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. '
Page-:0~-Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasanl, wv

Times-Sentinel

Why ·should .pessimism
surprise Bush, Greenspan?

I

&lt; '

·-

By JOHN CUNNII"F' .
AP Business Analyst
.· · ·
NEW YORK ·-Why should economic pessimism be so much
deeper lhan lhe b'aditional economic statistics would seem to justify?
. .
.
.
Both President Bush and Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve
chairman, have expressed lheir inability"to fully comprehend lhe
reasons·ror rampant pessimism.
"I haven't really been able to son out exactly why !here has
been this degree of pessimism," the President .said last week.
Wee.ks earlier, Greenspan referred to· concern deeper lhan he had
ever seen.
·
·
Some possibilities:
-Government and many private economists are relying on
methodology .d~vised to ·measure cyclical recessions, but not the
structural recess ton n.ow under way.
They are measuring something, perhaps accurately, but it might.
not be lhe consumer economy. Considepng the condition of their
balance sheet~ an'd their concerns earlier this year, consumers .
couldn't have led a recovery.
. .
.
The intensity ·or cyclical recessions and recoveries is measured
by month to month, quarter to qllll!'ter and year to year changes in
·gross.production and olher economic data, such as business inventories and officii\~ unemployment.
Structural recessions, far rarer, involve fundamental changes in
lhe makeup or the economy. Debt today is very high; taxes are too.
Home values have fallen. Job insecurity probab)y hasn't been higher since the Great Depression.
Confidence has been eroded by lhe financial problems at what ·
had been viewed as unshakable American institutions. Banks and
insurers have gone under. Massive layoffs have occurred in manufacturing, government, teaching.
·
Rather lhan criticizing the dark consumer mood and seeking to
dismiss it as an aberration, economists might have been more realisiic to recognize it as ·a more important ·economic factor and included
· it in their analyses.
•
·
. - "Consumers are no doubt distressed by the mixed messages
and genera! sense of incompetence emerging from Washington."
That comment was made in a speech by economist and porfolio
manager John Wright in an address Dec. 19to the New York Society of Security Analysts.
.
.
"Despite seriously adverse eeonomic trends, there was little.
se_nse of urgency in the halls or Washington until the November
1991 elections," said Wright, chairman or Wrightlnves!ors Service, Bridgeport, Conn. .
·
·.
·- Many or the profession31 economists and linancial forecasters
who bring lheir work before the public didn't see !he recession
coming, denied.it was here, said it would end quickly and prematurely declared il over.
·
A few examples:
..
On Aug . 1, the National Bureau of Economic Resear~h
announced lhat "According to the. NBER Experimental Rec~ion
Index (XRI), the pf&lt;?bability lhal the economy will be in a. recession
in December 1991 ... is I percent."
·
. · •
·on Oct. 9, Edward Yardeni, popular chief economist of C.J .
Lawrence securities, suited: "We expect that real GNP will increase
by about 2 percent per quarter from lhe fourth quarter of this. year
through the end or next year."
· .
.
.
· "On Nov. 27, he recast liis forecast. "We now expect that real
GNP growth will be somewhere between zero and minus 2 perQent
during lhe fourth quarter and the ftrSl halfof 1992.'' ,
Con(i!lence, says economist William Dunkelberg, deijn of Temple University's School of Business, "may lie·in a deeper'recessiqn
than the real econOf!IY. which grew 1.8 percent in the third qlllirter."
Maybe, it has been suggested by critics, economists should
. include more consumer input in their measwemerits.

December 29,

199~

·orange qu_ota under ·fir.e, again .
· "·

attempt by USDA, acting under a 'million cartons, out of an estimated
By JENNIFER DIXON '
,1937 law; to. ensure the orderly crop or 64.6 million canons.· ·..
AP Farm Wrlter
WA.SHINGTON --;- Shipping marketing of the .oranges, a fair'
the·so-ealled qbota, the aliiai-.ce
limits o~ this year~s California-Ari- return to "ewers and reasonably claims, wiU keep more than 2 bilzona navel orange crop could drive priced frun for consumers, Haley lion edible oranges off t~e tables Qf
up retail·prices by $250 million and said.
· U.S. consumers, and raise the price
"One side argues that con- at the grocery stoie· for those that
keep 2 billion oranges off U.S. grocery store shelves, says an alliance sumers are hun," Haley said. "The are sold by $250 million,
or farmers opposed to the market- other side says that without the
The quota is also 21 percent
order, they'd be hurt. It's a debate below the record consumpllon level
ing order.
·
But !he Mministrator of the that's raged on some 20 years. and reached during 1989,90, the
Agricultwe Department's Agricul- this is just one side taking their ·alliance said.
tural Marketing Service, Daniel Christrnastime opponunity to get
Haley, however, refused to conHaley, says this year's orange ship- some headlines." •
firm llle group's numbers, saying
The. Farmers Alliance for they .have ·been inaccurate or mis- .
ments haven't even hit lhe USDAimpo~ed ceiling, adjusted on a Improved Regulation, or FAIR, leading in the past
. .
contends that USDA has limited
weekly basis.
·
''The quotas injure both conThe marketing orjlers are an the domestic fresh sale of Califor- sumers and farmers," said' FAIR
nia-ArizoM navel orange's to 45.65 . cpordinator Jim Moody. "We are
.
.
.

all forced to pay more for scarce
oranges kept off the market by a
government-sanctioned cartel. For
the .USDA to allow such pricegouging, especially hai-mful to the
poor and lhose on fixed incomes, at
a time of economic stress simply ·
can hot be justified." ·
·· ·
Scott PattiSon, executive direc.
tor of Consumer Alen, said it is
"gross hypocrisy" for the USDA
age.!ICY to both ban oran~es from
lhe market and drive up pnces.
·
"We are giving billions in food
aid to recently liberated Commu; ·
nists while at the same time keep·
in~ food off American tables," he ·
satd.
·

0. D. Comments

Estate planning necessary·process
ments, taxes and insurance. How. ever, are .all factors considered?
Multi-generation farms are in conGALLIPOLIS -Harvest is over, stant transition. Goals or older and
workloads are lighter,, schedules younger generations are closely
are less hecuc - thts mtghl be the 1dentical, yet very different
Dad and mom see the farm as
best time or the year for family
members to have a serious discus- security. They built an operation
that has allowed them to raise a
sion.
.
Estate planning is a necessary family, and put something aside.
process. Fkrmers examin~ real Using the farm's fixed assets, they
can plan for later years. Holding on
esta~e. assets, machinery, in_~estBy KIM HARLESS
Farm Bureau

to what they have is the key. As
managers, dad and mom used their
talents and interests to custom
design their operation. They want
to remain a vital pan of the farm,
but they need to give their son or
daughter more opportunities to
assume responsibility for its success. ·
The san-or daughter sees the
farm as security. He or she plans to
build an operation lhat will provide

-Study shows median values
off 11.5 percent in 10 _years
CLEVELAND CAP) - An ll .S
percent overall drop in median
home. values in Ohio niflects the
state's·economic situation, said a
researcher who analyzed Census
Bureau data on home prices. ·
The· lower . median prices
amount· to lost equity for sellers,
but .the buyer gets a better deal,
said George C. Zeller, a researcher
_with the Council for Economic
OpP,Ortunities in Greater Cleveland.
"lf ~oulive in New Jersey and
want to live in Ohio,_you can get a
lot or good housmg for less
money," qe ·said Thursday. "It's
good.for buyers llut bad for sell-

ers."
The lost val~e "is ail inaicator
of' poor economic performance,''
said Zeller, adding that many Ohio
counties with the hi~hest poverty
·rates also had the b1ggest loss in
median home values.
Thy same factors that mean
more poverty also cause home
prices to dip, he said.
"When you have a big job loss,
there's less money circulating in
the county. People can't afford to
buy a_home, dernl!"d drops off and
the pnce declines, 'he satd.
The median value of an owneroccupied home in Ohio declined

from $71,770 in 1980 to $63,500
last year, said the council, which
analyzed census figures as part of
its annual survey on- poverty in
Ohio.
·
The only county to 'show an
increase was Delaware County, just
north of Columbus, where the
median home value jumped 9.8
percent, going from $87,366 in
1980 to $95,900 in 1990.
The biggest decline was in Marion County, which borders
Delaware County on the nor.th. The
med1an home value there dropped '
30.3 percent, falling from
in 1980 to $42,500 in

for a growing family, and put.
something aside. Using lhe farm's
fixed assets, he or she can plan for
the future. Expanding to meet new .
demands is the key. As managers; :
he or she wonders if the farm is'
equipped to meet his or her pnoduc, '
tion interests. The son or daughter .
wants the parents to be a vital part
of the operation, but he or she
needs more opportunities to assume
responsibility.
Want to complicate things? Add
more family members. What happens when the parents are in partnership with ~n uocle or more than
one child is involved in the operation? What consideration should be
given to children living off the
farm? Splitting up the operation
and letting lhose interested auempt
to buyout those off ihe farm ca~
cripple an operation as quiclcly as a
poorly constructed will.
Decisions on managing assets,
running the operation, providing
security to survi.vors and giving all
heirs equil.llble inheritance cannot
be left to guesswork. Honest and
frank communication between all
family members !needed.
The holiday season gives many
an opponunity to visit with all fam- ·
ily members. If you haven't had
lhis conversation in a while, plan to
have a fantily meeting on the matter.

·Military should b.e . ~sed to.
assist Russians, lawmaker says
WASHINGTON (AP)- An
Iqwa lawmaker Just back from
Moscow says President Bush

· Market.•.
Continued rrom D·l
Performance
While the equity market was
making some progress towards re~
covery early last week, lhc Federal
Reserves cut in the Discount Rate
Friday was greeted initially with
skepticism.
·
Following the announcement,
stocks opened moderately higher on
huge volume. Almost 100 million
shares were traded'on the New York
Stock Exchange in lhe first half how'
of trading. Volume of lhat magnitude with little gain suggested investors wanted . io "sell. on the good
news"- a phenomenon that has been
prese~t most of lhis year. Ho111ever,
as has consistently been the case lhis
ydlr, the good news was generally
followed by other good news, result. inginevcn higher stock prices. Much
· can be said about the market's performance on .Friday. When selling
p~ure abated, stocks f11'111ed and
closed nicely higher at the close.
Friday's breadlh was its best in
several weeks. We are encouraged
~Y this improvement as it suggests
that equities, at least for the time
being, have seen their lows for lhis
current "selling squall". The Dow
Utility Average moved sharply higher
on the Federal Reserves rate cut.
Given the abundance of liquidity in
the economy currently, we expect
small cap stocks to continue to pace
equity perfonmance.
[Mr .. Evans Is an Investment
Broker ror The Ohio Company in
their Gallipolis omc:e.]

should use the U.S. milita(y io
begin moving desperately needed
food assistance, including meat and
baby formula, into the Soviet
re'publics.
Rep. David R: Nagle, D-Io.wa,
said the republics don't need U.S.
wheat, which the Agriculture
Department recenily said they
would be putchasing with ,U.S.
credit guarantees. Instead, he said
Monday, lhey need meat, particularly pork; baby food, dairy products and proteins such as dry edible
beans.
"The only coarse grain they
need is corn to feed' their livestock," said Nagle, who returned
to Iowa - a major pork and com
producer- Sunday after a week in
Moscow and areas to the soulh.
Nagle said he would urge the
president to speed up the relealit of
$650 million in credit guarantees,
which are now scheduled to be·
made available in allocations of
$200 million each on Feb. 1 and
March 1, and $250 million on April
1.
The credits are part or a $1.25
billion package authorized last
month by Bush. The first $600
became operational immediately.·
The Agriculture Department said
the credits would be used to buy
$495 million in wheat and $338
million in feed grains, wilh the rest
for protein meals, soybeans, vegetable oils, hops, almonds and
freight.
Nagle said the republics requested the wrong foodstuffs and the
Bush administration failed to offer
more ready-to-eat foods such as
meats and dairy products.
Nagle suggested the United .
States use its military to move
ready-to-eat food to the Soviets,
and that the Soviets' use their military to help distribute the aid.

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....

!"-•.&gt;

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlnel~ews StaiJ
The latest ~uempt to restore the ..
Reedsville voun~ precinct has been
reJeCted · th1s lime by Republican
Secretary of Sta~ Bob Taft.
The ~nd ue vote on the issue
of restonng lhe precinct was subm1t~d to Taft for consideration followmg the December 12 meellng
of th.e Meigs County Board of
Elections. At that meeting, Board
Chauman Evelyn Clark vacated the
chau and made a motion that .the
"South Ohve precin~t be divided
and agam be Reedsvtlle and Long
Bottom precmcts."
Clark's motion was seconded by

her fellow Republican on the
board, Henry Wells, with the
board's Democrats, Mary Hunter
and. John !hie voting against the
m011on. The ue .vote was .then sent
to Taft for a deciSion. That decision
was recetyed by the board on Monday mommg.
Old issue
The re-drawn. lmes of the present "So~th Olive" precinct have
been an tssue between the board
and several Reedsville residents
s~nce the Reedsville precinct was
dtssolved in ~ebruary, ~989.
At that t1me, .poruons of the
Reedsv11le precmct were combined
with lhe Long Bottom and Olive-

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Dale precincts to form the South
Olive and North Olive precincts.
The RClC(Isville voting precinct was
one of several smaller precincts in
the cot~nty to be dissolved or combinedat that time. ·
The reasons cited for combining
the smaller precincts were cost savings, accessibility and safety and
convenience of the voting public.
Several angry residents in the
former Reedsville precinct formed
the "Committee to Restore the
Reedsville Voting Precinct" in an
attempt to reverse the board's decis1on.
In August, 1990, a tie vote identical to that or December 12 was

sent to former Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown for a decision. (A
different tie-vote was also sent to
Brown prior to lha~ concerning the
proposal of moving the South
Olive polling place to Riverview
School, which Brown rejected.)
Brown also upheld the boa~d's
February, 1989 decision.
Tart's decision
According to Taft's decisions,
the board's decision to combine
those smaller precincts in the county has already begun to pay off.
"The board's action in reducing
the number of precincts resulted in
a savings of several thousand dolIars," Taft's decision says, "allow-

ing for the upgrading of balloting
systems, as well as allowing the
board..to provide a safer, cleaner
and more accessible environment at
the remaining two precincts."
Taft's decision continues: "The
record is clear that the board, in
rendering its unanimous decision in
February or 1989, reviewed ... the
(necessary) factors of voter accessibility, costs to lhe board for main·
taining unnecessary precincts, fitness and safely or polling places, ·
goographic lllcation and lhe populati~ or nwnber. of registered voters m each precmct. There ts evtdence with respect to the costs savings achieved by the board from

President Bush begins
12-day trade mission
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE
(AP) - President Bush embarked
for Australia and Asia today on a
12-day hard-sell mission for American goods, pledging to tell Pacific
allies that "free trade is a two~way
street."
"lf we want to put people to
work here at home, we've got to
expand trade and to open markets," the president said as he
. boarded Air Force One f6r the journey to four nations.
Alth.ough initially pl~umed ll!l a
goodwtlltour, the trips miSSIOn .
was recast as the .u.s. econom!c
recovery f~ltered and' as Bush s
aJli!I:Oval raungs plunged. .
Let ~e ll!~e ve~y clear .the
f.ocu_s ~fthiS blp. My highestl!nor·
tly ts J~bs. I want.us to bu1ld .a
foundauon for susta.med economtc
growth and an .ever-mcreasmg _supply of f:?Od JObs. for Amen can
workers, Bush satd m a pre-dawn
departure statement at Andrews Air
Force Base ~uts1de Washmgton. . ·
The pres~dent contends that each
$1 btll~on m new ·exports means
20,000 m new JObs.

the consolidation plan which it
adopted."
·
.
"There is also evidence with .
respect to the problems of accessibihty, lighting and cleanliness at
Reedsville's polling place," Taft
said.
According to Taft's leu~r. Clark .
and Wells failed to present suffitienl reason to resciitd the board's
February, 1989 action.
''The board members who vOied
to rescind the prior board action
have not presented any evidence to
indicate th~ the two new .,.ecincts
are excesSively large com!NRd to
others in lhe county; lhll ihe driv·
Continued OD pli• 3

_...,

Although Bush did not name a "we'll be tallcing to them about a
particular nation, it was Clear that lot or lhings."
the major target of his remarks was
In his airpon speech, lhe presiJapan, lhe source of a $43 billion dent said he wanted to "get a firsttrade deficit.
hand glimpse of America's eco·
"There are still too many coun- nomic future, a world in which we
tries where markets are closed to . will conduct more and more busiquality American goods and ser- ness and trade with partners in
vices. There are still too many Asia, Europe and Latin Al!lerica."
countries whose consumers want
"We.seelt no special benefits,
but cannot buy American prod- nci rules stacked in our favor, just
ucts,'' he said.
open markets: trade that is free and
At the same time, the president fair," ·Bush said.
The spoon lias Its m~er's mark, a Impressed
. FACT DISCOVERED· This spoon, a seven
rectangle bearing his name, on tbe back or ~t
did praise the Bank of Japan's
The president is taking wilh him
and one-quarter Inch coined silver piece, made
handle. The spoon, wblch was located at il sale
by
W.A.
Aicher,
a
promlaent
jeweler
in
!DOve on Sunday to lower a key onthetripexecutivesof21 Ameriin Cbillicothe, eaa be seen at the M,lgs Couaty
mt.erest rate by half a ~ercentage ., can.cnmpaniea,...inclwling4Jie._~i,.~ .. ~QJ!!~rOY durin I the late 19tb ceQtury, is tbe !trst
and only evidence that shOws Aicher was a sifMuseum.
pomt.
. Three U.S. automakers. He said
versmitb as well as a jeweler and watcHmaker.
A few moments later, the pres!- lhese officials ••are ready 10 work
dent told reporters aboard A!r hard in these markets 10 blaze a
Force One th~t the ~e.ntral.bank s trail other American countries,
move to cut us offtc1al dtscount large and small, can follow."
rate from 5 J!Crcent to 4.5 percent
"My message in each country 1
was encouragmg.
. .
visit will be this: free trade is a
Some Jap~nese offtctals have two-way street," Bush said.
usual sort of jeweler's stock , House. Aicher died in the living
called for easter c~t as a way to
Bush was making the trip 10
By JULIE E. DILLON
including
"Fancy Articles or every quaners·of that establishment on
mcrease domesttc demand for Australia, Singapore, Korea and
Sentinel News Staff
1mports.
.
.
Japan amid growmg resentment in
A coined silver spoon made by description." Throughout his long Jan. 3, 1903. He is buried in Sacred
Bush, asked tf he believes that Japan_ which he will visitlast- Wenceslaus A. Aicher, a watch- and successful career, Aicher made Heart Cemetery. This building Can
the Ja)J3l1ese wo~ld tak~ other mea: 10 what Japanese officials see as an maker and jeweler who settled in lavish use or newspaper advertising now be identified as it is the only
swes m
to h1s
said. increasingly strident sales pitch for Pomeroy during March 1858, has and adhered "unflmchingly ," so he building on Main Street in
been placed in the archives of lhe claimed, ·~o my old maxim or Fair Pomeroy with the inscriptiori"Jew'•
u.s. goods.
Dealing." The language of his eler" on the top ornamentation or
Japan's Deputy Foreign Minis- Meigs .County Pioneer and Histori- advertisements
suggests lhat all or lhe facade.
ter Koji Watanabe on Sunday cal Society at.the·Meigs County his goods were American
and manThe coined silver fiddle-back
denied last week's reports that his Museum. The spoon was located at ufactured elsewhere or were
Eurospoon
which has been donated to
government was considering plans a sale in Chillicothe.
pean
imports,
his
label
or
watchthe
museum
is or significance as it
The book, Orna1e and Simple
to limit exports of autos and auto
maker
notwithstanding.
is
the
first
and
only evidence that
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and
parts.
Aicher's
establishment
was
Aicher
was
a
silversmith
as well as
"! categorically deny that is Fashion, 1840-1880, by Catherine
a
jeweler
and
watchmaker.
The
located
between
the
former
Gibson
under consideration," Watanabe McQuaid Steiner and Schuyler
spoon
also
bears
lhe
maker's
marie
House
on
Front
Street
and
what
said on NBC-TV's "Meet the Eaton Cone, states Aicher orfered became known as the Remington an impressed rectangle on the back
for sale at his establishment the
Press.''
or the handle with Aicher's name.

Coined silver spoon made by Pomeroy
watchmaker placed in Meigs County Museum

Texas River climbs toward record levels
in Ri chmond. Up to ISO ~eople
01ight have to evacuate, he srud. .
"Luckily, there's no more ram
expected, That will help us a whole
lot," he said.
About 20 miles downstream
from Richmond, ncar Rosharon,
the river late Sunday stood at 50.8
feet, breaking the record or 50}
feet set in 1968. The crest wasn t

RICHMOND, Texas (AP) Residents carried feed to their cattle in row boats, pulled up carpets
and put furniture up on sawhorses
as the muddy, rain-swollen Brazos
River climbed toward its highest
levels in two decades today.

. Licenses expire Tuesday

OVER 750 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU- CHECK YOUR LOCAL
DIRECTORY OR YELLOW PAGES FOR THE STORE NEAREST YOU/

A Mulllmodla Inc. New~p~~per

Latest effort to restore voting precinCt rejected

--Local briefs-__,..,

Welt~

cto,r tonlt!ht. Low .... 30.

Tuesday, partly sunny. High
near40

1 Section, 1o Pag• 25 a.to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, MQnday, -December 30, 1991

LEAVING FOR AUSTRALIA- President Bush left ror Australia
and Asia today on a 12-day bard-sell mission for American goods.
Although Initially planned as a go¢wUI tour, the mission was recast
as a trade mission whe1 the U.S. economic recovery raltered and
Bush's approval ratlags plunged. (AP LaserPboto)

'134 PER DENTURE!

•J

Vol. 42, No. 1.66
Copyrighted 1991

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Southern ·
defeated by .
Logan Elm

SMIIIC

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

DENTURES START AT

Ohio Lottery

Middlepon businesses are reminded that all licenses for coinoperated amusement machines expire on Tuesday, Dec. 31, and
must be renewed.
The license 'fees are $50 for each jukebox, $50 each for lhe ftrst
. three coin-operated machines and $25 each for each machine after
the flfSt three.
Licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office daily between 8
a.m. and.4 p.m.
·
Continued on page 3

The river was expected to crest
in Richmond today at about 50 feet,
or 2 feet above flood level, sending
more mwky water gushing into lhe
town. and pastwes about 20 miles
southwest of Houston.
Flooding caused by days of
heavy rain lhat began last week has
killed at least 15 people across
Texas, swamped farmland,
drowned livestock and caused millions or dollars in damage.
In Simonton, where the river
crested Sunday morning, about 200
homes were washed by water some up to 2 feet The river is normally a half-mile away. Evacuees
stayed with relatives and friends
rather than go to county shelters.
Some residents along the Brazos
carried feed in row boats and
motorboats to cattle stranded on
hills.

expected there until late today.
In rural southern Fort Bend
County, Melissa and Kirt Ha s·
sclmcicr and four of their friends
traveled by boat to check on their
house. The couple's 10 acres had
become a knee-deep swamp, and
the water was inches from their
house.
Flooding continued in Liberty

County east or Houston, affecting
about 3,500 people living near the
Trinity River.
Officials in Wharton, about I00
miles to the west, said the nowreceding Colorado River caused an
estimated $4 million damage to the
city and $4 million to the county.
About 30 homes and two businesses were heavily damaged.

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Some residents pulled·up thd
carpets as .the water advance6. '
Williams and his wife, Cathy, had
stacked llleir belongings on tables
and sawhotses before !her, fled to a
convenience store, but sull expect·
ed up to $30,000 in damage.
Like many in the area, they have
no flood insurance.
Mel Speed, Fort Bend County
emergency coordinator, said the
river stood at 48.8 feet late Sunday

FLOODED NATIVITY - A aativily scene Is
submerged In the nood water or tbe rain-swollen

Brazos River oa a fum a ear Missouri City,
Texas, Sunday moraing. (AP LuerPhoto)

�l:ommentary

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel ·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio r,
Monday, December 30, 1991 ·:':
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE 111108-MASON AREA

@!&amp;MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Preaa, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Pu~lisber Association. ·
LETTERS OF OPINION m welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters m subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone nUJ1\ber. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not penonalities.

