-tiMDe lll'e a few suggestions
OperatiQn Desert Shield in the .
Middle East.
:
them · to obesity. It's usually a · England found that diet counseling that may
lose those exaa
CQok, · a 1984 graduate of '
simple matter of overeacmg.
, was effective in changing lhe typeS pounds and
them off. Eal at
·The buman body ill very effi. , of food eaten one year after the end least twO
, and preferably
· WINNER • Clint Pearson, Jeft,. New Haven, W.Va., :was the .· Southern. High School. ill. pan of ~
the 1st Infantry Division of Fort · '•
cient. Fuel for the body's viJa1 of clilmseling, but ii was unsuccess- three ~s. per day. Put ·an adeChristmas wilmer of 1 12-speed !llcycle l'rom Heritage House and
' Riley in Kansas. ·
·
·
~ • brealhing, blood circula- r~ in bringing about wcigllt rcduc- quate portion ci each food on your
Locker 219. Pictured with
11011. tbinldng and the additional lion. Resemchcts at the Matshall
and then remo-ve the serving
Cards and letter may .be sent 10
Pearson is Dick Owen.
demands or physical activity (as University School of ~in~ Is • as wen as lhe temptation •
him through his wife, Jenny, who is
wen as muscle and bone growth in Huntin~, W.Va., . studied a from the table. Eat slowly 110 that
presently residing in Syracuse.
children) : !S usually supplied by · "bc;haYJoral approach~ 10 dieli~. · you feel full b,Y ~ end of the meal
the day's iJuite Of nutrients. If you ·This type Of program lllcludes diet If your food IS still hot when you
eat more food than is nea:ssary for counselin~ tba,t.addressed the type finish it. you are eating roo fast.
A series of six-week classes for
these daily functions, the, eltDa is and quantity of food eaten as well Exertise tegularly but set realistic weight
CO!lttol will begill 6 p.m. on
converted into fat and sa'o'ed for as the emotional reasons for eating. goals. Measure atJd record your
Tuesday .00 Wednesday at the
laler• .' This, of course, Pf'lduces They attempted to teach individuals weigl)t no mere than once each Meigs County Health DeparttnenL
weight gain. When consumption 10 identify when they eat because
week, and do it at the SBJne time or . There will be a choice of nights
and elleiXY expended are equal, the . of habit. anxiety or stress and teach day in the same situation. For in- for the classes. either Tuesday or
weight stays the same. If y~ 11ft them a more successful method of · Sla!ICC. Wednesday morning when Wednesday, and classes are li'ee to
following my logic, ·it should be dealing with these emotions. Twq &gt;:CJU first step Qll! or the s~K?wer·. It is
'
apparent that the only way to lose y~ after the education . 6S per- ume to eat less if your \Wight JS up Meigs County residents.
Each class will be of two hours
weight is to eat less than ill IJe!l(led cent of . the. panic~ts had tv:"O weeks in a row. It ill easie~ to duration. Auedance is required at
for each day's work. The body will mainlained a weight Joss.
tnm off a pound or two when only one two hour sessioo weeldy.dr!lw upon the stored energy • that
Thece are more types of diets necessary than Ill face the prospect · Ciasses will include nuttilion
unwan~ amount of fat • to make that could be counted ~ a day. That again next New Year or having to education. stress management.
up the difference. ·
should tell you something. There is
~ off another 20 pounclll.
weetly weigh-ins, relalUition teCh'
Erigaging in exercise in=ases . no one "correct" diet for healthy
niques, rec:ipes, diet recaii sheets,
.
"Family
Medicine
is
a
weekly
the body's need for food 8lld can but overweight individuals. The
1b submit questions, write exercise techniques and other
enhance weight.loss. Unfortunately, body needs vitamins and mineJals column.
10
John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio phases or weillht conttol.
many people find it difficult to each day. Fruits and vegetables
Class size IS limited and classes
University
College or Osteopathic
mainlain a higher level of physical provide these nuttieills. We also
~be
held in the conference 100m
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
activity for a lifetime, or even an need some ~. which .can come
of. the multi-purpose building,
Ohio4S701.
.
~xten~ . period of time. As the from meat. fish, eggs, or cheese.
·.Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
·
Konn•h MaC-gh. R.PII. .Chai•llllfto, R. Ph. '
"onlld Hln.nlr'lg. R.Ph.
•
. Meigs County residents may
.~on. ttwu Sat. 8:00 1.m. tO 1:00 p.ra-.
. ~ by calling the Meigs
lund., 10:00 a.m. to. 4:00. p.m. •
COunty Health Department at 992P!!ESCAI~TtONS
·
PH. 892-2915
6626. When registering, indicate a
E. Main
Friencly .Service
Pom•ov. OH.
Open Week Nlghtl 'tilt
preference of Tuesday or Wednesday evening classes.

UPI crowns Georgia TeCh
national football champions

•

•

Ohio University

•

V\i:~:J

I

..