The post-workout fat burn
By IRA DREYFUSS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Work out hard and you will get your
reward: even as you rest, you keep burning extra calories,
researchers say.
Exercise stokes your metabolic fire, raising the rate at which
your body demands and uses energy. Althoug~ rest quickly banks
the fire, the embers glow, and the afterburn makes you use more
energy than you would if you hadn't exercised, the experts say.
The post-workout calorie loss is nowhere near as great as the one
that results during aerobic exercise, but it's virtually something for
nothing from your body, said researcher Kris E. Berg.
"It's like a Chrisunas present," said Berg, professor and director
of the exercise physiology laboratory at the University of Nebraska,
Omaha.
You get a bigger present if you work harder, Berg said. A runner
bums more calories after exercise than does a walker, even if the
walker spends twice as long exercising, he said, based on his study
of six male competitive distance' runners.
"Exercise intensity is more important than exercise duration,"
said the report by Berg and his colleagues in The Journal of Applied
Sport Science Research.
The athletes ran and briskly walked on a treadmiU in 20- and 40minute periods. The researchers checked their energy expenditures
by seeing how mueh oxygen they used during the workouts and for
tip to 20 minutes afterward.
The harder workouts consistently burned more energy, Berg
said. The recovery" period after walking used about ten calories
more than a person would ordinarily use at rest, but the recovery
after running about doubled tltat, he said.
Berg concedes tltat ten or 20 calories isn't much. But otlter studies have found that the higher metabolic rate continues for at least
an hour, so the Iiule exua burn may mean more over longer periods
of time, he said. . .
Other expert! suggest that you keep your expectations reined in.
While you're doing fairly vigorous exercise, you can bum 7-10
calories per minute, sai.d Dr. Neil Ruderman, professor of medicine
and director of the diabetes unit, Boston University Medical Center,
University Hospital.
The post-exercise bum isn't big but can be helpful, he said: "It's
little small dribs and drabs that could just add up."
.
SUlrting exercisers won't work hard enough to make a rest-period metabolic·raoo worth worrying about, said Dr. Xavier Pi-Sunyer,
a professor of medicine at ·columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New Yorl: City.
·
"Whatever they do, they're better off than sitting around, but I
' don't think they get any extra dividend except (or a very small
one," he said. "During the exercise, they are expending more calo·
ries, and that's the impOrtant part of it."
Pi-Sunyer encourages peQple to get into exercise slowly and
comfortably.
·
And Berg advises against laking on too much too soon by dashing into an intense exercise program as a way to capitalize on your
metabolic weight control system. Overestimating your capacity
could lead you into an overuse injury, and might even trigger an
otherwise latent heart condition, he said. ,

Berry's World
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Query into Angolan plane crash·stymied
WASHINGTON - The crash
of a C-130 cargo pl;lne in Angola
last summer has launched Charles
and Clara Hendricks of Mena,
Ark., on a mysterious search for the
truth.
The couple's 34-year-old son
Chuck, an airplane mechanic, was
on the plane when it went down
June 10, shortly after takeoff from
Luanda International Airport. The
crash killed 10 people. Three of
them were Americans, including
Chuck Hendricks and the nephew
of Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa.
1-(endricks had told his parents
he was"flying famine relief mis·
sions for the Angolan government
and the United Nations. But when
the Hendrickses got official notification of his death, they were told
that tlie plane was bound for a diamond mine in Angola and that it
was loaded with whiskey,
cigarettes and other provisions.
That wasn't the only puzzle for
the Hendrickses to solve. An eyewitness said the plane's left wing
exploded shortly after the takeoff.
And when the Hendrickses began
asking around, they found that the
plane was owned by someone

.alleged to have ties to the Central
Intelligence Agency - a man
alleged at one time to have ferried
anns to Iran as part of the Iran-con·
tea arms-for-hostages fwsco.
Six months after the crash, there
has been no fonnal accident investigation. Wby the plane went down
and what was really on board
remain a mystery.
·
The Hendnckses have sent
queries to President Bush, Vice
President Quayle, the National
Transportation Safety Board and
three members of Congress. The
only response they have received
from their government is that the
United States cannot investigate a
plane crash in a country with which
it has no diplomatic relations.
The National Transporiation
Safety Board told the Hendrickses
to contact Lockheed, which manufactured the plane, and encourage
the company to do its own investigation of the crash. They did, but a
Lockheed crash investigator reported back that he had been told by his
superiors that he could not look
into the incident.
The Hendrickses and the families of the other American victims,

hired attorneys and welcomed the
help of a private eye who has tried
to trace the plane's roots. It was
owned by CZX Productions Inc., a
Delaware firm ·. It was leased to
Carib Air Transport Corp. of the
West Indies and Europe. Unitrann
International of Frankfurt, Germany; hired the crew. Majus Avia. tion of Colorado was another companphat commu~icated with the .
famtlies of the vtcllms.
.
The familiar name that emerges
from this list is Dietrich Reinhardt,
a partner in CZX and the reputed
head of Unltran11. He received
notori'ety during the Iran-contra
hearings when it was alleged that
an airline he owned, St. Lucia Airways, carried shipments of HAWK
missiles to Iran in 1985. During
those hearings, St. Lucia Airways
was referred to as a "CIA proprietary" airline. The airline was also
alleged to have .run arms to
Angolan "freedom fighters" on a
mission for the CIA.
The C-130 that crashed in
Angola had.an expired tail number
that was once assigned to St. Lucia
Airways, according to British press
reports.

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Today in history
By The AsSociated Press
Today is Monday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1991. There is one day
left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec:. 30, 1922, Vladimir I. Lenin proclaimed the establishment of
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, five years after the Bolsheviks
overtlln=w a provisional government that had replaced Czar Nicholas II.
On this dale:
· In 1853, ihe United States bought some 45,000 sq~U~Jt miles of land
from Mexico in 8 deal that became Tmown as the Gadsden Purchase.
1111865, author Rudyard Kipling was born in Bcimbay, India.
·
In 1894,111fb&amp;isl Amelia Jenks Bloomer died. She had gained notoriet,y for wearing in .public a short skin and baggy uousers that became
known as "bloomen."
·
In 19Cl3, about 600 people died when fire broke out at the Iroquois
Theater in Chit8gO.
.
In I911, Sun Y81·sen was elected the first president of the Republic of
China after the fall of the Chinese dynasties.

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.----Local briefs... - _continued_from page 1

EMS answers seven weekend calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medieal Services answered
seven calls for assistance over the weekend.
·
On Saturday at 12:56 p.m., Middleport unit went to State Route
554 for an auto accident Charles Athey was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At2:42 p.m., Scipio, Pomeroy, and Rutland units went
to King Ridge Road for a fll\l 81 the Frank King residence. At 3:58
p.m., Rutland unit went to Bailey Run Road for Geraldine Parsons,
who went to Holzer Medical Center. At 11:37 p.m., Rutland unit
went to McGinniss Road. Hazei Williams went to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.
.
On Sunday at 3:05 p.m., Middleport unit went to Third Avenue.
David Hardwick was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 6:50
p.m., Middleport unit werll to Story's Run Road. Georgie Fraley
was takCI)_,IO.Holzer. At 8:45 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Union
AvemleTor Jason Carpenter, who was taken to Pleasant VaUey.

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Christmas tree pickup announced
Racine village will have a Christmas tree pickup on Friday. Residents are asked to put their trees at the curb for pickup by the village uuck.

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When I moved to San Francisco be occupied for two years by huna little over two years ago, I knew dreds of bums, until he could build
exactly why I was doing it. The them a suitable shelter (which
charms of this city - its world· many of them then refused to move
renowned "beauty, its matchless into) . The Board of Supervisors
weather, its cosmpolitanism, its fO"rbade any City employee to coopOriental -ambiance, its humane erate with the U.S. ·Immigration
scale - had beckoned to me for a and Naturalization Service, lest
third of a century, ever since I ftrst some hapless refugee from fascist
saw it from the top of Nob Hill on El Salvador be arrested and deporta summer morning in 1956.
ed - the result being, of course,
But I also took a private vow that the city became a haven for
not to peoome entangled in San illegal aliens with criminal records
Francisco 's municipal politics. from all over America. Only the
During the past 30 years, a succes· impassioned pleas of local busision of liberal mayors and Boards nessmen deterred the board from
of Supervisors have done their best officially proclaiming San Francisto turn this lovely city into a per- . co a "City of Refuge" for homomanent exhibition of what senti· sexuals.
mental pennissiveness can do to a
It is easy to overdo the point; it
town .
almost cries out for caricature.
It didn't take long for the word Most San Franciscans are perfectly
to gel around, and soon a steady rational and well-behaved, and the
stream of bums and flakes from city is surrounded by a "Bay area"
less tolerant communities all over of suburban towns and surpassing
America was pouring into San natural beauty. But in the TenderFrancisco.
loin and along Market Street the rot
The liberals. were delighted. The was evident, and was clearly
mayor allowed City Hali "Piaza to spreading. Bums (now, of course,

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Racine water bills going up .

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Racine residents will ·notice an increase ·in their' water bills this
guarter due to an increase in rates established by the Board of Pubhe Affairs.
Jane Beegle, clerk, will be at the mayor's office, Jan. 2-15, from
9 a.m. to I p.m. to coUect the bills :which will be mailed out sometime this week.

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Perle Anderson
Perle K. Anderson, a former
Meigs County resident, died Nov.
26, 1991 at the Newark Healthcare
Center.
Born on May 31, 1913 at Long
Bottom he was the son of the late
John and Chloe Curtis Anderson.
He was retired from OwensCorning where he was a sheet
metal worker. He also served in the
U. S. Navy during World War II
and was a member of the United
Methodist Church, the Owens·
Corning 25 year Club, and the
GBBA Union.
Surviving are his wife, Margaret
M. Haluczk Anderson, one son,
Jerry Anderson of Glenford; one
daughter, Mrs. Lewis (Shirley)
Ault of Newark; three brothers,
Kermit Anderson and Leo Anderson, both of Alexandria, Ohio, and

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Stocks
Am Ele Power ................. .33 1/4

Ashland. Oil ...................... 28 3/4
AT&amp;T................................39 1/8
Bank One .......................... 50 7/8
Bob Evans ........................ 25 1/8
Charming Shop..................21 3/4
City Holding .................... .16 1/4
Federal Mogul ................... 14 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................50
5/8Key Centurion .............. 14"1/2
Lands' End ........................ 29 1!2
Limited Inc. ...................... 27 5/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 21 3/4
Rax Restaurant .................. 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 36 1!2
Shoney's Inc......................21
Star Bank ..............,........... .35 1/2
Wendy lnt'1........................9 1/2
Worthington Ind................21 3~
Stock reports art the 10:30 a.m.
quo/IS provided by Blunt, Ellis
a11d Loewl of Gallipolis.

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The "out of pocket" cests tbat
Medicare beneficiaries pay for
Medicare coverage are scheduled
to increase as of Jan. L
Ed Peter,~on, ~ocial Security
manager in Athens which serves .
Meigs County, reported that the
basic medical insurance ·premium,
sometimes called "Part B", 'will
increase by $1.90- from $29.90
10 $31.80. However, the $100
Medicare medical insurance
deductible will remain unchanged,
he said.

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The amount the .patient pays for
the Medicare hospital insurance,
sometimes ·called ~Part A",
deductible and coinsurance.
amounts will incJeUC as follows:
-from $628 to $642 for the ftrst
60 days of inpatient care in a benefit period;
.
·from $157 to $163 a day for the
61St through the 90th day of inpatient care;
-from $314 to $326 a day for the
60 hospital reserve days;
·from $78.50 to $81.50 for the

-Meigs announcementsNew Year's Eve service
Square Dance Club will hold a
The Faith FuU Gospel Church in dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at
Long Bottom will have a New the Henderson Community Center
Year's Eve service on Tuesday . in Henderson, W.Va. Keith Rip·
beginning ·at 9 p.m. There wmbe peto will be the caller and the
special singing and fellowshtp. dance is open t all western style
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub- square dancers:
lie.
Lodge to meet
Pomona Grange to meet
The Middleport Masonic Lodge
"The Meigs County Pomona will meet Jan. 7 at 7:30 p.m. This
Grange will meet Friday at the. wiU be a regular business meeting.
Rock Springs Grange Hall at 7:30 All master masons are urged 10
p.m. Star Grange will serve auend.
refreshments.
Services announced
VFW Auxiliary to meet
There will be a combined watch
The Tuppers Plains. VFW Post night service on Tuesday 81 7:30
No. 9053 Ladi~s Auxiliary will p.m. at the Middleport Wesleyan
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Bible Holiness on Pearl Street with
post home. Officers will be Calvary Pilgrim from Rutland.
installed.
Racine Legion to meet
Trustees to meet
The Racine American Legion
The Scipip Township Trustees Post 602 will meet Friday at 7:30
will meet Thursday to conduct an p.m. at the post home.
organizal,ional meeting for 1992.
Trustees to meet
Chester Trustees to meet
The Orange Township Trustees
The Chester Township Trustees will meet in special session on
wiU hold an organizational meeting Wednesday at 3 p.m. to being the
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the new year. The meeting will be held
town hall.
at the ho'me of the clerk, Susan
Dance to be held
Pullins.
The Gallia Twirlers Western

Home sales up 5.4
percent in November
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
lowest mortgage rates in more than
14 years helped boost home sales
5.4 percent in November, -the sec·
ond consecutive monthly increase
and the biggest in six months, a
uade group said today.
The National Association of
Realtors said the ~ain pushed sales
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate
of 3.33 million homes and i( foilowed a 1.3 percent~ in October.
The November increase was the
sharpest since home sales jumped
6.9 percent in May. Sales had fall·
en in July. August and September
as potential buyers became nervous

·Lottery numbers

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Ollly.........................................-.211 C..to

Sabacribfn Ml doairi,. to pay \he coni·
er tnl)' rend&amp; in ad..na. diftd &amp;o The
GaUioolk Dolly Tribane ,.. • 1.8 ,.. 12
monll. bulo. Cndil will be ti- conter

OUR SALE STABS J NUARY 2
DON'T·MISS TOMORROW'S
PAPER FOR DETAILS

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No oubocrip\tono by matt pmnll\od In
...... when home carrier semee ,.

avaflable.

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SHOE PLACE
992·5627

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21st through the tOOth day of care
in a skilled nursing facility. ·
The monthly Medicare hospital
insurance premium for people who
are not insured under the Social
Security or the Railroad Retirement
Act increases from $177 to $192.
The beneficiary share of the cost
of Medicare is figured each year
based on the increases in the cost
of the program during the year
before. People with limited income
may qualify for help with payment
of these costs under the Qualified
Medicare Jjeneficiary program
available from their State welfare
or public assisrance agencies.
For more information residents
may contact the Social Security
office at its toll-free number, 1800·772·1213.
The Athens office is located at
221 1/2 North Columbus Ave., and
the p[hone number there is 5924448.

Latest...

and clouda shrouded the Mie&amp;ill'ippi Valley and the Gulf Cl*t.lllleL

The second of two Pacific
storms reached Souihem Califomil
on Sunday, dumping up to 6 int:ilel
of snow in the Sierra N:evada. Up
to 8 inches of rain soaked partS 01
California, which is in its fifth year
of drought
nie heavy rain was blamed for
. the death of one person Sat~y in
acrash on a freeway in Irvine. fi.
homeless man found wet and
IIIICOOscious in a Los Angeles sub- .
urb on Saturday died of exposUre..
authorities said.
·· · ,
. , .The Interstate 5 section caBed
the Grapevine, 30 miles no!Jh of :
Los Angeles, was shut down twice
Sunday becanse of snow and winds •
gusting to 60 mph.
A new storm expected to roll
into Southern California on Ne.,..
Year's Day might rain on.the Tour·
narnent of Roses Parade, laSt held
in the rain in 1955.
Temperatures were exoec&amp;ed in
the teens in Maine, in the upper
Northeast arid Minnesota; ·in lho
30s in the Ohio Valley, Idaho, ~
Montana; in the 40s in the Grea
Plains; in the 50s in northern
Texas, San Francisco, and the
South; in the 60s in Southern Cali·
fomia, Houston and Georgia; an4
in the 70s in Miami.
The high for the nation Sunday
was 78 degrees in the Florida cities
of Ft. Lauderdale Beach, Ft. Myers.
Hollywood, Homestead, Mianu and
Tavernier.

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Continued from page 1
FIFTY YEAR S f&lt;Ci(J i
. ·
ing distances to the North and
Dec. 30
South Olive precincts are excessive
compared to other driving distances
in the county; that the consolida·
tion of three precincts into two
U.S. troops fall back to the
precincts has resulted in a decline
final defensive line in front of
in voter participation in elections or
thai there have been any serious
the Bataan Peninsula in the
problems with respect 10 the four.
Philippines. The Japanese
elections that have been held in the
push down both sides of
new precincts," Taft said. "FurtherMalaya near Kampar on the
more, no .evidence has been prewest
and Kuantan in the east.
sented that the board in their origi·
The Soviets recapture Tula on
nat determination of precincts acted
the central fro nt.
in an unreasonable, arbitrary or
inappropriate way.''
"In fact." Taft commented, "the Soorce: '"2194 Days of war; W. H. Smith
consolidation plan was adopted Publishers inc.; "World Almanac Book ol Wortd
after considerable analysis and on· WaJ 11," Bison Books Corp., 1981
site visits by the staff of the Board
of Elections."
Tall sympathetic
Taft did not ignore the concerns
Veterans Memorial
of the residents of Reedsville in his
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS decision, stating that "I am sympathetic with the concerns of the resi· Edgar Brewer, Middleport; Jane
dents of,tbe Reedsville area who Evans, Vinton; and Richard Hat·
would obviously prefer to vote field, Dexter.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES closer to home. •
"Unfortunately," Taft continued, None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
"it is not financiaUy possible to ere·
ate a separate precinct for every Mary Grueser, Pomeroy.
~U NDAY ADMISSION,S
communitr or neighborhood that
None.
would like one, especiaUy at a time
of dwindling resources at both stare
and local government levels."
"A difficult decision was made
unanimously bY the Meigs County
Board of Elections and 111ave been
given no sound basis for overturning that decision," Taft said.
Taft's decision: "Since no new
evidence has been submitted to jus·
tify overturning the board's original decision .. .I vote "no" on the
motion to rescind the board 's
action with respect to the precincts
in Olive Township."
When making the most recent
motion to rescind the board· s
action in the Reedsville precinct,
Clark commented tltat she "hoped
it would be the last time that the
issue would come up." That comment was also made the first time
the issue resurfaced.
television 3
When fonner Secretary of State
Brown's decision was received in
Watch Ohio lottery'~ nighrly
1990. Board of Elections Director
· drawings and Saturday's
Jane Frymyer stated that the
Reedsville group's only recourse
C:osh Explosion shows on
was "litigation", and there is no
WSAZ·lV Ch . 3, 7:29PM
evidence at this time that such liti(sl!lrting in lhe New Yeor!
gation will be filed.

Hospital news

about the faltering economy.
Don:as T. Helfan~ president of
the realtors group, said the lower
rates were helping to spur sales,
particularly among first-time home
buyen.
·
"We are seeing a steady flow of
buyers, mainly in the entry·level
category," she said. "Those sales
are keeping housing out of the dolRichard Anderson of Bradford,
drums.''
Fla.; one sister, Sara Thompson of
However, she said, "move-up
Escondid9, California; seven
buyers"
-those who own a home
grandchildren, and one great·
but would like a better one - are
grandson. He was preceded in
stiU "sitting tight until the economdeath by one brother and three sistees.
ic picture improves.''
I
Fixed-rate mortgages, as meaLocal relatives include four
sured by the Federal Home Loan
cousins, Perry Curtis of Reedsville,
Mortgage Corp., averaged 8. 71
Mrs. Jo~n (Marjorie) Brew_er of .
percent in November, down from
Reedsville, Denver Curus of
8.84
percent in October artd the
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hobart (lnzy)
CLEVELAND (AP} - Here are
Newell of Chester: Bunal was m Saturday night's Ohio Louery lowest since Marth 1977.
The median price of an existing
the Newark Memonal Gardens.
selections:
home
was $97,800 last month ,
Super Lotto
• har d Fl owers
R1c
down
1.4
percent from October and
5-23-27-28·3144
the
fourth
consecutive monthly
Richard Wes~y ~wers, 63, of
(rive·, twenty·three , twenty ·
drop.
The
median
is the midpain~
Hilton Head, S. C., died Saturday seven twenty-eight, thirty-one,
with
half
the
homes
selling for
at Island Hospi~ at Hilton Head., fony-foyr)
· ·
more and half for less.
Arrangements wtll be announced
The jackpot is $8 million.
The uade association cited two
by Fisher Funeral Home, Middle· Kicker
reasons for the drop in the median.
port.
9·7-2-0-7-3
Currently,
sales are suongest in the
·
(nine, seven, two, zero, seven,
South
and
Midwest, where home
three)
prices
are
lower
than the West and
Pick 3 Numbers
Hospital news
Northeast
Also,
the fiCSt·time buy6-8-3
ers
being
spurred
by low mortgage
(six, eight, three)
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Pick
rates generally buyer cheaper
4 Numbers
Discharges Dec. 27 - Lisa
homes than move-up·buyers.
8-5-4-5
Bloomer, Betty Decoy, Helen Jenk·
(cigh~ five, four, five)
ins, Elizabeth Landers, Steven Cards
The Dally Sentinel
Lane, Patricia Roush and N. Gail
5 (five) of Heans
Sisson.
(USPS 111-110)
A (ace) of Clubs
Births Dec. 27 - Mr. and Mrs.
Pabli•hecl:
neJ')' aRemoon, Monday
5 (five) of Diamonds
&amp;hroqh Friday, tD Com 81., Poooeroy.
Howard Stewart, daughter, Point
9 (nine) of Spades
Vhio by tho Ohio Valley Publiahinr
Pleasant, W.Va.
Company/MuiUmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Dlscba~ges Dec. 28 - Mrs.
Ohio 46T68, I'll. 11112·21116. Second cl.uo
poal.lp pold at~. Ohio.
Charles Booth and daughter,
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Tiffany Green, Benjamin Gray,
Member: Tho Aaoocia\od Pnu, Inland
446 4524
. . ~ ..
D1ily Preu AllodaUon and U1e Ohio
Norma Harless, Stanley Jones, VirNew•p•,-er AAociation, Nalional
ginia Lester, Mrs. 1ohn Pasquale
AciYeriillnJ RepreHDiati.-e, Bnnham
and daughter, and Opal Stanley.
Nowopapor Sale•.~, ~33 Third Avenue,
Now YQit. NowYUIIIIOOIT.
Births Dec. 28- Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Conley, daughter, Vinton.
POSTMASTER: Send- cha.... to
Tho Daily Sentinel , ttl Court 91.,
Mr. and Mrs. David Stump, daughPomeroy, Ollto 16768.
ter, Cheshire.
8UII8CIIPTION BATIS
· Discharges Dec. 19 - Mary
B7 c.m.r or Molar
· LeaCh, Mrs. Logan and daughter,
Ono Weoii............ _. ........................ Jl.60
Cody Pullins, Samuel Roush, Mrs.
Ono M,..lh....................................... :.l6.96
Ono Yoar............................. :... _ .... JAUO
Howard Stewart and daughter, and
II!IOU: COPY
Melburn Tackett.
·
PIUCI

--Area deaths.--

· ·-

and gro'!'ing ever wider. If we are
.}
going to keep up in this fastpaced
••••
world, we need more Carolinas, covered why: .Bush is secretly planDakotas and Virginias.
ning to campaign on the food issue. - ••'
Everywhere y(,lu look, pundits He will remind Americans of his . '
have been re-examining Dan courageous stand against broccoli. ' "•
•
Quayle's brain and pronouncing He will co~e out foursquare
him smarter than previously against cabbage, celery, kohlrabi,
''
thought. Writing in the Columbia rutabagas and turnips. And in the
'
Journalism Review, a Seattle Post· final week of the campaign, he will
lntelligencer
correspondent execute the Peanut Surprise: He
observed ' that Quayle had been will reveal precisely how many
,,
"elevated abruptly from buffoon to tons of peanuts, peanut brittle and .,.
serious news obJect." Columnist peanut butter he put on the shelvC,'i
Charles Krautharnmer allowed that when he raised the limits on peanut
'
,".
Quayle was not a dolt because he imports last July. Tha~ he reasons,
appointed bright staffers and "dolts will put the Democrats in a very -' "~
are not known for surrounding · stick~ comer. ·
~
.. ,-. 1,'
themselves with highly intelligent
T e Maharishi Mahesh· Yogi, •' ,,
staff."
·
·
founder of the Transcendental '~-..,' '
For the sake of argument, the SF Meditation movement, recently got
is willing to acceftt the judgment of his fill of politicians and bureau- . :•l
~j
the Los Ange es T1mesi Dan crats and moved his national office
Quayle is a "mediocre public from Washington to Iowa . The ."\. . ~·.
speaker" and hard! y "an intellec-. TMers had targeted Washington as ' .
tual," but he is "not stupid." a ciLy that could benefit from the : •.1.
In 1936, the United ·AuiO Workers union staged its tirst "sit-down" However, presidents and vice pres- · . "Maharishi effect." This is the ::..;
strike, at the Fisher Body Plant No. 1 in
Mich.
idents are like doctors and airplane peace that comes over a
when
In 1944, King Oeorge II of Greece
aimed a regency to rule his pilots: They are supposed to be a masses of meditators ocus their
I
country, virtually renouncing the throqe.
·
whole lot smarter than the rest of efforts and transmit their healing
· In 1947, King MichaeiJofRomania agreed to abdicate, but charged he us. Not stupid is not good enough. thoughts through .a "field of con•'
was being forced off the throoe by CommuniSlll. ·
The SF is hanging on to its "Keep Sciousness." With a few millions
In 1972, the United States halted ils beavy bombing of North Vietnam. Georgt·Healthy" T-shirt. .
in government money, they rea·
••
In 1978, Ohio State University fired Woody Hayes as its football
George Bush's approval ratings soned, they might even be able to
'
I
coach, one day after Hayes punched Clemson University player Charlie have slipped below 50 percent, but put an end to war.
I
\
Bauman during the Gator Bowl after Bauman intercepted an Ohio pass.
he professes not to be worried. "I
The SF concludes Washi~ton
l
Ten rears ago: The Soviet news agency Tass condemned President . can't live or die by the polls," he . was an arena in which the uru
•I
'
Reagan s decision to impose economic sanctions against Moscow in told C-SPAN's Brian Lamb.
Bull met the Political Bull head on
• '·
response to martial Jew in Poland, saying th~~ were ''doomed to failure.' •
The SF's investigators have dis· and the Politieal Bull won.
\
·' '•

_&lt;., .