Medicine

"For me It was a big deal .
In the NBABucknell 'Ill, M;...yland aait. CoiL 64
playing
against the (New York)
Butler 106, Geort~la Sl. 96
·
Euti!ra Collfcreate
ill,YS." said Autry, from the
Clarlestm-SC 63, NC·Wilmlnlltm
lllvlolaa
•
58 tOT!
Bronx, who was heavily recru' l,&lt;am• · · Allaallc
.
"
W L Pel. Gil
Dartmouth 68, Holy Croos 62
ited by St. John's.
ston ..... .... ... ~ ... 24 5 .828,
Dotrott 88, F1orlda !niL 75
Philadelphia ........1911 .633
51!
The vlctol')' made Jim BoDuke109, Boston U. 55
NewYork .... ........ J216.129 1111 ·
E. Car'oltna .60, Georgia Southern 59
ehelm
the wlnnlngest coach In
WashingtCII .......... IJ 17 .393 12\!
F1orlda 65. Mlssioolppl 49
Syracuse
history. The win was
Georwet:own 78, Jacksm St. 54
~'r Jer,.,y ... .. ........ 10 18 .357131!
ami.. ..- ............... 8·22 .267 16\!
the 356th of his 15-year career at ·
Geo!ila Tech 84. Howard 77
Kentueky 81. Geoigta 80
• ,
Syracuse, moving him one aheatl
Ceatral Dtvll._
LSU 87, Vanderbilt 70
of Lew Andre~ts.
·
MJlwaukee .... ....... 22 8 .733
Lamar 104. Southfrn 88
•
· Chicago ... :c .......... 20 9 .69o . I
Syracuse
has
IM!aten
the
Rejl·
. Louisiana Tech 75; Arltansaa-Litde
. Ileirott.. ........ .-...... 2011 .64~
2"
RQck 63 .
,.
men eight ,consecu Uve Urnes In
Atla ta '
"
. Mlsslsiilppl St·. io.renneuee 65
.Owens
fed
Oave
Jol!nson
·
~~arrler Doll1!! dating back to
l~dl~na :::::: :: ' :::~ ~ :~~ ~~~~
Moreheod St, 87. Alcorn Sl. g,
)
for
two
layups
In
the
!lnai
i:
31
of
C eveland ........ ,... 11 !9 .367 11
N. Alabama 88, Mu.r ray st. 70
Char.loote .............. 9 19 .321 12
overtime to help Syracuse re.
N. Carolina ~1. 74; Clemsm 70
.
In, games Involving teams In
Wettil!ra Coaferea.oe
New Orleans83. Colilmbla 53
·main one of the nation's three .UPI sTop 25: No.' 1 Nevada-Las.
Mldwes&amp; Dlvtit-.
SW LouiSiana ll4, Prairie VIew 79 •
remaining undefeated teams. Vegas crushed .James 'Madison
South Caro1Jnao103, MeiCer 67
~....,
W L Pet. · GB
Top-ranked UNLV, 7·0, and Ohio 89-65; No. 2 Arkansas cooked
n Antmlo .. .... .. . 19 1 .731 · Vo, Commonwealth 80, George
Utah .. .... .............. 20 10 .667
1
Mum 74
·
State, 10-0, ~re the others.
Rice 86-62; No. 5 Indiana ripped
Houstoo .............. :16 13 -~52
Wake Forest 74, Moryland 62
5
'Ule
.
two
teams'
rosters
are
Illinois
109·74; slxth'!'anked
Dallas .................. J017 .370
9"
~estm Carolina 88. Gardner Webb
Ml nnesota•............. 9 19 .321 II n
S:peckJed with players from the Duke destroyed Boston Unlver·
Orlando ............. ... 7 23 .233 U\1
Mldweol
New York and Syracuse areas, . slty 109-55; No. 9 UCLA bested
Ilen ..r ................. 6 24 .200 15
Arkansas-Pine Blutr 69 MJs•""•ri·
many of whom played against Southern California 98-81; No. 1~ .
RoUa ·66
•
·
PadlcDiv ..._
each other ori bo'lletown play·
Bethel 86, Mac'aleoler 63
Louisiana State hammered Van·
:;'rtland ....... .... ... 27 4 .871
C. Mlchlsan 59, w. MIChlKan 56
grounds or In high school.
derbllt 87-70 and No. 13 Coimectlhoenlx ............... 19 9 .679. 6\!
Carletm .86, Hamllne 61
•'I know practlc ally their whole cut thumped Boston College
Cleveland St : 68, AkrCII 66
6;,A~ Lakets ......... 17 9 .654 · Jl!
.
.
team. When you go 'home, you 96-70.
en State . ,.... .. 15 13 '.536 1011
E . Dllnois 75, w. Dltaols 68
Seattle ................. 13 15 .464 1211
E. Ml chlsan 68, Ball st. 59
talk' about wbo beat who," said
Elsewhere; No. 14 Pittsburgh
L.A. Clippers ....... 1119 .367 15~
Gustavus 96, St. 'John'S 86
Conrad . McRae, Syracuse's so- downed VIllanova 87-76; No. 15 • '
Sacramento .
6 21 .222 19
Indiana 109,.11llnois 74
phomore · center, who's from
Iowa St. 86, DrakP 69
Nebraska held off Wisconsin·
'
Wedaesd&amp;)''aramee
Kent 52, Toledo 47
·
Brooklyn.
Green
Bay 70-63; No. 16 GeorgeAtlanta 120, L.A. ClipPers 107
Pata!1l1-0hlo 82, Bowling Green 81 ·
Despite his team's Joss. St. town routed Jackson State 78-54·
Milwaukee 106. Charlotte 91
lOTI
John's junior guard Jason Buch- · No, 22 VIrginia clipped Ma~­
Phoen 1x 105, Oeveland 83
Mtssourt .%, ·Memphis State 82
Det rolt I IB, Donver 107
N.llllnols 65. Illinois-Chi. 45
· anan will also be able to do some quette 94-88; No. 23 South Carol·
Jndlan~ 121. San Antmlo 109
N. Iowa 86,. Wtsconsin·Osttkosh 64
talking when he returns borne to Ina blasted Mercer 103-65; No. 24
Boston1lll, New York 86
Nebraska 70, WIIConoln-Gr. Bay 63
l'yracuse. Buchanan scored a Georgia fost to Kentucky 81-8(1
MinneSota ll!i, Dallas 95
Notre Dame 66, Valpar.also 50
Utah 112, Miami 104
Ohio 75, Wright St. 56
career-high 28 points and made and No. 25 Georgia Tech out.
Seattlel27, Philadelphia 99
Oklsh&lt;rna St. 84. Mlsaourl-K.C. 67
six
steals for the Redmen;who lasted Howatd 84-77.
• SW Missouri St 72, CrelghtCII 71
also received .32 points from
( SJena 89, Evan&amp;vUle 69
'hllllht'l aunes ~
At Las Vega.s, Nev., Larry
Denver at New Yor1r., 7:30 p.m.
St. Louis 95. lll'adley 71
sensational forward Malik Sealy, Johnson scored 21 poln ts and
Charlotte at Washlngtoo, 7:30
St. Thcrnas 66, St. Olaf 64 120T)
With the score tied 80·80 Stacey Augmon added 20 to lead
p.m.
Tulsa 114.
entering overtime, OweAJS .and , . the Runnln' Rebels. UNJ..V. 7-0,
LA Clippers ' at Orlando, 7:30
MIS~5slppl Valley 56
p.m. .
.
Washburn 73; Talior65
Adria!) Autry scored ba;ttets to rolled up a 37-polnt lead' In tile ·
Dallas at Milwaukee. ·a: 3C) p.m .
Xavler-OH 75, Ne'I{Hampshtre 54
give
Syracuse a 4-pomt lead .. second half before the Dukes
Chicago at Hous1oo, 8: 30 p.m .
Soalllweot
Sealy then hit a 3· pointer before made the score respectable
Goklen State at Sacramento
Arbnsas 86 .. Rl~ 62
10:30 p.m.
. ·
Ar Unsai Sl. st;idorgan St. 42
J~hnson grabbed a high feed . against UNLV • reserves. Steve
HousiCII 87, Baylor85
.. L.A • .l.akers at Ponland, 10: 30
from Owens ·and slammed It Hood led James Madison. 5·5,
p.m .
New Orleans'83, Gllumbla 73
CONTROLS REBOUND - N.C. Slate's Tom Gugliotta (In
home.
.
Friday's IUDel
SW Texas St. 89, Maine 88 tOT!
with 32 poln Is.
beats Clemaoo's Eric Burlul to the ·ball io control the
_
white)
Phoenix at BOston, 7:30p.m .
TCU 86. W. Kentucky 80 101')
Owens then ·made a block on
At Houston, Todd Day scored
Indiana at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Texas 93, T"""s A&amp;M 67
rebound durlnJ the first half of Wedllesday niJbt'a ACC game In
the othe~ end and hit Johnson 21 points and Roosevelt Wallace
Det rott at Cleveland, 7: 30p.m.
T"""s Arllnlltlll 108, Nl chOUs St . 84
RaleiJb.
N~C., which the host 'Y\Jfpack won 74-?0. (UPI) ·
·.
With
a
long
pass
for
a
breakaway
.
San Antmlo at New Jeraey, 8
Texas Tech 56, SMU 54
'
added 13 ,.... all In the second half
p.m.
Tulsa 114. Miss. Valley St . ~6
reverse dunk that sealed the win.
- powering the Razorbacks' In
: Washlngtm at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Welt '
Owens led Syracuse with 28 their Southwest Conference opAt Bloomington, Ind., Calbert fifth-rated Hoosiers to victory In
.-. .Philadelphia at Utah, 9:30p.m.
Claremmt-Mudd 73, Azllsa Paolllo
points and Johnson had 22. Autry, ener. Arkansas, 12·1. has won Cheaney scored 30 points, 21 In their Big Ten opener. Eric
• L.A . !'akers , at Golden State, ·
69
IO: JO p.m.
.
Funertoo St. 91, Fresno St. 88
a fr~an adde&lt;! 18.
the first halt, to send tM Anderson added 20 points and
nine straight. .
Mla"/1 at Seatt~e.JO p.m .
· · Ka~sas 88. Pepperdlne 62
·
freshman gtiard Damon Bailey
Loyola Marymnt. 93, Westmoot 81
Montan11.St. 85. Boise St. 78
.came off the bench to score.14 for
, . .Jt:-~the NHL..
s. Utah 85, Stephen Austin 60
Ind~ana, ran Its winning streak to
. gc.santa Barbara 70, San Jooe St.
Wales Conref.enee
11 games and Improved to 13-1.
•
Pollick Dlvloloa
"'
UCLA' 98, USC 81
The
Flgbtlng Illlnl dropped to
• Team
WLTPto. GFGA
Utah St. Ill Cal-lrvlrie 88
10-4.
. .
.
'•
• N.Y. Rangers ..... . 2213 7 51158128
; Philadelphia ....... 2!18 5 47146142
.. At Durham, N.C., ChrlsUan ·
New Jer,.y · ........ 19 14 9 4'1' 159137
UPI rat• •.
Laetlner scored 26 points to lead
PittsbUillh ...... .... 2118 3 4~ 176154
six
Blue Devils In double figures.
WashlnlltCII ......... 19 221 39137·138
By .J~ SHAIN
· under Ross. The Yellow Jackets
· ·
NEW YORK IUPI) -The United
N.Y. Islanders .... 14 20 5 33!1.2 lllj
Duke,
10-3, received 14 points
UPI
Spor1s
Writer
went
2-9
and
3-8
In
his
first
two
.
champions,
were
coming
ott
a
Press lnternattonaJ Board of
each
from
Greg"Koubek, Grant
Coaott
..
•
Top
25
college
baoketball
NEW YORK - .G eorgia Tech seasons at the school, then posted ~ 46-3 blowout of Texas In the
~damsiMviiJoa
ratings, wtth ftrst·place votes and
Hill,
and
Brian Davis. The
• BostCII ............ : ... 20 12 8 4S136 130
Cotton Bowl. 'fhe Hurricanes
won Its first national college · a 7-4 record last season after an
records throogh Dec. 30 In paren·
lllonlreal. ............ 20 17 5 45131133
Terriers,
4-7,
were Jed by Reggie
football
championship
Wednes0-3
start.
·
earned
the
other
two
first-place
theaes, t~l polah (baaed on 15
Buffalo ............. .. 1516 9 39 Ui 131 ·
Stewart's
14
points.
p~nts tor first place, 14 ror second,
The Y~&gt;llow Jackets, picked to votes and moved up to No.3 with
. day, edging Colorado In Un.tted
Hart!onl ....... :..... 17 20 4 38116 137
eft.) and previous
weeJc'aran.,..•8•
At Los Angeles, Tracy Murray
Quebec ......... , .... .. 9 257 2~ 1131BJ T
,
.._.
Press Inter.natlonal's clpsest fl· finish near the middle ofthe pack . 763 points. N:o: 4 Florida State
scored
29 points and tloo Ma· •
i~v
~
Po-•
nal poll.
· . .
In the Atlantic Coast 'Conterence also Improved one poslti\ln after .
2. Arka ( ) (0-0) ........ . , ......!«!'!
Campb,.l Coo!erence
clean
25
to lift the Bruins over ·
·
naasll0-1 ~ ............. .... 4762
T)le Yellow Jackets, the only this year, romped through a
\&gt;beating Penn State In the
Nontolllvlllaa
3. Arlmaa 110·1) ............. ....... 433 3
their
cross-town
'rival. ,. UCLA,
Team .· ·
W LTPto. OF GA
major unbeaten team at 11.0·1, schedule that Included five bowl
Blockbuster Bowl.
;· ~YJ"cu .. 112-0) .................. 4211 1
Chicago ....... .. , .... 2713 3 5714111.2
11-1, Is off to Its best start since
overtook Colorado, the No. 1 teams. Georgia Tech's onl
No. 5 Washington moved up
. n lana ·112·1) ........ ,........... 363 5
St. Louis ........ .. ... 21 in 18 138112
the )982-83 season w.hen tbey
team after the regular season, blemish came Oct. 20 Ina 1a.13 11~ . two places after beating Iowa In
6. Ohio State (10-0) ...., ........... 362 6
Detrott .. ..... ,........ 20 17 411111111
were 13-1. Southern Cal, Jed by
Mlnnesota ...... ..... IJ 2f 7 29·12:!148
~· ~:;"' Carolln 19·1) ............ 329 7
847 points to 846. •
against North Carolina. _
the Rose Bowl, and Notre Dame
TorCIIto ......... ... .. . 12 26 2 26115160.
. g' UCLe 19-2) ................. ... .. ... 282 8
Harold Miner's 22 points and
Georgia
Tech.
a
45-21
wtnner
'There's
no
way
In
the
world
remained
sixth.
No.7
Te1111essee
1
0 S A 110-1)~-.· .................. 216 9
.
Smya.e lllvlolaa
Ronnie Coleman's 20, fell to 8-2.
over Nebraska In the Citrus could be happier .. ACC Co
I • t. John'sl,..) ............... l8710
Calgary .... .......... 22145'49171! 131
1 . jumped three spots afte~ edging
1!. Oklahoma 110-2) .... ........ 126 11
At Baton Rouge, La., Shaqullle
Los Angel., ........ 1914 513153129
Bowl·, .received 30 first-place stoner Gene Cori-Ja.an saidm.r!;}5 Virginia In the Sugar Bowl and
~i ~ulllan Stt 17·2) ........... 10313
Edmmtm . .......... 1818 2 38125120
O'Neal
scored 34 poJnts and Mike
votes
cast
by
the
entire
59·
great.ror
Bobby,
(Athletic
Dlrec·
Michigan
lmprov\'d
four
post• nnectlcut (8-1) ..............8815
Vancouver ... ...... . 17 22 3 37131149
Hansen
added 24 to lead LSU to
member Board ·of Coaches. No.2 tor) Homer Rice and the pia ers. !Ions _with a Gator Bowl rout of
Winnipeg ............ 13 22 8 34140154
~:· ~tllbu111h 111·2) ..............IN II
. ellraska 112-1) ...............60 19
an
·easy
win over the CommoColorado, which edged Notre I know they were dlscons~Jate . Mississippi.
.
. .,
~;· ~eo~et'""n (7·2) ............. 4716
WftlaMd&amp;J'• re1u.Ks
dores.
Tbe
Tigers, 8-2 overall and
Dam~ 10-9 In the Orange Bowl to with the AP poll came out toda
Clemson, wblch shut out Illl·
. S: st 011 Stt til-l) ........... 40 19
Oet roit 6, MlnnesO(a 2
1-0
In
t)le
SEC,
gradually pulled
finish 11·1·1, was at the ·t op of 27 but we were hopeful the coach:~ nols In tile Hall of Fame Bowl,
: ~thm Mssaspp 15-1) ......... 26 22
N.Y. Rangersl. Los Angeles!
9• owa (11-1) ...................... .2121
away after taking a 52-42 lead at
BuffaloS, N.Y. Islanders 4
ballolso
would come through I' j t moved up two places to ninth and
~·New Mxc Stt 18-Ji ..... ....... 23 22
Hartto~ 5, Vancouver. 2
halftl.me. Vanderbilt dropped to
"We are the only undefeated delighted.' •
· . . m us
No. 10 ' Penn State slipped two
~· Mlchlsan su 17-.1! ............ 1618 •
Calgary 3, WIMipeg 3 lOTi
7-5,
1-1ln the SEC.
.
· VII'JIInla 17·2) ........ : ........ .. 13 24
football team ln. the·country, and
' The Assochited Press a~d the places.
'·
Montreal 3, Edmmtm 0
2 ~Uth cardin 19-2) ....... .... 1112
23.
~h:hln.~ t~at ·should say some· USA TodayCable News Network
:...
1. OOfKIB (7·3) ...... .............. 917
TflDIIbt'l lAmS
' .
25R
ng,
eorgla Tech CO!Ich voted Colorado No. 1. Miami
. GeofKia Tech (7-3) ........... 6 NR
Vancouver at Boston, 7:~ p.m .
N -oolnakod
Final UPI grid ratings .
Bobby Ross said ·from Williams· finished voted No 1 · 1 th
9""bec at St. Louis. 8: 35p.m.
Others receiVing votes: Ala·
Cos Angeles at N.Y . Islanders
burg,
Va.,
where
he
was
at
tbe
computer
rating
b
.
.
Tb
n
N
e
~rna. Oklahoma State. Prlncetm,
7:J~ p.m.
'
hospital bed of his seriously 111 York Times.
Y e f!!W
NE\v YORK tUPI I -The United Press
PUrdue, SouthwestiPrn Loulllana
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 7: 35
17. (tiel N~raska (9-3l
lnternat lonal Board of Coaches final Top
19. Auburn 18·3-!
................... 4113
p.m .
.
Temple, Te)!as·D Paaa. Wycmflli:
mother.
·
•
Th
dJ·"ded
Th
1 ·
e ••
outcome marked 25 college football ratin~s. · with final
20. San Jo,. Stat! 'j9.2:i.................. 39 NR
Note: By a_.,.eat With the
New Jersey at Chicago, 8:35p.m .
1
fl
e prev ous c osest vote In the the first time since 1978 there was records and flrst - plac~ votes In paren-· 21. Syracuoe !7-4I .. ............... 16 25
National Asaeclation o1 Basketball
Toronto at Mlflnesota, 8:-35p.m.
2
.................... J2 NR
:,1
football ratings came In not a unanimous choice fpr No.1. theses , total points (based on 15 points tor 22. Southern Cal t{.'.'j
Coaches
of
the
Unlll!&lt;!
States,
learns
FrldOJ'II...,..
1 • when Mlnnesola won the That year, UPI named' Southern first place, 14 for serond;- etc.) and
23. Mlsslsslp 1 I9-J
I ......... .. ........ .. 918
on prd&gt;atlon by the NCAA and
Winnipeg ar B~ffalo, 7:35 p.m .
1 ............ , ........... ,. 714
· 24. 1111nolsti'.)
previous rankings.
·
!neiJalble lor Jhe NCAA TournaPhiladelphia at WashlnlltCII. 7:35
~~tlonaUIPtiitleb by three points over Cal the champion and the AP Team
25. VIrginia Teci."(ii-.......................... 6 17
Polnta
ment are lneltatble ror Top 25 and
p.m-.
5) ............ ........ 5 NR
I. Georgia Tech t301 tll·O·li ............ 847 2
·
w~.
. egan Its football poll chose Alabama
aatlo!W
champltmhlp
coasld,..aNR -araeed
..
k ·
Detroit at ~dmontaa, 9: 35p.m.
In
b50.
·
·
2.
Colorado
12711U-J.Ii
..
....
............
.
8461
tlon by the UPI Board or Coach•.
Others
recelvlng.votes:
Baylor
Louts!
A
The
Yellow
Jackets
will
take
a
3. Mlami121.U0-2i .... ...................... 763.4
Those scholls. are II)Jaola, Ken1 I champion, Georgia
Coli~ 8eGre8
Tech, North Cardlna Star'e, Ohl~
Tee~ na~l
16-game unbeaten streak Into 4. Florida State 110-21 ...................... 6n 5 asna
tucky. Mirlhall, Maryland Mil·
tate.
.
•
5.
Washlnlltm
110-21
..
..
..............
......
664
7
the
UP!
next
season.
The
last
time
receive
SCIIrl, Northwest Loulstaai. and •·
.Wediiolodily'o G&gt;Deie
As national champion, Geotgla Tech will
Robert Morris.
\
"'
Coaches Trophy and a $32,000 Georgia Tech lost was 30-19 to ;· ~otre Dam•l9·3)., ................. ...... 548 6 ~ceive a $32.000 nm-athleUc scholarship
. lukelball a..u~~.
. ennesoeel9·2·2l .... ...... ........ .... . 44910
Eut
ran the GerrttsPepsJ-Cota found at ton
non-at_h letlc scholarship from the
Duke on Oct 28 1989
8. Michigan 19·3) ........................... 42612
Army 89, C. Connecticut 81
By agreement wtth the Amertci.n ·
Gerrits
Foundation
and
United
"All
the
hard
work
has
paid
9.
Clemseil
110·21
...........................
420
11
Transactiona
lll'ooklyn 68, Baptist 66
Football
Coactles Assoolatlon te rn
'"
Penn~State(9-3) ......................... 3018
· Butfalo107, W.Va.·Weslyan 81
Press In~natlonal .
ott," Georgia Tech quarterback 10.
barred rrart lelevtston . appear-~nce: o~
11.
T•xa•
0-2)
...............................
268
3
Woda-.r Sports TraniAclleao
Colgate 71, Rider 69
~ostseasm play or having IDst more than
Colorado s .fall marked the
Shawn · Jones said. "The way we 12. Louis
110-l-11 ..................... 24516
Connecticut 96. Boston College 7o
of their football scholarshi
... '
'Ba
-hall
first time since the UPI began beat Nebraska I'm happy to see- 13. Texas A&amp; 19-3-11 .................... 20419 arepercent
ltlmore - Agreed to te
Dar.tmouth 68, Holy Crc.a 62
Ineligible
for
tlle
'i'Qp
25
and
natio~~
"" ·
14. Michigan So ate tS-3·11 ............... 120 20
with pUc her Jett Ballard on l-~~~
Lehigh 82.
moving Its .final ratings after the
that the coach~ feel we should be 15.
championship consideration by. the UPJ
contract.
·
r·
Virginia
lil-41
..............
.'
..
....
.........
65
23
William &amp; Ma'ry 79
postseason In 1974 that a team
No. i too.. .This erases the 16. 1owa ill-4) ............... .................. ,5715 Board of Coaches .. Thole schools are
Ci...,land "-Signed pitcher Dou
. Manhattan 73. Loyota-MD 68
Florida. Houstm, Memphis State Okl8
ranked No. 1 after the regular d!Mppoinlme~e had from the' 17. (tie) lll'iaham Young 00·3) .... ..... :419 h&lt;l!1a
Jones to 1- year fJPD1ract
g
Navr. 78, Lafayette 75 .
•
a~ Oklahcma ~tate.
, •.
New York ·oALI'::- Siiiti:.&lt;J plt&lt;het
.. Pittsburgh 8(, Vllllnw~ is
seas()n won Its.bowl anddropped .other polls." · ·
·
M!
ke Witt to 3-year cOntract.
,
Setm Hall97, Pi'a."ldence 92
fr~~ the top spot.
Tills Is the·second straight year
Syracuse 92, St. John'S 86
~t. LouJJ -. Sllhed catcher Alex
I
d
like
to.congratulate
Bobby
.
Colorado
took a No. · 1 rankin
.
'
ll:VIno
to
1~
year
contract.
Yeshlva 79. Baru&lt;h 70
.........11
.
Soolll
Ro~s
:~
his program for tile . Into the postseason but railed t~
San Jo.., iCBAi Nam
Appall!'~ ian St. 76. NC-Allhovllle72
ex ao nary season and the ' capture Its' first national IItle
Hl?rman KuiJ coach.
ect
Augu!ti'84, Wlnthrcp 75
~
decisive. win , over Nebrafoka," Colorado lilst to Dllnols and
Color~do Coach Bill McCartney · Tennessee In Its first game. ·
said. Certainly they can make a
Colorado also beat Mlssourt
strong case on their own behalf.' • 33-31 In a controversial finish In
~orgla Tecb, a power In the
which the Buffaloes mlslakenly .
~THENS. Ohio &lt;UPI) - Quar- a 7·3. regular season, said right
coa:h
a:;by950Dods
under
legendary
received fifth down and won on·
.. ter~ck Bubba Llchtenb,erg, who now the plans are for him to
d, returned to
tbe final play. ·
&gt;
Jed Athens to Its first state high redshlrt his freshman year.
prominence In jts !ourtli year
J':11aml, the defending national ,
school playoff berth the past
•~It ·au depends on bow 1 make
season, announced Wednesday. the transition," he said. "Person·
he will ·attend Ohio l:Jnlverslilio ally I'd like to,be able to put on
. and play football for his father, aom~&gt; weight, get a little more.
Tom.
·
meat op my bones."
"It just came down to being at
Ucht'enberg visited Arizona
.
'
home. and •i lear my famuy," said and Colorado State and also was
Golilllqr: .
' the &amp;-0, 165-pound Lichtenberg, being recruited' by Oblo State.
fURal
. ,,who played.at. four different hlgb
Lichtenberg's early· announceSamsung .
Syn....ic Shintem
':•gnanx .
scbooJS during his career,lnclud- ment also could help · attract
'GE .
lng Worthington when his father another top ~rult · to OU.
Soundtsign
wa.s an assistant. to Earle Bruce · Worthlniton's DeWight Pickens
Zenith
Phileo
Scott
at O~lo State. "I just laid out all a &amp;-foot-1, 215-pound runnmi
.. the 'pOsitives and negatives .and back and a fonner teammate of
settled on Ohio U.
.
Uchtenberg's, Is about ready to
. . "Playing under my dad will be . make Ills decision.
a fOOd expertehce," he added. •'I
"I know he (Pickens) likes my
. know he lsgolngtotumlt (theOU dad a lot," said the younger.
.football program) around and It Lichtenberg. "We're close to
wUJ be neat being a part of that."
him. He (Pickens) knows what 1
decided. I don't want to speak for
Uchten~rg, who completed 58
.391'WEST MAIN STEET '
"""~"P"'"t-o..ny; 0110
IleWight, but he said It could
percent of his passes for 1,400
make , a . difference In his
yards and 13 touchdoWJUI the past
'
"2·3524
·.
decision."
·
seatOn In Jeadllll the B.u lklop to
By TOM. WITHERS
UPI Spor1s Writer
There was more on the line
than uilbeaten records when
Syracuse _a nd St. John's met In
their Big East opener. There was
neighborhood pride.
Th.e Orangemen and Redmen.
sporting 12-0 and 9-0 records,
respectively, had to go to over·
Ume Wednesday night before
Syracuse emerged with a 92·86