Sunny

Fair on Wednesday. A chance of
snow north and rain or snow South
Thursday and Friday. llighs in the
upper 30s to the low 40s Wednesday, the 30s to low 40s Thursday
and the 30s Friday. Lows from the
mid-20s to mid-30s. .

South·Centnl Ohio
Tonigh~ becoming mostly clear.
Low 25-30. Tuesday, partly sunny.
High around 40.
Extended forecast
Wednesday through Friday:

San Francisco is .moving. to the right

I

Ice

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

'''

,,

1

Showeto T-11torms Rain Flurriar · Soow

• . ,.r...,

~

•

Now Yoar's Day in Obio.
7:53a.m.
Arouad tile Ditloa .
Some rain or mow ia poaaible .
A
Pacific
storm that dumped
on Thursday and Friday, but the
mild~ will persill
rain and snow on drought-stricken .
The recon1 hllb tempm&amp;ure for California weakened today, with
this dale 11 the Colwnbus weather scattered showen in Southern Cali·
Slation waa 63 'CiegRCS in 1964. The fomia.
Rains dampened ·much O"f the .
record low waa 1~ below ~ro in
1880.
Northeast. Snow fell in ups\llte
Sunset IOniJht will be a~ 5:15 New Yo.rlt and freezing nun and
p.in. S_lllll'i!e on Tuellday will be at drizzle chilled the northern tip of
New England and MinnesOta. Fog

Medicare costs going up Jan. 1
,,

M

'

late Sunday briefly providec\8 Win·
tty look, but the National Weather
Service said tluit would disappeir
quickly as temperatures climbed
into the upper 30s and 40s. ·
Bright sunshine is forecast for
. '

•I Columbus I 39•1

-~

.

Oh1o will greet tho ilow year
with continued unseaaonably fair

IND.

...

I

.

. 17 Tbe AaiOdlted l'nll

IMansfield I 38"1•

Reinhardt, who reportedly lives ••
in Florida, has consistently denied ;
any involvement with CIA covert :
activities, but will not elaborate
beyond that, except to say that the·
purpose of the flights in q~estiori in
the 1980s was classified. Rep. Weldon told us that the CIA conftrmed
Reinhardt had done some work for '
them in the past, but emphatically . •'
denied .that he was doing any CIA :
mi ssions when the plane went ;
down in Angola.
,
The parents of the crash victims '
· have tried without success to reach ' ~:
Reinhardt. They have had limited ,.
contact with one of his business
associates, attorney Morris Turkel- • ·'
son, of Lakewood, Calif. Turkelson
did not return our phone calls.
· •
"Nobody can find Reinhardt. . -,
Turkelson won't talk to us ," -Charles Hendricks told our associ·
ate Jim Lynch. Hendricks said he
would like to put the companies
"out of business." But more than
that, he said he just wants to know ,
the truth about what happened to ·...
his son.

MINI-EDITORIAL - The
breakup of the Soviet Union happened so quickly that the adminis·
tration was caught without a policy.
President Bush has been directing
diplomatic relations with the disintegrating Soviet republics by the
scat of his pants. He has tried to
adjust to day-to-day upheavals, but
· he has usually been one step
behind. There is one .issue, above .
all others, that Bush can't afford to
mishandle. That's keeping the
Soviet nuclear arsenal in responsi- ·
ble hands.

J

'

weather, fmcaaten IBid.
Snow in 10me pans of the state

Weldon, whose nephew was an ·
Air Force pilot when he quit to
work for Reinhardt, will ask for a
congressional hearing on the crash.
Among the things Weldon wants to
know is why a former CIA operative was allowed to recruit a pilot
from the Air Force for questionable
overseas work.
The State Department recently
established an informal office in
Angola, and the Hendrickses hope
the new outpost will help them find
some answers.

Despite our image as hardboiled counties are thinking of joining the
think-tankers, we at the Spear movement. This disturbs U.S. Rep.
Foundation are human, too, and it Peter DeFazio, D·Ore., who told
warms us immensely as we face the the San Francisco Examiner:
cruel winter to know that people "Once this starts, "where does .it
care.
stop? You look at the BalkanilaTake this note from Phil Pas- tion of the Soviet Union, and you
toret of Willowick, Ohio, for exam- ask yourself, can it happen here1''
pie: "Your Spear Foundation is the
SF's research shows there are
sole think tank in the Republic that similar situations in all parts of the
is fueled properly. Most think tanks · country. The two peninsulas of
are powered with platitudes, poop- Michigan have iiTeconcilable difery and portentous piffle from folk ferences, as do the Eastern and
with 27 degrees and not enou~h · Westefn Shores of Maryland, ·
sense 10 zip up after going toidy.'
northern and southern Florida,
Thanks, Phil. You inspired us as three distinct sections of Louisiana
we prepared our semi-annual report and so on.
to supporters, abstracts of which
The SF believes such separa·
follow:
tionist movements are healthy and,
Resi~ents of northern C_alifomia indeed, encourages them so as to
are talking hotly of secessiOn from keep the United States on a par
the southern pan of the state, and with the former Soviet Union. The
citizens of some southern Oregon Breakaway Republic Gap is serious

Sunny weather forecast New Year's Day

t,.IICH.

'

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

euphemistically called "the home. less") proliferated, and garbage littered the sidewalks.
occurred at all. What's more, JorThe awful part was that the con- dar :s no Jesse Helms. As the San
dition seemed permanent. The city Francisco Examiner (which, liberal
of San Francisco is a small but spe· rag that it is. backed Agne s)
cial segment of the Bay area, hcav· remarked on the morning after the
ily populated by transient Bohemi- election, " Jordan fancies himself a
ans of all sorts who, having little moderate. In any other American
else to do, take a lively interest in city he would be, but here he is a
local politics. The politicians were conservative.''
simply respondihg, as politicians
That, however, is the point, and
will, to the felt pressures. It is the town's liberal establishment is
rather as if New York City consist- in no mood to kid itse)f. As th"c
ed solely of Greenwich Village and Examiner went on tO say, Jordan's
. the West Side.
•
victory "overturned the quarterSo it is uuly great news that in a century hold of liberal San Francisrun-off election Dec. 10 the good co politics on City Hall." Getting
people of San Francisco rose up rid of the bums and cleaning up the
and threw out the incumbent streets will be no easy task mayor, a former social worker indeed, it will probably prove only
named Art Agnos, and replaced part!¥ achievable - but the great
him with Frank Jordan, who until thing is that Cit~ Hall will no
recently was the city's police chief. longer be on the s1de of the bums.
Jordan's victory, by 52 percent Over the long haul; thqt is bound to
to 48 percent, wasn't overwhelm· matter.
ing; but as Samuel Johnson said of
So rejoice along with me. San
the woman who preached a ser- Francisco's ''_golden sun" is shinmon, the wonder was · that it , ing again.

•' .

Aecu·Wcat1Jer8 forecut for

'
'

::

.The Daily Sentinel-Pig~ ;~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~eaday,J)ec.31

I

What of succession, Quayle and TM?

"I've got an Idea, chief! Just for fun - how
about calling a MEETING?"

:Mindily,,December 30, 1991

,60

.40

WE'RE MOVING TO .
V\ISAZ

Sumttfling (jootf's JU®ys Coofjng J'tt

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT
Lacllld on Rt. 33 beside Malon Exxon and Mason Motll, Mason, WV
Sundoy lhru Thullday, 10 .,..g pm; Friday &amp; Salurday , 101111-10 pm

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Monday Friduy. 11 a.m . to 3 p .m .

MONDAY ·Grilled Cheese, F1ench Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUESDAY • Cheeseburger, French Fries, Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY Cabbage Rolls, Choice of Potatoe •
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
• THURSDAY ·Beall$ &amp;Cornbread, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FBIQAY. Chopped Steak, Choice of Potatoe,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUaDAT a: Tll11UDAT, CHILDRII'f UNDIR 12 ltAT FRU
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UIIIT 1 CHILD Pill ADULT
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..

,

'\

�. • . --

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...... -

· - ··

··· · · ~ · ~ - - --·

-

···....- - - -···- .--·

-~-- -~-· - ····- ·--·- .. --··---- -..

·-· -&lt;,•··

'

The Daily Sentinel

;Sports

Waha a beats Sh:arplesto
capture tourn~ment crown -

Monday, Dec!!mber 30, 1991
Pag~

. J&gt;.yger Creek downs
Hannan for third

of the final 10 points of the quarter
to trail by four with eight minutes
remaining.
In. fourth period action both ·
teams traded baskets back and forth
with the Sharples lead over the
White Falcons ranging from a mere
one point to a four point swing.

By Gary Clark

TAKJNG CONTROL is the objective of the moment for South·
ern's Roy Lee Bailey (30), who is chased by two Logan Elm players
while trying to go upcourt with the ball during s-aturday night's
game in Chillicothe, which the Braves won 70-66.

PARTING mE DEFENSE may not be the same as parting the
Red Sea, but this Southern eager (holding the ball) splits the hip-to·
hip defense of Logan Elm players Brilin Miller (left) and Jeremy
Neff during Saturday night's tournament game in Chillicothe,
which Logan Elm won 70-66.

GOING ALOFT - Houston quarterback
Warren Moon (l) goes aloft as New York Jet
cornerback Tony Stargell (45) goes airborne in

an attempt to block Moon's pass during Sunday's AFC wild-card game in Houston, which
the ,Oilers won 17-10. (AP)

RIMW ARD BOUND - Southern's Billy Davis (24) sends his
shot toward the basket while Logan Elm's Jdf Bradbury (left) and
Jeremy Neff (22) surround him In Saturday night's game at the OU·
Chillicothe campus, which the Braves won 70-66.
.

Logan Elm beats Southern 70-66 in holiday tournament
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
CHILLICOTHE - Outscoring
Southern's Tornadoes 6-3 at the
foul line in the last 1:50 was all
Ken! Wolfe's Lo$an Elm Braves
needed to prevail m a 70-66 deci ·
sian in the fourth game of the
McDonald's Holiday Prep Classic,
played at Ohio University's ChiUi·
cothe branch campus Saturday
night.
Logan Elm is now 4-2 overall,
while Southern is 3-2 overall.
Southern's Jeremy Roush,
despite missing ponions of the ftrst
half with foul trouble, had a career
game with 21 points, i_ricluding several timely three-pointers in the
second half that kept Southern in
the hunt. Roush was 5·8 from three
point range the second half (5-13
overall), including one 27-rooter
when the game was still on the tine.
Roush was named the Southern
MVP of the tourney.
Michael Evans also had several
clutch baskets to net 12, along with
Roy Lee Bailey who did the same
and had ftve rebounds.
Logan Elm's Brian Miller paved
the way for his club with 25 points
and 10 rebounds, while Andy
Hulse netted 24, including a gamehigh 15 rebounds, and two slam'
dunks. Jeff Bradbury, a player with
local connections, had seven.
Hulse was named the Logan
Elm player of the ¥81l)e.
: In the beginnmg, Logan Elm
grabbed the opening tip, but neither
team scored on its first possession.
On the second time around, howev~r. Andy Hulse left no doubt that
the score was 2-0, when he opened
lhe .game with a two-handed slam
~unk at the 7:10 mark.
.' Roy Lee Bailey countered with
bn inside jumper for a 2-2 score,
but then a senes of turnovers and
missed shots plagued the action.
f:lrn scored next, but not until the

;5VAC cage standings
'

(OveraU)
Team
W L
Oak HiU ............. .3 I
:Southem ............. J 2
Eastern ................2 3
·North Gallia ........2 4
KygerCreek ........ l 3
Symmes VaUey .. .I 3
Hannan Trace ..... .! 4
:Southwestern .......O 4

PF
262
347
315
313
208
203
284
210

(Conference)
:Southern ........... .. J 0 232
;Oak Hill ..............2 I 207
EaStern ................2 I 172
NorthGallia ........2 I 170
·Symmes Valley :..1 I 117
Hannan Trace ...... ! 2 195
Kyger Creek ........o 2 95
Southwestem .......O 3 155
TOTALS .......... 11 11 1343

PA
236

302

372
401
221
266
'381
292
161
192
188
180
124
197
108
193
1343

(Reserves • SVAC only)
team
W l
PF
Southem ..............3 0 168
Symmes Valley ...2 0 84
Eastern ................2 . I 126
Kyger Creek ....... .! I 70
Oak Hill ............. .I 2 133
Hannan Trace ..... .! 2 liS
North Gallia ....... .! 2 ll2
Southwestern .......O 3 96
TOTALS .......... ll 11 907

PA
114
81
109
73

133
149
128
120
907

Saturday's scores
Logan Elm.70, Southern 66
Fairland 100, Hannan Trace 40
Kyger Creek 61, Hannan 33
Tbls week's games
Friday - Eastern at Oak Hill;
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek;
North Gallia at Southwestern;
Symmes Vllley at Southern
Saturda)' - GaDia Academy at
Southern; South Webster at Oak
HiD
I

4:46 mark when Bradbury canned a
three-pointer and two-pointer consecutively to put Logan Elm ahead
7-2
Many miscues dominated the
next 2:30 until Scott Lisle made it
7-4 at the 2:34 mark. With 50 seconds left, Miller scored on an
inbounds play to cap the scoring at
9-4.
1 Evidence of the cold first-half
shooting lay in the stat sheets,
where SHS was 8·22 in the first
half and Elm was 7-20.
The fecond quarter action was
much smoother with Elm · leading
2-4 points for most of the frame.
The big tum-around came near the
three minute mark when Scott Lisle
hit a three pointer from the left
wing and was fouled. He sealed the
free throw auempt for the fourpoint play and gave SHS its first
lead, 22-20.
After Hulse tied the score, 22·
22, Roush put SHS on top by two.
Elm's Jay Sharp nailed his lone
three-pointer of the night and Hulse
followed up with a two-pointer for
a 27·241ead.
Southern's press resulted in
seven unanswered points right
before half in which SHS went up
31-27 as Mark Allen capped the
scoring with a three pointer at the
buzzer.
In the second half, Logan Elm
intensified its attack, straying away
from its deliberated offense to a
more aggressive game.
Wolfe explained, "We wanted to
take advantage of our height and
our speed. We took the break when
we had it and offensively we wanted to attack the paint. We wanted
to power the ball inside and we
were able to do that successfully."
That strategy resulted in a 15-19
shooting spree from the field the
second half, all of which either
came off the break or the short
power play from the paint. Elm had
four starter's at 6-3. but lacked a
bona fide point guard. Elm's Brian
Miller was 10-12 from the field and
5-8 from the line.
Wolfe explained his guard situation. ''Three weeks ago we convert·
. ed one of our big men (Hulse) to
point guard. He's been a lifelong

post man, but we needed to do
something to establish an offense.
He did a great job tonight for only
three weeks on the job."
On goals by Roush and Bailey,
Southern took its biggest lead of
the night at 35-27 to open the sec·
ond half.
Elm patiently took the break
when it came and methodically
worked the ball inside, where it
outsCored SHS 14-6to lake a42-41
lead.
Bailey gave SHS a 4342 advantage, but that was Southern's last
lead. Miller hit an inside.jumper
and Hulse, the 6-3 .convened pomt·
guard had another break away dunk
for a 464 3 advantage.

The frame ended with Logan
Elm ahead 4845.
In the finale Southern trailed by
as much as 60-52 at the 3:56 mark,
but they did not give up. Roush and
Evans put on a shooting clinic that
would make.any coach proud, but
losing Bailey (to fouls), the center
of its offense midway throu~h the
frame, hun the Tornadoes' mside
game.
An Evans three poiner at the
3:39 mark made it 60-55, then two
Lisle free throws put SHS to within
two at 60-57. Elm went ahead 6457, but Roush buried two threepointers to make it a one point
game64-63.
Southern then opted to put Elin

Quarter totals ·
Southern .............. .4 27 14 21 = 66
Logan Elm ...........9 21 18 22 = 70
LOGAN ELM (70) - Jay
Sharp 0·1·0=3, Jeff Bradbury 2-1·
0= 7, Jeremy Neff 2·0·1=5. Brian
Miller 10-0·5=25, Andy Hulse 5·2·
8=24. Joel Duvall 3-0-0=6.
TOTALS- 22·4·14:70
SOUTHERN (66) - Mark
Allen 1-1-0=5, Jeremy Roush 3·5·
0=21, Michael Evans 1-3- 1=12,
Scott Lisle -1-1·3=8, Billy Davis 00-2=2, Roy Lee Bailey 5·0·2=12,
Russell Singleton 3-0·0=6.
TOTALS- 14-10·8=66

Ohio State beats American
University 96.;70 Saturday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ohio State players say the team's
victory over American University
helps make up for the seventhranked Buckeyes' only loss this
season.
•'I wanted to play today to make
up for the loss last week," senior
forward Chris lent said after the
96-70 win over American Sunday.
"Our schedule will be getting
harder and now we are getting
ready for the battle ahead."
The Buckeyes lost 79·77 in
overtime Dec. 21 against Southern
Cal. Big Ten Conference play will
begin after Thursday's game at
home against Penn State. The con·
ference opener will be Jan . 7
against Michigan State.
Junior guard Jim Jackson, who
led the Buckeyes with 29 points,
also was thinking about the loss.
" We learned from our play in
California that we need to take lots
of shots and make the defense
chase us," Jackson said. " And
today's game gave us lots of confidence. "
Jackson made 12 of his 15 field·
goal attempts against American (18). That included four of five from
three-point range.
"Jimmy didn't used to shoot

enough. Now he does," Ohio State
coach Randy Ayers said after the
Buckeyes improved to 7-1. "He
has worked on his perimeter shot,
and when he has h1s outside shot
going he and the team will play
well."
.
In the first half, Jackson made
all eight of his field-goal tries,
including four three-point baskets.
The Buckeyes led 52-26 at the half.
Ohio State made nine of II
three-point baskets in the ftrSt half.
That told Amedcan University
coach Chris Knoche that his defensive plan was lacking.
' '!told our players to force Ohio
State to take outside shots. I guess
that was a mistake," he said.
"Ohio State looked weak against a
zone defense previously. But today
they drilled three-pointer even
when they were covered.'~
Knoche praised the Buckeyes
and Jackson.
"Ohio State is the best team
we've played.... and Jim Jackson is
the best all-around player in the
countrY,," Knoche said:
The Buckeyes had three players
in double figures besides Jackson.
Jamaal Brown scored 12, and lent
and Alex Davis had 10 apiece.
Craig Sedmak led the Eagles'
scoring with 22 points. Brian
Gilgeous scored 16, which left him
three short of I ,000 points for his
career, and Byron Hawkins added
12.
last lead, 63-62. Moments later,
Ayers pulled his starters after
Slater hit a tum-around jump shot Ohio State took a 71-38 lead with
to give Wyoming a 64-63 edge.
10 minutes lef~
With 1:49 lef~ Alexander hit the
American was down 13· 10 with
two three throws.
15:49 left in the first half. Over the
The tournament's most valuable next seven minutes Ohio State
player, Lewis Geter, hit a shot to went on a 19·7 scoring run, with
puU Ohio University within one at Jackson conrributing eight points.
66-65 with 25 seconds left
Later in the half Ohio State,
That set the stage for Alexan- leading 25-15, went on a 23-7 run.
der's last-second heroics.
Alex Davis hit the Buckeyes' ninth
" Mo played under control and three-pointer of the first half with
sacrificed htmself for the good of 3: 13lef~ making the score 48-22.
the team," Dees said.
The Buclceyes' 10 three-pointers
The Wyoming coach said _the fell one short of the school record,
critical difference in the game was which was set in 1988 against
the Cowboys' man·to·man defense Florida.
in the game's closing moments.
American outrebounded the
Breaux led the scoring for Buckeyes 37-35. The Eagles turned
Wyoming with 21 points. Alexan· the ball over 24 times, Ohio State
der added 12 points and also con- 22 times.
·
tributed 10 assists. Slater was held
to only 10 points.
.Lewis led the scoring ror Ohio
University with 23 points. Aloi fin·
ished with 14 points.
In addition to Lewis, Slater,
Breaux, Steve Spurlock of
Appalachian State and Dan Delgar·
do of Boston University were
named to the all-tournament team.
Appalachian State of Boone,
N.C., defeated Boston University
90-84 in the consolation game earlier in the evening.

Wyoming defeats ou·70-65
CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - Mau·
rice Alexander hit two three throws
with nine seconds left in ovenime
play, stole the ball and made a bas·
ket to seal a 70-65 win for
Wyoming over Ohio University in
the Cowboy Shootout champi·
onship game Saturday.
Wyoming (8-2) has won six of
the mne Cowboy Shootout tournaments. The victory also marked
Cowboy head coach Benny Dees'
!50th win.
Wyoming and Ohio un-iversity
(7·3) tied the game several times in
regulation play. The score was 2929 at the half. Dan Alai then hit a
pair of baskets to open the lead for
Ohio University . The Bobcats
would lead by as many as five
points in the second half, 58-53.
With 40 seconds remaining in
the game, Tim Breaux banked a
jump shot to puU the Cowboys one
point behind the Bobcats, 59·58.
Ohio University's Chad Gill
was fouled with 27 seconds left in
regulation play, but he missed the
first of his two shots.
Wyoming's Reginald Sl&lt;tter was
fouled with 12 seconds left and hit
one of his two shots to tie the game
59-59 at the end of regular session.
With 2:11 left in overtime, Gill
hit two shots from the free-throw
line to move the Bobcats to their

at the line, and despite missing
three first shots of the bonus, still
managed a 6-11 effon to secure the
lead and the win, 70-66.
Southern hit 14-37 for 38 per·
cent, 10-28 three-pointers, and was
8-11 at the tine. Elm was 22-39, 2·
8, and 14-26.
Elm had a 35-31 rebound edge,
with Hulse leading with 15. Single·
ton had II for Southern.
. SHS had eight steals (Roush 2),
14 turnovers and 28 fouls. Elm had
eight steals, 20 turnovers and 20
fouls.