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. rom

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January Clearance
Now 'n·.Progress.·
S"OP NOW lND
SAVE
.
· ON THE ''T" IN MIDDLEPORT

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1 ot_~idUif-cro..
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OKfC 1!191

•••••y•••••'·········
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.
.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

221 WIST lUll
....
"

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992·5432
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POMIOY ·
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The D4lily Sentinel

....

,,._

•

Thursday. January 3; 1991

.

'

Pomalov Mlddlap ~ OhiO

1·
. ea . 0 ,

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Commllll.lt)' Calelldar Items the ~m Star, Mi~ wiJI·
appear two dQI before u event .mee1 Thursday. Officers are to wear
ud ·tile day ot !bat evettt. Items streel dresses.
must be m:elwd lD advan~ 50
·
insure pubUcatlon lD the caleiiL
Run..-\ND • · The Rolland
dllr.
·
Township Trustees will meet for .
their organizational meetilig fola
· 1'11Ui.SDAY
lowed by their regular monthly
POMEROY • 'l'lle Pomeroy . meeting on Thilrsday at 6:30 p.m. ·
Group of AA' and AI .Anon will at the Rutlan4 Fire Sta?iQII••. The
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. 111 the public is inviled to attend.
· Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
RACINE , The South¢m Local
School
Board will have an or, ·
RU'ILAND • Leading Creek
ganizational
meeting on Thursday. ·
Conservancy Disaict to hold speat
7
p.m.
at
the
high school. ·
cial bqard meeting on Thursday at5 ~.m . at its.office.
FRIDAY
LOTIRIDGE-, There will he a ROCK SPRINGS • Meigs
· · pOtluck supper 'at the Louridge County POmona Grange Will meet
Colltlllunity Center on Thursday at Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
6 p.m. before the meeting at 7 p.m. Springs Grange Hall. RoCk Springs
grange will be the hOS?S. All grana
...
TUPPitRS PLAINS • The .'l\Qla ges are reminded 10 bring items for .
Mr. and
S?q!hen ClirSon, of pers Pllllns VFW Post 9053 the gnmge caleridar. ' . ~ ·
San Antonio,' Thxas, are announe. . Awdliary will meet' Thur$y at
TUPPERS PLAINS • There· will
ing tbe birt4 of a son, Zachary 7:30p.m.
Stephen, btrn on OcL 27 at die,
be a round and square dance Friday ·
Sco?t Air Fon:e Base Hospi?al in fl,
CHES'I;ER , Tl)e Chestu from 8·11 :30 p.m. at the Thppers
linois. The· .infant weighed five Township Trustees will Hold their · .Plains VFW BUilding featuring
pounds~ 13 ounces.
year-end meetiDg Thursday at 7:30 ·Rocky Mountain Bluegrass. Ardour
· Maternal grandpareiots are Mr. p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
Conant will ·be the caller. Cost is
and Mrs. Ralph Ttussell, Long Bot, ·
$2.50 for adults ·and $1 for children
lOIII, and the maternal grell.t·
POMEROY • .Weekend revival at under 12', The public is inviled to
' grandparents are Sadie Trussell aiod the Calyary Pilgnm Cllapel on anend.
Faye Kirkhart, bo?lt also of Long Route 143 will be .held T6ursday
Boaom.
.
·
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
Mr. and MIS. Russell Carson of njghtly. Rev. Don Davidson, God's
SALEM CENTER • Star Grange
Middleport are ?he pa;emal Bible School, will be prelil:hing. He and Star Junior Grange will meet
grandpaients and par.emaf great· 8J!1 his wife ~ be singin~, Rev. Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at .the grange.
· grandparents are Mr. lind Mrs. Vx:tor Roush mvttes the pubtic. ·
hall located on County Road 1 near
A~ Carson, Pomeroy, and Mr.
·
· Salem Center. Potluck refreshments
and Mrs. Cbartea Dectet, West
MIDDLEPORI' , The Evan, will follow meeting and all memColumb"" W. Va.
geline Ctuqir.er No. 172 Older of . bei:s are urged to attend.
'I