CELEBRATE PICKOFF - Dallas Cowboys
linebackers Mickey Pruitt (52) and Ken Norton
. (51) celebrate after an ioterceplion in the closing

Oilers, Cowboys notch~ victories
in NFL wild-card games Sunday

DRIVES TO THE HOOP - Ohio State's Rickey Dudley (40)
drives past American University's Craig Sednak in Saturday
night's game in Columbus, which the Buckeyes won 96·70. (AP)

THANK YOU FOR
YOUR PATRONAGE IN ·
1991. WE LOOK
FORWARD TO SERVING
YOU IN 1992.
HOURS: TUESDAY, DEC •• 31
8:00 A.M.·6:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1
10:00 A.M.•2:00 P.M.

WAJITADS
All . . . .

11TH BAIIAIIS

minutes of Sunday's NFC wild-card game
against the host Chicago Bears, which the Cow·
boyw won 17-13. (AP)

Konn•h Mc~IJII, II.PII . c:tt.l•llllll&amp; II ,
llonllld llonnln!J. II.PII.
Mon. llvu lat. 1:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m .•
Sundor 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS
E. M1in

·

. Frlencly llr~tce
-

'tilt

PH. tt2~·28111 \I
~m•ay.

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
Haven't we done this before?
Well, yes. On Oct. 6 and Oct. 7 and OcL 27 and
Nov. 10.
The second round of the NFL playoffs will feature
nothing but rematches. That was decided on the
weekend when -Kansas City, Houston, Atlanta and
Dallas were winners.
Next Saturday, the Atlanta Falcons (11·6) will be
at Washington (14-2), where they were routed 56-17
on Nov. 10. The late game has Denver (12-4) entertaining Houston, whicn romped past the Broncos 4214 at the Astrodome on Oct. 6.
Sunday's early game will have the Bills (13-3) at
home against the Kansas City Chiefs (11-6), who
ripped Buffalo 33-6 on Oct. 7. And the final game
will send Dallas (12·5) to Detroit, where it fell 34-10
on Oct 27.
The first-round results saw Atlanta win at New
Orleans 27-20 and Dallas. win at Chicago 17-13 in
the NFC. The AFC games were won by the home
teams, with Houston taking the New Yoik Jets 17-10
and Kansas City beating the ~os Angeles Raiders 10-

6.

.

Cowboysl7, Bears 13 - The Cowboys parlayed
a fumble and a blocked punt by rookie Darrick
Brownlow into 10 points in the ftrst half. A 75-yard
drive in the second half ended with Steve Beuerlein
completing a three-yard TD pass to Jay Novacek.
Emmitt Smith, the NFL's leading rusher, had 105
yards.
But it was the defense that sparkled in Dallas'
sixth straight victory. Three times the Bears were
inside the IO.yard line and all they could come away
with was a 19·yard field goal by Kevin Butler.
"We find ways to win," safety Bill Bates of Dal-

Senior forward John . Johnson's
. three point goal at the buzzer ripped through the nets to cap an un·
· betievable comebeP: elTon by However, with 2:27 remaining
Coach Lewis HaD's Wabama White Early canned a three point goal to
Falcons Saturday night as the Bend put the Stags in front by six at 52Area Cagers overcame an early IS 40 and it appeared that the Logan
point delicit to score a 54-52 win County cagers were on their way to
over previously unbeaten Sharples a second straight WHS hotiday
in the. finals of the Wahama :tournament crown. Johnson then
Christmas holiday basketball connected from the right wing to
make it 52-48 with 1:59 to play
tournament
The host White Falcons over- before Danny Hudson drilled a
came wbat appeared to be a dis- three pointer from the comer to pull
astrous beginning in the title game the Falcons to within a pointat52- · WAHAMA (54)
. :
.
of the four team two day tourney 51 with :33 seconds remaininl.
coon 20; v~ 10; Jolmlon
after spotting the Stags an early 10·
Sharples held !pe ball for some 9 H dso0 6 H ff 4 "'- 3
; u 2.
'
u
' ....,.
'
0 advantage that quickly ballooned :21 seconds before Mike VanMatre Zuspan
·
to a IS point 29-14 deficit with came up with a steal with :12 SHARPLES (52)
...
2:26 remaining in the second seconds to play that gave the )Vhite
Early 11, Kish 10; Oarncr 10,
. quarter. Wabama began its FaIcons one Iast chance at the O•·'
Picket10, Janell 9, Wlllattan 2.
miraculous finish when senior point fensive· end of the coon. Wahama s
b Q
guard Craig Coon, who would later called time-out at the :08, ~nd
core y uartet 2 , 3 4 Tot
be named the tournaments most junchn'e to set up its final offensive Sharples
14 ·IS 12 11 52
valuable player, ignited a WHS scheme and·promptly put the ball in Wahama
5 15 11 11 . 54 .
rally that saw the Bend Area team Coon's hands for the fiital shot.
score the final six points of the first Coon drove for the basket but was . · Kyger Creek 61, HIUIIIIII33 .
Kyger Creek picked \IP its fmt.
half and 10 of the first 14 points cut off by a host of stage .defenders
scored once third quarter play . and the senior playmuer·dished a win of the season.and took third
resumed to .get back and con ten· pass to a wide open 'Johnson off I@ place by pounding Hannan'S Wildleft side. Johnson's arcing shot cats 61 ·33 in ,the consolation game
tion.
,
"We had trouble during the early touched nothing but the bottom of of th~ Wa)lama .Tournament Sllur· ·
going with our defensiye the net for three points as the clock day mght m Mason, W.Va. :, ·
Sophomore forward Cbris,Crace
alignments plus our shots wouldn't flashed the final second , giving
Wahama
a
thrilling
54-52
come
paced
the Bobcats, 1-3, w1th _15
fall for us and they took advantage
from
behind
victory
over
the
pomts
a~d
had 10 rebounds. Sen,ior
of it to obtain a big lead," Wabama
' forwar~ Phtl Bradbury chalked ~
veteran cage mentor Lew Hall said. heavily favored Stags.
"Once we started moving to. the : · "Believe it or not our final ptar 13 potnts _and led the team m ·
right spots where we needed to be worked exactly•the way we drew It reboun_ds wt~ 12. . . .
. Crrug. Tolliver led the Wtldcats
we created a lot or steals and tur·. up during our 'final time out,• Hall
novers and our shooting began to said. "Craig- did an excellenJ job of wtth e1ght pomts.
KC wtll host Hannan Trace on
come around which allowed us . penetrating and when he saw hedidn't
have
a
good
shot
he
kicked
Fnday,Jan.
3. .
..
back in the game," added Hall.
the
ball
out
to
John
(Johnson)
who
Quart~r·totals
_
Wahama trailed throughout the
entire game until Johnson's last drilled the game winner for us. You Hannan ................. S 9 6 13- 33
second game winning three point could see the cOncentration and Kyger Creek .........9 26 12 14 = 61.
-KYGER CREEK (61) · goal as Sharpies took advanta~e of confidence on his (Johnson's) face
the Bend Area teams inexpencnce when he went up for the shot. I'm Crace 5-1-2=15; Bradb~ry 2·1·
for numerous uncontested lay ups. so proud of th~e kids, they all con· 6=13; Covey 4-1-0=11; Villanuev~
The stags biggest lead ·of the even- tributed when they,got their chance 2-.2·0=10; Davtdson 3-0-0=6,
ing was a 15 point 29-'14 advantage to pi:rform during both nights of the Kmgery 1-04=6. TOTALS -17·
·.
5-12~ 1
.
with 2:26 to play in the opening tournament.Coon~
the
White
Falcon
of·
F•e!d
goals-:-22·59
(%)
·
half but from that point on the
fense
wtth
20
points
while
Mike
Three-pointers5-16
(%)
game belonged to, the White Fal·
Free throws -12-13 (%)
cons. Sophomore forward Mike VanMatre totaled 10 makers, John
Rebounds- 42 (Bradbun I~)
:VanMatre sandwiched a pair or Johnson nine and Danny Hudson
goals around, a bucke\ by Coon to six tallies. Carl King contributed a · Block~d shots - 4 (by Dav•d·
'
being Wahama back to within nine big fOurth quarter three wint goal .. son) .
for
Wahama
while
Doug
Huff
.
AssiSts12
(Vtllanueva
6) .
at the half.
dropped
in
four
points
and
John
Steals
16
(Bradb~
&amp;
V1l·
A I04 run by the White Falcons
Zuspan
two
..
Sharpleshad
four
lanueva
4
each)
to open the thin! quarter cut the
Turnovers- 20
. .
deficit to just three points. at 33-30 scorers in double figures in Frank
Early
with
II
while
Joey
Pickell,
HANNAN
(33)
·
C.
Tolhver
but 'Sharples weathered this par·
ticular rally with a three point goal James Kish, and Paul Garner added 4-0·0=8; Coole 2-0.1=5; Hagley 2·
by Frank Early and a basket by 10 each with Danny Jarrell drop· 0-1=5; Robenson 2_~; Ball().
0- 3=3, Cobb 0;-0-2=2, Mc&lt;:J~
Joey Pickett to go back on top by ping in nine tallies.
.
Kyger
Creek
captured
the
con·
0.2=2; R. Toll1ver ().().2=2, ~iley
eight at 38-30 at the midway point
solation
~tB~~~e
with
a
61-29
win
1-0-0=2. TOTALS -11-8-1-1=33
in the stanza. Wahama scored seven
Free throws -11-25 (44%)

().

Scoreboat. d
Major col.lege
basketball scores

las' first postseason victory since 1982 . ."Our whole
defense has character.''
Falcons 27, Saints 20 -The Falcons, who
hadn't won a playoff game since 1978, rode the ileroics of local product Michael Haynes, who scored on
TD catches of 61 and 20 yards. The 61 -yardcr, on
which he beat his friend, Saints cornerback Milton
Mack, won it with 2:41 to go.
.
"I grew up a Saints fan," Haynes said. " When I
was a Saints fan, they weren't doing well. They
didn't make the playoffs.''
They are out again and the Falcons head to RFK
Stadium to meet the NFL's most successful team this
year, the Redskins. The Falcons were missing quarterback Chris Miller, tackle Mike Kenn and comerback Deion Sanders; all injured. in that first game.
Oilers 17, Jets 10 -Houston advanced to the
second round for the third time in five years as Ernest
Givins caught two touchdown passes from Warren
Moon and the defense held the Jets without any
points twice inside the Oilers' 10 and once at the 22.
The Oilers also had three interceptions, two by
Bubba McDowell. His pickoff at the Houston 3 in the
third period was the most critical.
"This was a big hurdle for us to get over ... guys
were really down and out this week ," Moon said.
But they .survived, primarily thanks to big plays
by the defense.
Chiefs 10, Raiders 6- The Chiefs, at home for a
playoff game for the first time since Christmas Day
1971, when they lost to Miami in the longest game
ever, intercepted Todd Marinovich four times, two
by veteran Deroo Cherry.
"It feels great," Cherry said. "There is nothing
more special than playing a playoff game in front of
yourfans."
But now the Chiefs will play before the rabid Bills
fans. And against a team looking to get even.

Cent. Florida 96, Alcorn St. 18

54

Seton HalliOO, Florida A&amp;.M 59

Midwest

••

"He just exploded," said Panland head coach Rick Adelman .
"That's what you call turning it on.
I think he wanted to rest the fourth
period." .
'
But Drexler praised Portland's
reserves for outsCoring the Miami
bench 59-35.
"That's the reason we won the
game," said Drexler, who finished ·
with 22 points to go with five
rebounds, nine assists and three
steals.
. In o~her NBA games Sunday
mght, ll was San Antonio 96,
Orlando 87 and Milwaukee 110,
Houston 100.
· The Blazers shot a season-high
.568 from the field. They had shot
.625 through three quarters and

,,.

.

Tournaments
Flntround
N.,Cuolina St. 93. Chaminade 89
W. Kentucky 82, Prubyterian 64

Dr. PepperCiusic

'

)

P~c Shawnae II. Valley View 7i
Richmond Hu. 6S, Bloomfield S5
Ruacll, Ky. 70. /r.cklon S2
Skywe 64, BamemUe S3
SLC:ubinville Cath. 51, Edi~Ut S. 54
Sylvania Southview 70, Sylvanian
North•icw 61
Tol. Rocm60, Defianoc S6
Tol. Scou 52, Wt.aLCtrillc S. SO
Tol. St. I lim'• 69, Tol. Ccrnt1l S7
Tol. WoodwlJd 19, Tol. Ctvillian II
Tftllwood-Maditon 19, ,P.y. Dunbar
80
Troy 4), Miami E. 42
Tucanwu CaLh. 40, Jeweu-SciO 38
Tualaw 5l,CI'- Nonhwca' SO
VoUey Fool' 65, Sironpvilld9
VIR 8UtttJ 13, Xlftllll...akOLa61
W. Bn.nch 79, Salem 68 .
Wayne Tnoc S4, Coovoy Ctutvi~:w
ll
Wet~ Brown 61, Ripley SO
Wutlake S6, Bay Villaae 55
Woodrnote64, Old Fort 48
Youna. Unulinc 7\, Youna. Wilson

Boys
Alcundcr 60, Athens 51

Colsnc 48, Marilt44

Alliance 74, N. C1ntM Hoover 40
Amhent 64, Rocky Ri'ICJ' SO
Arcmum ~5. Vcn•ilh::s40
Austintown-Fitch 61 , 11 ubbard 5S
Avon 73, Obcdin 55
Avon Lake67, Olmsted FalJJ 46
Aymville49, ContinenLI\43

12. Dartmouth 5)

• Mu1lc Cllylnvltallonal
Flnt rou nd

Holy Crou 38, Penn 86
VandcrbllliOO, New Hampahire 67

Be.~chwood 18. E. Canton 56
BcnerCr=k 55, Da y. Carroll 37
Blanc:hester 47, Grcent.vicw 4]
Bow!ins Orccn 67, Libcn.y Cerncr 59

Palm Btac:h Cludc
Champlonahlp
George Wuhingl0ll78 , Miami 64

Thlrdplau
Penn SL 71, Marahall64
blnbow Clu•lt

Semlnnall
Alabama 78, Villlnou 76
Wa~hington St63, H1w1ii 61

Manley's Trash
Service wlU not
run Wednesday,
Jan. 1, 199Z but
wiUrun
Wednesday's route

on Thursday, Jan.
Zt 199Z.
614-99:&amp;-3194

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
ll 1Second Sty Pomerot
YOUR INDEPENDEN
AGJNTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

\I

Paintlville , Riven ide 79, l.Ue Ca\h,

63

Akron N. 74, Walsh Jesu.it 70

Firat round

pushed it up to .650 at one point
before the scramble at the end of
the game dropped the average.
Miami shot only .370 for the
game. Kevin Edwards led the Heat
with 20 points and center Rony
Seikaly bad 15.
Spurs 96, Magic 87
The Orlando Magic 's losing
streak reached an NBA season-high
14 as David Robinson had 25
points and 16 rebounds for the
Spurs. The game was tied 79 · 79
with 4:33 left, but San Antonio
went on an 8-0 run to seal the road
win.
Rod Strickland added 16 points
and II assists for San Antonio,
while Nick Anderson matched his
career-high with 31 points

Onawa Hill&amp; 56, Oib1Mburj"49
OsJord Talawanda ICX), Newpon. '76

Ohio high school
basketball scores

MarbtCiwlc
Niagua

N. Olmacd 76, Fairview 53
Onn.. 63, God"oeld ""· 59

,.

ChamplonJhip·
Tn.·O!.Itllnooga 81; Auburn ?S
Third place
Aluka·Anchongc 87, E. Kamu:lty
.

· Newatll: Calh .. 66. We.l.IJ.Ill'l4l

' TIIMI· DIIpalch lnviLallooal
Champlc.,"hlp
Richmond 80, Virginia 74
Consolallon bnckcl
Old Dom inion 67 , Va . Common·
wealth 66

Ch-.mlnade Alohlnvllltlonal

B~ ly n

CJayton Northmont 72, Milmisbu11

58

Sun Carn\~ 11 auslt
Champi01Uhlp
Tc us·El Puo 92, Tcu• 81
Third place.
Ch:msm 63, N. lowa '60

Qhlo St. ''' Amtrlun U. 70

83

-llocon

Sug-.r Bowl Claulc
Champlonahlp
New Orl~n• 78, Pittsburgh 77, OT
Third plate
James Majlia;m 75, M.Wisaippi 67 ·

florida St 81, Ouquune 73
Ocoraelown 91 , bclhunc-Coolr:man

·'

Cin. o.t llilb 76,
6l
Cin. Pu~ Marian 6!, GahaMa 53
Cin . Winton Wooda 6l, Cin. Ma.'·
lklllhy sa

Consolation IH-aclcet
Frt.~no St 74 , B~adley 5l
Wilc:oNin 9]. ~IVY 58

South

Portland, San Antonio, Milwaukee capture
wins in abbreviated NBA schedule Sunday
PORTLAND, Ore . (AP) Portland Trail Blazers forward
Alaa Abdelnaby says the best way
to beat the Miami Heat is to keep
the pressure building.
·
"We never let up," Abdelnaby
said. "We were about as consistent
as .we could have been for 48 minutes, which is nice to see."
Abdelnaby came off the bench
to score 10 points and grab six
rebounds in a 129-96 Portland victory over the Heat Sunday night in
a game lilat featured the Blazers'
reserves and a third-quarter star
performance by Clyde Drexler.
Drexler scored 14 points on 6for-9 shooting, had six assists, roue
rebouncls and two steals in the period.

over HaM!n 10 ~m third pllce
honors in the four 1e1111 toar1leY
field.
.
Joining Coon on the ill-tOUmament team were Phil Blldbury ol
Kyga- Creek; Craig Tolliver of
Hannan, Lennie Wortman, Daany
Janell and F11¥1k Early of Siw1Jiel;
and John Johnson and Danny kud·
sonofWahama.
The White Falcons.Will I'CIIIID to
action next Friday n~ht whell die
Bc:nd Area team puts 111.2-1 1991· ·
!n-5eason record on the line Ill Clay
County while Saturday nlahllllldl .
the Bend Area team ldtedelcd 10
visit Duval for a Sod 1Q11 Alh·
letic Conference encounter wW1 die
Yellow Jackets.

62

Girls
Akron Hobin 61 , Barbenon 28

(N.Y.) Xavierian 62, Kct·

A.mhc.nt 71, Rocky ltiYU l6

!Wng A liu 41
Caldwcll10, Beallsville 63
Cin. Aik11111 64, Warren (Ky.) CenLnl

Avon 42, Oberlin ll
BiJ watn.,47. t....doa 41

lS

BrooClyn ~7, Fairview Patk. J7
Cin. Anderson 90, New Richmond S6

OUR SALE STARTS JANUARY 2
DON'T MISS TOMORROW'S
PAPER FOR DETAILS
~

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, QHIO

JOHN WADE,

992·5627

D., INC.

•EAR, lOSE &amp; tlll0l1•WIIIY
•HEAIIIIAIDS • HIU &amp; IICI SUIIIIY
•-··•a.- Cue Ftr Ye1r
ltlklrt &amp; UMWA ........ Aue,11t11

SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE,.PT. PlEASANT

�.

-

.

'rhe .Daily .Sentinel\

.• q

·

=======i==.C=al=e=n=da=r~·== The·facts ·: and.nothing
but violence at
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. rums
must be rtctlved well In advance
111 QJSUrt publication In the calendar.

MONDAY
OAR WIN - The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold the.ir
end-of-year meeting on Monday at
7 p.m. at the !own hall.

on

watch services on Tuesday from 7
p.m. to midnight. There will be
several speakers. Rev. Paul Taylor
invites the public.

'
The Lottridge

LOITRJDGE .Community Center will host a New
·Year's Eve pany on Tuesday from
8 ,lJ.m. to midnight. Refreshments
Will be available. Public invited.
RIPLEY,W.Va. -The Liberiy
Mountaineers will perform Tuesday at Skateland in Ripley.

LETART - The Letart Township Trustees will meet Monday at'
10:30 a.m. at the offiCe building for . SYRACUSE - The Sutton ,
their end-of-year meeting.
Township Trustees will meet Tues;
day at 1 p.m. in the Syracuse
PAGi;.VILLE- The Board of Municipal Building. An organizaTrustees of Columbia Township tional meeting will be held
will meet Monday at -7 p.m. 'at the Wednesday atlO a.m.
fire station. End'of-year business
will be completed and an organizational meeting for 199~ will be . RUTLAND - The Rutland ..
Nazarene Church will have a New
held.·
Year's Eve service on Tuesday at 8
p.m. with special services at 11:45
' TUESDAY
CHESTER - The Chester p.m.
Township Trustees will have their
POMEROY - Th e Beesan
II
d ·
• year-end meeting on Tuesday at 10 Beaus Square Dance Club· will ~
a.m. at the town hall. An organiza- · ha.ve a dance New year's Eve from
tional meeting will be held Thurs- 9. p_. m. to 1 a.m. at the Meigs Counday.
ty Senior Citizens Center for all
western square dancers and fonmer
LONG BOITOM - There will square dancers. Dress in informal.
be a New Year's Eve service at the
·
·
Mount Olive Community Church
MIDDLEPORT - There will
in Long Bouom on Tuesday. Pastoo be a New Year's Eve dance at the
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
American Legipn F_eeney Bennett
Post No. 128 at the annex on Mill
PAGE'VILLE - The Scipio Street in Middleport from Sp.m. to
Township Trustees will meet Tues- I a.m. Music will be by "CJ. and
day at 10 am. to conduct year-end Company." Refreshments availbusiness.' An organizational meet- able. Memb'ers may attend at no
·ing will be held Thursday.
Ch!lfge. There will be a minimum
fee for guests.
HOBSON - The Hobson
Church of Christ in Christian
.PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Union will hold "watch night" ser- TowQship Trustees will meet Tuesvices on Tuesday. Theron Durham day at 4 p.m. An organizational
will be the pastor.
meeting wiD follow.
RACINE - The Racine Baptist
RACINE - The Racine AmeriChurch will have watch night ser- . can Legion Post 60Z -will have a
vices on Tuesday- from 9 p.m . to New Year's Eve pany on Tuesday
midnighi. The public is invited to from 8 p.m. to midnight at the post
attend.
home. Cost is 55 per pe!Son.
'

..

RUTLAND - There will be a
Ne.w Year's Eve dance at the Rutland American Legion 'Hall on
Tuesday from 8 p.m. to I a.m.
· Those attending bring a covered
di sh. There will be $5 donation
taken at the door. Music will be
provided by the Country Kin Band.
Ray Fitch will be the caller. Public
invited.
RUTLAND - The .Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will have

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church will have -regular church
services on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
There will be spec_ial singing by
groups of the church. Rev. James
Acree invites the public.
SYRACUSE ..:_ An organizational meeting will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Syracuse Municipal building for the
Sutton Township Trustees.

Ted Turner chosen to be
·Time's Man of the .Year
NEW YORK (AP) - Media
mogul Ted Turner was named Time '
magazine's Man of the Year 'on
Saturday by editors who cited the
impact of h'is Cable News Net'work's live television.coverage of
events around the globe.
Turner, 53, was hailed as a
" visionary" whose network
changed the definition of news
"from something that has happened to something that ·is happenmg at the very moment you are
hearing of it," the magazine said.
"For influeocing the dynamic of
. events and turning viewers in 150
countries into instant witnesses of
history, Robert Edward Turner lll
is Time 's Man of the Year for
1991," the magazine concluded.
Turner, whose Turner Broadcasting System Inc. also operates
Turner Network Television and the
cable superstation WTBS, said he
was "extremely honored" by the
award, but credited his employees
for his company's success.
"These dedicated individuals
share a common goal of infoonin~.
entertaining and inspiring audiences around the world with quality programming," he said. "In
accepting this honor, I salute their
efforts IOlVard these goals.''
CNN President Tom Johnson
expressed delight on Saturday but
sa1d the selection came as somewhat of a surprise.
"I think many people .expected
it would haw been (Russian President) Boris Yeltsin, but a number
of Time reporters have been in
Atlanta 'and in conversation with
our vasious bureaus, so we knew
they were working on a major
piece," he said.
"I think it's a wonderful recognition of Ted and those who
worked with him over the YC8fS ·in
buUdina CNN I!Jid his whole organizalion."
·
.
CNN has had "a wonderful
year, cerllinly for those of us wbo
love the news," Johnson said.
AmonJ lhe events carried live '
by CNN m 1991 w=the Baghdad
bombings wltldl bepn the Persian
Gulf War; the Soviet coup and the
emerpnc:t of Yeltsin; the trial and
acquittal of William · Keanedy
Smith: and die confirmation bearinJI of Supreme CourtJulllce
Clarence 'l'homls.