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Tt.ur.day,J.....,3.11P91

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ha~- from
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Ja8egotetlllllelll. .
,
Comm"""e 'l b.- Oppor· GaiDiber,tiWofa8111:1deillllhelf· ta.ciL
c.-,,..._
I
at 1 plll:e 10 lbat .,u..,.. wuwuu'~ go
Ohio's new panor Gocqe ·
011111 deni&amp;rM 10 help ex· infti&amp;:tedrifte...
· ·
l'lclmJW 1 umbar Co. . • ·
·~ush ~club 011 ew Year'a hllll&amp;fY• ........: _.......... ....... _.._
\\linovich madeJiiJflntc;!!lp'lan pllld""'"'naii!4)QP:;,"nfarlow
LyanYOIJIII,h",. a, om 'ell u cedlbllltwillberebniLMoasr
ve, lbeir bopel we~
ADd ...... .........7 visit!PMiipeo.ity.
1111 •llcatD iDciJ!o_ twtr riD
irl die Oblo AJCt11 lr*lr . link · lilnaHol!lm Tllacar'lbey ·jollied by ~. ~...-nJmedtolledle
M.UtCH
·
~·••l"'- ..,.,,.50 300.SIIelltmmwllfllleQea. ..,. biawd oat &amp;boule.
~tes11GJ:iDd· ~ y," . , .,Bille ..,,_ ,_llllllllllof . • ~ 50
lfoiV"J ecp1ipaeat 'MIIIIIIO'flCl so.·
•
•llldBiiiiiMB:w'
a. .
~
· ~ . . bid poe~ocpced lit
u.~y
· ,.....,. ear • ve --...- 1 -of ibO liiiiO.
. tile.. Route IU
site a( die·
MIA '4 • . rf:
Pinal
11 - .._ to •
.... .
·
..
·
to
tqhcl'
It
oui"'
~lCeep
'ill
culvert
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dO'
ICIIiae
WOik
1a1111011
wMia
n
f
j
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........._ 111
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y • 1 pat 111e ....,~ ' . . wyfartlle.. lnJ ....-.. 1luail, IliaMid!
~delamiDedof a
f1'lf1rJ aat fllbeir ·
in b:iupeo ,.o~~~em. 11111 c1ea rtna die po1a Rilllt to..-""'*- ·
·
a 10.. •• , 1
• ..
1 1 wt.P •oy ROIIIi aw 111r
~
us we only to . .,.,.. lllllc. crt '11 11ol sibiliay or fwlber
Preddio M ; • · 1 Sf!rt m · o- 1,000 ~ , . _ . .
· 1 till •d'Ci!NI _ . 71111:
~~ 50 watch .... New Yoar -:· or IP
'J~lclel Az. t you . Evel)'ll C1at - .~ Jllllior ..... ~· woo die IJiiled - l!.!!lfl Mil I nrf ,..,.
~vc
~
~!_!: glld)'llldaa~?lleproblem~ ehlirinan of tt. MeiP Cculty Mlip C: ly
.... ._. lllillem'l __ .,. I?Gfcttlr'' · · lir'•·Pcwaoy, ,..,;:
51011,
ver, as '¥0' 'llt'Tiisioo
OIIID..., lpcih not-·
B&lt;*dofE.IecliooL
·
lwR
1"1• 11 . . . . -,sill1 'It(• PI • 11
of lb .-.....
•
•
.
.
•
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...._
nearesteoacb.AIId
L: IWJ. .
,
fall shan in ~ die New ' No quiet CllriiiDI in l'locrBOJ
A aew public adcfta ayoi1m
~ ,.. 1lat ...... 1.0Tile
0 1 1111181
IIIII ~
·
L. .
Year? I KNOW Guy~ LombiKdo for Mt.llld Mn. Job Houdas~ in wu purcbilod wilb ·- . . , be- Clll ktMiol Di?rta llli a 1nl&amp; .a D - • -us fIN' '
..
isn'? with us~ more • but,• r. 1990.
'":
qgeat!iMtO lbe l'lwloloy .Fbur
aJcobo1 pidilem: 'die ....... t:1
~
1
as I'mc:oncsoecl ?be liDieYileclwel·
Tbe
Jb.....,lts
spent 711y Sc:bool
11 .... illkiii• ••411h policy 1 '" ::-.:: • '
. af
clllllinlln of die New Yo. wu Cblia?rlluw.kinLuVe&amp;P.Nev~ Cllalc;Oibba. ·
pw"'" far M 'I
_. 1
~;:
1
really die pits. 'l1lele mlllt lle10111• wllcie bolll of 7llelr 110111, 1ri1a IIIII
The Fknl Bouquet of Maaoo, .....- for rt' t»l I
So 1 ·u DI"J.
117 1 s~.. ....,
?bingC!Q?IIienbaa I nwblllaw.
Bftllll, . . · empkJyed. ~ IIIII W. Va., owDed by .. . . V.. · - 1be lint of 1 IMi t of puWiC
Mq1 (:IUMy't wr,· owa . Slllldln MiJ11t, R:N. of fomriO"J
Now alloat die lloocL Do we call k Bnlll ftllide in • aqlll1Dieat In Cllle Meter, Rudlad, W. pllldby lire.
helriap 011 ?be A 11d Willi · bl,w+*iiPT- pill Oil 1111• •
-llinldrie ~County era
~ ~ood ~J990~ load : of. ?1111111 -~""".::.:-'
AbOut 1,100 en••"'""' of Obio
plln for dll till w siLty 1 prt o( die COIIIIIi'• pabliC lbsly 7
; -ur for die I!Jda..
~'?!.':.
~ ~ 1111tpool ~
llut · Pow. rrom ~ 50 Jlacine
WU?e v a 17' w
"""
·
.
o1 11 .... 1em0111aiMioia
S,................., 1011 - lilo I ...VIII .
- ·IIIIIII&amp;OWI wen: widnaut, .,.-. far .-.1 -lleldat11atWIIkeiYIIetdnaol
.,
AP1UL
_,. .
11
flood 50 play ba~ wilb lbc Cllhar NiCi 6"11 aclivitlel for boun w1lell ?be . . . 011 I pickup
· .M M'A;M . 'Yilllae-- Cc•tD " Help o..ty..
P)lia) .,~
ICdvitles begin 50 ...
hOtidiY 8eiiOII wu ~ mld·Deom· ftiidrta. The 1JdPt li&amp;bll t:l Lu 7nll:k filled IDd tt. ?niCt ltiYel by ¥eiOed . I rtiOiudoo i ....ldilc ~ .... a 9.( , _ . . 1 ... • 1M ll . . 1tepub1ic8n I iro11
ber, 1978 • ?hat wu Jllll • 1 7lme v.ps. ol. coane, ue 1 far ay from 1bdd NanGa IWCk llid .,..lf*l 1 wbere b:al ...._..- diPip 7Pinfi to 1 .,.c IIIII ?lie (lido Bwt of IllY D' r 11
J1o1i1it
when Cluii?maa lboDDiDII would Pomeroy • but 011 die OCher lud. . ~ .
and lbe Mcllllp • I "'I clai*tl BqiOJ!I PI' !llltioel.
Tift, cnf! f for
of
have beal gravely altecsid. • lbe lbere'a 110 place lite borne.
raiain&amp; ddiel far feel • JIPOIICIIIId by die AGHJMV
illln Hart Till Ji JPtlll • pia- .
II?
lbst "ReLql .
water. cns?lld at 49 ~ N6rllll"J, waya, it 'Nil ~ ?hill die ~
111 pteall mill Solid Wanie H!lr t 'Hit PoUcy que In~- at 1llr ••a 10 'ft(IMIII 10 111 the way." Ke)'llotl
die Main SL mercllisiiiiiiCM!d out ' ~'ahelta could enjoy the eel
1 bepn widldle Fa men Commi?IIM.
·~
·
?he Moip CGaRI"J CIMIIIIIr Gl sp' • • • 7111 Denwll Jelfei..,
and that ?Ook 1311 of a ,..,,..,..... bolida1 wilb lbeir two lOllS. Wbilc Bank 811 Bar* 0ae CIICh COII?I'ibutl'llmeavy Vill,sp C..:B Wed Co•
ca.
Jw t • dlallr wu Sen. 0..
8lll(llllll of l!nsims ..Ken llfl die tmdle?rip,dlefamilydiddrivein?o inl$1,000.
,
iJWO 1 tw?IIPCt. Wi7ll B~qe~~ llld
.Caliln
ll!illlr BnintiOI. · ·
llood wa7aS re5llmed in==· Callfomiafouane.silhtseeing.
' Ricbanl Butcher, 33, Wilkesville Nipple Ltcl., PldrerlllarJ. far Ill- joilled 50 &lt;\uaclW'._ call.._.
011 +owe
of Pmeavt'l"
19J1! ~It 51.4 on the
• •' . ·.
·
.
.
was being IOUgllt for ?he eg, P-inlllldlldlilec5Uiil~t..OII ~dleirf1PIIif1ietto~dle~ SJal(licent will, 1940-1990; S!ll
The .curtelt ood Wll tet:OIIIed II
The C0. for Kids ·j)loject of ·gl'lv$ted murder of Melinda upd'?ioa Pamcloy Vllbi8el Willie ~ptll1ionof~-~. llir~ UlllllirwayandiCOIIIIIIIIIIIOI'I!ivello .
cresting 11 49.4 feel. It Clll't go Balik I iii 1Jluudoy bas been exten·
· ·Wiler ?rC tmalt ~
?iOII under .,ca ,•XlliOil by
sue Gil die ob8erlance away fattenoqb ~ llld ofc:ounc, it ded 10 Pridly,
18, and Bank I .
Meip Ctuliy l.i?SJr Cor7rol ar•·1 :: dlw'lbe Illil Senllne1.
prol;la;bly, isn't ;aiD&amp; 10 leave~ doea d bave P.Jd. W$1p coats
Since you mif already have die Direc?IOI' Kcluly Wlglii ioaued ,ill . It WP P
tod M I 50511 of f
~ p 7 ••
tee. The "~"
foriCitoolegeebildtenonly. .
January blahl, I 11att · 50 lay . ~ IWhlaa to IIOp iJiepl $133,()27.62 in~ ()plica of . . Ralllavi1le Vo?iD&amp;. ~.
people say lbat if lbe WI?« recedes .
sltonld be submit,· MlfDIOie tm you. However, die
· iD the CXItlllty. •
Ddliel will be CCIPIIiltl liiD -~ Wli Ci 1 1
·
and leaves ice, it w0lrecunt110011"50 ted
die local schools. Any 1990 - - - forma ue IOing to
MJ!It!w! Wli ...... eo.ty dumii990-911D lte1p 41,.
.,.; • 1 copiel t:l a
get il. Don't loot at mo • rve only COliS .ISOl .u.ibulied will be taken be 1 bit delayed in pUiJ18 10 you ~ of dll v.. 1811 {11!1!11" ltbled ...,.. Cl?bala.
.
1M a • 1 jl7llll7'ed by ?be MdP.
beard die "8oocc" people Illite tltll . to 1ocal clllrity ..,aes. If you and just wbea you _.. in die tecf 1 ?rOp1ty at ?he ?Ill lliltlllll)'
C. . . tltcllll Mil ~1 II ca ;y . . . . , l'llnninl Cail&lt;o'
eomntelll. That Will 1 nlco p
need ay infbrmalion or have. any mood to dl11111 ?liro!J8h dial hluel ceJebradoo .of Dlew Wdm PUtt
doiltiiD -·· •
a ' iri"" lite a il
tift · by f?it:k. Wimer, Kropt ~ about ' me program, 4o riahl ifw Cbrls7mas: Ah, ;he dis- 39;AmericaJ..esiaft.
·
Melp. C 1 Rlnil* ::...... of "u.J.o-,.._ _
iliiiii88Cf· Dick 11111t coffee, 1uncb ~ Wal?oll a call at die appoi11711Je1171 of life. Do bep smil·
Veip County ow-a. Plrlli
10 11M • a1iit •
Sil1
i
01t 10,
meat, lnad and adler fOC!d i;ems 50
Ballt I office. 992-2133.
ina.
Judp Fred Crow m 0111aed die JiRil5i IIIII pve guidiiL A •lloW 7litd ..SIIUtlnt infinlllitm ce,
.~ '
.
Baird of Dhec:lon of lite I·.,in&amp; 10 mJid the fioblela.
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.

c:..;.uetl?

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x&amp;..:--.llol'

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ad:'_.....__.,

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Business
Services
..c•••n
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IIOYIIIG SAU

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8 A,M. until NOON SATURDAY

,
•

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diiooum,... ••• Paid In ""'"oe
•'
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- GiviMfty 1nd FouM"' under tlwOfdlwill be
no ch•te-

,,;;.-_-.i~",;;;. lll, c.pbll••.,•

"S,•IIIinol il

typeofttr ..-1.
no1

raponoilolo for

e. doub61PfiC. of ld cot1 .

••or•

flrtt d-r ad rwns'in p..-1 . Call b.tere 2 :00p.m .
pubtie~tion to mike correct~.
'

·"

Card of T"enk•

Ha,py· Adl

In -Jam

Y•d Ill•

will also..,,.., in theftt, "••'"" ........,an~ tha Gall;.
pottl Dilly Tribune. rwlchi~l owr 11,000 hom"~
.

OAY IIFOIIIIIUILICATION
- U.OO A.M. IATUIIDAY
. :.. 2 •00 p.M MONDAY
- UIO P .M ·T UIIDAY
- 2'00 P.M, WfDNIIDAY
~ 2:00P .M. THIII!IDAY
- 2 •00 P .M.. FIIIDAY

=~~~·J•
I dalloriCralkiD
- .. 0.
tile
PI•olrerecl
aampater
.,._ wbea

i

. the• ?9:-roJ

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Frlda"J. u-; Brllll Reed, geae~

O.Uit County

I

r'

news reporter
torthedtepriDled
paper.page
deatCitltrlstel
copyllllika
lt10
to, k1 P,J.bow
Er·

•Inner workings or the · •
bus?ness bi!Came eas- .

•

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. .

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'

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. :. .. . ..

.

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salisly their .M?nftxmll7l0n. , .
PII:Jw!'. reqilitement 'lbe· group,
ccj11sisiling of eight and nine year
~" hard at work 011 oblain, ·
'tl1eir Bear paiC?ie~, one of ?he
in the Cub ·scouiS .organiza,.

•

-... · "scouts

'.,•·

1. ·
·

.·

onm

:

..
.'

archives, ·

looked up lhc hea11ines

''

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411..,Loon

773-....0ft
112-Ntw HIW'tn

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AdoleSdent Medicil;le

,

Po~tf1easani, VVest"u,pzua

4- G-oy

•

1-Hop(!Y -

1-Lolt lftd Feuncl

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t91•61U er

13-,l ftl\118n1·-•utin•• Treining
'
11- lchoot. • lnMructioft

1. 1- ~odlo. TV • Cl RotOoW
17- M I I - - 1
11-WMtM TO Do

31 - flom• 1« I-'•
32-Mollh Hom• tor ••••
33-flarma tor ·~~~
' 34-Buoln•• luildingo
31- L.a!• • •_ ...
Jl-llealll••• Wented

4:38P

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YAIDMAN &amp;
ldto DEAlll

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v. c. ne s••

1101115 EQUIPIBT
'
742·2455

137- Buffllo

"1:611-1

SIMI ..... h?l )" .
12·24-10-1 ...

'U/14111r1

GlOOM
100M

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ftl-5009

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aeu

TMI
0U11DE WOODIUilNNG
HEATER WITH INIIDB THIRIICMITAT

........ ,

(PA'IMIW)

CA.LL 614·992·7114 FOIUPI'T.

...

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1•c
. . . . . . . . . 111 ;•?

..........

STORE HOURS
Monday 9t30•1100
Tualday·Saturtlly
9r30-SsOD

•

·ANDERSON'$·
••nit

r

fLOOI CDVDING
'992-3671 .

APPUANCIS, TV'S,

).

.

.BIG KIDS and
BABIES'·
. PLEASANT.VALLEY
HOSPITAL

......,.Jd ••

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IOWIIIOWI .-oY

.

.

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DEER_CUT,
WUPPED .&amp;
..SKINNED
MAPlEWOOD

LAD
614·949·2U4

,614-tft...lt

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IAIIIOAD 11S

eRauol;l •• .nil.

• • - -· - - -

•

9 a.m. to 6 p.m, MODday tilroqh Friday

(304) 875-4107

3;:-A~emtfttt

•

290'7 Jl!ehon ~venue , ·

· For appointments call

11-HCNIIhellll . . . .
I-I; lint . . . .
13-AIIIill'!.!'

2-ln IIMMtry

r

1. .-La1er1·

.

.

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CIAiUIDAM
N. IOAID
fllTIE
BULLE'l'IN BOARD

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Construction

· ., ·

••at ..

992-2269
. . ..

'O·et Reeultt Fait ··

' .

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·1rfmcic:

.10
.01/. daY

•

Serinr patienta

•

171-Pt. PIMIMR

•uGHT HAULING

117- Coolvilo

General
PediatricS
·
·
..

were
a
of ?he company'•
computer sySjent .
sciDe ~ in The Daily .

, microfillli

'

.,
,..,

112- Mi •• l_.rt
Pomeroy
111-Ch.....

•••-fll•cin•
742-tlllutllftd

!IDJlOuDee~m.'»i of their

&lt;

A•uCode 304

247-lftlrl Fill•

·.£:~~: : EillY:oiival'ez-~z~ 1\(ii
.=

M11'en Co .• WV

Aroo Code 814

143- hnilnd '

'

·. E. Neal.:·Ortez~, M.p...

off¥e ,

leidl:n

· I ~tip Coumy

ArooCofo 114

R"/111!!1!
.

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. Classified pa~ea ,cot·er· t~e
foll6u;ing t~lephonr:•' exchanlle• ...:

~lo(~.:=n.==i:.DIIIJ!;=~:==wln~,C=.D~.Ell!!!!!i.ts.!!!
!. !!W~eU!!:and!!!!!!liMlkeE!!!!!!!.~~~·!!:lla!!IDI!!ID!!:n.~·

flJtJtt

.:10

870 R11111ln1ton
Blug GuM
.lthllaa l~u~ Gun•

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•A ol•••it!• ..tven.e..,ent pieced' in The Oaity lent~ (Ill·
cllllt -r cl•lifild diaollw. Buain. . C.rd and 1..111 nlrii011l

Sentinel cin

11111'9ild

.._,AL

·

'

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.tlot firll dor . iC~td&lt;

muM be plld tn •dv•n•..

•

113.00
,.1.30/dey

,...... a.IU• or M•on cownu.i ~ il ' • .,...
I

a;.. 1ii'Wordo

Rail •
14.00
11.00

.Wordl
11
11 .
11 .

Davs
10 .
Monthly

ciub steut

..... ..,..

1100 Rtmlrottvll

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru F-AY I A.M. to 5 P,M.

''
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• The ·Area's. Number , Marketplace
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Thulwday. J~ 3. 1991

..

BORN LOSER

•

WT ~ IQI AATi 1114T FlraJ -"""~~
P~ FtOO 'Q.I AAV5 ..,.,..,.l!.

- ~ :.

·--

The Deiiy seum'lti-Pea• 9 · -

Television
Vie.w ing

I CliO 1lf Fif9 (.CU'I.5 ~.
8UT !~ 66m~ USIO t:&gt; IT

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THURS.. JAN. 3

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1:01 ~, III¥111J r1• lnt••
1:3111Jle . 0 NIC NighiiJ Newa
(li Allboll and ·Ca14III . .

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1--,1,:., .:;. 1.. . ;. ,.;;1...;l~l'r-1 0 c-........ chlldde

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One Sunday got a reill
laugh when I saw thll )tim In
~=-~·::;:·~~:;~the
"For
r. Sale.claa8lfled
Mollvatlqnsectjol).
Tape~.Mom

Ql World TOCIIIV
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A Auction

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Mr111rlea Falhlr Dowling II
framed Ill' hiUYII bo otl)el tor
I blink 1'11111. Stereo. Q

oto. Naw Hlltn&amp;
bL K-10111.

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ill De Tap-Cepe An
Emergency SeNicea Un~

Cl ,.., "' ..... InC.

attempts to reteue 1 suldde ·
]umpeo:. (R) Stereo. Q
lDI• The llmpeon• The ,

Slmpsona help Homer's ~·
wttll.Hit Cllllfl8lgn lor
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8 PllmiNewa

1D MOVIE: One More T,.ln
ID Rob (PO) (2:00)

.

Business Services

8:011 (]) MOYIE: Thlllllg Red One
(PO) (2:15) .. .
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plot to enlflv1 c-at City.
.(R) Stereo. t:;1
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11 tile Htlly Hoee inoefel. (R) ·

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We Are A Deer
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Brln&lt;ta belle- II her 1111
llhe lhOUicl bt In IQve!

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call:hlil flying l'!- after
being at tfte controls of Joe's

GiETTIN&amp; A L.ITTU: """'IN ON 'JCP.

Homl

Improvements

plane.

a

Sl!lreo. Q

De DoctOr, Doctor Tile

&lt;toCtore help RIChard brealc
hll ll&lt;lclic:tlon to aJeaplng piHa.

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUUONS,INC.

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HE'S TRYIN' to
DliJWN IT It

HIS OWN

AN' STARVE A FEV~,"
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•ON -SITE SERVICE/REPAIR
'CUSTOM PROGRAMMING
· 'SALES
'ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

talkl abOUt gun control on

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governing you In the year ahead. Send quire a top IIPOI.on yourJiat ot prlorltiel.
for YOI\r Aotro-Graph prlldlotlona IOCIIY CAJICIII ( " - 21......, 21) Wtlgh your
by milling 11.25 to Aotro-G..ph, c/o llt..,at'-' (udlciOully today btforo
this ~-.paper, P.O. BOx 81428, Cleve- millctng
Important decision. You
land, OH 4-4101-3428. Be ooire to state have more chok:el at your diiPOI'al
your Zodiac lign.
than you miY raallza.
' AGUAIIIUI (olen. :10 l'elt. 1t) You ere LIO (.hiiJ 11-AIIg. 211) Your m-al
· p/Mently In a rather fortunate cycle proopecta look brlghtOf lh8n to.
-eln you COUld gain frOm I de\llllll ~IY- Thllupec:talndia!te there ... two
ment ortgfnlllld Ill' _ _ ,. thin c:1oanne1a you c:en tap that .could generyilurollll. Be IIUIPP&lt;eciiiiYe hltelohlller. ate peraonal galna.
P18cll (l'elt. a ''I oil :liD)"A
YlhO (Alii. 11-llpl. •l What you are
ship errangemen_tlhoulcl wortc out well . helping for could bt within U.. realm of
for you tbci8y, pro.icllld you.,. "'!t too · rtlllty tocll\l. Pfcwlcltd you gamble on
~~ upoa your countonwt to your own Ingenuity l l 1 d - - . auppty liMo lnltlellve. It Wilt be up to you 1nateac1 Of IOIMOioe .......
ID"' lila motar IWNII·
LJaM (llpt. • OIL., Dlllrlbte ,...
. , . , (I' iiii21-Aprll11) Ueulllly It Ia aulta aan
toHr It~ 1M •
unwt• t!' hlw too ..-y trona tn the aoctatea think your I&lt;INI .,. thllr own.
flre. but you .,.likely to functlort bettar Thli bottom line Ia What Ia ...ny tmpor·
at thla time It you
. .,. wortclng on -~~ ,.,,, not
0&lt; 11111 on lhli blck.
golll Olequltlllgnlfk:ance. PMka a ell- ICON 10 (
....... Dt You're .-y
OUIItecl llllctlon.
· muah on lila m1nc11 01 lrt.ndllllhO haW
TAUIIUI (Ajlrl :10 . ., ID) You .,. your "" lilla..t 11 ' - t toefly. Two,
!Mil oily In I I-IIIII cycle whlre ln ·partlaulw, _IIIIY IIIII It upon llolmyour ., ...... lnd 1111-imlgl ... con- --to do ........ llolnga lor~ wtthOI!Md. Continue to COnduCt your If· cout to.1na 11111111.
lalla In l i l a - , _ IIIII ~ proo. IAGITTAIIUa ( ..... II hD 21) When
Ill to be .I'JCIIIIoJ.
~
' ............. IIIOIIvated, your -Wz
mn(Mer IWtiM iDI Put your fo.
fllloon•~;:-'* , t
- today 011111 ~ .I!IIHII' you toclly, • H fii'U Wtn1 ~lledly

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.,. --.ro.fl!lllln. TIIWcen 1111 con- _,g,., your

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c1uc1ec1 to your •ttnctJon, bilttt wilt,...