The honor caps a busy year for
Turner. The television magnate's
Atlanta Braves won the National
League pennant before losing a
dramatic seven-game World Series
to the Minnesota Twins, and he
married actress Jane Fonda earlier
this month.

.L.L'-'.L..L.L·'

Dear Aau· Landen: Domestic b1ae1ecJ. Theio had IWic:c 11
violepce is not a subject that ·nwty miscarriages u liClil-balleRid
many women want to talk about, · .woaien.
· ·
·
but ~ ell'ects can be de¥11181ing.
.:. tbiJdrea from violell bames
Unless women ase willing .to · havehigh«riabcialcohohnddq
discuss it open'y! it will conlin\IC. abu.le~Juvefli!edclinqUIIIIC)'. ,
to destroy families ani! endanger
., Children til bomos wbere
anoth~ generation. Please. Ann, .domestie violence occurs aie
publish the following facts. People physically abused or aoriously
need to know that:
neglected at a rate I.SOO pereent
.. Four thousand women die from higher than the Rational mnae in
domestic violence anntially.
the &amp;enera~.populatlon.
.. Ninety-five percent of domes·
•• Data from lllel.~ in Illinois
tic violence victims are women.
show ihat S1 ~~ of blliered
.. Thirty percent have been women reported the al)use occumx1
physically abused while pregnant
at least once a week. Another 2S
.. Over two-thirds of abused percent reported a once-per-month
children come f~om households frequency. More than 60 pen:enl.
where th~ mother IS abused,
. were hit with a riSt or an ObjecL In
.. Chtldren who grow up m Texas more than two-thirds had
violent homes come to believe that their.Ilves threareitCd ~- 60 percent
vtolence _1s normal and acceplable were kicked, and 40 percent were
and thatl!ts the beSt way to control abused with a knife or a gun.
others.
. .
.
More than 2S percent were sexually
,
.. The majonty of vtolent adult assaulted.
.
' ed 10
' .1
pnsoners were rats
vto ent
If you ase a victim, there are
homes.
people ~ho c;are about you ~d
.. The FBI reports that 30 perce~t Y?Ur children s future .. Domestic
of the women murdered m th~s VIOlence ·counselors wtll not tell
country were ~tiled by therr you what 10 do, but they can
husbands_ or boyfri~nds.
.
provide informati.on on the legal
-- ~unng ~e .stx-month pen~ system, financial assistance, job
followmg an tnctdent of domesuc counseling and in some cases
violence, approximately 32 pertenl shelter.
'
of women are yictimized again.
If there is no domestic violence
.. Battering often occurs during program ill your area call the
pregnancy. In just one hospital NationaiDomestlcVio~24-how
emergency unit in Illinois, 21 hotline for · help. The ·n'umber is
percent of pregnant wtimen had been 1-800-333-SAFE. (TDD for the

- .

Monday, December 30; 1891 :
,. 't ~I

WHSgroup .'
lends hand
to shut-ins .....
, ,~

,n w

Anri

Landers
ANNLANDERI

:nn..,.._

.'11111, 1M Aalel•

By JOHN DIAMOND
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The Harvards an9 Stanfords lined up early
to pitch )ob offers at Mikhail Gorbachev. Even radio disc jockeys
and a Laughlin, Nev., casino operator have joined the chase.
Gorbachev has said little about
his plans since resigning the pn:sidency of the defunct Soviet Union.
What he has said points to his staying in Russia and remaining actively interested - if not directly
involved- in political affai!S.
Nevertjleless, Gorbachev has
received a stack of U.S. job offers
that includes a $1 million feeler
from a casino owner.
" You don't joke about $1 million," said Don Laughlin, founder
of the booming southern Nevada
gaming community that bears his
name. "It i~ ,a very serious offer."
In Arkansas, Little Rock radio
station KKYK wondered if Gorbachev might be interested in being
a traffic reporter. Two morning
radio personalities joked they probably couldn't match the milliondollar offer from the casino.
Laugh if you want, but the Sl
million salary puts to shame the
$40-per-month pension Gorbachev
will receive from the Russian government.
From the silly to the substantial
to the hisiOric, the offers poured in.

California's Stanford ·university
was among the first to offer Gorbachev a position. The Soviet lead·
er visited Stanford last summer and
established ties with its Center for
Security and Arms Control.
Boston University President
John Silber, in Moscow in the
weeks before the Soviet Union's
demise, reponedly sought out Gar·
bachev to mvite him to BasiOn'.
Harvasd University is interested
in having Oorbachev deliver a
speech and perhaps serve a stint at
the John F. Kennedy School of
GovemmenL
·
The University of Minnesota
and Johns Hopkins University are
among the other pre~tigious
schools to invite Gorbachev to
teach or lecture.
Retired University of Virginia
President Frank L. Hereford said
that universities have for years
sought famous writers, scientists
and public officials to teach, lecture
or preside over think tanks. ·
There was William Faulkner as
writer-in-residence at Virginia,
Albert Einstein at Princeton's Center f9r Advanced Studies, and
Dwight Eisenhower as president of
Columbia. ·
But seldom has the competition
been so rteJCC.
"ll's probably more of a trend
now than it was,'' Hereford said.
Often the visiting celebrity

the main target in the movie is
Japan itself..
In the new "Godzilla vs. King
Ghidora," people from the 23rd
century, many of whom appear to
be American, return in a time
machine to 1992. Their mission: to
change the course of history and
prevent Japan from becoming a
ruthless superpower in the 21st and
22nd centuries.
The furure folks unleash a flying
three-headed dragon-like King
Ghidora'on the Japanese, who tum
to Godzilla for aalvation.
A spokesman for Toho Co. stu-

dios, which has made all Godzilla
movies since the fust 1954 classic,
says the· movie focuses on Japan's
soul-searching about its economic
prowess and global role and not on
anti-American sentiments.
But the spokesman, Hidekichi
Yamane, acknowledged that some
Americans may be offended when
in one scene, a merciless Godzilla
smashes a group of U.S. soldiers on
a Pacific island. Japanese soldiers
then solemnly aalute the wounded
monster for saving them from the
enemy.

Oriental vegetables have many uses
By NANCY BYAL
with while stalks and dark areen confuse them' wilb the toxic comFood Editor
leaves, boll cboy has a sweet fla. mon nowerlna plut. Discard the
Better Homes &amp; Gardens
vor. Buy it fresh.
.ronts and llowerl1g buds before
For AP Special Features
Chili Pepper.s: Asian cblli pep· usine.
We tend to limit Oriental veg- pers are ol'lea unavailable in the
Pea Pods: Also knowa as ·
elables 1Q slit-fries and other Orien- . United States. Substitute RrriDO supr peas or snowpeas, pea pods
tal dishes. But don't forget, they're or jalapeno peppers. Always baa- conceal flat tiny peas. They have
perfect for many other dishes. Next die bot peppers with 1Ioved a sweet flavor aad ·crisp, firm
time you're making a soup, salad, bands to protect your skin from texture. Buy them fresh or
omelet,-or casserole, or simply the pepper oils.
frozea.
looking for a different vegetable
Chinese Cabba1e: Sometimes
Straw MushrOoms: Cultivated
side dish, choose one or a couple of called Napa or celery eabbaae, on rice straw, these dark mush·
vegetables from this lisL To tum this elonpted eabbate bas a mild rooms bave a "meaty" texture.
your family on 10 try them, mix sweet navor and pale veen wrll· . Buy them canned or dried. Soak
some or the more familiar vegeta- kled leaves. When steamed, It the dried mushrooms before
bles with ones you've never tried makes a great wrapper for uslna.
savory ftlllnp.
before.
Taro Root: A potatolike vegBamboo Sboots: nese IvoryDalk0111 This Jarae sweet-liSt· etable, tiro root llu dark, hairy
colored shoots come sliced or lag JapaaeR white radish may skll ad lltht-colortd flesh. Peel
cone·sbaped. Most stores stock be loq or round. Cook It as you It before ula1. Coot II u you
caaned bamboo sboots. Fresh would a turaip or Amerlcaa would potatoes.
bamboo ..0011 are aYIIIable Ia white radilb.
Water Chestauts: About tbe
Eaokl Mushrooms: Eaold are size of walauts, water cbestauta
some Orltlllalspeclalty markets.
Bell Sprouts: Grown from prized for tbelr llay caps, deU- are 1 root veptable wllb a crisp
mua1 bea111, fresb beau sprouts cate flavor aad crllp tature. Buy wlllte flesh, Buy lbem Cllllled or
are white, wltli day capsud a them fresh.
fresh. Caaaed water chestnuts
Oriental ChrJIIntb~mum are ~led. It J8U buylbem treitb,
crilp tature. Buy tbeat l'reth or
wuted.
• Leaves: T~eR fre1h veeu are you b 1eed to peel tllem before
Bot Choy: A Cblnese eabbage called shunllku In Japaa. Do aot

-··

II~

1

a.&amp;n

,

\.:!.:.

.

.bearini impUed, 1·800-873-6363.)

Domestic ,vi9Ienee is ·a crime.
If ·you keep it a secret. you
are protecting a criminal and
doJna a IIJ'IVO· injustice to Younelf
and )'IIIII' children. - FLORENCE
FORSHEY, P)tESIDENT, ILLINOIS COALITION AGAINST

OOMEsnC VIOU!NCE,'SPRINGFIELD,DL.
DEAR READERS: If your
boyfriend or husband has been
knoekiag you around, get some
hi:lp 81 onec.No woman deserves to
be beaten. When you accept such
.treatmen~ you allow it to continue.
If you fail to break the vicious cycle
it's possible your children will grow
·Up to' be batteters or victims .. a
pretty sad legacy.
Gem or the Day: One thing that's
really good about procrastination is
that you always have something
·planned for tomorrow.
Fee/ing pressured 10 have sex?
How well-informed are you? Write
for Ann 1.4ndtrs' boo/del "Sex and
the Tttll·ager;" Se11d a self·

addres~ed, long, buslness:size
e11velo~

. In good Christmas cheer.. the
Wahama Honor Society recently
provided amp~ fruit baskets_Jor ~-e
Mason and New Haven seruor CJU·
zen shut-ins:
.
.
Society members assisting V.ir·
ginia Bla~d, M~son_Se~ior Site
director, m dehvenes mcluded
Andrea Jeffers, Jenny .VanMeter,.
Stan Cook and Heath Hesson.
Other member pasticipating in
this popular project . included
Phillip Batey, Joy Black, Jenmfer
Chapman, Sh_ari F_iel~s. Shannon.
Grimm, Memly Ltevmg, Heather
MacKnight, Troy Bumgarner, Qlrl
King, He;lther Lockhart, Robert J.
Roush and Carla Sayre.

.
,,.,::
· "'·

Closing slated

.,,

The Mason County Public
Library will be closed Tuesday,
Dec. 31 and Wednesday, Jan. I.
The library will reopen Thursday,
Jan. 2.

Area happenings

,, ,
~ ...,

,::i'l

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A
car bomb exploded on a crowded
street in a poor Muslim neighbor·
hood IOday, ki~ing_ at least 30 peO·
pie and woun~g about 120 in the
worst such attack in· Lebanon in
more than six years, poliee said
The wounded included former
Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan,
:'1 ho was passing through the area
m his bulleiproof cas. Police said
Wazzan was hospitalized and later
discharged.
The bomb of 220. pounds of
TNT destroyed ·buildings and
caused fires near an intersection
filled with;fruit-and. vegetable ven-

·

!$

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,.
. "',.

...,,

::...

......
=

Dinner precedes
grange

~
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•
•"•
•••
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oQatom Cit-Ill illtlllldoa a.
•Ns,.. requlrtll pUtiiJ

f,..•

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...

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WIUIIUII
· tH•2772

· -Uk-111111 '*'/cleaDIDJ
.uret~.me · rt~me Wln'IJII)' ·

~M as\IC

u

r-....;._ _ _ _., . ,-,-

MICIOWA. E
OVEN ·IEPAII

PICK

.,

POMEIOY .

last 111arkdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAt
10:00 A.M.-3:00P.M.

DEEICUniNO
lid

AU.IIADS .

RA

10

Card of ThW~ks

. Happy Ads

In Memoriam

16 .

Monthly

15

AIIIIOU II ~elll e IllS
, - C1rd ofThlnks

KE.N'S APPLIAIICE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915-3561

Acro11 freill Post Office
217 I. s.c-1 St.
Pl*IIOY, OHIO
.

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDA'( PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

Classified paf{es ,corer the
following telephonp exchanges ...
Gtl li t

Count~

ArteCode614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

4•6- Gallipolit
992 ~ Middlspon
367- Ch•hire
Pomeroy
388 - Vinton
985 - CI"!.esler
245-Rio Or•nde 843- Portland
266- Guyen Oist. , 247- Letart Falls
143- Artbit Dist. 949- Ricine
379 - Wtlnot
742- Rutland
667 - Coolvill e

M~tonCo ..

WV

Area Code 304 .
675 - Pt . Plelltnt·
458- leon
576 - Apple Grove

773 - Muon
882 - New Haven
895 - letart
937 - Buffalo

Oet RuuJtc Fist
Bl!LLETIN BO.\RD

.42

$13.00

INDEPINDENI' ·
CAIPET CIIANEIS ;

.80

11 .30/ dav

Serv1ces

.05/ dav

Merchandi se

54 - Misc. Merchandise
66 - luilding Suppli•
56 - Pets foP Salt~

Situation Wanted
lnsur1nce
Busineu Training
S chools &amp; l" atruction
16 - R1dio, TV &amp; CB Repair
1 7- Mitcellaneoua
18 - Wanted To Oo

21 - Bulin•• Opportt~nity

22- ,.,oney to loan

23- Prcir•sionll Serv1cn

Real Esl ale
31 - Homes for Sale
· 32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33 - Ftrms tor Sale

34 - Busineu Bu~dings
35 - Lots &amp; Ac,uge
36- Rul Est111 Wtnted

l;bfilMI
41-Houses for Rent
'2 - Mobilt Homes for Rent
43 - Fttma for Rent
44 - Apartment tor Rent
45 - Furnished Rooms
41 - Space ror Rent
47- Wtntea.to Rent
48 - Eq~ipment for Rent
•&amp; - For Le•e ""

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, V(V . Pr..tnts

Rado. L.ota olelftru.
For dolllls &lt;11 304·675-5789

$10 peroon, l'rllperdnlu oaqulrld.

'.'I

· •·

,tt,·r,U.I!itl,-. ;_;

949·2734

12+4111

'·

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Dllfltlred 11 n.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding

IICIO OV!NI-$79 op

·Roofing
•Insulation
JUlES KEESEE

••mrS-sus ., .

.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE ·

992-5335 or 985-3561
Acro11 Fr0111 Post Ollie•

Teaford
Country Clull
Jr. Gtlf Stls

has nice homesites
available lor up to
80' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75 per mo.

Gr..Wit&amp;

Windows

992·2772 or
742-2097

531 Bryen Place
Mtddtepon, Ohio

Proftssilllal
tngraving

72 - Truckl hn Sale
73- Vens 1!. 4·wo ·s
74 - Motou:v cles
76 - Soau &amp; Motor s for Sale
76 - Aut o Parts &amp; Aceeuori11
77--Auto Rep1ir
78- Cimping Equtpment
79 - Cimpers • Motor HomH

614·992·3394

arc•

12·11·1 rno.

,,~mo.

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME

SHRUB &amp; TREE ·

Avallahlaln
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Starting •t $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or .3 BR, 2

REMOVAL

TRIM ,and

RENTALS

Services
81 - -Home lmprOVIImenu

82 - Piumblng &amp; Hutlng
8;3-EXti'JIIing
.84 - Eiectricll &amp; Refri~tlfltiOn
85 - Gtntfal Hauling J.c., •
86 - Mobile Home Reo•i'

blllh houee

wlbeeement •nd
carport, free gat.

87 - UpholtllfV

Call614-992-6528 or
385-8227

Raal Estata General

2·11-1 mo.

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
·
.
BIU SLACK

12-2-11·1 --pd.

11114/lfn

· ~';
CAIPENTEI SEIYICE ' . , r

GUN SHOO.l
RAONE ..
FilE DEPT•

YOUNG'S

-0--.,......

· -ReomAIIdttiDn•

-Eiectrioll tM Plun " •

-c...- - .

9-1 3- 't Hln

BISSEU I lUilE

.....
"·-·
.,.•..

CONSTIUC110N
..
•Garaps

,_,.inl

!FREE EITIMATEII

•

·'" 'V

,

t vt

V. C. YOUNG HI
992-6215
'

' 1.}

·-·,.11-14-10""
Oliie

-·

..

' ol

THE BASKET WEAVE

••a.w..s....
................
,.am-. ...
MlwOisMIIS.btJajl

I

.:

'I

,. tliltJP.!dtils• u 11

w............. ..

FrH E1tiMafll

USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-90-lln
. . .. ,_ _
.. -

.. oJ

-lnlerlof • Ex....

12 Gaut• ...... Oroly
Strldly lllt.rced

Stop. Co. .ar•

992-2269

. .'

---::-:-::--:--:~,

ia""deling

~

" "'

. 742·3020 Evtti111

Fadory a.et&amp;e

614·985·3961

' 'I

HOURS:
8:3.0 ain-4:00 pm

SAT. NIGHI
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 21

·covll'l, tic.

...

Wty Prllt 5ltep

Bas'-luilllng
EVElY

Mtlal a.lls
Cvst011 Riling
Bags,Htad

Call
614-992·5528 or
385-8227

71 - Aurot for S1le

US·U73
667-6179

stock.

located on Roekapringa
Rd. in Pomeroy, 3 mHN
from lhe Melga Co. Fair-

· "

grounds.

9112-6855

mo. pd.

1111511

S-3t-'90 Hn

"'\-

..••

Public Notice
PUBliC NOTICE
Bleil will be received until
3:30 p.m. January I, 1812
for the following tUPP.IY
nHdad lor tho 12 colendlr

year:

1

GASOLINE and
DIESEL FUEL
Dallvory will be made to
the Carleton School for tho
period of Jtnuary 1, 1tl2
through December 31, 1112.
Bleil are to be mailed to the
llddrae below: and; opec~
fie bid detallt may be
oblllnod by contacting:
llelge County Boatrd of
MIWD
P.D.Box307
Syracuaa, Ohio 45771
(6U)II2-C681
Bldt will be awarded at
the regular Board meeting
on Januory 13, 1912.
Molge County Boord · ol
Mental Retardation ruwvea

the rlghtlo occepl or relocl

any or all blda.
(12) t6, 23, 30; (f)6, 4tc

calling 446-9545

"THE LAST BLAST OF '91"
NEW YEAR'S EVE
TUES., OEC. 31
wlh Randy S"*h broodcullng llvo 101 .5

HOME BITES
HAUUNG: Lim1tllcl.-.;
Dirt, G1M end Call

IACIIIE. OIL ·

UIIGII-0..-0...-SU~ up ;

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

Transporlal10n

1, 3 &amp; 5 P.M.
$7.50 each
$4.50 children under 12
Make reservations by

ARNIE'S SPORTS LOUNGE

''

'-.•J

SEWER LINE&amp;

MAPLEWOOD
UKE -

·R•pl-ment

Newly Re-done

63- liveatock
64 - Ha~ &amp; Grtin
66 - Seed &amp; Fert ili.t er

Seatings AI

985-3929- 985·9996

•· .

IEfllG!UIOII-$100 ••

t0/l0fl9 Hn

62,- Wanted 10 Buy

ANOTHER BUFFET
AT OSCAR'S
NEW YEAR'S DAY!

Hats, Horns, Noisemakers

•Reaaontblt fl•t••
•QualitY Work
'
•FrH Ettlmatet
•Carpet Hu Feat Dry
Time •
•High Gloat on Tile
Floor Flnlth
. MIKE lEWIS. ow.,

'OMfiOY, OHO

6 1- Fir m Equipml!fll

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL 446 ·9~5

.CHESTER, OHIO

WAIHOS-$100.,

DIYII-$69 "'

67 - Muti.c illnatrumenll

NEW YEAR'S EVE
AT OSCAR'S
RESTAURANT

NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
7:30·12:30

tDIAYWAIUITY

58 - Frui1s &amp; VegeublfJI
59- For Stle or Trtde

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

SKATE-A· WAY

.

· ·~

BABEIENTS&amp;

11-2t-1mo.

USED APPUAIIICES . .

and nil FLOOI CAll

lt. I, lotland, OH.

Fa rm SuppliP. s
i':J L1ves1o~k

12 ,l14 15 -

..

LANOCIF'MIQ
WATER a

Emp loy menl
11 - Help Wan1ed

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION
...,.. n :OOA .M. SATURDAY
:_ 2:00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00 P.M. TUESDAY
·- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00 P M FRIDAY

$9.00

PONDI
SEPTIC SYITEMI

"'

53 - Antiques

6-lost and Found
7- ·YIPd Salelpaid in adllancel

• A tl•nified tdvenisem.,t placed in The D1ity Sentinel It• ·
cept - ciMtified displ.., , Busin111 Card and ltgll notices l
will tlso tppear In the Pt. Ple•ant flegistar and the Galli·
polil Daily Tribune. reaching over 18,000 home•
COPY DE!AOLINE MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

Ov'r 15 Words
.
.20
.30

51 - Household Good11
62- SportiRg Ooods

2- ln Memory
-3 - Annoucemants
4 - Givuway
6- Happy Ads
,
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auction .
9 - Want.d to Buy

Yard Sales

Rate
14.00
16.00

'

'25CII&amp;Wrae4
. s5 hlra II " '

S

Rat• ar e lor con .. cutlv• run1 . bro ken upd~s will becharg..:l
fnr ear.h d-.v as MPirlte ads .·
·

"Rec.tve 1 .50 dis count for ads paid in adv1nce
"Free Ids - Giveaway and Found IdS under15 words will be

run 3 d&amp;tfS 11 no ch•ge.
•Price of ad for 111 capit1lleners 1s double price of ad co11 .
"7 point line type only used.
•Sentinel is not responsible tor et"rors afteJ firs1 diV . I Check
for errors firU d·ey ad runs in p1p111r). Cal1 befor111 2 :00pm
d~ ther publlcetion to mike conec1ion .
~
·A~s that mu11 be paid in advance are

t6
15
15'

6

Me jgt. Gallia or M11on cc;n.mti• mu1t be pre·

Plid.

Wor~s

Days
1
3'

I&amp;C IICAVIIIH · '!~
'
BUUDOZING

WUPPING ..

lri.. " In Or Wt
Plcll Up.

3/1/90/Ho

TO PLACE AN AD .CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON"SATURDAY
SUNDAY

'

-:_\

. ~DIUPOII

'

=

~

.Uabelbble e-ar HYieit

• The ·Area's Number 1 Marketplac'
'

'' IN

"""

Business Services

dors and shoppers. A six-foot:deep
crater was left on Mal!loun S~t
in the mostly Muslim district of
Basta.
It was the bloodiest car bombing
since June 18, 1985, when a blast
outside a popular ice cream p!lflor
in Lebanon's northern port of
Tripoli killed 60 people and
woundediiO.
·
There was no immediate claim
of responsibility for the bombing,
the first since early November and
the fo11rth this· year.- Such attacks
usually go unclrumed in Beirut.
But the blast rnay have been
· intended to ~et back government
efforts to reestablish control ·

•
Classi II

i.·

. .......

OhiO

At -least 30 killed .in bomb blast

Cl:

::li

1991

'

.
•

and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this includes Officers to be installed
'•••
postage and handling) to: Teens, . TUPPERS PLAINS - The
....
cio AM 1.4ndtrs, r.O. Box ll562, Tuppers Plains Ladies Auxiliary t\ ' . ,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 -0562. (In wiU meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at .
Canada, send $4.45.)
the post home to install officers.
Pomona grange to meet
·
... P"(
ROCK SPRINGS -The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at the Rock S}lrings Grange
speaks to small, select seminars or Hall at 7:30 p.m. Star Grange will
perhaps makes no public appear- serve refreshments.
ances at all. The goal, in some
cases. may be to raise the university's prestige and help with fund
raising, Hereford said.
Every indication from Moscow
is that universities needn't worry
me~ting
about making classroom space
available for Gorbachev anytime
A potluck dinner precede the
soon.
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange.
,
Gorbachev has said he's weighThe charter was' draped in mem·
ing some job offers, but he is ory of Leona Karr, a long-time ·
expected to start out as head of a member of the grange.
think tank founded after the failed
Christine Napier and Pauline
August coup.
Rife; delegates to the state session, .
The Fund for Socio-Political were present and gave a rcpon on
Research, dubbed the "Gorbachev the proceedings.
Fund," employs about 200 people
Barbara Fry reported on the
and concentrates on preparing Christmas project, helping a needy
political, economic and social anal- family, and also that Bunny Kuhl ~'
yses for Russian and former Soviet had received honorable mention on ~ ~
officials.
her ~uilt at national grange session. • ;.
In a Moscow reception followOpal Grueser gave an informa,
ing his resignation speech Wednes- tive report on legislative items.
~
day, Gorbachev indicated that his
Rock Springs Grange received a
1
future is in his homeland, not at trophy for its -participation in the
:
some far-flung honorary posL
Christmas parade.
•
Pat Holter presented the pro- · -·:
"I am not leaving llie political gram "Follow the Star of Hope."
scene," the 60-year-old former She read "Life's Liule Instrucpresident pledged, saying he would tions." A candle lighting ceremony
like to maintain links to the new by all members and the singing of
Russian $Ovemment.
"Silent Night" closed the meeting.
In ari tnterview last week on the
Mem hers reported ill were
CBS News program "Face the Charles Kuhl and Nancy Radford.
Nation," Gorbachev said the uni- Sympathy was extended to Opal
versity offers are "serious and Grueser and Elma Louks.
interesting" but that he plans to
A whiie elephant gift exchang~
stay in his home country.
was held following the meeting.

Universities, casino bid for Gorbachev

Producers fear latest 'Godzilla' film
may offend American sensibilities
By YVRJ KAGEYAMA
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO (AP) - Godzilla, the
world's favorite mutant re~f.le, is
back on the silver screen for a 17th
sequel - and this time he's squishing Americans.
Is this a science-fiction response
to iapah-bashing? The movie, after
all, is drawing crowds nationwide
on the eve of President Bush's visit
for a summit dealing with con ·
tentious trade issues.
Hardly, Godzilla's creators say.
Although the reptile flattens some
World Was II American soldiers,

.

Monday, December

Public Notice
RING IN
Grant Street Middeport. 2 atory lramo home siilualo~
on 2 lots, 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms. full basement, carport ,
firwplace also a 2 staN ho11e shod wlallached feed &amp; tack
room. Foncod lot. ASKING $34,900. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! COME SEEI
THIS COU.LD BE THE YEAR TO START YOUR OWN
BUSINESS! - In lhia small building wilh an oven smaller
prtcel Located on Main St. In Pomeroy. Showroom with
plenly of storage space. Rooms upstairs wilh grwal view
olo rivorl ASKING $15,000.
WELCOME TO 1122... THIS IS FOR YOU! A beautiful
modem 2 story contemporary home wllh 4 bedrooms, 2 ~
balhs, firwplace, bay window, pine walls, basement on 3 ~
acrws. ASKING $109,900.
HAVE YOU RESOLVED '10 GET AWAY FROM IT ALL?
-How about a litllo houtethat would make a greal cabin
or hunting lodge. Located in Anliquily close to lho river.
ONLY $5,900 very baaic.
IN THIS NEW USTING YOU CAN MOVE UP WITH
STYLE - POMEROY - 2 story frame home wlfull
baaomont, 3 bedrooms, 211 ba!hs, 2+ BCIOS wilh a garden
area, 1 car garaga with wort&lt;ahop, shad, patio, .built-in
bookahelvu, firwplace, central air. ASKING $31,900.
COME TAKE ALOOKI
THIS IS THE YEAR TO BUY THAT NEW HOME! WHY
WAIT ANY LONGER? GET OUT OF THE OLD AND
INTO THE NEW...WE CAN HELP YOU DO BOTHI GIVE
.llll. A CALLI IF YOU WANT TO lillY OR saL..YOU
GOT THE RIGHT ONEI
.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................Ii2-61t1
TRACY IAINAGER ........................................,..t48-2438
JEAN TRtJIIELL. •• "..............................,•••.•• ~ ••• Me-2660
JO ttiLL. ................................,.....,..........,..,........985-44H
OFFICE......
H2·2258

--.--..o...........................:.............

GROOM
· ROOM
'

'

Complete Grooming
Jor All Brieds ..
EMILEE MERINA R
Owntr &amp; Operator

614-9f2 -6820
Pomeray,

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gouge fiKtory
Choke Only
9-6-tfn

Ownar
CLARENCE ATHER10N

C. l. Heatln1 I
Refrigeration.
w. Sill &amp; Slrdce
Wuthtr King, Miler,

• •.• tP,"

Luxalra, lnlldlr,

'

....

~-,

117110 IR 124
Olllo

Long

.

IUUDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Umeolone, Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
Uconaed end Bonded
PH. 614:.9.!~~·6i69J

NOTICE OF
APPLICATIONS FOR
CHIWREN'S TRUST
FUND MONIES
Tho Melga County CTF
Advisory Board "I• now
Interior Painting,
accepting oppllcallona for
Free Eotlmatn
Children'• Trual Fund
30
yNra experience.
moniu for progroma
Four ltlllfl ol
doalgned ,to reduce child . recommondetlon. Honal
obuee and neglect.
and dependable.
(S1D,DOO)
Pal
1a ..,
Appllcallont
IJ
IIJI
.
obtained 11
Ed Battin
aubmll·
collect at
to the oamo place by
1-614-667·6474
p.m. on January 28.
111111 mo. pd.
A public m.. llng lo
review opplicoUona wUI be
hold at 4:00 p.m. at tho
Melge County Superintend·
ont'e olftce on January Zl•
Approved epplluUono mual
be oubmlllld to tho atata by
Mlll'ah 2.
John Riebel, Membar of
Melge CTF Advltory Boord
(12)30, 1tc

ID'f'.
PAINTING

ca-

can

u,.

.... ,,

Heal Pumpa, F~a,
Air Condlllonlr.
. -.. .'t'
t
21

.... .

'
...
......' ...
·-, ~

SNODGRASS .
UPHOLSTERY
"Helping You To
,Recover Your
Investment"

614·949·2202
RACINE, OHIO
11/20/1

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAITS
5pldalizint in

Custo111 Fr- ltpair
NEW &amp; USED PAm
FOI All MAtcES &amp;
MODElS

992-7013
or 992·5553
01 TOll FIR

1-IDD-111-DDJD
. taln DIID

~ / 31 1 '11 ltn

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUILT .
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

, . . - - - - - -. . . . . .

HILL'S DEER

&lt; '

. ..

SKIN~ING,

.. .

CUTTING,

WRAPPING
BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

.'

949·2206
unm1-

'"f

..
..

•VINYL
•.41LUMINUM SlPING
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

.. b

.

BISSELL
SIDiNG
,.... CO.

.......

"F- Ettlmlll""

PIL 949·1101

. ., .... ····2160
NO SUIIDAT

GRAVE
BLANitETS
Hon:Mmade with
Long Lilting Green
Scotch Pine.

$20.00.Hdt

PH. 949-2101
or 949·2160

Order Now for Your
Lost l.cMd Onn.

4-I... TI'N

.. ...

coniNG

•At lllnn•Wt.Prkts"'
10 ILIIDCIW

. Jii

61'4-949-2051
11-ilt-·

"·

' .,

·.
·" "

•. It
• I ., oj;

'

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.I '.

·.~ ii tl
'1

" '!of

l.ri

'•

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•

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'

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'
Page

8

.The Dally Sentinel

44

Apartment
tor Rent

M1111 black, Lib mllld puppy,
11 wu. old, 614-H2-11071
Small tamale dog, Wll hou•
Un ~

Lost &amp; Found

Lost : malt, Slbtrtan Huaky, 1
blua •Y• 1 brown aye, Ytry
friendly, Crew rd. arM, &amp;M-m-

7111.1

Lost: Ring of keya, ao1111whara
around Vaughan's parking lot In

LABORERS
Earn to- $4.50 weakly, will train,

Real Estate

•VIral openlna-, alto part•

time,

1-ll~51·1545

Middleport or lower and at Mid-

dleport, reward, 614-742·2694

7

31

Yard Sale

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, , 538 Jackson Pike
from S19;uma, W1lk to ahop I

Homes lor Sale

moviH. Clll614...,.8·2568. EOH. ·

5 Rooms, Corner Lot, 31f Hen·

Complatty Fumlshld Small
Houu, $250/mo. Plus Utilities,
And Dapooll. 814-446-4)338. Call
Befort 7p.m.
Effenclency apt In Pt. Plea11nt,
nice neighborhood, Hud acceplod, &amp;14·m·585B
Fumlshod
Efficiency,
All
Utlllllll Paid, Shara Bath,
$90/Mo. 919 Sacond Avenua,
Galli polio. 614·446-31l45.

dtraon Street, Henderson, WV.
$21,000. Coli 614-4411-7523, 304·
675-1411.1.
C.PI Cod style, 3 bedroom 1
112 baths, formal dining &amp; living
room, full ba11ment1ctnlrtlalr,

elolt lo Hotp~al &amp; s hopping
arta, will contldar ~radt tor
farm or acreage In Gallia County

Ohio, SonvviDa Realty, 304-675-

3030 or 675-34:11.
Double Wlda Wllh 1 Acra Land,
Batha, Electric, Ctntral Air,
$37,000. 304-675-7217.

one and two bodrocm
1partmenl1 tor renl. 304-8752053 or 675-4100.

32

One Bedroom __Apartment In
.Point Pleuant, WV. Fuml1hld,

Galllpolle Ferry, 3 Bedrooms 2

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

12165 Memory $3,500, NHd t .

Some Aopolrw. 614-446-11144.

Vary Cl10n And Nice.
304-675-1388.

45

ctlltnt cond, naw carpet, un·
dtrplnnlng lncludld, must HI,
$4500, 61(·1112·2233 onyllmo
1974 Holly Park, 12x70, 1112

bathl, completely remodeled,

$10,500. lnvettmenl will sell
$7,1100. 304·n3·5840.

~o

P111.

Furnished
Rooms

1972 12x60 Skyline, 2-bdrm, II·

Rooms far rent • week or monlh.
Starting 11 S1ZOimo. Galllo Hotol.
614-44f.D580.
•
SIHplng room• with cooking.

Alao troller apace. All hook·upo.
Cell alllf' 2:00 p.m., 304-7735851, M11on WY.

Merchandise
1982 Oakwood mobile home, 3
bedroom, 2 bathe , double c1r

S1

Household
gar~ge , city w1ter, 6.5 acre1,
Goods
owner flntnclng, Somervlll•
Really, 304475-3lf40 or 675-3431. 3 Ploco LA Sullo, 3 PIICI End
18tt Brnzowood 14x10 3br, 614· Tablo
614-2511-1657.
446-1128.
Ccumy Apptlanco,,lnc. Good
2-bdrm lralter. furnlthed &amp; new uHd opptlanc:oo, T.v. 1111. ()pan
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon •.Sat. 114·
Clrptl $30001 114-949-2526
448·18H, 627 Srd. Avo. Gil•
All naw, Pli!'dld drywtll llpollt,OH
mochllar, 1peclal factory lncln·
tlv11, 1av1 thouunds, call 1· GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wuhef'l, drym, reh1Qer1tft,
800-464-7171, 11k tor Todd
rangn. Sklggo ADDIIIncot,
Upper River Ad. IelWe Stone
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Cnolt Molal. C.III14-4411-7S811.

s•.

Employment Serv1ces

------112
11

Help Wanted

Appror. 110A.: Ironto old Al.7 11
-'• water bid, e drfttlr
milo S. of Golllpolll. Tobocco
lllal, mlrrow headboard,
btse, $2i,500 with termt. 614·
25. 304-675o5301.
667-6220.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
W1ter front lal at R1ciM D1m, Comptoll homo tumlohtnao.
reduced price. Wll $7000 now Hours: Mon-Stt, N . tl4-416$5000, 114·1411-2528
0322, 3 miiH out Bui1YIIIo Rd.

~

14

Business
Training

FrH Dlllvery.

Rentals
41 Houses tor Rent

ConoiNIIIon Wantod

~eo.

... l.ollonnl, c..,..•.

llfl I I - Pllntol'l, and Mill Paula't Day Clrt c ...tar.
sa•, affordable, ehlldcart. M·F
Roo-, EO£ 1 -·1142
Eaay - 1 E-lont Payl M_,blo PfOdllcto AI Homl. Call
Ton FI'IO, 1~411M, Ext.
313.
Molp W.ntod: Full Tlmo C.rlltlod
1fT Or liLT. Excollonl -IH1.
WMIUII" • No Shift Wotk,
- I n - To Tho Medical
PliU, :103 Jacbon Plkl, Bat·
-~ A.ll. And 4::10 P.M.
MOllY IHCOIIE llo~g homo
For Craft Footlval. Call 1-IIQG.
N4-u41. (111101 81 Dvar 18, FN

.....,.

I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ago•

2~10 .

Befort, attar sohool. Drop-Ina
welcome. 614-448-8224. New In·

2br Houae
Vinton Artl,
Rtflfencll And Dlposlt Rtqulfld. 814·388-8671.

tanl Toddler Cart, 814-44"221:
WIN Babylltln My Homo On Ad·
.dlton Plke, G1Uipoll1. R1f1ren· 3br 2 Clr Gartge, Brick Home In
CM Provided. I'M-307·7298.
Country. 'No Houu
PM1.
$400/mo, Pluo Dopo!ll. 614-446·

Fmanc1al
21

Business
Opportunity

1082.

House for r•nt, 2 b1droom1
304~75-5301.
.
'
HoUMI lor renl· one In Mid·
dllport, 2 In Pomlfoy, call 614·
992·2403

HOTEL
!NOTICE I
1'D 1410 WK Now Hiring. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 42 Mobile Homes
-l.aC10-812·2rnl.
Cookl Slrvara, rtcomm~nda that you do buai·
tor Rent
llolnllftiOCI,
neas with .,.aplt you know and
NOT to lind monay lhrOUIJh tha 1 bedroom trailer, pay own
mall until you have lnvtshgated uiiiHin pluo dapcslt, 304-675the offering.
2535.

you

Kri' 'N' CARLYLE® by ·tarry Wright

want it ...

you·ve got it ...

2 bdrm mobile home tor rent,
at»prox. 3 mil• from Pomerov &amp;
Mlddlepon, 1011t elec:trlo, 614·
8115-4233
2· bdrm trailer In Racln• 1r11
Clll 614·992-5858
'

Nice 3Br Mobil• Hom•
Reterence And Dtposlt At!
quired . VInton, OH. 114-388-i243
U .M. To 10 P.M.

44

Apanment
lor Rent

Gr1cloua living. 1 and 2 beef,
room 1par1ment1 1t Village
Manor
end
Alveralae
Apartment• In Middleport. From

$196. C.ll614-l1112-7767. EOH.
In Middleport, Ohio. 1 and 2
btdroom tuml•hed 1pt, eom1

You'll Come Up kes With
The 9ossl{led$.

30, 1991

.

...

79

,,.~.

·8

,,..
'

1:00

; t,

. '•

i ,., •

..••,

Home
tmprovemerits

',.. ,,"

',,
••

Unconditional Ufellme · guaran-

IH. Lacal

'·'·

fumllhecl.
Coil colloct 1·

r~ferwncu

Of

All his life he tried
to be a good person.

,.'

BA8EMENT
WATERPROOFING

Wtl•prOOo

Many times, however,
he failed·. for after all,
he was only human.

He wasT\'t a dog.

Q

7:00

FRANK AND ERNEST

..
!·

jOf'IIGJ'ii!$

,•

TOPIC~

,.

----·you ANI&gt;

•••'
,.

.

,.

I'

,.

you~

"

~r/Cf' yeLP~/'

rot&gt;y

,A.PPIN6 A fi!OOM

'·'•

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ALLEYOOP

' (I) E,IIMIII T0111ght

Stereo.
• Meil'lad ... With Child..,.

f

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••

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Ill 1D ._lllvta Ruteo
S"tereo:.lil

GJ). MoVIe

EEKANDMEEK

~ShaWnlte

Ill Oft,a;'ge Stereo.

WHAT &lt;J.llll&lt;t;£
IS 'THAT 1

a Hotl!llr Bowl Brigham
Y~

0 Potnt:e va':.!J Stereo. Q
8:01 (I) MOVIE: Senti-Tough tR)
12:00)
8;30 (J). IIJ) 8lonolll Blossom
seeks a definition ot second
base. (A) Storeo. C
Ill) ID. Major Dlil A
MaMa lolditr returns from
1!Jt Persian CluH. IR) Sterao.

,.

iJ On Bt.ae Stereo.

'

1:00

MY ~D~1SCVR.NEWO\R
1$ A REAL CLUNKER.

State vs. Tulsa at Anaheim,
Calli. IL)
(l) Amerlcln PlayhouM The
rise and decline of a group
ol young P~rk Avenue
soclalijes.
MOVI : 'lpwtlcue (PI

&lt;ll.

.,'
0

2 of 2)' AIC Monday N)gltt

••

(!) AlfiiO

IIOvla (2:001 Stereo. C

•.'·
•
.' '
.·

community ol Mpen, Colo.,
Is documented. 12:40)
Ill) 1D. Mu!phy lnlwn The
FYI taam drtvas eaell Ollt8r
crazy wllan they car pool. IR)
Storeo. C
IIJ WWFl'rime 1'lme

BARNEY
YO'RE
NOT VERY
TALKATIVE
'fODAY,

UH ···l GUESS

NOT, PARSON

WHEW U I THOUGHT

HE'D NEVER LEAVE!!

,·'

.,
••

:--• .

lS ,___--'--- - 1 .t

''

.. ~ · .
,'1.;'

,,..L&gt; ,

......

• •

•uu,
. . ,t.
''"''·

... .. "'•

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I

which signa aro romantically pertoc11or tacls are ot more Importance 10 you at
you. Mall $2 plus a long, self·&amp;d· this lime 1han you may realize. In your
dressed, stamped srw81ope 1o Ma1ch· dealings with othBrB, make Ita point to
maker, clo this newopaper, P.O. Box do everything 1he way MISS Manners
would . .
91428,
Clevelttnd , OH H 101-3428.
BERNICE
AQUAIUUI (...., »Feb. 11) Thlsla an LEO (JuiJ D-Aug. 22) The personal
BEDEOSOL excellent day tor you to anempt to ldanthy you may have boen ONrelllng
breallte new lifo Into something that Is lor can be tound 1oday by reviewing
In need ol ......,.,, oopoclally II h per. your 88r1y experloncet. The.answer Ilea
at the core, wlleralt all began.
111111 to your vocation or career.
PIICII (Folb............ 20),II you have VIRGO (Aug. D-a.pl. 22) You might
to Ill In ludgmont of another 1oday, get Involved In a llet'IOUI diiCIIIIIOn toplace yourselt In 1he o1har guy'o shoes. day wllere you will want to otlor ano1her
II you do, you could and up making a what you blltovo to be conwuctlve
.auggoallona. Bo carotul that It doesn't
new friend lnatead ot an adversary.
ARIII (Merch 21· Aprtl 11) A joint Ill· bltcome outrlgh1 crttlclam.
dMvor, whole Worth had you PIIDiad. UIIIA (lapt. :D-Oot. D) A chance lOr
could reYNI Ito ln1rlnllc Value 1oday. penonll gain 1tu boen avlllablo to you
Follow your lnatlncla, pro or con, u to on vartoua occutona. ret you've been
. Dec. 31, , . ,
how It ltlould be hancllad trom this point UIUible to oltacllvety capitalize on 11.
Don't tot It avade you again today.
torwlll'd.
Partnershlpa could prove 10 be very TAURUS (April 20,IIQ 20) Adojlt a ICOIII'to (Oct. :Moftn. 221 You are In
conatrucllva tor you In 1ha year ahead, gl-d•tlka aHI1ude 1oday oo that a very faVorable cyde wllere you ltlould
both aoclllly and commerdatly. 111ool&lt;a you do not dllturb lhl dlllceto balance be able to reap 11te typeS ot rewards you
In a llgnlflclnt retattonlltlp. It can be antlctpahl trom alluatlona you poriOIIII·
like you might get Involved In -iJ.
ly CN~te or control.
C~~ (OK. 22-.lan. ft) You handlad attac:Uvetf.
may be In a more gregarious mood 1han 0111111 (May 21-..111ne 201 Kind worda iAGITTAIIIUI tllotr. D-Ole. 21) You
uauel today. Plan IORlethlng tun that and -llble prOcedures lhOuld come hlbl! a gUIII'dlen angel hovering over
11kll you
Is a lo1 ol ac1Mty eallly lor you today. It will enable you you today whO ltlould provide you W!th
and wllere you can 111111 and·make new and othara 10 do 1 good jOb regarding 11te Pf01* Inner IWOive to manage any·
lrtenda. Know where to look tor ro- IOI!Illhlng Ill of you would rather not thing t111tt comae your way, be It tavor'·
able or untavorable.
mance and you 'll. lind lt. The Altro- . do.
~
Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveala CANCER (olunt 21-.IUIJ 22) Soclll COli· ·

-•llloro

The sixth sense
serves

ill

S..lll

2t

Pua
Pua

·4 t

Opening lead:

eiperts, even though, wileD they made

"ICI'IImt

CftnllStano.
Tl1lll
1'1111

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...

The World AlmanalCrossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Wrote mullc
tor
7 Hlllll.)
II Actor Bela t2 Actreoa And ron
14 Not movtng
(2 Wdt.i
15 Sounda
t6 Gollrl
17 Coup d' -

19 Tide type

20 LOwing
22 Computar
term
25 Humorlol
George 26 Pot·a"' 2g Biblical
choractar
31 Swomp tl'll
33 Popeye'•
tood
35 Drunkard (II.)
36 Sixth 11n11
(abbr.)
37 - QuanUn

AftlwertoPrailaatPulle

38 Cooling
drlnko
39 TV'a Marla

.

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42 Uvernuld
45 Eau'a
country
46 Ortlntal uah
4g5low-movtn1

anlmall

51 Fungus/ lip
combination
53 Fellow
flghtora
54 Grlduot"
55 Rationll
56Atttclt'l'
Arlblln
watara
12 •da.)

DOWN '
1 Roluoe trom
mH"
2 Adorable
3110notor.

4 caviar

5 Ancient ·

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chartot
6Lthwloe

7 Slblllil of Ita
8 Ot thoo ..,..

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18 Spldor, . ....
20 vat period
olllml
21 K.... ln
cotton ftber
221ottom
23 llrlla thrllly

9 Circuit
breatcar
10 J'!ftiPintl

24.~owMr

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27 lllllla
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28 Pula lo work~
30 Crolby,
:~
Still, - lnCI
Young
32 ........ loudly
34 Slati ot
llftctlon
311egttn
40 Ofllltm Ol
hind
41 NoV811at Zo11

210ulrrtl

42 Youtll Grt·

431111t~

44 Glr1ot-·

441 Until of
r'*-o
47 Noll-

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110~

52

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.

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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!left llllllrtn ...................... , _ ,., _ 0 ..... Ill.

Hill

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10:30 (l) Columbua Mu- of Art
The Slrlk COI1ac11on (0:30)
• Cnloll: ttnd Clllll .
8 AIOS: Condtlton Clttlcll
10:30)
11:00 C2l. (J). 9 ID • IIJ)

Hal

. ·:.;:

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the key deleuiw play, they wouldn't
baw seea the exact reason beltiDd it.
"•!"/
To test '""•-If, COYer the West and ruffed both of dummy's club J&lt;.n Ia 1:~
,--South cards;
you are East. Agailllt six Ilia band. II couldn't belp East to ruff · ::'.'
~
diamonds yoor partner leads the club low or high. Trllmpe were drawn, • '""'
10. Decla.:e., ducks Ia tbe dummy and dutiuny's beart l011er wettt ott the ":·;~~
you wiD with the klog What do you spade klag, and the slam made.
: to.
lead at trick two?
·
· ~ wiDDiDg defeaae is for East. to · North's two-club opening was l'!ltcb to the diamoad two at trick . •I'\
strong artificial and forcing. South's two. U South wlalla tbe dammy 11111 ·,~
two-dl~moud response was 'waiting': ruffs the two club loaen witb bia Q-J • - ·
either a bad band or some values with- of dlamoads, East ICOI'eS a trump ..
out a good suit to bid. After diamonds trick. U South wiDI trick two in band, ,;;;,
were agreed on, North bid wbat be East can ~I tbe third club wllll tbe ..\·:
blllllld IllS pertaer could niake:- • · dia""W'J - . fon:utc Sooollt to - .
The deal is baBed on one reported by . ruff. Tbea he can ruff the lourtb club
VJad Racovicl!anu of I!Almaal.t. At the with the dl•mmd 10, the letliltc trick. ·c•".
table East returned his ·aecood club. It is the old llory of leading a tnunp "·'
De&lt;:larer won in the 4ummy and whea declarer willies to tate ralls Ia .. ;~
the short·tlii!Dp baacl. .
.. ,...,
,.

f"lltd (R) 12:30)

ill

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It

Aabutr:10:05[1) MOviE: Tho Longlll

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11!1700 Ctull Willi P11

11:301fl

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Vulnei-able: Both
Dealer: North

o• NottMm E -

On ..... S11reo .
lB lllacttwerC
lporli l'onltl!!!