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11:00 ()). (I) (J)
Ill.

DHein

Deelarer won the .king !Jf clubs and
played ace of hearts. When East
showed out, South ted th!! nine of
hearts,.linesstng. Next came K-Aof dlamonds and the jack of diamonds,
ruff~. Sou\11 cashed king of hearll,
lhen played ace of cMos and ruffed a
club. 'OojJB! West overruffed wltb the
heart jack, 8lld the defenders took
three quick spade tricks to set the
contract.
. .
sUre, declarer was unlucky lhat ttie
hearts were t-1 but he wu still careleas. Just In
a nasty trump tplll is .

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Dealer: North ·

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In the offlnl, t't'a ,..,.t to win the flrat '".'.;
_,
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clab Irick with dununy'uce. The play .
wiD still denlop akoaa the ume lines,
but the difference wiil be thai declar- ;, ,
er, after ruffliiC hll dlamoad ~ In .. ,
dummy, will be able to return safely
·
lo hls band with tloe club IWtglo pick
up West'i jack of tnunpe.

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. One letter stands for IIIIOiher. this sample A ls used ·
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers

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ARE SIMPLY CHECKS THAT MEN DRAW ON ·A
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OSCAR WILDE · ·
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apostrophes. the length and fonnatlon of the words are ali
hints. Eachdaythecode letterJ aredlffennt. · · .

Ollla•c

12:00

SOUTH
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lca,.,••loncl ~ King

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ACROSS
' copy . •
1 Glen ·
changes
5 Hair .
45 Appears
styles
46 Different
10 Lessen " DOWN
12 '60s guru
1 Licit
Timothy
2 Old
13 Painl
• calcula·
ingredient
tors
14' The King
3 Grow
15 Diamoods
loward
Yeaterday'a Answer
16 'The
evening
schema
to stimuli
Waste
4 Hot time 11 Book
30 Possess
Land"
In Paris
selection 33 Judge's
writer ·
5 Away
17 Bar1 1o
18 Mciolali
lrol'l1 the
Ho~er 34 o::r
20 ·-Butterwind
111 Go awry
newspamilk Sky"
6 Chop
22 Inouye.·
p"r work
21 Writer
down
and Day· 35 Under
Ay.n
7 Trattoria
Lewis ·
stress
23 Lunar
dish
24 Actress
37 Artie/a
bu~gy
8 Memorial
Griftith
· 38 Nol as
24 Painter •
Stadium 25 Pieorder
much
Chagall ·
team
27 Cancelled 42 Had
26 WWII
· 9 Gambler's 28 Responds
a bite ·
enemy
· ·
28 Pronoun
type
(abbr.)
29 Dialer's
sound
31 Old high
note
32 Small
mechanical device·
36 "House at
Pooh

. motions
44. Undoes

. (J) Nlglll Coull Q
(l) Nlwawlteh~

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39 Fruit drink
40$.100 bill
41 'Alice"
star

10:20 (I) MOVIE: ' - 10 flnHn

•ss•u &amp; 11111

...
EAST

~rn~r·

eCNHEventnaNewa
Q 700 Club Wlih Pet

446-6000 .

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

Pl~14llml U¥1

aGregDe
11no11 Lanclnl
and Paige plan

42 Mbblle Homes
for Rent

.
.
SI'IJNG I'ALUiY 110F6SSIONAL BUILDING
J06 JACKSON PIKE. • sum lllJ
.
CAWPOUS, OHIO .fUJI

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. 10:00 ()). 0 LA. Lew

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by THOMAS JOSEPH

from the 11011jlp161'1 wttll I

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CROSSWORD

Gl Gl e '1111 I'1IIilll A guru

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diamonds.

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(J) NIA 1«14oeet II

--------

GUliS &amp; SUHUIS
74t·tAJ1

WEST

position, trying either to score-a par·
tial or to suaest tbe best lead aplnst
wbalever contract · the opponenis
might reach. F,'or that reason North
bid t...O ~lobs rather than jump:.raising
hearts immediately. Two clubs was
·'lhe Drury conventiOn, promising heart
support 8lld asking South to clarify
whether tile opening bid was sound.
Slllce South's two-heart rebid promised a fuU opening bid (two diamonds
would have been an artificial negative, showing sub-minimum values).
North bid game based on hiS tbree
prime cards plus shortness in

createa lllfmagfnlry rnotller
lhli can till to. Stereo, Q

R0f'!~l l'

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11- or 12-point band In third or fourth

cue

o lima• 111ouom

8:30 ()) •

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Many players are prone to open an

oca••••llulletblll
QICrouflre ·

IN A ~{tp, At-L

NORTH

By Jimes Jac:eby

0 ....Idyl t:;1
Coull ..
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(J) e Maml'l Feinlty

A -.·DIAQLINI: 2:00 p.m. ~,.. Nott411lc-tr.
'""dar -......'""""
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7:01 (J) Happy Dar•

AlTENTION -EIIOYI
'IIOITAL.IOir
tn.41 • tM.to tar. No -.q~rr1eltoe

. ~y - Coll8t -Stoic- F.snnel- CONSENT

'

Sc~reww and Mra. King

........ Ill. . . lion lnlo., aoll ~11117
....... .,,.... 7dap.
'
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·

• •~ust remember." conSOled the echOol t..cller to a
crytng youngster, •no one can make you feel inferior
without.your CONSENT·"
.,·

Newal4clw '

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JCIAM.UTI AHIWIII

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Help Wanted

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)'011 dftalap . _ ..., No. :J .....
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7:00~~0 WMit of
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The.

one of strongest, not included

Gallipolis area
•'

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CANTON, Mass.- · - . John
The company expects to pres- mented 1n the fourth quarter."
f!roulllard, president of Hll~
ent a spec,lflc plan to restructure
Mr. Brouillard continued,
Its balance sheet; Including a "The stores we are closing as
Department Stores, Inc., ·anpounced today the !lrst steps In a
re(luctlon of overaU debt levels part of our restructuring, plan
• restructilrlng plan aimed at
and InfuSion of additional cap!- have had dlf!lcully achlevin.g our
refocusing the . company on Its . . tal, by the -end of January.
' standar&lt;ls o! profltab!Uty. Many"
most profitable markets.
. Hills j!stimates a total sales ·of these· storeS are former GOld
Brouillard, In . an announce- lncr.ease of 6% for the month of · Circle locations which we ac- ·
. rrent to the Ohio Valley Publish- December, and i! 5% Increase In . qulred two years ago ·from
!fig Compaqy, said 28 of llllls 214
comparable store sales. How- Campeau/ Federated .. Depart- ,·
stores will close, b11 t that, "The ever, as with tnost other retail- ment Sto~ that . have been
announced closings dO not affect ers, margins came under pres- unable .to make a successful
the Hills Store In Gallipolis. This sure !rom the cost o! additional transition to lhe Hills mere hanarea is 'o neourstrongestmarkets adverUslng promotions a·nd the dlslng format. By closing these
pnd we are committed to the overall difficult economic stores, we can concentrate on our
people In ·the GalllpoUs area to environment:
• stronger,. more profitable mar,
provide high quality, nam"
Thomas H. Lee, Chalrriuin of kerts such as those located In
brand merchandise at every day the Board of Directors, com- Indiana, New York, Olllo, Penlow price. "
men ted, ·"These store closings nsylvanla and WestV!rgtllla. Our
The president continued, "We arepartofanoverallrestructing remodeling and refurbishment
will continue to .keep you ap,- plan we began during the fourth . program will further strengthen
· POMEROY ACROSS THE RIVER • Fl'lllll · . Bowed Its "anks 011 New Year's. Eve cnsbig .
prlsed of all the exciting plans we quarter, which also Includes Hllls'leadershlp position In these
ma!ly Ma~ Street businesses to tYJICJUIIe, The
Masoa, W.Va. on NeW- Year's Day, It appeared
have In store for. the GalUpolls. overhead reductions and seniOr . mares.
k t .,,
·
river crested a bit over 49 feet early Wednesday
that aU or. Pomeroy' was Boating down the rjver.
area.as.we reaffirm our pledge to management appointments pre:
morning.
Pomeroy was hit bard as the .Ohio River
· provide area residents with the , Vlously lrhplement¢d as well as a
finest products and c11stomer reduction of outstanding debt
service. "
.
,
and a capital !l)fuslon. Our cash
The company, after closing 28 flow, which hicludes approxlFive calls for ·assistance 'were
stores, wlll Implement ~ pro- niately $5Q mijll~n In annual
• answeed by uniiS of Meigs CountY
gram to upgrade and remodel depreciation and amortization,
Eight were fined, several on Emergency Medical Services on
remaining locations In order to remains healthy. We maintain
more than one charge, in the court Wednesday.
Improve customer satisfaction close working relationships with
of Middleport Mayor Fred HofAt 9:02 a.m., Pomeroy squad
and to enhance Its competitive our vendors · and factors and
fman Wednesday night
went to Mulberry Avenue fOr Charposition.
·
continue to pay for goods· In full
Fined were 1unior Walker, Mid- les Carson. carson"'was taken to
Annual losses attributed to the and In , a timely manner. In
dleport. $100 and cOsts, possession Holzer Medical 'Center. At 9!48
28 closing s.tores amo1111t to addition; on December 31 1990
of marijuana, and $25 and costs on a.m., Rutl8nd squad went to Stale
·approxlmate'y $1j) million:
we made the schedLded $43
each bf two c~es of l!ismlerly Route 124 for Ernest Davis, who
As a result of store cloSings and mUllon principal payment to the · conduCt; Brad K. · Robinson, Long · ·. was taken to Holzer.
At 1:53
other restructlng charges, ·. the bondholders of our Senior
Bottom, $25 , and. cosiS, no p.m., Th('PCI'S Plains squad went to
company wllll.n curln the fourth · Notes.''
operator's license, and $100 and Stale ~oute 681 for Gene Jones.
quarter a one-time, principally : Brouillard added, ' 'In addition
cosIS an\f five days in jail, 'resisting · , Jones .w~ ta!cen Ill. Veterans
non-cash charge of approlmately to the $10 m!Illon we wlll save
arrest; IU)d Thomas P. ~8rooks, Memorial. At 9:29· p.m., Pomeroy
$125 mllUon.
from the store closings, during Cheshire, $10 and costs,-expired squad went to Chester Road for
Hills has also rtalned Smith 1991 we will also realize an
registration, and $25 and c;oscs, in- Clarence Lee; he was transported to
Barney,HarrisUpham&amp;Co.and additional $10 mUUon In annual
surance suspension.
Veterans. At 9:31 P·1'1·· ~ulland
the · Argosy Group to serve as cost savings as a result of
Others lined were Aaron J. squad responded to Meigs Mine 31,
flrianclal advisors.
overhead reductions lmple·
Davis, Middleport, $25 and costs, and took Randy Lowe to O'Bledisatler1y manner; Wmfcnl E. ness.
Life, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, disorderly manner; Tell. ._ Dexttz,
Middl
$10 and
failure
- Hunt
Nancy Kay DeWitt Brown.
Geor e· ·
·
He was. a retired state em-· .10 yietrchattene M. Cadle. Mid·
VeteraQS MeD1-~ital .
George W. Himt, 84, of Point ployee and attended the Garfield die~. $10 fine only, expired
.
WEDNESDAYAD~IONS
· regtstration; .and Randall R. Moore,
Pleasant, died Wednesday, Jan. 2, Avenue Chun;h of God.
Syracuse, $25 ·and cosiS, driving - Mattie 'learord, .fortland; Zel1990 at Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
He Is · survived by his ~Je,
pba Stewart, RadDe.&lt; WED. under suspension. '
Hunt was a retired fanner, a Geneve (Musser) Brown. . .
Forfeiting borids in the court NESDAY DISCHARGES • Wilmeml&gt;er of t)Je Good Shepherd
Also surviving are three
PITCHING JN 7 nis was the scene M011day night at Swisher
were Greg ,L. Nease, Syracuse, . liam Qulvey, Robill Dugan, Lillda
United Methodist Chm-ch and ·at- daughters, Aretta May Montgoand
Lohse as volunteen pitched In to help pBCk up merchandise
$110, possessicln of marijuana; Hawley, Mildred Fultz, Eruestille
tended Si. Paul United Methodist mery of Letart · Falls, Ohio,
and IJlOVe it to the secoad Boor. Because of the thousands of items
Chatles R. Petry, New Haven, W. WDIIams, Ro~rt File, and Jaditb which
Ch::!· March 2l, 1906 in Roane Dorothy Ann .Haskins of }'lelson- Va.,
bad to be moved, the pnleess started about 2 p.m. and con$460, physical control or a Laudermilt.
v!lle and VIrginia Lee
tinued
rot nearly sevea boars.
..
County, he was the son or the late 'Schmeltzer of· New Matamoras •. motor vehicle while under the inNoal\. and Laura (Price) Hunt. He Ohio; onesister,MarUiaGothard fluence of alcohol or drugs, and
$60, running a IIOp sign; Richard T.
was preceded in ~ by his wife, of BldiVell; nine . grandch!IdreDugan, JQtine, $60, running a red
Mary Marie (BamCtt) Hunt.
n; and 16 great-grandchildren.
light,
and $460, ~sical,control of
Surviving are a son and. He was preceded In death by
a
motor
vehicle while under the indaughter-in-law, W'dlard D. "Son- eight brothers and two sisters. ·
fluence of alCohol or drugs; and
,ny" and Elaine Hunt of Point . Funeral services· will be conMarty Dupa, Rutland, $225,
Pleasant; one grandson, George D. ducted 1 p.m. Friday .at waughHiint and two sislers, Myrtle Wolfe Halley-Wood Funeral Home with lleeing a police officer.
of Ravenswood and Matilda Rev . Paul .Voss offlclatlng. BurRowley of Pomeroy, Ohio.
tal will be In Ohio Valley Memory
· Service will be at 2 p.m. on Gardens. .
Continued !rom page 1
Friday, Jan. 4, 1991 at the. CrowFriends·may call at the funeral
•
HusseU Funeral Home with the home from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday . that )l!e ro8d was only slightly un- ·
'
Rev. Bill McDaniel presiding.
Grandsons and great- dermined.
A bid for office space for the
Burial will follow at the Kirkland grandsons will serve as
Meigs · County Depanmem of
Memorial Gatdens.
pallbearers.
Human Service's new · JOBS
Friends may caJI at the funeral
on Thursday, J_an. 3, 1991
4
.program was accepted on Wednes11-m. to 9 p.m.
,
··
Marriage licenses have been day. The bid was received from
Fred Brown ·
granted in Meigs County Probate Maxine Gaskill, for space in the
Coats Building in Middleport. The
Fred Brown, 86, o! Portsmou\h . Court to Donald~ Lindeman, 26, DHS currently leases other space in .
Rd., died Tuesday, Jan.1,1991,1n . Chester, and Tonya Sue B~ouse, the ·building for other DHS
University Hospital, Columbus. \20, Chester; Howanl D_aYid Barr,
'
.
~e ·was born Aug. 17, 1904 In · 25, Urbana, and ~linda JCJl!D . programs.
The commissioners cbntinued
Green ToWJishlp, 'Gallla County, Spencer, 20, Pomeroy, and Martin
their
discussions with the archi~
of the late ~!chard M and Leroy Searles, 27, and Tma Faye
~n
.
·
Hall, 27, bOth of Middleport.
tural firm oC Burgess and Niple"of
Parkersburg, W.Va. concerning the

-~Area

deaths-.

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at
Vol.41, No.178

.Local briefs----

Lower gas prices ~pected soon. . 1
- The lowered gas prices now l&gt;eing experienced in some areas

A Pomeroy Ruin mai beconie a little richer after an appearance on
the Ohio Lottery's television program.
.
· According Ill the Ohio Lottery's Marietta office, Kenny Brown of
Pomeroy won the semi-final round on last Saturday's program, and
now advances to the final round, where he will have the O{lportunity
to win c~h (up to $200,000) or a new au'!lmobile by spmning ,the
show's "big wheel." · ·
. ,
The
which will ~ telecast tomorrow evenin_g, can be
seen on W WK-TV 13 from Huntington; W. ~a., and begms at 7:30
p.m.

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rrom

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Deputies probe compl~fut

The attempted bmglary at ·the
Wayne Pullins residence on
Naylor's Run Road early Wednes,. day moriling is under investigalion
by the . Meigs County Sheriff's
DepartmenL ·
· Acconling to Sheriff Jatnes M.
Soulsby, a. six-foot male subject
wearing a denim jacket forced OllC'I
a lock on a bay window at the·
residence and entered lbe home.
Mr. Pullins reported to the department that the subject went to J'ullit\s' bedroom door and flicked on a
~ ligbler. . The S!•spect, upon seeinJ
Mr. Pullins, ran and exited througll
the same window and headed
toward the Laurel Cliff area. ·

Furniture .Company

•

Dissolutions
Actions for diasolutioa of mar·
riage . have beein li~ in Meigs
County Common Pleas CoUrt by
I ~~~L. French, Oleshire, llld
French, Pomeroy; Kimberly
Picbas and Bad O'Dea
Pickens, both of PomiiiO)'; and Jeffrey L. HoQeboldcr, CoOlville, llld
.Edna
May
Houlebolder,
Reedsville
CLEAN-UP B,EGINS • ~ Ill Oblo Rmr .._.. to netde Wed· .
Dissolution have been Plllled b1
. aufl1, _ , ••' 1 11 Clll Mila Street.,.._ ilae -•"J-deaD-:-----the-eoun 110 Thnya Sue Blmhoulo
!P f# .... . - II I II a- dlefr Ilion. Here, Clllritt ltraatter and
and David Howard B11110U1e, llld
'Dn'1 ra 1w ..... ad 111C11t 111e
llilt from the lint ~el or K . ' to ,Ernest l,l. Imboden II anc1 Vic-

.,A C Jewelm.
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mer

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Southern board adopts new budget·

THE LARGEST .
-INVENTORY REDUCTION
SALE IN 'tHE HISTORY OF
RUTLA"D. FURNITURE!'

818 DAYS!

'.'50°/o OFF:. and· more'~

During May, ]unt;!_gnd July . ·

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STOREWIDE SAYINGS

. Big

Dlleoun.tt

•

90 DAYS SAM
AS .CASH ..

·. ''FREE· ·
DELIVERY"

HELD OVER
2 MOll
DAYSI

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MAY
·
county Solid Waste Management
Last · year . was a busy and District.
.
.
memorable yeat for Meigs County. _ • The SYr&amp;euse Poli&lt;(e Depanmem
Some oC it was good and some of it recovered a stolen vehicle from
was not so goocl. The following-of· Florida on May 22.
fcrs a highlight of IIIIIP. hat!Sixty·nine Southern High School
penings from 1990. Which were. seniors ·received their-diplomas on
.most mem018ble for you?
·
May 20 in combined bacca1aurellle
:: A bid of $357,667 from the Sut· and commmcement exercises held
phen ~. Columbus; for a in the Charles W. Hayman gym·
· !jew ladder truck for theM;~ riasium. Kathy lhle was valedic; .
Fire
. Deparanent wu acce
by torian and Chris Murphy was
Mi!ldleport Vd~e Council.
salaitat0tif1. · ·
•' Prominent Middleport .Educator'·
Senator Jan Michael
'Lee W. McComu of Middleport . stieaker for the 22nd lllliUII
died May 26 at Holzer Medical Aigh School graduation on May
Centtz at the age of 83. Mr. Me, with 148 scnicn receiving their
Comas wu superintendent of the' diDlomas. MelanieJ- Beegle was
MiddJeDQJt · Exempted Village viledictorian and WaliiCt Edwln1
SchoolS lrom 1941 to 1965.
, Crooks witllalutatorian.
Eleven of Meigs County's DUb - Aspeots of six Meigs cOuntY and
Col1ectors formed• the Meigs two Oallla County mine recfama· · County Asaocialion of Trash ,lion pojeciB at a popoeed COil of
Haulers. 1'hcY orpnized in a ~ $1~ ,703 wete dllcullled at a
step toward fighting certa111 Ohio DepaQIJiaent of Natural
regulatici!IS.J&gt;!tJP!ied
by the ' ~ulti- ·. .Resoun:ea,
of Reclama..
. .. .Dlviion
.

'

FRIDAY, JAN 4 .&amp; SAIBDAY, JAN. 5 9AM·7PM

•

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torial.lmbodeo. ·

_____.._. .. . _ .

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YOU WON'T WANT TO Mrss .THE SAYINGS THAT WIU
.BE~ FOUND ON 'THE LAIGEST INVENTORY OF ~ELECTED
FURNITURE· - HELD
.OVER 2.MORE ·DAYS.
'
'

'

Snow, rain
·-Graduations, solid waste district.
foreeast f~r Ohi~ .
policy_ meetings, sesquicentennial this weekend
.celebration among 1990 highlights ' r!:~J:~~::::;z;::~~

'

'

Three injured in two-car.accident '- .

a

par-

2 MORE

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I)

River crests in ·Cincinnati

2. MORE. BIG DAYS!
.•
FRIDAY, JANUARY 4TH, 9 'AM·7 PM
SATURDAY, JA"UARY 5TH, 9 AM-7 PM

At 5:3S a.rri. on Wednesday, ticular, involved the speeifics of .
deputies took a deer accident general contracting bi$lJ. which
report
.
w~re opened by, the com,missioneis
Acconling to the accident report, at a meeting in November. No bids
Todd 'Ilipp of Pomeroy was have been awarded to date on the
southbound on Route 7 near the in- project; lind discussions on Wedtersection of State Route 248 when nesday involved the infonnation, or
he struck and killed a deer that ran lack thereof, submi~ with the apinto the path of his vehicle.
parent low bid.
.
Light damage was listed Ill the and~i.'c~a:c~ ~nf~=
hood ofTripp's l%6Cbevrolet.
. finn's references obtained by the
Bonnie Lemaster of Pomeroy architect are major issues in the
reported Ill_the deputment on Wed..,.;nw f the -~•
·
nesday eveoi!tg thit ~ ·had _.aww-oa. o
&amp;~-~-contractmg .
stolen her newSpiper tube. The ·bid.
· "
· ··
The
6rm
'
pledged
further
thef t is believed to have occaned research in the matter, and awardbetween 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. on ing of the conttacts is e•pected 10
WednCsday.
take place at next week's meeliilg. ·
In ocher action, the commissioners:
' approved a mquest for a $SO
petlJ cash/change fund for the
Meigs County Recorder's office,
which was submiaed for Wednesday's meeting;
- set January 14 as the board's
.orpnizatiooal meeting;
·. .
. .l&gt;reaent at the meeting ~
Commissionen Jones, Mannina
Roush, . David · Koblentz, Gletk
Mary Roush, Roberts, and County
OBlige Superintendent 'led Warner.

The ~g was conducted by
Hill in the absence of Mayor Eber
Pickens, who was injured in a fall
earlier this week. · .
' Council then entered into executive session.
Attending were Hill, council
members · Teresa Drummer, Jim .
Pape, Kenny Buckley, Minter
Fryar, and Katie · Crow, and
Clerk/freilsurer Janice Lawson.

·Deputies probe accident

Big 5g (o .OFF SALE

neix:~:~~=Lin

filling in the newly-formed ditches.
CoUncil agreed · that residents
· should stop such action, and that
ditches that have been filled must
be re-opened by the property ·
owners. This must be done immediately, council noted.
It was mentioned that . owners
could be held responsible if acddents are caused by water spilling
.oniD the highway.