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Joel runa a tab 1111 to
determine whit matcaa Chris

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Many experts enjoy .a sinh sense at

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Dlllgnlng
cartene Is torced to altttnd a
dinner dete with her
ax-huaband. IR) Stareo.l;l
10:00 !1) Hen

1:30111)

ASTRO-GRAPH

SOI1l'll

Now Shlrao.
• lArry King Uvel
11!1 Fllhlr Oowllng Mrllertle
Dowling and Stave era
lnv~ed to 1hil homo of ttn
erstery writer. lA) Stereo.

'

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4·46-2342 675-1333
992-2156

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LOWEEZ.Y

...

T!te dally llii of

11te people who live, wM,
viel1 and play In 11te

'•

. ''

6.-:--- - - - -7••-:---"---"'----11 •. _ __ _ __

0 ~ flllllon Stereo. Q
IIJ) 'Ff1)111 1M Dead ot

(2).

Nlgllt (PI 2 of 2)' NBC
MonclaJ Night II 1M MoviH
12:00) Stereo. Q
(I) Flllclom t10wt San Diego

•n

.

vs. Iowa at San Diego

~~

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.QIOP63

(2).

change. (1 ;00)

J'

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0

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t87

the table. Often they will make a play
becaUIIe It ' feels' ript, not based on
cold acalysis. Tbat appUes to today's
deal, wbicb would be solved by most

Bel Air Aunt Vlv and Uncle
Phil become suspicious ot
Will's ai.nteelam. (A)
Stereo.
(I) (J)
MICO,vw
MacGyver helps a woman
evlctad by a heartless
slumlord. Stereo. C
(l) (!) AIJl 7 In tlie USSRA
look at how sovtot children
view 11teir soctoty at a Ume of
broathtaklna and devastating
political and eeonom1c

..'
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ByP~pAider

7:35 Cll Binford l Son
1:00
IIJ) Frnh Potnt:e of

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EAST
+QI54Z

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a e. ellarStareo.
a NFL'• GNat~~t Mamanta
Sol! of Football Follies
QICrouftN

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lngtrl county aru 21
Thl
bolt In tumHuro u
Iring
Call 304.a75-4154 tor 11M ..;
Umatn.
·

Wlltel of Fortune Q
• Family FIUd

WEST

ALDER

(2).

•'

.

PHILLIP

w

Gff, IT /,..OO~.J

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Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Tonight

QIMOiteyh
0 The Waltonil
7:01 Addame Flllllly
7:30
IIJ) .llctplrdyl ~
())NBAIIelketNtiC
Bulls at Indiana Pacers IL

:r. TtfiN/C oF MY IOJ&gt;Y A5'
/A Tf Mpl.f, f/lNiff.

•

C1rter's Plumbing
Fourth and Pln1
Galllpolll, Ohio
114.C.IS-311M

.ll.- - - - .12 •. _ _ _ _ __

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NORTH
IJ.I8-II .
+A
.AK7
tAKHS
+AH2

BRIDGE

Stereo.

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2, _________________ .10..___ _ _ __

Ill Whlll of Fortune

.,.;ftl'

~&gt;;t ·

~:c::
c-

aiding or lrolllr oklrtlng. 61424B.fl52.

1ru·n. yom· duller into eush,
Sell it tire easy Wtly ••• by phone,
rw neetl to leut'e your irome.
l'lace you1· clussified ad fO(lay!
l5 wol'tls m· less, 3 days,
3 paiJei"B,$6.00

r I'

11

ICIAM.,J..ITI ANSWIIS
•2-&gt;·1
Bedbug-Delay-QuotiJ-(Jncorlc...COULD EAT
Last Hliltoween my neighbor came home from work
and ·announoed that he htid lecelved a bonus. Too bad
It was one that you · - - .
·

&lt;ll=

C.A~tl?H

Farm Equipment

\31•

~

~- :

~-

(j5, Dmm ot JMmla

PIN down EXTRA

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Llvcslock

. -....p

6 GEl
UNSCRAMilE lETTERS 10 I
ANSWER
· ·
1111111

OUpCtolt
(IJ New Zollo Stereo. 1;1
.8:3J ()) AnciJ Orlllllh

,.

Will build polio i:ov111, dockol

J::·

I :~~E~~,,H~uns r r r r

0 llcoobr Doo

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h·l'tr!~~

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.scrMnld roorne, put up vlnyt

87
Upholstery
;:Mo:::w:::,.
:::yo::'t~U~pl'~oot711711-,,.:"''I:._III'V_Ic-_

~- ~1ft

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=:.:::::•I=.,
other bl'lndL Houu calfl, allo
aomo opplllnco ropalno. WV
304-576-2318 Ohio 614-4411-2454,

Rnldenllal or commercial
wlrtng. new Mrvlc. or ,.Pill,..,
M11ter Ueenlld lllctrlclan.
Rldanour Eloctrlcol, 304-175·
1788.

&lt;1"'1 1"41
.. t~

lqun

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84

·,.rvi"l

.Amertctt
~. Q
Ona TV stereo.

::

Plumbing
Heating

-·

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1:30(2). ONIC..ew.Q
(J) 8MJ 1M llljl

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82

~ -·

8:05 (])lew lily Hftllllaa

....' •,.

Room lddHiont, oldlng, rooting,
vinyl ropiiCIOIIOI wlndowt,
corponlry by At TromM, IM-1'12·
2328 · CALL COLLECT
O.vlo
Sow·Vac
'Sarvlco,
Goorgoo CI'IOk Rd. Pane, a up.
piiH, pickup, oncl dallvary. 814448.02114.

;,•.!,Jt
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Fl'llman'l Plumbing And Hut·
lng, 114·211-1111. .
.

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Tin, K·l Cop .

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night.

MNING

ONewt
()) Ykllo Power
aqu.,. Ona TV Sllrto.

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81

(2).

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I CIS, A[L

MON.. DEC. 30 8

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~mplo

.low to form four

C 1991 , TV (;,stong tne n W(lrm TX

:~

Services

0 .._.,.
Iofton of
lour ICI'CimbiOd _ .

•

Want to:

61

Television
·viewing

.•,'·

Ca.m !)era &amp;
Motor Homes ·

11170 Scotty. · 'Camping Trillar,
S l - 4, uoo. Cal A~• &amp;p.m.
304·77:J.I154.
-

614-441-4311.
•
C.blnltt, Round O.Ok Tablol.
Sam Somerville'• Army Surplut.
C.mllougo clothing, C.rh•rl• 10 .:.71.:.....:.A.::U::tO:,S:..:;Io:.:r..:Sa:.:.:l:.e_ _ 72 Trucks·lor Sale
percent diiCount, l"nlor cam·
llaugot· regular pi'lcn. 18115 Tl'll!l Am Rod With Gray, 1885 Dadgar holt ton t&gt;l&lt;kup,
howa·Ill« Chriltrilal, Fri., Sit., Loodod, With T·Topt, 8:00 • outo. AIM'M atarto. $350o. 614Sun. Noon • 6pm. clhor dlyo
::4411
:::·7104
=-·==-;;::-::~=;;;
h.our• call 304-273. 51155 (until 3:00, 614,4411-3222. '"'· 58.
Chrlatmu) (Othtr daya ,_.pm) 1187 Chivy Nova: hl,h mileage, 111186 Ford F-250, v.s, 4x4, 47,000
All Chrlatmat orchlngn In by · - ropalr. Good ranoporto·
Calf Ahar !p.m. 614.C.6January 5, '1ltl2. ln1ulatld tlon ctro11,500. For mare lnlor'·
Dtcron camoUouge cO'tleralll.
;:~~ui.C.II B14o4411-2342, Aak 1911 Chovrollt Scotocllll 350,
$30.00.
Auto, Low Mllu, G.trag• Kept.
Stair Stepper 180. Enrcl11 bfkl 11187 -Horlzon Automatic With 614-2511-1556 Evonlngo.
$35. Both ••• cond, 304-ll75- Air, ~.1..700; 1H8 Edtol 81,000 Holiday Solal 1918 Nlloan PU
4634.
.
Milot, 01.200. 614-2511-1270.
$3,H5; 111116 Dodgl D-150 PU
$3,5H; 18117 Foril F-110 PU
55
Building
$3,295; 1181 Mud1 PU n,&amp;l5;
11110 Ford Elcon OT. Aaklng 1988 Chlv. S·10 Auto PU n,5115;
Supplies
$51100. 614-441.0731.
1865 Chav. 5-10 Blaur $3,295;
Block, brick. uwer Pipe.• , win· 18110 GMC Short Sid 12,100 1185 OMC Jimmy Blozor $3,295'
dowl, llnllll, IIC. Claude Win· MU~1 44.3-V-1, 5Spd., Loldld 1985 Ford Bronco II S3,095i 18M
tera, Rio Granda, OH Call 814· ~o.wo; Aomlnaton 11-48 16 GA. 5-10 Aulo PU $1,795; 1984 S·10
245-5121.
Full ChoU, Automatic, 5 Shot, Ext C.b $1,7115; 1!1114 Chov. 5-10
S1.41115i 1114 Bronco II S2,715;
$225. 114-441-7357.
1982 Dateun PU Auto Air,
56 Pets lor Sale
.,..._...;..;,;...;..:;.;...:;:;.:_ _ For Sola: 1164 F01d Tampa GL, ~,415l11110 FOfd 4x4 PU Sl,l85;
1177 uMC PU Nlc1 $1,515; 181'8
Groom and Supply Shop..Pet ~,115. 6M-367-G214.
Ford 314T 4r4 $815· 11174 Ford
Grooming. All brtlds, 1tyl11.
l1m1 Pit Food Deller. Jylle Holiday Solei 18117 Chryalor PU $815; 1884 Font ilu ~.~u. a.
LoBaron $2,485; 19811 Nl111n &amp; D Auto Silo, Hwy 160 N. 614·
Wabb. Call 614.C.6-0231 .
Stnllra $2,715j 1188 Nluan 4414665.
AKC Choco1111 Llbnodor Pup. Slnlra With Air, S2l715; 1811 Ply.
pin, Be1utltul, 8 WHkl Old, Cott ~,415; 18111 Cnov. Clllbrlty
Shoto And Wonnlld. Reidy To $3,8H~ 1888 Ford Elcort 11,HI5;
It Placadl614-446-8'111.
1188 Cloov. B1r1111 $3,585; 1187
Dodge Shadow ES $2,481; 1187 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
AKC Mln1tur1 Dlc:hahund, Buick Skyhawk, $2,385c 18117 1911.1 Ford Ran~STX. 4 whlol
$200., rudy Jan. 1!1, laking Fonf EICOII $1,685• 1811o Old• drl ••200 8
~
dapoobo, 304o675-3526.
C.lolo $2,10; 1184 Olda Cullin 1..;....;110.;;·..;..,;;..;;.;.;·.;.1;.;..;..;.1..;~;;..;;.'•'·~­
1184 Oldo Flronzo $1U;
AKC Poodle r,upplol, lop I ~.195·
Auto Parts &amp;
1183 Dotaun $815; 18112 Dotaun 76
llnr tor•. min eture Schnauzer, $7V5.·
B
l
D
Auto
S1111,
Hwy.
Accessories
male, aiiYif, toolvllle 814-817· 110 N. ll4-441-&amp;886.
3404.
Aluminum 6 tua Chevy truck
Wa buy IIIII or llodl. Jim WhHio.
Terrier pupplta,
$200, 61{-441-ll73t
Cochl'ln
Auto
Cantor,
5th
ond
lhlddlng, very amert,
Vlond
Sl,
Pl.
PH.
304-11'5-11185.
Budget Tl'lntmlulonl, UHCI &amp;
hNHh gua.r·•ntH1 now laking
l'lbul., lllrtlna 11 $H; A\Oo
dapooHt, 614·5114-4677 A1hont
Porta. 614·24~·51177, 614·371172 Trucks tor Sale
2283.
Blue HHI" pupe, 304.f7S..3121
ahar8 :oo PU.
1812 Chovrolll Plck...P, Prlco:
New ga1 tanka, body par1a, one
$300, 614-245-110117.
~ Houut For Sale: several
ton truck whHII, radlltort.
Slzn. 1 112 Mile OUte 141, 1178 JMp truck, qu1dfa..I111C 1 floor m1ta etc. D &amp; A Aula,
Wayne Shoemekar. &amp;M-441- auto, topper, ntW front Ure1, Alplay, wV. 304-372·3833 or 1·
0593.
U25 tlnn, IM-1824305
800.;!73-ll585.
Dtlgonwynd Conery Plfllln,
Slam. . tnd Himalayan kht1n1.
614 441 3844 on ... 7 p.m.
Fllh T•nk, 2413 J10kaon Ava.
Polnl PINNnl, 304-175-2083,
lull llno Trvplcal tloh1 blrdo,
1ma• 1nlmateand tuppltH.
Rat Tenter pupplee, Inside or
outaldl dOG, - pertntl on
preml•-. 11MM-107i ar .114·

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'J

38WIOI.

FII'IWood For Solo, Big Flat Bod
Loodo, $45, Dollvwod. 614-441U2D.
. ·
Portoblo llgh1od dlongAbla lot·
tor llgn rag. $3H. Spl,clll $211.
FI'IO lolloroldollvwy. Platlc lot·
111'1 $37.50 bor. AM SIGna, 1·
800~33-3453 anyllmo. Ofllr ••·
pii'IOJin.4.

5U~21111vtmei,IIQe

30, 1

BORN

'&lt; ...

&amp;

Pans

Monday, December

Ford Flllhlld, V4 . 12.5122.5 · • !·
Tirn And Whloll AI $35. IM·
,.

4-, _ _ _ _ __

wHh utllllln pold, rlfiNOCI and 53
Antiques
dapoaH roqulrod, 304482·211M. ~~--~::;:::~:..,...,-­
Modem 1 BR aptnment. 114· Buy ot 1111. RlvtriM Antlquee,
446.0310.
112-4 E. Main 81-, Pomeroy.
Hourt: JI.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00
Modem 2 &amp; 2 bad room lpol~· !&gt;:'!'&gt;..!"~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
manl In Mlddlaport, 2-bothl, 11.., . , . _
wuflar/cfrylf flook·up1 equip.
Pld
ohdlont. 54 Miscellaneous
Rohll'lnciiDopooM
requlrod.
Phon•
ti.C..U&amp;-4448
1tter
Merchandise
6:00pm.
lllg 41A, 2 both, OokOII - ..
Modem 2 IR opt. 114-446-03110.
holM bultl_f!lr J0U $21,Ht. 114Now Havon 001 bod,_ lpl, •ntt lltlpltty diPGtll ·"" rtllronct rtqulrod,
30ol.aBa·211M.

Auto

0 •

1Wo II Trlumph EngiOM. 10

Count'I

52 Sporting Goods

•

Accessories '· ·

g,.,....

tMd. 814-418 . . ..

PICKENS FURNITURE
185 Allla Chllmaro Dl-1 TI'IC·
Nowi\Jolld
tor, $5,150; 0.14 AC With Load.,
Houlohold tumlohtng. 112 mi. $2,150, 0.17. AC Wbh Plow, Cu~
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. ,PMiunt, WV, tlv.tor, Grain Drill, $2,150i 114Clll304-675-1410.
2884522.
'
RENT20WN
Dump Truck,. Hydl'lllc SPfOidor,
614-44f.315a
llor 12 Varlablo Spoodo FOf
Vl'ra Fumlture
Limo And Llmltlono. 614-441Solo &amp; Choir, ~1.10 WMk; 11044.
R~ellnar, U.47 W11k, Swlvlt
Rocklr, $3.83 Wook.lunk Bod Gtht grlnd1r mixer. New Holland
Complllt $8.41 W11k, 4 Drowor 7ft. hayblnd, Now Holland 8 ft.
Chill, $3.26 WHk; - · Bid· htyblnd, AC 2 row, no tl• com
room SuHo, 7 pc., $16.17 W•k, plantar. All good cond. 304-273lnclucfot Bodctlng.Country Pint 4215.
Dlno11a WHh llorii:h l 4 Cholrt,
~0.811 WNk.OPEH : Monday Jlm't Farm Equlpmant, SR. 35,
Thru s.turd•r, t..m. to l!l_
p.m.1 WHt Galllpolle, .IM-441-tmj
Sunday 12 Noon Til &amp;p.m. • Wide 11lectlon new I ulld firm
Mlln on Aouto7 On Route 141, lraclol'l &amp; Implement•. Buy,
un, tr1de, a:oo;.!li;OO weekd1y1,
In Con1enary.
Sot. 1111 Noon.
Salt On All C.rpll In Stock!
Vlnyl, $4.H yd. C.rt&gt;ll M.OO Up. Wantod: Uaod linn equipment,
Mollohon Coipota. lM-446-1'144. . anvthlng you want to Hll. 814·
25e·1308, 614-25H040 Aftar
Solid Maple Coltoo Table And 2 6p.m.
End Tabl11, Love S..t, Call AI·
tar 5p.m. 814-445o2411.
63
Livestock
SWAIN
:-::~~.;.::,;::.:.:;.,......,~
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 1 YAr Old Angua Bull, $1550.
Olivo Sl., Golllpollt. Now &amp; UHd 614' 2!11-1315·
tumhuro, hU11f0, WHIIIJ1 &amp; 2 Horu Trallw Ntw Pllnl, Ntw
Wort boola. 114-441-:1158.
nrn, $1,115· 18110 AQHA Gild·
lng,
1800; 8 Yur Old Paint Mara,
VI'RA FURNITURE
$650. 114-2BMI22.
.
114-446-3158
LIVING ROOM: ·Sohl &amp; Chair For Sale, 8 month old Angua
$1H.OO• Rocllnor
~41,00; holtarw wHh popora, $1.00 lb.
SWivel Roehr, $H.Oo; CcffN &amp; Call 814-448-4447.
End Tabln, IH.oo Soi.DtltiNG
ROOM: Tlblo WKh 4 Poddld Tflrol Bilek And WhH1 Foci
Chl~o, t14t.OOL
Pint Cow8, With Llmotlne CIIYII1
Dlno11o WHh •nch nd 3 614-368-ll'14.
Chalro, $:111.00; llltohl_"'l 2
Door ~Hch, $348· Or $651.00 64 , Hay &amp; Grain
Sol; Ook foblo, C2112 WHh" 1
Bow
•- .
Cllotro, Mlrlld Hoy Round BIIH, ~~
$828.00.8EDROOII: Pootw Bod- Par lalo. StOlid tnd~. Hay,
room SuHo (I pc.), $341.00; 4 800 So. llolol. PuN Rod 1.10vor.
Dr~wor Cholt, $44.15; Bunk $2.00 Por llolo.IM-245-1460.
Bid, 3229; Comploll Full llott
911 ~05.00 Sat; 7 pc. C:..r
Transporta11on
a04lroom SuHo, IIH.OO.OPEN: '
Monday Thru llotiM'dly, 8Lm, to
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Til
5p.m., it MIIN on Routo 1 On
ROutl 141 In Cont0111ry.

.......

76

.Dill No llorll LoN U.W.ntod
Pound• And lnchoo. Eat Tour
IIOaulor IIAio. Tiki Notii'OI
Harb Caooulol. Rooulo

tumllhad
lpt,
downltal,.., utllltiH furn, buuti·
fut vltw of river, S2!10mo, 614·
·149·252ti
1br Apartment, Carpeting, Fum,
Khchan, Water And Tn~lh Ptld.
L0c1ted In Bulavllle Pike. 614·
448-l!Ya.
R1t1 Or Mice? In Your Hou~?
Buy ENFORCER, Klllt lilt l
mlcl - In only 1 fNdlng,
GUARANTEED! Avolllblo ol:
O'Doll True Valut Lumber, 634
Elll Mtln StrHt, Pomeroy, OH
Racondblonlld wuhol'l · &amp;
dryorw, uch ~00 and up. Wo
-.teo all makot. Tho Wuhlf I
Drylll' Shoppo1. 114-44HI44.
s...nld Aah Oak And
ory FII'IWood, f55 Plck.·Up
o.n..rod And Stackld,
Wl"'lho 614-441.f846.
Solid O.Ok Curved Gila China
l.bdrm,

FrH catai614-H2-0Me

..

• &lt;

Merchandise

1,'

6

.•· t

Monday, December

54

1 &amp; 2 bdrm
In Ulddle.-rt,
Utlllt• fum, •p req, no petl,
6M·H2•2218.
1 Bodrocm Untumlahod, With
Slovo And Altrtgoratoril No Plio,
S1791mo. Water lnclu td, 5100
Dopollt. 614-446-3617.

dog, can be . . n at 1877
coin Hgt1, Pomtroy

-.;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.SN~FU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcement s

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "WI wl . _ , . your laglcy, ...... Warp

opoad. lnCI (lodopead, Mr. Aoddlnborry." - llrllddi) o.vtd l.Mibert.
.. -

t-

�Page-1 0-Tt:1e Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

It i~ time to reflect on
where you have been this year
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
several parades to be held over the teer work with the MGM Scout
Sentinel News Staff
following weeks as war in the Gulf District. .
John M. Causey entered a plea
It's almost 1992. Happy New continued.
year!
The new elevator at the Meigs of guilty to a. charge of voluntary
Isn't it nice to throw away the County Courthouse was dedicated manslaughter in the Meigs County
old calendar, pick up a new one as the John Stahl Elevator. Stahl Common please Colin for his role
and start all over again.
was a longtime courthouse custodi- in the October, 1990 death of his
The time has come 10 reflect on an.
next-door neighbor, Edmund
where you've been and where
John Lewis Young was found Shamp.
you're going and it's reassuring to guilty of kidnapping following five
Richard E. Jones was appointed
believe that the mistakes of tHe past and half hours of deliberation by a chairman of the Meigs County
will remain just that.
jury. He was returned to West Vir- Republican Party's Executive
Look at the New Year as a time ginia to face a 15 count indictment Committee replacing George
of challenge and promise, as anoth- following his conviction in Meigs Collins, now working in the Marier chance 10 go for those dreams, to County.
etta office of ODOT.
reach for the best and 10 forget the . Local businessman Charles
FormJ:r Meigs County County
Lcgar, a former Pomeroy mayor Auditor Gordon Caldwell and longrest.
But 1991 has not been without and long-time Pomeroy fire chief, time Pomeroy businessman Leo
events creating major changes in died in Grant Hospital in Colum- Vaughan died.
communities as well as in the lives bus.
Demolition began at Kerr's Run
of those who live here.
The threat of losing 1,258 jobs in preparation for the highway conSome long-established busi- at the Meigs Mines owned by AEP struction at (he intersection of
nesses, like Excelsior Salt Works because of the costly compliance Route 33 and 124.
of Pomeroy, have closed or are with the Clean Air Act surfaced for
Pomeroy Village Council and
preparing to close. Several others the first time, and still hasn 't gone several church groups protested the
under economic pressure are lrying away.
issuance of a liquor license for
new management as a way 10 revi"Smi!ty's Bar" in an East Second
talize business.
FEBRUARY
Stteet siOrefront The license, howNearly 200 coal miners have
The Racine Emergency Squad ever, were issued and the Bar
lost their jobs and hundreds of oth- covered a huge evergreen tree at opened.
ers live under the threat of being the firehou se wilh more than a
About 60 students of Southern
without jobs because of the Clean thousand red, white and blue rib- High School formed the letters
Air Act by which utility companies · bons to show their support for the "USA:" by candlelight at · a
must comply, one way or another.
troops in the Persian Gulf.
"Thanksgiving in March" service
Ravenswood employees have
The United Mine Workers made held at the high school in obsermarked more than a year of being American Electric Power aware vance of the end of the Gulf War.
off the job due to a lock-out as they that they are in support of installaArea miners and their families
call it, a strike as the company calls tion of scrubbers at the Gen. James joined in a "give scrubbers a fair
it. Both have had a financ1al impact M. Gavin Plant and will do every- chance" rally in Columbus with
on businesses in the Bend area.
thing possible to protect jobs at the American Electric Power being
On the positive side, Rutland's mines.
urged to install the equipment so
Approximately 600 people par- that coal from the Meigs Mines can
2.2 million waste water collection
and se-wage treatmeiu system got ticipated in a parade in support of continue to be used.
under construction, as did the $1.2 Operation Desert Storm in Racine.
million expansion of the Meigs The American Legion led the
APRIL
County Depanment of Human Ser- parade to the high school gymnasiPetitions containing 2,327
vices building in Middleport and um where the Southern Band and names of area residents in a show
the $750,000 Ohio Jl,iver erosion Choir performed and several minis- of suppon for keeping the Meigs
project below Hobson.
ters spoke.
Mines open and in production were
Meigs voters in a special elec- mailed out to American Electric
The intersection at U.S. ltoute
33 and State Route 124 in upper tion turned down tax levies for the Power, state and local officials by
Pomeroy was completed, and last Carleton School/Meigs Industries Mayor Fred Hoffman.
week plans were announced by the and the Southern Local School DisThe public defender's program
Ohio Department of Transportation trict.
was credited with saving Meigs
John D. Dowler was appointed County money in the defense of
for an $11 million first segment
co nstruction of the Pomeroy- 10 replace Democrat Joe Leach as indigent criminals.
head of Marietta's office of the
Ravenswood connector road.
A ci vii suit was filed in Meigs
Ohio
Department of Transporta- County Common Pleas Court
1991 came in with a flood, then
came the Gulf War, the hot dry tion. The appointment came after against Jason Riggs, Douglas Harsummer, and the full-blown reces- weeks of speculation that Meigs ris and others by the family and
County Engineer Phil Roberts estate of ViciOr Will.
sion of fall.
would get the appointment.
And we remember........ .
The First Southern Baptist
The names of the more than 200 Church dedicated its new building
service men and women serving in located on Pomeroy Pike.
JANUARY
There was plenty of action in Operation Desert Storm were
A three mile nature trail at
Pomeroy to usher in the New Year. placed on a banner 10 hang in The Camp Kiashuta blazed by the
As the bells rang flood waters were Locomotion.
Civihan Conservation Corps and
Jim Tompkins of Am erican orchestrated by the Meigs County
already across Main Street and
merchants were busy unloading Elecllic Power and Bill Oiler of the Park District Board was opened.
shelves of merc~andise as the UMW workers at Southern Ohio
More than 1200 children turned
murky Ohio lapped at their doors. Coal mel with Middleport Village .out on Easter Sunday for an egg
Before the first day of the New Council to discuss lhe Implications hunt at Middleport's Hartinger
Year had passed flood waters of the Clean Arl Act and how it Park.
reached 49.4 feet, 3.4 feet above will affect the local operation of the
Conlnlcts tolaling nearly $2 milflood level and several businesses Gavin plant and the lives of miners lion dollars were awarded on the
of high sulfur coal.
Rutland waste water collection and
saw a foot or so of water inside.
Demolition began on Nyc sewage treatment system.
Several emergency situations
Heavy wind and rain storms
were created by the floods around Avenue in Pomeroy as the Ohio
Department
of
Transporlation
predamaged
the historic Meigs County
the county. Five hours of one
for
highway
work
at
the
pared
courthouse in Chester and the
man's New Year's Day was spent .
on the top of his truck which had mlcrsection of U. S. Route 33 and Meigs County Commissioners
autho(ized repairs tolaling $7,209.
flooded out as he attempted to go Slate Roule 124.
More than a 100 Ravenswood
Those opposed to the proposed
through high water, three families
had to be evacuated in Rutland, and Aluminum Corporation workers closing of the Portland Elememary
five trailers had to be moved in from Ohio filled the Meigs County School by the Southern Local
Common Pleas courtroom to dis- School Disllict Board of Education
Racine.
By Jan. 3,just two days after the cuss their three month old labor staged a successful protest rally at
river crested, most merchants had dispute with a representative from the school. Just a couple of weeks
cleaned up and it was back 10 busi- Congressman Clarence Miller's later the board voted to keep the
school open.
office.
ness as usual.
Discontinuance of the Elders for
A Red Cross l:&gt;isaster Service
Attorney I. Carson Crow was
team moved into Meigs County 10 elected a director of the Farmers Options pro~ram proposed by Gov.
access flood damage and assist the Bank and Savings Co. succeeding George Vomovich sparked local
his father, Fred W. Crow, Jr. who concern from the Meigs County
victims.
The Meigs County Commis- resigned from the board.
Council on Aging for those resi Kelley Grueser was the grand deniS who have come to depend on
sioners adopted a $3 'fllillion ~ener ­
al fund budget. Title 10 the h1storic champion and Brandi Reeves the home services.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple with runner up in the annual Meigs
Stale Rep. Michael C. Shoemaker came ui Meigs County to speak
land adjacent 10 the Meigs County County Spelling Bee.
Central Trust Co. of Middleport at the Jefferson-Jackson dinner
Court House was accepted by the
made a nice donation 10 Middleport held by the Meigs County DemoCommissioners from the Masons.
Twenty-six welfare recipi ents Mayor Fred Hoffman to be used as cratic Pany.
lames Diehl, longtime Meigs
were charged with fraud and part of the local share of monies
ordered to pay back $27,566 in for the $112,500 improvement pro- County educaiOr, died.
ject at the levee.
AddingiOn, Inc. of Ashland, Ky.
benefits.
purchased the .Jaymar Coal Co.
A budget with anticipated
MARCH
which was expected 10 terminate
receipts of $7,793,300 and expenThe
candidacy
petitions
of
approximately
100 local jobs.
ditures of $8,949,200 was adopted
by the Meigs Local Board of Edu- Republican Fred Hoffman who
Fifty-six Southern students were
cation. The $75,000 deficit will filed for mayor of Middleport, and recognized for academic excellence
come from a spending reserve of Democrat Larry Wehrung, who at a banquet held at Southern High
filed as a candidate for mayor of School.
$310,189, it was noted.
As hope faded for avoiding war Pomeroy were not validated by the
The Eastern Concen band made
in the Persian Gulf, signs of con- Board of Elections. Both later ran history when it achieved its first
cern and compassion began appear- for the positions \&gt;" the indepen- superior rating at a stale band condent balloL
ing in Bend area communities.
leSt .
Jobless statislics for January
An $80,000 in Issue 2 monies
The rec~tion complex at Royal
Oak Resort Club was named in were released by the OBES and was approved by the Ohio Public
honor of Horace Karr, founder of Meigs .County's stood at 11.6 per- ' Works Commission for the Pearl
Street reconstruction project in
the pal'k in the mid-1960's. The cent.
School proficiency test results Middleport.
resort was earlier sold to Family
Meigs County's unemployment
Reson, Inc., William Stuckey, vice showed the academic perfonnance
of
Meigs
County
students
considerdrogped
to II percent.
president and manager.
ably
below
the
state
average.
Meigs
.Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's new Executive Direc- County teenagers recorded the third
Leverage is the use of borrowed
tor/Development Director Eliza- highest birth rateS in the state.
assets by a business 10 enhance the
beth Schaad, reported for her ftrSt
Meigs County Treasurer George return of the owner's equity. The
Collins was appointed 10 the posi· · th h ·
day at work.
The war to drive the army of lion of District 10 Administra.tive . expectabon IS at t e mterest rate
Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait Assistance, Ohio Department of charged· will be lower than the
began and The Daily Sentinel put Transportation. Howard Frank was earnings made on the money.
out an "Extra':, the first on the appointed to fiU Collins' unexpired
The International Monetary
term of ueasurer.
s~ree~S in this area with the printed
Ted Reed·Of Farmers Bank pre- Fund·is a supply of money supponword concerning the start of the
sented Mayor Fred Hoffman w1th a ed by subscriptions of member
Persian Gulf War.
A yellow ribbon campaign in sizable donation toward the local nations, for the purpose of stabilizsupport of those fighting in the Per- share of funds needed for the levee ing international exchange and promoting orderly and balanCed lrade.
sian Gulf was in full swing in improvements in Middleport.
Member
nations may obtain forTwo ·hundred of the GOP faith· Meigs County.
eign
currency
needed, mating it
A JIIOUP or Eastern High School ful turned out for the Lincoln Day ·
possible to correct temporary mal.rudents carrying 1he American flag dinner.
adjustments
in their balance of payGeorge
Wright,
Danny
Will
and
and signs With f11CS&gt;&lt;16...S ~f ' "!"Jport
~ent
~
"
'!!h0!Jt
~l!rrt"nr:y flepret:iRMary
Powell
were
rcc~;;~:z::!
~~:!
for Desert Storm paraded through
tlOn.
presented
pla9ues
for
their
volunTuppers Plains. It was tb~ first of
;

.,

· Vol.

167
1891

'
2S.CUona, 12 Pogos 21-.la
A IIUIIlmedlo lno. -.,..,... ,

December31, 1991

Electric customers get
temporary reprieve
BODY REMOVED -New York City police
and EMS workers remove a body from the gym
at City College in New York Saturday night.
Eight people died and at least 28 were injured in

2~.5 percent rate

a stampede outside the gym berore the start or a
sold-out rap celebrity basketball game. (AJ'
Laser Photo)

Eight die in stampede
NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor
David Dinkins ordered an investigation in10 the deaths of eight people crushed outside a set of gymnasium doors in a stampede to ,get
into a charity basketball game put
on by rap stars.
The crowd surged iniO a narrow
stairwell leading to the already
overcrowded gym at City College
in Harlem. Most victims fell down

the stairs·and became pan of a pile thau also assigned a homicide prosof bodies against the gym doors ecutor 10 investigate possible crimiSaturday night
nal charges.
•'We're going 10 find out why it
"It was a cone effect," said rescue worker Sy Collins. "There happened, how it happened, who's
were bodies on the floor and r,:ople responsible, if someone was
were just running over them . '
derelict." Dinkins said.
Dinkins on Sunday assembled a
The mayor said he had no
task fori;e that included police, fire, answers Sunday, but he did say the
medical and university officials. event was oversold.
District Attorney Robert Morgen-

PAITY WEAVER

.

By Ed Peterson
Social Security Manager in
Athens
Social Securily beneficiaries
will receive statements in the mail
in January showing the benefits
they received in 1991. This statement is used to determine if any
benefits are subject to Federal
income tax.
At least nine out of ten of those
who receive the statement - Form
SSA 1099 - will not have 10 pay
taxes on their Social Security benefits because their total income is

less than the taxable ceiling. If you
receive Social Security benefits as
your only source of income, you
are unlikely to owe Federal taxes
on the benefits.
An Internal Revenue Servic e
(IRS) worksheet - IRS Notice 703
- comes with the benefit statement. The worksheet shows you
how to determine if .your Social
Security benefiiS are subject 10 tax.
If, after completing the worksheet,
yo~ have questions on filing, you
should call the nearest IRS office
and ask for Publication 915.
To be taxable, you and your

JANKNAPP ,

:Residents
:look toward
:new year

Importance of benefit statements
.

LINDA MAYER

spouse's adjusted gross income
plus nontaxable interest, plus onehalf of your Social Security benefits would have to exceed certain
base amounts of income. The base
amounts taxable are:
- $25,000, if you file as a single
taxpayer, or if you are married and
filing a separate return and did not
live with your spouse at any time
during the year;
- $32,000, if you are married
and file a joint return, or
- $0 if you are married 'and lived
with your spouse at any time during the year and ftled separately.

COLUMBUS, (AP) - Customers of two electric utilities were
temporarily spared higher rates
after the companies and state regulators agreed to delay increases
associated with the costs of building the Zimmer power plant.
The Public Utilities· Commissian of Ohio on Monday approved
a 10-day delay for a 28.5 percent
rate increase proposed by Colum- .
bus Southern Co. and allowed
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elecllic 10 defer
its proposed 21.4 percent increase.
The $202 million Columbus
Southern increase was to have
takC/1 effect Friday.
PUCO Chairman Craig A. Glazer said he had pressed Columbus
Southern and groups opposed to
the utility's increase 10 keep negotiating.for a suilable increase.
"ln the spirit of cooperation and
continued negotiation, the parties
have agreed to postpone the rate
increase in an effort 10 achieve a
settlement," said Harry D. Post,
vice president of Columbus Southem.
The Ohio Office of Consumers'.
Counsel, which opposes the
increases, said it would join the
negotiations.
"We'U continue to put our best
effort forward in that direction;
however, if the settlement auempiS
fail, we and other group opposing
the increase are prepared 10 go to
•

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Congratulations, Meigs County!
Throu~h both the good times
and bad umes, you have kept your
collective chin up during the past
year. Bul 1991 is over, and as we
look IOward the new year, we can't
help but be optimistic.
The Daily Sentinel took·to the
streeiS over the holidays and surveyed citizens to see what's on
your mind as the new year gets
CINDY PRATER
~KEWALKER
underway.
Patty Weaver, a paralegal in the
"My wish for Meigs County is piness in the new year" for all of
law offices of Meigs County Prose- for everyone to 'take chargf and Meigs County..
,
- cuting Attorney .Steven L. Stocy, . work. in some way to make this a
"To my husband, Bill Prater,
has an optimistic wish for Meigs better place to live aM worlc," she who will graduate as a Registered
County in the new year.
continued. "I would also like to see Nurse from Hocking College by the ·
. "My wish for Meigs County in the Meigs County Infirmary end of 1992, I give my love and
NEW YORK (AP) - Lobster
1992 would be economic stability
receive their much-needed piano." support as he begins his new
parfait lOps the seven-course menu
regarding the,.AEP/Meigs Mines
"And last, but not least," Linda career."
¢'1,
for revelers willing to pay $110
issue and eco'llomic growth with
concluded, "my prayer is that God
Jan Knapp of Langsville, who is each to gorge in the new year at
the possibility of a new prison site
will ·bless us all and go with us a customer service specialist at
Alison, a trendy downtown reslauthat would create several 'hundred
through this new year."
Bank One's Rutland office, rememrant that has been booked for
new jobs for Meigs County",
"A prosperous new year for all bers loved ones who were lost in
weeks.
Weaver said.
Meigs Countians, and academic 1991, and says this about what she
Recession? Not at the opulent
..., wish for myself a hapPy new
excellence in the Meigs Local has learned from tl!at experience:
Rainbow Room, 65 stories above
year, surrounded by family and
School District" was the wish of "liS kind hearts are the gardens,
Manhattan's Rockefeller Center,
special friends."
Pomeroy resident Mike Walker. A kind thoughts are the roots, kind
where leggy showman Tommy
Linda Mayer of Pomeroy hopes
sports fan, Mike also included his words are the flowers, kind deeds
Tune
will tap. at a $395-a-person
that peace will prevail in the new
favorite teams in his new year's are the fruits."
black-tie
bash - tax, tip and bubyear.
wishes. Mike, who is employed by
Jan also offered two more
bly
excluded.
"My hope for 1992 is for a betAmerican Electric Power at Philip "thoughts 10 grow on" as her Meigs
After a year of scrimping a.nd
ter world where we can live in Sporn .Plant, staled that he hoped County neighbors enler iniO a new
worrying
about everthing from job
peace by learning io love one ' for a "TVC Championship for .the year: "Remember, that 'American'
security .10 credit card debts, many
another," she said.
Meigs Marauders football team and ends with 'I Can'!"
Americans are eagerly anticipating
Linda, who serves Farmers a Super Bowl championship for the
And finaUy, Jan offered ll)is bit
a
night of indulgence. Whether at
Bank and Savings Company as a Cleveland Browns."
.of advice, which we can all make
quiet
gatherings at home or at
customer service representative,
Meigs EMS Dispatcher Cindy into a useful New Year's resolupricey
prix fiXe restaurant parties,
also has a special wish for her com- Prater hopes for a "safe New tion: "Do something - either lead,
they
are
opening long-shut wallets
munity.
·
Year's holiday and health ~d hap- follow or get out of the way."
for New Y~'s Eve.
•
. ''People held back all year and

increase delayed 10 days

the hearing," said Beth Gianforcaro, spokeswoman for the agency
that represents consumers in utility
rate cases:
A bearing on Columbus Southem's rate increase request had been
set for Jan. 6. The utility requesled
that the hearing be delayed until
Jan. 13. It also said ·it would delay
imposing the increase until that
date.
Under state law, Columbus
Southern and CG&amp;E could begin
c)larging their cus10mers the higher
rates on Friday because the
requests will have been pending
275 days without a PUCO decision.
But if the PUCO later rejected
the increases or granted smaller
ones, the u~lities would have to
refund the difference, plus 10 percent interest, in the form of a temporary rate"reduction.
The rate for a residential cus, .
tomer using 700 kilowatt hours of
electricity per month would
increase $16.21 under the Columbus Southern plan. The current
monthly rate is $52.98, the utility
said.
·
The deferral for CG&amp;E is in
effect until the PUCO decides the
utility's rate case. The CG&amp;E rates
would brin~t in $204.8 million.
CG&amp;E spokesman Steve Brash
said the cost deferrals will allow
the company's current rates to stay
in effect for three months. He said
·co&amp;E now proposes to decide

Apri12 '.)'hether 10 impose the higherrates.
CG&amp;E estimates that the Zimmer operating and maintenance
costs total $80 million per year.
Permission 10 defer those expenses
allows CG&amp;E 10 protect Its 1992
corporate earnings by not having to
charge those costs against e&amp;n}ings,
Brash said.
Ms. Gianforearo said th{ OCC
opposed the CG&amp;E deferral.
..
"Our general position is that
this iu company that is in a very
healthy fmancial condition and was
not in need of deferring these op&amp;ating and maintenance costs," she
said.
The converted $3.4 billion Zimmer p1ant in Moscow, along the
Ohio River, began commercial
operation in March, 22 years after
construction began as a nuclear
power plant. The· project's original
_
cost was $240 million, but overrun~J--'~
and years of construction delays
and problems increased its price.
Zimmer's three owners Columbus Southern, CG&amp;E and
the Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. all have sought rate increases to
offset costs of converting the plant
from nuclear to coal-fired operations.
There was a settlement in the
Dayton case, reducing the DP&amp;L
rate increase from $186 million 10
•
$57 million.

New Year's :revelers,defy recession ·
wantiO blow it now," said Victor
Masullo, owner of Soho Wines &amp;
Spirits Lid.
In San Francisco, champagne
sales at Colt Liquors are going well
as customers say, "'Oil, to hell
with everything. It's Christmas ani!
New Year's,' said manager Paul
Riley.
For some, the focus is off alcohol and abundance in favor of quieter gatherings around the hearth.
"People are doing a lot of
things at home," said Liz Neuman,
president of Great Performances
Catering Inc. in Manhauan.
Neuman's company, like many
others, is sacrificing a bit of profit
10 keep the parties roUing.
In Atlanta, reservations are
steady at the Buckhead Life
Restaurant Group, which operates
six restaurants there. But
spokes man Brad Anderholm said

he wouldn't be surprised if couples
spend a bit less than the average.
$125 last year.
Fort Worlh, Texas, has taken
some heavy recession wallops this
yClli because of layoffs at companies ranging from General Dynamics Corp. to American Airlines. But
that hasn't held back New Year's
festivities at· warehouse-size Billy
Bob's Texas country and western
nightclub, which expects to be
filled 10 capacity.
For those unwilling to cast
financial caution 10 the wind, there
are First Night celebrations in
many cities that allow the reveler to
sample a variety of entertainment
for a single ticket.
First Night originated over a
decade ago in Boston, where it
atttacts more than 500,000 revelers.
It has since spread throughout
Continutd 011 pagt 3

the explosion wn1cn occurrell between 6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m., Sallaz
said. The cause of the explosion is
not yet known, Sallaz said. but
there was no evidence of natuzal
gas in the area.
Aeconling 10 Sallaz, no one was
present 81 the building at the time
of the explosion.
The Division · of Alcohol,

Tobacco and Firearms was 81 the
scene S81urday collecling Slllllples
which were sent 10 their lab in
Charleston.
· An investigation is ongoing with
A.T.F. and the Point Pleasant Police
Department, Sallaz Slid.
The Point Pleasant \l&gt;lunrcer
Fire Department also assisted at the

Schools, others dislike cuts Explosion causes $20,000 damage

'

lver

'et APol

1
•

••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State education officials were
expecting Gov. George Voinovich
to cut state spending, but said that
doesn't lessen the impact those cuts
wiD have.
Regents Chancellor Elaine
Hairston said cuts Gov. George
Voinovich announced Monday will
Jiave a devastating effect on slate:
supported colleges and universities.
Voinovich ordered $196 million
in cuts to help deal with a $457

million slale budget deticit projected for the fiscal year ending June
30. The cuts take effeot Wednesday.
Higher education wiD be cut by
$57.2 million.
Ms. Hairston said colleges and
universities were reduced $44.9
million last Februar)IIO help solve
an earlier budget problem.
"Together, these cuts will force
virtually every institution in the
state to focus on crisis manage-

---Local briefs----.
Patrol probes two-car wreck
No injuries were reported in a two-car wreck on· slate Roule 338
in Letart Township Sunday afternoon.
Atcording to a report from the GaiJia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Eugene L. Porter, 44, of Belle, W.V.a., was westbound on Route 338 when an eastbound car driven by Jennifer L.
Couch, 22, of Pomeroy went left of center striking the left-rear of

fAKE THE KEYS

CAll ACAB .
TAKE ASTANO .

~~

.

The patrol listed damage to Porter's 1988 BMW and Couch's
1991 Honda as light

ment, instead of important issues
such as improving access, building
An estimated $20,000 damage
academic excellence and contribut- w~ the result of an explosion
ing 10 the economic growth of the which occurred Saturday evening at
state," she said. "The easy cuts the law offices of Shaw and Slein
have been made. We are coming on Main Stteet, Point Pleasant acperilously close to negatively cording 10 Point Pleasant l'citice
affecting the academic core or our Chief J.D. Sallaz.
colleges and universities."
A busted window, wall damage
Similar reaction came from as well as damage io a computer
Robert Moore, spokesman for the system in the secretary's office
Ohio Department of Education, . were listed as some of the results of
.
..
which will lose about $88.8 million
of its $3.4 billion annual budget.
But he said the department
uppreciates Voinovich' s decision to
limit its cuts 10 2.5 percent, compared with an average of 3 percent6 percent for most state agencies,
and to spare 172 poor school districts from any cuts.
"We would have been reeling,"
if the S~;hools had been cut 6 percent, Moore said.

.

scene.

WOIILDWMII

EMS units answer eight calls .
Eight caDs for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesday.
On Monday at 12:07 p.m., Racine unit went to Number Nine
Road for Carl Smith, who was taken to Veterans Memorial HOSpital.
• At 12:29 p.m., Pomeroy squad .went to Lakewood Road. Anthony
Perry was transported 10 Veterans. At 3:35 p.m., Syracuse unit went
• to Block Plant Road. Lillian Napper was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 3:57 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 Flatwoods Road. Tm.
Hoslcins was treated at the scene. At 5:17p.m., Pomeroy transported
· lj:oskins to Holzer. At 11 p.m., Racine unit went to Old Portland
Road. Jerry Hayman was taken 10 Veterans.
On Tuesday 8l 7:39a.m., Bashan unit wen110 Bashan !toad for a
chimney fue at the Tom McKay residence. At 7:45 a.m., Racine unit
went to the scene of that fue for Randy Friend, who was tle8led at
Ve1erans for smoke inhalation.
·
.

~~U.S.~ DflrrlljiQI'IIkWI

.,
\

,,

','';

Sourte: "2194 Daya ol war.·
Publishers Inc.

w.H. sn;!h

('

'

'

LAST OmCIAL ACT· Outgolna Syracuse
Mayor Eber Pickens, tblrd from left, performed
bls last orfiCial duty IS mayor Monday night
when be swore in new mayor, Jim Pape, riRht,

IDd two COIIDCO.tn, SJmia tUlia tllelr oatil ~
omce are, Jell lo rlabt, BID Ro1ib aad Deulll

Wolfe, coundl membtn, Plck-.o~s and l'llpe.

•

..

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