Tpe Ohio Supreme Court Is to set
the ground rules Friday fQI' Pa~l
Pfeifer's legal challenge to. Lee
Fisher's victory In the state
attorney general's race.
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
Aside from answering clills regatding the hiJ~h water in the
saldhewlllmeetwlthlawyersfor
county, the Meigs County Sheriff's deparunent responded Ill a
Pfeifer and Fisher to establish
mishap near the Beacon Station and ihvestigated·a ddmestic dispute
grounds rules for the challenge
on Thursday.
and to determine the cost of the
On Thursday afternooll, deputies were called to State Route 7
'
.
beyond the Beacon Station . when · a semi truck was southbound
procedure·
through the high ~ when a pickup truck going north qtused' a
Pfeifer flied the challenge last
wave and droWned OLit the' semi's engine. A wrecker .was caJied to
week seeking to overturn his
pull the semi out qf ~ WBIP.'. •
, ; , ~.
·
~ narrow loss to Fisher In the Nov.
- Oir ,ljiaiili;· ~-~-- were C81led 10 a ~tatrTawilsldp ;- · G!geaetat,,eU!ctltm.' :"'
·
·•
• residence for a domeSifc dispute: NO' enforcement aciiOn was taken,
The chle! Justice also will
, as the dispute, according to the sheriff's report, was just verbal.
· decide If a $10,000 bond Pfeifer
· Continued on page 10
posted last Friday will coyer the
·
cost of the procedure. Attorneys
for both candidates were to
TBREE INJURED IN WRECK- Three people
rtght side ol the road and came to rest offthe right
recommend Thursday the
hiJured
In
a
two-ear
accident
on
Slate
Route
were
berm actordlns to the Ohio State Wghway Patrol.
amount of the bond.
Tbunday
altenoon.
Both
vehicles
went
ofl
the
7
I
,
.
Fisher's representatives con. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
One runway at the city-owned tend the bond should be much
flooded Ohio River, which forced , Lunken Airport was closed be- higher, .while Pfeifer's attorneys ·
several floating restaurants. to cause of high water.
argue that It should be reduced. .
At Riverfront Stadium, where
close and prompted flood gate
The bond Is to cover legal,
·Three Meigs Co\lnty residents leased and the Yonkers were by Cleland.
to be Installed at Riverfront the Cincinnati Bengals host the administrative and personnel
Cleland, who was traveling at
Stadium, crested Thursday five •Houston Oilers.In a playoff game costs of such things as taking were suffered Injuries In a admitted for observation. Sarah approximately
55 mile~ per hour,
two-car accident on State Route 7 · Yonker was reported In lair but
feet above Cincinnati flood stage. Sunday, a flood gate was lndepOsitions. on what happened Thursday afternoon.
was
unable
to
stop In time and
stable condition Friday, a hospiFlood stage at Cincinnati Is 52 S!;llled to keep water off the during the electio!l.
struck
Yonker's
car broadside.
Sarah G. · Yonker. 87, her tal spokeswoman said .
feet and the r~ln-swollen river playing surface. However,JnstalAccordlqg to a report from the Both vehicles skidded oft the
Harry Franken, a court spo- · passenger David C. Yonker, 87,
crested about noon Thursday at . llng the flood gate meant closing
GalUa-Melgs
post of .ihe State right side ofthe road and came to
both
o(
Pqmeroy,
and
Donald
C.
·
kesman, said Thur$day Moyer
· 57 feet, ltshlghestcrestln the city . the stadium service entrance.
Highway
,Patrol,
· Yonker was rest off the right berm, the report
Cleland,
17,
of
Racine,
were
"The ·magic number lor t!le had not decided whether to
since 1979:
State
Route 7 slated.
southbound
on
Memorial'
taken
to
Veterans
Officials at the Ohio River stadium Is 57 feet (water level) handle the case himself ot pass It
· Yonker was cited for.raflure to
when
.she
attempted
to
turn left
Hosplt~l
by
the
Meigs
County
FO'recast Center said the water, and that me110s there Is water on to another Justice as state law
yield
when turning left and
on
to
Meigs
l:ounty
Road
75.
As
EMS
following
the
accident
In
· level was expected to remain at lapping at the service entrance,'' permits. Both Moyer and Pfeifer
Cleland
was cited lor failure to
she
turned;
she
traveled
Into
the
Salisbury
Township.
about 57 feet Friday and begin said Bengals -business manager are Republicans, Republicans
wear
a
safety
belt.
path
of
an
oncoming
car,
driven
Cleland was treated and reslowly falling this weekend.
Bill Connelly. "This plllce was· tontrol the Supreme Court, 4-3.
The court can declare Fisher
The high water forced some engineered with floods In mind.
or
Pfeifer the winner or rule that
families who live near the river it's like the opposite o! a bathtub;
the election should be set aside. If
to evaeuate their homes. The Red Inside the bowl Is dry."
a ·new election Is ordered, ihe
If high water requires that the
Cross said 35 families sought
The board ._,as reorganizCIJ Board Association - fo~ the board
A needs budget showing a deficit
flood gate be lett In place Sunday state and counties would pick up · of approximately $479,000 in during the meeting with Denn)' members, and Dennie Hill, Supt.
.•emerge!ICY hO\ISing In motels.
Sections of a bOut 40 roads near and the stadium service entrance the cost.
-operating funds to be submitted to Evans l&gt;eing elected president, and Bob Ord, and Pam Boso, assistant
the river were temporarily closed, another entrance further . Fisher, meanwhile, Is going the Meigs County Budget Commis- Scott WOlfe, vice president. . treasurer, were approved. PerforcJ&lt;ised and a hall-dozen res tau- away from the river will be used . ahead with plans to be swo~11 In
sion was adopted by the Southern. Regular meetings were set for the mance bonds where required and
Jan. 14. He would succeed Local School District Boa¢ of third Monday ·of each month at 7 · subscriptions for ·the Brief q.se
'
rants that float on the Ohio River lor the service, gate.
Bengals ot!lclals said the flood- Anthony Celebrezze Jr. , a Demodid not open because acess
p.m. at the hi$h school. However, .were renewed.
Education Thursday nighL
-roadways and walkways were Ing did not threaten the playing of. crat, .who ran unsuccessfully for
Attending were Charles Norris,
· The budget shows anticipated the ·next meenng will 1&gt;e held on
governor.
water-covered.
Sunday 's game.
Evans, WoHe, Gary Willford, and
receipts of $3,352,000 IIJid ~pen­ Feb. ~ at 7 p.m. at the school.
Membership in the Ohio School Susie Grueseio Supt. _Ord, and HiU.
ditures of $3,832,000, according to
Treasurer Dennie Hill.

0

I
Marriage . icenses

cOmpleted. C,ouncil was informed
that Bob Smith of the water board
has resigned ·and Bob Moore ·has
assumed his duties. ·
Hill reported · that ditchirlg. has
been completed in the upper end of
Syracuse to correct the flow of
water coming from private property
oniD the highway. Howevt7, Hill
sta!ed, some owners have defeated
the wad: that was neeessary ·by

set rules

=·

HAS EXTENDED THEIR

i

2 Sectiono. 14 Pogeo 26 Conu
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Court to ·

Pomeroy man lottery participant

ATTENTION TRI-COONTY AREAl

Meigs ...

'

Hlll renamed .· ~ouncil president

B)' KATHRYN CROW .
have not yet arrived in Meigs County.
·
·
.
.
Seatlael News Stair
Since Christmas. regular unleaded gasoline Jlrlc:es in the GalJim Hill wu re-elected Prmdent
lipolis area have dropped an)'Where from five Ill 15 ceniS per gallon.
of Council and I. Carson Crow,
Both Go-Mart and SuperAmerica in Gallipolis are offering gasoline
Pomeroy Attorney, wu IIPJXlinted .
at $1.23 per gallon, compared tq a regular unleaded price of $1.31 at
Village Solicitor. when Syracuse
the SuperAmerica outlet in Middleport
Village Council held lis first meetDale Ellis, w.ho operates the Sohio station in Middlepon. reported
. ing Of the year on Thursday night.
Friday morning that his regular (self serve) gasoline pnce is holding
Council also discussed the an.......... : ....dlestelldY ..8l , S).3~ aaallll!l, and other retailers in Pomeroy and Midnual budget and decided to meet
:port report sunifilr pnces.
.
·
·
again this month, at a date to be ·
'
Sugar Run Asl\land in' Pomeroy is still offering _its gasolin_e at a ·
announced. Ill work on the budgeL
competive price, &amp;spiae a rect:nt tw~ cen~ i!1CfC8SC tn COSt, while the
·
Beacon Station in Pomeroy IS selling tiS Gulf brand gasoline at , CoWJcil discussed at length the
projects that were uodertami. last
$1.32.
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year but which have not been com· The only, sign of lower pricing in, Meigs Couniy came from the .
pleted. It :was .the opinion of
./
Gas Plus outlet in Middlepm:t, where the.m~ager reported that'shecQ_unCil that no new pn;~jects will be
. expected the prices to ~ an:ttitne. Oils Plus is supplied by Burlile
undertaken until aU old projetts are
Oil, headquartered in GaUtpoliS:
.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Janu~ry 4, 1991

Copyrighted 11181

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Cloudy ionlglit. mgh Salur4ay In mid tos. Chance ol
precipitation 50 percent.

-·

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Hospital news ·

-Rutla~d

Pick-3: 004 •
Pick-4: 9476
Cards: lO.H; 4-C;
A-D; Q..S

l
p age 3

EMS has 5 runs

a.

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Iowa five ·

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Middleport
court news

past .

. ~lip

.Hills Depar~ment
. Stores .··announce
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consolidation (lnd restructuring plQn
.

Ohio I.,ttery

Buckeye8

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----~~----~---.-----~----

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lion, public nieeting on~l6. . tlon was In the forecast for the
The meeting dealt with
lems weekend In 0hlo.
created by surfacO and
· d
A high pressure system movmine sites abandoned pnor to lng .across the state Friday ·
August 1977 and popoeedjFClama- provided the state with lots o!
lion once the federal RRmment sunshine and high temperatures
mptes funds availlble.
.
expected to range from upper 20s
A long-tenn care ombudsn!an •. to the near 35.
.
pro8J8111 was initiated in Meigs
But clouds. are expected to
County as • Cc:~U:~ for begin fllterlrtg \nto the state from
Elders rural
program · the .west and southwest Friday
whic~ was IWied . in .eigbl night. There Is as"'all chance lor
southeastern Ohio Counties. The ·· snow to !all In the northwest
prop· worts to linpove the counties by Saturday motnlng.
quality oC life .Mticb older penon~·--··Overntght lows will be In the 20a.
receive in their homes, in comThe chance for preclpl~tlon
munity baled settings IIJid in nurs- will be Increasing. on Saturday.
ing homes.
·
• Rain will~ tile rule .In the south
NEW VETERANS SERVICE omca · Ma c.le, left, Is
Melp County's leW YeterDI tenke ulflcer. tHe nplacei Hugh
Meigs real ·estate 118CDI Jean with snow In the north. Warmer
nUsseU wu hired by Middleport air will slowly spread north Into
Coster who retired Ibis -~~ .tier l!oldfnlllle job for the put 12
years. Cale will be Iaiiie Veterul Service Ollc:e at U4 Mulberry
SCooneil to adminisler the . the Ohio Valley Saturday mornhitln Regionil Commission lng, which may first cause the
.Ave~ Pomeroy, tift da)'l a -k, 8:30 LJL to 4 p.m. to prOYide a
variety of aervlcel to veterau. Joanaa CGalldl will ·coatfnue to
Opponunilies' 011111 of preclpltailon to beatn as a
work In llle ~ there. Cale II a velela llal'llll ee1 ted fOil!' yens
$43,
awarded to th6 village ill miXture o! rain or snow o~ even
March
the pOsalblllly of freezing rain
In 111e U. S. Na,Y durin&amp; the early IMO'L He and bill ~fe, ADa,
reside on Skinner Ro.cl, P0111eroy.· ·
. ..
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· Continued on.page 10
'and sleet.
·

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    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34440">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34439">
              <text>January 3, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="262">
      <name>brown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="220">
      <name>hunt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
